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Rebound opportunity: Hunter Mahan relishes the chance to write his next chapter

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NAPA, CA - OCTOBER 04:  Hunter Mahan plays his shot from the 12th tee during round one of the Safeway Open at the North Course of the Silverado Resort and Spa on October 4, 2018 in Napa, California.  (Photo by Robert Laberge/Getty Images)

NAPA, CA - OCTOBER 04: Hunter Mahan plays his shot from the 12th tee during round one of the Safeway Open at the North Course of the Silverado Resort and Spa on October 4, 2018 in Napa, California. (Photo by Robert Laberge/Getty Images)

He looks to overcome struggles inside the ropes and tragedy inside his family



    Written by Jim McCabe @PGATOUR

    Hunter Mahan's pre-round warm-up routine


    To appreciate the view of Hunter Mahan these days, it is best to first refer to snapshots from years gone by.

    Of that day in 2003, for instance, when he officially signed an equipment deal to signal his move to the professional ranks. “He showed up wearing an OSU (Oklahoma State University) T-shirt and gym shorts,” laughed Chance Cozby, the longtime director of tournament player relations for PING. “No pretenses.”

    Of that Monday in 2010 when another U.S. Ryder Cup loss on European soil was decided in the final game of the competition – Graeme McDowell edging Mahan, 3 and 1 – and teammates had finally tired of the media’s excessive interrogation of the man in that anchor match who ended with a poor chip. So, Stewart Cink spoke from the heart. “If you go up-and-down the line of TOUR players in Europe and the U.S. and ask them, ‘Would you like to be the last guy to decide the Ryder Cup?’, probably less than half would say they would and probably less than 10 percent would mean it. Hunter Mahan put himself in that position today; he was a man to put himself in that position.”

    Of that warm October afternoon at Oklahoma State’s Karsten Creek Golf Club, when Mahan – just five days after that crushing defeat to McDowell in Wales – hung around and mingled with 72 players and their parents for more than 3-1/2 hours as host of the PING Invitational. For sure, he was peppered with more Ryder Cup questions. Yes, he provided all the answers.

    Of that April Sunday in 2012, when Mahan’s victory at the Houston Open lifted him to a career-best No. 4 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

    Of that August in 2014 when a triumph at The Barclays assured Mahan of another trip to the TOUR Championship, meaning he had scripted a seven-year run of impeccable consistency: Appearances in all 32 FedExCup Playoffs events; two World Golf Championship wins; and berths on three Ryder Cup and four Presidents Cup teams.

    Of that Sunday in July of this year, when Mahan, having shared the 54-hole lead at the Barbasol Championship, bogeyed a pair of par-5s down the stretch and squandered his chance to win for the first time in four years.

    Put them together in one of those childhood flip books and you would see that Mahan has ridden the highs and lows that are as much a part of golf as doglegs and greenside bunkers – all the while maintaining an impeccable dignity. “Hunter,” said Cozby, “is just a stand-up guy.”

    Good perspective to consider for those who might wonder if there is a story developing along the lines of “the rise and fall and rise again” of Hunter Myles Mahan, who parlayed a share of second at the DAP Championship presented by NewBrick on Labor Day weekend into a 11th-place finish on the money list and 18th on the priority ranking. It assures him full status for 2018-19 after having played out of lower-tier categories for a few seasons. He will be making his fourth start of the season at this week’s The RSM Classic, the final event of the fall portion of the schedule.

    Mahan, whose eight-year run of elite golf – from 2007-2014, he ranked top 20 in ball-striking seven times, won six tournaments, and placed top 10 in 45 of 202 starts – is as impressive as his 2015-18 stretch is perplexing, has not let the slide define who he is. He and his wife, Kandi, welcomed a third child in the summer of ’16 and while it’s convenient to suggest that Mahan’s golf took a back seat to quality time at home, it remains tough to explain, he said.

    “There are just so many layers,” said Mahan, who has finished 49th, 183rd, 182nd, and 159th in the FedExCup standings each of the past four seasons after having been a fixture at the TOUR Championship for the previous eight. He acknowledged that it started to slip away in 2015 when he had just one top 10 over his last 13 tournaments and exited the Playoffs at the BMW Championship.

    “For the first time in my life, I really wasn’t sure what was going on,” he continued. “My ball-striking, usually so consistent, just didn’t feel the same.”

    From there, he added, “it was a slow bleed and a lack of confidence comes with that.”

    But for all the struggles on the golf course in ’15, ’16 and ’17, Mahan never lost his passion for competitive golf. He hooked on with Dallas-based swing coach Chris O’Connell, who had won praise for his work with Matt Kuchar – winner of last week’s Mayakoba Golf Classic -- and the foundation at home buoyed him. “When you’re surrounded by people you love and who love you, you don’t want to waste a day,” Mahan said.

    Little did he know how that faith was going to be tested early in 2018 when news was received “that took my breath away,” Mahan said. His wife’s sister, Katie Enloe -- whose husband, Jason Enloe, the head golf coach at SMU, is one of Hunter Mahan’s best friends -- had been diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia.

    For years, Mahan concedes he didn’t really “go deep into my technique” to study why he was so proficient a ball-striker. “I figure it was in my DNA and I knew that I was consistently good at it,” he said.

    Cozby remembers Mahan telling him there isn’t “a golf hole in the world that I don’t think I could stand up there and hit it in the fairway,” so clearly it was stunning when he dropped to 99th in ball-striking, then 144th in 2015 and 2016, respectively.

    Yet that mystery didn’t shake Mahan. Katie Enloe’s death in July did, however. The mother of two daughters was just 35.

    “To be here right now, with all that has happened, you know you just don’t have that much control of life and what might happen,” Mahan said. “But you realize life is so precious.”

    Understandably, Mahan had trouble focusing on golf, but he knew it was important “how you react” to heartache like this. Admirably, he and Kandi embraced golf, not so much Mahan’s own tournament golf, but instead, they poured their hearts and souls into the Mahan Family Foundation Match Play at Trinity Forest outside of Dallas and a sense of wonder consumed them on this day to support “KatieStrongTx.”

    Said Mahan: “It was clear to us that we wanted to do this, that we needed to do it.”

    To offer Mahan praise for putting so much time into a charitable foundation at a time when he was still trying to get his game back together does not register with him. It’s golf. It’s everywhere. He remembers in the aftermath of Celtic Manor and the gut-wrenching loss to McDowell in the 2010 Ryder Cup, how Steve Stricker “made a point of telling me he’d always be there for me.” And how Kuchar and Cink and Phil Mickelson and Jim Furyk and Davis Love III had Mahan’s back in front of a media that might not have been kicking a man when he was down, but they weren’t exactly letting him up without more questions about that deciding game.

    Of course, Mahan recovered from that bitter defeat. A starring role in the 2011 Presidents Cup win, two more triumphs in 2012, and a 2013 and ’14 seasons that saw him win over $3 million -- it was all proof that Mahan wasn’t down for the count. Nor is he now, said Cozby.

    “His priorities changed for a while,” Cozby noted. “He got to the point where he didn’t want to be at the golf course. But we think Hunter has got a lot of game left.”

    At 36, Mahan agrees, and he relishes the opportunity in front of him. He improved to 69th in ball-striking in 2017 and 30th this past year, so he feels as if he’s trending positively.

    “On or off the golf course, it’s always an interesting challenge to pick yourself back up,” he said. “I’m motivated for this opportunity.”

    Jim McCabe has covered golf since 1995, writing for The Boston Globe, Golfweek Magazine, and PGATOUR.COM. Follow Jim McCabe on Twitter.

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