Burns paired with Cantlay for rainy opening day of President’s Cup

READY TO GO:  Shreveport native Sam Burns begins competition today in Canada, hoping to help Team USA win again in his second President’s Cup event.
 

JOURNAL SPORTS

QUEBEC, Canada – When Shreveport native Sam Burns tees off today in his second President’s Cup competition, he’ll be wearing rain gear. And he won’t be playing with his great friend Scottie Scheffler, at least not on the opening day of the four-day competition at Royal Montreal Golf Club.

The weather forecast is daunting, with heavy rain anticipated during the four-ball competition. Burns is paired with Patrick Cantlay and tees off at 1:47 CST.

Burns was named to the President’s Cup team as a captain’s pick by Team USA captain Jim Furyk. The Calvary Baptist graduate and two-time LSU All-American is one of 12 players, six automatic selections,  chosen to represent the USA against the International Team.

World No. 1 Scheffler, two-time major champion Xander Schauffele, and Tour champion Keegan Bradley – next year’s Ryder Cup captain – headline the roster.

The President’s Cup began in 1994, at the historic Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Gainesville, Virginia with a unique format in play. Team USA competed against Team International, with Team International excluding players from Europe. The USA currently leads 12-1-1 over Team International.  

The competition has 30 total matches being played over four days. Friday’s matches will be foursomes. Saturday will feature eight matches, with four-ball and foursome formats splitting the morning and afternoon. Championship Sunday will consist of 12 singles matches with each player from each respective team facing another player in a one-on-one format. With 30 points up for grabs, the first team to reach 15.5 points will win the tournament. 

Burns was named to the President’s Cup team after an impressive 2024 PGA Tour campaign. Burns finished inside the top 10 eight times, with a season-best second-place finish at the BMW Championship in August.

Burns also accumulated over $6.1 million and made 18 cuts in 21 events. Burns’ success was well stated in the statistics, with the Choudrant resident ranking among the top of the PGA Tour in multiple metrics. Burns ranks second among all tour players in total putting, averaging 1.685 putts per hole. The two-time PGA Tour winner also ranks second in birdie average, with 4.42 birdies per round.  


Spread the news: Skippy comes back strong 

By RON “MAD DOG” HIGGINS, Journal Sports
 
BATON ROUGE – Somebody was knocking on my front door Tuesday morning.
 
Through the peephole, I saw a middle-aged man wearing a Skippy the Wonder Bichon WWSD (What would Skippy do?) bracelet and T-shirt that read, “Skippy always makes the grass greener on the other side.”
 
I opened the door.
 
“Hello, my name is Hilly Farnsworth, president of your neighborhood association,” the man said. “Is this the home of Skippy the Wonder Bichon?”
 
“Yes, but I have to say in Skippy’s defense he didn’t know it was against association rules to use a real donkey for his pin-the-tail-on-donkey game at his birthday party,” I quickly responded.
 
“No, I’m here because to acquire over the last two football seasons, our neighborhood association board has tracked Sklppy’s `relief’ work in our yards while he’s made his picks,” Hilly said. “The yards he frequented the most consistently won our neighborhood `Yard of the Month’ awards.
 
“Can you have Skippy come to the door?”
 
“Skip, there’s someone here to see you from the neighborhood association,” I yelled.
 
Skippy arrived at the front door with a papaya smoothie in one paw and a sausage biscuit in the other.
 
“Skippy, I’m Hilly Farnsworth, president of your neighborhood association, Hilly said. “I’m here because we’d like you to become the first non-human member on our Yard of the Month judging committee. Your exemplary work as a sniffer picker speaks for itself.”
 
“I’ll do it,” Skipperoo said. “But I don’t want neighbors peeking through their blinds while I’m perusing their yards and flower beds. I don’t do my `business’ in front of an uninvited audience.
 
“Now, let me autograph your Skippy shirt and get out of here, Hilly. You’re interrupting my snack before breakfast.”
 
Last week, Skippy was 6-4 to improve to 24-16 on the season. I was 7-3 and now 31-9 on the year.
 
Here’s Week 5:
 
South Alabama (2-2, 1-0 Sun Belt at No. 14 LSU (3-1, 1-0 SEC), Tiger Stadium, Baton Rouge, Saturday, 6:45 p.m. (SEC Network)
 
Betting line: LSU favored by 22
 
The skinny: The Jaguars from Mobile have scored more points (135) in their last two games than LSU has scored all season (133). Their two-deep depth chart is littered with FBS transfers who play with chips on their shoulders.
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Tigers’ Tails Tales of Two Halves 41, Gulf Shores Refugees 24
 
Skippy’s pick: LSU
 
No. 2 Georgia (3-0, 1-0 SEC) at No. 4 Alabama (3-0, 0-0 SEC), Bryant-Denny Stadium, Tuscaloosa, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. (ABC)
 
Betting line: Georgia favored by 2
 
The skinny: I’ll take Georgia coach Kirby Smart, whose team traffic violations count is 25 and counting since January 2023, over first-year Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer, who looks and sounds like a junior high woodshop teacher.
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Team Speed Trap 27, Nick Saban Has Left the Building 24
 
Skippy’s pick: Alabama
 
Mississippi State (1-3, 0-1 SEC) at No. 1 Texas (4-0, 0-0 SEC) at DKR-Stadium, Austin, Saturday, 3:15 pm. (SEC Network)
 
Betting line: Texas favored by 39
 
The skinny: Mississippi State recently received an anonymous $8 million donation for the football program. A grand gesture but there’s no in-season free agency portal for the Bulldogs to buy players.
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Arch’s Army 54, Clang-bangers 10
 
Skippy’s pick: Texas
 
Kentucky (2-2, 0-2 SEC) at No. 6 Ole Miss (4-0, 0-0 SEC), Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Oxford, Saturday, 11 a.m. (ABC)
 
Betting line: Ole Miss favored by 17½
 
The skinny: The Rebels, rising to No. 5 nationally after feasting on a non-conference smorgasbord of assorting creampuffs such Not A-Wake Forest and 2024 CMA breakout artist winner Georgia Southern, finally play their first SEC game.
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Kiff-Kiff’s Commandos 38, My Old Kentucky Home Needs Renovations 24
 
Skippy’s pick: Ole Miss
 
No. 21 Oklahoma (3-1, 0-1 SEC) at Auburn (2-2, 0-1 SEC), Jordan-Hare Stadium, Auburn, Saturday, 2:40 p.m. (ABC)
 
Betting line: Oklahoma favored by 2
 
The skinny: Two teams that lost SEC openers at home last weekend – Oklahoma steamrolled by Tennessee and Auburn choking it guts out vs. Arkansas – meet in a game that could have Duke Mayo Bowl implications.
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Sooners Say Hold The Mayo 45, Hugh Freeze’s So You Think You’ve Got QB Talent Search 24
 
Skippy’s pick: Auburn
 
In other games:
 
No. 25 Texas A&M (3-1, 1-0 SEC) vs. Arkansas (3-1, 1-0), AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Saturday, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN)
 
Betting line: Texas A&M favored by 3½
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Six-Pack Sam’s Northwest Arky Hydration Specialists 31, College Station Cult 28
 
Skippy’s pick: Arkansas
 
No. 15 Louisville (3-0, 1-0 ACC) at No. 16 Notre Dame (3-1), Notre Dame Stadium, Notre Dame, 2:30 p.m. (Peacock)
 
Betting line: Notre Dame favored by 6½
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Magically Delicious Leprechauns 27, Kentucky Featherheads 24
 
Skippy’s pick: Louisville
 
No. 20 Oklahoma State (3-1, 0-1 Big 12) at No. 23 Kansas State (3-1, 0-1 Big 12), Bill Snyder Family Stadium, Manhattan, Saturday, 11 a.m. (ESPN)
 
Betting line: Kansas State favored by 5
 
Mad Dog’s pick: The Other Manhattan 34, Git Along Little Stillwater Dogies 33
 
Skippy’s pick: Kansas State
 
Virginia Tech (2-2, 0-0 ACC) at No. 7 Miami (4-0, 0-0 ACC), Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Friday, 6:30 p.m. (ESPN)
 
Betting line: Miami favored by 20
 
Mad Dog’s pick: South Florida Druglords 35, Virginia Technical Institute for Moonshine and Meth Studies 20
 
Skippy’s pick: Miami
 
Wisconsin (2-1, 0-0 Big Ten) at No. 13 USC (2-1, 0-0 Big Ten), Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, Saturday, 2:30 p.m. (CBS)
 
Betting line: USC favored by 14½
 
Mad Dog’s pick: Perfectly Basted Cali Dudes 41, The Other White Meat 24
 
Skippy’s pick: USC
 
Contact “Mad Dog” and Skippy at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com

Memories of the Harris Hill Boys

Some kids are more fortunate than others. I can’t help but feel a tiny bit sorrowful for those youngsters who were raised in urban settings where concrete, police and fire sirens, heavy traffic were a part of life. I was blessed to be reared out on the rural route, alongside a gravel road where the half dozen cars traversing the old road daily would stir up either dust or mud, depending on weather conditions.

