With its star player back in the lineup, Sam Houston State is primed and ready for its NCAA Championship debut

Don’t be surprised if the Bearkats make a run this week.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Sam Houston State sat one stroke outside qualification for the NCAA Championship with just 18 holes left in the Stillwater Regional two weeks ago.

The Bearkats leader and star player, William Holcomb, was second on the individual leaderboard at the time, but was sitting in a hotel room by himself following the final-round action on his phone. The fifth-year senior was ruled out due to COVID-19 contact tracing, but that didn’t stop his teammates from rallying without him to punch their ticket to this week’s NCAA Championship, their first in program history.

“He told the guys, ‘Hey, give me a chance. Give me another chance,'” said head coach Brandt Kieschnick. “They gave him another chance to play.”

“I learned they’re a lot tougher than they seem sometimes and I guess, humblebrag, I made them tougher,” joked Holcomb after Thursday’s practice round at Grayhawk Golf Club. “It was awesome getting to see them go out and do that and getting updates from my dad and mom and wife. I was just sitting in the hotel, praying for them, pissed off. It was a roller coaster of emotions.”

“If I didn’t have COVID, I sure felt like I did after as emotionally spent as I was,” said Holcomb. “It was awesome to that, and it’s just a testament to coach and how he wants his program to be.”

Kieschnick and the ‘Kats have five pillars for the program: Humility, hard work, wisdom, discipline and team.

“We don’t need any maverick molecules. We’re all here for each other,” explained Kieschnick. “We play for each other.”

That’s not just coach speak, either. Those pillars are the foundation of Sam Houston’s program, and the belief in the message has manifested into one of the best stories of the year in college athletics.

“Part of our culture is being the same guy every day, and I felt like if everyone did that, we would be fine,” added Kieschnick. “So I just thought, ‘Hey, this is a really good opportunity to prove the things we talked about work and will get us through.’”

“You had to give those kids hope,” he continued. “You understand, I just told them that their best player isn’t playing. So you have to deal with that, and then you’ve got to give them some hope, ‘Hey, we can do this. This is how we’re gonna do it. And we can make one heck of a story.’”

But the story isn’t done yet. Far from.

Sam Houston’s confidence is at an all-time time entering Friday’s first round alongside Georgia Tech and Louisville, and why shouldn’t it be?

The Bearkats ended the season with a win at the Bayou City Collegiate, a second-place finish at their Bearkat Invitational and another win at the Southland Conference Championship before the Stillwater Regional.

“I look at some of their games, and I’m like, ‘How do I beat them every time?’ They’re really good players,” Holcomb said of his teammates. “I know every one of them can play at the highest level. So it’s just them believing it and getting to do it on the big stage.”

The stage is set, the lights are on and it’s Sam Houston’s time to shine.

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COVID-19 protocols force Sam Houston State to finish NCAA Stillwater Regional without star William Holcomb

COVID-19 contact tracing is keeping Sam Houston State’s star player on the sidelines when they need him most.

Sam Houston State entered this week’s Stillwater regional as the No. 8 seed. After 36 holes of play on Monday, the Bearkats found themselves in sixth place, one shot outside the top five and automatic qualification for next week’s NCAA Championship.

Due to COVID-19 protocols, Sam Houston State was forced to play their final round on Tuesday without their star senior, William Holcomb.

“This is truly heartbreaking for Will,” said head coach Brandt Kieschnick via a release. “He played phenomenal (on Monday) and has put us in this position. He has handled this like the champion he is. I had a great meeting with the rest of the guys and they are looking forward to this opportunity. We have a chance to do something really special today. All year long we have dealt with different scenarios we’ve never faced before, and this is just another challenge that has been placed before us. We have a great group of guys and I am fully confident in their ability to go out and perform at a championship level today.”

A release from Sam Houston State said Holcomb was ruled out due to contact tracing.

At the time of this post, the Stillwater regional is in a weather delay, with Sam Houston State in fifth place at 2 over, three shots clear of Auburn.

