That mission continues in earnest this week at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas, where Lee is planning on exacting some “revenge” on the course and will have golf’s man of the moment for company during the first two rounds.

Lee, who missed the cut here last year by one, will head out for the first two rounds at ‘Hogan’s Alley’ with club pro, and last week’s PGA hero, Michael Block, as well as Pierceson Coody, the grandson of Masters winner Charles Coody.

It won’t be the first time Lee and Block have played together though, Lee telling Australian reporters on Wednesday the pair had a game by chance in Los Angeles some seven or eight years ago when the Australian was still an amateur.

Like Block, Lee will look to carry the momentum of a T18 finish at Oak Hill into this week as he chases enough FedExCup points to finish level with, or better than, the 125th ranked player at season’s end to secure full status on the American circuit.

“I think the biggest thing I took away from last week was just the way I handled myself and played for the week. It's obviously tough, and it's sometimes how you handle yourself after a bad shot. Everyone's going to hit bad shots in a major, so it's nice to really get into that zone,” Lee said.

“Those majors are really good to me, so I want to do that at a smaller event. They're still big ... hopefully you can play well and get some crowds and do that.” - Min Woo Lee.

“It was a time to really just step up and play some good golf because it's a major and you don't want to miss another cut. I missed three in a row, so it was nice to – I mean, a little disappointing Sunday.”

That success after being “a bit burnt out” at the Masters and RBC Heritage, where he missed the weekend, came on the back of a trip home to Australia to see coach Ritchie Smith, attend a Golf Australia camp in Melbourne and relax.

The home comforts clearly helping, so too might the incoming presence of his mother, who Min Woo expects to do the things all 24-year-olds think of first.

“Mum's going to come over in the next couple days and be a mom to me and do some cooking and laundry,” he said of this week.

Clara Lee arriving could help his quest to unlock the success the World No.61 has found at the majors and The Players Championship on a smaller stage, but Lee also has ideas on how to recreate the big show atmosphere he loves so much and clearly thrives in.

“I think it's just little things. It's making a par putt, making a birdie putt, just a couple fist pumps, and you kind of have to get yourself going,” Lee said.

“Those majors are really good to me, so I want to do that at a smaller event. They're still big. I still consider them big, coming from playing some Aussie Tour events when I was an amateur to playing Europe to out here. I mean, hopefully you can play well and get some crowds and do that.”