Current:Home > reviewsGolf phenom Nick Dunlap talks about going pro: "It was the easiest, hardest decision I've ever had to make" -Aspire Money Growth
Golf phenom Nick Dunlap talks about going pro: "It was the easiest, hardest decision I've ever had to make"
View
Date:2025-04-19 00:50:56
Nick Dunlap announced at a press conference Thursday that he was leaving the University of Alabama golf team to join the PGA Tour.
At just 20 years old, Dunlap made waves in the golfing world as the first amateur golfer to win a PGA Tour event in 33 years.
He spoke to CBS News after the announcement about the difficult decision to go pro and how he broke the news to his college teammates two days before going public.
"It was the easiest, hardest decision I've ever had to make," Dunlap told CBSN anchors Vladimir Duthiers and Anne-Marie Green. "And it was always a dream of mine to play in the PGA tour and play professionally, but telling [my teammates] that I'm leaving them mid-season ... I feel like I'm leaving them to dry a little bit, so that was really difficult for me, but they were all super supportive and wanted me to take this opportunity to chase my dream."
The reigning U.S. Amateur champion became the tour's first amateur winner since Phil Mickelson at the Tucson Open in 1991. Playing in his fourth tour event, Dunlap became the seventh amateur winner since 1945 — and only the third since 1957.
Dunlap and Tiger Woods are the only players to win both the U.S. Amateur and the U.S. Junior Amateur. While Dunlap was able to celebrate Sunday for one of the most impressive performances in recent golf history, he didn't get to take home the $1.5 million first-place prize, which goes to Christiaan Bezuidenhout after the South African's final-round 65.
Dunlap said that he's feeling added pressure as more people come to know about him, but he's staying focused on playing his best.
Noting that "golf has its ups and downs," Dunlap said that "you might get some good breaks and bad breaks, and I was fortunate enough to get some good ones last weekend. And, you know, everything kind of fell in place, so hopefully that happens again sometime soon, but if not, golf is a weird game."
Weird, but special, Dunlap said, noting that he's driven to play golf because it's simultaneously challenging and rewarding. It hinges on your individual efforts, but you get to celebrate as a team when you win, he said.
Dunlap told CBS News his biggest inspiration is Tiger Woods, but that he never imagined himself as a golfer because he grew up playing other sports. His father played baseball at college, and Dunlap said he grew up playing baseball, football and basketball.
"For whatever reason I was out on the range with [my father] one day, and he's not very good himself, and I, just, for whatever reason, picked up a golf club and started playing and fell in love with how difficult it is and trying to perfect it," Dunlap said.
Dunlap believes golf is impossible to perfect, which is part of its draw. "You can always get better," he said, "and whenever you feel like you're doing something special, golf never fails to kick you right in the teeth."
- In:
- PGA
veryGood! (181)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Julia Stiles Privately Welcomed Baby No. 3 With Husband Preston Cook
- 'Coordinated Lunar Time': NASA asked to give the moon its own time zone
- Suits’ Wendell Pierce Shares This Advice for the Cast of Upcoming Spinoff
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Prosecutors recommend at least 10 years in prison for parents of Michigan school shooter
- North Carolina State in the women's Final Four: Here's their national championship history
- Jack Smith argues not a single Trump official has claimed he declared any records personal
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Without Lionel Messi, Inter Miami falls 2-1 to Monterrey in first leg of Champions Cup
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Justice Department announces nearly $80 million to help communities fight violent crime
- 'Parasyte: The Grey': Premiere date, cast, where to watch creepy new zombie K-Drama
- Horoscopes Today, April 3, 2024
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Here’s Everything You Need To Build Your Dream Spring Capsule Wardrobe, According to a Shopping Editor
- Small Nuclear Reactors May Be Coming to Texas, Boosted by Interest From Gov. Abbott
- Party conventions open in North Dakota with GOP divided and Democrats searching for candidates
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
What is next for billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott’s giving?
California schools forced to compete with fast food industry for workers after minimum wage hike
Trump Media sues former Apprentice contestants and Truth Social co-founders to strip them of shares
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Andy Cohen regrets role in Princess Kate conspiracy theories: 'Wish I had kept my mouth shut'
A former Houston police officer is indicted again on murder counts in a fatal 2019 drug raid
Mother of Mark Swidan, U.S. citizen wrongfully detained in China, fears he may take his life