November 23, 2024
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Notah Begay III to receive GWAA’s Bartlett Award

AUGUSTA, GA (APRIL 4, 2012) – Notah Begay III, whose tireless passion, commitment and advocacy for the health and well-being of Native American youth led to the founding of the Notah Begay III (NB3) Foundation in 2005, is the recipient of the Golf Writers Association of America’s prestigious Charlie Bartlett Award.

The 39-year-old Begay, who is half Navajo, one-quarter San Felipe and one-quarter Isleta and the only full-blooded Native American to play on the PGA Tour, founded the NB3 Foundation to battle the epidemic of childhood and Type 2 diabetes and obesity among Native American children. A four-time winner on Tour, Begay has worked with his NB3 Foundation and PGA and LPGA Stars through the annual NB3 Foundation Challenge Golf Tournament to focus national attention and raise support to battle the health epidemic impacting Native American youth.

The award, named for the first secretary of the GWAA, is given to a professional golfer for his/her unselfish contributions to the betterment of society. Begay will be honored at the GWAA Annual Awards Dinner April 4 in Augusta, GA, which is home to the world renowned Master’s Golf Tournament taking place this week.

In the last three years, the NB3 Foundation has touched more than 10,000 Native American children in 11 states through soccer, golf, health and wellness and grant programs. The largest grant assisted the San Felipe Pueblo (NM) to build the tribe’s first recreational facility — a community park and soccer field, which is home to the San Felipe Soccer Club, another NB3 initiative.

In 2012, the NB3 Foundation will be launching a two-year study to evaluate the impact of holistic interventions at San Felipe Pueblo to reduce the rates of childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Begay, who will be a part of The Golf Channel’s team covering the Master’s this week, spoke at the “Building Healthy Communities” panel at the Clinton Foundation Health Forum at the Humana Challenge in January. The panel included Susan Dell of the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation, Annika Sorenstam and founder of the Annika Foundation, and Goldie Hawn of the Hawn Foundation. Begay also participated in a nationally broadcast Townhall Meeting with President Bill Clinton, Dr. Nancy Snyderman of NBC News and others to raise awareness about the growing epidemic of childhood obesity.

Begay was also instrumental in building partnerships with two American Indian tribes — the Oneida Nation of New York and the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians — to sponsor the NB3 Foundation Challenge which has served as the largest one-day fundraiser benefitting Native American youth. Begay, who also has a course design firm (NB3 Consulting) and is a Golf Channel analyst, has an Economics degree from Stanford and, in addition to his four Tour wins, was a member of the 1995 Walker Cup and 2000 Presidents Cup teams.

He follows Lorena Ochoa (2011), Ernie Els (2010), Tiger Woods (2007), Greg Norman (2008) and Jack Nicklaus (2009) as recent recipients. Other former Bartlett winners include the Louisiana trio of Hal Sutton, David Toms and Kelly Gibson, Val Skinner, Betsy King, Tom Watson, Payne Stewart, Tom Lehman, Arnold Palmer, Kenny Perry, Brad Faxon and Billy Andrade, Patty Berg and Andy North.

The GWAA will also honor Players of Year Luke Donald, Yani Tseng and Tom Lehman, William D. Richardson Award winner Maj. Dan Rooney, Ben Hogan Award winner Sophie Gustafson and Jim Murray/ASAP Award winner Brad Faxon at the April 4 dinner.

The nearly 900-member professional organization takes an active role in protecting the interests of all golf journalists, works closely with all of golf’s major governing bodies and the World Golf Hall of Fame.

For more information on the NB3 Foundation visit www.nb3foundation.org