USA TODAY US Edition

2 rookies take aim at Tour finale

- Steve DiMeglio

LAKE FOREST, I LL . Mackenzie Hughes and Xander Schauffele have been in the same boat this season during their maiden voyage on the PGA Tour.

The rookies have each had to learn to maneuver around golf courses they’d never seen while playing against the best players in the world. Figure out the best places to stay and eat in destinatio­ns they’d never visited. Face, at times, erratic schedules that had them on the road for long periods.

“Everyone knows what it’s like for rookies,” Hughes said.

But the two have more than held their own.

Each won their first Tour title: Hughes in the RSM Classic last fall, Schauffele in the Greenbrier Classic in July. Each has won more than $2.3 million. Each has seven top-20 finishes in the

2016-17 wraparound season. And both are one good week from cashing big time at next week’s Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Heading into Thursday’s start of the BMW Championsh­ip at Conway Farms Golf Cub — the third event of the four in the FedExCup Playoffs — Hughes is No. 31 and Schauffele No. 32 in the standings.

Only the top 30 after this weekend head to East Lake and have a shot at winning the

$10 million bonus.

That alone turns up the pressure this week.

Now add what comes with making it to East Lake — the perks.

The top 30 in the standings each receive one-year exemptions into the Masters, U.S. Open, British Open and Players Championsh­ip. They get into two World Golf Championsh­ips events: the Mexico Champion- ship and the HSBC Champions. They also receive playing spots in the following invitation­al events: the CIMB Classic, Arnold Palmer Invitation­al, RBC Heritage, Dean & DeLuca Invitation­al, Memorial Tournament and Quicken Loans National.

Hughes just smiled when realizing what he’s playing for.

“You’d be lying to say you weren’t thinking about it,” Hughes said Tuesday.

“But at the end of the day, it’s just golf. Once I start playing, I won’t be thinking about the Masters, the U.S. Open and all that stuff. And if you had told me 12 months ago that I would be at the BMW Championsh­ip playing for a spot at East Lake, I would have taken it in a heartbeat. So that’s how I flip it. My glass is half-full. There’s pressure, but it’s a great place to be. I’m a bubble guy this week, but it’s a lot better than being No. 70 or not being here.”

The priority this year for Hughes, 31, was to secure his playing status for next season. Then he won the RSM Classic in a five-man playoff, and his focus changed.

While he said he’s had a so-so year where he’s played well at times but been inconsiste­nt for the most part, his spirits remain high.

“It’s hard your first year, seeing these places for the first time, learning so much other stuff, but you just keep going,” Hughes said. “I’d love to finish the season off getting to East Lake.”

Schauffele already is exempt into the Masters and the U.S. Open. His win in the Greenbrier got him into the 2018 Masters; his tie for fifth in the U.S. Open got him into next year’s U.S. Open. But all those other perks have his attention.

“It’s huge, in terms of setting up a schedule and knowing where I’m going next year,” said Schauffele, 32. “As a rookie and before that, you’d show up at events not knowing if you’d get in or not. And you’ll get to play in the best events in the world playing against the best players in the world, and that’s what you dream of.”

In many ways Schauffele’s year turned around at the U.S. Open. Unknown to most every golf fan that week at Erin Hills in Wisconsin, Schauffele stood up to the course, the field and the pressure and tied for fifth.

“It changed my belief on the course,” he said.

So Schauffele said the pressure won’t get to him this week.

“I’ve been living on the bubble a couple years now, so why not live another week on the bubble,” he said with a smile. “I’ve been on the bubble and gotten through it somehow, and that makes me feel a little bit more comfortabl­e out here. It’s a great week, and I’m just trying to have fun.”

 ?? KYLE TERADA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Rookie Mackenzie Hughes says, “It’s hard your first year, seeing these places for the first time.”
KYLE TERADA, USA TODAY SPORTS Rookie Mackenzie Hughes says, “It’s hard your first year, seeing these places for the first time.”

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