Russell Henley - 2010       Matt Hill - 2009       Kevin Chappell - 2008       Jamie Lovemark - 2007       Pablo Martin - 2006       Ryan Moore - 2005       Bill Haas - 2004       Hunter Mahan - 2003       Graeme McDowell - 2002       Bryce Molder - 2001       Charles Howell III - 2000       Luke Donald - 1999       Matt Kuchar - 1998       Brad Elder - 1997       Tiger Woods - 1996       Stewart Cink - 1995       Justin Leonard - 1994       David Duval - 1993       Phil Mickelson - 1992       Phil Mickelson - 1991       Phil Mickelson - 1990       Robert Gamez - 1989       Bob Estes - 1988       Billy Mayfair - 1987       Scott Verplank - 1986       Sam Randolph - 1985       John Inman - 1984       Brad Faxon - 1983       Willie Wood - 1982       Bob Tway - 1981       Bobby Clampett - 1980       Bobby Clampett - 1979       Lindy Miller - 1978       Scott Simpson - 1977       Phil Hancock - 1976       Jay Haas - 1975       Curtis Strange - 1974       Ben Crenshaw - 1973       Ben Crenshaw - 1972       Ben Crenshaw - 1971                           

Haskins Spotlight - 5/3/2009 Mike Van Sickle

The Haskins Award has been presented several times to players from schools in favorable climates. Schools such as Oklahoma State (7) and Texas (6) - where golf can be played year round seem to have an unfair advantage when it comes time for the Haskins Award to be voted upon.

But this year could be different. A colder climate doesn't seem to bother Mike Van Sickle one bit.

Marquette's Mike Van Sickle has been working on a more than stellar year including five wins, one second, and two third place finishes. In fact, only 34 players have beaten him all year. 21 of those came in one tournament. His record of 782-34-10 is the best in the nation and it seems the only thing holding him back in the Golfweek/Sagarin Ratings is the smaller number of top 25 players he has played. By the way, he is 16-1-1 against them.

Van Sickle, a Senior, who was recently named the Big East Player of the year, will be leading the Golden Eagles into the NCAA Tournament in Mid-May where the First round of Haskins Ballots will be handed out to players and coaches.

Van Sickle was also invited to play in the Palmer Cup, and after that, he will be focusing on a professional career. An excerpt from gomarquette.com explains:

MILWAUKEE (AP) - College golf hotbeds generally are, well, hot. That makes Mike Van Sickle a likely PGA Tour prospect playing in an unlikely place.

Sure, warm-weather schools such as Oklahoma State, Southern California and Georgia still rule college golf. But the nation's best player just might be a personable 22-year-old currently making his rounds at Marquette, where spring weather is more likely to involve scarves and boots than sun visors and spikes.

A late bloomer, Van Sickle was skipped over by the nation's elite golf schools coming out of high school but feels at home at Marquette. And unlike other sports, where coming from a marquee program might be an advantage when it's time to go pro, golf's playing field is level.

"Whether you play golf at Marquette or USC, it doesn't matter," Van Sickle said. "There is no draft. It's not like playing at a bigger school or being more publicly recognized is going to get you more money when you get out there. Because you just go out there, and everyone has to play the same golf course in the same conditions -- whatever those conditions are -- and at the end of the day you earn a score based on the way you played.

"It's just the most fair game out there."

Van Sickle, a senior, won five of the 11 tournaments he played for the Golden Eagles this season -- including the All-America Classic in November, where he beat Oklahoma State's Trent Leon on the sixth hole of a playoff. He'll get another shot at top golfers from other marquee schools when NCAA tournament play begins in mid-May.

Van Sickle leads Division I in scoring average at 69.67 strokes per round and is the eighth-best amateur player in the world according to the R&A world amateur rankings. He has been invited to the Palmer Cup, a Ryder Cup-style competition in June between top U.S. and European college players.

He'll turn professional at some point after that, and is hoping to earn invitations to play in a pair of PGA Tour events in July: the John Deere Classic in Silvis, Ill., and the U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee.

With continued improvement to his wedge play, Van Sickle is confident he'll make it.

"I think my game for the most part is ready," he said. "I just need to focus on the short game, because those guys out there are just unbelievable with their wedges."

Marquette coach Tim Grogan played at UNLV at the same time Phil Mickelson was at Arizona State. One of Grogan's teammates, Warren Schutte, won the NCAA championship in 1991 and one of his roommates was an All-American.