Much like the men this week, the women’s team found themselves in an unfortunate situation last week at the Baton Rouge regional. The event was decided without a single shot being hit due to the golf course being playable, but not at a “championship level.” The top-six seeds automatically advanced, leaving the Sam Houston State women on the outside looking in, though Hanna Alberto qualified as an individual.

Barstool Sports then rallied to put together the Let Them Play Classic, an event for teams and players who weren’t able to compete in Baton Rouge. The Bearkats will be sending four players to the tournament, held May 20-21 at Whirlwind Golf Club at Wild Horse Pass in Chandler, Arizona.

Texas Baseball: Longhorns defeat Sam Houston State

The No. 19 Texas Longhorns followed their series vs. Houston with a high-scoring defeat over Sam Houston State.

The No. 19 Texas Longhorns (8-5) just got back from their three-game series against Houston to face the Sam Houston State Bearkats on Tuesday. Texas brought the bats with them in a high-scoring affair that ended with a score of 15-9.

Zach Zubia and Ivan Melendez led the team with three hits each. Zubia brought in five runs and Melendez brought in three on the night.

Pete Hansen got the start on the mound pitching 4.0 innings, throwing 73 pitches and getting three strikeouts while allowing two runs on four hits. Texas would use four other pitchers in this game as well — Tanner Witt (2.0 innings), Lucas Gordon (2.0 innings), Drew Shifflet (1.0 innings) and Dawson Merryman (14 pitches, filled/subbed in the fifth).

Texas held a dominating 10-2 lead through five innings before the Bearkats went on a seven-run tear in the top of the sixth to bring the game to within one run. However, the Longhorns never slowed down at the plate. Texas scored five total runs in the bottom of the sixth and seventh innings, capitalized by DJ Petrinsky’s double to put the final nail in the coffin.

With another win under their belt, the Longhorns are now 8-2 since going winless at the State Farm College Baseball Showdown to start the season. Now, Texas has another challenge when they host No. 8 South Carolina for a three-game series this weekend. The first pitch is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on Longhorn Network.

Will Holcomb is teeing it up at the Jones Cup with one big goal in mind

Will Holcomb would like to close the amateur chapter of his golf career with a turn on the U.S. Walker Cup team this spring.

The driving range at Spring Creek Country Club, a nine-hole facility in Crockett, Texas, was practically at the end of Will Holcomb’s driveway as a kid. Holcomb can’t tell you how many times he found himself in an intense game at Spring Creek – often one in which he wouldn’t be allowed to use his driver, but would still have to give up strokes anyway. He was always welcome, and he was always challenged.

“Doesn’t matter if you’re 100 with one lung and one leg … or if you’re 14 or 15, just a good group of guys who play together and compete and anybody is invited,” Holcomb said. “There’s trash talk and I can’t tell you how many times somebody has said something while I was over a putt.”

It’s no wonder Holcomb craves that setting. As a fifth-year senior on the Sam Houston State roster, Holcomb recently found himself less than excited about going to golf practice as he helped a friend with a home project. But when he got to the golf course, he discovered head coach Brandt Kieschnick had planned an up-and-down competition.

Holcomb’s switch flipped – instant engagement.

“I love it – that’s what I want to do,” he said. “I want to just beat somebody. I don’t know where I got that from.”

The switch will flip again on Friday as Holcomb tees it up among the world’s best amateurs at the Jones Cup, a 54-hole event at Ocean Forest Golf Club in Sea Island, Georgia. The objective is simple: Holcomb wants to play his way onto the U.S. Walker Cup team.

No one else like him

As Kieschnick likes to say, there’s a Navy SEAL-style discipline to the way Holcomb goes about business, and the killer instinct figures in. Holcomb thinks he’s such a good match-play player because he hates to lose more than he likes to win.

“He wants to win more than anyone out there,” Kieschnick said.

