Ever since their freshmen year, the Fighting Illini would always find a way to the National Championships. Actually, Illinois had done it 13 times in a row. Sure, their senior year hadn’t been their most consistent, but the pride of the Big Ten always got it done.

Illinois has won eight straight Big Ten titles
It was a tough pill to swallow for a program that made toughness a trademark. When Small was hired to head coach his alma mater in 2000, he had just lost his PGA Tour card. He knows exactly what kind of attitude that demands: “Conviction, discipline, the grind, the grit.”
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His coaching philosophy, he says, was fortified in his time out on Tour. Entrusted to be at the helm of the oldest programs in the NCAA, he’d have to summon that from himself and the athletes he’d coach. The department’s goal was to hire someone who knew college golf but could figure out the coaching part along the way. “I didn’t really know what to do,” Small admits. Donor involvement, facilities, recruiting, and scheduling were an entirely different world.

The Illini's state-of-the-art indoor practice facility
Illinois would address the climate part, opening a robust, 14,150 square foot indoor facility in 2007. It had everything a college golfer could ever ask for: Indoor putting, chipping and pitching areas, heated hitting bays, a golf equipment repair room and a full locker room.
Two individual NCAA titles and 13 NCAA championship appearances later, Illinois would become a very difficult program to ignore.

Adrien Dumont de Chassart
Both called their recruiting processes simple. Illinois had developed an unofficial Belgian pipeline, boasting Thomas Detry and Thomas Pieters – two players Dumont de Chassart had looked up to. He was his country’s amateur champion and played in his first professional event before finishing high school – making him a highly sought-after recruit. Kuhl was his state junior champion, a two-time high school golf champion and had begun to make a splash on the national scene.
Each took two visits, but neither considered playing anywhere else.
“There’s a standard around this program that Coach Small preaches,” Kuhl says. “The way you work in your practice when you train in the workout room, the way you study, the way you treat people,” he says.

Mike Small is in his 23rd year at his alma mater
The fire from his fifth-year mature trio is the kind of resolve Small loves. “They practice harder than anybody,” Small says. “They’ve taken ownership of the season.” Kuhl has played some of the best golf of his entire career, with the second-best scoring average and seven top fives. Dumont de Chassart, the 12th-ranked player in the world, has recorded one win and three-runner-up finishes this season.
Small subscribes to a philosophy called PhD: Poor, hungry and determined. As it has been explained to Small’s players, Poor means not being above anyone else, hungry is the motivation to play with what you have, and determined is knowing what you want. That line of thinking has produced seven victories, the best win percentage at the top of Division I men’s golf. In an era where it felt almost impossible to challenge No. 1, the biggest threat to their reign is somewhere a little chillier than the Southeast.
Once upon a time, Small was a coach who had to learn on the job and build a program from the ground up. Now, this group has given Small his best chance at accomplishing the program’s missing feat – a team championship. Yet, he remains as humble as ever.
“The game owes us nothing,” Small says. “All the attention we've gotten last few weeks has been great. But it's just it's noise and we’ve got to put that away. We’ve got to go play golf.”