I read about city kids who have their milk delivered by the milkman and who know to head back home when street lights came on. We got our milk from our milk cow that our mom was glad to turn over milking duties to us kids when we got big enough. Street lights? We didn’t have street lights growing up because for the first few years, we didn’t have electricity.

We had kinfolk like grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins who lived on the same hill we did near Goldonna in north Natchitoches Parish. Because there were so many of us there, the hill was called “Harris Hill.”

I had a brother, Tom, who was two years younger than me. Living over on another part of Harris Hill were our two cousins, Doug, a year younger than me and Sambo, a year younger than Tom. It was special to have a brother to do stuff with but it was extra special when Doug and Sambo were added to the mix. It was like instead of cousins, we were more like brothers. Some folks called the four of us the Harris Hill Boys.

Thinking back the four of us enjoyed special times together although we didn’t necessarily think we were special because all the kids we knew grew up just as we did.

We had a couple of water sources that attracted our attention when it was warm enough to swim. We usually started our swimming earlier than our moms thought we should. That’s why we’d sneak off to the Tank Pond or Molideaux creek without asking for permission; we just did it and didn’t tell anybody.

Our growing up years together were extra special to us but with the passage of time, we grew up and went our separate ways. I graduated from college and became a teacher and social worker and eventually an outdoor writer. Doug graduated and became involved in the oil and gas industry. Tom got his degree in forestry and for years, worked as a forester. College wasn’t in Sambo’s plans so he joined the Marines and after serving his time, worked as a logger.

One day, Doug, who owned property which included a fine fish pond, got in touch with the other three of us and suggested that rather than us just rely on memories, how about we get together on his pond, catch fish and catch up with all we had done since we grew up and scattered. We jumped at the idea and on June 19, 2007, the four of us met at his pond for the first annual Cousin Fish Fest. For the next 15 years, it became an annual event for us that we looked forward to each spring.

We were all growing older and with age comes infirmities. Tom was the first to leave us as on April 30, 2015, he passed away. Doug, Sambo and I continued our annual Fish Fest until 2022 when Doug began having health problems that curtailed our gatherings and on January 6, 2023, Sambo and I were there to honor Doug at his funeral.

That left only two of us, Sambo and me and a couple weeks ago, a heart attack ended Sambo’s life. He died on September 11, 2024.

That leaves only me to keep the memories of the Harris Hill Boys alive and so long as the Lord keeps me upright, I’ll hang onto those special memories of four country boys who spent their growing up years living a special country life.

Contact Glynn at glynnharris37@gmail.com


Caddo Parish Sheriff’s Office announces relaunch of Youth Empowerment Center

The Caddo Parish Sheriff’s Office is excited about the relaunch of the Youth Empowerment Center by Volunteers for Youth Justice. The center, formerly known as the Misdemeanor Referral Center, is a crucial resource for diverting at-risk youth from the juvenile justice system and guiding them toward positive intervention, rehabilitation, and support.
 
The Youth Empowerment Center will provide a holistic approach, offering legal, educational, and emotional support to address the root causes of juvenile misdemeanors, including economic disadvantage, lack of positive role models, and academic challenges.
 
This relaunch demonstrates VYJ’s ongoing commitment to creating a supportive community environment where children and families in crisis can access the assistance they need to rebuild and thrive.

Seatbelt Saturation Operation Results

In response to the continuing high number of traffic accidents in our city, the Shreveport Police Department’s Traffic Unit recently conducted a seatbelt saturation operation from 8 AM – 6 PM. The operation focused on heavily traveled streets, including Youree Drive, East Kings Highway, East 70th Street, and Bert Kouns Industrial Loop.

The purpose of the operation was to ensure compliance with the State’s occupant protection laws by targeting motorists who were not using seatbelts. The operation resulted in 97 citations for seatbelt violations.

The Shreveport Police Department remains committed to protecting our citizens by taking necessary enforcement actions to prevent traffic accident-related deaths and injuries.


National Situational Awareness Day

By Jeanni Ritchie
 
When you grow up with a police detective for a father, safety is ingrained in you and you notice things others might miss. 
 
I’ll never forget walking around the neighborhood one day when I was about 10 and my dad asking me if it was possible that someone had broken into a vacationing neighbor’s home the previous night through their front window. 
 
Anything’s possible, I’d answered, skirting behind him a little as if believing it would manifest an armed intruder as he led me closer. 
 
“No, see this spider web here,” he pointed out as he proceeded to explain the position of the web and the time it would’ve taken the spider to weave such a design. “If they got in, it was not through this window.”
 
No one had broken in- it was simply a lesson- and one I’ve never forgotten. I‘ve heeded the message ever since: Pay attention to every detail. 
 
It has served me well in life, even to my own detriment at times when my overthinking brain and overactive imagination team up. But I have always had situational awareness. 
 
I was 12 when Dad brought me to the Police Academy for a self-defense class. We learned basic defense moves, situational awareness tips, and how to walk to your car holding your keys in such a way that the key could become a weapon in an emergency. Over forty years later I still walk to my car holding my keys the same way. 
 
How to observe #NationalSituationalAwarenessDay
A great way to observe this important day is by discussing it with those around you, especially younger generations. While you do, you’ll be improving the safety of those you love. Be human again. Pay attention to the people and events happening around you more than you pay attention to modern-day devices like cellphones and earbuds. 
 
Situational awareness is being alert to suspicious activity around you as well as noticing your surroundings. A person following too close, a car not yielding to a red light, an unsupervised child tottering near a pool edge. 
 
Being aware of your surroundings can make the split-second difference between safety and a tragedy. 
 
National Situational Awareness Day is held annually on September 26. 
 
Jeanni Ritchie is a contributing journalist from Central Louisiana. She can be reached at jeanniritchie54@gmail.com. 

Notice of Death – September 25, 2024

Jennifer Kay Gatti
March 3, 1972 — September 23, 2024
Service: Friday, September 27, 2024, 10am at Cypress Baptist Church, Benton.

Robin S. Harvill
August 25, 1960 — September 24, 2024
Service: Saturday, September 28, 2024, 10am at Rose Neath Funeral Home, Bossier City

Margaret S. Murphy
November 2, 1924 – September 21, 2024
Service: Saturday, September 28, 2024, 11am at Forest Park East Cemetery.

Thomas Fortson Murphy
October 11, 1935 – August 12, 2024
Service: Saturday, November 30, 2024, 11am at Osborn Funeral Home, Shreveport.

Norma “Deenie” Bost
August 16, 1926 – September 22, 2024
Service: Pending at Osborn Funeral Home

Lavena Walker Moss Pace
January 2, 1938 — September 23, 2024
Service: Pending at Rose-Neath Funeral Home

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)

Woman arrested for multiple charges following poor living conditions for children

Shreveport Police Department officers responded to a welfare concern on Sept. 21 around 11:46 pm at 3016 Valley Ridge Road. Upon arrival, officers made contact with a 13-year-old juvenile, who reported that she could no longer tolerate the poor living conditions at her home. The child stated she often goes multiple days without eating and that her mother is rarely present.

While inside the residence, officers discovered extreme conditions, including a severe bug infestation, a lack of food, no electricity, no sources of light, and no functioning appliances to prepare meals. Further investigation revealed that the mother, Lasonya Wilson, had allegedly been using narcotics in the presence of her three children.

