Notre Dame’s home finale against Wake Forest is turning into a game in which some unlikely names are contributing. We already have seen touchdowns from [autotag]Devyn Ford[/autotag] and [autotag]Tobias Merriweather[/autotag]. Now, we have one from [autotag]Eli Raridon[/autotag], who didn’t really have any stats next to his name before this contest. That didn’t stop him from catching a 19-yard scoring pass from [autotag]Sam Hartman[/autotag]:
Raridon is a sophomore tight end and has a lot of time still to make his mark on the Irish. One touchdown won’t do a lot to move the needle, but he at least showed that he has the potential to move it even further. Hopefully, this is the first of many big plays he’ll make for the program over the next few years.
Once again, social media found itself in the position of reacting to a player most people weren’t think about before the game. Here are some of those reactions:
[autotag]Chris Tyree[/autotag] has made one big play after another for Notre Dame this season. He’s done so on both offense and special teams. His latest such play opened the scoring for the Irish’s game against Pittsburgh.
Sam Hartman’s opening drive was moving until he was picked off by Phillip O’Brien Jr. The Irish’s defense promptly forced a three-and-out, and Tyree went back to receive the punt. When he did, he broke multiple tackles and suddenly found himself home free for an 82-yard score, giving the Irish a 7-0 lead:
It’s been a long time since Irish fans have seen a punt returned to the house. You have to go back to [autotag]C.J. Sanders[/autotag] against UMass in 2015 to find the last instance. The program definitely was overdue for one.
Here are some Irish fans’ reactions to Tyree’s big play on social media. After all, it’s been a while since they’ve seen this exact occurrence:
Notre Dame and its fans were stunned to be up by only one score on Central Michigan at halftime. That the Chippewas scored two touchdowns in one half, let alone the entire game was mind-boggling. This wasn’t supposed to happen.
Sam Hartman needed to get something going on the second half’s opening possession to swing momentum back toward the Irish. He did that when he completed a 39-yard pass to Jayden Thomas, advancing the ball to the Chippewas’ 3-yard line. After a pair of 1-yard runs by Audric Estime, Hartman took the ball himself and put the Irish back up by two scores:
Sorry for the bad view of the play, but it was the only one available at the time this was written. In any event, the Irish are back in business. Take a look at some of the best tweets talking about the play that made that a reality:
As good as [autotag]Sam Hartman[/autotag] has been for Notre Dame thus far, his tight ends haven’t gotten involved. They technically haven’t been needed because the offense has been that good, but you’d still like to see them contribute something. It finally happened just before halftime against Tennessee State.
Fresh off the Tigers’ second unsuccessful field-goal attempt of the first half and with 53 seconds left, Hartman chose to exclusively air it out, mostly to his tight ends, to try and extend a big Irish lead. Six plays and 38 seconds later, he did just that, finding [autotag]Holden Staes[/autotag] for a 4-yard touchdown:
Irish fans, how are you feeling?!@NDFootball is up 35-3 at halftime.
The touchdown was the first of Staes’ collegiate career and his second reception. There’s no telling how much Staes will factor into the rest of the season, but it’s at the very least of reflection of how many backs and receivers Hartman is getting involved. Yes, that includes tight ends.
Here’s what social media said about the score that put the Irish up, 35-3, at the break:
Expectations were high for Notre Dame running back [autotag]Audric Estime[/autotag] coming into the season. Even though the Irish have arguably their best quarterback in years in [autotag]Sam Hartman[/autotag], that didn’t mean their rushing attack would be de-emphasized.
Estime scored one touchdown against Navy, and it only was a matter of time before he got his second against Tennessee State. He did just that on this 5-yard run that was the same distance as Hartman’s earlier in the second quarter:
That 28-3 lead was much more in line with what the Irish were expected to do with the Tigers. The Irish got off to a slow start in the first quarter but finally have asserted the gap in both talent and level between the two programs. Assuming the Irish hold on, there will be a lot of dissecting those differences. In the meantime, here’s what social media was saying about Estime after his touchdown:
[autotag]Jeremiyah Love[/autotag] got four carries in his first collegiate game when Notre Dame beat Navy. While he got 40 yards out of those opportunities, they barely registered a blip on the radar with all the scoring going on. He didn’t have to wait long to find the end zone against Tennessee State. On the Irish’s first drive, they mainly advanced the ball on the run, and Love capped it with a 36-yard touchdown, the first score of the game and the first of his collegiate career:
Love is so new to the Irish that we don’t even have a proper photo of him available at the time this is being written. Rest assured, plenty of images of Love will surface if he continues to have big plays like the one we just witnessed. For now, we’ll settle for the fact that he’s being noticed by those watching the game as these tweets suggest:
How do you lead a program back from utter tragedy? Warmth, understanding and an occasional chicken dance.
