Dave Williams (golf coach)

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Dave Williams
Biographical details
Born (1918-10-14)October 14, 1918
Randolph, Texas, U.S.
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Wharton, Texas, U.S.
Alma mater East Texas State Teachers College
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1952–1987 Houston
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
16 NCAA Division I Golf Championship (1956–1960, 1962, 1964–1967, 1969, 1970, 1977, 1982, 1984, 1985)
5 MVC (1956–1960)
9 SWC (1974–1980, 1984, 1985)
Awards
GCAA Hall of Fame (1980)
Texas Sports Hall of Fame (1983)
Texas Golf Hall of Fame (1982)

David Glenwood Williams (14 October 1918 – 16 December 1998) was an American college golf coach.[1] He is tabbed as "The Father of College Golf" due to how he revolutionized the sport in the United States.[2] As head coach of the Houston Cougars, he won 16 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) team national championships and coached eight individual national champions.

Life

Williams was born in Randolph, Texas. Before becoming head coach at Houston, he was a professor in the engineering department at the university, having earned degrees from East Texas State Teachers College and the United States Naval Academy. After he began to beat then-UH athletic director Harry Fouke at golf on a regular basis, Fouke made him the head golf coach.[3] He served in that position from 1952 to 1987.

In addition to winning 16 team national championships and eight individual ones, Williams' teams won 14 conference championships and 340 tournaments overall. Several of his players would go on to have professional golf careers, including Fred Couples, Steve Elkington, Nick Faldo, Bruce Lietzke, John Mahaffey, Dave Marr, Phil Rodgers, Bill Rogers and Fuzzy Zoeller.[4] Future broadcaster Jim Nantz also played under him.

Williams' contributions to the sport lives on to this day, as the scoring system he devised is used at the high school level all the way up to Division I. He was also the first coach to start outfitting his teams in the same uniforms featuring the school colors.[5]

Williams died in Wharton, Texas in 1998. The Dave Williams Golf Academy at the Golf Club of Houston is named after him.[6]

References

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