May 2022 Ohio Golf Journal

golf, school, and also trying to prepare for The Masters was quite a bit. Trying to get all the details ironed out. I really learned a lot in terms of how to delegate things to other people,” Greaser said. “Sometimes you have to say “no.” You only have so much time in the day. It was a tough lesson to learn.” Greaser will need to use his experience atAugusta National to compete in the U.S. Open at The Country Club in Boston next month. “I need to focus a little bit more on me before the U.S. Open. Let the details be ironed out by somebody else, just focus on golf. Everyone else will take care of the little things and I’m the only person that can go play,’ Greaser said. “I’m the only person that has a tee time. I need to focus on the golf side of things and have some of the closest people around me focus on the rest.” None of the six amateurs made the cut in the Masters, but Greaser’s two-day score of sevenover par was the best among the amateurs. Greaser has one more year of college remaining at North Carolina. Taking the lessons he learned this year from the Masters and the U.S. Open, he should be ready to turn professional next year. *Quotes taken fromMiamiValley Golf Association Ohio Golf Journal

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