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Ziehm: With Web.com success, Hopfinger a contender for PGA Tour

The Web.com Tour is billed as the pathway to the PGA Tour, and Lake Forest's Brad Hopfinger is making progress on that journey.

Last fall Hopfinger regained his Web.com privileges with a gutty showing in two stages of the qualifying school. He survived Stage 2 with a 4-under-par final round to make it to the finals by one stroke. In the finals Hopfinger covered those 72-holes in a solid 14-under-par - the exact number to earn playing privileges for the first eight tournaments of this Web.com season. No. 8 is this weekend in the $550,000 North Mississippi Classic, a new event in Oxford, Miss. It tees off on Thursday, and there'll be a shuffling of players based on their money winnings after this tournament but it's not a concern for Hopfinger.

"I had a fourth-place in the Bahamas and a top-20 in Mexico. I should have plenty of cash to play the rest of the year," he said.

Actually, his long-term prognosis is better than that. He is No. 42 on the money list, which makes him a contender to earn his PGA Tour card when the 27-tournament regular season ends in August.

"Goal is the top 25, so you can make the PGA Tour," he said. "I feel a lot more prepared than I did two years ago when I lost my Web.com status."

Crack the top 25 and Hopfinger will have status on the PGA Tour for the 2018-19 season. If he doesn't make the top 25, he can still advance if he plays well in the four-tournament Web.com Playoffs in September. The top 25 there go to the PGA Tour as well.

Hopfinger, 28, is one of eight players to win both the Illinois State Amateur (2011) and the Illinois Open (2014). He started playing at Exmoor Country Club in Highland Park and has been coached by Jeff Mory, head pro at Conway Farms in Lake Forest, since he was 12.

He took his game to the collegiate ranks, playing at Kansas for one year and then transferring to Iowa for the final three. His teammates with the Hawkeyes included Deerfield's Vince India, who won the Illinois State Amateur the year before Hopfinger did. India also made it to the Web.com Tour but lost his playing privileges. He missed regaining them at qualifying school when he finished one stroke behind Hopfinger.

Elgin's Carlos Sainz Jr., also a former Illinois Open winner (2016), just missed out as well. That one stroke difference has left India and Sainz struggling to get into tournaments while Hopfinger has been playing.

Sainz got into five of the first seven tournaments, made the cut in three and had tied for eighth in Colombia. He's No. 64 on the money list and will play this week in Mississippi, perhaps a good omen since he attended college at Mississippi State. India is 0-for-3 on making the cut in his Web.com appearances this season.

  Michael Schachner of Libertyville shot a 65 on Monday to qualify for this week's Web.com Tour tournament. Steve Lundy/slundy@dailyherald.com/file

Another local golfer, Libertyville's Michael Schachner, made 10 birdies and shot a 65 on Monday to qualify for the North Mississippi tourney.

Hopfinger plans to play five weeks in row, ending the stretch at the Rust-Oleum Championship at Ivanhoe Club in June.

"It's been a wild ride," said Hopfinger. "We all want to get to the PGA faster, but it's not always that easy. I'm just grateful to still be playing golf for a living."

Northwestern and Hannah Kim hope to contend for another Big Ten women's golf title this weekend in Ohio. Associated Press/2017 file

NU, Illini women chase Big Ten title

Last year coach Emily Fletcher's Northwestern women's team went all the way to the title match of the NCAA finals at Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove. On Friday, the veteran team begins another postseason at the Big Ten tournament at TPC Rivers Bend in Mainsville, Ohio. The NCAA regionals follow in two weeks.

The Wildcats, Big Ten champions in three of the past five years, are ranked 14th nationally and only Michigan State (12) is ranked higher among Big Ten teams. Coach Renee Slone's Illinois team is peaking at the right time. The Illini take a No. 29 ranking into postseason play and have won their past two tournaments.

Following his strong performance in the Masters, Arlington Heights native Doug Ghim plans to turn pro after he plays in the U.S. Open in June at New York's Shinnecock Hills. Associated Press

Here and there

Arlington Heights resident Doug Ghim, the low amateur in the Masters, plans to turn pro after competing in June's U.S. Open. As was the case in the Masters, Ghim has an exemption into the Open at New York's Shinnecock Hills course thanks to his runner-up finish in last year's U.S. Amateur. He's finishing his senior season at Texas.

• Kemper Lakes members have given a name to the final three holes of their Kildeer course. Following a membership vote they're calling it The Gauntlet. It's marked by a rock near the No. 16 tee now and more decorations will likely be added before to the staging of the KPMG Women's PGA Championship in June.

Preparations for the KPMG event are well underway with tournament staffers headed by director Jackie Endsley and director of operations Eric Nuxhol operating out of a trailer at the club. Cristie Kerr is the first player to request time for a practice round before tournament week. She'll get a peek at the course in June.

• Weather problems forced the Illinois PGA to cancel its Pro-Pro-Pro Scramble at Metamora Fields and reschedule its Pro-Assistants event. Next up is the Assistants Match Play Championship, which begins its three-day run on Monday at Ruth Lake in Hinsdale.

• For more golf news, visit lenziehmongolf.com.

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