HOBBS, N.M. â When Dayton Price woke up, he was burning alive.
Flames engulfed the van carrying Price, seven teammates and his coach. There was no time to think. He smashed a window and dragged himself to the pavement before trying to get his friends out, as well. Only Price, 19, and Hayden Underhill, 20, were able to escape the inferno, and even then just barely. It wasnât long before helicopters landed at the crash site and took them to hospitals some 100 miles away to save their lives.
The National Transportation Safety Board said Henrich Siemens, 38, and his 13-year-old son were in a white Ram 2500 truck southbound on Farm-to-Market Road 1788 deep in the West Texas plains when it crossed the center lane at 8:17 p.m. on March 15, 2022, colliding head-on with a van carrying eight members of the University of the Southwest golf team and its coach.⯠The team was about 30 minutes into its 90-minute return ride to campus.
Nine of the 11 people involved died. The NTSB later ruled Siemens had methamphetamine in his system.
Victims included 26-year-old Tyler James, the golf coach who was driving the van, as well as golfers Jackson Zinn, 22, of Westminster, Colorado; Karisa Raines, 21, of Fort Stockton, Texas; Travis Garcia, 19, of Pleasanton, Texas; Mauricio Sanchez, 19, of Mexico; Tiago Sousa, 18, of Portugal; and Laci Stone, 18, of Nocona, Texas.
A final report has yet to be released. Why the truck crossed the centerline remains unknown. Price spent 86 days in the hospital before he went home. A year after the crash, he and Underhill, along with their former teammates not involved in the crash, families of those who died and the USW community are still coping with the pain and loss.
There are feelings of guilt and questions that can never be answered about a moment that changed their lives forever. At times, itâs almost too much to bear. But all know they have to move forward.
Each month, Price and Underhill join a Zoom call with the remaining members of the USW golf team and their former teammates’ family members. Itâs a group therapy session. They laugh. They cry. They love.
âNone of us should actually really know each other as well as we do,â Laci Stoneâs mother, Chelsi, said.
âWeâre almost mad at the fact we have to,â added Laciâs father, Haydan.
The crash scene
Itâs a chilly January morning, but the sun bakes the pavement of Farm-to-Market Road 1788 in Andrews County, Texas. Itâs a rural stretch of two-lane highway that connects Midland to Seminole, with the town of Andrews a mere 10 miles to the west. Half a mile north of the intersection with State Highway 115 is a straightaway where the yellow centerline is faded, thanks to the wearing effects of oil-field traffic and West Texas weather.
The road itself is rough, mimicking the landscape that surrounds it. Oil pump jacks repeatedly pound the Earth, marking the horizon in every direction. The speed limit is 75 mph, though that seems more of a recommendation. Cars, trucks and semis blaze through this stretch, swirling up dust.
Itâs easy to miss, but glance to the east side of the road and you see it: two blue pieces of metal resembling a cross affixed to the post of the barbed wire fence. Purple, white and pink flowers, illuminated by solar-powered lights, hug the dirt, and hearts sway from barbed wire. In the middle of each of the seven hearts is a letter, the first name of each deceased USW golfer. There also remain seven golf balls in the dirt, untouched and seeking refuge beneath the bouquets of flowers cascading over them.
Closer to the highway is evidence of how this memorial came to be: shreds of rubber, shattered pieces of a headlight, scraps of metal. Faded colors and splotches of dirt tattoo the remains, making it seem as if theyâve been there forever.
On the west side of the road is a smaller tribute, laying on a bed of white rocks. Itâs again surrounded by rubber and shrapnel. There are two bouquets, one on either side of the rocks. Behind those are pairs of crosses, one sculpted from tree bark and the other with the names Henry Siemens and Ricky Siemens. Beneath the names are dates of birth and death. Dried, crunchy brown roses lay on the rocks, guarded by two lights that brighten the somber scene.
The memorials are the most colorful, powerful and emotional markers along Farm-to-Market Road 1788. The flowers dance in the breeze as vehicles pass. The spray-painted markings from law enforcement on the highway have all but faded, though the horrors have not.
The administrator
Steve Appelâs office is typical for an athletic director at a small college.
