Western Kentucky student repeats as GCSAA Scholars Competition winner

Elliott Pope will use money from the scholarship to complete his class requirements a year early.


Western Kentucky University student Elliott Pope is the repeat winner of the Mendenhall Award of $6,000 in the 2023 Scholars Competition offered through the GCSAA.

The GCSAA Scholars Competition is funded by the Robert Trent Jones Endowment and administered by the GCSAA Foundation. It was developed to recognize outstanding students working toward careers in golf course management or other related areas of the golf course industry.

The scholarships range from $250 to $6,000. Applicants must be enrolled in a recognized undergraduate program in a major field related to turf management, have completed at least 24 credit hours or the equivalent of one year of full-time study of the appropriate major and be a member of GCSAA.

Pope has had a longstanding passion for the game of golf since childhood. From playing golf to drawing golf course designs during his free time as a child, his appreciation for the game has grown with him. He realized early on in high school that becoming a golf course superintendent was the career path he wanted to follow.

Pope has worked on the crew at Columbia Country Club in Columbia, South Carolina, and The Club at Olde Stone in Bowling Green, Kentucky, and completed internships at The Tree Farm in Aiken, South Carolina, and Maidstone Club in East Hampton, New York.

“Being awarded the Mendenhall scholarship was such a great honor last year, and I am extremely excited to receive the award again this year,” Pope said. “This award will help me finish my degree in turf and golf course management at Western Kentucky University this year (a year early) and help to prepare me to begin my career as a golf course superintendent.”

The top award of the GCSAA Scholars Competition is named for the late Chet Mendenhall, who was a charter member of GCSAA, a past president (1948) and recipient of the association’s Distinguished Service Award (1986).

Other award winners are:

Luke Bennett, Knoxville, Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Scholars Award, $2,500

Zac Kelly, Holt, Michigan, Michigan State University, Scholars Award, $2,500

Hunter King, Atglen, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania State University, Scholars Award, $2,500

Diego Barandiaran, Sevilla, Spain, Pennsylvania State University, Ambassador Award, $2,000

Andrew Dorland, Grand Ledge, Michigan, Michigan State University, Scholars Award, $1,500

Michael Doyle, Birmingham, Michigan, Michigan State University, Scholars Award, $1,500

Evan Gerhard, Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania State University, Scholars Award, $1,500

Gavin Lyons, Marietta, Georgia, Penn State World Campus, Scholars Award, $1,000

Camden Macek, Laurel, Maryland, Pennsylvania State University, Scholars Award, $1,000

Zachary Olowniuk, Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan, Michigan State University, Scholars Award, $1,000

Benjamin Casella, Clarksboro, New Jersey, Delaware Valley University, Merit Award, $500

Ryan King, West Allis, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania State University, Merit Award, $500

Simon Wattier, Flourtown, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania State University, Merit Award, $500

Edward Wetherell, Valleyford, Washington, Pennsylvania State University, Merit Award, $500

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