Photos: Lost Rail Golf Club brings something new to Nebraska golf scene

Nebraska native Scott Hoffman utilized an abandoned railroad line in his design at Lost Rail .

There’s been much attention paid to Nebraska’s golf scene in recent months, with the opening of Landmand Golf Club and the announcement of architect David McLay Kidd breaking ground on a new layout, GrayBull.

Those two are not alone in generating interest in the Cornhusker State.

Also brand new is the private Lost Rail Golf Club in Gretna, just outside Omaha. Designed by Scott Hoffman, built by Landscapes Unlimited and operated by Landscapes Golf Management, the new course opened September 1 nearly two years after breaking ground.

Hoffman, a Nebraska native, worked several years for Landscapes Unlimited in Lincoln before becoming a senior design associate for Tom Fazio and then moving on to Jackson Kahn Design. He always wanted to create an elite course in his home state, which has become well known for stellar properties such as Sand Hills Golf Club, which ranks No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best list of courses built since 1960 in the U.S.

After finding the property on which Lost Rail would be constructed in 2019, Hoffman – working with his cousin, Dirk Chatelain, and his old boss, Bill Kubly of Landscapes Unlimited – took the course from the dreamer stages to reality.

The 155 acres the team eventually purchased features long views with no houses or roads on site, but there was an abandoned railroad line. Hoffman incorporated the rail line on several holes, even using the terminus of the line as the back portion of one green. Lost Rail plays wide, sometimes at 70 yards across as the course traverses ridges, valleys and a washed-out culvert in reach 7,309 yards with a par of 71.

Check out the photos of the new layout below.

OU Baseball finishes 2022 season at No. 2 in D1Baseball Top 25

OU Baseball finishes the 2022 season at no. 2 in D1Baseball’s Top 25 Rankings after magical Omaha run.

The Oklahoma Sooners finished the 2022 season with much to be proud of. They won the Big 12 Tournament, made it to the Men’s College World Series, and were two wins away from being national champions.

For this amazing season, they were rewarded with the No. 2 ranking in D1Baseball’s final Top 25 of the 2022 season. That’s a jump up of seven spots from D1Baseball’s previous ranking.

The first-time national champion Ole Miss Rebels will finish the season atop the rankings after a magical run of their own to Omaha. All of the top eight are teams that made it to the MCWS.

The Big 12 is well-represented, with Texas at No. 8, Oklahoma State at No. 17, TCU at No. 23 and Texas Tech at No. 24.

Meanwhile, from the SEC, Ole Miss leads the way at No. 1 with Texas A&M at No. 2, Arkansas No. 3, Auburn at No. 7, Tennessee at No. 9 (more on that later), Florida at No. 21 and LSU bringing up the rear at No. 25.

So in both OU’s current and future conferences, there is a lot of stiff competition.

As for Tennessee, they had an extremely disappointing tournament after being the best team in the country for most of if not the entire regular season. The Volunteers went 57-9 and won their regional, but ended up losing to Notre Dame in three games in Super Regionals.

The future for OU Baseball is without a doubt very bright. However, the Sooners will have to deal with something they have not in a long time next season.

Expectations.

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Loss in championship series shouldn’t diminish the remarkable run Oklahoma Baseball had

Although the season ended in a disappointing fashion, OU Baseball has much to be proud of.

To the Oklahoma Sooners Baseball Team,

On April 3, I wrote about OU Baseball for the very first time. The article was a recap of a 12-8 loss to the Longhorns, and that game was one of the first times I had actually sat down and watched an OU Baseball game. Later that month, I went to my first OU Baseball game at L. Dale Mitchell Park.

Not once in April or May did I think to myself, “this team could make it to the national championship.”

But you did.

Out of nowhere, the pitching came together and the bats got hot. You won series after series after series and did something OU Baseball hadn’t done in over a decade.

You made it to Omaha.

Oklahoma is more than just a football school and you’ve done more than your part to help prove that. There’s no doubt in my mind that this program will not only survive but thrive in the big, bad land of SEC Baseball.

Go win the Big 12 again next year. Host NCAA Regionals next year. Make it back to Omaha next year.

Win it all.

And to the Ole Miss Rebels, congratulations.

What a story. Last ones in the tournament to national champions. Enjoy the feeling. See you in the SEC.

And Skip Johnson, you were the captain of this ship that nearly made it all the way to the promised land. You are no doubt the man to bring the national championship back to Norman.

L. Dale Mitchell Park will be getting a massive renovation and the program will be getting more resources as it prepares for the move to the SEC.

It won’t take another 10 years for the Sooners to get back to Omaha.

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PHOTO GALLERY: Auburn outlasts Stanford to advance in College World Series

Relive Auburn’s 6-2 win over Stanford on Monday afternoon with the gallery below:

Despite the temperature reaching the high-90s in Omaha, Nebraska on Monday afternoon, the Auburn bats needed a little time to heat up.

