Another Heroux: Defenseman drops the gloves, sparks ‘Bugs

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

The tide can turn on a dime for several reasons during a hockey game. A big goal, a big hit or simply not allowing the opponent to score (killing a penalty).

Last Friday, the Shreveport Mudbugs employed a fan-favorite momentum grabber. When the horn sounded to end the second period, Logan Heroux attempted to awaken his teammates, and the fans at George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum, who had witnessed a 40-minute clinic by the visiting Lone Star Brahmas.

Heroux dropped the gloves for the first time this season. The 6-foot-2, 195-pound defenseman tangled with 5-foot-11, 175-pound forward Ben Zimmerman and incited the crowd with an impressive decision.

Following the second intermission, the Mudbugs played an inspired final period. Goals by Connor Gatto and Austin Brimmer forced overtime. Shreveport eventually prevailed in a shootout to climb into the final playoff position.

Did the donnybrook turn the tide?

“When players step up and take on that role, they’re doing everyone a favor,” Mudbugs defenseman Evan Mitchell said. “It’s a great boost of energy. It rallied the boys for sure. We came out with a bit more energy and a bit more jump.”

Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell admits dropping the gloves isn’t a foolproof method.

“We’ve had it work against us, too,” Campbell said. “In this instance, it was a good. It was part of it (of the comeback), but there is a lot more to it. However, I definitely believe a good fight gets the boys going.”

However, in one of the most critical moments of the season, it worked. Shreveport has proven to have many methods to turn the tide. The Mudbugs trailed by two goals in both games against the Brahmas last weekend, yet won both.

The never-say-die attitude will be needed should they trail at any point against first-place New Mexico this weekend. The Ice Wolves have lost just 16 games this season, three of the losses have come against the Mudbugs.

“It’s believing in your game plan, believing in your teammates and sticking to the game plan and don’t panic if you get down,” Campbell said. “Obviously, this is another team that plays a consistent style of hockey and it’s hard to break that down and defeat them. It’s a matter of chipping away at them.”

The Friday-Saturday doubleheader will begin a seven-game road trip for Shreveport – the final games away from The George unless the team secures a playoff berth.

Following this weekend, the Mudbugs will play a midweek game at Wichita Falls before they stay on the road for a pair of games at Amarillo.

Mudbugs at New Mexico
Friday (8:30 p.m. CDT) and Saturday (7:30 p.m.)
Outpost Ice Arenas
Season series tied 3-3

Photo courtesy SHREVEPORT MUDBUGS


My favorite champ

“Is he the best you ever coached?”

My daughter asked me this question four years ago today as we made our way to the 2018 NCAA Track & Field Indoor Championships in College Station to watch ULM’s Alton Clay compete in the weight throw.

She asked this question after I had given her a little history about Clay. Besides his immediate family, I’m not sure there was anyone – at the time – more apt to tell his story.

All-City defensive end in football. District MVP in basketball. Top public-school finisher in the 2013 LHSAA State Outdoor Meet in both the discus and the shot put.

There wasn’t a day during his senior year at North Caddo Magnet High School when Clay went home rather than practice. I should know. I was there, as the head football and track coach.

After giving 14-year-old Caitlin Elizabeth Byrd’s question a couple of seconds of reflection, I confidently replied:

“Yes, he is.”

Sitting next to her in the car, I could sense disappointment, so I asked her what was the matter.

“I wanted you to say that I was the best you ever coached,” Caitlin Elizabeth Byrd said.

My answer: “I will one day.”

Well, that day has come.

Most people only dream about meeting their favorite athlete. Some get to meet their athletic hero once or twice. Mine came into this world on March 16, 2004 and has lived under the same roof with her mother and me ever since.

I remember her first day of throwing the discus and turbo javelin at Lee Hedges Stadium. She was still wearing her green Upward basketball jersey from a game earlier that morning. The discus was a little suspect, but I knew she had potential when she threw a bomb with the turbo jav, causing her dad to yell “BOOM!” so loud heads may have turned along Youree Drive.

Remember that, Caitlin?

I remember her throwing a real javelin for the first time in the lot beside Ellerbe Road Methodist Church. It was like she had been throwing it her whole life. Of course, I had to put the video on slow motion and post about it on Facebook.

Remember that, Caitlin?

After an epic road trip to the 2016 Altis Throws Camp in Tiffin, Ohio, Caitlin dropped some bombs at the AAU Regional Qualifier in Covington and then continued at the AAU Junior Olympics in Houston, where she finished eighth in the nation to earn Junior All-America status.

Remember that, Caitlin?

It’s not just about watching her compete in track and field. I remember a rainy Friday night in LSU’s Bernie Moore Stadium at the 2014 LHSAA State Outdoor Championships, huddling with spectators and athletes under the stands to get out of the weather. I looked down at 9-year old C.E. Byrd, who was looking at me with the biggest grin, her lips trimmed with a light blue stain from a celebratory snow cone. My North Caddo long jumper, Lagarion Taylor, had won a state championship that afternoon and C.E. was enjoying the spoils of his victory.

