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UNITED STATES
| Nationwide Tour VICTORIES | (1) |
| 2001 BUY.COM Dayton Open. | |
| INTERNATIONAL VICTORIES | |
| (1): 1996 Thailand Open | |
| Best Nationwide Tour Finishes | |
| 1-- BUY.COM Dayton Open. | |
| Other Information | |
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Member of Nationwide Tour in 1997, 2000-02. Returning to the PGA TOUR for the first time since 1994 after finishing 15th on the 2002 Nationwide Tour money list. Finished T13 in the season-ending TOUR Championship, good enough to remain in the 15th spot on the money list. Just one year earlier, he entered the tournament in the same spot, only to be denied a PGA TOUR card after being bumped to the 16th spot. Posted 12 top-25 finishes and seven top-10 finishes during the season. Made the cut in the final seven tournaments, finishing out of the top-20 just one time during that stretch. Shot a course-record and career-best 11-under-par 61 in the third round of the BMW Charity Pro-Am at The Cliffs, tying three others for the low round of the year on the Nationwide Tour. Earned his first career win on the Nationwide Tour at the 2001 Dayton Open where he shared the lead after each of the first three days. Posted a final-round 7-under-par 65 to edge Bo Van Pelt by one stroke. His winning score of 26-under par tied the Nationwide Tour record held by Chris Smith (1997 Omaha Classic) for the most strokes under par in a 72-hole event. Made the cut in 18 of 27 events in 2001. Monday qualified for both Tours in 2000, ended up playing in a combined 13 events and making over $100,000. Made three of five cuts on the PGA TOUR, including a T18 at the B.C. Open. Had two top-25s on the Nationwide Tour in 1997, but struggled making just eight cuts in 22 starts. Became ill later that year and tests found that his red blood cell count was high. Had been diagnosed with testicular cancer in 1995. Underwent surgery and returned to his golf career in March 1996. Won the Thailand Open later that year and earned spot in 1996 Sarazen World Open Championship, where he finished T9. Best finish in 1994 was a T13 at the B.C. Open. Led 1994 Buick Southern Open after first round but faltered and finished T60. Five-time winner on Tommy Armour Tour. NJCAA All-America selection in 1986 at Scottsdale Community College. |
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