Duke's Andie Smith slam-dunks hole-in-one at Augusta National's Par 3 Course
But all 71 competitors got a chance Friday to play Augusta National Golf Club in practice as well as the Par 3 Course.
Any lingering disappointment from the day prior vanished in one shot for Smith as she hooped an ace on the Par 3 Course.
The moment. The celebration. Andie Smith's epic hole-in-one on the Par 3 course!#ANWAgolf | @DukeWGOLF pic.twitter.com/9u6gXp1hGW

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San Francisco Chronicle
3 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Breaking down some good players on college football teams that are likely to be bad
Isaac Smith knows what drew him to Mississippi State and why he has remained there. 'There's no distractions in Starkville,' the junior safety told reporters during Southeastern Conference media days. 'Small town. Real pretty community. The people are awesome. I fell in love with it and I'm still in love with it and will forever always be in love with it.' Smith's 127 tackles last season led the Southeastern Conference and tied him for seventh place among all Football Bowl Subdivision players, production that hasn't translated to team success. Mississippi State has gone 7-17 overall and 1-15 in SEC competition during Smith's two seasons. That makes Smith a natural candidate to head our list of good players on teams that figure to struggle this season, even though he believes Mississippi State has what it takes to turn things around. He considers Mississippi State a blue-collar program that values hard work. 'I love the fact that's Mississippi State's been all about that, just working hard and going to prove something that maybe people don't think you can do,' Smith said. Mississippi State's chances of being more competitive this season depend on whether Smith can help upgrade a defense that allowed 34.1 points per game last season. Texas Tech, Oklahoma State and Purdue were the only Power Four teams to give up more points per game. 'We lacked execution the whole season really – missed tackles, missed assignments,' Smith said. 'Quite frankly, that's why we lost a lot of games. I think we were last at about everything.' 'To me, there's no greater spokesperson for our locker room or our defense than Isaac Smith,' Mississippi State coach Jeff Lebby said. 'When you think about the game of football, loving football, that is Isaac. This guy loves to play the game. He's incredibly physical. He's been a great leader for us. Proud of him and who he's been, excited about the year that he has the ability to go have.' Wake Forest RB Demond Claiborne Claiborne rushed for 1,049 yards and 11 touchdowns last year for a Wake Forest team that finished 4-8 for a second straight season. He rushed for at least 113 yards against North Carolina A&T, NC State, Stanford and Cal. Claiborne also had 23 catches for 254 yards and two more scores. The ACC preseason media poll forecasts Wake Forest to finish 16th out of 17 teams, ahead of only Stanford. New Mexico RB Scottre Humphrey After helping Montana State reach the Football Championship Subdivision title game last year, Humphrey makes the move to the FBS ranks while trying to help New Mexico produce its first winning season since 2016. Humphrey rushed for 1,386 yards last year, which include 140 yards and the winning touchdown in Montana State's 35-31 victory over New Mexico. The Lobos' 5-7 record last year was their best since a 9-4 finish in 2016. Purdue RB Devin Mockobee The small-town, home-stater started at Purdue as a walk-on but earned a scholarship by helping Purdue win the 2022 Big Ten West Division crown. Purdue has struggled since – going 4-8 in 2023 and 1-11 in 2024 – but Mockobee has remained productive. His 2,466 yards rushing rank him seventh on Purdue's all-time list. He's aiming to become the fourth 3,000-yard rusher in school history. A big season could enable him to threaten Mike Alstott's school record of 3,635 career yards rushing Southern Mississippi CB Josh Moten Moten transferred to Southern Miss after intercepting five passes for Marshall last season to tie for fourth place among all Bowl Subdivision players. Southern Miss went 1-11 last year and has won more than three games just once over the past five seasons. He intercepted a pass in four of his final five games last season. Northwestern OT Caleb Tiernan Northwestern went 4-8 in 2024 for its third losing season in the last four years, but the Wildcats have a quality left tackle in Tiernan. He has started 30 games over the last three seasons. Pro Football Focus gave him an 88.9 pass block grade last season, ranking him sixth among all tackles. He allowed just one sack over Northwestern's final six games last year. Cal LB Cade Uluave After being named the Pac-12's freshman defensive player of the year by the league's coaches in 2023, Uluave collected 71 tackles while playing nine games for the Golden Bears last season. He made at least eight stops in six different games, including a 15-tackle performance against Miami. Cal went 5-7 last year for its fifth straight losing season, and it's picked to finish 15th in the ACC this year. ___


