Can someone please discuss what happened down the leader board?
The PGA Tour Qualifying School ,ended on the 5th December, 2010 .It embraced a cult of 150 players, residing from various struggles of life and observing more than one, interesting story.
Apart from what was going on, at the top of the leader board, the lower decks had one of the best stories. From the unique fixation of golfers, who recently played at the Q school and walked away with the 2011 Tour cards, the inventory includes many chronicles.
Some examples include the first Brazilian golfer, a man who incidentally cut the tips of his two fingers and a golfer, who played despite his recent root canal. The wind was cold, but they were still sweating.
From Brazil, Alexandre Rocha grabbed the honour of becoming, one of the first Brazilians to grab the PGA Tour membership. The thirty-three-year-old golfer ,has thus included another Tour, in his long list of clashes.Some of them include, the European Tour,
the Asian Tour, the Canadian Tour and last but not the least, the Tour de las Americas.
Regarding his play at the current Q school, the 2000 turned professional considers it as a great, flood back. The golfer from Orlando had near to zero expectations, about getting back in form, but still managed to persist onwards with the International Olympic
Committee. The International Olympic Committee welcomed Rocha’s vote for adding golf, to the 2016 Games, in Rio de Janeiro.
“I just kept saying to myself that I had to move on” Rocha said.
Other than Rocha, Brandt Jobe won the Tour card fight, after he lost the tips of his two fingers, against his metal broom. Four years ago, Jobe’s metal broom handle suddenly shattered, which injured his hands a great deal. Despite the strange household accident
in 2007, Jobe has had a good comeback, this spell. So, Jobe recovered well from a hand injury but Gary Woodland, has an even more interesting story at hands. Woodland is reported to play the tournament, despite his recent surgery. The sectional qualifier for
the U.S Open 2010 thus regained his card after the surgery and played the Qualifying tournament, with less than 24 hours in between the match and the root canal.
When Woodland was asked to comment on his root canal and the Q schools match, he sort of made a comparison between the two. According to the golfer, Q school and the root canal, doesn’t have a lot of things different from each other. THe golfer said that even
his surgery, seemed like lasting for a good six days, just like the six round Qualifying event. He said
“None of these are that much fun”.
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