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Time to give back: Charles Howell in a mission to support diversity and minority mini-tour in golf

“It’s time to give back”, says Charles Howell III, a professional golfer who currently plays on the PGA Tour. Featured in the top 15 of the Official World Golf Ranking and known as one of the most consistent players on tour, he reflected on all that the game has given him and concluded it was time to give back.


“Given the current situation, I thought it would be really neat to do something via the game of golf,” Howell declared. “It’s been my life since I was 7 years old. There’s a way here to help other golfers to reach their dreams and goals. I thought the Advocates Tour was a really good fit.”

Charles Howell III playing golf. Image credit Yahoo!Sports

When on May 25, George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, was brutally murdered in Minneapolis while he was in police custody, Howell zeroed in on a cause he could get behind.

He pledged to make performance-based cash donations to the APGA Tour, a 10-year-old mini-tour for minority players, and its affiliated Advocates Foundation, through an initiative named #CharlesHowell4APGATour.


But that’s only a part of the story. Howell is also the first to admit that he’d never heard of the Advocates Tour until he was paired with one of its founders, Ken Bentley, during the pro-am a couple of years ago at the Farmers Insurance Open. It turns out that Howell’s caddie, Nick Jones, who played collegiately at USC, had competed in three APGA events, including a playoff loss, and knew Bentley, a retired Nestle executive, who made a lasting impression on Howell that day. On June 24, Howell left a voicemail for Bentley, saying he’d like to talk to him about how he could be part of the APGA’s effort to create more opportunities for minorities within the game of golf.


“It was a shock, a pleasant shock. He called out of the blue and said he wanted to help. He was feeling like he had to do something to make the world a better place and being a golfer, he felt like what he wanted to do should involve golf. He did some research and he wanted to be a part of it,” Bentley explained.

Howell III at the 2018 U.S. Open. Image credit Wikipedia

In other words, the Advocates Pro Golf Association’s mission is to create greater diversity to the sport by developing African Americans and other minorities for a variety of careers in golf. This grassroots effort began as 20-30 friends organizing three events in its first year has blossomed to eight events this year with $250,000 in prize money, including its first 72-hole tournament. Yet, Bentley declared he expects to grow to 12 tournaments next year.

Straight away, Howell committed to donating $50 for every birdie he makes and $100 for every eagle, but his involvement will extend far beyond monetary concerns to something far more valuable – his time.


“He wants to talk to the players and play with the guys. He wants to make a difference. It adds another layer to guys understanding what it takes to get to the PGA Tour and stay on Tour,” Bentley added.

Initially, Howell didn’t want to bring attention to his good deed. It took some coaxing from Bentley, who explained, “if we tell people what you’re doing, it could help other people get involved. I can envision other players doing the same thing.”


Bentley’s prediction already has come to fruition to some extent. When Farmers heard about Howell’s involvement, the company agreed to match Howell’s financial contributions based on the birdies and eagles of Willie Mack III and Kamaiu Johnson, two APGA players that Farmers is supporting financially to the tune of $25,000 per year through 2021.


The APGA has made steady progress since its humble beginning with three tournaments at inner-city courses. The PGA Tour’s involvement in 2012 provided a boost of credibility as well as an upgrade to tournament-tested courses – TPC Scottsdale, TPC Deere Run, Innisbrook Resort and Torrey Pines among them – and a glimpse of what it takes to be on Tour. Bentley believes that having a player of Howell’s pedigree could be the missing ingredient in establishing a platform for minority golfers to succeed in the professional ranks.

Charles Howell III. Image credit Celebrity Net Worth

“Charles is a game-changer. It’s inspirational for our guys to know that Charles is interested in their development, but also Charles can tell them what it takes to get where they want to get to,” Bentley said. “We have four or five guys who are a putt away from the Korn Ferry Tour or PGA Tour. With Charles’s involvement in player development, I think that his impact will result in that one or two putts they need to make it on the PGA Tour.”


Despite Tiger Woods being the dominant golfer and the formation of youth golf development programs such as First Tee, there are currently only four Black golfers on the PGA Tour, roughly the same number as when Howell grew up in Augusta, Georgia, and had minority golfers Jim Dent and Jim Thorpe as influences in his development.


“We’ve been talking for a long time about how we can diversify golf, but other than the PGA Tour we haven’t gotten a lot of support from the golf community,” Bentley said. “Now everybody is talking about how we need to expand the game. I think the George Floyd situation heightened attention that golf needs to change. If I had a crystal ball, I think golf will look more like America in the next five years.”


Howell can’t explain why more minorities haven’t progressed to the highest levels of the game and concede he doesn’t have an answer. But as he wrote in an Instagram post, “I believe in a better America, and I want to be a part of the solution.”


Source: Yahoo!Sports

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