As a result, Lasonya Wilson was arrested and charged with:

  • One count of cruelty to a juvenile
  • Three counts of Controlled Dangerous Substance (CDS) in the presence of a juvenile-one count for each child.
  • Shreveport Police Chief Wayne Smith emphasized the importance of vigilance in the community, stating,
    “We must look out for those who cannot look out for themselves. If you see or suspect children in dangerous or harmful situations, please report it to the authorities immediately.”

The Shreveport Police Department urges citizens to be proactive in protecting the vulnerable members of our community.


Bossier Sheriff welcomes new deputies, employees

Bossier Sheriff Julian Whittington recently administered the Oath of Affirmation in a swearing-in ceremony for five new deputies that have joined the Bossier Sheriff’s Office team and welcomed one new corrections officer and clerical employee.
 
The swearing-in ceremony for newly hired Deputies Wyatt Carson, Israel Collins, Cara Okray, Cesar Rodarte and Brian Westcott was held in the Sheriff’s Conference Room in the Bossier Sheriff’s Command Center in Plain Dealing on Monday morning. Sheriff Whittington told the new deputies, “I commend you for joining a great team and welcome you to the Bossier Sheriff’s Office.”
 
Sheriff Whittington also welcomed new corrections officer Chris Sullivan and clerical employee Megan Bates to the Bossier Sheriff’s Office team.
 
All of the new deputies and the corrections officer will begin their careers at one of the BSO correctional facilities, Bates will be assigned to the Taxes/Fines department.
 
If you are seeking a career that offers excitement in the workplace and allows you to make a difference in your community, then the Bossier Sheriff’s Office is the place for you. To apply to be a deputy, applicants must be 21 years of age. However, the Bossier Sheriff’s Office does offer a corrections officer position that requires the applicant to be 18 years of age.
 
To start the process of becoming a member of the Bossier Sheriff’s Office, call the Human Resources Department to schedule a test today. You can reach them by calling (318)965-3459.

LDWF to celebrate National Hunting and Fishing Day on September 28

Louisiana’s National Hunting and Fishing Day (NHFD) will be held Saturday, Sept. 28 at four locations across the state, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) announced.

Waddill Wildlife Refuge in Baton Rouge, Woodworth Shooting Range in Woodworth, the Tom Merrill Recreation Area at Bodcau Wildlife Management Area (WMA) in Haughton, and Black Bayou Lake National Wildlife Refuge in Monroe will all host this year’s event, sponsored by the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Foundation.

Attendees can try their skills at the shooting ranges, fishing ponds, and boating activities, and learn about wildlife with live animal demonstrations. It’s the perfect opportunity to enjoy the great outdoors with family and friends. 

NHFD has become a tradition since its establishment in the early 1970s. Since then, every fourth Saturday in September is dedicated to Louisiana’s popular outdoor pastimes. LDWF introduced its first NHFD event in 1982 at the Monroe District Office, and in the following years, additional locations were added to its roster.

Each location’s event varies but all include exhibits on LDWF’s research and conservation efforts, shooting and fishing demonstrations, and exhibits from local chapters of Ducks Unlimited, the Safari Club and the Coastal Conservation Association, as well as local businesses.

Event details are as follows:

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Black Bayou Lake National Wildlife Refuge
480 Richland Place Drive
Monroe, LA
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
318-343-4044
 
Waddill Wildlife Refuge
4142 North Flannery Road
Baton Rouge, LA 70814
8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
225-765-2927

Woodworth Shooting Range
661 Robinson Bridge Road
Woodworth, LA 71485
8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
318-484-2276

Bodcau WMA
Tom Merrill Recreation Area
171 Ben Durden Road
Haughton, LA 71037
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
318-371-3050

 For more information, go to https://www.wlf.louisiana.gov/page/nhfd.


First Ballot All-American on Team Breakfast: Bacon

As a concession to age, about five days out of seven for the past 20-ish years I’ve eaten, for breakfast, cottage cheese and yogurt mixed up together.

It’s starting to get on my nerves. Not happening for me.

It is not cottage cheese’s fault and it is not yogurt’s fault, though they are each easy targets. Cottage cheese is good for you but it couldn’t run out of sight in a day and a half. So much for it being “healthy.”

Cottage cheese is supposed to be just about the most perfect man-made (no offense to cows) food there is. A fistful of it is packed full of protein. It is low in fat and has carbs, calcium, magnesium, potassium, iron ore and tin, and a four-ounce serving contains more than 12 percent the daily recommended helping of cottage.

When I am eating it I try not to think of the word “curd.” Curd does not sound good but, well, there is no getting around that those are the little things half floating around in the other stuff, which is, I suppose, curd runoff.

It is not an especially ugly food – it is lumpy and white, like good homemade mashed potatoes – but it will win no beauty contest for you either. 

Never until I started eating cottage cheese and yogurt together had I eaten cottage cheese alone. It doesn’t taste like anything really, but if you had to say it DID taste like something, you would think of something bad.

That is just my opinion.

But mix cottage cheese and yogurt together – say a vanilla or strawberry yogurt, whatever you prefer – and bingo!, you have a healthy combo that does not taste bad at all. Drop some blueberries or bananas and/or granola in there and you’ve got a most decent leadoff hitter.

Good, and good for you.

There are only two drawbacks.

One, after a while, curds and yogurt lose that sensual BAM!, you know, the one they never really had in the first place. After a couple of decades, you have an excuse for waking each morning and crying over spoiled (spoilt?) milk.

The second drawback: cottage cheese and yogurt is no bacon and eggs. And bacon and eggs is the flagship of the breakfast armada.

You’ve got your French toast. Your waffle. Even your morning pork chop or sausage, patty or link. Outstanding all.

But if the go-to breakfast foods were lined up and we’re choosing team captains, bacon and eggs would be my first selection. Cottage cheese is the healthy but uncoordinated kid who does not get picked.

The multi-talented egg needs no introduction, and just smelling a home where bacon fries makes you feel like you can make it one more day, no matter how tough the sledding.

Bacon is to meats what brown sugar is to sweets: it just makes everything better. 

Bacon makes people smile. Bacon beats cottage cheese in a footrace 10 times out of 10. I wish my name were Sir Teddy Bacon.

My second draft pick: biscuit. The chef is key, but even a buttered canned biscuit will at least look at you in the eye.

Third draft pick: grits. But only if someone who knows how to make them are in charge. Bad grits might as well be cottage cheese. 

Now you can come in with all your fillers, your pastries, Stuff With Syrup On It, fruit and hash browns. (I love sort-of-burnt hash browns.) 

Chocolate milk. Orange juice. Coffee. Eat all that and your day is made and you haven’t even left the house yet.


Thomas has come through life’s struggles like a ‘Champ’

 FAMILY TIES: Justin Thomas and his father Hosie have learned all about life’s blessings.  (Journal photo by JOHN JAMES MARSHALL)
By JOHN JAMES MARSHALL, Journal Sports

It doesn’t take long after meeting Justin Thomas that you realize this isn’t your typical high school junior. Once you hear his story, you understand just how true that is.

He’s smart, with a daily schedule of nothing but advanced level classes. He’s athletic, starring in two sports at Northwood. He works just as hard at home as he does in the classroom and on the athletic field. And he’s as polite as he is modest.

Justin Thomas is living his best life.

Or so it seems.

Life for Thomas has been anything but typical.

Nine years ago, he lost his right hand in a machinery accident.

Last year, he could have lost his life due to a mysterious case of myocarditis that put him in hospital care for weeks.

And yet there he is every Friday night, chasing down opposing players as one of the leading tacklers on the Falcons’ defense.

So it’s only normal to wonder how Thomas has dealt with two life-altering circumstances.

“Actually, there’s three,” Thomas says. “When I was five years old, my house caught fire. I was the only one inside.”

***

He introduces himself as Justin Thomas, but everybody knows him as “Champ,” a nickname his father gave him when he was young that has become increasingly appropriate as time goes along.

Thomas is so highly regarded that he is one of the team captains for the Falcons as a junior. That’s usually a role reserved for seniors. 

“To be honest, if he had been able to play last year,” says Northwood coach Austin Brown, “he probably would have been a captain as a sophomore.”

