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Aug 17, 2022

Five players to watch at Korn Ferry Tour Finals

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ST ANDREWS, SCOTLAND - JULY 16: Min Woo Lee of Australia tees off on the 3rd hole during Day Three of The 150th Open at St Andrews Old Course on July 16, 2022 in St Andrews, Scotland. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

ST ANDREWS, SCOTLAND - JULY 16: Min Woo Lee of Australia tees off on the 3rd hole during Day Three of The 150th Open at St Andrews Old Course on July 16, 2022 in St Andrews, Scotland. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

    Written by Sean Martin

    The Korn Ferry Tour Finals showcases a mix of rising stars and veteran grinders, with the ultimate goal of securing 25 coveted PGA TOUR cards via the top 25 positions on the Finals Eligibility Points List.

    Twenty-five TOUR cards were determined via the top 25 on the Regular Season Eligibility Points List, which was set at the conclusion of last week’s Pinnacle Bank Championship presented by Aetna. These players (The 25) will compete in the Finals to better their position on the 2022-23 TOUR Priority Ranking, with the Korn Ferry Tour’s 50 graduates alternating positions between The 25 and The Finals 25.

    Players to compete for The Finals 25 PGA TOUR cards: finishers Nos. 26-75 on the Korn Ferry Tour Regular Season Eligibility Points List, Nos. 126-200 on the FedExCup Playoffs and Eligibility Points List, non-members who would have earned enough FedExCup points to have finished Nos. 126-200, and medical extensions.

    A solo fifth or better at one of the three Finals events will be enough to secure a TOUR card via The Finals 25; other combinations will suffice as well.

    Click here for a full explanation of Finals structure and eligibility. Click here for The Finals 25 live projected standings.

    Here’s a look at five notable players set to chase their first PGA TOUR card across the three-event Finals, which begins at this week’s Albertsons Boise Open presented by Chevron. The Finals then proceeds to Columbus, Ohio, for next week’s Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship, then to southern Indiana for the Korn Ferry Tour Championship presented by United Leasing and Finance.

    MIN WOO LEE

    CHRIS GOTTERUP

    PIERCESON COODY

    Pierceson Coody turned pro this summer as the top-ranked player in PGA TOUR University. He quickly lived up to that billing, collecting a win and a T4 in his first three starts on the Korn Ferry Tour.

    His victory in the Live and Work in Maine Open put him on the precipice of a PGA TOUR card, moving him to 31st on the Korn Ferry Tour Regular Season Eligibility Points List.

    He couldn’t quite keep up the pace, however, and was unable to crack the top 25 last week to earn his PGA TOUR card. He finished 32nd in the Regular Season points standings in just eight starts. He made half his cuts, but three of those four made cuts were top-10s. He shot three rounds of 63 or lower in those eight starts, as well.

    When he’s on, he’s on. There would be no better time to summon his best stuff than in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals, which offer another opportunity for him to earn a PGA TOUR card at just 22 years old. Should Coody earn his card through the Finals, he’d surely be one of the can’t-miss kids that fans would watch with interest next season.

    Coody’s lineage and pedigree make him an intriguing prospect. He is the grandson of former Masters champion Charles Coody and a former No. 1 in the world amateur rankings.

    Pierceson was a three-time All-American at Texas, earning first-team honors in 2021, when he was also the Big 12 Player of the Year. He also won the 2020 Western Amateur and played on the United States’ victorious Walker Cup team last year, overcoming a stomach bug to win both his singles matches and help the U.S. to a 14-12 victory over Great Britain and Ireland. He led Texas to its fourth NCAA Championship this year, and its first since the Jordan Spieth-led squad a decade ago. It was Texas’ fourth national championship. The Longhorns also won in 1971 and 1972 when a couple guys named Tom Kite and Ben Crenshaw were on the team.

    Those are some big names to follow in the footsteps of, but Coody’s career is off to a promising start already.

    AKSHAY BHATIA

    Akshay Bhatia admits he has dealt with more adversity this year than he might have been expecting. The 20-year-old believes he’s stronger for it.

    The often-smiling, technicolor-sporting North Carolinian appeared to be on the fast track to TOUR after winning the Korn Ferry Tour’s season-opening The Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay in January.

    The back didn’t always cooperate, though, and Bhatia struggled to rediscover the form of that magical week in Exuma with his girlfriend Presleigh on the bag, where he stuffed a wedge on the 72nd hole to tap-in range to cement a win that converted conditional status to full Korn Ferry Tour membership.

    Bhatia, a fourth-year pro, is without a top-10 finish since his win but enters the Finals with on the strength of T14-T27 in his last two starts.

    The California native entered the Regular Season-ending Pinnacle Bank Championship presented by Aetna at No. 30 on the Eligibility Points List, and he moved to the precipice of the all-important top 25 bubble with three rounds in the 60s to enter the final round at T13. He birdied two of his first four holes Sunday and was on the verge.

    He was without a birdie the rest of the day, though, signing for even-par 71 and an eventual No. 30 spot on the Regular Season Eligibility Points List. The good news? Across the next three weeks, he has the chance to secure the trophy that he has desired all along: his first PGA TOUR card.

    “Winning the first event feels like ages ago, and it’s just been hard,” Bhatia said in Omaha. “I’ve been hurt the whole year, and it’s not how I want my season to go. I want to be healthy. There's been a lot more adversity than I would've thought, but I know it's gonna help me in the long run, whether it's this week or a couple years from now.”

    He wouldn’t mind it helping him across the next three weeks.

    CHRIS NAEGEL

    Chris Naegel has been long regarded as one of the best players without TOUR status. Across the next three weeks, he’ll have the chance to change that.

    The St. Louis-area native went on the Monday qualifying circuit this summer and drew attention across the golf world for his propensity to make the most of these daunting one-day competitions. Qualifying for the U.S. Open at Brookline via Final Qualifying was just the beginning. Naegel, 39, went on a remarkable tear of Monday qualifying for four TOUR events in a five-week period in July.

    In addition to his T56 at the U.S. Open, a T16 at the John Deere Classic proved critical as Naegel accrued 55 non-member FedExCup points. Naegel underwent a wild week after falling one stroke shy of a playoff at the Wyndham Championship's Monday qualifier; his 55 points looked safe to surpass No. 200 on the FedExCup Playoffs and Eligibility Points List, good for a Finals berth, until Tom Kim won in Greensboro to earn automatic membership. This appeared to move Naegel’s 55-point total behind exactly 200 TOUR members, one spot shy of Finals entry.

    But with Bubba Watson’s resignation from the PGA TOUR, Naegel’s 55-point total was now bettered by exactly 199 TOUR members. He would be eligible for the Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

    Naegel has made 73 career Korn Ferry Tour starts, highlighted by a fourth-place finish at the 2019 Regular Season-ending WinCo Foods Portland Open, where he made a hole-in-one in a final-round 64. This will mark his first Finals appearance, his best chance yet at a TOUR card; his career-best Korn Ferry Tour ranking is No. 99 in 2016, when he made 10 cuts in 20 starts with three top-25 finishes.

    If the Missouri Baptist alum can channel that Monday form across the next three weekends, his TOUR dream could become a reality.

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