Remember that, Caitlin Elizabeth Byrd?

In two months, my favorite champ graduates from The City of Byrd. With a throw of 115-5 at last year’s Region I-5A Meet, she is only five feet shy of the school record in the javelin. And while I love watching her compete, and equally love watching her work hard to chase her goals, if she decided to hang it up today, I would support her decision and be thankful to her – and to track and field – for all the good times, and even the bad times.

Throwing is what C.E. Byrd does. It’s not who she is. She is so much more than a medal, or a record. She is a child of God with a heart of gold. She uses her gifts to glorify God. She is my favorite champion, and the best I’ve ever coached.

Remember that, Caitlin.


A favorite gobbler story as spring nears

This is the time of year when guys and gals of my ilk crawl out of warm beds early mornings to head for the woods. Granted, no hunting season is open now and we’re not out there to circumvent the law; we’re going out to “listen,” as you’ll overhear us talking about what we did early on pre-spring mornings. We’re going out to “listen” for a gobbler.

Turkey season is still a few weeks away, opening April 2. There’s something about getting to hear a gobbler sound off from his roost tree that gets the juices flowing and serves to fire us up for what we hope to hear opening morning.

Not only is it possible to locate where gobblers are roosting, you can also find tracks, droppings, strut marks and such to find where birds are hanging out. Such was the case for me on March 19, 2008, when I stumbled upon the mother lode of turkeys.

After an early morning of listening for a gobbler when the woods were silent, I drove up to a well site back in the woods on my hunting club. I didn’t need to hear a gobbler that morning; when I rounded the curve leading to the well site, I saw turkeys – a whole bunch of turkeys including several strutting gobblers. When they saw me, they took off but no problem; I knew where I’d be set up on opening morning.

The next afternoon, I set up my ground blind in a thicket next to the well site, and cleared brush so I could see the area where the turkeys had gathered the day before.

Granted, it was hard to sleep that night as my mind kept running the tapes back of what I had seen two days prior.

March 21 was opening day and I arrived at my blind well before daylight, I decided to sweeten the pot by placing “Pretty Boy,” my strutting tom decoy, on the well site with a submissive hen crouching in front of the tom. Then I waited for daylight with high expectations.

Once the eastern sky began to illuminate the woods and the cardinals and barred owls began their morning chorus, I heard a gobble from the woods directly in front of where I sat. Waiting a couple of minutes, I stroked a few sweet yelps on my slate call and was greeted with an immediate gobble. Then I just sat back and waited to see something.

In less than 10 minutes, I saw a white head pop up on the far edge of the well site 100 yards away. Then another head and then a third head. Three gobblers began looking for the hen they thought they’d heard.

What happened next was what turkey hunters dream about; all three gobblers spied Pretty Boy and the little hen. It became a foot race to see who could get there first to chase away what they envisioned to be a gobbler that had invaded their territory.

One gobbler won the race and immediately attacked the fake gobbler, sending him careening off the stake where I had placed him. All three proceeded to give the fake a thrashing like I’d never seen with a chorus of clinks and rattles as their beaks and spurs pummeled the hard plastic.

One of the gobblers separated from the other two, I got a bead on him and dropped him. I expected the other two to hightail it when I shot but no; they jumped on the flopping bird I had shot and began pecking and spurring their fallen cohort unmercifully.

I could have easily taken both the other gobblers but I had my limit for the day and all I could do was sit back and enjoy the show until a vehicle approached and they scattered.

Spring turkey hunting can be disappointing but it can provide thrills and excitement, the likes of which I never experienced before or since that special morning in the turkey woods.


They are NOT just mailing it in

Gus and Jezebel live next door, and sometimes Molly from a house over is there and sometimes even Duke from down the street. These are labs and herding dogs and mixes of athletic breeds, serious animals, and when the mailman or mailwoman come by each day, it is Armageddon, the Olympics of Barking.

And all these dogs are gold medal contenders.

No problem. Our mail carriers have more than once smiled at me and said, above the insane barking, “They love me.”

Maybe you don’t need a sense of humor to carry the mail, but I have to believe it helps. That, and spray repellant.

All this came to mind after a letter arrived alerting us that this is the 230th anniversary of the U.S. Postal System. The actual date that President George Washington created the modern-day post office is Feb. 20, 1792, so the letter was three weeks late but, hey, who’s counting?

I’m not, and here’s why:

The post office is a dart board for complaints. Stamps are too high. Service is slow. “Y’all make my dogs bark.”

Easy target.

But allow me to argue for my brothers and sisters at the USPS.

First of all, a “sort of” mail delivery had been in place since 1775, and Benjamin Franklin, you’ll remember from history class, was our first postmaster general. His salary was $1,000 annually. That’s a lot back then but … it would not have bought nearly as many stamps then as today.

