Great depth takes Ole Miss women’s golf turnaround to another level

Ole Miss is currently ranked 11th in the country by Golfweek and has the kind of depth to make history in the desert this spring by advancing the match play.

Julia Johnson was in line at Chipotle when she picked up the phone. She’d just finished up a four-hour Saturday team practice session. The Ole Miss sophomore described it as immensely focused and enjoyable. The day prior, the men’s team and women’s teams had paired up for a worst-ball challenge on the program’s short course.

Here’s the thing about playing golf at Ole Miss: Players get better.

Head coach Kory Henkes isn’t really into rah-rah speeches. But you want inspiration? She plans to carry Johnson’s bag at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur while seven months pregnant. For perspective, she coached at the Magnolia Invitational in October of 2018, two weeks before giving birth to daughter Parker Elizabeth on Halloween.

“She’s just a freakin’ warrior,” gushed Johnson.

Henkes’ due date is June 5. The NCAA Championship ends on May 27. Ole Miss is currently ranked 11th in the country by Golfweek and has the kind of depth to make history in the desert this spring by advancing the match play.

GOLFWEEK/SAGARIN: Women’s team | Individual

Johnson said it would break Henkes’ heart if she wasn’t at the finale, but there’s no doubt that the Rebels would enter the week fully prepared. Henkes would make sure of it.

As for Augusta, Henkes used to be the head coach at Augusta University and happens to have plenty of experience around the iconic track.

“I’m sure Kory has a lot of the X’s in the book that she won’t really talk about,” said Kristy McPherson of her old college teammate’s strategy. “I think it will give (Johnson) a huge advantage.”

Ole Miss head coach Kory Henkes with Julia Johnson during the 2018 season. Photo by @OleMissWGolf

McPherson played golf with Henkes (formerly Thompson) at South Carolina. The pair roomed together for three years, and for a while, Henkes caddied for her friend on the LPGA. McPherson’s friends, players like Gerina Piller, Brittany Lincicome and Angela Stanford, took Henkes under their wing. The behind-the-scenes look at elite-level play showed Henkes how differently players go about the job.

“The key is learning how to adapt to each player,” said Henkes, “realizing you can’t coach them all the same because they’re not all the same.”

Johnson had verbally committed to LSU when she decided to accompany good friends Conner Beth Ball and Macy Holliday to the Ole Miss-LSU game at the The Grove. She was there for football, but ended up falling hard for the vision that she heard Henkes explain to her friends on that trip. Soon Johnson was willing to give up the security of a full scholarship to make the switch to Mississippi. Johnson even sent in a friend from the men’s team at Ole Miss to lobby on her behalf.

“We talk a lot about how I begged her to let me play golf here,” said Johnson.

Upswing has been staggering

The Rebels won their fourth title of the season earlier this month in Melbourne, Florida, setting a new program record for most wins in a season.

The upswing in Oxford has been staggering. When Henkes took over the program in 2015, the team scoring average had been below 300. The past three years, the Rebels have broken the mark, with the 2017-18 group holding the record at 295.26. This year’s team is on pace to shatter that number with a current average of 284.22 through six events.

Johnson looks do the same with the individual record. Dori Carter, an LPGA player who recently joined the Louisville staff as an assistant coach, holds the school record of 72.28. Johnson’s average of 70.72 includes an NCAA record-tying 61 last semester.

Johnson credits her improvement this season to her teammates. There are eight players on Mississippi’s team that can make the lineup any given week. Three of the four team wins this season have been with different lineups. Qualifying comes down to a shot or two every time.

“Everyone’s game has risen to the next level because we want to play so badly,” said Johnson. “You’ll see that I haven’t shot above 74 this year, but I didn’t play No. 1 in our lineup until the last event. … I was putting up the best scores I’ve ever had in qualifying, and I still wasn’t winning the qualifying.”

No player has pushed Johnson harder than Kennedy Swann, a senior who transferred from Clemson last January. Swann’s scoring average has dropped from 75.1 to 71.39 since she arrived in Oxford. She drained a 45-foot putt for birdie on the final hole at Medinah to win the Illini Women’s Invitational last fall.

“I kind of like to sit back and reflect on where we’ve come in two and a half to three years,” said Johnson. “From not being embarrassed to walk into events. … to realistically, we can beat anyone we play. The respect level has grown each year.

“Freshman year I felt like we had none.”

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Yordenis Ugas takes out Mike Dallas in seventh round

Yordenis Ugas stopped Mike Dallas in the 7th round of a welterweight bout, thus improving his chances of getting a title shot this year.

Welterweight contender Yordenis Ugas has been the odd man out among the elite welterweights aligned with Premier Boxing Champions. On Saturday night at the Beau Rivage Resort & Casino in Biloxi, Mississippi, he took a step toward correcting that.

The 33-year-old Cuban came out at the opening bell with unusual aggression and never looked back, eventually stopping Mike Dallas Jr. in Round 7.

