This is a highly collectible and Very RARE Jack Vickers Award GOLF Silver Medal Coin, awarded to the Las Vegas Sun publisher Brian Greenspun, son of Hank Greenspun, for his achievement as Team Winner in the 1992 Vickers Cup Tournament at the famous Castle Pines, in Castle Rock, Colorado. The Vickers Cup is an annual and highly exclusive golf tournament founded in 1987 at Castle Pines, which honors the Club Founder, Jack Vickers (1925 - 2018.) This medal was awarded during their 5th annual tournament. The medallion is .999 Fine Silver and features the highly detailed portrait of Vickers on the front, with the words, "Jack Vickers Award" around the edges. On the verso, the two flying hummingbird logo of Castle pines is visible, along with the engraved words: "1992 Team Winner. Brian Greenspun. Vickers Cup." At the bottom edge of the medal, a small stamp reading: "FINE SILVER" can be seen. Approximately 4 inches wide x 3 7/8 inches tall x 3/4 of an inch thick (including Lucite casing.) Actual medal is approximately 2 inches across. Good condition for age, with some light scuffing and speckles of cloudiness to the vintage Lucite casing. Priced to Sell. In the 36 years that this illustrious private golf tournament has occurred, there has never been another example of these awards offered for sale. None of the past recipients have ever wanted to part with them. Acquired in Los Angeles County, California. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique items!



About Jack Vickers:

Colorado Golf Hall of Fame Museum

Jack Vickers was born in Colorado Springs on August 8, 1925. A one-time 5-handicapper who once belonged to 15 country clubs, Vickers has been a giant in the Colorado sports and business world. As chairman of the Vickers companies, he oversaw a firm that had business interests in oil, gas and mineral properties, real estate, land development and farm and stock investments. He was former chairman and majority owner of the Colorado Rockies National Hockey League team in Denver; organizer and president of the University of Colorado’s Flatirons Club, which is a major fundraiser for the university; sponsor of the Vickers Wichita team in the old National Industrial Basketball league that later formed the ABA; and sponsor for the start of the pro career of three-time U.S. Open champion Hale Irwin.

Jack’s greatest legacy to Colorado golf is Castle Pines Golf Club, which he founded north of Castle Rock in 1981, and The International PGA Tour event, which debuted at Castle Pines in 1986. Vickers ended the International’s 21-year run after the 2006 event. Among the International’s champions were Phil Mickelson, Greg Norman, Ernie Els, Davis Love, Vijay Singh, Jose Maria Olazabal and Retief Goosen.

As a player, Vickers was runner-up in the 1950 Trans-Mississippi Championship.
Vickers, who passed away in 2018 at the age of 93, is a member of the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame, Colorado Business Hall of Fame and Denver and Colorado Tourism Hall of Fame. In 2014, the PGA Tour honored him with the 11th Lifetime Achievement Award in its 98-year history.

1985 Golf Person of the Year

The founder and owner of Castle Pines Golf Club debuted The International, the PGA Tour event that took place every Augusts until 2006.


Jack Vickers

Inducted 1999

FOOTBALL, BASEBALL, HOCKEY, GOLF



Jack Vickers is one of Colorado’s great sports promoters. From hockey and golf, to football and baseball, he has helped to make Colorado a premier sports state.

Vickers used his success in the oil business to support his ventures into sports. A booster of the University of Colorado, he helped found the prestigious Flatirons Club and underwrote CU golf great Hale Irwin’s early professional career.

Vickers forayed in major league sports in 1976 when he introduced the NHL to Denver with the establishment of the Colorado Rockies (now the New Jersey Devils). He was also involved in efforts to bring major league baseball to Colorado, most notably through his attempt to buy the Oakland Athletics. Vickers also participated in the campaign to bring the 1976 Winter Olympics to Colorado.

Vickers most successful sports venture began when he purchased a tract of land near Castle Rock and hired his friend, Jack Nicklaus, to design a championship golf course. He then successfully lobbied the PGA to add a new tour stop, The International, at the Castle Pines Golf Club.




JACK VICKERS

A Colorado native, Jack A. Vickers was born in Colorado Springs on August 8, 1925. In 1946, Vickers joined Vickers Petroleum Corporation, founded by his father in 1918, and was an oil scout for about six months. He then resigned to start his own independent oil and gas royalty business. In 1949, in addition to the royalty business, he became a vice president of Vickers Petroleum and worked in the land department. In 1951, he was promoted to president of Vickers Petroleum at 26.

Vickers was very active in the petroleum industry in Kansas, serving as Chairman of the Kansas Governor’s Oil and Gas Advisory Council, and was named Oil Man of the Year in 1957. In 1958, Vickers moved to Denver and became the first member of the Colorado Chapter of YPO, and Esquire magazine named Vickers as one of America’s 16 Bright Young Men in Business. Vickers was elected to the Swift Board of Directors and the Executive Committee when they bought out his company in 1968. Swift subsequently purchased Trans-Ocean Oil of New Orleans, LA. In 1973, these three companies were merged into Vickers Energy Corporation (formerly Vickers Petroleum).

A love of golf led to his acquisition of land and the founding of Castle Pines Golf Club in Castle Rock, CO. Jack Nicklaus was engaged to be the architect of the Castle Pines Golf Club course, which was completed in the summer of 1980.

Vickers has served on numerous boards, including the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver, PGA of America, and the Jack A. Vickers Foundation. He was also the former chairman and majority owner of the Colorado Rockies, the first MLB team in Denver, and the organizer and president of the University of Colorado’s Flatirons Club, a major athletic fundraising organization, for 19 years.



