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A hurricane set in motion an improbable season (and next) for this Big 10 men's golf team

A hurricane set in motion an improbable season (and next) for this Big 10 men's golf team

USA Today10-05-2025

A hurricane set in motion an improbable season (and next) for this Big 10 men's golf team
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Hurricane Milton didn't do the people of Florida any favors last October. Michigan State's men's golf program, on the other hand …
If the Spartans are the team they think they might be next year — perhaps the deepest team they've had — they'll have to thank Milton's ferocity for canceling the Quail Valley Collegiate Invitational in Vero Beach, Florida, last October. Because if senior star Ashton McCulloch had played in one more event before he separated his shoulder, he wouldn't have any eligibility remaining and wouldn't be coming back next fall to headline what could be a special team.
'Next year's roster will be the deepest (we've had) by a lot,' MSU men's golf coach Casey Lubahn said.
It'll be that deep because of what this year's team has become without McCulloch — a team that, well beyond its winter expectations, finished third in the 18-team Big Ten championships and then was selected for the NCAA regionals, a team now led in no small way by two Lansing-area stars, Williamston's Caleb Bond and East Lansing's Drew Miller.
The Spartans are the 10 seed in the 14-team Tallahassee (Florida) Regional, playing May 12-14. The top five teams advance to the NCAA championships.
'If we play just like we did at Big Tens, we'll advance,' Lubahn said. 'And we didn't play great at Big Tens. It's getting them to think that their good is good enough.'
That's been a big part of the story of this season — adjusting and then re-adjusting expectations as the Spartans learned their good was absolutely good enough.
This, Lubahn thought, would be a rebuilding season after McCulloch's injury — which he suffered while celebrating as he tested equipment for a golf manufacturer that's one of his endorsements. McCulloch (best known for winning the Canadian Amateur in 2023) had carried the team during the fall season and, even with him, they weren't playing that well.
'Even though we've made it to the last nine NCAAs and we've been finishing top four in the league, I think we all just took our expectations (down a bit and said), 'Let's just worry about getting better, growing, learning,'' Lubahn said. 'And we did that for about two weeks in January. Then we went out the first week of February and I'm like 'Dang, these guys look good.' They just kept getting better the rest of the year. So it went from a rebuilding year to a reloading year pretty quick.'
Losing McCulloch meant losing about four or five shots a round. What allowed MSU to make up for it was that each of the five guys in the lineup took about a stroke a day off their scores.
'I've never seen that, ever,' Lubahn said. 'I've never seen four guys go from basically out of the lineup or not capable of playing at Division I or Big Ten golf in one semester, to all performing very well in the next semester.'
MORE: Couch: MSU's Brooke Biermann, Katie Lu hope to leave their mark in NCAA championships, before chasing pro golf dreams
Bond and Miller were a big part of that. Bond's rise is pretty incredible — from someone who Lubahn believed was just a little below the Big Ten level when he was coming out of Williamston High School, to someone he thought would be a solid contributor this season as a transfer from Ferris State, to the guy who's carried the most weight on MSU's team, as the Spartans' low scorer this season with an average around of 71.53.
'From my senior year of high school to my sophomore year at Ferris I really became a way better putter and a better driver of the golf ball, too,' Bond said.
