He could actually be declined for future entries to U.S. Open qualifying, as the USGA has a rule requiring entrants to finish within 12 strokes of the qualifying course's USGA rating or face potential issues trying to enter in the future without documentation of better tournament scores.
U.S. Open local qualifying continues until May 18.
Former Georgia player Lee McCoy, who qualified for the 2015 Open, played in the same local qualifier.
Things never got going for McDonald as he scored a double bogey on the very first hole. "Shot 68 on his front 9 and chose to finish #NeverGiveUp".
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McDonald was competing at Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail at Silver Lakes in Glencoe, Ala. His second nine was better with no double-digit numbers and a 23-over 59. He posted a tweet with McDonald's scorecard, which set off a social media storm, and praised McDonald for still finishing his round. The next worst score was also a savage 35-over-par 107, by Christopher Burley from Jacksonville, Alabama.
Interestingly, McDonald had signed up for qualifying as a professional.
As anyone who has seen Tin Cup knows, even the most humble of local golf pros has a chance at living their wildest dream at the US Open. According to the USGA, golf's governing body in the United States, 9,485 players across 113 different sites are attempting to qualify for the event this summer.





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