Back then, a dollar equaled about 30 bucks in today’s dough. So a 12-cents stamp, the most fancy stamp you could get, one that would get a letter as far as you needed it to go—to one of the new states like, say, from Philly to Kentucky—would have cost between three and four bucks, if you’ll kindly do the math (because I can’t).

I just don’t understand why anyone would complain today that, for 50 cents, I can mail a check from my house to the insurance or electricity people instead of having to go to the actual address and hand it to the insurance or electricity people. It’s a bargain—and a lot better bargain than it was in 1792, when the “new” post office, in addition to other improvements, guaranteed lower mailing rates for newspapers, greatly advancing the idea of a free press.

Also back then the penalty for robbing a mail delivery person or stealing mail from the post office was death (see Sect. 17 of the Official Act). That’s right: The Big D. And you think 50 cents is a high price to pay.

Today the fine for such misguided tomfoolery is “only” five years in prison, which is no walk in the park but it beats having your mail and earthly address discontinued permanently.

So shut your pie hole!, you USPS bashers.

Finally, how do the mail sorters know how to do that? How can all this paperwork, all these envelopes of different sizes, come into One Building and people in there are fast enough, basically overnight, to get it into The Appropriate Piles?

And how do different carriers get My Mail to My House? Now and then I’ll get Jezebel or even Molly’s mail and will have to walk next door and trade, but still, even getting a letter from Fort Worth to within two doors of my house for half a dollar is cause for celebration, in my way of thinking.

Nobody’s perfect, but in a dog-eat-dog world, the USPS is carrying its weight and then some. Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night—nor barking dog—stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds. Hat tippage.

I should mail them a thank-you note. (Think they’ll get it?)

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Lang’s Locks: Let’s go with some NCAA dogs, more golf

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

The Players Championship was profitable and we nearly nailed the winner of the MyGolfLife Open on the European Tour. However, our lone win bet, Jordan Smith, lost in a playoff and we wound up down for the week. That W would have been nice, but it’s time to shake of the loss and look to March Madness.

I see some value in the Houston Cougars across the board in the futures, although they drew a tough region. Let’s whet the NCAA Tournament appetite with a couple of futures and some first-round games. Of course, we still have plenty of golf on the board!

Notes

All bets are measured in units. For instance, if your normal bet on a game is $100, that is one unit. If the bet is listed as .2 units, it’s a $20 bet.

Best line (as of Tuesday) is listed in parenthesis. Find the best price, one key to being a successful sports bettor! Shop around!

Sportsbook legend

CAE: Caesar’s
FD: Fan Duel
MGM: Bet MGM
DK: DraftKings
BS: Barstool

LANG’S LOCKS

Last week recap: -2.17 units

THIS WEEK’S SELECTIONS

College Basketball

To win NCAA Tournament

Arizona, +650, .2 units (DK)
Houston, +4000, .1 unit (FD)

To Reach Final Four

Houston, +600. .2 units (CAE)
Duke, +500, .2 units (BS)
Iowa, +450, .2 units (CAE)
Baylor, +300, .2 units (CAE)

To Reach Sweet 16

Houston, +116, 1.5 units (FD)

First Round games

Vermont (+5.5) vs. Arkansas, 1 unit (MGM)
Vermont (+180 ML) vs. Arkansas, 1 unit (CAE)
Davidson (+1.5) vs. Michigan State, 1 unit (MGM)
Davidson (+100 ML) vs. Michigan State, 1 unit (CAE)
San Francisco (+1.5) vs. Murray State, 1 unit (DK)
San Francisco (+105 ML) vs. Murray State, 1 unit (MGM)
Colgate (+7.5) vs. Wisconsin, 1 unit (FD)
Colgate (+270 ML) vs. Wisconsin, 1 unit (CAE)

Golf

PGA Tour, Valspar Championship

Win bet

Aaron Wise, +12400, .1 unit (DK)

Top 20 Bets

Aaron Wise, +400, .9 units (DK)
Martin Laird, +500, .6 units (DK)
Kramer Hickok, +750, .5 units (DK)
Tyler Duncan, +1200, .5 units (DK)
Lanto Griffin, +550, .4 units (FD)
Matthew NeSmith, +750, .4 units (DK)
Joel Dahmen, +500, .4 units (DK)
Nick Taylor, +500, .4 units (DK)
Mito Pereira, +500, .3 units (DK)
Keegan Bradley, +230, .3 units (FD)
Russell Knox, +270, .3 units (DK)
J.J. Spaun, +650, .3 units (DK)
Michael Thompson, +750, .3 units (DK)
Vincent Whaley, +1000, .2 units (DK)
Brian Stuard, +650, .2 units (DK)
J.T. Poston, +900, .2 units (DK)
Webb Simpson, +270, .2 units (DK)
Patton Kizzire, +450, .2 units (DK)
Kevin Streelman, +450, .2 units (DK)
Davis Riley, +1000, .2 units (DK)
Kiradech Aphibarnrat, +1600, .2 units (DK)