But when they finally got going, it was hard to slow down the Tiger offense.

Down 2-0 heading to the sixth inning, Auburn broke through to score six runs on six hits to defeat Stanford, 6-2 to advance in the College World Series, earning their first win in Omaha since 1997.

[autotag]Cole Foster[/autotag] helped Auburn take the lead on a three-run double in the sixth inning, which complimented a bases-loaded walk to [autotag]Bobby Peirce[/autotag] just two at-bats prior.

In the 7th, [autotag]Brody Moore[/autotag] scored [autotag]Bryson Ware[/autotag] on a sacrifice fly, and Peirce earned his 2nd RBI of the game on a double to score [autotag]Blake Rambusch[/autotag], extending the Tiger lead.

Auburn will now await the winner of Ole Miss-Arkansas. The game will be played on Tuesday at 5 p.m. CDT, and can be seen on ESPN.

Tale of the Tape: Individual Leaders – Notre Dame vs. Texas A&M

The Irish will have to hope that their best players shine in an elimination game.

Notre Dame and Texas A&M will be fighting for their College World Series lives when they play each other. If the Irish turn to [autotag]Jack Findlay[/autotag] at any point, that’s a good sign because they likely are in the lead and want to shut the door with arguably their best pitcher on their whole staff. [autotag]Carter Putz[/autotag] likely will be around runs one way or another if the offense gets it going because that’s what he does. Also, we’ve already seen [autotag]Ryan Cole[/autotag] swipe a bag in Omaha.

Literally almost all of the Aggies’ best offensive numbers come from outfielder Dylan Rock. Even if he’s not driving in runs, his speed keeps pitchers and catchers on guard at all times. As far as pitching, the leaders are spread out pretty evenly, so you don’t really have one person you would prefer to face at the plate. That’s what any team that has gotten this far should want.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Notre Dame takes College World Series opener vs. Texas

It was a fun Friday for the Irish.

Notre Dame’s first game in the 2022 College World Series couldn’t have gone better. They took the lead on Texas in the first inning and never gave it up in a 7-3 win. With the victory, they earned the right to play Sunday against Oklahoma, which earned a 13-8 win over Texas A&M on Friday. They also will have at least one more game regardless of the result.

Just as fun as the victory was the atmosphere in the stands. Even if you disregard all the Irish fans who showed up, the neutral fans who were there still have be to happy about this program that didn’t even let an unlikable Tennessee team reach Omaha. The Irish fans might even have been outnumbered by Longhorns fans, but it didn’t matter because the folks wearing green had a lot more to cheer about during the evening.

In case you missed the game, here are a few images:

Rocco’s Jell-O shot counter is one of the College World Series’ finest traditions

What better way to prove your fandom than by buying thousands of Jell-O shots?

The person in charge of marketing for Rocco’s Pizza & Cantina in Omaha, Nebraska is a genius. They found a way to supercharge their tourism dollars from the annual NCAA Men’s College World Series.

While downtown is dotted with excellent bars catering to the masses of college baseball fans who descend upon eastern Nebraska each summer, Rocco’s has found a way to cater to their insatiable demand for booze, innate homerism, and unquenchable thirst for competition. And, more importantly, they found a way to sell that fandom at $4.50 per shot.

Behold, the glory that is Rocco’s College World Series Jell-O Shot Challenge, an annual competition that honors the glorious invention of one of America’s greatest heroes, Army mathematician, Harvard professor, and expert pianist and satirist Tom Lehrer. The good folks at Rocco’s give patrons the chance to back their teams one wiggly, sugary slurp at a time:

Rocco’s knows it’s due for a boom when the CWS comes by, thanks to its location being roughly 500 feet from the right-field line of Charles Schwab Field. It also knows that SEC fans — whose teams make up half the field in 2022 and 2019 and multiple teams every year since 2016 — are lunatics obsessed with displaying their superiority in any way possible. This is how you get more than $11,000 in revenue from Mississippi State fans alone:

That’s a truly bewildering number AND IT WASN’T EVEN THE FINAL TALLY. Bulldog faithful wound up celebrating their first NCAA team championship by taking down 2,968 Jell-O shots at Rocco’s alone, besting the previous record — set in 2019 by Arkansas fans — by more than 2,100 shots.

This is obviously a windfall for the bar. It also feels like a windfall for the staff, as this year’s price bump to $4.50 suggests the bartenders passing out these shots will be getting tipped $1.50 per instead of a single dollar (though some more miserly patrons will opt for a 50 cent tip as though they’re the mayors of 1939). They also won’t have to deal with the effort of mixing drinks or pouring from the tap, either, since Rocco’s appears to serve pre-packaged shots:

This is kinda disappointing! Per Slrrrp Shots’ official website, those flavors come in Strawberry Slammer, Watermelon Wiggler, Peach Bottom, Blue Raspberry Smash and, (deep sigh) Mango Unchained. At 13 percent ABV and 50 milliliters per drink, they’re roughly one-third as potent as a regular shot of whiskey or rum and a little less than half as strong as a shot of Fireball. They’re also ostensibly served right from those jugs, which is an unappealing temperature for gelatin products.