Castle Pines Founder Jack Vickers Passes Away


The creator of The International, an annual PGA Tour stop, was 93

By Jon Rizzi

The flags at Castle Oines Golf Club and Sanctuary Golf Course will fly at half-staff this week in honor of Jack A. Vickers, Jr., who died September 24 at the age of 93.

In 1981 Vickers founded Castle Pines, where he would stage The International, a regular PGA TOUR event from 1986 to 2006. After the demise of the event in 2007, the club annually hosted the Jack A. Vickers Invitational, raising more than $6.5 million for Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver.

The annual event takes place this Tuesday through Thursday (Sept. 25 – 27), but with Castle Pines’ clubhouse currently undergoing a major expansion, Sanctuary owners of Gail and Dave Liniger will host the players at their award-winning course in nearby Sedalia.

“Each player will get a glass with an ounce of J&B Scotch—Mr. Vickers favorite—as we propose a toast to him at the opening-night welcome dinner,” Tournament Director Kevin Laura said on the morning of the event. “It will be bittersweet, of course, but I’m optimistic it will be a happy occasion.”

Laura, who worked as the caddiemaster at Castle Pines in 1983, before the original clubhouse opened, said working for Vickers “changed the trajectory of my life.”

“I was a punk kid on an Evans Scholarship,” he joked, “and right away he made sure I was oriented to the service level of the club. We were in a double-wide trailer at the time, and he said he wanted the members to feel like they were on a red carpet, not gravel. It was eye-opening to me.”

The eldest of the five sons of a Jack A. Vickers, Sr.—a prominent Wichita oilman who with his sons had built a nine-hole golf course on their property—Jack Vickers, Jr. became president of Vickers Petroleum at age 15, when his father died in 1940. By 1950, the young executive and Coast Guard veteran was competing in the finals of the Trans-Mississippi Championship.

He expanded his business interests in the energy sector and got involved in real estate and other ventures, including majority ownership of the NHL’s Colorado Rockies. As many as 15 private clubs—including Augusta National and Denver Country Club—counted him as a member.

One club to which he didn’t belong was Jack Nicklaus' Muirfield Village, even though Nicklaus invited him shortly after it opened in 1974 and Vickers aced the 16th hole.

Vickers, however, would later ask Nicklaus to design a course on 3,000 wooded acres south of Denver. That course would become Castle Pines Golf Club, the “Augusta of the West,” with green-jacketed members from all over the world.

And by 1986, the world’s best players were coming to Castle Pines to compete in The International, which pampered them with first-class amenities and rewarded them with the PGA Tour’s first $1 million purse.

The International introduced America to Ernie Els, among other international players, as well as to the Modified Stableford Scoring System. Winners of the event included majors champions Els, Vijay Singh, José María Olazábal, Greg Norman, Retief Goosen, David Toms, Lee Janzen—and Davis Love III and Phil Mickelson, both of whom won twice.

But by February 2007, a number of forces conspired to put an end to the event: lack of a title sponsor; regular absences by Tiger Woods; and Vickers’ refusal to move the tournament to September as part of the newly created FedEx Cup because he knew golf couldn’t compete with football.

Colorado wouldn’t host another PGA Tour event until 2014’s BMW Championship at Cherry Hills. The night before the first round, PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem—at whom Vickers had glowered during their 2007 press conference announcing the International’s demise—presented Vickers with only the 11th Lifetime Achievement Award in the organization’s history. The only other non-PGA Tour players to receive the honor are former President George H.W. Bush and Course Designer Pete Dye.

The year following the demise of the International brought the first Jack A. Vickers Invitational hosted by John Elway, benefiting the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver. Over the next 10 years, the event averaged $650,000 in donations, and in recognition of these contributions, the Jack A. Vickers Boys & Girls Club opened at the Nancy P. Anschutz Center in October 2013, serving hundreds of youth and families in the Northeast Park Hill neighborhood.

As philanthropic as he was entrepreneurial, Jack Vickers always took care of his members like they were his family, and their guests like they were members. He trained and treated his staff the same way.

“He always had more than enough personnel to take care of the members,” Kevin Laura said. “And the members in turn took good care of the staff.” As a result, few staffs in golf have seen the low personnel turnover that Castle Pines has.

“He was very fatherly and mentoring at the same time,” Laura continues. “He had a unique touch—the kind of approach that made you want to put your head into a brick wall for the guy.”

“If we came in and worked hard and we adopted Jack and (his wife) Cally’s vision, we became family,” General Manager Keith Schenider, who has worked at Castle Pines since it opened 37 years ago, said earlier this year. Schneider now has his 28-year-old son Drew—who basically grew up at the club—as his right-hand man.

“I’ve told him this already, but my last words to Jack Vickers will be, ‘Thank you for letting me include the family as part of Castle Pines,’” Keith Schneider continues. “That is probably the greatest thing Jack Vickers has done for me.”

In that spirit, perhaps the most fitting tribute came yesterday on Facebook from Jack Nicklaus: “Simply put, Jack Vickers was very good for the game of golf.…Jack always handled himself incredibly well, and always with integrity. He was a very good man, and I’m blessed to say he was my friend… I know that through Castle Pines, a wonderful relationship with Jack Vickers only grew. He was involved from day one and until his passing. Everyone at Castle Pines loved Jack Vickers.”