The Road to 2026 — From My Dad’s Shadow to the First Tee
When I was five years old, my dad put a cut-down golf club in my hands and took me to the range.
We didn’t talk about trophies or tours.
We just hit balls until sunset.
That’s where this started.
Every lesson about patience, discipline, and showing up when things get hard came from those evenings together.
Years later, golf became more than a game. It became our language.
In college, my game was trending upward and I earned my first win at Daytona. Then COVID shut the season down. Just as I was preparing to return, my dad was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. I stepped away from competitive golf and spent that time caring for him full-time until he passed in 2022.
For a while, I didn’t know if I’d ever come back.
But every time I walked past my clubs, it felt like unfinished business.
So I came back.
Slowly. Quietly. One tournament at a time.
2025 — Proof That I Belong
With the help of friends, family, and this community, we raised $4,000 last year and covered most of my Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying Tournament entry fee.
That support wasn’t symbolic. It directly funded opportunities.
And the results followed.
• Advanced cleanly through Pre-Qualifying in Valdosta
• Played consistently under par
• Entered First Stage as an amateur
• Sat –5 and T17 going into the final round
• Missed advancing to second stage by one spot (top 16 and ties moved on)
One spot.
Not “I’m not good enough.”
Just “not yet.”
That week showed me something important:
I belong at this level.
2026 — Treating This Like a Professional Season
This year, we’re not piecing things together week by week.
We’re building a full season.
I’m committed to:
• Americas Tour Q-School (March 16–20 at Country Club of Ocala)
• 15–20 Monday qualifiers
• Korn Ferry Tour Q-School in September
• Travel blocks across the U.S., Canada, and South America
• Playing enough events to give myself real statistical chances at earning status
Professional golf is simple math.
If you don’t have status, you earn it through qualifiers.
Every Monday costs money.
Every start matters.
The players who make it aren’t just talented. They’re the ones who can afford to keep showing up.
Full Transparency — The Season Budget
This isn’t a vague “support my dream” number.
It’s a working plan.
• Monday qualifiers (~$500 each × 15–20)
• Americas Q-School entry (~$3,000)
• Korn Ferry Q-School entry (~$6,000)
• Flights, rental cars, and travel
• ~50+ hotel nights
• Food, training, and recovery
• Extended stays for back-to-back events
Total estimated season cost: ~$50,000
Nothing extravagant.
Just reps, starts, and opportunity.
Partnership Opportunities
This campaign is no longer just about donations.
It’s about alignment.
I’m opening the door to:
• brand sponsorships
• small business partnerships
• logo placement and apparel
• social media collaborations
• event appearances
• structured profit-share or equity-style arrangements depending on contribution level
If you want to support casually, I’m grateful.
If you’re interested in partnering professionally, I’d love to connect directly.
Why I’m Still Doing This
Because every time I step onto the first tee, I still hear my dad behind me.
Same lessons. Same standards.
Show up. Work hard. Earn it.
2025 proved I can compete.
2026 is about removing financial barriers and giving myself the runway to break through.
If you believe in this journey, thank you for being here and for helping me take the next step.
Let’s go earn it.
— Andrew Reid Morris