'I didn't know he was going to be this kind of impact player,' Lubahn said. 'We talked about him all summer being a very steady contributor. By Big Ten championship Sunday, he had the team on his back, which is just amazing to watch a kid go through that. And it was emotional for me.'
Lubahn could relate from his own playing days at MSU in the early 2000s — when he wasn't in the playing group as a sophomore and was the top player on the team by his junior season.
'He leveled up very quickly because he believed his good was good enough,' Lubahn said of Bond.
And, he's a 'goldfish,' to steal a reference from the show 'Ted Lasso'.
'(Bond) is a genius at moving on three seconds after a shot,' Lubahn continued. 'For a lead player, he hits two or three shots a round — and he'll laugh about them — they're pretty poor. And if it was somebody else, you'd think, 'Oh, boy, there goes his confidence for the next hour.' He's a goldfish. He moves on.'
Miller has always believed his good is good enough.
'The thing I love about Drew is he's not afraid of anything,' Lubahn said of the freshman. 'The thing I worry about with Drew sometimes, he's not afraid of anything.'
Miller was a big-time recruit out of East Lansing, but not playing all that well when he arrived, and those struggles continued into the fall. McCulloch's injury gave Miller an opening in the lineup in January.
'He ran with it,' Lubahn said.
'I think there's a lot to learn, and I think that's at every level, too,' Miller said. 'Everyone kind of goes through it at some point, and even more than once. … I think you're always going to come out of that (struggle) a better player than you went in it. And I think just having a good environment of coaches and teammates to help you keep working at it and know you're going to figure it out is important.'
As Miller, Bond, sophomore Lorenzo Pinili, freshman Julian Menser and sophomore Lucas Acevedo prepare to tackle an NCAA regional, they're excited for this opportunity but also hopeful that this is just the beginning.
'I think this season is really important to us,' Miller said. 'I think we have a really good chance at making the national championship this year, but it's hard to not think about next year in the sense that we look good. But, I mean, you look at it in these other sports, too, and it's not like it always works that linear.'
'The way we finished at Big Tens, especially having the second round, second lowest round of the day, I think that's a huge step toward playing well at regionals,' Bond said, 'knowing we've showed up when we needed to. Even though our season will be on the line, we have nothing to lose at regionals.'
'Four of the five guys had never played a Big Ten championship,' Lubahn said. 'They handled that incredibly well. They followed the game plan exactly like we asked them to. If they do that this week, whether win or lose, they're going to understand when we get to next year where we need be.'
If it seems like a lot of talk about next year with a lot still to play for this year, it's because most teams in NCAA regionals won't return everyone AND add a player like McCulloch.
'If he would have played that (last) event (in the fall), no hurricane, he's not going to be back,' Lubahn said. 'I don't think he really ever had a plan to come back. But when you consider how it all fell, maybe it was something just miraculous. And the reality is, with the PGA Tour setup now, it's almost as easy to make the PGA Tour coming from college golf as it is as a touring program. We are going to facilitate everything we can to help him come back and go right from here to the PGA Tour next year.'
After building on whatever Bond, Miller and Co. are able to do this month.
'At some point during the spring, everybody kind of found something that gave them confidence,' Bond said.
Contact Graham Couch at gcouch@lsj.com. Follow him on X @Graham_Couch and BlueSky @GrahamCouch.

