Former PGA Tour winner leads 6 players to earn Tour cards at Q-School
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Lanto Griffin played “pissed off” this week.
On Wednesday, after his second-consecutive down year on the PGA Tour, he was told he wouldn’t have any status on the Korn Ferry Tour, but by Sunday none of it mattered.
Griffin fired a final-round seven-under 63 on Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass at PGA Tour Q-School to earn medalist honors and his PGA Tour card for the 2025 season. Five other golfers will join him as six golfers finished the week at four under or better with the top five players and ties earning PGA Tour membership.
It’s Griffin’s first win worldwide since his rookie season on the PGA Tour, when he triumphed at the 2019 Houston Open, but his game had fallen off in the years since.
After a solid run of sustained success where he finished inside the top 100 of the FedEx Cup points list three years in a row before a back injury knocked him out of action in the summer of 2022.
His comeback in 2023 and 2024 resulted in just one top-10, and lost him full-time status on the PGA Tour, but that wasn’t what pissed him off this week at Q-School.
Griffin played out of the past champion category this past season and earned 22 starts, but still finished 158th in the FedEx Cup Fall standings, a ways off the top 125 mark needed to keep his card for 2025.
Then on Wednesday, he learned he wouldn’t have any guaranteed starts on the Korn Ferry Tour next season if he wanted to re-earn his card that way.
“That email Wednesday night that I wasn’t going to even have guaranteed Korn Ferry Tour starts, that was— it kind of pissed me off, ticks me off,” he said Sunday. “So that was a little chip on— you know, me and my mental coach have been talking about playing with a chip on your shoulder, being an athlete. Doesn’t really matter what it looks like. Yeah, that was the goal coming out here this week and compete as hard as I can.”
On Sunday night, as he spoke to members of the media, the mission was accomplished.
After three rounds at Sawgrass Country Club and Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass, Griffin went off Sunday, starting the day in eighth place and rocketing up the leaderboard to finish three shots ahead of anyone else.
“I guess when your back’s against the wall you kind of just have to— you don’t have a choice,” he said, “Obviously it could have gone a different route this week for me, but my focus was good.
“Today was huge for my confidence. I have a lot of confidence in my game, but I haven’t won since back surgery. Today on the back nine your mind’s racing a million miles an hour. You can make three bogeys and still get in, it’s like I haven’t won a tournament since ’19, it’s been five years.
“You know, it would be pretty cool to win Q-School, and being able to win Q-School with 156 really good players on two hard golf courses is a huge accomplishment for me and I’m super proud of that.”
Here are the five other players who will join Griffin on the PGA Tour in 2025
Hayden Buckley: Had been on the PGA Tour for the past two seasons but fell out of the Top 125 after recording just two top-10s in 2024.
Takumi Kanaya: A seven-time Japan Tour winner who has already played in 11 major championships. Was a former World No. 1 amateur and was ranked as high as No. 49 in the Official World Golf Ranking in 2022.
Alejandro Tosti: PGA Tour rookie in 2024 who made headlines for some of his huge (and bold) tee shots, as well as some of his less-than-rosey antics.
Will Chandler: Will be a PGA Tour rookie in 2025 and fired a final-nine 30 Sunday to earn a spot. Advanced from the second stage of Q-School after logging only 10 events on the Korn Ferry Tour this season and nine PGA Tour Canada events in 2023.
Matthew Riedel: Former standout at Vanderbilt University who graduated this spring and earned status on the Korn Ferry Tour through PGA Tour Q-School. That also put him straight into the final stage of Q-School this week.
Notables who failed to Qualify
Nick Watney
Adrien Dumont de Chassart
S.Y. Noh
Austin Smotherman
Tommy Gainey
Christo Lamprecht
Pierceson Coody
Doc Redman
Hank Lebioda
Austin Cook
James Nicholas
Robby Shelton
Sangmoon Bae
Justin Suh
Joseph Bramlett
Carl Yuan
Chez Reavie
Sean O’Hair
Norman Xiong
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Jack Hirsh is the Associate Equipment Editor at GOLF. A Pennsylvania native, Jack is a 2020 graduate of Penn State University, earning degrees in broadcast journalism and political science. He was captain of his high school golf team and recently returned to the program to serve as head coach. Jack also still *tries* to remain competitive in local amateurs. Before joining GOLF, Jack spent two years working at a TV station in Bend, Oregon, primarily as a Multimedia Journalist/reporter, but also producing, anchoring and even presenting the weather. He can be reached at jack.hirsh@golf.com.