Discipline is maybe the unseen layer to Holcomb’s success – or at the least the one that gets overlooked. Holcomb is a quick talker and a cut-up, and those qualities come through first. Personality was arguably the biggest takeaway from Holcomb’s break-out performance at the 2019 U.S. Amateur, when he played his way to the semifinals after entering the week ranked No. 328 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

“He proved to himself that his good golf is as good as anybody’s good golf in the country,” Kieshnick said of that week. “He’s continued to prove that.”

Will Holcomb and Brandt Kieschnick
Will Holcomb with Sam Houston State coach Brandt Kieschnick. (Photo: Sam Houston State Athletics)

Kieschnick saw a kid with the whole package on the recruiting trail in the summer of 2015. Sam Houston State had finished the previous season as a top-50 team in the nation, and Kieschnick really wanted the fast-talking player from Crockett with serious game. Keischnick secured the commitment over dinner at the Holcomb family’s table.

There are no boring moments with Holcomb on the roster.

“He would hit shots – he’d be trying to hook this 3-iron, he’d yell hook and he would spin on his feet three three times round for that ball to hook,” Kieschnick said. “That’s how much he talked to the ball. He’s spinning his body three full circles for that thing to hook.”

“When he hits a shot and he gets a good bounce he says, ‘The good lord takes care of the needy boy,” and he just keeps going.”

The Holcomb file is equal parts one-liners and statistics. It speaks of faith and character. Holcomb has steadily improved on the golf course because of a single-minded commitment, but Keischnick also remembers Holcomb coming to his office the summer after his freshman year to talk about proposing to his girlfriend. Holcomb and Graycie were ultimately married in August. Holcomb broke his foot at the wedding, but told his coach he’d play through it – and did.

“He played the whole semester in a boot, was our No. 1 player, almost won a couple times,” Kieschnick said. “… It was just the most amazing thing you ever saw.”

One box left to check

With a transition approaching, Holcomb would like to close this chapter as a Walker Cupper.

“I wouldn’t have gone to the South Beach (International Amateur) and I wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for the Walker Cup,” Holcomb said flatly. “I’ll get to play plenty of golf in this life, I didn’t really necessarily have to play any more.”

Realistically, Holcomb, as a U.S. Amateur semifinalist, was one match away from serious consideration for the last U.S. Walker Cup team. Ultimately, however, it took two more years and a head-turning stroke-play performance at the inaugural Maridoe Amateur in December to lift him into the conversation for the squad that will compete at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, on May 8-9.

“I’ve wanted to be on the team,” said Holcomb. “I want to play against the Europeans. I want to compete in match play with the best amateurs in the country and so I’ve always wanted to play it.”

Only one position on the 10-man team is spoken for – it went to Tyler Strafaci as winner of the 2020 U.S. Amateur. The USGA’s International Team Selection Committee will select three more players (the top three players in the WAGR) at the conclusion of the Jones Cup. Holcomb currently is ranked No. 71.

Will Holcomb, Maridoe Amateur medalist
Will Holcomb with his trophy as Maridoe Amateur medalist.

It’s safe to assume the winner of the Jones Cup, if he is American, will get serious consideration. Holcomb knows what he has to do.

A 16-man practice squad invited was selected the week before Holcomb’s run at the Maridoe Amateur or he would conceivably have been in that elite group. After he wrapped up the stroke-play medal, Holcomb was introduced to Walker Cup captain Nathanial Crosby. He relished the face time.

“It’s kind of like, you’re not going to want to go on a date with somebody unless you’ve probably met them, even if everybody says great things about them, you don’t know them,” Holcomb reasoned.

The Maridoe medal amounted to a major feather in Holcomb’s cap. It goes along with a runner-up at the North & South Amateur, the Trinity Forest Amateur title and a top-10 finish at the Azalea Invitational.

“He truly believes he’s one of the best in the country and he’s not afraid to play anybody,” Kieschnick said. “He definitely respects his competition, he knows he has to play well. He wants the moment and he’s kind of the guy who wants the ball. I think the bigger the scenario, the better he is.”

This moment is big, and as he always does before major amateur events, Holcomb has spent three days at Ocean Forest getting lines and committing to spots. He’s already noted the small greens there, which will work in his favor. After all, some of his crowning achievements have come at Pinehurst No. 2, where he deftly navigated tricky green complexes. That’s not to say it’s the only place he’s a factor.

