Commentary

Unselfish act leads to unlikely PGA win

Nate Lashley took advantage of the fact that David Berganio Jr. withdrew from last weekend’s Rocket Mortgage Classic after his clubs did not arrive on time to win his first event on the PGA Tour.
Nate Lashley took advantage of the fact that David Berganio Jr. withdrew from last weekend’s Rocket Mortgage Classic after his clubs did not arrive on time to win his first event on the PGA Tour.

The text messages kept coming until David Berganio Jr. stopped counting, somewhere around 100, all wanting to celebrate his small role in an unlikely victory.

Berganio didn't win the Rocket Mortgage Classic.

He didn't even play.

In fact, he didn't know anything about Nate Lashley, the last player to get in the tournament when Berganio chose to withdraw.

It was only after Berganio returned home from Detroit that he heard Lashley opened with a 63 and that both were Arizona Wildcats, separated by a generation and a different variety of hard times.

"I texted my coach [Rick LaRose] and said, 'Who is this kid from Arizona?' " Berganio said. "He told me the whole story and I was like, 'Holy smokes.' "

The story is nothing short of remarkable.

Lashley was a junior at Arizona in 2004 when his parents and girlfriend died in a plane crash on their way home to Nebraska after watching him play in an NCAA regional. The mental anguish was more than he realized.

Lashley struggled upon turning pro, dabbled in real estate during a break from golf and began the slow climb back through five tours over the next decade until reaching the PGA Tour as a 34-year-old rookie in the fall of 2017.

Lashley wasn't in the field at Detroit. He didn't make it through Monday qualifying, but he stuck around as an alternate in case his luck changed.

That's where Berganio enters the picture.

Berganio has been on a medical extension since 2004 because of a bulging disk in his back that took 11 years to be diagnosed as a problem in his hip. He has played only 28 times in the past 15 years on the PGA Tour.

He was certain the new PGA Tour event in Detroit would be No. 29 when he arrived Monday morning before last weekend's tournament.

There was only one problem: His golf clubs never made the connection in Dallas, and Berganio didn't get them until Tuesday night. The course is occupied all day Wednesday with the pro-am.

"I wasn't able to play a practice round," Berganio said. "A friend of mine always says, 'Fail to prepare, prepare to fail.' I'm 50. I know some kid behind me was waiting to get in, and I didn't want to take up a spot. And then this happened."

Lashley followed that 63 with a 67, and then he blew open the tournament with another 63 to build a six-shot lead. He started the final round with two birdies in three holes and was on his way to a six-shot victory.

His sister, Brooke, flew in from Phoenix, along with a host of friends and family from Arizona and Nebraska to share an emotional moment. The victory gives Lashley a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour, along with a spot in the British Open, Masters and PGA Championship.

"I'm just thankful I got in the tournament," Lashley said.

Berganio never felt so happy for not being able to play, but only to a point. The text messages kept pouring in Sunday night and into Monday, all filled with amazement that a withdrawal could change someone's life.

"I didn't change his life," Berganio said. "I didn't hit a shot."

All he did was unwittingly provide an opportunity. It just happened to fall to Lashley, who took it from there.

Berganio knows all about opportunity.

He was born to a 15-year-old mother on welfare and raised in a housing project in Pacoima, Calif. A priest from the Guardian Angel Catholic Church gave him a starter set of Chi Chi Rodriguez clubs when Berganio was 12 to keep him off the streets.

"He gave me an opportunity to hit all the golf balls I wanted," Berganio said. "He never hit a shot for me."

Berganio took it from there.

He was a two-time winner of the U.S. Amateur Public Links and played on the winning Walker Cup in 1993.

In three full years on the PGA Tour before injuries shut him down, Berganio had two good chances to win. He played in the final group of the Byron Nelson Classic in 1997 with the eventual winner, 21-year-old Masters champion Tiger Woods. Five years later, he lost in a playoff at the Bob Hope Classic to Phil Mickelson.

"I wasn't trying to beat No. 50 in the world or No. 150 in the world," he said with a laugh. "It was either No. 1 or 2."

He has three PGA Tour starts remaining on his medical extension. He wants to use them wisely. He thought Detroit was a wise move until American Airlines didn't get his golf clubs to him on time. For Berganio, there was only one option.

An unselfish act. An unlikely victory.

photo

AP file photo

In this July 1, 2001, file photo, David Berganio, Jr. of Granada Hills, Calif., drives off the sixth tee during the final round of the Greater Hartford Open golf tournament in Cromwell, Conn.

Sports on 07/03/2019

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