European Tour, Steyn City Championship

Top 20 Bets

Tristen Strydom, +490, .4 units (FD)
Alfredo Garcia-Heredia, +550, .4 units (FD)
Espen Kofstad, +550, .4 units (CAE)
Marcus Helligkilde, +450, .3 units (FD)
Nino Bertasio, +600, .3 units (FD)
Jamie Donaldson, +600, .2 units (FD)
Matthieu Pavon, +190, .2 units (FD)
Stephen Gallacher, +1200, .2 units (CAE)
Frederic LaCroix, +500, .2 units (CAE)
Julien Guerrier, +310, .2 units (FD)
Dale Whitnell, +900, .2 units (CAE)
Kristoffer Broberg, +410, .2 units (FD)

Korn Ferry Tour, Chitimacha Louisiana Open

Win bets

Kevin Roy, +18000, .1 unit (FD)
Nicholas Lindheim, +15000, .1 unit (FD)
Kyle Reifers, +10000, .1 unit (DK)
John Pak, 13000, .1 unit (DK)


McConathy left his best to a game that said goodbye

When Mike McConathy announced his retirement Monday after 23 years as head basketball coach at Northwestern State, it wasn’t because he wanted to leave the game.

Instead, the game had already left him.

With the speed-of-light institution of the transfer portal and NIL deals, players can skip from one school for another in an instant, in theory for more playing time or more NIL incentives.

The college basketball game we grew up with has left. Gone as a wild goose in winter.

We’re not blaming players. We’re just sending up a flare that the rules are different, which means the reality involving college competition is different. Drastically.

If you’re a coach whose foundation, whose plan for success, is building relationships, is building teams, the odds have turned against you.

If you’re that coach at a lower-profile school — say, for instance, Mike McConathy — and you were already at just a bit of a budget disadvantage, what can you do when the green backs on the other side of the fence look all that much greener than before? How can you coach up a freshman or sophomore, knowing that he could be playing against you the very next year?

It’s hard for a coach to build a relationship with a player and build a team around players when the only guy who plans to stick around is … the coach.

For 23 years.

And so, like everything else, the game changes.

But McConathy hasn’t. And that’s a good thing.

You’ll read and hear and see a lot about his playing and coaching records in the next few news cycles. If you don’t know a lot about McConathy since the Demons have been down recently, you’ll be impressed.

And if you’ve been a fan all these years, you’ll be re-impressed. No one has won more college games in Louisiana than he has so … there’s that.

But no one coaches all the time. They have to leave the court or field or track at some point and be like the rest of us. They have to go to the grocery store or doctor or to church.

And that brings us to the beautiful thing about McConathy: he is as approachable today at 66 and as the winningest college basketball coach in state history as he was as a high school All-America player at Airline High in Bossier City and an All-America guard at Louisiana Tech.

Maybe a little shy and as unassuming as an athletic guy who stands 6-foot-3 can possibly be, McConathy has nonetheless always been about relationships.

He, a sister and two brothers were raised by servant-leader parents, a couple who gave themselves to educating young people, either in grade school or Sunday school. The reddish hair and boyish face and “Aw shucks” vibe — either implied or imagined — earned him the nickname “Opie,” the pure and innocent young star of The Andy Griffith Show he grew up with.

Whether he likes it or not, it fits. Which brings us up against what so much of life is, a sort of paradox, maybe an enigma. Either way, a semi-puzzle.

In the life of a McConathy/Opie fan, you understand that, with the retirement of “Coach Mike,” an era has ended. They’re flying the barber pole at half-staff down at Floyd’s, the courthouse door is locked, and the Snappy Lunch closed for the day right after snappy brunch.

Sort of like a Mayberry Moment of Silence.

But on the other hand, McConathy can sleep a winner’s sleep for the first time since 1980 or so. Not worry about what might have happened to a player or staff member. Not tossing and turning in a hotel bed. Not reading anything about the transfer Port-o-Let or the NIL. Instead, he and wife Connie and their family — plenty of family around for sure — can build even more relationships.

Maybe you’ll see him around. Good for you if you do.


Bugs Beat: Shreveport’s Clawback Kids do it again (x2)

GAME WINNER: Austin Brimmer delivered the decisive goal for the Mudbugs Saturday at George’s Pond.

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

A pair of improbable comebacks Friday and Saturday set George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum ablaze and helped the Shreveport Mudbugs put the finishing touches on a successful, yet mind-boggling season series against rival Lone Star.

The Mudbugs trailed by two goals entering Friday’s third period, yet emerged with a 3-2 shootout victory. Saturday, they again found themselves down a pair of goals and, again, managed to claw back and get the game into overtime. Shreveport did not possess the puck once in the 5-minute extra session, was shorthanded for 2 of those minutes and still denied the Brahmas long enough to force a shootout, where it won again.

