Virginia Golfer Nov / Dec 2019 | Page 19

Nashville it gave me a ton of confidence and I made every cut after that and start- ing making some top-10s and I got my Tour Card. “Then I go to the PGA Tour (in 2018) and I struggled in the beginning missing cuts—when I did make a cut I would fin- ish in the bottom of the pack—and then I made the last eight cuts of the PGA Tour season last summer which gave me a lot of confidence. “Obviously, I lost my card. I wasn’t play- ing bad but it just didn’t work out. I took three months off and I might have hit balls four or five days in those three months. “I didn’t try to reinvent the wheel, I didn’t try to change my golf swing. I knew what I was doing was good enough and that I just needed to be patient. Taking that time off last fall and last winter kind of made me hungry again and got me excited.” When Griffin made his first appear- ance on the PGA Tour’s developmental circuit—then known as the Web.com Tour—he said he was simply “hoping I could make a cut to reshuffle up.” “This year started with expectations that I knew I could manage,” Griffin said. “It wasn’t so much expectations, it was more the belief that I won (previously) and I knew I could record top 10s.” Griffin struggled with his putting early in the 2019 Korn Ferry Tour season, but a now famous tip from Ponte Vedra neigh- bor Vijay Singh and a borrowed flat stick from Blacksburg High buddy Oliver Chap- man helped him turn around that part of his game at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail Championship in April in Alabama. He won that tournament in a playoff, and continued that momentum with a string of high finishes to secure his PGA Tour card for 2019-20. “The big thing for me was turning those 50th or 60th place finishes into top 25s,” Griffin said. “I had 11 top 25s this year and had four or five really good chances to win.” SETTLING IN The 6-foot-3 Griffin has stretched things out so far on his second ride on the big tour, and he’s come a long way since win- ning the Delta Dental State Open of Vir- ginia at Ballyhack Golf Club in Roanoke in July 2015. “It’s just getting comfortable ... getting comfortable under pressure and get- ting comfortable with more fans, more exposure and more money,” he said. “If you’ve never played golf for hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars a shot .... I mean that putt that I had on 18 in Houston, it’s a $700,000 putt on paper. But, honestly, it was probably more like a $4- to $5-million dollar putt. “The difference between winning and finishing second is astronomical. But I felt totally comfortable. My hands weren’t shaking. I was nervous but not to the point where I couldn’t function. “That just showed me that two years ago that if I had that putt to win a PGA Tour event—not that it would have hap- pened two years ago—that I wasn’t ready. I probably would have crapped in my pants ... it would have been too much for me!” Instead, Griffin showed nerves of a champion, leaving his immediate future secure—a tremendous feeling for a play- er who has spent the better part of a decade grinding through professional golf’s fringes. After years of grinding on golf’s fringes in South America and on the Korn Ferry Tour, Lanto Griffin’s PGA Tour future is secure through the end of the 2021-22 season. vsga.org N OV E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 19 | V I R G I N I A G O L F E R 17