The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA’s Ralston rolls with it as play with pros is dashed

Senior not sure of months ahead, intends to prep for his career.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

ATHENS — Spencer Ralston, a senior and captain of Georgia’s men’s golf team, was playing in a PGA Canadian Tour qualifier March 12 in Dothan, Alabama, when the world as we know it started falling apart.

One of his playing partners from Alabama said he’d just gotten an email from his coach saying the Linger Longer Invitation­al, scheduled for the following week at Lake Oconee, was probably going to be canceled. A bit later, while still playing their round, they heard the Players Championsh­ip that would be played in Ponte Vedra, Florida, without fans present was probably going to shut down, too. By the time they completed their rounds, pretty much every ongoing sport around the globe had stopped.

But it wasn’t until Tuesday of last week that Ralston got the gutpunch he was hoping wouldn’t

come. The PGA Tour, which already had canceled its next four events, announced it was pulling the plug on four more. That included the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head, South Carolina.

That meant Ralston’s first shot at playing in a PGA event was gone with the wind. Whether or not it blows back his way he won’t know for a while.

“Once they canceled the Players Championsh­ip and the four events afterward, I started thinking about it,” said Ralston, who’d earned an exemption into the Heritage by winning the Players Amateur last summer. “The first event back was going to be the Heritage. So I was thinking there was still hope.”

Ralston learned via Twitter it was not to be. At that point, he really wasn’t all that surprised.

But disappoint­ed? Yes; very.

“I talked to my dad on the phone after I saw the news,” said Ralston, speaking by phone from his home in Gainesvill­e. “As we started seeing things kind of spiral down and events getting canceled, I became less hopeful it was going to be played. But, I mean, it’s the right decision. You’ve got to keep people healthy and take the necessary precaution­s to get through this time that we’re going through right now.”

Ralston is one of dozens of UGA athletes and thousands of collegiate athletes nationwide who have had dreams dashed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. He is a senior and the captain of the Bulldogs’ nationally renowned team. The firstteam All-SEC player has qualified for every tournament Georgia has played the last four years.

Now Ralston is just another UGA student stuck at home, trying to keep up with his classes online and not knowing what the future holds.

Men’s golf, like all other NCAA sports, has been shut down for the rest of the season. The Bulldogs carried a national ranking of No. 21 — somewhat low for a prestigiou­s program that has won two national championsh­ips and 26 SEC titles. But the team was hopeful of making a run again this season. That can’t happen now.

“I haven’t picked up a club since I got back from Dothan,” Ralston said Wednesday. “I’m just kind of taking this week off because we’d been so busy traveling to Puerto Rico and Las Vegas, then the four-day Q-school last week. So, I decided to just kind of stay home and take the right precaution­s, hoping everything will turn around sometime soon.”

Ralston’s future, as it is for many seniors in spring sports, is more uncertain than most athletes. The NCAA has preliminar­ily approved another year of eligibilit­y for seniors who lost their final seasons. But Ralston had planned to turn pro as soon as his college season ended.

Now he’s not sure what he’s going to do. Another year of college is appealing for Ralston, who has three courses to take in order to complete his degree requiremen­ts after spring semester ends. But then, playing profession­al golf is his dream.

“That’s something I’m having to talk to coach (Chris) Haack and my parents about,” Ralston said. “I know when I start back practicing next week or whenever it is, I’m just going to take the mental approach that, ‘Hey, I’m turning profession­al and have to be serious and focus.’ But I don’t know what I’m doing yet . ... That’s just the mental approach I’m having to take until more details come out.”

Remarkably, the PGA Canadian Tour qualifier Ralston was competing in chose to continue. It concluded March 13. He finished 30th, which brings with it “conditiona­l status” on the Canadian Tour.

The truly remarkable chapter of Ralston’s story, though, is what he did to qualify for the spot in the RBC Heritage.

Ralston shot a 63 in the final round of the Players Amateur to wipe out a whopping 11-stroke deficit on the last day and win the tournament and the exemption that came with it.

Ralston started the final round at Berkeley Hall Club in Bluffton, South Carolina, “playing decent” at 9 under par, but thinking he had no realistic hope of winning the tournament. “We just kind of went out there with no expectatio­ns,” Ralston said of he and his caddie, cousin Sims Griffith. “I felt like I was playing well; I just needed to put it all together. I went out and birdied the first hole and just felt really good about how I was hitting it. I had some putts drop early and just kind of took the momentum and went with it.”

Ralston was actually sitting at 10 under par coming to the final hole. He bogeyed, signed his card and retired to the clubhouse to grab a bite for lunch. “I’m sitting there and a rules official comes over and says, ‘You might want to go hit some balls; you’re about to be tied for the lead,’” Ralston recalled with a laugh.

Before he could get warmed up, the co-leader three-putted the last hole and Ralston was declared the winner. After handing Ralston the winner’s trophy, tournament director Steve Wilmot said, “See you in April.”

That was last July. Since then, Ralston has operated with the prospect that he’d be teeing it up with PGA profession­als at the famous Harbour Town Golf Links for the April 16-19 event. Though he has played in many big tournament­s as a junior and collegian, he’d never gotten to go toe-to-toe with the pros.

Now, Ralston might actually be a pro before he gets that opportunit­y.

“I really don’t know,” he said of whether the invitation would be extended at a later date if the tournament is reschedule­d. “I actually haven’t talked to anybody about that yet. I’m just hoping everything will turn around soon.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? When he came from behind to win the Players Amateur trophy last July, UGA senior Spencer Ralston (right) was excited to play with the pros this April. Now, with the tourney canceled during the pandemic, he’ll focus on becoming a pro.
CONTRIBUTE­D When he came from behind to win the Players Amateur trophy last July, UGA senior Spencer Ralston (right) was excited to play with the pros this April. Now, with the tourney canceled during the pandemic, he’ll focus on becoming a pro.

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