The Official Home of University of Illinois Athletics
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05/18/2013
Campbell, Detry Tie for Second; Danielson Ties for Fifth; Pieters Ties for 10th
05/17/2013
Three Illinois Players in Top 10 With 1 Round Left in Tournament
05/16/2013
Freshman Danielson Fires Best Round to Par in NCAA Play in UI History
05/14/2013
Illinois Aims to Qualify for NCAA Championships for Sixth-Straight Season
05/13/2013
Rookies Band Together to Move Program Forward Despite Different Backgrounds
04/28/2013
Photos from day three of the Big Ten men's golf championships
05/31/2012
Photos from Day 3 of the 2012 NCAA Men's Golf Championship at Riviera CC. Illini Thomas Pieters won the national title.
01/22/2012
Photos from Illinois' 67-63 loss to Wisconsin on Jan. 22, 2012. Photos by Mark Jones and AP.
Head Coach Mike Small has brought national recognition to the Illinois golf program in his decade-plus as head coach. Small has guided the Illini to four straight Big Ten championships and has coached two of the last three NCAA individual champions in Scott Langley (2010) and Thomas Pieters (2012). He also coached the 2012 Big Ten Player of the Year Luke Guthrie, who repeated as the individual Big Ten champion and broke the program's career stroke average record to complete an illustrious career. Guthrie became the third Big Ten Player of the Year Small has coached, joining Scott Langley (2010) and James Lepp (2003).
In 2012, Small guided his club to the NCAA Championships for the fifth-straight season, making Illinois one of only six schools to compete at nationals each of the last five years. In 2011, the Illini completed their best NCAA finish since 1941, finishing third in stroke play to reach the NCAA match play quarterfinals before tying for fifth overall. Small has led the Illini to uncharted territory in his 12 seasons in Champaign-Urbana, guiding them to seven top-25 finishes at the NCAA Championships.
Small has been named Big Ten Coach of the Year a conference-record five times in his career (2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2002) after taking home the top honor for the fourth year in a row in 2012. He also has been named Midwest Regional Coach of the Year four times in his career (2011, 2010, 2009, 2003). Under his direction, Illinois athletes have won 10 All-America honors and 23 All-Big Ten accolades.
Small's players also have had individual success as well. Two recent graduates earned their PGA Tour cards in the last six months, as Guthrie secured his by finishing second on the Web.com Tour in 2012 and Langley earned his by finishing tied for 17th at the 2012 PGA Tour qualifying tournament. They join Joe Affrunti, who lettered at Illinois in 2004, and fellow Illinois alumni Steve Stricker and D.A. Points as the five Illini on the PGA Tour in 2013. Recent graduates Chris DeForest (2011) and Langley (2010 and '12) also have qualified for the U.S. Open.
Langley has been Illinois' most visible player since Steve Stricker. His run to low amateur finisher at the 2010 U.S. Open came two weeks after winning the NCAA championship. Langley also won the clinching match at the Palmer Cup, reached the quaterfinals at the U.S. Amateur and was one of three players on the United States team at the World Amateur Team Championships in Argentina.
Illinois' most recent NCAA champion, Thomas Pieters, also helped Europe clinch the 2012 Palmer Cup by halving both of his singles matches in the event. And two more of Small's players, Zach Barlow (2008) and Luke Guthrie (2009), won Illlinois State Amateur titles while playing at Illinois.
Small's players also have had academic success and captured the last two Big Ten Medal of Honor awards for Illinois with Scott Langley in 2011 and Luke Guthrie in 2012. Small provides the Illini with the unique combination of a respected teacher/coach and a current playing professional wrapped up in one man that has lifted Illinois into national contender.
Small has the distinction of playing on a Big Ten championship team and coaching four. As a former full-time professional, he can share with aspiring tour players what it takes to play at the next level. As someone who still competes and succeeds at a handful of tour events each year, he has had a chance to rub elbows with the likes of Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.
