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2024 Dinah Shore Trophy

Vanderbilt’s Celina Sattelkau Awarded 2024 Dinah Shore Trophy

Sattelkau honored for golf excellence, leadership and community service

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., June 25, 2024 – The LPGA Foundation announced today that Celina Sattelkau of Vanderbilt University is the recipient of the 2024 Dinah Shore Trophy, cementing her status as one of the top collegiate female players in the country.

 

The Dinah Shore Trophy recognizes the top collegiate female golfer who excels in both academics and athletics. Recipients must achieve an overall grade point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale and must have played in at least 50% of the team’s scheduled events while maintaining a scoring average of 78 or less. In addition, nominees must demonstrate outstanding leadership skills on the course, and charitable impact and service in their community.

 

“I am honored to receive the Dinah Shore Trophy Award, especially given its namesake – Dinah Shore, a fellow Vanderbilt graduate who was inducted into the Vanderbilt Athletics Hall of Fame just this year,” expressed Sattelkau. “I want to thank the LPGA Foundation and Friends of Golf for their dedication to honoring Dinah Shore’s commitment to advance women’s golf. Vanderbilt University has provided me with an incredible environment to grow as a golfer, student, and person. I am grateful for the unconditional support of my family, coaches, teammates, and friends who have encouraged me over the past five years. They have empowered me to make a positive impact in the world, and I am thrilled to do so in Dinah Shore’s name.”

 

A native of Neustadt, Germany, Sattelkau certainly left an indelible mark during her time at Vanderbilt. She came to the United States with a deep-rooted love for the environment and the game of golf. She was already as an accomplished athlete, having served as a member of the German National team since 2016, where she earned 3rd place in 2022 in the World Amateur Team Championships and 3rd place in 2023 in the European Team Championship.

 

Although she arrived in Nashville excited to wear the Black and Gold, Sattelkau struggled to find her footing after suffering from neuropathy in her hands and feet due to COVID. She dealt with mental health issues as a result and had to step away from golf briefly. After some time, she gained the courage to seek help adjusting to life in America. She proved to be a true success story who was able to get her game back.

 

From that moment on, there was no stopping Sattelkau. She believes it was her setbacks that taught her so much and helped her in ways she could have never imagined. She returned to the game with a growth mindset and a new “Winning Formula” that she developed for herself and to help others.

 

Sattelkau’s relentless pursuit of academic distinction demonstrated a passion for learning that inspired others around her. Her goal was always to communicate her knowledge about the environment to others while also using her financial knowledge to make a positive impact.

 

She excelled during her five years in Nashville earning both her graduate and undergraduate degrees from Vanderbilt University. Sattelkau maintained a 4.0 GPA while earning her Master of Science in Finance from the Owen Graduate School of Management. She made the Dean’s list every semester and graduated cum laude with a 3.89 GPA earning a Bachelor of Arts with a double major in Psychology and the Communication of Science/Technology and a minor in Environment & Sustainability Studies. She received the distinction of All-American Academic Scholar three times and made the SEC Academic Honor Roll five times. She was a finalist for Vanderbilt’s Award for Leadership Excellence in 2022.

 

On the golf course, she was known as a true competitor with the fire to win. Sattelkau is a four-time Women’s Golf Coaches Association All-American and two-time All SEC First Team. She was named the first two-time All-American at Vanderbilt since Marina Alex in 2012. Known for being a supportive teammate, Sattelkau helped the Commodores conclude their 2024 season at the NCAA Championships with their highest finish since 2014. She contributed to the team reaching back-to-back-to-back NCAA Championships in a decade, when the Dores made a program-best five-straight appearances from 2010-14.

Some of Sattelkau’s biggest impact has come from her community outreach and leadership. She dedicated countless service hours and raised money for the Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University, led exercise sessions at an Alzheimer’s care facility, wrote letters to seniors during the holidays and fostered dogs from a local animal shelter. In addition to her community service, Sattelkau served as Founder/President of the Vanderbilt Sports Business Club dedicated to merging sports and business for students. She was selected for the “Be An Anchor” Leadership program by the Athletic Department and served as Project Lead in the Students Promoting Environmental Awareness and Responsibility for four years.