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Here are 2025 high school football schedule for Gastonia, Shelby area schools
Here are 2025 high school football schedule for Gastonia, Shelby area schools

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Here are 2025 high school football schedule for Gastonia, Shelby area schools

Here are 2025 team-by-team schedules for the 20 NCHSAA football programs in Cleveland, Gaston and Lincoln counties. The 2025 regular season kicks off Aug. 22 and reaches its conclusion on Oct. 31. Postseason play begins Nov. 7, with NCHSAA state title games taking place Dec. 12 and 13. 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Roberson Aug. 29 at Bessemer City Sept. 5 at North Mecklenburg Sept. 12 Anson County Sept. 19 at North Gaston Sept. 26 at South Point Oct. 3 Forestview Oct. 10 Crest Oct. 24 Kings Mountain Oct. 31 Ashbrook Kings Mountain Aug. 22 Shelby Aug. 29 at Burns Sept. 5 Bandys Sept. 12 at Charlotte Catholic Sept. 19 at Forestview Oct. 3 North Gaston Oct. 10 at Ashbrook Oct. 17 South Point Oct. 24 at Hunter Huss Oct. 31 Crest Lincolnton Aug. 22 Maiden Aug. 29 at North Lincoln Sept. 5 at Cherryville Sept. 12 at Burns Sept. 19 East Gaston Sept. 26 Highland Tech Oct. 3 Bessemer City Oct. 10 Shelby Oct. 17 at Stuart Cramer Oct. 31 at West Lincoln Lincoln Charter Aug. 22 at Highland Tech Aug. 29 at West Lincoln Sept. 5 at Union Academy Sept. 12 at SouthLake Christian Sept. 19 Christ the King Sept. 26 Corvian Community Oct. 3 at Langtree Charter Oct. 10 at Community School of Davidson Oct. 24 at Pine Lake Prep Oct. 31 Lake Norman Charter Mountain Island Charter Aug. 22 Foard Sept. 5 at West Caldwell Sept. 12 at Christ the King Sept. 19 at North Stanly Sept. 26 Albemarle Oct. 3 at Thomas Jefferson Oct. 10 Union Academy Oct. 17 Bonnie Cone Leadership Oct. 24 at South Stanly Oct. 31 North Rowan North Gaston Aug. 22 at East Gaston Aug. 29 Stuart Cramer Sept. 5 Concord Sept. 12 at South Caldwell Sept. 19 Hunter Huss Sept. 26 Ashbrook Oct. 3 at Kings Mountain Oct. 10 South Point Oct. 17 at Crest Oct. 31 at Forestview North Lincoln Aug. 22 West Lincoln Aug. 29 Lincolnton Sept. 5 at Maiden Sept. 12 at West Iredell Sept. 19 East Lincoln Sept. 26 Hickory Oct. 3 at Newton-Conover Oct. 10 Bandys Oct. 24 at Bunker Hill Oct. 31 Foard Shelby Aug. 22 at Kings Mountain Aug. 29 Crest Sept. 5 at Highland Tech Sept. 12 at West Lincoln Sept. 19 Cherryville Sept. 26 Stuart Cramer Oct. 10 at Lincolnton Oct. 17 at East Gaston Oct. 24 Bessemer City Oct. 31 Burns South Point Aug. 22 Hickory Sept. 5 at TC Roberson Sept. 12 Mount Pleasant Sept. 19 at Ashbrook Sept. 26 Hunter Huss Oct. 3 at Crest Oct. 10 at North Gaston Oct. 17 at Kings Mountain Oct. 24 Forestview Oct. 31 at Ambassador Christian Stuart Cramer Aug. 22 Forestview Aug. 29 at North Gaston Sept. 12 Bessemer City Sept. 19 Highland Tech Sept. 26 at Shelby Oct. 3 Burns Oct. 10 West Lincoln Oct. 17 Lincolnton Oct. 24 at Cherryville Oct. 31 at East Gaston West Lincoln Aug. 22 at North Lincoln Aug. 29 Lincoln Charter Sept. 5 at Bessemer City Sept. 12 Shelby Sept. 26 at Burns Oct. 3 at Cherryville Oct. 10 at Stuart Cramer Oct. 17 at Highland Tech Oct. 24 at East Gaston Oct. 31 Lincolnton 2025 composite schedule Friday, Aug. 22 Bessemer City at Pine Lake Prep Cherryville at North Stokes Crest at Burns Foard at Mountain Island Charter Forestview at Stuart Cramer Advertisement Hickory at South Point Hunter Huss at T.C. Roberson Lincoln Charter at Highland Tech Maiden at Lincolnton North Gaston at East Gaston West Lincoln at North Lincoln Shelby at Kings Mountain South Iredell at East Lincoln West Mecklenburg at Ashbrook Friday, Aug. 29 Ashbrook at Berry Crest at Shelby East Gaston at Forestview East Lincoln at Providence Highland Tech at Buford (South Carolina) Hunter Huss at Bessemer City Kings Mountain at Burns Lincolnton at North Lincoln Lincoln Charter at West Lincoln Stuart Cramer at North Gaston Owen at Cherryville Friday, Sept. 5 Ashbrook at Northwest Cabarrus Asheville at Crest Bandys at Kings Mountain Advertisement Concord at North Gaston East Gaston at Burns Hunter Huss at North Mecklenburg Lincolnton at Cherryville Lincoln Charter at Union Academy Mountain Island Charter at West Caldwell Newton-Conover at East Lincoln North Lincoln at Maiden Shelby at Highland Tech Smoky Mountain at Forestview South Point at T.C. 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High school lacrosse: South Jefferson, Watertown girls claim Section 3 titles
High school lacrosse: South Jefferson, Watertown girls claim Section 3 titles

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High school lacrosse: South Jefferson, Watertown girls claim Section 3 titles

