Blades Brown still remembers a two-minute encounter with Jordan Spieth at the 2018 Masters. Spieth was one year removed from his third major victory at age 24, and Brown was 10, gazing up at his golfing idol in awe — the wunderkind speaking to a soon-to-be sensation in his own right.Brown met Spieth again this year, not at Augusta National, but at the 2026 Valspar Championship. Now they were both inside the ropes: Brown stood next to Spieth on the practice putting green, about to make his fourth PGA Tour start of the season at 18 years of age.“Hey, I’m Blades,” Brown said. “You don’t remember, but you came up and talked to me at the Masters, and it really meant a lot to me that you did that.”“You’re making me feel old right now, kid,” Spieth quipped with a smile.Brown turned 19 on May 21. He celebrated his birthday at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson, first by eating what he estimates was 9,000 calories’ worth of a homemade chocolate cake and then by taking a significant step toward his life-long dream. Brown secured Special Temporary Membership on the PGA Tour that week, solidifying his status as one of the game’s youngest and hottest budding stars.“It’s been a goal of mine to play on the PGA Tour for a long time now,” Brown told The Athletic via telephone Monday. “I was warming up yesterday, and I was like, man, I have status now on the PGA Tour. It’s pretty cool.”Brown, whose memorable, golf-adjacent first name originates from his mother’s maiden name, is the latest teenage phenom in a sport teeming with young talent. At 16, Brown became the youngest stroke-play medalist in the history of the U.S. Amateur, breaking a 103-year-old record held by Bobby Jones. But every year, golf prospects emerge from around the world, and no metric can determine who will continue to skyrocket and who will fade away.Brown, however, is rising through the professional ranks just five months removed from receiving his high school diploma. He found himself in a final pairing with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler years before being legally able to order his first drink. If Brown keeps up his streak of consistency on the Korn Ferry Tour and the PGA Tour, he could become one of the youngest card-holding PGA Tour players ever. The last 19-year-old to earn his PGA Tour card through the Korn Ferry Tour was Jason Day in 2007.Brown, a Nashville native, chose to forgo college and turn professional at 17, following a path similar to that of Akshay Bhatia, now a top-30 player in the world. A year and a half into Brown’s pro golf journey, he has played his way into a position to likely earn full PGA Tour membership for the 2027 season.“I’m in a very unique position,” Brown said.This year, Brown has compiled three top-15 finishes on the PGA Tour, including a solo third-place finish at the Puerto Rico Open. All the while, he has also been competing on the minor-league Korn Ferry Tour, where he has two top-three finishes and three top-20s, putting him 11th among 197 players on the tour’s points list. At the end of the season, the top 20 in the Korn Ferry Tour standings earn PGA Tour cards.But a T14 finish at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson last month helped Brown lock up PGA Tour Special Temporary Membership, which is awarded to non-members who achieve more FedEx Cup points than the player who finished 150th in the previous season’s standings. That was a welcome achievement for Brown, but it also came with a choice that he and his team have been weighing.Now, Brown can play in an unlimited number of PGA Tour events, via sponsor exemptions. He can play against the world’s best and potentially give himself a chance to win. That’s the flashier option, and it’s certainly tempting. Or Brown can take the safer route, continuing to compete on the Korn Ferry Tour and earning his 2027 PGA Tour card by finishing in the top 20. He is already well on his way to doing that, and the PGA Tour route offers little reward if Brown were to suddenly stop playing well. On the Korn Ferry Tour, Brown would still have a path forward.A text from three-time PGA Tour winner Ben Griffin helped confirm Brown’s thinking: “Blades Brown, PGA Tour member, has a nice ring to it,” Griffin’s message read. “But see if you can get a ‘W’ on the Korn Ferry Tour, and then you can come and hang out with me full time.”Brown agreed wholeheartedly with the assessment. He plans to play the next seven Korn Ferry Tour events in a row without taking a week off. The goal is to earn the same amount of Korn Ferry Tour points that qualified for a PGA Tour card last year, then try his hand at more PGA Tour events.“The most strategic decision for me was, ‘I just need to stack up a few more points on the Korn Ferry Tour,’” Brown said. “My main goal is to lock up my PGA Tour card for 2027. So I’m just going to grab a few more points, hopefully get it over 1,000. And hopefully I’ll be playing the rest of the season on the PGA Tour after that.”Brown currently has 667.215 points on the Korn Ferry Tour. A win earns 500 points. The 19-year-old knows what he needs to do to fast-track his dream.But for right now, he’s just excited to be traveling the country, chipping away at his craft and competing alongside his childhood heroes. Brown does not take it lightly that he’s already beaten many of them.“I want to become the best player that I can be,” Brown said. “I’m so thankful and grateful to be in the position that I am at my age.”