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    Home » “Inside, I Feel Like I’m Dying” — Gary Woodland’s Win Is the Most Emotional Story in Golf Right Now
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    “Inside, I Feel Like I’m Dying” — Gary Woodland’s Win Is the Most Emotional Story in Golf Right Now

    Errica JensenBy Errica JensenMarch 30, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    On a Sunday afternoon in late March, the eighteenth fairway at Memorial Park in Houston was noisier than it should have been. “Gary, Gary, Gary” was chanted by the crowd as they pressed up against the ropes, making the kind of noise typically associated with major championship closing holes. For a brief moment, the whole story of how Gary Woodland arrived at this specific fairway on this specific day made the noise seem perfectly proportionate as he approached them with his arms eventually extended and his eyes wet.

    CategoryDetails
    Full NameGary Lynn Woodland
    Date of BirthMay 21, 1984
    Age41
    NationalityAmerican
    Height1.85 m (6’1″)
    SpouseGabby Granado (married 2016)
    ChildrenJaxson Lynn Woodland (and others)
    Turned Professional2007
    PGA Tour Wins5 (including 2019 U.S. Open and 2026 Houston Open)
    Major Championship2019 U.S. Open (Pebble Beach Golf Links)
    CoachRandy Smith (also coaches Scottie Scheffler)
    CaddieBrennan Little
    Brain Surgery DateSeptember 2023 (lesion/tumor removed via craniotomy)
    PTSD DiagnosisEarly 2025 (publicly revealed March 2026)
    2026 Houston Open ResultWinner — 21 under par (–3 final round, 67)
    Winning Margin5 shots over Nicolai Hojgaard
    Tournament VenueMemorial Park Golf Course, Houston, Texas
    Purse$9,900,000
    Current World Ranking139th on PGA Tour
    Next Major2026 Masters (qualified via Houston win)
    Reference LinksPGA Tour Gary Woodland Profile | BBC Golf — Woodland Houston Win
    "Inside, I Feel Like I'm Dying" — Gary Woodland's Win Is the Most Emotional Story in Golf Right Now
    “Inside, I Feel Like I’m Dying” — Gary Woodland’s Win Is the Most Emotional Story in Golf Right Now

    On the par-70 Memorial Park course, Woodland finished 21 under par with a final 67 to win the Texas Children’s Houston Open by five strokes. It was his fifth win on the PGA Tour. Additionally, it was his first since the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, which was seven years ago in a different life. Between those two victories were brain surgery, farewell letters to his wife and kids before he passed away, a recuperation that appeared to be a comeback but wasn’t quite, and a PTSD diagnosis he carried in secret for more than a year while continuing to tee it up every week, sobbing in scoring trailers and running to his car to collapse where no one could see him.
    The area of his brain responsible for controlling fear had been compressed by the brain lesion. Before receiving a diagnosis, Woodland would wake up in the middle of the night, clutching his bed, believing he was going to die. He had no idea what was going on with him. In September 2023, the growth was finally removed by doctors using what Woodland later described as a baseball-sized hole in his skull. It was a success. The lesion had disappeared. However, the fear—a kind of lingering alarm that refused to go away—stayed with him and manifested as PTSD, which made everyday golf course moments seem nearly impossible. A walking scorer is approaching from behind. At the ninth tee, there are too many spectators. Unexpected triggers included blurry vision and immobile legs. He only managed to finish some rounds because his caddie, Brennan Little, told him where to aim when he was completely blind.

    He kept it all to himself. He competed as best he could, showed up every week, and remained silent for over a year following the diagnosis. The golf community applauded his comeback and told him how wonderful it was to see him well. And in his own words, he felt like he was living a lie every time someone said that. He said, “Inside, I feel like I’m dying,” during a conversation he had personally sought out with Rex Hoggard of Golf Channel earlier this month. He described himself as being a thousand pounds lighter after entering that interview in tears.
    The timing of what came next seems almost too perfect to be true, but it is. The week following the interview, a T14 at Valspar. Houston came next. 64, 63, 65, and 67 rounds. putting ahead of the field. At 41 years old, he ranks seventh in driving distance, averaging 321 yards off the tee, making him one of the longest hitters on a circuit with players half his age. Woodland was instructed months ago by his coach Randy Smith, who also works with world number one Scottie Scheffler, to stop guiding the ball, stop playing scared, and return to swinging like he used to. In essence, he had described him as soft. Woodland heard it, worked on it, and this week at Memorial Park the violence was back in his swing — the kind that made him a U.S. First of all, an open champion.
    A detail from the final round fits this story perfectly even though it doesn’t belong in a sports narrative. On Sunday, Woodland wore custom shoes that were vibrant, colorful, and full of life. They were created in collaboration with Texas Children’s Hospital and were influenced by the artwork of a young patient named Ceci, who has been fighting a brain tumor for seven years. On the side of those shoes was the word “courage.” The word didn’t feel like marketing when you saw him walk those last fairways in them, knew the week he’d had, and realized how much the past two and a half years had cost him and his family. It felt well-deserved.
    Nicolai Hojgaard and Min Woo Lee, Woodland’s playing partners, purposefully held back and let him walk alone as the crowd erupted after the final putt. Afterwards, Hojgaard stated that they believed it was the right decision. Standing twenty-five yards behind, Lee gestured for the gallery to raise their volume with both hands. At that moment, the two men who came in second and third wanted nothing more than for the man who outperformed them to have his full, uninterrupted moment.
    In two weeks, Woodland will arrive at Augusta. His long run at the Masters came to an end last year when he failed to qualify. He believes that his current game is the best it has ever been. However, he made it apparent following the victory that Sunday was not the end. A trophy doesn’t make PTSD go away. On Friday’s back nine, there was still a moment when the crowd was too close, causing him to become hypervigilant once more. His personal security had to calm him down before he could gather himself and carry on. Nothing was cured by the victory. It simply demonstrated something. He continues to struggle, heal, and learn how to cope with something that doesn’t show up on a leaderboard.With his arms encircling Gabby and tears streaming down his face, he declared, “I wasn’t going to let this thing in my head win.” “Today was evidence of that.”


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    Errica Jensen
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    Errica Jensen is the Senior Editor at Creative Learning Guild, where she leads editorial coverage of legal news, landmark lawsuits, class action settlements, and consumer rights developments and News across the United Kingdom, United States and beyond. With a career spanning over a decade at the intersection of legal journalism, lawsuits, settlements and educational publishing, Errica brings both rigorous research discipline, in-depth knowledge, experience and an accessible editorial voice to subjects that most readers find interesting and helpful.

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