In 2005, he won the NCAA Division I Championship while playing for the University of Washington, the first Canadian male to do so.
golf | 101st Airborne Division | United States men's national soccer team | The Championships, Wimbledon | X-Men | Football League First Division | NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship | Football League Second Division | Joy Division | Canada men's national soccer team | 82nd Airborne Division | World Figure Skating Championships | Mad Men | Boyz II Men | Two and a Half Men | men's basketball | ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships | Texas Ranger Division | IAAF World Championships in Athletics | golf course | Cypriot First Division | Men in Black | United States men's national basketball team | Men's National Team | 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships | Of Mice and Men | Men Behaving Badly | Ice Hockey World Championships | World Gliding Championships | Hong Kong First Division League |
He originally attended Georgia Tech before transferring to Valdosta State University where he won the NCAA Division II individual golf championship in 1994 and 1995.
He played collegiately at Florida Southern College where his team won the NCAA Division II Championship three times (1998–2000) and he won the individual title in 2000.
In that game, Shane Battier led Duke to the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball title.
The programs both experienced their greatest national prominence in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when both schools were led by young up-and-coming coaches who would eventually win more than 700 games (Don Haskins at UTEP, Lou Henson at NMSU) and appeared in the NCAA Tournament's Final Four within four years of each other.