Howard UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM’S Gregory Odom Jr., plays through grief to win PGA Works Collegiate golf title, EVERYBODY IS TALKING, THE WORLD IS WATCHING

Howard UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM’S Gregory Odom Jr.,  plays through grief to win PGA Works Collegiate golf title, EVERYBODY IS TALKING, THE WORLD IS WATCHING

Howard’s Gregory Odom Jr. Wins One for ‘Pops’ at the PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship

 

@University of Memphis, photo by Trey Clark.Odom_Jr_Gregory_1920MGOLF_8393_TC_20190927
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Gregory Odom Jr.
  • Ht./Wt.
    5-10 /
  • Class
    Junior
  • Hometown
    Germantown, Tenn.
  • Prev School
    Middle College High
Academic Honors
American Athletic Conference All-Academic Team 20192019-20 (Sophomore)
Participated in the Men’s South Region Preview Oct. 27-29. . . . Opened by firing a 2-under 70. . . . Finished the 54-hole event at 4-over 220 and posted a Top-20 result, the first of his career. . . .  Did not participate in the spring season.

2018-19 (Freshman)
Odom made his lone appearance during his freshman season at the Memphis Intercollegiate at Colonial Country Club in September. . . . He shot 19-over 235 at the Memphis Intercollegiate, including a 4-over 76 in the final round. . . . Improved his scores each round of the event. . . . Named to the American Athletic Conference All-Academic Team.

High School
Odom finished his senior year at Middle College High with a second place finish at the state tournament at the WillowBrook Golf Club in Manchester, Tenn. . . . Odom was a state qualifier in three of his four high school seasons. . . . His other top finishes include winning the Memphis Publinks and Fellowship of Christian Athletes tournaments. . . . His best round outside of competition came when he set the course record for Irene Country Club in Memphis with a 61. . . . One of the highlights of his junior career was shooting a 67 in the USJGT Windyke to finish with medalist honor

 

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Gregory Odom Jr. had held in his emotions long enough. The wave finally crested. He signed his scorecard, bent down next to the push cart that held his navy Howard University Bison bag, put his hand over his face, and finally let some of the hurt go.
@imglojr
His coach, Sam Puryear, rubbed Odom’s back to comfort him.
Odom, 20, was on the grounds playing his first practice round at the PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship at TPC Sawgrass on Saturday when Puryear had to tell him that his father, Greg Odom Sr., had passed away back home in Memphis, Tennessee. Odom Sr., 67, had been admitted to hospice a day earlier, his kidney failing him. The son, miles away in Florida, conferred by telephone with his mother and knew there was one thing his dad would want him to do: Play.
Odom not only played, but he played incredibly well on a tough test, the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. Though Howard fell shy of its first team stroke-play title on Wednesday – Prairie View A&M would win that – Odom landed the first trophy of any sort for Howard, which restarted its golf program only 13 months ago. His team struggled on Wednesday, posting 332 and finishing fourth, but Odom shined. He shot 74 on the Stadium to finish 54 holes at 4-over 220. He beat Alabama State’s Thacher Neal by five shots.
“I knew my dad wanted me to go out there and ball out,” Odom said. “Never can let down Pops.”
Greg Odom Sr. loved golf, and taught his son the game in Memphis. Greg Jr. said he was about 4 when he got started. He and his dad would spend afternoons out at Irene Golf & Country Club, which pitches itself as “affordable championship golf.” Says the son, “We played all the time until he got sick.”
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When Puryear – who coached at Michigan State and Stanford – got the job at Howard, he wanted to build a culture. He wanted to be a program that came together as family. He heard of Odom through a fraternity brother of his from Tennessee State who happened to be the principal at a school that Odom attended in Tennessee. He told Puryear “He’s a kid that’s just like you. Trust me, he’s your guy.” Odom, who didn’t play much as a freshman at Memphis, was Puryear’s first recruit.
Puryear said after the first round at PGA WORKS that he and Odom have forged a special bond. They have “vibed” well together. Puryear will begin to say something to one of the Bison players, and Odom will step in, tell his coach, “I got this,” and say exactly the words that Puryear would say himself.
Howard led the Men’s Division I group at PGA WORKS through 36 holes, and somebody asked Puryear if he wanted a team victory, or to see Odom win individually. “I said that’s not even a question,” Puryear said. “I’d take an individual victory for him all day, every day.”
Through tears, Puryear tried to put the week’s experience into words. The team didn’t know the situation through the week, as Odom Jr. and Puryear kept it to themselves. At one point, they stopped eating.
“How do you lose your dad on the day of the practice round before you tee off and you say you want to play?” the coach said. “Not another player in this field carried a more heavy heart than this kid. To do what he did, and hold your emotions in until the end, like he just did?
“I just don’t know what’s better than that. I’ve been coaching for a long time, at a lot of places, and I’ve won everything you can win in this game. National Championship, Big 10 Championship, Coach of the Year … I’ve won all of that. I’ve never felt like I do right now for a win for a kid after what he just went through. That kid has something different. He’s tough. He’s got moxie that comes from deep down inside. He’s got a whole lot.”
When Puryear made his initial pitch to Odom to join the new Bison program, he told him if he came, he would get better as a player, and he would win. Puryear says Odom is special. “He has the heart of a lion,” he said.
After his round, Odom said he was headed back to school for a few days, and then will gather his things and get home to Memphis. There, he’ll say his final goodbye to the man who taught him the game.
“When I found out, I knew he wouldn’t want me to sit around,” Odom said of his father. “He always liked to see me on the golf course.”
He would have been awfully proud to see what his son accomplished at TPC Sawgrass.

