Tour Pro McInerney Survived Las Vegas Massacre



 

A.J. McInerney finished 97th on the Web.com Tour’s The 25 Money List ranking in 2017 meaning that the UNLV product and Henderson, Nevada-native didn’t qualify to make it into the Web.com Tour Finals over the past four weeks.  

Instead, McInerney, girlfriend and a group of other friends enjoyed the three-day Route 91 Harvest Festival where he hoped to relieve some stress before having to head to the second stage of the Web.com Tour Qualifying School next month to play for his job.

However, the Route 91 Harvest Festival has become synonymous in the past few days with the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.


McInerney was there dodging bullets.

Global Golf Post’s Ron Green Jr. talked to McInerney about the harrowing and life-changing light

What was it – divine grace or blind luck or both – McInerney wonders that blessed him, his girlfriend and her brother when the bullets came raining down from a madman’s sniper nest in the nearby Mandalay Bay hotel?

The mass shooting Sunday night claimed nearly 60 lives and injured more than 500. Had his golf season gone better, McInerney would have been playing the Web.com Tour Championship event in Florida. Instead, he was at the Route 91 Harvest Festival, having heard Eric Church, Sam Hunt and many other country music stars over what McInerney calls a “three-day neon sleepover.”

McInerney could hear the bullets hitting people. He saw a man standing nearby go down, never to get up again. He could feel the bullets. He saw one kick up smoke when it whistled into the pavement one foot away from where he was standing.

“Jake Owen had finished his set and I was with a group of about 20 people, just taking pictures and hanging out,” McInerney recalls. “Jason Aldean is one of my favorites and he came on and played two songs as I remember.

“I was with my girlfriend dancing and all of a sudden our friends heard what sounded like firecrackers behind us. Then someone beside said those aren’t firecrackers and told everyone to get down. Her brother (Anthony) was about five feet away and he jumped toward us. Then the shooter unleashed. It was like da-da-da-da-da-da … It just kept going. It lasted about a minute and then it let up. I grabbed my girlfriend and said we need to go. We just started running east (away from the hotel).”

As the bullets kept coming, as the screams and the panic filled the night, McInerney saw the human spirit at work. People helping people. People protecting themselves but helping others. Lifting them over fences, pulling them into cars, leading them to shelter.

The good McInerney saw amid the madness came through the night with him.

But surviving came first.

 

“I saw people to the left and right of me get shot,” McInerney says. “I could hear the bullets hit people. You could see the bullets hitting the ground right beside you. I don’t know what a war zone is like but it felt like we were sitting ducks. … It was a pretty gruesome scene. When we hit the ground, we tried to take as much cover as we could. I grabbed my girlfriend and her brother jumped on top of us. We try to protect the people we love. Then you just tried to run. Everyone has to go.

“We were helping people get over these long walls. As I look back on it, as I reflect, there was a kind of caring together. If you saw someone down, you had to help them. People in pickup trucks were driving down the road pulling people into the back. It’s amazing how quickly the first responders and the police were there. If not for them, it could have been so much worse, which is terrible to think about. But it was a group effort.”

McInerney had parked his Chevy Tahoe at the MGM Grand, not far from the concert site. By his estimate, it took about 15 minutes for him, his girlfriend and her brother to get to the car. The gunfire continued until they reached the car.

In addition to the three of them, McInerney said he got two more people in the front seat, five in the backseat and four more in the third row of his SUV.

“You’re just trying to stay alive,” he said. “You can try to prepare for it I guess but once it starts happening, you just go with your instincts. You try to be safe and keep all the people you love safe. That’s everyone’s mission.”

At some point, life will edge back toward normalcy. McInerney failed to keep his card on the Web.com Tour this year, finishing 97th on the money list. He will go to the second stage of Q-School next month, playing for his job again.

McInerney will go there a different person from the one who was swaying to Jason Aldean’s music Sunday evening when true darkness arrived. McInerney is one of the lucky ones and he knows it. He will know it forever.

“I know people who weren’t as lucky as me and it kills me,” McInerney says. “Fortunately for me, there was no physical damage, just emotional damage. I was standing next to people who weren’t as lucky. I can’t tell you how lucky I feel that not anything happened to me. I can’t quite understand why nothing happened. A lot of people weren’t so lucky and we have to keep those people in our prayers.”

[GlobalGolfPost.com]

 

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