Baseball jerseys line the walls as Appel, also the baseball coach and facilities director, is a jack-of-all-trades for USW. His desk is cluttered with papers, though theyâre organized in a way only he will understand. There are couches surrounding a table next to his desk, often a place for fellow coaches or athletes to come spend their time and escape the outside world. It is often Appelâs escape, too.
âThere are no guidelines to this,â he said, fighting back tears.
Appel went to college in Connecticut at a school with about 8,000 students, but that wasnât for him. He craved an even smaller school environment. He enjoys the minuscule details, even down to cutting his baseball fieldâs grass. USW was unique. Now in his ninth year there and with no kids of his own, the students and staffers on this small New Mexico campus â attendance is roughly 1,000 total counting virtual students and 300 on campus â became his family.
Thatâs why his job changed forever when his phone lit up on March 15, 2022. USWâs baseball team had just completed a game in New Orleans, 16 hours from home. Sitting in his hotel room, Appel began receiving bits of information from someone back in Hobbs.
âThereâs been a crash.â
âIt involves the golf team.â
âFatalities.â
Appel still remembers the emptiness he felt as the reports dripped in.
âIt was a tough, tough night because you werenât (there) and didnât know all the details,â Appel said. âYouâre still trying to take care of 40 kids on the road. Itâs not like something where we can get on the bus, and in a couple hours weâre back home.â
Eventually, all the details came to light. The two-day drive back home from Louisiana seemed to take two weeks. The following days, weeks and months didnât pass any quicker.
The news vans and national spotlight left Hobbs, but Appel and the students still on campus, many of whom were athletes, continued with daily life. Questions remained. Questions about the future of the golf team and replacing the coach. When would they post this job?
The answer was always the same: whenever Appel was ready.
He knew he couldnât replace Tyler. There would never be another like him. Inside the USW athletics building, Tylerâs office remains mostly untouched. Papers remain scattered on his desk. Thereâs a water bottle there, too. A putting mat is tucked away on top of a shelf.
âThere are still no answers.â
The survivors
Halie Cruz was shaking. Her stomach quivered.
âI canât do this,â she thought to herself. But she couldnât stop. She had to continue on.
On Oct. 24, 2022, more than six months after the accident, Cruz was in Plainview, Texas, the halfway point between Amarillo and Lubbock. The USW golf teams played at Plainview Country Club in their first tournament since the crash.
Cruz and Taylor Phillips both competed in the TankLogix Collegiate in Midland on that fateful March day alongside their teammates, but instead of getting back on the van to return to campus, they stayed with family. Little did they know the impact of that decision.
Cruz and Phillips are two of the four members of the USW golf teams who decided to return to the Mustangs, along with Harrison Kessler and Phillip Lopez on the menâs side. Itâs conceivable the golf teams wouldâve been cut had the four not returned to school after the crash.
No one wouldâve blamed them if they left.
Yet here they were, competing in the Wayland Baptist Invitational in Plainview. Cruz and Phillips played as individuals because only three members remain on the womenâs golf team this season. Meanwhile, Kessler and Lopez are with three new teammates on the menâs side. The core four were eager to play well, but the scores didnât matter. There was more on the minds of these student-athletes than hitting good golf shots.
âI just wanted to go out and just do amazing,â Kessler said. âAnd that just canât happen. Thatâs a hard thing to deal with.â
In the days following the tragedy, Kessler, Lopez, Cruz and Phillips all went home. Kessler tried to block the incident from his mind. As time went on, though, the pain became harder and harder to deal with. He wanted to stay strong and say the right things. But there are no answers. Lopez went home, working to keep his mind busy. Cruz spent time alone â and with her dogs. Phillips relied on her hamster, giving her a reason to get up each day and stay active.
The four checked in on one another. As close as they were before the crash, they became inseparable after. Eventually, it was time to decide whether to return. There was survivorâs guilt and second guessing and some uncertainty ahead.
âAt first, I was like âNo, Iâm not coming back,â â Cruz said. âBut I needed to go back. I needed to finish what I started.â
âFor me, it was to honor them,â Phillips added.
The return was, as is to be expected, difficult and at times uncomfortable, often with time spent in classrooms and working through homework once tackled with teammates. Others on campus tried to offer sensitivity, but the group has been treated differently for certain. A new coach, RJ Lester, is yet another reminder that life has changed, but he is learning each day how to lead a group that has been through severe trauma.
And then thereâs the golf course, Rockwind Community Links, where the four have memories of qualifying in the snow and laughing through numerous practice rounds. New golf bags will never have the meaning of the old ones. In some rounds, the four are trying to get better, yet in others, theyâre simply seeking solitude.