 

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.
a group of people posing for the camera: Gregory Odom Jr.
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© Gregory Odom Jr.
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.’ ”

a man standing on a sidewalk: Greg Odom Jr.
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  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.”

Gregory Odom Jr., a 20-year-old junior on the Howard University golf team, loves the rap music of his hometown of Memphis, Tennessee. On Wednesday night, after winning the men’s Division I individual title at the PGA Works Collegiate Championship on the famed Stadium Course at the TPC Sawgrass, the economics major “turned it up” with his teammates to the catchy lyrics and beats of Pooh Shiesty and Key Glock.

With rounds of 71-75-74 for a 4-over 220 total, Odom led Howard to a fourth-place finish in the team competition in the university’s first appearance in the championship that began in 1987 to feature golf programs from historically Black colleges and universities.

Odom’s win comes in the first season of golf’s resurgence at Howard with the help of Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry, who single-handedly resurrected the program in 2019 by pledging to fund Howard’s men’s and women’s golf teams for six years.

A transfer from the University of Memphis, Odom began the tournament week on a more somber note with the death of his father, Gregory Sr., who had battled chronic kidney failure for most of his son’s life. Introduced to the game as a 4-year-old by his father, Odom saw his dad go through years of dialysis before receiving a kidney transplant. In recent years, Gregory Sr. suffered from dementia. After another kidney failure, he was in the hospital last week and in hospice care when he died on May 1 at the age of 67.

On Wednesday as Odom battled the tough Pete Dye-designed stadium course, memories of his father crept into his mind, helping him embrace the magnitude of the moment. While his coach and Howard administrators knew, his teammates wouldn’t know about his father’s death until after the round. He didn’t want to be a distraction. On some putts, he told himself to make it for his dad. He remembered how his dad, a good player in his own right, had taken him to play golf at his Irene Golf and Country Club in Memphis.

“Dad was the strength that turned me on hole by hole,” Odom said. “I couldn’t feel down. I was just lifting up in his spirit. My dad’s been hurting for a long time and I’m glad that he’s now resting in peace.”

Samuel Puryear, Howard’s golf coach, was the one to give Odom the news of his father’s death. On April 30, shortly after landing in Jacksonville, Florida, from Washington, Puryear had sat down for a meal with the team when he got a call from Odom’s mother, Shirley, who told him that her husband had been placed in hospice. A day later, before their first practice round, he got another call from her telling him that Gregory had died. After receiving the news from Puryear in the coach’s hotel room, Odom told his coach that he was going to win the tournament.

Since taking the job at Howard in March 2020 after stints as the golf coach at Michigan State and Queens University in Charlotte, North Carolina, the 50-year-old Puryear is poised to resurrect a program that had been dormant for nearly 50 years. Odom, who was his first recruit, is the type of elite-level player that he hoped to attract to build a strong foundation for the program.

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Howard University’s Gregory Odom Jr. watches his tee shot on the 16th hole during the third round of the 2021 PGA Works Collegiate Championship held at TPC Sawgrass on May 5 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

“When I was asked if I could pick between a team championship and an individual championship, I said that I would take an individual championship for Greg all day long,” Puryear said. “To come out here and play three inspired rounds of golf in the midst of losing his father is remarkable. I’ve won a lot in my career, but I don’t know of a story that can match this one.”

That the Howard University golf team even made it to the PGA Works Collegiate Championship is a remarkable story. With COVID-19 restrictions, Puryear didn’t expect his team to play this season, but in late fall it was given the go-ahead to play this spring. This week at TPC Sawgrass marks only their 10th week together as a team. Yet after two rounds at PGA Works, they held the lead before stumbling in the last round with a 44-over par total of 332 to finish 25 shots behind the winner, Prairie View A&M, which learned on the same day that it had earned an at-large berth into the NCAA Division I regionals.

“Experience plays a big part,” Puryear said. “I think sometimes before you can win you have to learn how to win. Outside of Greg, none of my kids had ever won.”

For Puryear, who played golf at Tennessee State, the opportunity to build a winning tradition at Howard is very different from his stints at predominantly white institutions. “For one, all the players here are Black like me,” he said.

“Here I have to do a lot more teaching. Most of my players are not polished. Much of what I have to tell my players now during the tournaments I didn’t have to tell my players at Michigan State. But that golf IQ comes with playing in top-tier events. My goal is to recruit some good players and come back to the PGA Works and win the team championship. Once I can get a couple of cycles of recruiting, I think I can build some depth to build a consistently competitive program.”

One person who is hoping that Puryear can succeed is Curry. On Wednesday evening, the NBA star FaceTimed the team after the tournament, offering congratulations and encouragement for a good finish in their first national championship competition.

“It’s great to have one of the best athletes on the planet in your corner because he understands how champions are built,” Puryear said. “So he understands what I’m trying to build at Howard.”

For Odom, the future is bright. After a couple of weeks to unwind in the Washington area, he plans to head home to Memphis to be with his family and celebrate his father’s life before the start of a busy summer schedule of golf tournaments. “I’m full of confidence,” said Odom, who plans to turn pro after graduation next year. “I’m just going to continue to try to keep the positive vibes going and make the best of some of the opportunities that I have to play with this win.”

During the flight home Wednesday night with a layover in Charlotte, Odom could mellow out and reflect on these past several days – his future in golf and the peace and understanding that he has about his father’s death. The beat of Pooh Shiesty’s “Shiesty Summer” helped him pass the time as his father looked over him from high above.

 

 

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