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NPR Sports Commentator Discusses Book on Golf and Q-School

In order to play in the U.S. Open, many golfers have to go through Q-School. This qualifying tournament is host to some of golf's best players, all dreaming of making it to the major tournaments where

NPR Sports Commentator Discusses Book on Golf and Q-School

(Photo: Book cover, Tales from Q-School: Inside Golf's Fifth Major )

Tom Fudge:
The U.S. Open, which takes place next year at Torrey Pines in San Diego, is one of the world's great venues for the elite players in the game of golf. But how do you become a top PGA player? For most pro golfers, it requires graduation from Q-School. If this sounds like a college, it's not. It's a competition where professional golfers vie for the sport's approval to enter big-money tournaments.   

Writer John Feinstein is well-known to public radio listeners as a sports commentator. He is often heard on Saturday Weekend Edition , hosted by Scott Simon. John is the author of several books about the game of golf, including A Good Walk Spoiled . He now joins me from the location of this year's U.S. Open, Pittsburgh, PA, to talk about his new book, which is called Tales from Q-School: Inside Golf's Fifth Major.  

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