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Cowboy Golf Camp
Head Coach Mike McGraw
In just two seasons as the head coach at Oklahoma State, Mike McGraw has already
left his mark on one of the nation’s proudest programs.
In 2006-07, he
guided the Cowboys to three team titles, including the school’s fifth Big 12
crown, and produced his second Big 12 Player of the Year in Pablo Martin. McGraw
was also named the Big 12 Coach of the Year after leading the program to its
50th conference championship.
No better script could have been written in
McGraw’s inaugural season at the helm as he guided the Cowboys to their 10th
NCAA title.
After taking command of a talented squad that returned four
starters and had won seven tournaments during the 2004-05 season, McGraw began
his first year with lofty expectations and did not disappoint. He broke through
with his first career victory at the Hall of Fame Invitational before collecting
the team title at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate. However, the back-to-back
titles were just a precursor to the success that would lie ahead as he guided
the squad to three consecutive victories, including the NCAA Championship, to
close out his rookie season.
After triumphs at The Maxwell and the NCAA
Central Regional, McGraw delivered the school's 10th national title in Sunriver,
Ore. at Crosswater Golf Club before being named the Dave Williams Award winner
as the national coach of the year.
Just the third head coach in the
60-year history of the storied program, McGraw assumed the position held by
former Cowboy head coach Mike Holder, who had manned the post since
1973.
“This job is a big responsibility, because I know how much this
program has meant and means to Mike Holder,” McGraw said. “I realize what a
great job Labron Harris did and Mike built on that. That is why the position has
a lot of responsibility, because I have to do the same thing they did. My
expectations are to continue their success and try to make the program
better.”
A native of Ponca City, Okla., McGraw grew up in the shadows of
the Cowboy program and has never been far from its reaches.
During his
youth, McGraw watched as Holder brought his squad to Ponca City Country Club and
spent numerous days on the course as a caddy for former OSU All-American Roger
Brown.
“I was raised 40 miles north of here and knew all about the
program when I was growing up,” McGraw said. “I never dreamed I would be the
head coach, so this opportunity means a lot from the standpoint that I have
followed the program for more than 35 years and realize its
stature.”
McGraw was raised in a golf family as his father, Gervis,
competed in the 1949 U.S. Open at Medina at the age of 19. His older brother,
Tim, was a state champion at Ponca City High School and his twin sister, Patty,
who played at OSU, has won nine Oklahoma amateur state titles and currently
serves as the head women's golf coach at Central Oklahoma.
Prior to his
appointment, he spent the 2004-05 season working as the head coach of the
Cowgirl golf squad after a seven-year stint as an assistant with the men's
team.
While leading the women's team, McGraw directed the Cowgirls to the
2005 Big 12 title and was named as the conference coach of the year in the
process. Under his guidance, the squad produced two first-team All-Americans in
Karin Sjodin and Annie Thurman-Young.
During his tenure as an assistant
coach for the men's team, the Cowboys won 16 tournament titles, and produced 19
All-Americans. OSU enjoyed marked success at the NCAA Championship with McGraw
on staff, winning its ninth national title in 2000 and posting four top-five
finishes, including a pair of runner-up finishes.
Among his pupils were
Charles Howell and Hunter Mahan, who both earned national player of the year
honors, and fellow first-team All-Americans Bo Van Pelt and Anders
Hultman.
In 2003, McGraw was named the inaugural recipient of the Jan
Strickland Assistant Coach of the Year award, presented by TaylorMade-Adidas
Golf, after spending the year in a dual role as assistant coach and tournament
director for the NCAA Championship.
The following season, McGraw once
again found himself with multiple roles within the OSU golf program, adding the
title of assistant women's coach to his list of duties. He helped the Cowgirl
squad to a runner-up finish at the NCAA Championship.
McGraw came to
Stillwater in 1997 after heading the golf program at Edmond (Okla.) North High
School for four seasons. Under his watch, the Huskies captured three state
titles. Overall, his squads won 36 out of 46 tournaments entered and were
runners-up on seven other occasions.
McGraw served as an assistant coach
at Edmond Memorial High School from 1987 until 1993, helping the Bulldogs to six
state championships in seven seasons.
The Daily Oklahoman's Coach of the
Year in 1994, 1996 and 1997, he served as the President of the Oklahoma Golf
Coaches Association in 1994.
During his time in Edmond, he coached a
total of seven individual state champions and sent over 20 players on to play at
the Division I level.
In addition to his coaching duties, McGraw served
as the junior golf director at Kicking Bird Golf Course in Edmond for several
years. He also taught in the Edmond Public Schools system from
1990-97.
As a player, McGraw was a three-year letterwinner for Central
Oklahoma and was named an honorable mention All-American in 1981 after finishing
16th at the NAIA Championship that season. He graduated from UCO with a
bachelor's degree in broadcast communications in 1982.
Born April 18,
1960, McGraw and his wife, Pam, were married in October of 1996.
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