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Imago

Since he was a child, one thing Bud Cauley’s father always taught him was: ‘Don’t stop running.’ With that in mind, he became one of the handful of players, including Tiger Woods, to join the PGA Tour directly from college, skipping Q-School. But just seven years down the road, things took an ugly turn. And all Cauley could remember? ‘Don’t stop running.’

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It wasn’t as easy, though. After missing the cut at the 2018 Memorial Tournament, Cauley was returning home on June 1 when his car went off the road and slammed into a tree. It became one of the most dreadful experiences of his life. Not only did Cauley refuse to quit, but also he met his greatest support, as he recently revealed in a documentary series by PGA Tour Studios called Mindful.

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“I couldn’t have gotten through any of it without my wife, Kristi. Three years is a long time,” Cauley recalled with teary eyes. “It was happening to me, but she was really going through it as much as I was.” Cauley took half a minute to gather himself before he confessed, “Had it not been for that car accident, I would’ve been out on the ropes, playing golf. So, the worst thing that sort of ever happened to me led to the best thing.”

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The near-fatal accident had left Cauley with six broken ribs, a collapsed lung, a fractured left leg, and a concussion. At the time, surviving was a gift enough for him. But with Kristi by his side, he did so much more.

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Cauley met his future wife through a mutual friend months after the crash at McDonald’s. Kristi was then a digital marketing and relations manager at TGR Venues. Cauley was still recovering and grappling with an uncertain future. However, the two clicked from the get-go, and on Christmas of 2019, Cauley proposed to her. By 2020, Cauley was back inside the ropes, but things got worse again.

In September 2020, he felt a sharp pain after practicing for about an hour. He thought resting would help and took a break until the next tournament, but then, he couldn’t even get through nine holes there.

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In April 2021, just six months before their wedding, Cauley underwent another surgery to remove the plates that had been inserted into his chest. However, the bones had grown over the plates, making it impossible to remove. He had to be stitched up with scar tissue instead.

Just 12 days after that surgery, Kristi noticed her husband’s shirt was wet. When he took it off, his incision had popped open because of the seroma, a buildup of fluid. He also developed a C. difficile infection as a result. That followed another wound VAC and his third surgery. If this hadn’t worked, the doctors would’ve had to remove portion of his ribs.

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“Everything that could go wrong seemed to go wrong,” he said back then.

Despite the setbacks, the couple navigated the recovery together. But first, watch him tell his story:

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“When I would get down or lose hope, Kristi was always the positive one who said I would get it figured out and I would get back out there,” Cauley shared.

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The couple got married on October 23, 2021, and welcomed their first son, Cooper William Cauley, in November 2022. Just two years later, he made a return at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open. His wife and their son were there with Bud Cauley. It was also his first event as a father.

“I’m so, so excited Bud is back,” Justin Thomas, fellow Alabama alum and Cauley’s best man at the wedding, had said. “He’s one of my best friends in the world. I just wanted to keep him positive. It’s going to work out. Just time will heal.”

The couple welcomed their second son in January 2025. The very same year, he finished tied for sixth at the Players Championship. Again in May, he finished third at the Charles Schwab Challenge. But the biggest wins were his zero withdrawals.

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Now, things are only trending upward for the golfer who entered the PGA Tour as one of the most-touted young talents.

In 15 starts this year, he has made 13 cuts, with six top-25 finishes, and most importantly, he fired a final-round 65 yesterday at TPC Toronto to win the RBC Canadian Open—his maiden win on the Tour in 239 starts. Cauley chased a Tour title for a very long time, and now he got his reward. But one lesson he will always keep close to his heart remains the same:

‘Don’t stop running.’

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Written by

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Roshni Dhawan

301 Articles

Roshni Dhawan is a Golf Writer at EssentiallySports, covering the financial and human side of the professional game. Her reporting centers on player earnings and tournament economics, from net-worth profiles of pros such as Sahith Theegala to the prize-money breakdown at the 2026 U.S. Open, alongside explainer features that introduce readers to the tour's lesser-known names, including her profile of Harry Higgs. She also reports on everything that define a tournament week, covering on-course conduct, rules decisions, and the fan and media reaction that follows, with much of her 2026 work centered on the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. Roshni's background is in research and brand strategy, which informs the accuracy and structure she brings to her coverage. She works methodically, prioritizing verification and the detail that a strong earnings or profile piece depends on.

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Srashti Sharma

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