Make no mistake — he is Northwood, through and through. Thomas was a ball boy for the Falcons when he was a kid. His father Hosie is the school’s director of security. 

Justin is among the leading tacklers for the Falcons, who are 3-0 this season and headed into a huge opening game in District 1-4A Friday when they take on defending champion North DeSoto.

Thomas has been clocked this season at running 21.7 miles per hour on the football field. To put that in perspective, only three players in college football have been clocked at a faster speed so far in the 2024 season.  

“He’s just a great human being,” Brown says, “and we enjoy having him.”

And to think how close – and how many times – they almost didn’t.

***

He is the seventh of eight children in the Thomas family and they have always lived in the country. One night when Justin was five years old, Hosie and his other son left the house to go chase down some hogs who had broken out of the pen.

In the meantime, his wife had gone to go pick up one of their daughters whose car had broken down. 

That’s when a fire broke out in the home.

“I never knew anybody left the house because I was asleep,” Thomas says. “Nothing really woke me up; I just did. There was smoke everywhere. I saw the fire and just ran out of the door, ran up the street and knocked on the neighbor’s door.”

The house in Blanchard was completely destroyed.

“Every time I think about that night, I realize there was no other reason that woke me up,” Thomas says, “other than God.”

***

Ten years ago, Hosie Taylor had a butcher shop on Greenwood Road and seven-year-old Champ was quite excited to get his first chance to process a deer. He’d seen it done before and knew what to do. He especially knew how important it was to wear cutting gloves.

“I had just taken a picture of him about to process his first one,” Hosie says. “He was so happy.”

“It was Halloween and it was the first time I was going to be able to go trick-or-treating,” Justin says. “We were finishing a deer and he told me I couldn’t go until we finished. I was so excited.”

But during the process, his right glove got caught in the throat of the meat grinder. Justin didn’t actually notice it at first, but when he pulled his hand back, it severed.

Hosie, who had served overseas, immediately “went back to my medic training,” he says. “The ambulance was taking too long, so I put him in my truck because I knew time was of the essence and rushed him to the hospital.”

He was going to have to learn to live with one hand, but Champ was determined to begin the process of getting back to normal as soon as possible. However, there were some obstacles to overcome.

“Being young, there weren’t too many things I did where it made a difference, other than writing and picking things up,” he says. “It was a quick process. I just had to learn how to write with my left hand. It wasn’t that hard.” 

One of the things he has often been asked about is “phantom hand,” a rather typical experience for people who have lost a limb and gives the feeling that the missing limb is still there. There can be sensations such as tingling or pain where the limb was, or sometimes there is the feeling that the limb is moving.

“A lot of people ask me if I’ve had that experience,” he says. “But I never have.”

But there was yet another experience awaiting Champ Thomas that would take on even more dramatic consequences.

If that even seems possible.

***

The Thomas family was at Living Word Christian Fellowship for Sunday worship in 2023 when Champ had just finished his prayers as the service was about to begin. When Hosie looked up, he saw his son walking out and he knew something was wrong.

“He just kept saying his chest hurt,” Hosie says.

Champ’s parents took him to the hospital for testing but he wasn’t getting any better. “The doctor told me they couldn’t do anything for him there, so they sent him to Ochsner,” Hosie says. “Once we got there, they put him in the pediatric ward and started giving him all sorts of fluids.”

Finally they got a diagnosis, but not exactly once the family wanted.

Myocarditis. 

That’s an inflammation of the heart muscle, which can reduce the heart’s ability to pump blood and is often caused by a viral infection.

But not in this instance.

In the case of Justin Thomas, it was caused by a simple tick bite. No one knew when the bite actually happened, but for a teenage boy who spends a lot of time outdoors, there’s no shortage of opportunities.

Champ stayed in the hospital for a week, but he wasn’t getting better and started having hot flashes. “They kept trying to get him regulated but just couldn’t do it,” Hosie says. 

A decision was made to medevac Justin to Children’s Hospital in New Orleans, where he stayed for two weeks. Almost immediately, Thomas began to show improvement. “From the moment I got there, things began to feel better,” Champ says. “The doctor there was amazing and made sure I was taken care of.”

“It was so grueling for him to go through that,” Hosie says. “Before we went to New Orleans, the doctor did come in and tell us that if it did work out, it was pretty much over for him to do anything (with sports).”

“The only time I could get any relief was when I was asleep, but I kept asking if I could go to practice,” Justin says. 

But no one was going to allow that to happen as his sophomore year approached. A simple hit to his chest could have literally caused his heart to explode.

“It broke my heart to have to miss even one practice,” Champ says. “I just wanted to be out there playing. I was just out there trying to do the things I knew how to do. I just wanted to be a motivation and an inspiration. Somebody who could help them persevere through the hard times.”

***

On May 4, the Northwood Falcons 4×100 relay team won the state championship with a time of 42.29. Running in the second leg of the relay team was Justin Thomas, who had been cleared to participate in activities only a few months earlier.

Champ was indeed a champion.

Since then, he has picked up where he left off with his football career. He says he really didn’t take a moment to let it all sink in.

“This whole year has been a blessing,” he says. “Just being in the game is my ‘moment.’ I’m here and I get to make a difference in this program.”

As for playing football with only one hand, that’s just part of the life he’s had for almost 10 years. And it does lend itself to some interesting moments. “When the captains went out before one game, we went to shake hands and I put my nub out there,” Thomas says. “The other guy kind of jumped back and didn’t know what to do.”

His teammates do.

“Guys joke with me all the time,” he says “If I drop a ball in practice, they’ll say ‘Use two hands!’ and things like that. I joke about it too.”

Jokes or not, there’s been a support system that has always been a big part of the formation of Justin Thomas.

“It’s just the community I grew up in,” he says. “Ever since I lost my hand, the people around me have always been so helpful and understanding. People have always made sure I’m OK. Having all of these things happen to me, I realize how blessed I really am with the family I have and this community and support I get compared to other people.”

Indeed, Justin “Champ” Thomas has lived a life that is unlike almost any other. There’s no doubt his experiences have made an impact. Nor is there any doubt that he understands their significance in ways far beyond athletics.

“The one that’s affected me the most is my hand, but the one that’s made me realize how blessed I am is my heart,” he says. “When I realize how close I am with my teammates and coaches and how it could have all been gone just like that. A lot of people get in those situations and don’t come back. God truly has blessed me.”

Contact JJ at johnjamesmarshall@yahoo.com


Return of a hero: Fitting Tioga honor for LSU great Chris Williams

It had been more than 40 years since former LSU football star Chris Williams had been on my radar when I visited with him at Tioga last Friday night.

He was in a special seating area for honored guests at Tioga High School’s football stadium, otherwise known as the “Indian Reservation.” The place was packed. Young and old, and black and white came not only because the Indians were playing their blood rivals, the Pineville Rebels, and everyone expected a good game, but because they wanted to pay tribute to Williams.

The youngest of four boys of Rev. and Mrs. James Williams, Chris Williams is 65 now, and he had been invited to come to Tioga from his home in Buffalo, N.Y., because his Tioga jersey number 24 was going to be officially retired in a halftime ceremony Friday night.

Chris and his wife, Darlene, whom he met in Buffalo, have been married 40 years, and their two sons, Chris Jr. and Cody, both played defensive back for Colgate. Chris Jr. is a district manager for a brewing company and Cody is a financial consultant. Chris and Darlene have three grandchildren. Chris spent some years after retiring from the NFL as an assistant high school football defensive coordinator, and he worked 30 years with underprivileged children.

“I’ve been following football at Tioga for 50 years, and there never has been a better football player at Tioga,” said Eddie Laborde, who was a senior linebacker at THS when Williams was a freshman in 1973. “He rushed for 1,000 yards as a freshman, and that was after his fifth or sixth game!” A grinning Laborde pumped Chris’ hand, and their chat was interrupted by shrieks and groans from the fans as Ayden Tate outraced several Tioga defenders into the end zone.

“That Tate is something else,” Williams said of Pineville’s junior running back, who went on to rush for a school-record 400 yards and four TDs in a 39-36 stemwinding win over Tioga.

Kevin Vanek, who was a stubby, pine knot-tough offensive guard while Chris was a running back for the Indians, was sweating on this Indian summer September night and smiling from ear to ear as he greeted his former teammate.

