Zach Bauchou was prepared to receive the news.
He and his wife Victoria had spent eight months preparing for the arrival of their first child in the summer and fall of 2023. Now, well into the third trimester, they knew their new arrival could come on any day at any time.
Bauchou just wasn’t prepared to receive the news when he did: On the 12th hole of PGA Tour final qualifying, with his PGA Tour dream firmly hanging in the balance.
It was two years ago that Bauchou made his career’s most agonizing decision, leaving behind a chance at his lifelong dream in order to be at his wife’s bedside as she delivered their first child. Of course, Bauchou never flinched when he was approached by the rules official with the news that his wife was due to go into labor five weeks early. The official told him he could choose to continue competing or withdraw.
Bauchou calmly informed the official of the plan he and Victoria had chosen weeks earlier: He would withdraw from the event, and hop on the first flight home. The next day, Bauchou was in the hospital as his first son, James, entered the world — and though he was overjoyed, his emotions around leaving the golf tournament were understandably mixed.
Then 27 years old, Bauchou had spent most of his working life pushing toward an opportunity like PGA Tour final qualifying — where a handful of the Korn Ferry Tour’s best players would earn a Tour card for the following year based on their performance that weekend. After a successful career at Oklahoma State, he’d battled just to earn a spot onto one of golf’s feedertours, then battled again to get his game in the place where he might considerqualifying for the big show. Now, his WD had raised the possibility that he might lose his Korn Ferry status, too, given the breakdown of the points for the year’s final event.
Thankfully, Bauchou kept his Korn Ferry Tour status and began the 2024 season with a fresh goal to make it to PGA Tour. But that goal continued to prove elusive. He fell short of qualifying for a Tour card in 2024 by just three spots.
Bauchou turned for 2025 with a second baby on the way and a renewed sense of clarity: It was time to make one final push for the PGA Tour in his age 29 season, getting on Tour in time to celebrate his 30th birthday.
With two boys watching from home, Bauchou pieced together the best golf of his life in ’25, winning for the first time at the Simmons Bank Open and qualifying for the U.S. Open after a dramatic (and emotional) final qualifying run, his first major start as a pro.
By the time last weekend’s Korn Ferry Tour Championship came around, Bauchou’s fate was sealed. By virtue of a 9th-place points finish in 2025, he earned PGA Tour status for 2026.
With his family by his side, Bauchou celebrated in Florida as he received his official PGA Tour card. He will be a PGA Tour rookie in the new year, chasing down his childhood dream at the highest level. And he’ll do so with a family of three cheering on from up close.
Sure, he’d traded in a dream for his family in 2023. But the opportunity to have both? He wouldn’t trade it for anything.
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