Howard men’s golf builds on Steph Curry’s support to become nation’s top HBCU program, and they’re still growing

“Did I know it was going to happen in year two? No I didn’t, but I knew it was possible.”

Greg Odom Jr. thought head coach Sam Puryear was blowing more smoke than a chimney when he was being recruited to play golf at Howard University.

“Getting recruited, I thought he was bluffing. I’m on the phone with him, he’s like, ‘Oh, you’re gonna win championships, you’re gonna get this, you’re gonna do this,’” recalled Odom Jr., who was a sophomore at Memphis at the time. “When you actually walk up on the tee of PGA Tour event and you walk to the podium after winning a championship, you look back and it’s just, ‘Wow, everything happened.’”

Sure, they were lofty goals for an upstart program getting its first crack at NCAA Div. I competition thanks to the financial backing of NBA superstar and avid golfer, Stephen Curry, but where there’s smoke, there’s fire. And Puryear believed every single word.

“I’ve been feeling like for the last 30 years I’ve been saying to myself the day is coming where you can put (an HBCU) product on a golf course where it can be competitive if you have the proper things in place,” Puryear said of his vision for the program. “From funding to course access to instruction to the opportunity to compete against the better programs, teams can get better. I knew that was gonna happen.”

“Did I know it was going to happen in year two? No I didn’t, but I knew it was possible.”

Howard’s inaugural 2021-22 season was just five events, two of which were match play duels against local programs Navy and Georgetown. Howard finished T-13 at the Golden Horseshoe Intercollegiate, third (out of four) at the MEAC Championship and fourth at the PGA Works Collegiate Championship, an event that highlights the best minority collegiate golfers across the country.

“I feel like we’ve always had the pieces, we just had to put them together,” said Odom Jr, who individually placed fifth at the conference championship and then won the PGA Works in 2021. “We were close the first year at PGA Works but we fell short, and I feel like that was our drive for the next season.”

The Bison closed out their second season in 2021-22 with a pair of wins at the MEAC Championship and PGA Works and placed inside the top five in five of 10 events. Odom Jr. won the individual MEAC Championship wire-to-wire and then defended his PGA Works title, fulfilling Puryear’s vision.

“We go to every event and try to win and give it our all, so I feel like the expectations haven’t changed,” said Odom Jr of the team’s early success. “If we win, we win, and if we don’t, we learn something so we can win next time.”

“I think the one thing that we have to continue to do is just to realize that we have a long way to go,” added Puryear. “All the guys on my team will tell you, I preach it all the time: don’t get comfortable, because you’re only as good as your last week, as good as your last shot.”

“So we keep it focused, stay in the present, don’t put your mind too far down the road and you don’t lament on where you’ve come from, because you have to keep putting the left foot in front of the right foot.”

The team has worked hard to reach its current status as the top HBCU program in the country, but Puryear and his players will be the first to tell you that none of this would be possible without Curry, who in 2019 announced his commitment to support and establish Howard’s first NCAA Div. I golf program for the next six years. The university also launched a golf endowment campaign to support Curry’s efforts. While Curry’s money has provided the team with tangible benefits, it’s the intangibles his support brings that mean the most.

“To show you the mark of a man, when (Curry) was hurt during the NBA season last year, he was in a walking boot, got in a cart and followed the team when we were playing out at Stanford,” said Puryear. “Most people, 99% of the people would never do that. Some people are comfortable with signing a check. He’s comfortable touching a life. To me, that speaks volumes.”

“I would like to commend that guy. He’s an NBA champion. He’s a superstar. He’s the MVP. He’s everything. But he’s also the guy that started the Howard golf team and helped fund the team. It’s incredible,” added Odom Jr. “For the team, he’s present, and when we need him, he comes. He’s supplied us with everything, and he’s helped us with resources and opened doors for opportunities so we just can’t thank him enough. He’s the guy.”

The men’s golf program joined the Northeast Conference as an associate member this season and have six events on the schedule for this fall, including this week’s Howard/USF Intercollegiate at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm. As the program continues to evolve, the expectations for Odom Jr. and his team remain the same.

“I see no difference. I still see us being the No. 1 seed and having that target on our back,” said Odom Jr, who won the Bison’s first start of the fall at the River Run Collegiate. “We will be at that podium and we will be winning.”

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Freshman phenom highlights inaugural winners of Black College Golf Coaches Association Awards

College of Charleston’s Kieron Van Wyk stole the show.

Black college golfers across all divisions will now be honored with the BCGCA Awards thanks to a partnership with the Black College Golf Coaches Association and Golf Coaches Association of America.

College of Charleston’s Kieron Van Wyk earned the Adrian Stills Award as the Black College Golfer of the Year after becoming the first Black golfer in Colonial Athletic Association history to win medalist honors at the league championship.

Howard’s Gregory Odom Jr. was named HBCU Golfer of the Year and picked up consecutive wins to end his season at the MEAC Championship and PGA Works Championship.

A pair of teammates highlight the BCGCA All-America Team with Drexel’s Jeffrey Cunningham and Tafadzwa Nyamukondiwa and Howard’s Odom Jr. and Everett Whiten Jr., as well as Van Wyk, Javan Johnson (Taylor), Steve Kibare (Dalton State), Quinn Riley (Duke), Kristopher Stiles (San Jose State) and Troy Taylor II (Michigan State).

Van Wyk earned his third honor as the BCGCA Outstanding Freshman, with Kci Lindskog (Texas Southern) as the HBCU Outstanding Freshman. The pair were also named to the BCGCA All-Freshmen Team alongside Florida A&M teammates Tyler Partee and Miles Taylor and Chicago State’s Camron Jones.

