Gary Hurley turned pro in 2015 with a handicap of +5. On his CV already was being part of a victorious Walker Cup team, where he contributed two and a half points from four matches against a team which included Bryson DeChambeau, and the prospect of very bright career in the paid ranks.
But since then Hurley has had to do it the hard way. There have been a grand total of 14 starts on the main DP World Tour along with 60 tournaments on the Challenge Tour which have resulted in winnings of €56k.
This year he won on the Alps Tour where he finished in 5th spot on the money list to secure his status back on the Challenge Tour. Now he has leapfrogged all of that with his brilliant efforts at the final stage of the DP World Tour Qualifying School.
The West Waterford player, which is also Seamus Power’s home course, will get a full season on the main tour. This time last year things looked very different for Hurley but a tie for 13th this week has never looked so good.
“This time last year I had nothing, I had no sponsors, nothing. I convinced some guys to help me out over the winter and I convinced them that this was going somewhere and that the work that I was putting in was going to mean something,” an emotional Hurley said afterwards.
The 29-year-old was in good shape all week after a pair of 65s on the Lakes Course at Infinitum and three birdies in his first 11 holes meant that he was comfortably inside the top 25. But then a pair of bogeys at the next two holes wobbled the ship slightly before a brilliant birdie two at the 14th steadied things. Four closing pars got him home where he finished in a tie with the likes of Marcel Siem, Mike Lorenzo-Vera and former GM columnist Sam Hutsby.
Hurley was also joined inside the top 25 by his countryman John Murphy, who birdied two of his last three holes to squeeze in on the mark, while Kiradech Aphibarnrat (4th) was another to make it through.
“I was brilliant today, brilliant with my approach shots and my mindset. A lot of things tried to pull me away, especially yesterday evening when I had a big reset with my coach. I just got back to me again and that’s where I was today – I was happy and smiling on the course and just proud of what I’m doing and the way that I’m doing it now because it wasn’t long ago that I wasn’t doing it great,” added Hurley.
“It was really painful for me playing golf so it’s great to have this. I was playing on the Alps Tour this year which was…
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