 

The LPGA Foundation first announced the Dinah Shore Scholarship Fund in March 1994 in honor of the late Dinah Shore, a Vanderbilt University graduate and an honorary member of the LPGA and World Golf Halls of Fame. The Dinah Shore Trophy Award, which was founded by FOG through the efforts of board member and producer Ray Beindorf and his good friend Dinah Shore, has contributed more than $210,000 to women’s collegiate golf programs, including this year.

 

Since 1994, Friends of Golf (FOG) has helped the LPGA Foundation provide this award to the country’s top collegiate golfers and community leaders. As part of their support, FOG contributed to the $10,000 grant that will be awarded to the women’s golf program at Vanderbilt University.

 

The last recipient from Vanderbilt University to receive this award was Mallory Crosland back in 1999. Former winners of this prestigious award include current LPGA Tour players Stacy Lewis (University of Arkansas, 2007) and Amy Olson (North Dakota State University, 2012), as well as Golf Channel personality and former LPGA player Amanda Blumenherst (Duke University, 2008, 2009).

 

About the LPGA Foundation  

The LPGA is committed to being the global leader in women’s golf and to using our unique platform to empower, inspire and advance opportunities for girls and women, on and off the golf course.

 

Our commitment to Changing the Face of Golf focuses on making the sport we love more diverse, accessible, and inclusive. As the philanthropic arm of the LPGA, the LPGA Foundation achieves its vision through the programs of LPGA*USGA Girls Golf, LPGA Leadership Academies, and providing grants & scholarships to those in financial need. The Foundation also includes the LPGA Amateur Golf Association, the recreational arm of the LPGA serving 16,000 members worldwide.

 

Our programs advance equality by removing barriers to sports participation, ensuring that every girl and woman who want to play has a welcoming and positive experience while taking advantage of the benefits of golf.

 

About the Friends of Golf (FOG)
Originally founded in 1979, Friends of Golf (FOG) has donated over $10 million to both national and Southern California college, high school and non-profit golf-focused organizations. Legendary professional golfer and Bel-Air Country Club teaching pro Eddie Merrins (“The Little Pro”) and a group of Los Angeles-area golfer helped organize FOG’s first annual golf tournament intended to benefit the neighboring UCLA men’s golf program. Since then, FOG has hosted 42 annual charity golf tournaments at Bel-Air Country Club and honored some of the game’s top stars including Jack Nicklaus, Sir Nick Faldo, Annika Sorenstam, Phil Mickelson, Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson, Lorena Ochoa and Collin Morikawa. FOG supports student athlete golfers by instilling the values of honesty, ethics, and fellowship with a true appreciation for the game. From the time boys and girls enter grade school through the end of their college experience, FOG makes it possible for aspiring junior golfers (irrespective of economic standing) to play, compete and excel in this exceptional sport.

FOG also founded and backs a number of leading national amateur golf awards including The Ben Hogan Trophy, presented each year to the top male college golfer and The Dinah Shore Trophy, which is similarly presented to the top female golfer through a joint venture with the LPGA Foundation. Friends of Golf, Inc. is recognized as a non-profit, tax-deductible organization through Federal I.D. #95-3668541 and the State of California Franchise Tax Board Organization #1058257.

 

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2024 Ben Hogan Award

Koivun wins 2024 Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank

FORT WORTH, Texas (May 20, 2024) – The Hogan Trophy Award Foundation, Friends of Golf (FOG) and Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA) have announced that Auburn freshman Jackson Koivun is the recipient of the 2024 Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank.

 

Koivun joins Rickie Fowler of Oklahoma State in 2008 as the only freshmen ever to win the Ben Hogan Award. Koivun also is the first Auburn player to win the honor at Colonial Country Club. William Blackmon won the Ben Hogan Trophy in 1994 at Bel-Air Country Club.