For Kessler, Lopez, Cruz and Phillips, itâs about perseverance. Itâs the reason they returned to this tiny town. It is, in their eyes, what their teammates would have wanted. Itâs what Tyler James tried to instill in them. Golf was once their primary ambition, but now it also serves as an escape. Itâs how this group manages the pain.
âWe just have to finish what we started,â Lopez said.
The new coach
To find RJ Lesterâs office, walk through the Jack and Mabel Maddox Student Life Center, past the weight room and gymnasium, and around the corner. Youâll find the training room, and just to the left is a compact office with just enough room for a desk, cabinet and a couple of chairs.
Lester is the new golf coach at USW. Heâs also an alum, so he knows the program, the university, the town and the expectations. He has coached golf before, recently at high schools in West Texas. Lester was aware of what he was stepping into but had no idea exactly what challenges sat before him.
âI came in knowing there were going to be obstacles and that it was going to take time to heal,â he said. âAnd thatâs no problem. My look at it was, âHow could we make this as good of an experience for the ones coming back with the new ones coming in?â â
Lester is not afraid to let his silly side shine through on the golf course. Itâs a sizable portion of his persona. Heâs comfortable playing the role of goofball if thatâs what puts his team at ease. Sometimes, itâs necessary. Itâs part of the reason he was a perfect fit for a job it seemed no one could fill.
A handful of applicants responded when Appel posted the job in early May. Lesterâs name appeared in late June. Lesterâs wife told him, âWhatâs the worst that could happen, they tell you no?â
He had former teammates in the area who pushed him to apply and supported his decision. He was hired in early July.
The four returning players were part of the interview process. Lester said he talked with Appel for about three-and-a-half hours then set up a Zoom call with the returning players. The five chatted for about 45 minutes. Later that day Appel called back and wanted Lester to talk with university president Dr. Ryan Tipton.
âThose four decided they wanted me to be their coach,â Lester said. âIt has been a blessing.â
Although heâs happy to have the role, Lester admits coaching USW isnât always easy. There have been good days and bad, either mentally or in producing shots on the golf course. Early on, he walked on eggshells, putting one foot in front of the other while being respectful of what his four returning players were going through.
If one of his players was suffering through a rough day, Lester had no issue with letting them go home to take time for themselves. He also wasnât afraid to lighten the mood, sometimes needing a quick joke or an embarrassing chicken dance to help ease the tension.
Lester also realized the importance of allowing the four to have input on the season, such as which tournaments they wanted to play and vocalizing when they needed personal time. The camaraderie has been pivotal. Lester walked into a nearly impossible situation, just as his players came back to one.
How do you lead a program back from one of the worst tragedies in the history of college golf?
With warmth, understanding and an occasional chicken dance.
Lester needed each member of the returning foursome. They needed him, too.
The small-town college president
Hobbs has a population of roughly 40,000 and is known as a blue-collar town. Want something? Go earn it. Sitting just four miles from the Texas border, Hobbs is essentially an extension of West Texas, rather than a New Mexico oasis.
When oil prices are on the upswing, so is Hobbs. But even at that, itâs a tiny speck on the map, nearly a five-hour drive from Albuquerque, the stateâs largest city. Chances are good that one doesnât come upon Hobbs unless he or she is going to Hobbs. Long, straight highways are about the only thing in and out.
The University of the Southwestâs campus sits on the northern edge of town, just off Lovington Highway. Among the nearly 300 students on campus, 95 percent are athletes. Across the street is the Rockwood Community Links, where the golf teams practice.
Tipton â now the president at USW â was born 20 miles up the road in Lovington and knows the area well. He managed an oil company for a decade before retiring and returning to school for his doctorate. He always wanted to teach. He told his wife, Keisha, as much, and a chance encounter with a dean at USW allowed him to teach part-time. Fast forward 15 years, and Tipton was the provost at the time of the crash.
He has managed crisis situations before; oil fields can be treacherous, a place where workers die or are injured too often. In his new life, the anxiety that comes with an explosive work environment finally seemed like a thing of the past.
Then the phone rang.
Tipton was in Florida on vacation with his wife and daughter on March 15. Information was scarce at first, but he remembers the word âfatalities.â
âThereâs no college textbook, thereâs no class, thereâs no handbook for this,â Tipton said. âWe had no idea what to do next.â
Over the following weeks, amid self-reflection and national attention, Tipton had trouble sleeping. The community rallied around the school, and nationally the outreach was unimaginable. But while Tipton hoped the university could eventually show signs of healing, he knew his original priority was to reach out to each of the families, talking with parents who had their lives shattered.
