Virginia Golfer Jul / Aug 2019 | Page 7

( ) compiled by CHRIS LANG Virginia Golfer A R O U N D NEXT UP: AMANDA HOLLANDSWORTH P.8 T H E COMMON WEALTH » Virginia golf & the people who make it great 5 NEWS & NOTES 6 OPENING DRIVE 8 NEXT UP 10 TOURNAMENT RECAPS 14 MEMBER CLUBS Lanto Griffin savored his victory in Alabama. Griffin Back on the Big Stage L A N T O G R I F F I N I S H AV I N G FUN AGAIN. At the end of May, the Web.com Tour filmed a rendition of the famous Seinfeld episode in which Jason Alexander’s George Costanza becomes a “marine biologist” by finding an obstruction in the blowhole of a beached whale. Web.com pro Harry Higgs portrayed George, while Griffin took on the role of Michael Richards’ goofball Kramer character, perfectly delivering Kramer’s, “Was it a Titleist?” line to the sound of canned laughter. After a year that started with some uncertainty, Griffin—the 2015 Delta Den- tal State Open of Virginia champion and former Blacksburg High and Virginia Commonwealth University standout— had reason to kick back and play a fun role for a tour-sponsored video. His spot on the 2020 PGA Tour is secure. Griffin earned his first Tour card in 2017 by finishing inside the top 25 of the Web.com Tour’s regular-season money list. Griffin’s first PGA Tour season in 2018 was a mixed bag. He found some early success, tying for 12th at the Farmers Insurance Open in January. He struggled to make cuts until June, when he tied for 38th at the Travelers Championship, beginning a string of eight straight made cuts to end the season. It wasn’t enough to hold onto his card. He finished 171st in the FedEx Cup stand- ings, well below the cut (125th) to make the first playoff event. Still, because of his PGA Tour status, he earned a spot in the Web.com Tour playoffs, needing only to fin- GRIFFIN BY THE NUMBERS (AS OF JUNE 5) 2 Web.com Tour wins (Nashville Open 2017; Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail Classic 2019) 4 Place on Web.com Tour points list vsga.org ish in the top 25 to return to the PGA Tour in 2019. But his putter abandoned him, and he missed the final three cuts in the playoffs, relegating him to Web.com status for 2019. The putting woes followed him into the New Year. Griffin struggled in his first six events, managing just one top-50 finish while missing two cuts. “Doubts get in your mind, you know,” he said. Then came a putting lesson in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.—where Griffin lives— from World Golf Hall of Famer Vijay Singh, and suddenly, something clicked. He won the Web.com’s Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail Classic in Alabama in April with a birdie on the fourth playoff hole. His sec- ond Web.com win left him understandably emotional. He struggled to speak through tears in a post-round interview. “You put so much work in,” he said. “There are so many days and weeks where things don’t click, and you kind of wonder if you’re going to get back in that situation to have a chance. “I went from the PGA Tour last year to thoughts of, ‘Am I going to keep my card this year on the Web?’ A week later, Griffin tied for second at the Dormie Network Classic. He tied for 14th at the Nashville Golf Open, tied for 22nd at the KC Golf Classic and tied for sixth at the Evans Scholars Invitational. Through the REX Hospital Open in early June, Griffin had accumulated 982 points. The Web.com Tour estimates 830 points are needed to secure a Tour card. “I just don’t want to get a job,” Griffin said in Alabama after his win. “I want to keep playing. This is going to go a long ways.” Like right back to the PGA Tour, where he strives to make the most of a second chance. 3 Top-10 finishes on the Web.com Tour in 2019 $191,923 Earnings on the Web.com Tour in 2019 $358,380 Earnings on the PGA Tour in 2018 in 26 events 13 Made cuts on the PGA Tour in 2018 J U LY / A U G U ST 2 0 19 | V I R G I N I A G O L F E R 5