VCU’s Andy Walker was named BCGCA Coach of The Year, with Gary Grandison from Texas Southern earning HBCU Coach of the Year honors.

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Greg Odom Jr. repeats, Howard wins team title at PGA Works Collegiate Championship

Make it two in a row for Greg Odom Jr. While you’re at it, make it a team title for Howard University.

Make it two in a row for Greg Odom Jr. While you’re at it, make it a team title for Howard University.

Odom and Howard teammate Everett Whiten Jr. finished 1-2 to lead the Bison to the team title at the 2022 PGA Works Collegiate Championship on Wednesday at Union League Liberty Hill in Lafayette Hill, Pennsylvania. They were the only two golfers to finish under par, with Odom’s 6-under 208 total leading the way. Whiten finished 2 under.

“I was just trying to keep hitting golf shots,” said Odom. “Coming into today three shots back, I knew my guys would stay strong. Today we overcame obstacles. This is huge for the Howard golf team.”

In August of 2019, Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry announced that he’s supporting men’s and women’s golf teams at Howard for six years, making it the first time Howard men’s golf competed at the Division I level.

In its second year of existence, the Howard men’s golf team capped its season with the MEAC Championship and now the PWCC title.

“The older guys did their jobs,” said Howard coach Sam Puryear. “But the younger guys. … what they did was invaluable. It was a total team effort. All the dreams came true. We said we wanted to win an HBCU national championship one day, and we got it.”

It’s a quick turnaround for Odom, who is playing this week’s Wells Fargo Championship on the PGA Tour on a sponsor exemption at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm starting Thursday. He’s grouped with Bo Hoag and Michael Gligic for the first two rounds in Potomac, Maryland.

2022 PGA Works Collegiate Championship
Texas A&M-Corpus Christi celebrate after winning the women’s division at the 2022 PGA Works Collegiate Championship at The Union League Golf Club at Torresdale, Pennsylvania. (Photo: Hailey Garrett/PGA of America)

Other winners include Cal State Dominguez Hills in the men’s Division II championship, and Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, which repeated in the women’s division but with a different coach, as Pat Stephens started as the team’s head coach in January. Lucie Charbonnier of Corpus Christi was the women’s medalist.

Delaware’s Sparky Ariyachatvakin won the men’s individual division and Kansas State’s Haley Vargas won the women’s for those golfers entered not on a team.

PGA Works features 30 teams from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic-serving institutions, and other minority-serving institutions from across the nation.

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‘Never can let down Pops’: Howard’s Greg Odom Jr. wins individual title at PGA Works days after father died

Days after the death of his father, Greg Odom Jr., won the first trophy for Howard University since Steph Curry revived the golf program..

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – As Greg Odom Jr. waited for the final round of the PGA Works Collegiate Championship to get underway, he danced a joyous boogie to Pooh Shiesty as if no one was watching.

Odom’s good cheer disguised the hurt underneath.

“Not another player in this field carried a more heavy heart than this kid,” said Howard University men’s and women’s golf coach Sam Puryear Jr.

That’s because Odom’s father, Greg Sr., 67, had died on May 1, back home in Memphis. Odom played on, shooting a final-round 2-over 74 at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, finishing his week at 4-over 220 and winning medalist honors as well as his first collegiate title. It also earned the first trophy for Howard since NBA star Steph Curry breathed life into the school’s golf program 13 months ago.

“I knew my dad wanted me to go out there and ball out,” Odom said. “Never can let down pops.”

It was ‘Pops’ who introduced Odom to the game at age 4 and took him to Irene Golf and Country in Memphis until kidney problems prevented him from playing. He endured a transplant and lived to see his son take to the game, but his health issues grew worse during COVID-19 and he was placed into hospice on Friday. On Saturday, Odom’s mother phoned Puryear, who broke the news to his team’s star.

“He wrapped his arms around me and told me everything would be OK,” Odom said.

Puryear was hired last April, not long after Curry’s foundation, Eat. Learn. Play., committed to support the establishment of the university’s first NCAA Division I golf program for six years. Odom, a 20-year-old junior who transferred from the University of Memphis, was Puryear’s first recruit. Not long after accepting the job, he called one of his Tennessee State University fraternity brothers who lived in Memphis and had been a principal at a school Odom attended and asked for the lowdown on the promising young player.

“He said, ‘That’s your guy,” Puryear said. “He said, ‘He was you when you were in college. You might be the only man who can handle him.’ ”

Greg Odom Jr.
Men’s Division I Medalist Greg Odom Jr. of Howard University holds the trophy at the PGA Works Collegiate Championship at TPC Sawgrass on May 5, 2021. (Photo: Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Puryear sold Odom on his track record, telling him to look at his resume, that everywhere he’d coaches he’d helped students improve and become winners.

“He trusted me,” Puryear said. “Once I had him on the hook to come, I knew I would be able to do something special. He was my lion. You’ve got to have a king of the jungle.”

But Pete Dye’s house of horrors is no place to play when the mind is fragile, especially on a day when the winds were whipping more than 20 miles per hour. Odom impressed his coach with his inner strength, but it came as no surprise.

“I saw this coming to fruition. I knew this was going to happen. He walked out of this room after his father passed and said, I’m going to win this event.’ That’s what he said. How many people can do that?” Puryear said, wiping fresh tears from his eyes after the round. “I’ve coached for a long time and I’ve never felt what I feel right now for a win for a kid after what he just went through.”

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