“Kevin was the guy who pulled around the corner in front of me on so many sweeps,” said Chris. “He was shorter than me so I could see the eyes of the defenders coming towards me,” Chris said, “and I’d just say, ‘Mister, you’re fixin’ to get laid low,’ because he was a devastating blocker.”

Williams first flashed speed as a toddler when the family home burned to the ground. Chris, the family story goes, swiftly crawled out of the burning house into the yard without anybody’s help. By his freshman year at Tioga, he ran a 9.9 100-yard dash. By his senior year, he was a blue-chip recruit and regarded as one of the five best running back college prospects in the state, even though half his prep career was cut out by a knee injury.

On this night, one of the first memories he shared was how he and running back Nathan Johnson of Winnfield and Joe Delaney of Haughton were chosen to play in the Louisiana High School All-Star game after their senior seasons in 1976. He spoke with disbelief that Delaney, who went on to earn All-America honors at Northwestern State and was a star NFL running back with Kansas City before a shocking drowning death, was ranked third at running back behind him and Johnson. Delaney played a receiver position for the all-star game.

“That should’ve been reversed because he was better than both me and Nathan (who played four years for UL-Monroe),” said Chris, who fashioned a stellar college career at LSU. He finished as the SEC and LSU career leader in interceptions with 20. He was a two-time first-team All-SEC pick as a sophomore and senior (’78 and ’80). He was a second-team All-America by Football News as a senior and was selected to play in the Senior Bowl in 1981.

Until this past weekend, he had never been invited to be an honorary captain before an LSU football game, but his friend and former LSU teammate Greg LaFleur changed that.

“I asked Greg if he could get me some tickets to the LSU game (at home against UCLA) on Saturday,” said Chris, “and he said he would report back to me. Next thing I know, he said he had 10 tickets and they wanted me to be an honorary captain.”

It’s a fitting honor and long overdue. But Williams, who owns a winter home in Naples, Fla., where he and Darla will settle down in October, wasn’t complaining. It’s not in his nature to complain. Nor does he boast.

When Laborde brought up Williams’ “one-hand snag for an interception” against USC in an epic 17-12 home loss in 1979, Chris downplayed what was acrobatic pass theft as a “nice play.” It was one he made early in his junior season that broke the school career record for interceptions at 13. He was step-for-step with wide receiver Kevin Harris on a bomb from quarterback Paul McDonald when he batted the ball, juggled it and then made a diving catch in the end zone to prevent a Trojan score.

Yet another fond memory for Williams was his heroic 60-yard punt return for the deciding score in a comeback 20-17 win over Tulane in the Superdome as a freshman in 1977. It atoned for Alexandria’s Bobby Moreau having a punt blocked and returned for a Green Wave touchdown late in the first half. It also eased the pain of Williams’ having an earlier 50-yard punt return nullified by a clipping penalty.

What’s more, he said he went into the contest “with a chip on my shoulder” because he was recruited by Tulane but got the feeling the Green Wave didn’t give him enough respect. “I wanted to show ’em what they missed out on.”

A second-round draft choice of the Buffalo Bills, Chris had an uneventful three years in the NFL. His career was cut short by a slowed step from too many knee injuries. His oldest brother Terry, who played football at Peabody and Grambling and was a high school athletics director in California, was among those celebrating him Friday night at Tioga. Terry, Chris said, has been the most influential person in his life “without a doubt.”

“He’s a role model for me,” said Chris. “He opened my eyes to having God in my life, and he stressed the importance of making my grades and getting a good education, because the football will go away, but an education is something they can’t take away.”


Winning is great, and comeback wins are something special

JOURNAL SPORTS 

Victories are to be savored. Some memories fade, but there are those games that will never be forgotten.

Lots of those keepers in the memory box result from great comebacks. Today’s Shreveport-Bossier Journal Coaches Roundtable question asked about coaches’ favorite comeback memories.

Some went all the way back to their playing days. For others, it was almost yesterday. 

RODNEY GUIN, Calvary: “That one is easy! Nine points down with four minutes to go in the Superdome last December, and we came back and won the state title with 20 seconds left over the two-time defending champ.” 

AUSTIN BROWN, Northwood: “Week 1 this season, at home against Benton, down 21-10, with eight minutes left. We get some penalties and we are first-and-45 from our own 10.  We were able to climb out of that hole, and scored two touchdowns to win the game. We got the go-ahead score in the final 90 seconds.”

STEPHEN DENNIS, Huntington: “The biggest comeback of my career came in 2021. We were down, I believe 21 points, to Evangel at Evangel midway through the third quarter. 

“We had shot ourselves in the foot all night, and then boom! Zyion Claville makes a catch and score from 70+ and we force two turnovers to get the game into overtime. We won in double OT.” 

REYNOLDS MOORE, Benton: “Hahnville in the first round of the playoffs in 2021. It was our first playoff win in 5A and at home!

“We went down 14-0 pretty quick, but then got a kickoff return for a TD from Pearce Russell that finally sparked our offense. The game went back and forth and was tied up with a few minutes left. They kicked off and Ethan Johnson returned another KO for a TD. The defense held them out on fourth down, and we were able to take a knee and finish it off.

“In that game we recovered two surprise onside kicks, had 2 kickoff returns for touchdowns, and a 40-yard field goal. It was also my son’s last game at home. Extra special!” 

JUSTIN SCOGIN, Airline: “Leesville vs. St. Martinville, 2018 quarterfinals. (Scogin coached at Leesville). We were down 48-39 with around 1:50 left.

“They kicked off to us after everyone thought they sealed the win. We got a long return by Duwon Tolbert down to the 30 and scored about 3-4 plays later.  D’Ante Gallashaw ran for two and made it 48-46. With an onside obviously coming, we were still able to recover it.

“We ran the ball three times and converted a fourth-and-1 with about 50 seconds left. After they spotted the ball, Jacob Mount hit Noah Allain for about a 40-yard TD pass. We held them and on fourth down, time expired.

“Crazy game. Rained the majority of the night. Caleb Gallashaw had about 4 TDs. Our O-line was really good and we finished 13-1 that year.” 

ANTHONY JOHNSON, Magnolia School of Excellence: “My senior year in high school at Plain Dealing,  we came back and beat Homer on a field goal.  We made a 27-yard field goal with eight seconds remaining in the game.  Final: 15-14, Plain Dealing over Homer.

“A wild night. Nothing like it!” 

MATTHEW SEWELL, Haughton: “When I was playing here, in 2019 we made the 5A semifinals before losing to Destrehan. We almost didn’t make it there.

“We played at Comeaux in the second round. They had Trey Harris and Malik Nabors. They ran the veer and kept the ball the entire game. They were up 21-14 with about six minutes left. We had a fourth-and-12 on their end and drew a pass interference call. It was only half the distance to the goal so we had fourth-and-3. We got converted and scored a few plays later to tie it.

“We traded possessions after that and ended up pinning them inside the 3. They tried to throw and BJ Feaster sacked Trey Harris for a safety and we won 23-21. It was our first road playoff win in 27 years.”

JOHN SELLA, Loyola:  In 2022 we were down 30-0 to Logansport at halftime and a bunch of people left the game and I’m sure were shocked to see the final score. We recovered multiple onside kicks and had a chance to recover the last one at the end that would’ve given us a shot for the win.

“We lost by 2, but it was still crazy to come back from down 30. I was proud of the players for just staying the course and not giving up.”


Cavaliers’ baseball alumni progressing in minor leagues

JOURNAL SPORTS

Four former Bossier Parish Cavaliers are finding success in professional baseball. Zane Morehouse, Justin Lawson, Bobby Lada, and Zach St. Pierre all had successful campaigns in the 2024 season, reports Cavs coach Bobby Gilliam.

Winnfield product Justin Lawson played for the Cavs for the 2020 and 2021 season. He then signed at North Carolina State and was drafted by the New York Mets in the 15th round. Lawson put up dominating numbers in Class A Brooklyn before being called up to AA Binghamton to finish the year. In Class A, Lawson pitched 61 innings, going 8 for 8 in save opportunities. Batters hit .185 against the righthander while he was posting a 2.43 ERA. 

