(L-R) Martin, Cy Nobles, Russ - Thank you Cy and wife Gayle, Wichita host family
Wichita, Kansas - August 3, 2009
(L-R) Martin, Mrs. Janice Hanna, Russ, Mr. Bill Hanna - our Aggies in Wichita. Thank you so much!
Overland Park, Kansas PGA Nationwide Tournament
Griffin Mott and Martin - Thanks to Mott family for hosting Martin and Russ all week.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
From the Valero Texas Open - Hello Friends
When
I woke up on Saturday, May 9th, I was preparing for a five week, non-stop Nationwide Tour schedule that would begin
at the end of the month. Since the Mexico Open was postponed, I thought this was an interval of practice and sleeping, before
heading to Raleigh, North Carolina on May 23rd.My former teammate at Texas A&M University,
Trey Todd, was getting married in a week in Abilene, and I was going to be a groomsman in his wedding. I planned to head for
west Texas on Thursday.Never did I suspect that one phone call would change everything.
THE PHONE CALL
At about two o’clock in the afternoon I got a phone call from a man named
Tony Piazzi, President and CEO of Golf San Antonio.“Would you like to play in our tournament in
San Antonio?, Mr. Piazzi asked,“the Valero Texas Open.”I was in shock.
Was this really happening? I said “yes” after a moment of being literally speechless.Of course
playing on the PGA Tour was a dream of mine, but I didn’t realize that it would come so soon.So
I then did what anyone else would do, go practice!(Haha)
Two days later, I left Dallas and picked up my caddie, Russell Helson, in his hometown of Georgetown, Texas.On Tuesday, we played a 7:30 a.m. practice roundin a foursome made up of my former teammate Texas
A&M,Robert “Bobby” Gates, whoshot a 64 the day before to Monday Qualify,Texan Chad Campbell and Heath Slocum.Chad and Heath were class acts the whole way as they put up
with me being a little star struck.We finished the round and were greeted on the range by my favorite
BBQ in the world, Rudy’s!I thought, it would be real easy to get used to this whole PGA Tour thing.Then, on Wednesday, Russell and I went over to the Palmer course at La Cantera Golf Course to play in the off-site
pro-am.Despite the wind blowing about 50 mph, we had a blast with our amateurs as usual.I’m
still waiting to win a pro-am.I’m beginning to think a Wednesday pro-am is tougher to win than an
actual tournament.
MY
FIRST ROUND ON THE PGA TOUR
I
started the first round the next day at 2:05 p.m. off of the 10th with Aron Price and Matt Bettencourt.Brian Winnett, my high school golf coach from Duncanville, Texas made the trip to watch me play. His familiar face
relaxed me a bit, which is what I needed.I struggled to control some nervousness on the first tee, an
uphill par 4 with a stiff wind coming towards us.I needed Coach Norman Dale of the Hickory Huskers from
the movie, “Hoosiers,” to come measure the cups out there just to calm me down or something.And I thought to myself, this is the same golf that I’ve been playing my whole life.There’s
really no difference.I calmed the nerves and was able to hit a decent tee shot, second shot and par the
first hole.I shot one under, 69, the first round and was in a good position.
MAKING THE CUT
While some people would not expect a player to make the cut in his first PGA Tour
tournament, I expected nothing less. In the second round, I was even par for the tournament standing on 17 tee, a par 3, one
over for the second round.I knew I had to get to at least 1 under to make the cut.The
hole was about 190 yards into a light breeze.I smoked a high 5-iron into the back pin about 7 feet away
and made the putt for birdie to go one under.I needed to par 18 to make the cut. On 18, a par 4, l pulled
out my driver and hit my tee shot left into a fairway bunker.From the bunker, I decided on a 6-iron.The ball shot up high and into the hospitality tents left of the green. The crowd heard the ball hit the roof.It was embarrassing how bad the shot was.Luckily, the PGA Tour gives generous drops around grandstands.