A slick counterpuncher by nature, Ugas might have been trying to channel the spirit of a certain basketball player. Written on his trunks were the words “Mamba Mentality,” his was of honoring the late Kobe Bryant. 

The stoppage came at the end of seventh round, after Dallas’ corner decided their charge had taken enough punishment.

Ugas (25-4, 12 KOs), who lives and trains in Miami, pressed the action all night, as he tagged Dallas with numerous overhand rights and clubbing body shots. In the opening round alone, Ugas staggered Dallas a few times, including at the end, with a left hook-right hand-left hook combination. 

Dallas (23-4-2, 11 KOs), once a promising name in the sport before he fell violently to Lucas Matthysse, had a few strong moments as he flitted around the ring and tried to connect on potshot right hands. They were too few and far between, however, to give him a winning chance. It was a survival game for Dallas, who began breathing heavily from the mouth by Round 4.

Ironically, Dallas had his best offensive stretch in the last round – Round 7 – landing a few straight rights, but he petered out with a minute remaining. Ugas stormed back to steal the round with a series of unanswered blows.

Ugas has won two consecutive fights since his highly disputed points loss to then-titleholder Shawn Porter in March 2019. Porter would go on to face Errol Spence Jr. in a unification bout that September, losing a split decision.

While Ugas has expressed an interest in a rematch with Porter, his priorities are to win a title, which means, at least in the foreseeable future, bouts with either Spence or Manny Pacquiao. (Boxing politics will most likely prevent him from facing the Top Rank-promoted welterweight titleholder Terence Crawford.)

Ugas was originally supposed to face undefeated welterweight Alexander Besputin, but negotiations were scrubbed after Besputin, who allegedly tested positive for PED in his previous bout, reportedly suffered an injury. 

 

Michel Rivera shines in stoppage win; Clay Collard steals the show

Michel Rivera stopped rugged veteran Fidel Maldonado Jr. in the final round on the undercard of the Yordenis Ugas-Mike Dallas Jr. card.

On a card featuring many highly regarded prospects, Michel Rivera turned in the most complete — and promising, — performance.

The 21-year-old Dominican lightweight stopped rugged veteran Fidel Maldonado Jr. in the 10th and final round on the undercard of the Yordenis Ugas-Mike Dallas Jr. card at the Beau Rivage Resort & Casino in Biloxi, Mississippi.

Rivera (18-0, 12 KOs), whose poise belies his youth, landed the cleaner, harder shots throughout the fight even though he was a tad too economical with his punches at times. His jab was nearly nonexistent, but his straight right and body punching were on point, and apparently more than enough on this night.

Early on, the shifty Maldonado (27-6-1, 20 KOs) had some success outworking Rivera, but as the rounds went on, Rivera began to tag Maldonado with eye-catching right hands.

Rivera turned it up late in Round 8, landing two straight hard rights that briefly buckled Maldonado. It appeared the fight would go the distance, but in Round 10, Rivera connected on right hand that downed Maldonado for the first time in the night. He got up on wobbly legs only for Rivera to unload a flurry, forcing the referee to stop the bout.

***

Boxing has an early candidate for Round of the Year.

Rising prospect Raymond Guajardo was supposed to have an easy time against journeyman Clay Collard, but Collard didn’t get the memo. Collard dropped Guajardo twice in a hellacious Round 1, before stopping Guajardo in the next round behind a deluge of power punches.

“It was a war,” Collard (6-2-3, 2 KOs) said in a matter-of-fact tone. “We’re in there battling. I love it. It’s something that I love to do.”

Guajardo (5-1, 4 KOs) came out of his corner at the opening bell, gunning for a quick knockout. But Collard remained composed, stayed in the pocket and, a minute into the round, he countered with a hard left hook that immediately decked Guajardo. Collard then let his hands go, landing clean lefts and rights to Guajardo’s exposed chin, dropping him again with a straight right.

As Collard looked to finish the prospect off, the southpaw Guajardo countered with a right hook, followed by a left that put Collard down. It was a flash knockdown, however, as Collard would go on to hurt Guajardo some more, punctuating an unforgettable round with a series of clean, straight rights and two hooks.

In Round 2, Collard continued to batter his opponent with clubbing combinations, as blood continued to pour out of Guajardo’s nose. Collard landed a right to the body that caused Guajardo to nearly bowl over.  With Guajardo on the ropes, Collard began teeing off, snapping back Guajardo’s head with several straight rights before the referee intervened.

The stoppage came at 1:42 of Round 2.

It may be the last time Collard enters a boxing ring. He said he plans to fight for the mixed-martial-arts outfit, Professional Fighters League, citing more lucrative opportunities.

Rising prospect Omar Juarez dominated a game Angel Martinez Hernandez over eight rounds, including scoring a knockdown, en route to a unanimous decision win.

The judges’ scores were 80-71, 80-71, 79-72 for Juarez, who hails from Brownsville, Texas.

With a minute remaining in Round 7, Juarez, 20, dropped Martinez hard with a left hook. Martinez would regroup to hear the final bell.