“Just your typical Lone Star weekend,” Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell told The Journal.

The sweep helped Shreveport move into sole possession of the fourth and final playoff position in the North American Hockey League South Division.

With 11 games remaining in the regular season, Shreveport stands three points behind third-place Wichita Falls and two points ahead of fifth-place Odessa.

Despite not outshooting the Brahmas in any game this season, the defending Robertson Cup champs earned five victories in the eight games against Lone Star — four of the five wins came in overtime or a shootout.

Shreveport netminder Devon Bobak played every minute between the pipes and stretched his personal win streak to six games. His 22 victories this season rank No. 4 in the NAHL.

Connor Gatto and Austin Brimmer, the Mudbugs’ leading scorers, sparked Friday’s rally with third-period goals before Gunner Moore’s tally in the ninth round of the shootout put the game away.

Saturday, Jake Mack scored twice in the second period to tie the game. Brimmer ended things in the shootout. The latest comeback marked the third time in four meetings Shreveport emerged victorious against Lone Star despite trailing by two goals. In all, the Mudbugs trailed in four of the five games they won against the Brahmas in the 2021-22 campaign.

Campbell says the comebacks have little to do with magical words he’s offered in the locker room or on the bench during desperate times.

“We can try to motivate them, we can yell at them, we can pat them on the butt and say, ‘You’re so awesome,’ but in the end, it’s just them and their ability to keep playing the game,” Campbell said.

Shots on goal in Bugs-Brahmas this season

Nov. 12: Brahmas, 23-17; Brahmas win 3-2
Nov. 13: Brahmas, 36-13; Brahmas win 9-2
Jan. 28: Brahmas, 27-20; Bugs win, 3-2 (OT)
Jan. 29: Brahmas, 26-14; Bugs win, 2-0
Feb. 11: Brahmas, 22-19; Bugs win, 3-2 (SO)
Feb. 12: Brahmas, 34-13; Brahmas win, 5-2
March 11: Brahmas, 30-22; Bugs win, 3-2 (SO)
March 12: Tied 26-26; Bugs win, 3-2 (SO)
Total: Brahmas 224-144; Bugs win series 5-3

 

Journal’s 3 Stars

1. Austin Brimmer, whether it’s ripping his team on the bench, getting in the face of an opponent or scoring the timely goal, he seems to be the guy who can consistently do what’s needed when it’s needed

2. Devon Bobak, impeccable finishes set the stage for both comeback wins

3. Jake Mack, erased a two-goal deficit with a pair of tallies in the second period Saturday.

NAHL South Division standings

New Mexico (34-13-3), 71 points
Lone Star (29-11-10), 68
Wichita Falls (26-15-8), 60
Shreveport (26-18-5), 57
Odessa (25-20-5), 55
Amarillo (24-23-3), 51
Corpus Christi (23-25-2), 48
El Paso (13-33-4), 30

*top four make the playoffs

Team leaders

Goals: Austin Brimmer, Connor Gatto, 14
Assists: Brimmer, 26
Points: Brimmer, 40
Penalty Minutes: Davis Goukler, 125
Game-winning goals: Connor Gatto, 4
Goals-against average: Devon Bobak, 2.08
Save percentage: Bobak, .919

Up next

The Mudbugs begin their final road trip of the regular season with a pair at first-place New Mexico (Friday, Saturday). The seven-game swing will also hit Wichita Falls, Amarillo and Odessa.

Photo by CHRISTI LANG


Rival Lone Star next up in Mudbugs’ feverish race to the finish

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

If you believe the Shreveport Mudbugs have seemingly faced a never-ending list of crucial hockey games this season, you’re right – and not alone. Since arriving in Shreveport in 1999, head coach Jason Campbell believes the intensity the 2021-22 campaign has offered is in a class of its own.

“You’re fighting for your life,” Campbell said.

The Mudbugs (24-18-5) were put in a gigantic hole after losing 14 of 18 games early this season. That caused a must-win feeling for every subsequent series, and nearly every game has come against a team above Shreveport in the North American Hockey League’s South Division.

The next task is the final regular-season meetings with rival Lone Star (29-11-8). Puck drop for Friday and Saturday is set for 7:11 p.m. on George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum.

The Mudbugs have taken kindly to the feeling of desperation. Their rally from the bottom of the South has put them in a tie for the final playoff spot with 13 games remaining.

This roller-coaster ride reminds Campbell of the only ill-fated campaign in franchise history (2002-03). The Bossier-Shreveport Mudbugs, then a member of the professional Central Hockey League, were doomed by losing 23 of their first 36 games to start the season.

“And then we had a heck of a run,” said Campbell, who matched a career-high with 25 goals that season.

The Mudbugs won 20 of their past 28 games, but finished 33-22-9, sixth in the Northern Conference and five points shy of fourth place and the final playoff spot.

