Ryan started playing
golf at the age of nine. His dad took him to play at Southwest Golf
Course with a friend’s golf clubs. He remembered that he shot
118 his very first round.
His first
tournament win was in 1988 in the nine-hole division of the Tascosa
Country Club junior club championship. He shot 46-44-46 for three rounds.
That was only the beginning.
Junior Golf
was a great time in Ryan’s life. He loved the game and loved to
compete. He played almost every Northern Texas PGA one-day event that
he could, winning several and having some other good finishes. Some
highlights during that time were runner-up finishes in the Texas-Oklahoma
Open in Wichita Falls and the Dr. Pepper Junior Classic in Amarillo.
Ryan’s
career really didn’t get started until high school. Growing up,
he loved other sports, especially basketball and baseball. He was told
he wouldn’t get to play that much his junior year in basketball,
so he dropped basketball and decided to focus on just golf. Looking
back, Ryan thoroughly appreciates the honesty of his high school basketball
coach! His junior year was the first year he just played golf and that’s
when Ryan started really improving and dreaming that one day he could
play on the PGA Tour. He finished 2nd at the Amarillo relays and won
in Tyler, Texas his junior year (1994). That same year, he finished
2nd at the regional tournament and 2nd at Texas 5-A State Tournament.
In 1995, Ryan signed with University of North Texas on a golf scholarship.
During his freshman year, he had several top 15 finishes and that year
won the Southland Conference Championship as a freshman. He was then
given the opportunity to transfer and play at his favorite school while
growing up, Texas A&M University. He transferred in the summer of
1996 to Texas A&M under Coach Bob Ellis and played three wonderful
years as an Aggie. During his years there, Ryan was selected to the
All Big 12 Team three times and won two tournaments while at A&M,
the Louisiana Classic and the Border Olympics. During college, he also
played in two U.S Amateurs and one Western Amateur. Ryan won the Southwestern
Amateur in 1999. A high light that he’ll never forget happened
in 1998 when he qualified for the 1998 U.S. Open Championship at Olympic
Club in San Francisco, California. His father, Butch, caddied every
step of the way. He played a practice round with Payne Stewart, one
of the PGA’s greatest and one of his favorite players throughout
his life. It was an unbelievable experience for Ryan.
He graduated
from Texas A&M University in May of 2000. It was now time to take
the next step, professional golf. He spent the summer of 2000 on the
Tightlies Tour where he won twice that summer. He went to the PGA Tour
qualifying school for the first time, but did not get through the first
stage. He spent the next season playing 14 tournaments on the Hooters
Tour and six on the Tightlies Tour. 2001 was a difficult year as a professional,
but it pushed Ryan to keep working towards his dream. He missed the
PGA Tour qualifying school again and spent the 2002 season on the Tightlies
Tour fulltime. Ryan had a breakout year winning three times and losing
in a playoff to finish 2nd on the Tightlies Tour. He didn’t miss
a single cut and finished the 2002 season on top with $81,000. Ryan
then successfully made it to the PGA Tour’s finals stage of qualifying
school and finished high enough to get his Nationwide Tour card for
2003. In only his 2nd tournament on the Nationwide Tour, he won the
Clearwater Classic (now the New Zealand PGA) in Christchurch, New Zealand,
earning $105,000. In 2003, he had five top 5 finishes with three 3rd
place finishes, making $286,000 and finishing 6th on the money list.
The success on the Nationwide Tour earned Ryan his PGA Tour card for
2004. A DREAM COME TRUE!!!!!
As a rookie
on the PGA tour he had some ups and downs, but achieved his main goal
for the year when he finished 2nd at the Southern Farm Bureau Classic
to retain his PGA card for 2005. Then, dream number two came true when
Ryan won the Funai Classic at Walt Disney World with a final round 62
to beat the world’s no.1 player, Vijay Singh, by three shots.
Can you believe it? Ryan was the fifth rookie to win on tour in 2004.
Then, dream number three came true when he qualified for the 2005 Masters
(Augusta, GA).
According to Ryan,
“You see…. Dreams do come true when you work hard and believe
in yourself.”
“Set your
dreams high, work hard and stay focused.”
“Nothing in
life is worth having, unless it’s worth working for.”