I was given a free drop about 40 yards short and left of the green.I pulled out my 64 degree wedge and
sent it straight into the air. It landed about 8 feet away from the hole.I knew I had to make the putt
to make the cut. I lined it up and pulled the putter straight back. The ball dove into the center of the hole.I gave the biggest fist pump of my life!
PLAYING SATURDAY
Saturday was nearly perfect.I was paired with Matt Bettencourt again. I enjoy playing with
him for one reason: he plays fast.I’ve developed a reputation on the Nationwide tour as a fast player.
Matt makes me look slow.On top of that, he is a super nice guy. We teed off at 8:11 a.m .and somewhere
around 5:30 p.m., after 7 birdies and a 5 hour rain delay, I had a 64 by name on the leaderboard.Just
to play is thrilling.To put together a great round is extra special.For the first
time, I was on a CBS golf broadcast putting out on 18.I later saw the tape and thought “so that’s
what I look like in HD”.
FINAL
ROUND
The
final round was fun but frustrating. I wanted to try to get into the top-10, so I could play in the Byron
Nelson Championship the next week.I shot 71 to finish in a tie for 40th place, far short of
my goal.But the walk up 18 fairway was one of the coolest moments I’ve had in golf.The galley applauded as our threesome approached the green.Charlie Wi made a tap in for birdie.
Willis Garrettalso made a birdie putt. And I made par to finish my first PGA tournament 69-70-64-71-274
(6 under).
HELLO FRIENDS
After
my 2nd round, I was interviewed on Sirius Satellite Radio’s PGA Tour Channel, and I was asked what my goals
were for the week.I responded: “ I want to play well. And , I want to meet Jim Nantz of CBS Sports.”I heard Mr. Nantz speak at Texas A&M , when I was a freshman in 2004. Ever since then, I’ve always been a
big fan of him. Well, someone else took note of that from my radio interview. After my final round, I was stopped outside
the scoring tent by a young lady who worked for CBS Sports. She asked me, “do you still want to meet Jim Nantz?”I said, “Heck yeah!”So she walked me up to the tower behind the 18th green
and into the booth where Mr. Nantz and Ian Baker-Finch were announcing the play-by-play.I saw Mr.
Nantz in the back of the booth.He motioned for me to come over.We waited until a commercial
break.Then Mr. Nantz took off his headset and said “hello Martin”.He was
as smooth off the air as he is on.He showed me around the booth and helped me get a little comfortable
with how things work.I didn’t realize how complicated broadcasting a golf tournament was. That’s
got to be way tougher than actually playing golf!Mr. Nantz gave me a headset to listen to the broadcast,
which was one of the coolest moments all week.If you listen to the actual broadcast, Mr. Nantz gives me
a special “Hello Friend” while scrolling through the scores, his signature greeting during the Masters coverage.I stayed in the booth for about 30 minutes. After that, Mr. Nantz signeda copy of his book.The inscription read:“I hope to put a green jacket on you in Butler’s Cabin someday.”
It also was Mr. Nantz’s 50thBirthday.
SPECIAL THANKS
Special thanks to Tony Piazza and his entire staff
for giving me the opportunity to play in the Valero Texas Open.I will never forget their support during
my rookie year.That turned out to be a good thing. Thanks to Cliff Dugosh, Chris Curiel, and Brandon Leone
for hosting me all week in San Antonio.And I appreciate Coach Winnett of Duncanville, who is retiring
this month and my swing coach, Neil Wilkins of Sugarland for making the trip and all my friends who d walked the steep cart
paths of La Cantera. Congratulations to Trey and Casey Todd, who lost not one but two groomsman to the PGA Tour last week,
Bobby Gates and me. And finally, congratulations to Coach Higgins and the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Golf team for advancing
to the NCAA National Championship in Toledo, Ohio. Whoop! Thanks for all the people who came out there
and supported me for the week, my old roommate Will Harrell, especially my old friends from high school, Jeff Walston, Michael
Miles, Daniel Gossett, and TJ Drake, y’all are the best.
