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04/21/2013 Men's Golf Finishes 13th at SEC ChampionshipsStow shoots 5-over-par for the tournament finishing tied for 12th overall. 04/20/2013 Wildcats Conclude Day Two of SEC ChampionshipsStow in 18th place at 2-over-par for the tournament. 04/18/2013 Men's Golf Prepares for SEC ChampionshipSeaside Course set to play host of championships for 11th time in the last 13 years. 04/09/2013 Wildcats Finish Eighth at Gary Koch InvitationalUK wraps up regular season schedule, looks toward SEC Championships. 04/08/2013 Wildcats in Eighth after Day One of Gary Koch InviteStow records career day with 4-under-par second round. Brian Craig enters his 12th season as head coach of the University of Kentucky's men's golf team. In 11 seasons at the helm, Craig has elevated the program to unprecedented heights, taking the team to three straight top-10 NCAA finishes and the school's first Southeastern Conference title. Craig has reached success in 11 years that the Kentucky men's golf program took decades to accomplish. Since 1930, the Wildcats have finished in the top half of the SEC Championship a total of 11 times, with almost half of those finishes coming under Craig's tenure. However, more impressive for Craig's tenure is the fact that Kentucky has been to seven NCAA Championships since golf was started at Kentucky with Craig making the NCAA Championship four times. The native of Gastonia, N.C., led UK to its first SEC Championship in 2005 and finished with a school-best fifth-place finish at the NCAA tourney in 2006. He earned SEC Coach of the Year honors in 2005 and was twice named the Eaton Golf Pride Regional Coach of the Year for the Midwest Region. Before coming to UK, Craig spent two years at the helm of the University of Central Florida's golf team. At UCF, Craig coached the Golden Knights to a second-place finish in the 2001 Trans America Athletic Conference Tournament. In his first recruiting class at UCF in 2000, Craig signed four nationally ranked golfers, three of whom made the TAAC's All-Freshman Team, including league Freshman of the Year. Before landing his first head-coaching job, Craig served as assistant coach at the University of Florida, his alma mater, for two years (1997-99). As a Gator assistant, Craig had the opportunity to mentor two All-Americans and seven All-SEC golfers, including 1999 SEC Player of the Year Steve Scott. He also helped guide Florida to the 1999 SEC Championship. Craig began a three-year professional career as a golfer shortly after graduating from UF with honors in economics in 1992. He competed in numerous mini-tour events, winning the Powerbilt Tour Northwoods Championship in 1995 and the 1996 Future Majors Tour Harbor Hills Championship. In 1994, Craig competed in the U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club in Pittsburgh and finished sixth at the Jamaican Open. He finished 11th on the 1995 Powerbilt Tour money list and followed with a 15th-place ranking on the Golden Bear Tour money list in 1996. Craig finished his college career ranked among the leaders in University of Florida history for most top-10 finishes. He received Academic All-SEC honors three times in his career and was honored as an Academic All-American during his senior campaign in 1992. During his time at UF, Craig was a member of one of the most successful teams in school history as the Gators claimed runner-up honors at the 1990 NCAA Championships. Florida also won three SEC Championships in Craig's four years, as well as the 1992 NCAA East Region Championship title. Craig arrived at Florida in 1987 rated the fifth-best junior golfer in the nation. As an amateur golfer, he advanced to the semifinals of the Carolinas Amateur Championships in 1987. Craig won the Carolinas Junior Championship in 1986. In 1987, Craig won the Insurance Youth Classic, earning him an exemption into the 1988 PGA Tour Houston Open. Craig has been married for 17 years to his college sweetheart, Tami. They reside in Lexington with their three children, Katie Beth, Carson and Philip. The Craig File
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