If the agonizing pressure of battling for five precious PGA Tour cards wasn’t enough, cold and wind descended on North Florida on Friday, sending everything sideways at the final stage of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School — everything including, apparently, a whole bunch of golf balls.
The basics from this weekend’s Q-School are as follows: 171 players are competing for five PGA Tour cards and there are 40 additional spots for Korn Ferry Tour status up for grabs after that. There are journeymen PGA Tour pros and KFT pros with secure status who are here taking a “free roll” and chasing one of those five cards to get status on the big tour. There are youngsters chasing status for the first time. And there are dozens and dozens and dozens of talented pros with varying levels of status in between.
Given the field, then, it was somewhat shocking to see the scores that came through on Friday across two Ponte Vedra Beach-area courses.
-The 36-hole lead settled at three under par
-Just eight players were under par through two rounds
-The first-round leader followed his 61 with a 76
-The Dye’s Valley course averaged more than two-and-a-half shots over par
-Sawgrass Country Club averaged more than five strokes over par and didn’t yield a single under-par round
As Saturday’s round begins there’s a three-way tie for the lead between Alistair Docherty, Corey Shaun and Matthew Riedel.
The chase for that fifth spot is heated, too: four players are T5 at one under par including PGA Tour mainstay Lanto Griffin.
There’s also a logjam around that top-40 number: two over par is T23, which sounds safely in, but four over par puts you in T52. Play hard, fellas!
There are some notable names on the right and wrong side of those numbers, including PGA Tour familiar faces Hayden Buckley, Matt NeSmith and Richy Werenski (all T9 at even par), Nick Watney and Austin Cook (T15 at one over) all the way down through Doc Redman (T33, three over), Alejandro Tosti (T65, five over), Scott Piercy (T79, six over), Justin Suh (T99, seven over), Chez Reavie (T112, eight over), Sam Bennett (T135, 10 over) and plenty more. Most have some guaranteed status for 2025, but their presence is a reminder of an increasingly competitive top of the PGA Tour landscape.
There are names you may have never heard, too, every player with a specific dream and a unique story. These weeks become sliding-doors moments, introductions to those stories and previews of who you’ll see at PGA Tour events next year and beyond.
There’s Corey Shaun, who missed a cut in Australia by one shot — otherwise he wouldn’t be here. He opened with 61 and sits T1 despite running into Friday’s conditions.
Thomas Longbella is chasing a second chance at big-time status after wrist surgery cut his promising season short.
Co-leader Alistair Docherty finished No. 32 on the KFT’s points list, just outside PGA Tour status. Now he has another chance to advance, too.
He’s halfway there. The WDs began to trickle in on Friday evening; some pros have already seen the writing on the wall and that writing does not include a top-five finish. But most will stick it out through the weekend. This is their big chance for a big break, after all. And a few well-timed birdies can go a long way.
You can see scores here. And you can watch the high-stakes action on Golf Channel on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.
Dylan Dethier is a senior writer for GOLF Magazine/GOLF.com. The Williamstown, Mass. native joined GOLF in 2017 after two years scuffling on the mini-tours. Dethier is a graduate of Williams College, where he majored in English, and he’s the author of 18 in America, which details the year he spent as an 18-year-old living from his car and playing a round of golf in every state.