Over the next six weeks, Campbell and his bunch will aim for a different fate.

“I do not recall having to fight like this before, but it’s good for all of us,” Campbell said. “Hopefully we do our part to get in and we’ll be weathered and prepared to hopefully battle for some playoff wins.”

If you’re looking to predict who may light the lamp for the Mudbugs this weekend, good luck. Shreveport doesn’t have a player with more than 13 goals and the top five goal-scorers are within three goals.

Austin Brimmer and Connor Gatto lead the way with 13 goals. Burke Simpson and Timofei Khokhlachev have 11 apiece. Lukas Sedlacek has 10. Brimmer and Gatto are tied for 84th on the NAHL’s scoring list. No team’s leading scorer has less than 13 goals this season (the Maine Nordiques are the only other team whose leading scorer has 13).

“It’s great because we weren’t there earlier in the year, so it’s nice to see those goals being spread out throughout the lineup a little bit more,” Campbell said. “That gives you way more opportunities to win some hockey games when you can throw any line out there and there’s a possibility that they can contribute offensively. It’s huge.”

The Mudbugs will need all hands on deck for what’s expected to be a spirited weekend.

“We need to bring simplicity,” Campbell said. “Lone Star plays a strong, well-rounded hockey game and you just have to be prepared not to do too much. It’s going be a grind. We’re going to have to win a lot of puck battles.”

Mudbugs vs. Lone Star

Friday and Saturday, 7:11 p.m.
George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum
Season series tied 3-3

Photo by CHRISTI LANG


Anna the Archer takes aim at destructive nutria

So how does a pretty young lady, a graduate student at LSU, spend her leisure time? Making sure she’s up to date with the latest fashions? Shopping for lady things like purses and shoes?

Some might, and Anna Ribbeck could have interest in these things, but if she really wants to be involved in “what’s happening,” she’ll be pulling on her camo, grabbing her bow and heading for the marsh to sling arrows at nutria.

Ribbeck lives in Baton Rouge and works for the Ag Center as a social media strategist. She attends graduate school studying invasive aquatic plants such as Giant Salvinia and water hyacinths.

“I was introduced to archery in college some four years ago and I fell in love with the sport of slinging arrows,” Ribbeck said. “Since then I have gotten into bow hunting and have taken two deer already, a doe and a buck.”

There is another critter that has captivated her attention more than hunting deer. She loves to shoot nutria, those invasive rodents that eat native vegetation. Their destructive habits are contributing to Louisiana’s coastal erosion. Nutria down in the marsh make one think of feral pigs up this way. Both are putting dents in native habitat, food sources and creating havoc wherever they are found.

“I started hunting nutria last year when one of the stars of the Swamp People television show invited me to participate in a nutria rodeo. I asked him if I could use my bow, he asked me if I could hit them with a bow and I told him, ‘shoot yeah I can,’ ”she said.

Accompanied by her boyfriend, Ribbeck participated in her first nutria rodeo when 62 teams from around the country participated in attempting to see how many of the ugly critters could be eliminated.

“We went back this year to the rodeo, which is held down in Venice, and I decided to leave my bow at home and take my .22 rifle because we wanted to win. In two days of hunting, our team took 220 nutria while a total of some 1,900 were taken off the landscape by all teams,” Ribbeck continued.

So what happens to all the nutria that are taken? Are they just unceremoniously tossed aside for the buzzards to clean up?

“No, we eat them,” she said. “Nutria are vegetarians and the meat is quite good. A nutria gumbo is just plain delicious.”

In addition to spending her time in the woods after deer or in the marsh working on nutria, Ribbeck has another mission in which she is heavily involved.

“I want to educate the public, especially women, on archery. I do a lot of You Tube videos on social media under the name of Anna the Archer, and I visit bow shops to teach women about archery. I also participate in competitive archery and that has not only been lots of fun but getting to hang out with others in the sport has been a big help in developing my skills and my love for the sport,” she said.

Ribbeck, a.k.a. Anna the Archer, will be in north Louisiana late this month to host an archery program in Homer at the Claiborne Parish Library on Saturday, March 26 with program beginning at 2 p.m.

If you are a bow hunter, competitive shooter or would just like to meet this archery enthusiast, you need to make plans to be there. She may even share her recipe for nutria gumbo.


‘What’s the good Wordle?’

Never say the Wordle Word of the Day if “a wordler,” someone who works the daily Wordle puzzle, is around.

I’ll explain.

First, Wordle is a five-letter word that can, if you’re aggravated enough, become a four-letter word.

Wait. We better explain some more…

If you are part of the Great Unwashed who don’t know Wordle, consider yourself both blessed and cursed. Same as the ones of us who DO know.

