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All ‘fore’ the best: High school golfers among those with best shot at college scholarships

By Mark Hofmann, For The Greene County Messenger 5 min read
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In this 2020 file photo, Remmey Lohr chips onto the 16th green at Duck Hollow Golf Club during Monday鈥檚 WPIAL Boys Class AA Team Golf Championship. Lohr now plays golf on the women鈥檚 team at West Virginia Wesleyan College, and received a partial scholarship to do so. (Photo by Jim Downey)

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Remmey Lohr of Carmichaels plays golf for West Virginia Wesleyan College, where she received a scholarship for the sport. Women鈥檚 golf is one of the sports that offer a greater chance of getting a college scholarship. (Photos courtesy of Remmey Lohr)

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Remmey Lohr of Carmichaels is a member of the golf team at West Virginia Wesleyan College.

news@greenecountymessenger.com

Sometimes, father really does know best.

Carmichaels native Remmey Lohr said hers told her if she played golf and worked hard at her game, she鈥檇 have a better chance at a scholarship to help pay for her post-secondary education.

So, when Lohr, now 20, was a student at Carmichaels Area Senior High School, she and her sister joined the school鈥檚 team. They were the only two girls to do so, and, said Lohr, listening to her father paid off.

Recruitment letters started coming.

Among them was one from West Virginia Wesleyan College, where she鈥檚 a junior majoring in management with a double minor in marketing and art 鈥 and receiving a scholarship to play on the school鈥檚 golf team.

Although the golf scholarship didn鈥檛 give her a full ride, it did substantially cut down on her tuition costs.

鈥淚鈥檓 very fortunate,鈥 she said.

While the Friday night lights of football get a lot of attention, area athletic directors said sometimes, the athletes who play the less traditional sports are the ones who find themselves in a better position to secure college scholarships.

鈥淣o doubt, they (colleges and universities) are always looking to fill rosters with kids that can help their sports programs, especially the more local you get,鈥 said Harry Kaufman, the athletic director for Uniontown Area School District in Fayette County.

Kaufman said while sports like golf, hockey or lacrosse normally don鈥檛 get the same attention as the bigger sports, the colleges that he communicates with 鈥 especially Division 2 and 3 schools 鈥 have asked about student athletes who play those auxiliary sports.

鈥淚 do think there are some sports that are easier to get into for collegiate scholarship (opportunities) than others,鈥 said Brian Geyer, the athletic director for Peters Township School District in Washington County.

He, too, mentioned girls鈥 golf, noting that there are only a handful of schools in Fayette, Greene and Washington counties that offer golf programs. For young women who鈥檇 like to pursue post-secondary education, playing golf in high school could translate to an increased opportunity to find scholarship money at a college or university looking to fill a team, he said.

Ed Dalton serves as the athletic director at McGuffey School District in Washington County, and is also the head football coach at the high school. He said another factor in the rise in scholarship opportunities 鈥 particularly for the less traditional sports 鈥 is Title IX.

Title IX is a federal law that was passed in 1972 to ensure that male and female students and employees in educational settings are treated equally and fairly. Part of that includes a college providing male and female athletes with equal access to financial aid. Funds allocated to athletic scholarships must be proportionate to the participation of male and female athletes.

Dalton explained that, if a certain number of scholarships go toward football, then proportionate number of scholarships have to go toward sports for women. He said he鈥檚 seen female wrestling, which has been at the club level for the past five or 10 years, begin to emerge as the next possible sport to get the attention of colleges.

鈥淟ast year, WPIAL officially approved it,鈥 Dalton said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 offer it yet. We typically need student interest first.鈥

Lohr urged high school girls who are golfers to reach out to college coaches.

鈥淭here are schools that people don鈥檛 know about that would give scholarships, especially for women鈥檚 golf because women鈥檚 golf is struggling to find recruits,鈥 Lohr said, using her own college as an example.

But, she said, just being on the team isn鈥檛 enough. Coaches want quality players who have a solid game and care about their sport.

鈥淓ven if you鈥檙e not the best golfer, if you鈥檙e dedicated and want to work to be better at it, they鈥檒l help you,鈥 Lohr said.

Rich Evans, the athletic director for the Connellsville Area School District in Fayette County, said in his experience, students who play either golf or ice hockey have the highest chance of receiving a scholarship to play in college. The caveat to that, he said, is that it鈥檚 rarely a full ride.

鈥淯nless you鈥檙e a dynamic, once-in-a-lifetime type of player, probably destined to be in the major league, students almost never receive a full scholarship,鈥 Evans said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 highly competitive, that鈥檚 why we always try to tell our students for as special as you are, there鈥檚 someone at a neighboring school just as good or as close as good as you.鈥

And how a high school athletes conducts themselves has become just as important as their prowess on the court, course, rink or mat, he said.

鈥淎 school is going to be very careful who they鈥檙e committing to. You have to do all the right things on and off the field, in the classroom and in the community,鈥 Evans noted.

Especially over the past few years, he said, athletic directors and coaches have started talking to student athletes about being thoughtful about what they post on social media.

鈥淭hese colleges are doing their homework,鈥 Evans said. 鈥淵ou have to think about the bigger picture, getting good grades, preparing for the real world and doing the right thing to make yourself marketable for your future.鈥

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