“The last three or four years, the APGA has really grown,” Mack said in early August. “I don’t know any other tour, other that the PGA Tour, that currently plays better courses. When I first started playing in APGA events, the big focus was on getting more diversity in the game. Recently, everybody has been playing there, not just African-Americans. The better the competition, the better it makes your game.”
To bring his story full circle, the player of the year honor earns the use of a Lexus for a year, appropriate for his positioning on an interstate roadside in 2018 when his car caught on fire and was destroyed. The first thing he rescued from the fiery vehicle was his golf clubs, not his wallet or clothes.
“Maybe in the early stages it was a little bit embarrassing, but I’m glad I went through it, and it made me a better man and a better golfer today,” Mack said earlier this year. “You can have all the talent in the world, but if you don’t get the opportunity to show your skills and your game to the world, it’s kind of blah.”
As veteran Black golfer Tim O’Neal, 49, stated about the new opportunities, “It’s a step in the right direction. We’re not there yet.” The APGA is a pathway and not a destination. Mack’s achievement earned a spot in Korn Ferry Tour qualifying, but he must navigate all three stages, and waits to see where else he plays this fall. The APGA will play in Pennsylvania, Atlanta and LA before year’s end.
The tournaments in Ponte Vedra Beach and Atlanta displayed the depth of this excursion.
Meet Maurice Allen
There was Maurice Allen, a 39-year-old, charismatic former track and football athlete from Orlando who made a name for himself on the long-drive circuit, capturing the 2018 World Long-Drive Championship as the first Black male winner. Allen is notable for his Ric Flair-like exultations when he hits a long drive and completed a seldom-seen blast across Niagara Falls in 2019. Upon his 2018 victory, he dedicated a large percentage toward charity in his inner-city Orlando neighborhood. Alas, when COVID-19 struck, it sidelined the top level of long-drive competition. In January, Allen fractured his left hand during an exhibition in Orlando. After recuperating this summer, Allen is now focused on playing “regular” golf, something he didn’t try competitively prior to long driving. He shot two rounds in the 80s at Sugarloaf.