FIVE STATE SWING
Russ and I are headed to Raleigh on May 23 for the Nationwide Rex Hospital Open and then to Nationwide tournaments
in Maryland, Tennessee, Arkansas and West Virginia. I love the Nationwide Tour because it gives us opportunities, which can
lead to one phone call that turns a routine Saturday into an unexpected and life changing opportunity. Come see us play this
summer and say hello.
“But the fruit
of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.Against
such things there is no law.”Galatians 5:22
Well, I’m back in my home base of Dallas, Texas after a two-step in Georgia for the
Athens Regional Foundation Classic and the South Georgia Classic Presented by First State Bank & Trust Company in Valdosta.As always, it’s a real treat and privilege to be a part of the PGA Nationwide Tour.So every
time I get the opportunity to tee it up, it’s exciting.
Before I write
about the golf tournaments I played, I have to mention that I had the opportunity to be a “patron” of the final
round of The Masters.As a member of the Nationwide Tour, I am allowed a free , daily pass at Augusta
National.I scheduled my trip to begin early to take advantage of this tour benefit.I kept thinking“why didn’t they mention this after Q-school at the orientation?”It’s a PGA benefit almost as good as health and dental insurance.
The Masters
At5:00 a.m. on Sunday of The Masters,Nationwide Tour player and
friend, Josh Teater,and I left Athens and headed down I-20 toward Augusta to stand in line in order to
get a good seat.Going to The Masters was unlike any experience I’ve had as a golf spectator.The course is phenomenal. It’s true that television doesn’t really show the slopes and elevation changes.The fan atmosphere rivals that of afootball game on a Saturday at Texas A&M University’s
Kyle Field.I waited for two hours on the 8th tee box to see Tiger and Phil come through and
smash drivers.Then I spent the rest of the day on #15 the Par 5 to watch guys give
it a rip in 2.My swing coach, Neil Wilkins of Sugarland, Texas told me that you can only go to The Masters
once as a spectator. The next time, he says, I must go as a player. So I guess I may not return to Augusta until I’m
invited to play.I know that someday I’ll be playing there.
Athens
Back in Athens at the Jennings Mill Country Club, I made my 6th cut on the tour easily with opening
rounds of 70-71. But during both tournaments I struggled with roller coaster rounds.I was playing aggressively
and making a lot of birdies.But the downside was that I was also making some big mistakes resulting in
double bogeys.In Athens, I was T4 in birdies for the week with 20, but I was T2 in double bogeys with
4.I don’t care who you are. You aren’t going to be able to move up the leader board when you
are making double bogeys. It doesn’t take a genius to figure that out. So my goal is to continue to minimize mistakes
by better assessing risks and taking trouble out of the picture as much as possible.
I
also witnessed something in Athens that I’ll probably never see again in my life.I was paired with
Brendon Todd and Neal Lancaster the first and second rounds in Athens.Brendon Todd made a hole-in-one
the first day on the 17th hole.I was thinking “wow that was a great shot”, but
I didn’t think anything of it after that.The very next morning on our first nine holes (we started
on the back), Brendon gets up on 17 and aces it again!Our whole group was stunned to say the least.Here is the link to the video of Brendon’s second hole in one.
In Valdosta at KinderlouForest Golf Course, it was the same story.I was T7 in birdies with 17, but T1 in doubles with 3. Kinderlou played almost 78-hundred yards, just about the longest
course on the PGA or Nationwide Tours.The distance wasn’t the problem for me though, as I struggled
again on the greens.I feel like I’m playing well enough every week to win, but I need to eliminate
my mistakes and minimize penalties to avoid the big numbers.My short game really needs to become more
consistent if I want to win out here.I didn’t have my best stuff in Valdosta, but I was able to
keep the ball in play and shoot some consistent numbers.