Eighteen-year-old prospect Jesus Ramos (12-0, 11KOs) had no trouble breaking down Ramal Amanov (16-2, 5 KOs), stopping the veteran inside six rounds of an eight-round welterweight bout. The southpaw Ramos was too skilled and too quick for Amanov, whose corner decided to throw in the towel at the end of Round 6.

Cruiserweight Deon Nicholson didn’t maintain his perfect knockout streak, but he remains unbeaten, outpointing Earl Newman over 10 rounds. Nicholson (13-0, 12 KOs) nearly pulled off an early stoppage in Round 1, when he had Newman (10-3-1, 7 KOs) dangerously dazed. Newman, however, would not only survive, but go on to give Nicholson a decent challenge.

The judges had it unanimously for Nicholson with scorecards of 97-93, 96-94, 96-94.

 

Notre Dame Football: Ole Miss Coaching Search Includes Irish Assistant

a Notre Dame assistant has now been linked to an SEC opening.
And it’s not Clark Lea.

We’ve been on the lookout for star Notre Dame defensive coordinator Clark Lea as coaching changes have been happening all around college football. The former Vanderbilt fullback won’t return to his alma mater since the Commodores didn’t make a coaching change but a Notre Dame assistant has now been linked to an SEC opening.

And it’s not Clark Lea.

247Sports is reporting that as of Tuesday night that Notre Dame offensive coordinator Chip Long has emerged as a candidate to fill the Ole Miss head coaching vacancy.

Long has been at Notre Dame since 2017 when he took over as offensive coordinator.

Long began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Louisville in 2007 before stays in various positions at Arkansas, Illinois, Arizona State and Memphis.

Long went to Memphis with Mike Norvell in 2016 and spent one season there before headed to South Bend to call Notre Dame’s offense which he has had great success with, helping guide the Irish to now three-straight 10-win seasons.

My initial thought is that yeah, you hate to break-up something that is working but in all honesty – what is Notre Dame’s offensive identity this year?

There is something to be said with being able to get by somewhat on the fly, but it’s hardly a unit that dominates in any one capacity.

My initial thoughts upon reading this are more “Thank goodness it’s not Lea” than it is “Don’t leave, Chip!”

Ole Miss at Mississippi State odds, picks and best bets

Previewing Thursday’s Ole Miss Rebels at Mississippi State Bulldogs sports betting odds and lines, with college football picks and best bets

The Ole Miss Rebels (4-7, 2-5 SEC West) lock horns with the Mississippi State Bulldogs (5-6, 2-5) Thanksgiving night at 7:30 p.m. ET in the annual Egg Bowl in Starkville, Miss. We analyze the Ole Miss-Mississippi State odds and betting lines, while providing college football betting tips and advice on this matchup.

Ole Miss at Mississippi State: Three things you need to know

1. This is the only bowl the Rebels will be participating in this season, but they’d like to make it so the same applies to their rivals. A win by Ole Miss would deal Mississippi State its seventh loss and prevent a postseason berth.

2. Ole Miss might have a losing record, but it’s a darling at the betting window with a 6-1 against the spread mark across the past seven. Mississippi State is 2-5 ATS in the past seven overall, and 1-5 ATS in the past six inside the SEC.

3. The Egg Bowl has been defensive lately, cashing the Under in five of the past six meetings, and each of the past four in Starkville.


Get some action on this game or others by placing a bet at BetMGM!


Ole Miss at Mississippi State: Odds, betting lines and picks

Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday at 3:45 a.m. ET.

Prediction

Ole Miss 29, Mississippi State 27

Moneyline (ML)

Go lightly on OLE MISS (+110) in this rivalry game, as the Rebels will be motivated to keep Mississippi State (-134) nailed to the couch for the postseason. The Rebels rolled up huge yardage on the ground last week against LSU. QB John Rhys Plumlee was a one-man wrecking crew, going for 212 yards and four touchdowns on the ground, and RB Jerrion Ealy gobbled up 141 yards on 13 totes. Hotty Toddy!

New to sports betting? Every $1 wagered that Ole Miss will win outright will return a profit of $1.10.

Against the Spread (ATS)

There isn’t a lot of sense taking Ole Miss (+2.5, -110), unless you feel it’s going to lose by one or two points. The Rebels are a much better value on the moneyline. If you feel Mississippi State (-2.5, -110) will extend its school-record streak to 10 consecutive seasons with a bowl appearance, then get out your cowbell and back the Bulldogs. I will not be joining you.

Over/Under (O/U)

PASS. The projection of 58.5 is a good total. My lean would be to go Under based on the trends in this series, and the fact we just haven’t seen a lot of consistent football out of these two sides; however, I can easily see the game going Over, as Plumlee and the Rebels’ rushing attack raised eyebrows gouging potential playoff-bound LSU for huge chunks of real estate a week ago.

Get some action on this game or others, place a bet with BetMGM today. And for more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @JoeWilliamsVI and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

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