I was finally able to figure out the status of Delco’s
adopted favorite son on the PGA Tour, Sean O’Hair, as he spoke to the region’s
top golf writer, Mike Kern of the Philadelphia
Daily News, during a promotional appearance for TaylorMade at his new home
course, White Manor Country Club, this week.
I knew O’Hair, a four-time winner on the PGA Tour, had to go
through the Web.com playoffs to regain his tour card, a process he had
successfully grinded his way through in 2013. But when he missed the cut in the
first two events, I didn’t think his chances were very good.
But apparently he played
well enough in the final two events to earn his playing privileges with
the big boys again in 2014-15. I don’t
think the tour does a very good job of spelling out where guys like O’Hair
stand when they are trying to navigate their way back to the tour through the
Web.com playoffs, but maybe that’s just my lack of Internet savvy showing.
When I spotted O’Hair showing up in the first couple of
events of the new season, I wondered if maybe he had just enough status to
sneak into these fields that the top players tend to ignore. But the interview he did with Kern made it
clear that O’Hair is indeed still a card-carrying member of the PGA Tour.
And he gave himself a big boost of confidence with a
third-round 64 at The McCladrey Classic last weekend in Sea Island, Ga. that
helped him finish in a tie for 17th after he backed up the 64 with a
final-round 68.
O’Hair’s name first came into my consciousness when
something called the New England Pro/Cleveland Golf Tour started sending
results to the Daily Times in the
summer of 2003 with a frequent contender from Aston, Pa. named Sean O’Hair. The
name didn’t ring a bell to anyone on the Daily
Times sports staff.
But when I finally reached O’Hair on the phone, the mystery
was solved. He had married the former Jackie Lucas, an All-Delco golfer at Sun
Valley, the previous November and she was touring with him as both new bride
and caddie. Asked where he lived when he filled out his application for the New
England Tour, he said to his new wife, “Where are we from, Jackie?” And so,
Aston, Pa. was it.
I didn’t make the connection then that O’Hair was the
talented youngster who had reached the semifinals of the U.S. Junior Amateur in
1997 at Aronimink Golf Club before being coerced to turn pro at age 17 by a
father who, in a “60 Minutes” piece on pushy sports parents, referred to his
son as a “commodity.”
O’Hair was close to rock bottom when he met Lucas, who had
transferred after two years at Monmouth to a Florida college because she was
seeking better competition to improve her game. She became O’Hair’s partner
on a golf journey that has had a lot of twists and turns in the last
decade-plus.
Mostly, it’s been good times. The O’Hairs have four children
and Sean has banked in the neighborhood of $13 million on the tour.
Oddly, after reaching as high as No. 12 in the world
rankings, O’Hair’s game started to slide in 2011. He got a big boost by winning
the Canadian Open that summer for his fourth tour victory, but he has struggled
mightily the last two seasons.
Somehow, though, O’Hair seems to be at his best when his
back is up against the wall. And he sounded determined at the still relatively
young golf age of 32 to turn things around.
“There’s no doubt in my mind my best golf’s ahead of me,” O’Hair
told Kern. “I don ‘t look at myself as an obsolete golfer. Once you lose the belief,
you’re screwed. And there’s a million guys waiting in line who are willing to
put the time in.”
Here’s hoping O’Hair can get his game back on track in this 2014-15
season. Honestly, I don’t think I’ll have the path to qualifying through the
Web.com playoffs figured out by next September, so I’ll be in the same boat if
O’Hair has to take that complicated route back to the big tour again.
No comments:
Post a Comment