Statistics
Ifinished T24 in Athens (70-71-72-70-283), and T29 in Valdosta (73-69-72-71-285) and
remained in the Top 10 (#7) on the money list.I lead the tour in overall birdies after eight tournaments,
30 rounds with 128 birdies. The player closest to my total has 18 fewer birdies at 110. I have 3 Top 10s and 4 Top 25s so
far. The PGA statistics tell me to keep working hard on all aspects of my game.
What’s Next
I
will use the next couple of weeks that I have off to work very hard on my short game, as it was mostly my putting that cost
me shots.And I will play in my former golf team’s Texas A&M Golf Booster Club event at Traditions
Golf Course in College Station. Gig’em Aggies!This is one of my favorite things to do all year.
While my professional career is important, I value relationships and my faith above all else. I am not
playing the BMW only because I am a groomsman in the wedding of my former Aggie teammate, Trey Todd in Abilene, Texas. It
is the same week as the South Carolina tournament.Meanwhile, I’m watching the swine flu news and
am currently in the Mexico tournament. I’ll definitely tee it up at the North Carolina, Maryland, Tennessee, Arkansas
and West Virginia tournaments making the trip in my van. The only airline flight is to Pittsburgh and a 2-hour drive to the
Nationwide Tour Players Cup at Pete Dye Golf Course in Bridgeport, West Virginia. That’s five weeks on the road after
Mexico.Until then I’m going to enjoy the break.The next couple of weeks I’ll
be practicing hard on my game with some stick and puck sessions sprinkled in between.
New Friends
If you live near a Nationwide tour stop, come watch us play and I will sign a ball for
you.
Thanks so much to my Athens
host family, Laura and Kevin McHugh for sharing their beautiful home with my caddie, RussellHelson, and
me for the week of the tournament.Y’all are the best, and no host family could be more loving and
warmer than you both were.Thanks for opening your hearts and refrigerator and letting me play with Halle,
the dog, every day.
Thanks for reading my blog and God bless.
“This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our
lives for our brothers.”1 John 3:16
Well it feels so good to be back home in Texas after two weeks on the road. I love my Lone
Star State and have become a boastful, native son, some might say insufferably proud at times. The first week was spent
in Lafayette, Louisiana at the Chitimacha Louisiana Open. The trip was mostly filled with great Cajun food and four
rounds of golf in between meals. Two of those rounds were unexpected! The 36-hole cut line was a little more dramatic
than I would have liked. I made the cut on the number at one under, but I didn't find out until mid-Saturday morning
when a large group of players finished their 2nd rounds a day late due to rainy conditions.
In the hotel room, Russell Helson, my caddie, was refreshing the computer every few minutes and giving a dramatic
play-by-play of the action via the live scoring on pgatour.com. It came down to one player making a final bogey on his
final hole. This was as close as it gets! The player made a bogey and 14 guys were sticking around for the weekend, when the
cut moved from two under to one under. I was one of them. So we jumped in the car and rushed to the course to warm up.
On Sunday, I posted a 66, my best score on the Nationwide Tour at that time. I finished in a tie for 36th place at four under
for the tournament. Thank you Neil Wilkins, my swing coach, from Sugarland, Texas
for making the trip over to Lafayette.
After Louisiana, I headed to Houston to Monday qualify for
the Shell Open. I shot 70 (-2) at Cypresswood. 65 was the number. Though I failed to make it in, I played well and gained
some confidence from the round on a course I had never seen before and with no yardage book available. The Monday qualifier
looked like a PGA Tour event unto itself. So many foreign players were in the Shell Open because of the upcoming Masters.
That left some PGA Tour players out of the Shell and trying to Monday qualify for the very competitive event. After the Cypresswood
round, it was good to reunite with my old teammate from Texas A&M, Canadian Tour player Bobby Gates and some other close
Texas friends that I hadn't seen recently.
From Houston, Russell and I jumped on a Continental flight
and headed for the City by the Bay. I was mostly pumped for the week, because of the beautiful views that San Francisco
has to offer and also the daily visit to In-N-Out Burger. Seriously, it is one of my west coast "food groups."