In 2010-11, the Illini completed their best NCAA finish since 1941, reaching the NCAA match play quaterfinals and tying for fifth overall. Over the past four years, Illinois has consistently been ranked in the top 10 in the country, finishing seventh in the 2011 Golfweek computer rankings.
In 2009-10, Scott Langley won the NCAA title while the Illini advanced to the NCAA for the third straight year. The Illini ended the season ranked in the top 10 after its second straight Big Ten crown.
In 2008-09, Illinois won the Big Ten championship, advanced to the NCAA finals and claimed titles in seven tournaments overall, including the prestigious Olympia Fields/Fighting Illini Invitational.
During the 2007-08 season, Illinois recorded the lowest individual (63, Chris DeForest) and team (272) round in school history. The Illini advanced to the NCAA Championships, finishing 17th. Scott Langley was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year
In 2006-07, senior Kyle Hosick placed 10th at the Big Ten Championships and was named a Cleveland Golf All-America Scholar.
Small directed a young Illinois team to a solid year in 2005-06. The Illini recorded four top-five finishes as six different players in the lineup combined for a total of 11 individual top-10 finishes. Patrick Nagle earned All-Region and All-Big Ten honors while Mark Ogren also earned all-conference accolades.
He led his squad to four top-three finishes in 2004-05, including runner-up honors at the Bruce Fossum/TaylorMade Invitational, a tournament that featured nine Big Ten teams.
During the 2003-04 season, Illinois finished runner-up at the Big Ten Championships for the third-straight year and made its third consecutive appearance in the NCAA Central Regional.
In 2002-03, the Illini recorded the lowest 72-hole team score in school history, finishing runner-up at the Big Ten Championships for the second year in a row. Illinois went on to a runner-up finish at the NCAA Central Regional, marking the UI's best performance ever at regionals. Small was recognized for Illinois' stellar season by being named the Eaton Golf Pride Midwest Region Coach of the Year.
In 2001-02, he directed the resurgence of the Illinois program and was named Big Ten Coach of the Year. The Illini finished as Big Ten runner-up and placed fourth at NCAA Regionals. Illinois qualified for the NCAA Championships, finishing 18th.
The summer of 2007 saw arguably the biggest of those successes when he won the low club professional at the 2007 PGA Championship and shared the award stand with its champion Tiger Woods on national television. Four years later, he again earned low club professional honors at the 2011 PGA Championship, where he has honored alongside PGA champion Keegan Bradley on CBS.
Four-time United States PGA Cup team member (2011, 2009, 2007, 2005)
Three-time PGA Professional National Champion (2010, 2009, 2005)
Two-time PGA Professional National Championship runner-up (2007, 2004)
Two-time PGA Championship low PGA club professional (2011, 2007)
Nine-time Illinois PGA champion (2010, 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2001)
Made 15 of 30 PGA Tour cuts from 2003-12
Four-time Illinois State Open champion (2007, 2006, 2005, 2003)
Participated in eight PGA Championships, making three cuts (2011, 2007, 2005)
Three-time PGA of America National Professional Player of the Year (2010, 2007, 2006)
Three-time U.S. Open participant (2007, 1998, 1994)
Nationwide Tour member (1996-2001)
Exempt member of PGA Tour (1998), with top finish a tie for ninth at the Bell Canadian Open
Earned PGA Tour exemption by finishing in top 15 of earnings list on Nationwide Tour (1997)
Won Monterey Open & Cleveland Open (1997)
2011: Earned low club professional honors for the second time at the PGA Championship, which he played for the seventh time in his career.
2010: Won his record tying third PGA Professional National Championship and second in a row. He also claimed his record ninth Illinois PGA title and eighth straight with a convincing 11-stroke victory at Olympia Fields. Small also earned his third PGA Professional Player of the Year honor.
2009: Small won the PGA Professional National Championship for the second time in his career. He made the cut in the 2005 and 2007 PGA and missed the cut by a stroke in 2006.