Tipton made calls to each and every family that night from his Florida hotel room. Better they find out from him than on the news. The tearful, horrified responses are still firmly ingrained in his memory.
But time doesnât stop for tragedy.
Tipton knew he then needed to focus his attention on the students who remained, especially the four who decided to keep playing.
Through the intense pain, Tipton admits thereâs a satisfaction in seeing the leadership that Halie, Harrison, Phillip and Taylor have taken, not only as golfers and students but as people. In Tiptonâs eyes, the four have become heroes, four pupils battling through agonizing circumstances to persevere. For themselves. For their program. For those who can no longer fight.
âIt speaks volumes of their character,â Tipton said.
The grieving families (and a hole-in-one)
Jackson Zinn was accustomed to his father, Greg, yelling at his golf ball to âget in.â No matter how many times Greg pleaded for his ball to disappear and give him that elusive first ace, it never did.
The two played golf all across the country, whether throughout their home state of Colorado or at PGA Tour host courses such as TPC Scottsdale and Harbour Town Golf Links. Jackson got used to Greg saying those two little words, yet his dad just couldnât seem to get one over the lip.
âDad, I guarantee youâre going to get a hole-in-one someday,â Jackson told Greg at one outing.
Jacksonâs memorial golf tournament was held Sunday, Aug. 7, at Hyland Hills Golf Course in Westminster, Colorado. Nearly 250 people registered, those spots selling out in five days. Jen Zinn, Jacksonâs mother, tried to make sure a photographer snapped photos of every group that came through.
Jen called Greg, her former husband, to ask which hole they were on, and they planned to have the photographer meet them on the 13th, a par 3 playing 187 yards.
Greg was last to hit. He wanted to swing a 5-iron, but his nephew convinced him to club down to a 6.
âI hit it just flush and perfect,â Greg recalled.
The ball landed on the green about 10 feet short and a bit left of the hole. The green gently sloped from left to right. After a couple of hops, the ball rolled closer and closer to the hole.
âGet in,â Greg yelled, just as he had so many times before with his son.
This time, it listened.
âItâs probably the most meaningful hole-in-one in the history of golf,â Greg said. âIt was Jackson. He was there.â
While thereâs no way to replace a child, the Zinns wanted to celebrate Jacksonâs life, which is why it was important to the family to start the memorial tournament. They raised more than $82,000.
âWe had to make his death count,â Jen said.
Each of the four returning golfers at the University of the Southwest received a scholarship through Jacksonâs tournament. Garrison Smith, a senior at New Mexico State, was also given a scholarship. Then there were donations to Jacksonâs high school, First Tee and other junior golf programs in his hometown.
The second memorial tournament is set for this summer. More than 300 people have registered. Other families involved in the crash have coordinated similar tournaments to raise money in their childâs memory. Haydan and Chelsi Stone founded a charity, the Love Like Laci Foundation. Itâs exactly what their daughter wouldâve wanted, they say, to spread love to others at whatever cost.
Once a month, faces pop up one by one on the screen. Itâs the Zinns and the Stones, Price and Underhill, those who went back to school and families who still question why. Jen set up the monthly Zoom call, insisting she just couldnât connect with national grief groups. They arenât her people. Those associated with the University of the Southwest are.
Some calls are easier than others as each person copes a little differently. The first series of holidays was especially painful. Birthdays come and go. Sometimes the pain stems from simply not being able to hang out on a Friday night.
But the monthly Zoom call brings laughter. And remembrance. And comfort. All part of the process of moving forward.
âI didnât think I needed it at first,â Haydan Stone said. âThe more that weâve gotten attached and the more that weâve opened, it just helps. It has helped for us to open up to these people and to let them know we are hurting.
âBut weâre also building and moving forward.â
The shrine â and the future
Behind the student dorms at the University of the Southwest lies a putting green. Itâs a common area where coach Tyler James would spend time mentoring his players. Itâs a place the golf teams frequent, even to this day.
And soon a memorial will be built there, as university officials are working with builders and families to put the finishing touches on something special. Nobody is looking to rush, so thereâs no timeline for when it will be finished. All that matters is that the memorial is done right.
Planning the shrine has been challenging; in the middle of a bustling campus, it will be out of place, no matter what it looks like. But of course, the shrine shouldnât even be there.
