Obit: Tennessee State’s Catana Starks, first Black woman to coach an NCAA men’s golf team

Catana Starks, the the first Black woman to coach a men’s NCAA Division I golf team, died Sunday in Nashville. She was 75.

Catana Starks, who made history in 1986 at Tennessee State when she became the first Black woman to coach a men’s NCAA Division I golf team, died Sunday in Nashville. She was 75.

Starks’ trailblazing story was documented in the film “From The Rough” in 2011.

In 2005 Starks led TSU to the National Minority Golf Championship. The team shot a record-setting 840 as a unit. It was Starks’ final year as the coach.

Catana Starks
Catana Starks

In 2014, Starks was inducted into the National Black College Alumni Hall of Fame, and, in 2019, TSU honored Starks by recognizing her achievements during a ceremony on campus.

Starks, a Mobile, Alabama native, was a TSU alumnus and classmate of Olympic track great Wilma Rudolph.

In 1986, when TSU joined the Ohio Valley Conference former athletics director Bill Thomas dropped the schools swimming program and added men’s golf.

Starks was the school’s swim team coach at the time. The swim team was not sanctioned by the NCAA.

Starks, who earned her doctorate degree during her time as coach, also served as head of TSU’s Human Performance and Sports Sciences department.

During her time as TSU’s golf coach, Starks guided several successful players including Canadian Sean Foley, who went on to become Tigers Woods’ swing coach, Sam Puryear, who became the first Black men’s head golf coach in a major conference (Michigan State, 2008) and is now the coach at Howard, and Robert Dinwiddie, who was an All-American at TSU and went on to become a member of the European Tour.

Arrangements have not yet been announced.

Reach Mike Organ at 615-259-8021 or on Twitter @MikeOrganWriter.

 

GCAA, WGCA among those opposing NCAA waiver that could cut programs

Representatives of 17 coaches’ associations, including the Golf Coaches Association of America and the Women’s Golf Coaches Association, have written to NCAA President Mark Emmert opposing a recent proposal from a group of college conference …

Representatives of 17 coaches’ associations, including the Golf Coaches Association of America and the Women’s Golf Coaches Association, have written to NCAA President Mark Emmert opposing a recent proposal from a group of college conference commissioners that the association consider providing schools temporary relief amid the coronavirus pandemic from several Division I membership requirements. This includes one that sets the minimum number of varsity teams Bowl Subdivision schools must field.

At present, FBS schools must field at least 16 teams, with a minimum of six men’s teams and a minimum of eight women’s teams. Division I schools must field at least 14 teams.

In a letter to Emmert dated April 10, the commissioners of the Group of Five conferences – the American Athletic, Conference USA, the Mid-American, Mountain West and Sun Belt – said: “In order to provide NCAA Division I institutions flexibility in addressing the challenges for the foreseeable future, we request temporary relief from several regulatory requirements for a period of up to four years. A blanket waiver for relief will provide institutions the ability to make prudent and necessary decisions for the financial well-being of the institution.”

The coaches’ groups, from so-called non-revenue sports, have responded with a letter in which they expressed concern that a temporary waiver of the sport-sponsorship requirement would result in permanent cuts.

“The economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic places a lasting burden on both higher education and intercollegiate athletics alike,” the letter says, “but slashing opportunities for students is not the solution. … Reducing the minimum sports sponsorship requirement that would open the door to eliminating sports should not be an option.”

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The letter comes from associations representing coaches in baseball, softball, volleyball, wrestling and golf, among others.

Meanwhile, Golfweek received a copy of the letter GCAA CEO Gregg Grost sent out to members, detailing the concern the group has over the potential waiver.

“If this waiver passes, it would mean the potential for fewer teams, fewer scholarships and fewer opportunities for student-athletes competing in Olympic and non-revenue producing sports,” the letter said. “The GCAA strongly opposes this drastic measure and has signed off on a letter with other coaches associations that was sent to NCAA President Mark Emmert.”

The letter also asked members to avoid using student-athletes to fight for the cause, saying, “we do not think they should be on the front lines.”

Meanwhile, the WGCA tweeted to followers something in the same spirit, asking members to help spread the word.

Oklahoma leads, Pepperdine rises in men’s Division I Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll

Oklahoma leads the latest men’s Division I Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll while Pepperdine rises in rankings to the No. 2 spot.

After finishing the fall as the No. 1 ranked team in the country and the spring season underway, the Oklahoma Sooners continue their reign as the top-ranked men’s team in the country in the first Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll of 2020.

The Sooners received six first-place votes, followed by second-ranked Pepperdine, who received 16 first-place votes, and Georgia Tech, who received one first-place vote. Duke and Wake Forest round out the top five.

Texas Tech, Colorado State, Notre Dame, Arizona State and Arizona all earned a spot in the top ten.

Vanderbilt (22) and Tennessee (25) both rejoined the ranking this week, while Arkansas and Oregon State fell from the top 25.

Coaches Poll

Rank

University (First-place votes)

Points

Previous Rank

1

Oklahoma (6)

554

1

2

Pepperdine (16)

546

4

3

Georgia Tech (1)

531

3

4

Duke

462

5

5

Wake Forest

439

6

6

Texas Tech

422

2

7

Colorado State

412

8

8

Notre Dame

410

7

9

Arizona State

405

10

10

Arizona

387

14

11

Texas A&M

342

T-16

12

Baylor

314

11

13

Texas

289

19

14

North Carolina

274

12

15

BYU

264

9

16

SMU

262

13

17

Auburn

204

T-16

18

Washington

181

18

19

Louisville

172

15

20

Georgia

155

20

21

Clemson

101

22

22

Vanderbilt

76

NR

23

LSU

70

25

24

UCLA

64

21

25

Tennessee

41

NR

Dropped from ranking: Arkansas (23); Oregon State (24).

Others receiving votes: East Tennessee State, 22; California, 18; Arkansas, 17; North Florida, 7; Oklahoma State, 7; Florida, 6; Oregon State, 6; Florida State, 5; Illinois, 4; South Carolina, 3; Mississippi, 2; South Florida, 1.

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