Stephen Curry helps Howard University start Division I golf team
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HAYWARD, CA - AUGUST 04: Stephen Curry plays a shot during round two of the Ellie Mae Classic at TCP Stonebrae on August 4, 2017 in Hayward, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON -- What started as an innocuous conversation during a public event has evolved into a golf partnership between an NBA superstar Stephen Curry and Howard University.
The two-time NBA MVP announced Monday that he is helping Howard re-establish a golf program. Curry is providing a donation that will allow one of the country's most prominent historically black universities to launch Division I women's and men's teams for the 2020-21 academic year.
The 31-year-old Curry, who has won three NBA championships with the Golden State Warriors, has long been known as a passionate golfer. But the idea of partnering with Howard didn't start until January, when Curry went to the campus in January for a screening of the documentary "Emanuel."
After watching the film -- which chronicles the 2015 shooting of nine black worshippers at a church in South Carolina -- Curry was approached by Howard student Otis Ferguson. The senior explained to Curry how he had been unsuccessfully trying to start up an official university golf team. Howard had previously fielded a Division II golf team but that was discontinued.
At a Monday news conference, Curry singled out Ferguson for applause and recalled their chance meeting.
"We connected on golf," he said. "Accountability, competition, discipline -- all those different ideals we learned through the game of golf."
The exact amount of Curry's donation has not been disclosed, but the university announced it would be a six-year partnership. Sports apparel company Under Armour, which sponsors Curry and is based in nearby Baltimore, will provide the uniforms and golf club manufacturer Callaway will supply the equipment.
"I'm going to be following every part of the journey as we go into next year when the team takes the course for the first time," Curry said. "This is going to go way beyond the game of golf, way beyond Howard. This is huge."
Curry has made two starts on the Korn Ferry Tour both coming at the Ellie Mae Classic at TPC Stonebrae, with a low-round of 71 in the first round of the 2018 edition. While he missed the cut in both appearances, he announced after last year's tournament that his foundation would donate $25,000 to Scott Harrington and his wife Jenn, who was diagnosed with Hodgkins Lymphoma for a second time.