Wordle is the new pickleball of word games, pickleball being our country’s fastest growing sport, not counting Pin the Tail on the Fauci. Pickleball is a combination of tennis, badminton, ping pong, and, of course, cucumbers. Look it up, grab a racquet and a wiffleball and go play — IF you can find a free court.

Not kidding. It’s a 24/7 Pickleball Party out there.

Same with Wordle, except it’s right there on your laptop device, just waiting to either reward you or make you want to hit yourself upside your head with a pickleball racquet.

The game was created in October by an engineer in Brooklyn named Josh Wardle, who was obviously born to create a word game. (“You say Wardle, I say Wordle.”) The game starts with six rows of five blank boxes each, and you get six guesses to figure out the five-letter word that changes every day.

One day this week was “hoard.” Others were “cloth” and “brine” and “mourn.” March 1 was “rupee,” a unit of Indian money, which apparently a lot of people didn’t know, and we know this because It Was In All The Papers, stories about Wordle-ites who felt they’d been ripped off — an interesting take on the American mindset since Wordle is, after all, free.

(I got rupee; sixth and final try. Makes me think of another five-letter word: lucky.)

The Guardian reported that Wordle had 90 players in November, 300,000 by January, and now more than three million around the world. Mankind is caught in a Wordle vice of biblical proportions. The game’s traveling faster than gossip down a church pew.

Its charm is that it’s not overwhelmingly hard to solve — but it’s hard enough. Simple, but keeps you on your toes. Sort of like your colon does as you age.

Sign up through Google, or wherever you subscribe to your addictive, fun, time-wasting, sucking-the-life-out-of-you word games. Again, it’s free, and the rules are simple, which the Wordle site will explain.

The first day I played, a good friend — my “Wordle dealer/supplier” since he got me hooked — gave me a two-minute tutorial. One minute I’d only heard of Wordle and the next, I was a Wordle Junkie.

A Final Word to the Wordle Wise: Do not casually mention to anyone the Wordle Word of the Day unless they ask. My rookie day, I said, “Hey, took me four shots but I figured out ‘shake’ was the Worldle wor…”

“Nooooooooo!” That was the sound from a friend (now ex-friend) walking by; they had not Wordled yet on that day.

Wordle word for me at that moment? Idiot. Or loser. Either five-letter word would have worked.

Moral of story? Keep your Wordle to yourself. Otherwise … “YIKES”

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


BROOKE IT: Stoehr brings another title to Techsters

STOEHR-Y BOOK FINISH: Coach Brooke Stoehr has led Louisiana Tech from an 0-4 start in Conference USA to a West Division title.

By TEDDY ALLEN, Shreveport-Bossier Journal

They didn’t take the easiest path to their planned destination — think about scoring a successful moonSBJ spotlight shot from Earth by way of Mercury — but Louisiana Tech’s Lady Techsters are basketball champions of Conference USA’s West Division anyway.

Start to finish, there were some misfires:

An 0-4 hiccup to begin conference play;

A loss to 0-and-5-in-conference Rice in January;

A fourth-quarter collapse and mid-February loss at last-place UTSA after winning by 17 at UTEP two nights before.

But it’s not where you start or even how you get there — as long as you get there first. Tech did.

The regular season ended with Lady Techsters cutting down nets in Thomas Assembly Center after a convincing, division-clinching 82-56 victory over UAB Saturday afternoon, the program’s first championship since 2011.

“Winning a championship as a player is special because its validation of the work you put in with your teammates to achieve something together,” said head coach Brooke Stoehr, who made it to four NCAA Tournaments, two Elite Eights, and one Final Four as a Lady Techster student-athlete between 1998-2002. “You have a direct impact on the results because you are on the court competing. I cherish those memories with some amazing teammates.”

Saturday’s championship was a new taste to cherish for Stoehr, in her sixth year as coach at her alma mater.

“I have a whole different appreciation and feeling now that I’ve experienced it as a coach,” she said. “There is nothing like watching a team celebrate a championship together, especially for the first time …

“I’ve found great joy in watching them celebrate each other throughout the season,” she said. “Watching them celebrate after the game on the court with each other and their families (Saturday) is something I will never forget.”

The Lady Techsters began practice in the fall with nine new faces, five true freshmen, and a season-ending injury to projected starting guard and Division I transfer Gabbie Green — and didn’t win a C-USA game until January 17.

“It would have been a little less stressful had we gotten off to a better start,” Stoehr said, “but I do believe we needed to figure some things out about how this group needed to play in order to be successful. They never wavered and always believed in what we were doing.”

Doing what was asked of them and “competing hard for each other,” Stoehr said, was the reason Tech was able to win 8-of-10 and four straight — including a dramatic got-things-going 90-80 double-overtime win over Rice — to close out and smooth out the bumpy regular season.

Along the way since that long-ago first practice in October, her team “figured out how to win close games and found their identity as a group,” Stoehr said. “They became a tough-minded defensive team, figured out the types of shots we need to take and how to get balanced contributions on both ends of the floor.

