It is insufficient, if not inaccurate, to simply note that this loan arranger got back in the saddle, as it were, trying another run at professional golf, and cashing a $1.71 million check in Cowtown on Sunday.
First solo TOUR win! š
North Carolina native @BenGriffinGolf claims his first stroke-play victory @CSChallengeFW. pic.twitter.com/fgwYS8Sssi
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) May 25, 2025
It is more complicated, indeed more unlikely, than that. No scriptwriter conceivably would have created this scenario. Four years ago, Ben Griffin walked away from a golf career going nowhere, his inability to make a living at it sending him in pursuit of a job that would reliably provide him a paycheck. His mother was a mortgage loan officer, so he decided that that would be his livelihood.
One day, attired in coat and tie and driving to the office, when, by his own telling, he āaccidentallyā made a wrong turn toward a golf course that convinced him to give golf a mulligan. His wrong turn in fact was emphatically a right turn.
Griffin, 29, won the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, on Sunday, his second victory of the year, second in his last five starts, in fact, the first coming in a team event, the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, partnering with Andrew Novak. This latest win ran his earnings this year alone to $4.9 million and his PGA Tour career earnings to $11.6 million.
Wild guess, but writing loans likely would not have been so lucrative.
His is a remarkable second-chance story that is still unfolding, while no doubt inspiring others now that he has become the standard-bearer for keeping dreams alive, even those on life support. In his case, he already had pulled the plug, yet still persevered.
āYeah, thereās nothing to this game. Itās easy,ā he said, smiling. āYeah, itās crazy. Up until last week I had never made a cut in a major. Finished eighth at the PGA. Had a real good chance there to even finish solo runner-up. Was within a few of Scottie [Scheffler] going into the back nine.
āItās crazy how fast things can change in this game. Even going back to when I didnāt have any status on any sort of tours, getting onto the Korn Ferry Tour. I mean, itās a bunch of stepping stones that kind of gets you to the next part of your career. Now Iām at the point where I feel like Iām starting to show that I am an elite golfer. I can compete against the best.ā
It was not an easy career resurrection, four years in the making, as it was, and a similarly difficult challenge in winning his first individual title, notwithstanding his opening the final round with an eagle and a birdie to take a three-stroke lead that at one point increased to five. Over the next 16 holes, he made four bogeys and the rest pars, and needed to make a difficult up-and-down par save from a steep bank at the 18th green to fend off a strong challenge from runner-up Matti Schmid of Germany.
Griffin took a two-stroke lead to 18, and both players missed the green, though Schmid had the far greater challenge, needing to hole his third from a steep bank left of the green to have a chance. Griffin, too, had a difficult third, standing in a bunker. He put it to four feet of the hole. Schmid then, remarkably (miraculously?), holed his birdie pitch, after which Griffin casually made his winning putt.
āLike a whack-a-mole hitting that third shot,ā Griffin said. āGripped down to the hosel on the wedge. In my mind, I was thinking Matti probably would make it. So, fortunately, I had that four-footer and felt pretty good with it.ā
Griffin discounts the notion that he has redeemed his career, however, given its unusual meandering path, instead preferring to call it validation.
āI didnāt redeem myself for anything, but definitely validation,ā he said. āItās really nice to get the validation. Some weeks you get validation with a top 10. Some weeks itās the top five. Some weeks maybe itās a made cut if you are grinding through something and itās a challenging course, but winning is an incredible feeling.
āWords canāt really describe what it feels like to be the last man standing on 18, an incredible feeling, something Iāve gotten to soak in twice in the last month. Itās one that I want to keep feeling.ā
Follow Golf Digest Middle East on social media
Main Image: Sam Hodde







