These 5 golfers earned 2026 PGA Tour cards at Q-School
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. β Dylan Wu needed extra holes to retain his PGA Tour card for 2026. Wu, a 29-year-old American, two Canadians, a Colombian and an Argentine were the five pros from a field of 176 to survive the 72-hole pressure-cooker that is PGA Tour Qualifying School at Dye's Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass and Sawgrass Country Club.
Wu, with his brother Jeremy on the bag, edged Ben Silverman on the first playoff hole with a birdie in his return to No. 18 at Dye's Valley.
"It means a lot to do it together," Wu said. "It means a lot to do it after the year I've had."
Here are the five pros who booked their ticket in the big leagues.
A.J. Ewart
Ewart, 26, played like a Tour-bound player from start to finish, shooting the low score at Sawgrass CC in the first round, making a hole-in-one on the fifth hole at Dyeβs Valley on Friday to share the 36-hole lead, and shooting 67 on Saturday in his return to Sawgrass CC. On Sunday, he was stuck in neutral with a bogey at nine but carded four birdies on the back nine to go from on the bubble to medalist of the 2025 PGA Tour Q-School.
After playing this season on PGA Tour Americas, Ewart was making his first start at Final Stage but youβd never know it. He followed a simple philosophy.Β βI try to dumb it down. Itβs just another tournament, right?β Ewart said of Q-School. βYou donβt go to a tournament to finish in the top 50. Just do my preparation and treat it like any other week as hard as that may be.β
Ewart, who won 14 times at Division II Barry University, is a native of Vancouver.Β Β
Marcelo Rozo
The Colombian native pumped his fist as he wrapped up a final-round 69 to finish T-2 at 12-under 268. The 36-year-old Rozo had made 255 career Tour-sanctioned starts but had never held a PGA Tour card.Β He also was sidelined for a season after undergoing wrist surgery. He shared the 54-hole lead but started slowly on Sunday, making two bogeys on the front nine. He didn't make his first birdie until No. 10 and tacked on two more to earn his card on the PGA Tour.
Alejandro Tosti
The 29-year-old Argentine did it again. He sank a bomb for eagle at the par-5 16th to shoot 3-under 67 and seal the deal of regaining a PGA Tour card for next season. Tosti made his move on Saturday with birdies on five of his first seven holes to surge up the leaderboard. He entered the final day one off the pace for a Tour card at 9-under 201 and T-6. The former Florida Gator earned his Tour card at Q-School last year but missed his last six cuts of the regular season and didnβt play in the fall, dropping to No. 137 in the season-long standings.
Adam Svensson
The 31-year-old Canadian opened his final round Sunday with six straight pars, which didn't bode well for his chances of regaining his PGA Tour card. But he remained patient and reeled off four birdies in a six-hole stretch beginning at No. 7. He tacked on one last birdie at 15 to shoot 4-under 66 and finish 12-under 268 and T-2.
A past champion of the Tourβs RSM Classic, Svensson struggled this season, finishing No. 167 in the season-long standings and without a top-10 finish. But now the fellow Barry University grad, just like the medalist Ewart, is headed back to the Tour for another season.
Dylan Wu
Wu picked a good time to find his game. The 29-year-old from Northwestern University finished 168thΒ in the season-long standings and counts four missed cuts and a DQ in his last six starts on Tour. But he birdied five of his first eight holes on Sunday and sank a long eagle putt at 16 to shoot 66 and finish T-5 at 11-under 269. He and Ben Silverman returned to 18 for a playoff for all the marbles, and it was Wu who delivered the birdie to seal the deal.
This article originally appeared on Golfweek: These 5 golfers earned 2026 PGA Tour cards at Q-School
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