NBC Sports
a day ago
- NBC Sports
Nate Smith – no, not that one – into U.S. Amateur match play at Olympic
SAN FRANCISCO – Will the real Nathan Smith please stand up. While U.S. Walker Cup captain Nathan Smith is observing the action this week at the Olympic Club, where his 10-man squad for Cypress Point will be filled out following Sunday's U.S. Amateur final, another Nathan Smith is putting on a show. Nate Smith, a 42-year-old from Tetonia, Idaho, fired back-to-back 1-under 69s, on Olympic's Lake and Ocean courses, to breeze into match play as the seventh seed. 'I still have a few tricks up my sleeve,' Smith said with a laugh, before adding, 'I didn't have any expectations.' Why should he? After all, while many of his fellow competitors were going through their skillfully crafted, pre-round routines and then slipping into their NIL-logoed apparel, Smith woke up early before his afternoon tee time to order some roofing materials and dial into a job site. 'I'm fully aware that I'm a full-time home builder, and these guys are dedicating their lives to the game and they're some of the best amateurs in the world,' Smith said. 'I used to be at one point; not anymore, but maybe I still am, who knows?' Smith once was a hotshot amateur, too, a product of municipal golf out of Santa Cruz, less than two hours south of San Francisco, who played four years at Duke. He was a two-time All-American there before turning professional in 2006. He traveled the Hooters Tour with fellow Blue Devil Kevin Streelman, won there, and then won again on the then-called Nationwide Tour in 2010. That year, he fell out of the top 25 at that tour's season finale, though later earned his PGA Tour card through Q-School. But after only one season, during which he made $154,814 on eight of 24 cuts and failed to notch a top-25 finish, Smith lost his card. Two years later, he was quitting competitive golf after left-knee surgery and heading to graduate school at College of Charleston, where he not only earned his M.B.A. but met his wife, Amra. 'I had felt like I'd lost a lot stuff in my life, and I just wanted to turn the page,' Smith said. The couple moved to Idaho, where Smith spent a few years getting his business off the ground. By 2022, he had the itch to compete again, so he applied to have his amateur status reinstated started playing some local events, which eventually led to state and national tournaments. He won the 2024 Idaho Amateur and the Snedeker Memorial earlier this year while making a run to the Round of 16 of the 2023 U.S. Mid-Amateur and tying for fourth at the Huddleston Cup. He's qualified for three of the last four U.S. Amateurs, three times as many as he played during his first stint as an amateur. 'I still love the game, and I love competing; I just didn't like the way I felt playing professional golf,' Smith said. 'I have a much greater appreciation now for this game, which has given me everything in a lot of ways. I'm just so blessed to be here competing.' Smith knows how crazy this game can be. He recently failed to qualify for the U.S. Mid-Amateur by a shot, and now, over the hill, he's into the knockout stage at Olympic Club, which he'd occasionally play as a teenager if he was fortunate enough to score the invite. He finds himself doing math often these days, and his head spins when he realizes that some of his peers this week, including 16-year-old Miles Russell, who was just two shots better than Smith in stroke play, were born after Smith graduated college. And speaking of math, his odds of playing the Walker Cup next month at Cypress Point were astronomical before this week. But with the two main contenders for the one mid-amateur berth, Stewart Hagestad and Evan Beck, missing the cut, perhaps the door has been cracked open for Smith, the lone 25-and-older competitor left in this championship, to force his way onto the other Nathan Smith's team. The Smiths are familiar with each other. When it comes time for the Darrell Survey each year, surveyors are often confused when they see Nathan Smith has completely changed his bag of clubs. 'Wrong guy,' Nate will then tell them, though he wishes he had four U.S. Mid-Amateur titles and three Walker Cup appearances under his belt. 'I gave him Nathan a while ago,' Nate explained. 'That's exactly why I did it because we kept getting confused. I really respect Nathan and what he's accomplished in the mid-am game, and he's older than me and he has seniority, so he got to keep Nathan.' Back in 2004, they were both invited to attend the Walker Cup practice session ahead of the next year's event at Chicago Golf Club. During the trip, captain Bob Lewis paired the Smiths in a match against Brian Harman and Roberto Castro at Old Memorial. 'Nate and Nate; it was the best!' Nate Smith said with a smile. Now, 21 years later, could there be a Nathan Smith reunion at Cypress? 'I've been politicking with him a little bit,' Nate Smith said. 'If I were to win, maybe there'd be an argument for it…' That's when Smith was interrupted. A win, as he's then informed, would earn him an automatic spot.


USA Today
2 days ago
- USA Today
Watch Jonathan Smith provide a MSU update following team's first fall scrimmage
Michigan State football is halfway through fall preseason camp, with the team holding their first scrimmage this past weekend. That scrimmage provided head coach Jonathan Smith, with some interesting insight on the team -- which he shared on Monday. Smith met with the local media on Monday to talk about the first few weeks of fall preseason camp as the Spartans enter week three of practice. This was also the first time for media availability following the Spartans' first preseason scrimmage, which was a hot topic during Smith's press conference. Check out what Smith had to say about the team's first scrimmage and how practice has gone the first two weeks of fall camp in the highlights and full video sections below: Highlights Some of the notable topics covered during Smith's media session on Monday were... Full Video This video is courtesy of SpartanMag. Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on X @RobertBondy5.