Zane Morehouse was on the 2019 Cavalier baseball team. The Dawson, Texas native went on to pitch for the Texas Longhorns in 2022 and 2023 before being drafted by the Cleveland Guardians in the 14th round. Morehouse also started the season in Class A at Lake County before being promoted to AA Akron. For Akron, Morehouse threw 15 innings, posting a 1.76 ERA while striking out 20 batters.

Bobby Lada was a Cavalier for the 2019 and 2020 seasons, then the Houston native signed with the UL Lafayette Ragin’  Cajuns. After being a starter for ULL, Lada was signed by the Yolo High Wheelers in the Pioneer League. The Pioneer is an independent league owned by Major League Baseball, operating on the west coast. Lada put up major production for the High Wheelers and helped them to the league championship. He hit .328 with 17 home runs and 25 doubles. Lada hit the walk off homer to cap the successful season and win the league title.

Zach St Pierre was at Bossier Parish from 2020-22. At BPCC he became the most decorated pitcher in school history, holding multiple single season and career records in almost all major pitching categories. He was the Region 14 Pitcher of the Year in  2022. Going into his second professional season, the righthander was signed by the Oakland Ballers, also in the Pioneer League. The Ballers made the Pioneer League playoffs and St Pierre was a major contributor,  logging  82 innings which led the team. He collected 87 strikeouts and posted a 7-5 record. 


Centenary football makes history, other fall teams notch wins

By PATRICK MEEHAN, Centenary Sports Information Director

The Centenary football team made history Saturday, winning its first NCAA game since the 1940s. The volleyball and soccer teams also picked up wins and the men’s golf team made a strong showing in tournament play.

FOOTBALL

Sophomore defensive lineman D’Qavion Lemons, a Southwood alum, was named to the D3football.com Team of the Week following an outstanding performance in the Gents’ 36-17 victory at Austin College on Saturday. Lemons is the second Gent to earn a spot on the prestigious national team this season after freshman DB Jacob Wilson made the team in Week One.

Lemons, who also was named the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference Defensive Player of the Week on Monday, had a stellar performance Saturday night, recording a team-leading eight tackles and a team-best two sacks, including two tackles for loss. He also forced one of four fumbles by the Gents’ defense, which recovered three.

Centenary achieved a milestone Saturday night recording their first NCAA victory since the 1940’s. The Gents (1-2, 1-1 SCAC) play this Saturday at East Texas Baptist University in Marshall, Texas.

MEN’S GOLF

The men’s golf team finished in a tie for third place Tuesday in the UMHB Invitational hosted by the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor at Sammons Park Golf Course in Temple, Texas. The Gents shot a 22-over par 582 to finish in a three-way tie with host Mary Hardin-Baylor’s “A” and “B” teams. Centenary shot a 13-over par 293 in Tuesday’s final round after a 9-over par 289 in Monday’s opening to finish in a tie for second place at the par 70, 6,597-yard course.

Senior Andrew Bennett of Airline finished in a tie for second place at 3-under par 141 after shooting rounds of 71-70 to lead the way for the Gents. Bennett, who won the individual title at this same tournament last season, finished in a tie with Gettysburg’s Myles Cunningham III and they each finished two shots behind individual champion Patrick Kilcoyne of Gettysburg (5-under par 139).

Sophomore Aubrey Snell, a Parkway grad, rocketed up the leaderboard on Tuesday with a 6-under par 66 to finish fifth. Snell, who shot a 5-over par 78 on Monday, recorded his fourth-career top-10 finish, giving him three top-five finishes in his young career.

MEN’S SOCCER

The Centenary men’s soccer team scored a pair of goals late in the second half to break a 1-1 tie on its way to a 3-1 victory over the East Texas Baptist University Tigers in a non-conference match at Cornish Soccer Field in Marshall, Texas. The Gents (4-2-1) and Tigers (5-3) were meeting for the ninth time and Centenary now leads the all-time series 4-2-3. Senior Ron Masti, sophomore Fernando Santos, and freshman Nathan Uduojie each scored goals for the Gents and freshman keeper Sebastian Lutin recorded five saves.

Masti gave the Gents a 1-0 lead with a goal in the 32nd minute, his third goal of the season, with the assist credited to sophomore midfielder Jacob Ramsey – the first of Ramsey’s career.

ETBU tied the match at 1-1 in the 50th minute, but Santos found the net for his first goal of the season in the 72nd minute to break the tie. Uduojie padded the Gents’ lead with a score (his fourth of the season) in the 83rd minute, off an assist from midfielder Emiliano Mondragon.

The Gents will open Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference play at home at 7 p.m. on Friday against the University of the Ozarks Eagles at Atkins Field.

WOMEN’S SOCCER

The Ladies got their first win of the season Sunday with a 1-0 shutout over the Wiley University Wildcats in a non-conference contest. Sophomore midfielder Shona Carlton scored her first-career goal breaking a scoreless tie in the 80th minute following a corner kick from sophomore midfielder Sarah Crenshaw.

Sophomore goalkeeper Zoe Keller went the distance and had four saves in the goal for her first career shutout and the Ladies’ (1-4-1) first since a 1-0 win last season over Belhaven.

The Ladies and Wildcats will meet in a rematch at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Marshall, Texas.

VOLLEYBALL

The volleyball team got its first win of the season Tuesday, taking a 3-0 sweep of the Wiley University Wildcats in a non-conference match Tuesday in the Gold Dome.

Centenary (1-10) won the match 25-20, 25-22, 25-16 and their top offensive effort of the season tallied season highs in assists (30), aces (14), digs (60), and tied their season high in kills (34).

Statistical Leaders: Aces — Reign McArthur (4, career best); Assists: Kristi Hinze (17); Digs: Daly Nagot (15, tied season high); Kills: Aaliyah Barnett (9, season high).

The Ladies, 0-2 in conference play, will host Austin College (9-6, 2-0 SCAC) in their first conference match at noon Saturday in the Gold Dome.

Contact Patrick at pmeehan@centenary.edu  


Forever linked together: that championship season

This week, I would like to go back in time and reflect on a group of guys who shared a championship season and were the first team in school history to win a state title. Not only were we teammates, but this group was truly something special. This group was the complete package of talent, attitude and commitment. We were players/friends who would forever be linked together.

Last week, I had the opportunity to reunite with this group of guys that did something very special in 1978 by winning the Texas high school state baseball championship in Class 3A, the second highest level at that time in the Lone Star State. As an athlete who has played on all levels, high school, college and professionally, I’ve been blessed to be a part of several championships. 

The one common thread for every team I’ve played on, was the personal connection to the players. The 1978 team was unique and will always have special meaning for me personally. This was a group of guys who grew up together in the small East Texas town of Mt. Pleasant. 

During the 1970’s, MP was a prideful community that was very athletic-minded. The mindset here was about winning and anything short of that was not acceptable. But before the early ‘70s, MP was just another small town that had minimal athletic team success. Then a coach by the name of Donnie Laurence showed up and began to develop not just a great football power, but a solid all-around high school athletic program.

Along with Coach Laurence, several high-quality coaches arrived including two baseball coaches, Marion Giesecke and Steve Rippee. These coaches help build MP into the second winningest all-around program of the ‘70s, only behind Oddessa Permian of “Friday Night Lights” fame. It was a very special time in MP Tiger history. 

Then in 1978, MP Tiger baseball became the school’s first team sport to win a state title. This was accomplished by a special group of guys who played loose and confident and never walked on a baseball diamond expecting anything less than a victory. These guys played with heart and determination and no matter how bleak a moment was, they never wavered or faltered. 

To understand how good they became, you first must look at where they came from. These young men grew up with great success coming up through the Mt. Pleasant Dixie Youth Program. They had great coaching early in their young careers from a handful of special men like James Stansell, P.A. Thomas, Pat Sisk, Joe Traylor and many others. These men knew the game and taught this group how to play the game the right way.

The 1978 Tiger baseball team was built around six seniors, eight juniors, and two sophomores. This was not an average group of players, but guys with an immense level of talent. The skills included great pitching, defense and the ability to hit the baseball. To illustrate the level of talent, this group had three players drafted — two by Major League Baseball and one by the NFL — and several that went on to play collegiately. 