Stonebrae Golf Course in Hayward, California appears to be the highest point in the entire Oakland/San Francisco area, as
you could see both skylines from the 1st tee. The first day was incredibly windy. The course is completely unprotected, so
scores were especially high on Thursday. I shot 74-67-63-70 - 274 (-10) to finish in a tie for 4th. The 63 in
the 3rd round tied my personal best for lowest round in a tournament.
It felt good to be in the hunt again on a big stage. I felt confident all week, and I was very aggressive.
In the final round, I got off to a shaky start with a four-putt on #1 and a bogey on #2. I stayed patient and positive.
I know I have the game to compete out here. I just need to minimize my mistakes. Through six tournaments, I have three
Top 10 finishes (Moonah, NZ Open, Stonebrae) and my putting stats are #1 on the Nationwide. I am currently #1 in birdies on
the Nationwide. But I have many things to learn and work on to improve and minimize costly mistakes. Russ and I are
working hard on getting the right club in my hands at the right time too.
It was fun to be interviewed by The Golf Channel at Lafayette and San Francisco. Thank you to all the television
folks, especially Jerry Foltz for all the positive comments he wrote on his blog, "Shag Bag." Some people wonder
if the television coverage is distracting. It isn't for me. My mom is a producer, and I've been in front of
her cameras for years. However, I do plan to take voice lessons and improve my singing for future appearances on The
Golf Channel. My loyal audience is demanding an encore!
I have this
week off, although I will be headed back to beautiful College Station, Texas to play in an AJGA Junior-Amateur, a charity
event at Traditions Golf Course. It will be kind of surreal to hang around a junior golf tournament. Not since
the summer of 2004 have I played in an AJGA event, the world's best tour in junior golf. I look forward to seeing my A&M
Coach, J.T. Higgins and many of my former teammates on the Fightin Texas Aggie Golf Team. Whoop!
Russ and I leave on Saturday for a two week trip to Georgia where I'll play in the Athens Regional
Foundation Classic and the South Georgia Classic in Valdosta. So can you guess where
I will be on Sunday? My PGA membership gets me one free day pass through the other set of pearly gates, the ones in Augusta.
Until my next post, God bless you and pray for our safe travel on this exciting journey.
"If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation, the old has gone, the new has come!"
My runner-up finish at the New Zealand Open was
encouraging. Of course, a win would have been better!Alex Prugh and his caddie Zach Bixler have become
good friends.We hung out together in Australia and New Zealand, so it was good to see him at the top of
the leader board. This is his second year on the Nationwide.So he was due! And shooting 64 the last day
was obscene. He earned it.Don’t worry though; I made him pay for dinner that
last night.
My stats in New Zealand – 67-69-68-68=272 (16 under) were solid.From
tee to green, I hit a lot of good shots.My ball striking was above average.The Hills
rewards ball striking, so I think that is why I did well.I want to get a little more consistent with the
putter though.I will be working on that before my next tournament in Louisiana.
During
the third round when I was the tournament leader, my ball hit a woman next to the #12 green.It broke her
nose, which was pretty disturbing to her and me.Officials put her in a cart and carried her to get emergency
medical help.I putted out and made a par, despite feeling pretty unnerved about it.Russell
said, don’t worry, most pro golfers have this happen sometime in their career, which brings me to the subject of the
crowds at the NZ Open.They were phenomenal. Before the NZ Open, the biggest crowds I played in front of
were at the Texas State Open at The Cascades in Tyler.In Queenstown, the crowds were well above 10 thousand
each day.I read estimates for the weekend reached 40-thousand. The crowds were so loud in their reactions,
Russ and I knew when my ball was close to the pin by the sound of the spectators.Conversely, we also knew
when it wasn’t close by the silence. This was a really positive experience to play in front of a large crowd and TV
cameras.I gained a lot of confidence playing in front of the big galleries.I was nervous
a lot, but I was also confident, which is most important.
