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Hong Kong golfer Jason Hak hopes he’s consigned dark days to history after wondering whether he should quit

Former prodigy struggled on his first years as a pro, but has re-emerged into the light in past two months

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Hong Kong golfer Jason Hak Shun-yat at the launch for the Clearwater Bay Open, Hong Kong’s first PGA Tour China Series event. Photo: SCMP pictures

Jason Hak Shun-yat has consigned the dark days to history.

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“I’ve learned that I have to walk down my own path,” says the 22-year-old. “And I have started getting better and better since I realised that.”

The past few months have seen Hak re-emerge into the light, thanks to string of solid performances on the PGA Tour China Series.

There’s not been the breakthrough victory he has longed for but the 22-year-old is full of confidence once again after leading for the first three rounds of the Ping An Bank Open in Beijing last week – before finishing fourth to American Charlie Saxon – and finishing runner-up at the Chongqing Jiangnan NewTown KingRun Open earlier in the month.

Long gone, he says, are the haunting experiences of last year, when Hak found himself grinding away on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA Tour Canada, missing cuts with worrying regularity and feeling as far from home as a young man can get.

WATCH: A bird’s-eye view of the Clearwater Bay Golf & Country Club

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