What made this group so special? Most of the guys on this team were members of the 1977 Tiger baseball team. That team had great talent but underachieved mainly due to the amount of internal pressure that was placed on the shoulders of each player. From my perspective looking back, it seemed like we had a team meeting every other week talking about what we must do in order to make it to state. 

As the ‘77 season progressed, the pressure continued to build to the point that the team played tight and did not even win district, therefore being left out of the playoffs. This was the only year of my four years at MPHS that we did not make the playoffs. Again, this was a team with as much talent as any team I ever played on. 

But the 1978 team, guided by great senior leadership, made a group decision that there would be only ONE team meeting before the season started. We committed to play loose and have fun! We knew we had plenty of talent, we just had to relax and let our talent take us to where we wanted to go — and that it did!

This MP team made it to the regional finals, where we had a best of three series against Fort Worth Boswell. MP hosted the first game, and the mighty Tigers came up short. With the odds stacked against us, the remaining two games were to be played in Fort Worth. We had our work cut out for us; either sweep a doubleheader or go home like so many other MP Tiger baseball teams had done in the past. 

But the ’78 Tigers made it happen, with great pitching, defense (zero errors in the last four playoff games) and timely hitting, and defeated Boswell twice and advanced to the state tournament in Austin! As they say, the rest is history. We shut out top-ranked Brazosport 10-0 in five innings in the semifinals and defeated Burkburnett 5-2 in the title game. We finished with a state championship and a record of 26-4. 

I cannot describe the bond among athletes that get the opportunity to win a state championship. It’s a connection that forever links you as players. I remember Coach Giesecke’s locker room speech after our huge win. “Fellows, this is a victory you will cherish more later in life, than you do now. You will forever be remembered with this win.” Truer words have never been spoken! He was spot on with his statement! 

Contact Steve at sgraf26@yahoo.com


Williams Companies raise $143,000 for United Way

Williams Companies, in partnership with United Way of Northwest Louisiana (UWNWLA), raised $143,177 for UWNWLA through the company’s annual golf tournament held on Sept. 13 at Huntington Park Golf Course.  

For the third year, Williams rallied hundreds of employees to participate in its golf tournament, where they enjoyed a work-free day of golf, comradery, and competing for a cause. Each participant paid to enter the tournament, and some spent additional dollars on entries for raffle prizes provided by Williams’ Golf Tournament sponsors. All proceeds raised from the tournament, including a generous company match, will support UWNWLA’s programs and services. 

Williams handles approximately one-third of the natural gas in the United States that is used to heat our homes, cook our food, and generate our electricity. However, the company’s involvement in our community goes beyond delivering natural gas products to fuel the clean energy economy reliably.

Williams believes in United Way’s mission, supporting more than 150 local United Way agencies through active participation, organizing fundraisers, and pledging dollars. 

“Williams employees support United Way because supporting the communities where we live and work is part of who we are,” said Tye Ragle, Williams Companies Director of Operations for the Haynesville division. “Our employees embody the Williams Core Values: to be authentic, safety-driven, reliable performers, and responsible stewards on the job and off. The Williams and United Way partnership is important because we operate clean energy infrastructure in several states across the U.S. United Way helps Williams focus charitable giving and community engagement through scalability across those states while remaining committed to ensuring that all proceeds are distributed locally.”

UWNWLA fights for the health, education, financial stability, and essential needs of everyone in its ten-parish footprint, with a focus on ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) families and individuals struggling to make ends meet. The organization is widely known for its programs and services, such as Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, the Shreveport Financial Empowerment Center, and the 211 health and human service hotline.  

“Williams Companies is our single largest fundraising event,” said UWNWLA President & CEO LaToria Thomas. “We are greatly humbled by the generosity of the company, its employees, and event sponsors, as they continue to increase their giving every year and have made an outstanding leap from last year by $36,000. Their dedication, resources, and commitment to improving the lives of those we serve will have a significant impact on our mission and the communities we support.”

To learn more about United Way Workplace Campaigns or start your own, please contact Jennifer Terrell, UWNWLA Director of Donor Relations, at jterrell@unitedwaynwla.org.


Ponderings: Keys

By Doug De Graffenried

When I was a little boy, keys were my thing. I loved keys. I loved real keys.

I had a reliable source of keys too. My grandfather was a police officer. It seems that back in the 60’s people would lose keys at a very high rate. Pop would bring me bags of keys from time to time. I’m sure I was only receiving three or four at a time, but to me they appeared as a mountain of plenty.

I had a key ritual. I would separate out the door and house keys from the car keys.

Back in the day, each motor company had a key design unique to that motor company. For this article we will illustrate using the Ford Motor Company. Because Ford also made Mercury products the keys were interchangeable. If you worked at it, you might discover a Mercury car key would fit a Ford product.

One Friday night, Pop stopped by with a bag of keys. I quickly sorted the keys. I took the car keys outside for an experiment.

I don’t know how I knew this, but I had a couple of Mercury keys which I took outside. I crawled into the driver’s seat of our 1961 Ford Galaxy and started testing keys. The Mercury ignition keys would fit into the Ford ignition. (You remember, of course the difference between the ignition keys and the trunk keys?) While the Mercury keys fit into the ignition, they would not turn the tumblers.

My key experiment was nearly completed when I put a Mercury key into the ignition and turned it. The 1961 Ford Galaxy roared to life. I then followed the pattern I had learned from adults. I pulled the shift lever down into “D.” “D” meant go!

The car lurched forward and traveled about five feet into the side of the house. The dent in the house was still there 40 years later!

Thus began my illustrious driving career.

The adults filed out of the house. Mom, Dad and Pop the police office all asked, “How did you start the car?” I shared my key knowledge. Pop cut off my Ford Motor key supply. I did have a large collection of General Motors keys that I had decided to try on whoever owned one of those cars. Pop owned a Chevrolet. I had developed a testing plan for that automobile.

Jesus has given us the keys to the Kingdom. No need to be locked in or locked out. You have the keys. Often you have the power to set yourself free.

Doug de Graffenried is Pastor of Trinity Methodist Church in Ruston.

You can contact Doug at dougsponderings@gmail.com

National One-Hit Wonder Day

By Jeanni Ritchie
 
Turn up the volume and bring back memories on September 25 to celebrate National One-Hit Wonder Day. Today, we honor all the musical artists and chart-topping songs that make them memorable–even if it was just once.
 
It’s a subjective list but loosely defined as an artist(s) who reached massive success with one hit that was never matched in their follow-up tunes. Little Nas X set an extremely high bar for himself with Old Town Road
 
Deciding how to present a list was tricky. There were so many. Choosing one per year left off incredible tunes in favor of mediocre ones. Selecting an even amount from each decade was unfair to my 80’s upbringing. I felt compelled to stack my Gen X deck with some of my old 45 titles. 
 
I ultimately decided to create a list where each one-hit immediately took me to a scene in one of my favorite movies. The songs are listed with the original artist and year though cover versions were usually used in the films. 
 
Sing along and picture the big screen scenes that accompany them. 
 
1956: Earth Angel, The Penguins (Back to the Future)
 
1963: I Will Follow Him, Little Peggy March (Sister Act)
 
1963: Wipe Out, The Surfaris (Herbie Fully Loaded)
 
1965: The Boy From New York City, The Ad-Libs (My Blue Heaven)
 
1972: Jungle Fever, The Chakachas (Just Like Heaven)
 
1974: Kung Fu Fighting, Carl Douglas (Kung Fu Panda)
 
1976: The Boys Are Back in Town, Thin Lizzy (A Knight’s Tale)
 
1979: I Will Survive, Gloria Gaynor (The Replacements)
 
1982: (I Ran) So Far Way, A Flock of Seagulls (La La Land)
 
1982: Mickey, Toni Basil (Bring It On end credits)
 
1984: Almost Paradise, Mike Reno (Footloose)
 
1985: Walking on Sunshine, Katrina and the Waves (Barbie’s A Mermaid Tale…don’t judge, I had a three year old niece that didn’t like naps and it was a good movie!) 
 
