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Lambeth named Division III Jack Nicklaus Award winner

Lambeth named Division III Jack Nicklaus Award winner

DUBLIN, Ohio – Huntingdon junior golfer Addison Lambeth was named the winner of the Division III Jack Nicklaus National Player of the Year Award on Thursday.

Lambeth was one of five golfers at the Division I, Division II, Division III, NAIA and NJCAA level to be honored. Nicklaus will present the awards to Lambeth, Arizona State's Jon Rahm (Division I), Florida Southern's John Coultas (Division II), Johnson and Wales' Peter French (NAIA) and Eastern Florida State's Kerry Sweeney (NJCAA) on Sunday.

Lambeth is the first Huntingdon golfer and the first golfer from the USA South Athletic Conference to win the award. The award was first presented in 1988 and the first Division III winners were presented in 2003.

Lambeth was selected from a group of five Division III finalists that included Methodist's Jackson Collier, Oglethorpe's David Kleckner, LaGrange's Logan Lanier and Schreiner's Phillip Stewart.

"The Jack Nicklaus Award is a great honor and it is very humbling to know I will represent Division III golf in the Barbasol Shootout," said Lambeth, who also earned first-team All-American, All-Region and All-Conference honors this season. "Meeting Jack Nicklaus and receiving the award from the greatest golfer to ever live is an extremely exciting opportunity."

The five winners will compete in the Barbasol Shootout on Saturday at the Scioto Country Club for an exemption into the PGA Tour's Barbasol Championship on July 14-17 at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail at Grand National in Opelika, Ala.

"I am very proud of Addison's work this year. His future is bright in this game," Huntingdon Director of Golf Dave Schreyer said. "I knew coming into the year that he had what it took to be one of the elite in Division III. He proved that very early in the year and he stayed very consistent all year long. He is a born leader and a great teammate."

Behind Lambeth's leadership and play, the Hawks won four tournaments this season and qualified for the Division III National Championships this season for the first time since 2012. The Hawks shot 1,204 in the four-round tournament and finished six strokes out of first. The second-place finish was the best for Huntingdon during the NCAA era.

"The Jack Nicklaus Award is very special to our team," Schreyer said. "We are in this battle together and Addison has clearly been our leader this year. We are all celebrating this achievement together and it will only add fuel to the fire. These boys will not stop until they have a national championship. It takes leaders like Addison to help shape the future of a program and Addison is leaving a mark that will stand at Huntingdon for many years to come."

Lambeth averaged 72.37 per round this season, won two tournaments and finished in the top-five eight times in 11 tournaments. He shot par-or-better 14 times in 27 rounds, including nine straight par-or-better rounds.

In the national tournament, Lambeth battled to a three-way tie for first through four rounds with an 8-over-par 295. He finished tied for second after a playoff hole, matching the best individual finish by a Hawk during the NCAA era.

As strong as this season has been, Lambeth wants to see more from himself and the team next season.

"Even with all of the accolades that have come from this season, we still didn't win the national championship," Lambeth said. "Our goal is to win a national title. We all have to get better next year, including me, for our team to realize that goal."

 

Past Jack Nicklaus Award Recipients

2015

Maverick McNealy, Stanford (Division I)

Santiago Gomez, Nova Southeastern (Division II)

Anthony Maccaglia, Oglethorpe (Division III)

Sean Elliott, Dalton State (NAIA)

Kerry Sweeney, Eastern Florida State (NJCAA)

2014

Patrick Rodgers, Stanford (Division I)

Adam Svensson, Barry (Division II)

Bobby Holden, Redlands (Division III)

James Marchesani, Oklahoma City (NAIA)

Tim Walker, Central Alabama (NJCAA)

2013

Michael Kim, California (Division I)

Alex Carpenter, Abilene Christian (Division II)

Brad Shigezawa, Claremont McKenna (Division III)

Sondre Ronold, Oklahoma City (NAIA)

Jake Argento, South Mountain (NJCAA)

2012

Justin Thomas, Alabama (Division I)

Ben Taylor, Nova Southeastern (Division II)

Noah Ratner, Guilford (Division III)

Nathan Anderson, Texas Wesleyan (NAIA)

Jimmy Kozikowski, South Mountain (NJCAA)

2011

Patrick Cantlay, UCLA (Division I)

Alex Carpenter, Abilene Christian (Division II)

Chris Morris, Centre College (Division III)

Oscar Stark, Oklahoma Christian (NAIA)

Brandt Garon, Meridian CC (NJCAA)

2010

Eugune Wong, Oregon (Division I)

Brett Munson, North Alabama (Division II)

Tain Lee, Claremont McKenna (Division III)

Justin Lower, Malone (NAIA)

Abraham Ancer, Odessa College (NJCAA)

2009

Matt Hill, NC State (Division I)

Brent Witcher, Valdosta State (Division II)

Mitchell Fedorka, La Verne (Division III)

Sam Cyr, Point Loma Nazarene (NAIA)

2008

Kevin Chappel, UCLA (Division I)

Jarin Todd, Sonoma State (Division II)

Scott Harris Jr., St. John Fisher (Division III)

Sam Cyr, Point Loma Nazarene (NAIA)

2007

Jamie Lovemark, Southern California (Division I)

Jarin Todd, Sonoma State (Division II)

Andy Miller, Otterbein (Division III)

Daniel Mitchell, Oklahoma City (NAIA)

2006

Pablo Martin, Oklahoma State (Division I)

Scott Brown, USC-Aiken (Division II)

Stephen Goodridge, Rochester (Division III)

2005

Ryan Moore, UNLV (Division I)

Dane Burkhart, USC-Aiken (Division II)

Pete Weber, Loras (Division III)

2004

Bill Haas, Wake Forest (Division I)

J.J. Jakovac, Chico State (Division II)

Trent Erb, Oglethorpe (Division III)

2003

Hunter Mahan, Oklahoma State (Division I)

Andrew McArthur, Pfeiffer (Division II)

Ryan Quinn, Wisconsin-Eau Claire (Division III)

2002

D.J. Trahan, Clemson

2001

Bryce Molder, Georgia Tech

2000

Charles Howell III, Oklahoma State

1999

Luke Donald, Northwestern

1998

Bryce Molder, Georgia Tech

1997

Brad Elder, Texas

1996

Tiger Woods, Stanford

1995

Stewart Cink, Georgia Tech

1994

Alan Bratton, Oklahoma State

Justin Leonard, Texas

1993

David Duval, Georgia Tech

1992

Phil Mickelson, Arizona State

1991

Phil Mickelson, Arizona State

1990

Phil Mickelson, Arizona State

1989

Robert Gamez, Arizona

1988

Bob Estes, Texas