"Mike's better. Mike's better than all those guys," Grogan said, pausing to reconsider. "Not better than Mickelson, I'm not going to go that far. But just straight-up ball striking? He's as good as anybody I've seen."

If Van Sickle makes it to the tour, he'll run into a familiar face. His father, Gary, is a golf writer for Sports Illustrated.

An accomplished golfer who made it to sectional qualifying for the U.S. Open in 1996, Gary Van Sickle hopes for the chance to write about his son.

"I'd just blast him -- 'How could you miss that putt, you choking dog!' " he joked.

Kidding aside, Gary Van Sickle sees tour potential in his son, given the fact that he had such success in college despite a short game that still needs work. The real question, Gary says, will be whether Mike can get through the tour's rigorous qualifying school and then handle the weekly grind of tour play.

"Hopefully, we get to find out," Gary said.

Mike Van Sickle's love of golf came from his father. His first driver was a made from a club that some hack at their local club had snapped in half over his leg; they fished it out of the garbage and put a grip on it.

Mike's serious injury in a baseball game at age 13 -- he broke his left elbow sliding into a base and still has a titanium pin in his arm -- helped steer him toward golf. But he wasn't pressured to go into the family business.

"You hear all these horror stories about dads forcing their kids to practice," Van Sickle said. "My dad was never like that. He'd just let me do whatever I wanted to do, whatever made me happy. And I loved golf so much that by the time I got to high school, I started to focus on that a little bit more and really improve my game."

Nor was there pressure to go to Marquette -- even though Mike's father was a reporter for the Milwaukee Journal in the late 1970s and '80s while his mother, Betsy, was Marquette's sports information director.

"They never pushed Marquette on me," Mike said. "My mom actually never really expected me to come to Marquette. We were always thinking, 'Oh, it's cold there. You don't want to go there.' But things happen for a reason, and it's funny sometimes how things work out. This is the one place that seemed to fit me the best."

His success has been a boost to Marquette's program, providing proof that elite college golf can be played in a chilly climate.

"I just think it shows that you can go to Marquette and do it," Grogan said. "There's nothing holding you back. I think a lot of players at a midwestern school, there's always a little bit of an excuse. There's always, 'Well, we're not an Oklahoma State. We don't have the same facilities.' And Mike kind of took that notion and dispelled it. You can go to Marquette and be the top player in the country."

The Haskins Commission would like to wish Mr. Van Sickle and all of the NCAA players luck in this years Haskins Award vote and beyond.





Past Recipients

2010 - Russell Henley
2009 - Matt Hill
2008 - Kevin Chappell
2007 - Jamie Lovemark
2006 - Pablo Martin
2005 - Ryan Moore
2004 - Bill Haas
2003 - Hunter Mahan
2002 - Graeme McDowell
2001 - Bryce Molder
2000 - Charles Howell III
1999 - Luke Donald
1998 - Matt Kuchar
1997 - Brad Elder
1996 - Tiger Woods
1995 - Stewart Cink
1994 - Justin Leonard
1993 - David Duval
1992 - Phil Mickelson
1991 - Phil Mickelson
1990 - Phil Mickelson
1989 - Robert Gamez
1988 - Bob Estes
1987 - Billy Mayfair
1986 - Scott Verplank
1985 - Sam Randolph
1984 - John Inman
1983 - Brad Faxon
1982 - Willie Wood
1981 - Bob Tway
1980 - Bobby Clampett
1979 - Bobby Clampett
1978 - Lindy Miller
1977 - Scott Simpson
1976 - Phil Hancock
1975 - Jay Haas
1974 - Curtis Strange
1973 - Ben Crenshaw
1972 - Ben Crenshaw
1971 - Ben Crenshaw




Tiger Woods receives the 1996 Haskins Award


The Fred Haskins Commission is based at the Country Club of Columbus, Columbus, Ga. Home of the Southeastern Amateur Golf Tournament. The Southeastern Amateur Golf Tournament was created by Mr. Fred Haskins shortly after accepting the position of Head Professional at the Country Club of Columbus in 1922. The Fred Haskins Commission administers the ballot process in which Division One collegiate golfers as well as national golf writers are asked to choose one of their peers as "The Most Outstanding Collegiate Golfer of the Year". © Copyright 1971-2009
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Country Club of Columbus
The Fred Haskins Commission
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