From a managerial standpoint, this feels like a missed opportunity as well. Jell-O shots aren’t expensive to make; gelatin is cheap and no one expects them to be strong. You can make something like 180 of these shots — with name-brand Jell-O and Smirnoff — for about $36 if you’re paying retail prices. If you wanted to skimp on the booze a little, it’d be even cheaper. That’s a product cost of let’s say 15 cents for a $4.50 drink, which is the kind of profit margin that keeps Jon Taffer from bursting through your doors and yelling at your bar manager.

And yeah, that’s a little bit labor-intensive and would require a ton of fridge space, but it’s not like Rocco’s doesn’t run out of the pre-made stuff and ask its bartenders to free-pour anyway:

This is, of course, a stupid quibble from a grown man who prefers homemade to store-bought when it comes to his terrible drinks (I also prefer the ease of the syringe as the Jell-O shot delivery system). The point remains that:

a) this is a tremendous idea that brings in lots of money for Rocco’s with minimal effort beyond removing shots from buckets and basic counting, and

b) no one should try to out-drink the SEC, which was leading the rest of the field 206-58 before games even started at the College World Series (and, if you count Texas and Oklahoma as future members, that lead grows to 254-10).

We’ll keep you apprised of the situation should someone challenge Mississippi State’s record of nearly 3,000 Jell-O shots in 11 days (no one will).

Notre Dame’s Link Jarrett named Coach of the Year

Hopefully this is only some of the hardware the Irish will be bringing back from Omaha!

The following release is from Notre Dame athletics:

OMAHA, Neb. — On the morning of the program’s first College World Series game in 20 years, head coach Link Jarrett was named the Mike Martin National Coach of the Year by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association. This is the second-straight season Jarrett has won a national coach of the year award after being named D1Baseball’s Coach of the Year in 2021.

Jarrett led the Irish back to Omaha for the first time since 2002 and they had to do it all on the road. They won the Statesboro Regional that had three ranked teams in it and it was the first time in program history that the Irish reached the Super Regionals in back-to-back seasons. Next, the Irish knocked off the No. 1 overall seed Tennessee in Knoxville. The Irish are the only team this season to win a series in Knoxville and they are the first program ever to have four wins over the No. 1 national seed in the Super Regional round history.

The Irish are one of two teams in Omaha that had to win their regional and super regional on the road. With the clinching win over Tennessee, the Irish eclipsed the 40-win plateau for the first time since 2006. Notre Dame is also just one of three schools to sweep the Regional Round in consecutive seasons.

The Irish made history earlier this season when they swept No. 5 Florida State in Tallahassee back in April. It was the first time in program history that the Irish swept a series from a Top-5 team on the road. The Irish finished a half a game back of winning their second ACC division title this season but got a top-four seed for the ACC Championship for the second-straight year. The Irish went 2-0 in pool play to advance to the ACC semifinals for the first time in program history.

The Irish have been a model of consistency since Jarrett arrived in 2020. Over the past three seasons the Irish are 85-30, good for a .739 winning percentage. That winning percentage ranks second in the entire NCAA over that span, only trailing Tennessee.

Jarrett and the Irish will take the field at Charles Schwab Field later today for their first game of the College World Series. The Irish are set to take on the No. 9 overall seed Texas Longhorns at 7 p.m. ET with a national broadcast on ESPN.

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See photos of Notre Dame practicing in preparation of the College World Series

Chills

The Irish broke a twenty-year drought last weekend, defeating the No. 1 overall seed Tennessee Volunteers and clinching their first trip to the College World Series since 2002. The ride isn’t over for Link Jarrett and the 2022 Notre Dame Baseball team. They are set to face off against Texas Friday night at 7pm EST on ESPN.

Take a look below at some of the photos shared on social media of the Irish arriving and practicing in preparation of playing for a national title.

Tale of the Tape: Individual Leaders – Notre Dame vs. Texas

Which players do you trust more?

Although Texas has an overall offensive advantage against Notre Dame, some individual leaders on the Irish can boast better numbers. Sure, [autotag]Jack Findlay[/autotag] having the best starter ERA between the two schools is fine, but what do the offensive leaders tell us about how these teams match up? Well, it still isn’t the best news for the Irish, even if [autotag]Ryan Cole[/autotag] has stolen the most bases of anyone in this matchup. Still, they’ve shown so far in this tournament that timeliness matters as much as stats.

The Longhorns have five players on MLB.com’s top draft prospects list. None is ranked higher than first baseman and unquestioned offensive leader Ivan Melendez. After that is left-hander Pete Hansen, arguably their best pitcher. But again, the Irish didn’t make the College World Series without dispatching some of the best potential future major leaguers, which always will show up on the road to Omaha. What’s not to say they can’t do it again?

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89