âNothing will ever be the same,â said Appel, the athletic director. âAnd how will you ever understand that? I still donât.â
But there is no other place to put this memorial. The putting green is where more than 100 people gathered six days after the crash for the first of what would be dozens of vigils across the country. Because of blustery winds, students, faculty and others from the community raised cell phone flashlights and other items to the stars to light up the sky. The City of Hobbs brought in light towers to help brighten the blank desert tundra.
Videos poured in on social media of others across the country holding similar vigils. The university has added a âLight up the Skyâ celebration before spring break every year, just part of how the seven will live on in memory.
And at Midland College, across the Texas border, the TankLogix Collegiate at Ranchland Hills Golf Club is back on the schedule. The tournament was canceled after the first day last year, with USW named honorary champion on both the menâs and womenâs sides.
In the fall, Midland officials reached out to see whether the Mustangs would want to return. Lester and USW administrators didnât push, but the four returning team members insisted on putting it back on the schedule.
March 15, 2023, marks one year since the crash that claimed nine lives, seven of those from the University of the Southwest. Itâs also the last day of the TankLogix Collegiate. The final round is bound to be damn near impossible. But scores wonât be all that matter.
Did anyone remember that [autotag]Brandon Joseph[/autotag] played for Notre Dame before Saturday? The transfer from Northwestern might have slipped through the cracks for some Irish fans. However, he reminded everyone he exists in a big way on the first play from scrimmage against Syracuse. Garrett Shrader surely will be asking himself how he didn’t see Joseph, who gave the Irish their first defensive touchdown of the season:
It’s worth noting that since this happened on the first play from scrimmage, it won’t mean anything if the Irish don’t play up to that level for the rest of the game. Despite the recent loss to Clemson, the Orange are no slouch, and anyone who doesn’t treat them like that is in for a rude awakening. With them also playing at home, the environment won’t be very forgiving either. The Irish surely are aware of that.
Still, that was an exciting way to begin things, and here’s how Twitter reacted to Joseph’s big play:
If you don’t know much about [autotag]Jayden Thomas[/autotag], don’t feel too bad. He had minimal playing time during his freshman year at Notre Dame, and even with more opportunities as a sophomore, he hasn’t done a lot to turn heads. However, you definitely will want to know more about him now after this amazing 30-yard touchdown catch late in the first half against BYU:
That wasn’t your typical long touchdown reception. Thomas had to battle with a defender on him to secure that ball and run toward the end zone only a few yards away. If this is the beginning of what will be a fine rest of his Irish career, Irish fans undoubtedly will be anxious to see what comes next for him. In the meantime, some of them took to Twitter to react to a touchdown catch that many will be replaying over and over for the next week:
Investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board made a shocking announcement on Thursday.
After originally releasing that a 13-year-old boy was driving a pickup truck responsible for a Texas crash that killed six University of Southwest golfers and the coach back in March, investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board made a shocking announcement on Thursday â that the boy’s 38-year-old father was driving the truck and he had methamphetamine in his system.
According to an Associated Press story Thursday, the NTSB said that DNA testing confirmed that the father, Henrich Siemens, was driving and that toxicological testing showed the presence of methamphetamine in Siemens’ blood.
The van was carrying school’s team back from a golf tournament. The University of the Southwest is a private Christian university located in Hobbs, New Mexico. Teams were competing at the TankLogix Collegiate at Ranchland Hills Golf Club in Midland, Texas.
Head coach Tyler James, 26, was among those killed. The students who died were identified as: Mauricio Sanchez, 19, of Mexico; Travis Garcia, 19, of Pleasanton, Texas; Jackson Zinn, 22, of Westminster, Colorado; Karisa Raines, 21, of Fort Stockton, Texas; Laci Stone, 18, of Nocona, Texas; and Tiago Sousa, 18, of Portugal. Hayden Underhill, 20, and Dayton Price, 19, remain in the hospital.
Siemens and his son died in the crash, as well.
According to the Associated Press:
The collision happened at about 8:17 p.m. in Andrews County, which is roughly 30 miles (50 kilometers) east of Texas’ border with New Mexico. Although it’s a rural area, the roads there are often busy with traffic related to agriculture and oil and gas development.
In the days after the crash, the NTSB had said that the truck’s left front tire blew before impact. But it said Thursday that so far, investigators haven’t found evidence of a loss in tire pressure or any other indicators that the tire failed.
The NTSB said the road they were traveling on consisted of a northbound lane and southbound lane. Near the crash site, the roadway was straight but there was no highway lighting.
The crash is still being investigated to determine the probable case of the crash, the NTSB said.