2008: The summer of 2008 saw Small win the Illinois PGA title for the sixth straight year and seventh overall, both event records.
2007: Small won the PGA Professional of the Year award for the second straight year and was honored as the low club professional at the PGA Championship. He claimed the Illinois PGA championship for a record sixth time and fifth in a row, and won his fourth straight Illinois Open. He also won the Illinois Match Play Championship and qualified for his third U.S. Open.
2006: Small was named the PGA Professional Player of the Year by the PGA of America after another brilliant summer. He made the cut in five of nine PGA Tour events, highlighted by a season-high finish of 38th at the U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee. He also finished fourth at the PGA Professional National Championship, earning a berth to his third consecutive PGA Championship. In addition to his success nationally, Small also won Illinois Open and Illinois PGA titles for the second straight year. He remains the only golfer ever to win both titles in the same year, a feat he has now achieved four times. It was his third Illinois Open victory and fourth consecutive IPGA title, as well as his fifth all-time.
2005: The summer proved to be one of the most spectacular in Small's professional career. In June, he won the PGA Professional National Championship, held at the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, S.C., earning an exemption for the second consecutive year to the PGA Championship, as well as earning six exemptions for PGA Tour events in 2006.
Small then reached a professional pinnacle in August when he made the cut at the PGA Championship at historic Baltusrol in Springfield N.J., marking the first time in four career tries that he advanced to the weekend in a major.
Small continued his summer run by winning his third consecutive Illinois PGA Championship, marking the second time in three years that he won both Illinois Open and IPGA titles in the same year. His dramatic run concluded in September when he led a 10-member U.S. team across the Atlantic to compete against Great Britain and Ireland in the 22nd PGA Cup, a club professional version of the Ryder Cup.
Following the national club pro title, Small made the cut at the PGA Tour's Western Open for the third straight year. He then won his second Illinois Open Championship, storming back from a five-shot deficit to win the title on the strength of a final-round 67.
2004: Small repeated as the Illinois PGA Champion, claiming his third IPGA title in four years. Small finished 7-under par at Royal Melbourne and broke the course record with a 65 during round two. He then went on to take runner-up honors at the PGA Professional National Championship, missing medalist honors by just one stroke after shooting 11-under par at the Longaberger Course in Nashport, Ohio.
For the second straight summer, Small made the cut at the PGA Tour's Western Open. He tallied three straight rounds under par at Cog Hill's Dubsdread Course, and had a hole-in-one during the second round of play when he aced the 180-yard hole No. 2. Small was listed on the leaderboard entering Sunday's final round, in sixth place, before finishing tied for 27th.
Small's memorable summer culminated in August when he traveled to Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wis., to compete in his first-ever PGA Championship, which also marked his third career appearance in a major.
2003: Small made an amazing return to competitive golf in the spring of 2003 after an arm injury and subsequent rehabilitation kept him from playing for nearly a year. He won the 2003 Illinois PGA and Illinois Open titles, becoming the first golfer ever to win both tournaments in the same year. His win at the Illinois PGA qualified him for the Western Open. Small made the cut at the prestigious PGA Tour event, finishing in 43rd place at 3-under par. He also finished fourth at the 2003 Northern Club Pro to qualify for the 2004 PGA Professional National Championship.
2001 & 2002: In the summer of 2002, he finished second at the Illinois PGA Championship. In the summer of 2001, Small won the Illinois PGA title, placed second in regional qualifying for the 2002 PGA Professional National Championship and set the course record at Stone Creek, carding an 8-under-par 64.
Small's father, Bill, was the captain of the 1963 Big Ten Champion Fighting Illini basketball team. Bill earned All-Big Ten accolades and won three varsity letters during his Illini career, which spanned from 1961-63. Small's brother, Andy, also was an award-winning Fighting Illini athlete. Andy was a member of the 1990 Big Ten Champion Illinois baseball squad. He won four varsity letters as an infielder.
Small, his wife, Ann, and their two sons, Will and Wyatt, reside in Champaign.
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