Ryan Brehm Claims Unimaginable Win in Puerto Rico To Keep PGA Tour Card

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Ryan Brehm Wins 2022 Puerto Rico Open
Ryan Brehm and caddie/wife Chelsey Brehm celebrate on the 18th green after winning the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve GC on Mar 6, 2022 in Rio Grande. (Photo by Stacy Revere via Getty Images)

Ryan Brehm defied the odds, and wrapped up one of the most heartwarming stories in the history of the PGA Tour when he claimed a truly unimaginable victory in the Puerto Rico Open.

Brehm lost his PGA Tour card for the 2022 season, but because he’d missed the 2021 Zurich Classic due to COVID-19, he was granted one final start using a Minor Medical Exemption to try to regain his playing privileges. He strategically chose the Puerto Rico Open – easily the season’s weakest field, where he tied for 11th in 2021. To keep his PGA Tour card, though, Brehm needed to finish first or second, or it was back to the Korn Ferry Tour.

How long were the odds? In his 67 previous PGA Tour starts, Brehm never posted a single top-10 finish.

“There was really no pressure at all,” Brehm said. “I had everything to gain, and nothing to lose.”

Ryan Brehm Wins 2022 Puerto Rico Open
Ryan Brehm makes birdie putt on the 9th hole during the final round of the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve GC on Mar 6, 2022 in Rio Grande. (Photo by Mike Mulholland via Getty Images)

Well, Brehm gained plenty in an oppressive psychological challenge for a golfer as he made a game that had been so hard on him for so long look easy. He said he felt calm as he ever has on a golf course all week because he enjoys the Korn Ferry Tour, but his life dramatically changed in fairytale and championship fashion. He closed with a bogey-free 5-under-par 67 for a 72-hole total of 20-under 268 at Grand Reserve Golf Club in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico – a record six-stroke victory over Max McGreevy, who was making only his 11th PGA Tour start.

“I’m speechless,” said a smiling Brehm.

A month shy of his 36th birthday, Brehm entered the tournament ranked 773rd in the Official World Golf Rankings, the lowest-ranked player to win on the PGA Tour since Jim Herman was No. 1,252 when the captured in the 2019 Barbasol Championship.

As if that wasn’t enough notoriety, Brehm won with his wife, Chelsey, on his bag. It marked the first time a wife caddied for a victorious husband since Justine Reed carried for Patrick in the 2013 Wyndham Championship. He earned 300 FedExCup points, a fully exemption through the 2023-24 season and a spot in The Players Championship, which begins Thursday at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra, Fla.

Ryan Brehm Wins 2022 Puerto Rico Open
Ryan Brehm and caddie/wife Chelsey Brehm walk on the 5th hole during the final round of the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve GC on Mar 6, 2022 in Rio Grande. (Photo by Stacy Revere via Getty Images)

“It might sound like Bill Belichick or Nick Saban, but honestly, I wasn’t thinking about the impact of my status or anything this week,” said Brehm, who needed a win or solo second to retain his PGA Tour status.

“I think that’s probably the real lesson. I have people on my team that will do that for me. Really, I just need to put my head down and hit good golf shot after good golf shot. That’s my job, and I’m going to trust people around me to do their job and they can take care of all those details for me.”

Making his 68th PGA Tour start in an event played opposite the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando, Fla., Brehm had a three-stroke lead entering the final round, carded five birdies in the first 11 holes and then parred in to earn the two-year exemption and spots in The Players Championship, PGA Championship in May and 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions in January.

Brehm heads to the PGA Tour’s flagship event after Chelsey signed him up before last week’s deadline, just in case.

“She believed,” Brehm said. “She was smart to do that.”

Ryan Brehm Wins 2022 Puerto Rico Open
Ryan Brehm and caddie/wife Chelsey Brehm pose with the trophy after winning the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve GC on Mar 6, 2022 in Rio Grande. (Photo by Stacy Revere via Getty Images)

After his final putt dropped, Ryan and Chelsey shared a long embrace and kiss. Waiting just off the green was Nate Lashley, winner of the 2019 Rocket Mortgage Classic with a bottle of champagne. During a post-round speech to the gallery, the 6-foot-4 Brehm finally teared up.

Brehm said he just tried to keep it simple while standing over some difficult shots in 30 mph wind gusts and driving rain for much of the back nine and stuck to a simple game plan that he and Chelsey had for all four rounds. He ended up becoming the first player to make his first PGA Tour Top 10 finish a victory since Jason Gore in 84 Lumber Classic in 2005.

“Our goal coming into this week was just to improve every day, every shot, every round, every hole,” said Brehm, who lives in Traverse City, Mich. “We committed to that, and I can say that it worked this week. I think it took a lot of mental discipline, took a lot of conversing. It was great having Chels up there with me caddying. It was a special week. I don’t know, there was just something special about it from the moment we landed.

“It’s can you produce the golf shots when you’re uncomfortable and when the pressure’s on and figure out a process to do that. We just tried to refine that process the best we could and learn from the mistakes. It just so happened there were very few mistakes and got a ‘W’, but in previous weeks there have been a lot of mistakes. So Chels and I just tried to move on from them, learn, put it in the memory bank. I didn’t really pay much attention to my back being up against the wall.”

Ryan Brehm Wins 2022 Puerto Rico Open
Ryan Brehm tears up during trophy presentation after winning the Puerto Rico Open at Grand Reserve GC on Mar 6, 2022 in Rio Grande. (Photo by Stacy Revere via Getty Images)

But in the next breath he admitted, “I look calm from the outside, but I’m a basket case inside.”

Brehm, a native of Mount Pleasant, Mich., played college golf at Michigan State, where he won five times, helped lead the Spartans to three Big Ten championship and later served as an assistant coach. He played on the PGA Tour Canada in 2014 and 2015, with his best finish a tie for second in the 2015 Great Waterway Classic. He then played on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2016, winning twice, including in the final regular season event, the WinCo Foods Portland Open. The victory moved him to fourth on the money list and secured him a PGA Tour for 2017.

In more than four years in the major leagues of golf, Brehm never finished in the Top 10 – until Sunday. His winner’s check of $660,000 nearly equaled his previous PGA Tour earnings of $810,391 and the $696,194 that he won in 89 starts on the Korn Ferry Tour. And he made only one bogey, on the 14th hole in the third round, while besting Martin Trainer’s tournament-record, three-stroke victory in 2019 with the largest winning margin on the PGA Tour this season.

“I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of doors open for me now after getting a victory,” Brehm said. “There will be some new challenges and situations that I’ll have to navigate, but, you know, we’ll be able to draw on this moving forward, which is going to be powerful, I think.”

Powerful, indeed, and why all of what Ryan and Chelsey achieved and enjoyed together is what often makes sports such a compelling and memorable endeavor.


2022 Puerto Rico Open


Leaderboard: Top-10 Finishers

Pos-Player-To Par (Final Rd)
1. Ryan Brehm -20 (-5)
2. Max McGreevy -14 (-3)
3. Brandon Wu -13 (-3)
3. Tommy Gainey -13 (-2)
5. Callum Tarren -12 (-2)
5. Chad Ramey -12 (-1)
7. Cameron Percy -11 (-6)
7. Nate Lashley -11 (-5)
7. Vaughn Taylor -11 (-4)
7. Kevin Yu -11 (-4)
7. Jim Herman -11 (-3)
7. Matthias Schwab -11 (-3)
7. Mark Hensby -11 (-3)
7. Brice Garnett -11 (-2)
7. Christopher Gotterup -11 (-2)

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