At the close of the trip, the flight from
Auckland to Los Angeles wasn’t too bad.It went fast mostly because Air New Zealand has individual
touch screens with movies, TV shows and other entertainment for every passenger.I watched the entire 2008
Rugby League World Cup.I was planning on mastering the Rubik’s Cube, but I lost my cube toward the
end of the trip. If you have a Rubik’s Cube you aren’t using, send it to me. I promise to master it on long car
and plane trips!It was great to get back to my family in Dallas.Thanks Grammy for
one of your fabulous cakes! (This is a tradition in our family.)
Next
up is Louisiana Chitimacha Classic in Lafayette.We are leaving Monday, March 23 and are routed through
Beaumont to pick up Russell.After the tournament, I will be playing the Shell Open Qualifier in Spring.If I qualify, I’ll withdraw from the Stonebrae tournament in San Francisco. I have college tournament experience
on both courses at Redstone. Otherwise, Russell and I fly out of Houston to SF on Monday, March 30th. Then it’s
back to Dallas for a two-week trip to Georgia.
So far, I am adjusting well to the travel and playing.When you are high enough on the money list, you are asked to play the pro-ams on Wednesdays.(You
aren’t supposed to say no; I wouldn’t anyway.)This gives me an extra practice round, which is good. When we are
playing back to back tournaments, the only day off is Monday (except for players who miss a cut).I am
working hard and feel so blessed to have this opportunity.
I want to say thank you to
five special people:PhilPacker and Kendall Phinney at Hale-Mills Construction Company,
Ron Atchley ofAtchley Resources, Inc of Oklahoma City, Dr. John Lonergan and Dr. Linda
Niessenof Dallas for their sponsorship. They made financial commitments before I won any money on the Nationwide
Tour. That is faith!
And lastly, I close with this verse: “Let us run with perseverance the
race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him
endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such
opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.” Hebrews
12:1
I missed my first cut, and it was strange to hang around for two days. Truthfully, it sucked not to be playing the final
two rounds. We travel to Queenstown for the last tournament, and I think I'll be anxious to play after the unexpected
lay-off. I shot 69 my second round at Clearwater with 33 putts. Some days, putting is the biggest challenge and other
days, it's the best part of my game. I struggled with putting in Christchurch. Russ says he has never seen my hit the
ball better. I just need to put all the pieces together, and I believe I can win!
Christchurch is a really cool
college town. It kind of feels like London, England too. Imagine a British version of Austin, Texas. The golf course
reminded me a little of Crosswater in Bend, Oregon where the NCAA Nationals were held my sophomore year at Texas A&M.
The narrow fairways are guarded by big pine trees, lots of little streams and lakes on the course. But Crosswater was much
longer than Clearwater.
The Kiwi's (New Zealanders) say "no worries" as a way of saying "you're
welcome" or "that's fine" or "yes" or a response to just about any question. "No worries"
to a food order. "No worries" after saying thank you. "No worries" is the national slogan.
Kind of cool. That captures the attitude of this small country, which is very friendly.
I bought a rugby jersey
of the New Zealand All Blacks. My brother, Nate knows about the team. One awesome thing about rugby is how they
score. Players have to actually touch the ball to the ground in the end zone before it's a touchdown. So once a
player gets into the end zone, the other team tries to take the ball away before the ball is "touched" to the ground.
I think we should do this in American football. That's a real touch down.
I haven't seen a Kiwi bird yet,
but I did find Dr Pepper in a store! It was really cool to "Skype" with my mom and my Grammy. It costs less
than an Australian penny a minute at an internet cafe in downtown Christchurch. My staff bag finally arrived from PING,
so my mom showed it to me on camera! I also saw our cat Cobweb. How awesome is that to be on the other side of the world
and see your cat in real time, live on a computer? The sound was really clear too. No worries!
Well, Russ and
I are working hard and will be ready for The Hills outside Queenstown. I know I'll like this course. The front nine
begins and ends with a Par 5. Since I'm in the Top 25 on the money list after Moonah, I may get to play the pro-am,
which means an extra practice round. But if not, no worries.... Cheers and God's blessings always, Martin