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CLAYTON STATE’S SHORT NAMED GCAA
ALL-AMERICA Lakers Ranked 11th in Final
MasterCard
Collegiate Golf Rankings
MORROW, GA –
Clayton College & State University juniors Adam Short and Dave Kelly
were each named to the 1999 NCAA Division II All-America Teams as voted on
by the Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA).
“I am extremely happy for these two young men,” said Clayton State head
coach Bob Hill. “They both had exceptional years for us, and they are
well-deserving of this honor. A large part of our success this season was
due in part to what these two did, both on and off the golf course.”
Short, a Second Team selection, finished the 1999 season with a
school-record 7-under 65 in the final round of the NCAA Division II National
Championships to place fifth overall. The Vineland, Ontario, native led the
Lakers with four top-five finishes, including medalist honors at the
University of North Alabama Spring Classic in March. He recorded scores of
par-or-better in 10 of his 31 rounds during the season, finishing with a
74.42 stroke average, second lowest in school history.
Kelly, a Third Team selection, finished with a school-record 74.20 stroke
average despite missing two tournaments with a broken finger. An All-Peach
Belt Athletic Conference and GCAA All-District 3 South selection, Kelly led
the Lakers to their first-ever team title by winning medalist honors at the
Richard Rendleman Invitational in November. The Ste-Marie, Quebec, native
also shared medalist honors at the NCAA Division II South Regional in early
May with the help of a 3-under 69 in the second round, the only sub-70 score
of the tournament.
The GCAA selected three eight-member All-America teams and a 24-member
honorable mention squad. Columbus State’s Jaco Rall earned Player of the
Year Honors, while Chad Tate of Ferris State was named Freshman of the Year.
Also released on Tuesday was the final MasterCard Collegiate Golf
Rankings.
Clayton State, which finished the year with a seventh-place showing at the
NCAA Division II National Championships, climbed from the midst of the
unranked all the way to No. 11, marking the highest final ranking by any
team in school history. Among the teams ranked in the top 10, the Lakers
defeated four of them at the national tournament.
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