Backspin may_2017 | Page 5

narrominded For this issue of Narrominded I’d like to give you a report of how our golf team’s season went. We’ve recently just finished our conference championship in McKinney, Texas where we battled the rest of the Southland conference schools, the course, Mother Nature and mostly importantly, ourselves. But I’ll save that for the end. As usual, our year starts out at the Sam Hall Intercollegiate hosted by the University of Southern Mississippi at the Hattiesburg Country Club. It’s a treat for me to attend this event every year as I was a member of the USM Golf Team way back in the fall of 1988 and spring 0f 1989. Sam Hall is a long time member of HCC and the former coach of their golf team. I just missed him by a couple of years but have known him since those good old college days. Another reason this event is special is their assistant coach is former SLU golfer and Ponchatoula native Eddie Brescher. To add a bit more nostalgia to the mix, Eddie worked for me during my tenure at Oak Knoll Country Club. Despite this home cooking, we got off to a slow start in the fall. Our 10th place finish out of 18 teams was not exactly what we were looking for. From there we went to the Jim Rivers Intercollegiate where Louisiana Tech is the host. Perhaps the best course in the state was the venue for our second event of the fall. Squire Creek is quite a challenge, and we were up for it as we finished a respectable 6th. The highlight of the week was sophomore Bailey Smith placing 6th individually in only his second college tournament. We then played in the David Toms Intercollegiate, of course hosted by LSU, at The University Club in Baton Rouge. We were a bit disappointed in our 8th place finish as we know the course very well. Southeastern, La. Tech, UL, and ULM were all within four shots of each other with our team being on the wrong end of the four shots. That really stung. We ended the fall by playing a great new course in El Dorado, Arkansas, called Mystic Creek. ULM hosts the event on this course where the greens can make you feel as if you were playing a mini Augusta National. Great condition but very fast and undulating greens were quite a challenge for all players, not just us. A lack luster 7th place finish was how we ended our fall season. We started off the spring season with a bang at the All American Intercollegiate. The University of Houston and Rice are co-hosts of perhaps the strongest field we played in all year. Six ranked teams highlighted by number one Vanderbilt were in the field with a host of highly ranked individuals. We finished 6th out of 18 and were only five shots out of 4th behind Rice and Auburn, both ranked in the top 30. Senior James Anstiss finished tied for second in the field. They played at the Golf Club of Houston where the Shell Houston Open is played. Not bad at all. However, we couldn’t hold that momentum as over our next three events, we really struggled. Low finishes at the Louisiana Classic, UTSA Lone Star Intercollegiate and the Old Waverly Invitational derailed us during the midseason. It was especially upsetting to play poorly in UL’s event in Lafayette as we know and love Oakbourne Country Club so much. After playing poorly in Mississippi State’s event at Old Waverly, we definitely needed a hard self-evaluation for the rest of the year. Luckily it worked. Back-to-back second place finishes followed at the Jim West Intercollegiate hosted by Texas State just outside Austin and the LSU Tiger Classic. Only fourth ranked LSU beat us at the University Club, and the field included 18th ranked Texas A & M and 27th ranked Arkansas. We were actually leading the Tigers as well after the first round but couldn’t hold off the high powered lineup. Now, we were really pumped for the Southland Conference Championship. We were playing well and even more importantly, feeling good about ourselves. We continued on Page 7 5