 

He is ranked third in the National Collegiate Golf Ranking System and fourth in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. He reached the quarterfinals of the 2023 U.S. Amateur and placed second at the 2024 Jones Cup Invitational. His amateur finishes also include a 20th-place showing at last summer’s Southern Amateur and a 21st-place landing at the Western Amateur.

 

Koivun owns a 69.25 collegiate scoring average thanks to 17 sub-70 scores in his 36 rounds. He has 10 top-5 finishes in 12 tournaments, including wins at the SEC Championships and the Pinehurst Intercollegiate. His victory at the conference tournament came by six strokes with a 12-under-par total of 198. He was named the SEC Golfer of the Year and SEC Freshman of the Year, becoming the first to earn both distinctions since Justin Thomas in 2012.

 

The Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank annually awards the top men’s NCAA Division I, II or III, NAIA or NJCAA college golfer based on all collegiate, amateur and professional events over the previous 12 months. The award’s esteemed selection committee is made up of more than 30 leaders in collegiate, amateur and professional golf. In addition, all past award recipients were eligible to vote in the final round.

 

The other finalists for the 2024 Ben Hogan Award were Georgia Tech senior Christo Lamprecht and Vanderbilt junior Gordon Sargent. All three finalists attended a black-tie dinner at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, where the winner was crowned.

 

The Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank has honored the outstanding amateur collegiate golfer at Colonial Country Club since 2002. Prior to its move to Fort Worth, the original Ben Hogan Trophy, which was awarded based on a different list of criteria, was issued at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles beginning in 1990.

 

Recipients of the Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank have combined to accumulate 88 worldwide victories, including 66 PGA TOUR wins, and have amassed more than $420 million in prize money on the PGA TOUR. Additionally, the group has appeared in 17 Ryder Cups and 13 Presidents Cups.

 

Past recipients are Ludvig Åberg (‘22, ‘23), Ricky Barnes (‘03), Patrick Cantlay (‘12), Matt Every (‘06), Rickie Fowler (‘08), Doug Ghim (‘18), Bill Haas (‘04), Viktor Hovland (‘19), Chris Kirk (‘07), Hunter Mahan (‘03), Maverick McNealy (‘17), Ryan Moore (‘05), John Pak (‘21), Jon Rahm (‘15, ‘16), Patrick Rodgers (‘14), Kyle Stanley (‘09), Nick Taylor (‘10), Sahith Theegala (‘20), D.J. Trahan (‘02), Peter Uihlein (‘11) and Chris Williams (‘13).

 

Since 2002, the Hogan Trophy Award Foundation has awarded over $1 million in scholarships and charitable contributions. For more information on the Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank, visit TheBenHoganAward.org and follow @BenHoganAward on Twitter (X), Facebook and Instagram.

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2024 Ben Hogan Award

Koivun, Lamprecht and Sargent Named 2024 Ben Hogan Award Finalists Presented by PNC Bank

FORT WORTH, Texas (May 7, 2024) – The Hogan Trophy Award Foundation, Friends of Golf (FOG) and Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA) have announced the three finalists for the 2024 Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank, which annually awards the top men’s NCAA Division I, II or III, NAIA or NJCAA college golfer based on all collegiate, amateur and professional events over the previous 12 months.

 

Determined by voting from the award’s esteemed selection committee made up of more than 30 leaders in collegiate, amateur and professional golf, the 2024 Ben Hogan Award Finalists are Auburn freshman Jackson Koivun, Georgia Tech senior Christo Lamprecht and Vanderbilt junior Gordon Sargent.

 

Koivun is the first-ever finalist from Auburn, while Lamprecht is the second from Georgia Tech, joining Ollie Schniederjans (2014). Sargent is a finalist for the second straight year, and is the school’s third ever, all in the past five years (John Augenstein, 2020). Koivun is just the second freshman to be an award finalist in the last decade, joining Florida’s Ricky Castillo in 2020.