As Holcomb noted, “Cup’s the same width at Pinehurst as it is here, I think.”

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DT P.J. Hall enjoying the ‘fresh air’ of playing for the Texans

Former Sam Houston State and Seguin High School product P.J. Hall is enjoying the “fresh air” that comes with playing for the Houston Texans.

P.J. Hall is enjoying a reboot just three seasons into his NFL career.

The Oakland Raiders selected the former Sam Houston State product in Round 2 of the 2018 NFL Draft. The Raiders attempted to trade the 6-0, 305-pound defensive tackle to the Minnesota Vikings in August, but a failed physical nixed the deal, leaving the Raiders with no other choice than to waive him.

Hall played 35 games for Oakland, starting in 22 of them, and collected 69 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, 1.5 sacks, and two pass deflections. However, it wasn’t good enough to make the move with the club to Las Vegas.

Houston claimed the former Seguin High School alumnus off waivers to bolster their defensive line. Through five games with his new team, Hall has enjoyed the new start with the AFC South club.

“It’s definitely more comfortable,” Hall said. “It feels great knowing that like my family’s here. I’m from Seguin, so it’s two and a half hours down the road. It just feels like I’m back at home, like this is fresh air, like a fresh start.”

Hall doesn’t begrudge his two seasons with the Raiders, but rather chooses to look at the positives, such as how the organization helped him acclimate to the pro game.

“I think things didn’t click when they needed to,” Hall said. “I feel like stuff happened over there and I think I couldn’t control it. So, once I got here everything started rolling just in time. I feel like it’s going good. Making sure that I stay focused and stay on track right now.”

When Hall got to Houston, he cleaned up his diet and chipped away at other aspects that could affect his focus.

“I feel like that’s why I’m playing better,” Hall said. “I feel more comfortable out there. I have great leadership out here, too. I feel like all those things are tying in.”

Hall has provided Houston with 21 tackles, two tackles for loss, and 1.0 sack in five games, four of which he started. The Texans are far from perfect at 1-4, but if Hall can continue to give the Texans a presence on the defensive line’s interior to shore up the run defense, the 2020 season may start to become as perfect as it can be.

Texas Baseball: Fifth Inning Offense Keeps Longhorns Perfect

The Texas Longhorns hosted the Sam Houston State Bearkats in hopes of staying perfect on the season. Pete Hansen would earn his first win.

Texas Longhorns took the field for their ninth game of the season looking to stay perfect ahead of their trip back to Houston. The Longhorns will participate in the Shriners Hospitals for Children College Classic. This will be the team’s first test taking on the 11th ranked LSU Tigers and 6th ranked Arkansas Razorbacks. They will wrap up the weekend against the Missouri Tigers.

As far as the Tuesday night game against the Sam Houston State Bearkats, it was bleak early on. Texas gave up an unearned run in the top of the first, Pete Hansen would settle down. He went five innings for the Longhorns, surrendering just two hits while striking out six batters.

In the bottom of the fifth inning, the offense was finally able to break though against the Sam Houston State pitching staff. Murphy Stehly drove in the first run. The Longhorns had the bases loaded, Stehly hit into an RBI fielder’s choice driving Eric Kennedy home. After finally tying the game, Austin Todd stepped to the plate with an opportunity to get the team head.

With runners on second and third, in stepped Zach Zubia with a big opportunity to get the pitching staff some breathing room. There isn’t another bat the team wants at the plate than Zubia, he singled to right field to bring two more runs across the plate.

Hansen went from being on the hook for the loss to relying on the bullpen to close out the game for the win. Kolby Kubichek came in to the game, pitching 2.1 innings. He would be the beneficiary of some good defense behind him.

Andre Duplantier II came into the game in the eighth to close the door on the game. He would pitch 1.2 innings to earn his first save of his Texas career. The save also earned Hansen his first win in his collegiate career. Texas improved to 9-0.