1985: St. Elmo’s Fire, John Parr (Rob Lowe plays the saxophone movie aka St. Elmo’s Fire)
 
1985: You Spin Me Round (Like a Record), Dead or Alive (The Wedding Singer)
 
1985: Don’t You (Forget About Me), Simple Minds (The Breakfast Club)
 
1987: Funkytown, Pseudo Echo (Take your pick; I love them equally: Alvin and the Chipmunks or My Fellow Americans)
 
1987: (I’ve Had) The Time of My Life, Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes (Dirty Dancing…also Ryan Gosling’s “big move” on Crazy, Stupid, Love
 
1989: Bust a Move, Young MC (This one pulls triple duty for me: Uncle Buck, The Blind Side, 17 Again)
 
1990: Ice Ice Baby, Vanilla Ice (Whose got the moves on the ice and off? Why it’s Jenna Rink’s hockey boyfriend in 13 Going on 30!)
 
1991: There She Goes, The La’s (The Parent Trap– LiLo version)
 
1992: Jump Around, House of Pain (Mrs. Doubtfire)
 
And I must end the list with a silver screen entry, everyone’s favorite theme song from 1995….
 
I’ll Be There For You, The Rembrandts (Friends, celebrating its 30th anniversary this week) 
 
Can you sing it and get the claps right?!
 
Jeanni Ritchie is a contributing journalist who loves writing at the 4-way intersection of faith, mental health positivity, community, and pop culture. She can be reached at jeanniritchie54@gmail.com. 

Notice of Death – September 24, 2024

 

Margaret S. Murphy
November 2, 1924 – September 21, 2024
Service: Saturday, September 28, 2024, 11am at Forest Park East Cemetery.

Thomas Fortson Murphy
October 11, 1935 – August 12, 2024
Service: Saturday, November 30, 2024, 11am at Osborn Funeral Home, Shreveport.

Norma “Deenie” Bost
August 16, 1926 – September 22, 2024
Service: Pending at Osborn Funeral Home

Lavena Walker Moss Pace
January 2, 1938 — September 23, 2024
Service: Pending at Rose-Neath Funeral Home

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)

What’s Your Story? Logan Lewis, Red River Revel Executive Director

A JOLT OF ENERGY: Logan Lewis has brought fresh ideas to one of Shreveport-Bossier’s most anticipated festivals.

Each week, the Shreveport-Bossier Journal’s Tony Taglavore takes to lunch a local person – someone who is well-known, successful, and/or influential, and asks, “What’s Your Story?”

By TONY TAGLAVORE, Journal Services

He was the almost 38-year-old new kid on the block. One of those darn millennials who dare to have new ideas and a new way of thinking.

And in some ways, that’s just what the music and arts festival – which was starting to show its age at 46 – needed. And while he was welcomed by the organization’s Board of Directors, there was still some trepidation on both sides. Shake things up a little, just not too much.

But he was excited about his new gig and wanted to deliver on his promise to bring new energy to the event. So, he booked Big Fredia, a hip-hop singer known as the larger-than-life ambassador of New Orleans Bounce music. At least that’s her website’s description.

Oh, hip-hop singers had performed at the festival, but they weren’t like Big Fredia.

“This is one that was present, new, and just different than what people were used to. Fredia is a trailblazer. She’s trans (as in transgender.) She’s tall – like really tall.”

Big Fredia is also described on her website as “a loud and proud advocate for racial and gender equality and LGBTQ+ rights.”

Some of the festival’s old-timers were a bit concerned.

“I had vendors who were like, ‘What in the world is going to happen here?’ They had no clue . . . . A board member would tell them, ‘We’re going to have this act, and there’s going to be a whole line of girls twerking on stage.’ They were like, ‘What?’”

A promise kept, there was Big Fredia on stage, headlining opening night. Tatted-up arms. Long, colorful nails. Lyrics that would make conservatives blush.

There was also a crowd. A big crowd. Bigger than what the new kid with the new ideas expected.

“I walked out to the top floor of the Sam’s Town parking garage, all the way out to the corner. I looked down Commerce Street and saw all these cars, food trucks, vendors, and a significant number of people downtown. There was a huge sense of pride. We did this. We’re responsible for this party of people . . . . It just felt really good.”

Logan Lewis, now in his third year as Executive Director of the Red River Revel, told me that story, and his story, over lunch at The Glass Hat. Taking a break from preparing for the September 28th-October 6th festival, Logan had chicken fried steak, turnip greens, pinto beans, a roll, and water. I enjoyed fried catfish, turnip greens, black-eyed peas, cornbread, and water.

I wasn’t surprised at the location of the restaurant Logan chose.

“I rarely eat lunch outside of downtown . . . . I think the Revel director should be one of those people who is part of the downtown daily life.”

Born in Minden and raised in Ruston, the oldest of three children will tell you he is a perfect fit for the Revel. Logan is a musician, having played guitar since his grandmother bought him one when he was 14. Logan is also a promoter, a skill he first showed when he was 16.

“I had some friends who were seniors in high school who had a band. They really wanted to have a concert with two Christian bands from California. I signed the contract – I didn’t tell my folks about this – to bring these two bands to town. I called city hall and reserved Railroad Park. I figured out how I was going to pay the taxes . . . . I charged five dollars a head. We made enough to pay the bands and make a little bit of money.”

Logan finished high school in South Carolina, the result of Logan’s father taking a new job. Logan stayed in-state and went to Anderson College. He studied Church Music, was worship leader for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, was in three different music groups, and took piano and voice lessons.

“I was overly involved in music.”

But Logan became less involved, thanks to the perception of being known by the company you keep.

“A buddy of mine was on the soccer team. I went to a party. At that school, the soccer players were the bad kids. They were drinking. I got kicked out of everything I was involved in just for being there. That’s when I decided to come back to Ruston. It was really weird. It was a tough lesson in the way not to behave with grace and love as Christians should. It was a different time. It was a different place.”

However, another time and another place once again resulted in Logan feeling let down by his love for church music. He and a friend were asked to be the house band at a local watering hole.

“Some of the people didn’t like that we were playing music in a bar. They more or less forced me out of a leadership group. That’s when I was like, ‘I’m really not going to do this again. I’m not going to get involved or play worship music anymore.’”

Those experiences left Logan feeling a bit bitter. He admittedly had trouble finding his way after graduating from Louisiana Tech with a degree in Speech Communication. (By the way, Logan’s grandparents were E.J. Lewis and Patsy Lewis, stalwarts of the university.)

A brief stint working in fine dining in Houston. Sales and management for a flatbed trucking company. Running a po-boy restaurant in Lafayette.

“I never really felt like I got going after college.”

But a newborn named Asher got Logan’s attention.

“Having that little boy, I just made a life change.”

It was time to grow up.

“From a high-minded or esoteric mindset, that makes you think about what you are doing with your life. But in a direct way, what’s right in front of you, I wanted to provide for my kid. I didn’t want to live with my parents the rest of my life. I wanted to get married. I wanted to have a family.”

Logan’s new-found motivation led him to an inside ticket sales position at Tech. After five years, he became the head of corporate sponsorships with Shreveport’s Independence Bowl. In 2021, after playing at the Revel, Logan learned the event would soon be looking for a new leader.

“A job where I get to do my first love, music and art? I closed on that harder than I think I have any other sale. I don’t think I even let them interview anybody else, I wanted it so badly.”

Logan got what he wanted, and the Revel did, too.

“I walked into a really good situation for me with the timing, coming in post-Covid. I think the Revel was definitely in need of some new direction, some new ideas, some outside perspective. The Board was at a place where they wanted that, too, so it wasn’t like I was walking into a battle. We took some chances and changed some stuff, and we really did have a great impact.”

Knowing Logan needed to get back to work on making a great impact on this year’s Revel, I asked my final question. As always, what is it about his life that someone could apply to their life? Logan chose to emphasize something he’s learned from several mentors.

“Focus on the solutions. Be solution-based. You can get in your feelings about the problems later. Nobody likes problems. It’s uncomfortable. It’s painful. Of course, the natural thing to do is to try to relieve that pain as quickly as possible. You can choose to do that by focusing on the root cause of the pain – how did that happen? Or you can focus on the solution to that pain.”

Even if that solution is a bit out-of-the-box. See Big Fredia.

Do you know someone with a story? Email SBJTonyT@gmail.com.

The Journal’s weekly “What’s Your Story?” series is sponsored by Morris & Dewett Injury Lawyers.