 

Koivun, a native of Chapel Hill, N.C., is ranked third in the National Collegiate Golf Ranking System and fourth in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. He reached the quarterfinals of the 2023 U.S. Amateur and placed second at the 2024 Jones Cup Invitational. His amateur finishes also include a 20th-place showing at last summer’s Southern Amateur and a 21st-place landing at the Western Amateur.

 

Koivun owns a 69.15 collegiate scoring average thanks to 16 sub-70 scores in his 33 rounds. He has nine top-5 finishes in 11 tournaments, including wins at the SEC Championships and the Pinehurst Intercollegiate. His victory at the conference tournament came by six strokes with a 12-under-par total of 198. He earned SEC Golfer of the Week honors three times and Freshman of the Week accolades on five other occasions.

 

Lamprecht sits atop the World Amateur Golf Ranking, is second in the PGA TOUR University rankings and sixth in the National Collegiate Golf Ranking System. He won the 2023 Amateur Championship and claimed the Silver Medal as the low amateur at the 151st Open Championship (T-74). The South African finished 71st at the 2024 Masters Tournament. A member of the International Team at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Cup, he also competed at the 2023 World Amateur Team Championship, placing eighth.

 

Collegiately, he won the OFCC/Fighting Illini Invitational and was co-medalist at the 2023 Ben Hogan Collegiate Invitational. Additionally, Lamprecht shared second place at the Watersound Invitational and tied for third at this spring’s ACC Championship. Overall, he owns a 69.11 stroke average with six top-10 finishes in 10 events and no placements outside the top 16.

 

Sargent, a product of Birmingham, Ala., ranks second in the World Amateur Golf Ranking and seventh in the National Collegiate Golf Ranking System. In the fall, he became the first player to earn his PGA TOUR card through the PGA TOUR University Accelerated program. A member of the United States teams at the Walker Cup and Arnold Palmer Cup, Sargent was low amateur at the 123rd U.S. Open (T-39). He also reached the round of 64 at the 2023 U.S. Amateur and was fifth individually at the World Amateur Team Championships for victorious Team USA.

 

Sargent has a 69.93 average over 27 college rounds in 2023-24. He won the Mason Rudolph Invitational and was runner up at the SEC Stroke Play and the Watersound Invitational. His tie for third at the Ben Hogan Collegiate Invitational gives him four top-5 finishes in nine events.

 

The finalists will attend a black-tie dinner Monday, May 20, at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, where the winner will be crowned.

 

The Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank has honored the outstanding amateur collegiate golfer at Colonial Country Club since 2002. Prior to its move to Fort Worth, the original Ben Hogan Trophy, which was awarded based on a different list of criteria, was issued at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles beginning in 1990.

 

Recipients of the Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank have combined to accumulate 88 worldwide victories, including 66 PGA TOUR wins, and have amassed more than $420 million in prize money on the PGA TOUR. Additionally, the group has appeared in 17 Ryder Cups and a dozen Presidents Cups.

 

Past recipients are Ludvig Åberg (‘22, ‘23), Ricky Barnes (‘03), Patrick Cantlay (‘12), Matt Every (‘06), Rickie Fowler (‘08), Doug Ghim (‘18), Bill Haas (‘04), Viktor Hovland (‘19), Chris Kirk (‘07), Hunter Mahan (‘03), Maverick McNealy (‘17), Ryan Moore (‘05), John Pak (‘21), Jon Rahm (‘15, ‘16), Patrick Rodgers (‘14), Kyle Stanley (‘09), Nick Taylor (‘10), Sahith Theegala (‘20), D.J. Trahan (‘02), Peter Uihlein (‘11) and Chris Williams (‘13).

 

Since 2002, the Hogan Trophy Award Foundation has awarded over $1 million in scholarships and charitable contributions. For more information on the Ben Hogan Award presented by PNC Bank, visit TheBenHoganAward.org and follow @BenHoganAward on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

 

2024 Finalists

Jackson Koivun, Auburn, Fr., Chapel Hill, N.C.

Christo Lamprecht, Georgia Tech, Sr., George, South Africa

Gordon Sargent, Vanderbilt, Jr., Birmingham, Ala.

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