Jun. 3—CORTLAND — Monday proved to be a banner night for the Frontier League in girls lacrosse. One team successfully defended their sectional title and another returned to the championship ranks. South Jefferson defeated Westhill, 13-7, in the Class D final at SUNY Cortland. Advertisement In Class B, Watertown rallied to beat Auburn, also 13-7, at the same venue. With the win, the Spartans repeated as sectional champion. Meanwhile, the Cyclones prevailed to claim their first Section 3 title in nearly a decade. SOUTH JEFFERSON 13, WESTHILL 7 The top-seeded Spartans rode a surge in the fourth quarter to turn back the third-seeded Warriors and prevail in the Class D final. Amalia Netto scored three goals and assisted on two others, and Lily Morrison supplied three goals and an assist for South Jefferson (18-1). "It's amazing to be back here and get a two-peat again," Spartans senior Chloe Elmer said. "We're excited to be here obviously and excited for states." 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And they handled it and they did well, they've earned it and I'm glad they came through with it." The Spartans now advance to a state quarterfinal when they'll face an opponent to be determined at 3 p.m. on Saturday at Christian Brothers Academy. Last year, the Spartans defeated Westhill in the final and went on to reach the state final in Class D. Advertisement WATERTOWN 13, AUBURN 7 Olivia Macutek and Alena Clough each scored four times to propel the top-seeded Cyclones past the second-seeded Maroons in the Class B title game. "This is so awesome, we have no words to describe it," Macutek said. Julia Covey and Delaney Callahan each contributed two goals to propel Watertown, which improves to 10-8 on the season. "I'm speechless, like genuinely speechless, it's like the greatest feeling ever," Clough said. Goalie Lilah Bieri made seven saves, including several clutch saves in the second half, to record the win. She was supported by a strong defensive effort as the Cyclones yielded only one goal in the second half. Advertisement Watertown trailed by two goals at halftime, but mounted a determined rally to take command. "I think we handled that well and we were just like 'who wants it?" Clough said of the team being down at halftime. "And we were like, 'we want it more,' so we went out there and we had to prove it." "I think after the first half, after we were able to kind of take it all in, this is a different atmosphere for us, obviously," Watertown coach Taylor Purvis said. "And we knew we had adjustments to make and we did a really good job of coming out in the second half and playing more confidently." Callahan and Adriana Arthur each scored a goal within a span of two minutes to draw the Cyclones even at 6-6. Advertisement Clough then struck for back-to-back goals, scoring twice within a span of 24 seconds. First, she converted on a free-position attempt with six minutes left in the quarter to provide Watertown with its first lead of the game at 7-6, then followed with an unassisted tally. Macutek followed by generating two quick goals within 48 seconds, first scoring 1:21 into the final period. After Auburn's Anna LeFevre scored just 12 seconds later, Macutek responded with tally set up by Clough to extend the lead to 10-7 and the Cyclones never looked back. "She (Clough) assisted one of mine and our teammates did a great job opening up lanes for us and we all just played together as one unit and really fed the ball well," Macutek said. Advertisement "Alena is one of our seniors so that was really awesome to see her perform the way she did and be successful with it," Purvis said. "Olivia, everyone knows she's one of our go-to (players), she's all over the field, she never gives up, her tenacity is something I hope all of our girls strive for all the time." 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One national analyst believes that Notre Dame football will be a powerhouse going forward
One national analyst believes that Notre Dame football will be a powerhouse going forward

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One national analyst believes that Notre Dame football will be a powerhouse going forward

This past season was an eye-opener for many Notre Dame football fans, and the haters as well. Many didn't think that the Irish were good enough to make the College Football Playoff due to an early-season loss to Northern Illinois, and even though they got in, those same people believed it would be a quick exit for Marcus Freeman's group. Well, that wasn't exactly the case, as they beat two Big Ten teams in Indiana and Penn State, and the SEC Champion Georgia on its way to the CFP championship game. Advertisement While one season doesn't define a program, it was eye-opening and enough to impress On3's J.D. Pickell. He went on to say that he 'doesn't see a clear governor on Notre Dame' to becoming a powerhouse in college football. Pickell mentions factors like Freeman, the influx of talent via recruiting, and being a destination for players who enter the transfer portal that give him no reasons to think this won't happen. With the change to the CFP format going to straight seeding, the conference hurdle is no longer an issue, making Notre Dame's path to a title much easier. It's hard to disagree with Pickell's assessment of the Irish's current situation, but you have to give a ton of credit to Freeman for what he has built over his first three seasons. While losses to Marshall and NIU weren't ideal, it hasn't stopped the vision that the head coach has created, and we are starting to see the fruits of his labor in South Bend. This article originally appeared on Fighting Irish Wire: J.D. Pickell can't see why Notre Dame won't be a CFB powerhouse

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