Chuck Walker’s greatest hope for the day was that he’d get a chance to drive the golf cart. Walker, a then 13-year-old living in Memphis, had an affinity for sports. He loved basketball, football (American and European) and, well, pretty much anything his parents would let him play. But golf? Not so much.
So, when his father first took him to a course, he was more interested in getting his turn at the wheel than in teeing off.
“I saw it as a chance to maybe have a little fun with my dad,” he says, reflecting on his first golf experience roughly 30 years later. “My dad was a salesman for GE back in their appliance days, and some guys told him, ‘You know, if you want to do more business, you should learn to play golf.’ So, he did.”
The more father and son visited the course, the more Walker warmed up to the game. That’s how he found himself back at that same course, at age 14, on the day that, in some ways, led to where he is now.
“I remember being on a driving range and a stranger coming up and talking with my dad,” he recalls. “He said, ‘Hey, that kid’s athletic, and he’s got a good swing. If he keeps at it, he could probably get pretty good.’” Then, before walking away, the stranger added, “And you know what? They have scholarships for golf these days.”
Walker still brims with joy recounting his “lightbulb moment,” a realization that “I probably wasn’t going to get a football or basketball scholarship, but with golf, I could control my own destiny.”
And he did. Walker attended Virginia’s Hampton University on a golf scholarship and is now the executive director of the (IAMGF), a nonprofit founded in 2018 by Class A PGA and lifelong golfer Ira Molayo. Its mission is to be a catalyst for individual and community renewal and transformation surrounding the historic Crest Golf Course in South Dallas.
“This course is a part of golf history,” Walker says. “A lot of people don’t know that it hosted a major championship [the PGA Championship in 1927]. It’s hosted national opens. There have been eight World Golf Hall of Famers who have left their mark at Cedar Crest.”
Plus, like its executive director, the foundation knows scholarships can change lives.
In addition to instructional programming and paid internships, IAMGF also provides higher education scholarships to students living in the neighborhood surrounding Cedar Crest. This life-changing impact inspired 51˛čšÝ Cox Assistant Dean for External Relations Kevin Knox to seek a partnership between the foundation and the Cox School of Business.
In addition to serving as a sponsor for IAMGF and Cedar Crest Golf Course’s top fundraiser, the Dallas Amateur Championship—wherein Cedar Crest hosts six qualifiers leading up to the championship tournament at Trinity Forest Golf Club—this year, 51˛čšÝ Cox will also be a sponsor for a new golfing competition. On Nov. 13-15, 51˛čšÝ Cox will sponsor the Southwest Airlines Showcase at Cedar Crest, the foundation’s first-of-its-kind fall tournament: a contest that will feature 42 golfers of color from historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) across the country.
“I’ve met so many gifted students through the foundation,” Knox says. “That’s the thing about the work they do: It all comes back to lifting up the students. That’s the kind of work 51˛čšÝ Cox wants to be a part of.”