By GolfDigestME.com
Tom McKibbin will look to become the youngest Road to Mallorca No. 1 in history when he tees it up in the Rolex Challenge Tour Grand Final at Club de Golf Alcanada this week.

The Grand Final is the 28th and final event on the Road to Mallorca, a season which has featured 16 different countries, where the top 45 players on the Rankings will battle it out for one of the 20 coveted DP World Tour cards.

The 19-year-old McKibbin is currently placed 15th on the Road to Mallorca Rankings and he would move to the No. 1 spot should he triumph at the season finale and current Rankings leader Jeremy Freiburghaus finishes no higher than fourth, while JC Ritchie, Alexander Knappe and Mikael Lindberg would also have to finish no higher than third.

Englishman Tommy Fleetwood became the youngest Challenge Tour No. 1 when he topped the Rankings in 2011 at just 20 years old after finishing second at the Challenge Tour Grand Final in Italy, and McKibbin now has the opportunity to write his name into the history books.

Freiburghaus will himself look to make history by becoming the first Swiss player to win the Rankings, while current No. 2 Ritchie would also become the first South African winner should he triumph this week.

Another piece of history could be made by Frenchman Clément Sordet, who is looking to become the first man to win this event on two separate occasions following his victory at the 2017 NBO Golf Classic Grand Final.

Any player in the 45-man field can mathematically graduate, with the likes of Ireland’s John Murphy (42nd) and Switzerland’s Benjamin Rusch (45th) requiring strong performances to break into the all-important top 20.

The 27th edition of the Grand Final, which has been the season-ending event since 1995, will be broadcast live around the world for the first time in the Tour’s history.

“I’m just going to focus on my own game and hopefully I can produce some solid golf and everything else will take care of itself,” said McKibbin. “If I play the same way I have all season I’m confident I can get the job done and secure my DP World Tour card.

“I’m focused on securing my card but obviously it would be fantastic to win the tournament because I know I still have a chance to win the Rankings.

“My game has developed so much this year. The courses have been fantastic, and the fields have been so strong that I have naturally had to up my game and make my misses a lot smaller because any mistakes get punished out here on the Challenge Tour. I’ve definitely grown as both a player and a person this year.

“The course is lovely this week and I think it will be a good test of golf. It looks generous off the tee but once you get up there you realise how narrow the fairways are and if you miss the fairway, the rough can be quite thick which means the ball sits right down.

“It’ll be great to have my family with me this week. They don’t get to see me play that much so hopefully I can put on a show for them.”

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