SPORTS: Port Angeles golfer is an exceptional exception

PORT ANGELES — By any measurement, Joe Barnes had an incredible golf season.

What makes it especially unbelievable is he wasn’t even playing golf a year ago.

It isn’t that he wasn’t playing high school golf for Port Angeles. He wasn’t playing golf at all.

Barnes’ focus was baseball, and he also played football and basketball.

When an elbow injury derailed his baseball career, he needed a spring sport to replace it.

He chose golf and wasted no time excelling.

Two MVP awards

Now the junior can add the All-Peninsula boys golf MVP to his Olympic League MVP.

He also won the Higgins Invitational trophy and was the Duke Streeter co-champion.

Despite playing alongside talented and experienced teammates Jordan Negus and Garrett Payton, Barnes led the Roughriders in birdies and pars.

The highlight of his season came in the 2A state tournament.

“The best part was the feeling after leading the state tournament after the first day,” Barnes said.

“I can’t describe it.”

Barnes finished the state tournament in sixth place, following up his opening-day score of 75 with a second-round 82.

He chalked up his drop from the top spot to “a couple of bad holes,” including a triple-bogey on the second hole.

A good day

But his coach put the second day into perspective.

“Most high school kids would love an 82,” Mark Mitrovich said.

Count Mitrovich, the All-Peninsula boys golf coach of the year, among those surprised by Barnes’ out-of-nowhere-out-of-this-world season.

But Mitrovich also might be the best person to attempt to pin down exactly how Barnes excelled so quickly:

■ He has the natural ability to play the game right away, combined with the passion and hard work, combined with the ability to understand the game.

■ He’s a quick, tenacious learner. Learns from his mistakes. Flexible enough to make adjustments.

■ He has a strong, repeatable swing. Controls the ball. Consistent ball striker, good around greens. Good hand-eye coordination.

As the list grows, Barnes’ season starts to make some sense.

Perhaps most telling is the amount of time he puts into his new craft.

“He knows the hard work involved and does it,” Mitrovich said. “He hit more balls than anybody. He outworked everybody.”

Mitrovich isn’t as quick to speak when asked what Barnes needs to improve.

“He needs to experience that [state-tournament] level of competition more often,” he said after pausing for a few moments.

“There is no substitute for tournament experience.”

Barnes is getting some of that experience by participating in the Washington Junior Golf Association this summer.

He also got a job at Peninsula Golf Club, which will give him even more access to the course and driving range.

Barnes said the biggest adjustment is not dwelling on mistakes, especially with such a small margin for error.

“The hardest thing is forgetting about the last shot and moving on when you hit a bad one,” Barnes said.

“Golf is harder than other sports, because each little bit doesn’t matter [in other sports]. If you make a mistake, you can redeem yourself.

“In golf, every shot matters.”

Despite Barnes’ work ethic and natural ability, Mitrovich can’t help but be amazed as Barnes makes golf look so, well, easy.

The week before the state tournament, the Port Angeles coach provided what might be the best explanation of Barnes’ swift rise.

“He’s the exception,” Mitrovich said.

More in Sports

Port Angeles boys head coach Kevin Ruble, right, and volunteer assistant Bryant Hoch watch during pregame Tuesday in Port Angeles before the Roughriders took on defending state champion Bremerton. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
BOYS PREP ROUNDUP: Defending champs Bremerton cruises past PA

Sequim, Forks, East Jefferson all victorious

GIRLS BASKETBALL: Riders, Spartans seal league titles

4th straight league championship for Forks girls

GIRLS FLAG FOOTBALL: PA, Sequim both in state tournament this weekend

In their inaugural seasons of girls flag football, both Sequim and Port… Continue reading

Sammie Sullivan of Kingston (143) leads the pack, including Tanya Woodward of Forks (638)  at the starting line of the 2025 Elwha Bridge Run, which returns Saturday. (Run the Peninsula)
RUN THE PENINSULA (Updated): Elwha Bridge Run returns Saturday

The Run the Peninsula series returns this weekend with… Continue reading

Tom Garrick celebrated a hole-in-one at Cedars at Dungeness on Jan. 28. (Cedars at Dungeness)
AREA SPORTS BRIEFS: Hole-in-one at Cedars at Dungeness and OJBR sign-ups

The Cedars at Dungeness reported its first hole-in-one of the… Continue reading

The Klahhane Gymnastics Xcel gold team of, from left, Emily Bair, Abigail Odland, Lorelei Sanders and Zayleigh McCullem finished first at the Freedom Invitational Gymnastics Meet at the Kitsap Pavilion last week. (Klahhane Gymnastics)
KLAHHANE GYMNASTICS: Xcel gold first at Freedom Invite

Klahhane Gymnastics Xcel teams delivered an outstanding weekend of competition… Continue reading

Liam Sprague, Crescent basketball.
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK: Liam Sprague, Crescent basketball

Crescent basketball player Liam Sprague finished the season with a flourish, showing… Continue reading

GIRLS BOWLING: Port Angeles’ Franich, Van Gordon qualify for state

The Port Angeles girls bowling team will send a pair… Continue reading

WRESTLING ROUNDUP: Forks’ Jade Blair wins her fifth tournament this season

Forks’ Jade Blair won another wrestling tournament, taking first in… Continue reading

Sequim's Jordyn Julmist dribbles against the defense of Port Angeles' Mikkiah Stevens on Friday night in Sequim. (Emily Matthiessen/for Peninsula Daily News)
GIRLS BASKETBALL: Sequim hot from the floor in win over Port Angeles

Sequim put together its finest performance of the season in… Continue reading

Forks' Bailey Johnson brings the ball up the floor against North Beach on Friday in Forks with teammate Skye Hestand. Johnson, despite a broken wrist, scored 25 points in a 67-25 victory. (Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News)
PREP ROUNDUP: Forks girls win to stay in first place

Crescent’s Liam Sprague scores 42 in victory