Wesley Bryan

Golfer

Birthday March 26, 1990

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Columbia, South Carolina

Age 33 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6ft 0in

Weight 175 lb

#33992 Most Popular

1937

With the win, Bryan moved up to 37th in the Official World Golf Ranking, his career-best ranking to date.

Bryan and his brother George started a YouTube channel featuring their golf trick-shot videos.

1990

Donald Wesley Bryan (born March 26, 1990) is an American professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour.

Bryan attended Dutch Fork High School in Irmo, South Carolina.

He played college golf at the University of South Carolina, winning two events.

2015

They also appeared on the golf reality show Big Break The Palm Beaches, FL in 2015.

George caddied for Wesley for his first Web.com Tour win.

2016

Bryan played on mini-tours before earning his Web.com Tour card for 2016 by finishing T-9 at qualifying school.

In his third event of the 2016 season, he won the Chitimacha Louisiana Open.

He picked up a second win a month later at the El Bosque Mexico Championship.

In August, he won his third event of the season, the Digital Ally Open, to earn promotion to the PGA Tour.

He was the eleventh golfer to do so.

He won the Web.com Tour Player of the Year award.

2017

On April 16, 2017, Bryan secured his first PGA Tour victory at the RBC Heritage and earned a spot at the 2018 Masters Tournament.

He won by a single stroke over Luke Donald, after a final round of 67 moved him through the field from four strokes behind.

George is also a professional golfer and played on the 2017 PGA Tour Latinoamérica.

Bryan and his wife Elizabeth have two daughters, Hadley and Winnie.

In 2023, brothers Wesley and George Bryan, purchased Solina Golf Course in Lexington, South Carolina.

The private golf course intends on opening by 2024.

Source:

Web.com Tour playoff record (1–0)

{{legend|#eeeeee|Did not play}}

CUT = missed the half-way cut

"T" = tied

CUT = missed the halfway cut

{{legend|#eeeeee|Did not play}}

"T" = tied