USA TODAY US Edition

Rookie knows work is just starting

Hughes eager to pick up where he left off — with win

- Steve DiMeglio @Steve_DiMeglio USA TODAY Sports

On a 38-degree November morning at Sea Island Golf Club in southeast Georgia, Mackenzie Hughes stood just off the 17th green wondering if his life was about to change again at the RSM Classic.

Less than four months earlier, he was struggling on the Web.com Tour and thinking his golf season was headed to Q-School, but a tie for fifth in the LECOM Health Challenge in New York ignited a wondrous change to the arc of his career. A few weeks later, he won his first event on the developmen­tal tour at the Price Cutter Charity Championsh­ip in Missouri. A month later, he locked up his PGA Tour card at the Albertsons Boise Open in Idaho.

A couple of rounds paired with Phil Mickelson in the Safeway Open in California in his first start as a PGA Tour member proved educationa­l and pivotal, and the tie for 13th proved profitable.

Six days later, he married longtime girlfriend Jenna Shaw.

Riding his momentum, Hughes got into contention — and then into a five-man playoff — at Sea Island in the last tournament of the fall portion of the 2016-17 season. After canning a 15-footer from off the green for par on the second hole of the playoff, he waited to see if the other survivors would force a third playoff hole. None did, and Hughes exhaled in celebratio­n of his first Tour victory.

Now he’s in Maui — where it’s 40 degrees warmer — for the SBS Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course in Kapalua, where 32 winners from last year will reignite the 2016-17 season Thursday.

“I am the first guy to recognize how things turned around and changed for me, but I guess for me it was something I always thought I could do,” Hughes, 26, said of his first Tour title. “I always thought I’d get to the PGA Tour but just wasn’t sure when. Obviously, it happened much faster than I hoped.

“Coming from the LECOM Health Challenge to where I am today, it’s very humbling and very surreal still.”

Since he left Sea Island, Hughes hasn’t played much golf. He honeymoone­d in Thailand and received an invitation to play in the Masters. He relished the much-needed downtime, which allowed him to think about the changes coming in 2017, such as trips to Hawaii, Augusta for the Masters, The Players Championsh­ip, World Golf Championsh­ips events and the PGA Championsh­ip.

It’s a long way from the 9-yearold boy in Canada who hung a picture of fist-pumping Tiger Woods during an epic win against Ernie Els in Kapalua in the 2000 Tournament of Champions (then the Mercedes Championsh­ip).

“I was still just playing golf for fun, but I remember watching that and thinking how cool it was to watch them go head-to-head,” Hughes said.

So while he’s on his second honeymoon this week — “My wife is not disappoint­ed, I’ll tell you that. She doesn’t mind spending a week in Hawaii,” Hughes said — and has job security through 2019, the Tour rookie knows he has work to do as he gets set to face the best players in the world.

“If I finish second at Sea Island, I’d still be fighting for my card,” Hughes said. “Knowing I have the job security is something you can’t put a price tag on. … I’ve had five weeks to let the win sink in, enjoy it and then put it behind me. It’s time to get ready for the next tournament.

“I know I won at Sea Island, but I want to win majors, and to win majors you have to beat the likes of Jason Day and Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth and Dustin Johnson, so the level you have to get your game to is so much higher.

“But I know there is still so much left in the tank to work on. There are always so many things to improve on. I like to keep my goals high, so you work hard to achieve them.”

“Coming from the LECOM Health Challenge to where I am today, it’s very humbling and very surreal still.” Golfer Mackenzie Hughes

 ?? LOGAN BOWLES, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mackenzie Hughes’ first Tour win came in November at the RSM Classic in Sea Island, Ga., where he won in a playoff and celebrated with his wife, Jenna.
LOGAN BOWLES, USA TODAY SPORTS Mackenzie Hughes’ first Tour win came in November at the RSM Classic in Sea Island, Ga., where he won in a playoff and celebrated with his wife, Jenna.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States