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http://www.thebattlecreekshopper.com BATTLE CREEK SHOPPER NEWS Thursday, July 18, 2024 43

co-champions
were amateur
Eric Cleasby
from Kalamazoo
and amateur
Greg Zeller from
Jackson with
scores of 2-under
70.
A total of 75
golfers from
around the state
made up this
year’s finishing
field.
Local-wise,
Gull Lake View
Golf Club &
Resort director
of golf Dean
Kolstad finished
tied for 55th
with a 7-over 79;
Binder Park Golf
Course manager
and head PGA
professional Ron
Osborne shot an 85; and no score
was available for amateur Mike
LeBarre of Battle Creek.

Dean Kolstad,
director of golf for
Gull Lake View
Golf Club & Resort
group – of which
Bedford Valley
GC in B.C. is part
of – shot a 79
during last week’s
Yamaha Golf Cars
Michigan PGA
Senior Open. (Photo
provided)

GOLF
Continued from Page 41

After excelling at B.C. Central and
then starring for four years at the
University of Iowa, 1993-96 – where
he became the Hawkeyes’ first-ever
player to have over 1,000 points, 500
rebounds and 200 steals as a 6-foot-
5 swingman – Murray then played
professionally in the Continental
Basketball Association and the
International Basketball Association.
Murray and wife Michelle have
four children, all of whom have now
graduated from high school – and
three who excelled in athletics at the
college level.
Adopted son Demetrius (adopted
when he was 17) played college
football and now at age 27 has two
degrees, including a master’s, and is
a teacher and a coach. “He connects
well with the kids as well,” Kenyon
said.
Also, the Murrays have twin sons
Kris and Keegan – who both are
NBA players after collegiate time
spent at Iowa – plus a daughter,
McKenna, who just graduated from

high school and is headed to the
University of Oregon to major in
sports marketing.
As far as his NBA sons:


  • Keegan was the fourth overall
    pick in the 2022 NBA draft by the
    Sacramento Kings, and the 6-foot-8,
    225-pounder last December broke a
    team record for 3-pointers in a game
    with 12 – including an NBA-record
    11 straight en route to scoring 47
    points in a Sacramento victory over
    the Utah Jazz.

  • And, Kris was the 23rd player
    selected in the 2023 draft by the
    Portland Trail Blazers.
    “Did I ever push my sons into
    basketball as a career? Never. It was
    their choice,” Kenyon said.
    “But making that choice, I helped
    them as much as I could understand
    the same things I’m telling these kids
    out here today: That education is
    just as important as basketball, doing
    well in the classroom is part of the
    commitment, and through support
    and commitment, anything is pos-


sible.
“Have that commitment, and you
can be anything you want to be.”
Murray said that now that he’s been
back once to talk to youngsters in the
Cereal City area, he hopes to make it
a regular situation.
“Like I was saying to the Mayor,
to be able to come back and speak to
kids and make an impact, it’s a great
thing,” Murray said.
“So I’m excited to be back. And
I want to come back and do more.
And I want to bring Kris and Keegan
here, too. Because a lot of younger
kids can only see the end – being like
Kris and Keegan or myself – while
actually, there’s a process in life you
have to go through to get there, and it
takes commitment in a lot of things,
athletically as well as academically,
and having a good home life and
being a responsible and good per-
son.”
Murray then turned back the clock
to when he was growing up in B.C.
and making his mark in both athletics
and education.
“Personally, I didn’t start playing
basketball until 8th grade. And I used
to get my butt kicked by older kids

in the Hoopsters program at Claude
Evans Park for the longest time –
until I committed myself to bigger
and better things, which helped me
become a better player and a better
person,” he said.
“I mean, I’m living proof that it
doesn’t matter when you start playing
basketball. It’s the commitment you
have to excel that matters. Have that
commitment, and anything is pos-
sible.”
Murray then closed his interview
with the following inside perspective:
“In my case, did I do everything
right? No. Was everything smooth?
No. But if you have the right support
around you, the right people, and you
make right decisions, you can do any-
thing you want in this life,” Murray
said.
“I’m not going to sugar coat that
becoming a college player, becoming
an NBA player, is easy. There’s a lot
of hard work you have to do. And a
lot of work for the coaches and the
parents to do. But if that hard work is
done by all, anything is possible.”

BASKETBALL
Continued from Page 42


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