“They’ve just had a sheer determination to accomplish something special,” she said. “They’ve played some really good basketball over the past three weeks at the most important time of the year.”

With the championship, the Lady Techsters, 19-10 and 11-7, earned a double-bye in the 2022 Heritage Landscape Supply Group C-USA Women’s Basketball Championship that begins today. At 1:30 Thursday in the quarterfinals, Tech will play the winner of Wednesday afternoon’s WKU (4th in the East) – UAB (5th in the West) game.

Although her team is young, Stoehr is a mid-March Old Timer. Besides four times as a player, she’s experienced the Big Dance as a head coach twice: she led underdog teams at Northwestern State to the NCAA Tournament in 2014 and 2015. With three more postseason tournament bids to her credit (NSU in the 2016 Women’s Basketball Invitational, Tech in the 2017 and 2018 WNITs), Stoehr is plenty familiar with all-or-nothing March basketball.

A victory Thursday would be her 100th as Tech’s coach. More importantly, it would push the Lady Techsters one step closer to the program’s first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2011.

Photo courtesy of Louisiana Tech Athletic Communications


Bugs Beat: At last, Shreveport climbs into a playoff position

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

With 13 games remaining in the regular season, the Shreveport Mudbugs have finally climbed back into the playoff race in the North American Hockey League’s South Division.

The last six weeks will determine if the Mudbugs keep the momentum and have an opportunity to defend their 2021 Robertson Cup.

Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell says it’s been “a battle” since his team was mired in last place two months into the 2021-22 season. On Saturday, Shreveport put the finishing touch on a convincing two-game sweep of Odessa on George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum and moved into a tie for the fourth and final playoff position in the division.

“Now it’s going to be a war,” Campbell told The Journal.

Although Shreveport’s five-game win streak ended in a 2-1 loss to New Mexico on Sunday afternoon, the weekend was a success. Prior to this weekend, the Mudbugs were winless in four games against Odessa, the team they are now tied with in the standings.

“I feel like we were possessing the puck a little better,” Campbell said regarding the turnaround against the Jackalopes. “Our forecheck was working pretty good and we were able to find the back of the net a little more consistently.”

Friday, after Shreveport (24-18-5) saw a 2-0 lead erased, it recovered to collect a 6-3 victory in front of a packed house – of people and canines. Saturday, the crowd was treated to a 4-1 triumph.

“The fans were beautiful,” said Campbell, whose team spent the prior three weeks on the road. “It was pretty awesome to be back home.”

Goaltender Devon Bobak grabbed both victories while Burke Simpson had a three-goal weekend. Timofei Khoklachev and Logan Furstenau scored two goals each.

Last week’s 3 Stars

1. Logan Furstenau, scored twice Friday, including massive tally with game tied at 2 in the second period that -helped the Mudbugs wrestle back momentum

2. Burke Simpson, three goals, including a short-handed marker late in the second period Friday.

3. Devon Bobak, 46 saves on 50 shots against and posted a 2-0 weekend.

NAHL South Division standings

New Mexico (34-13-3), 71 points
Lone Star (29-11-8), 66
Wichita Falls (24-15-8), 56
Shreveport (24-18-5), 53
Odessa (24-19-5), 53
Amarillo (23-22-3), 49
Corpus Christi (23-25-2), 48
El Paso (13-31-4), 30

*top four make the playoffs

Team leaders

Goals: Austin Brimmer, Connor Gatto, 13
Assists: Brimmer, 26
Points: Brimmer, 39
Penalty Minutes: Davis Goukler, 121
Game-winning goals: Gatto, 4
Goals-against average: Devon Bobak, 2.10
Save percentage: Bobak, .918

Up next

The Mudbugs stay at home for a two-game set against rival Lone Star. Puck drop for Friday and Saturday is set for 7:11 p.m.

Photo by CHRISTI LANG


Vicarious experiences make deer season a success

Deer season 2021-22 is in the books and for me, it was an outstanding one. I got a thrill when big bucks, some of them with eye-popping stats, appeared in front of the stand. I was there when a trophy buck was stopped by an arrow or bullet. It was a genuine rush for me, but truth to tell, I never sat down in a deer stand this season, not the first time.

My experiences were vicarious, the type Webster defines as “experienced in the imagination through the feelings or actions of another person.” I was there, vicariously, when 38 hunters enjoyed success, hunters who shared their experiences with me allowing me to write about their conquest of big bucks for Louisiana Sportsman magazine and web site.

I felt the chill of excitement when 21 big bucks were downed by conventional firearms; when a dozen more fell to conventional bows and arrows with three succumbing to bolts propelled by crossbows and another pair giving up the ghost to primitive firearms.

I was there on December 12 when Tangipahoa Parish deputy sheriff Daniel Sharkey, nailed the biggest of the bunch, a 20-point buck with a rocking-chair set of antlers that measured 193 5/8 inches.

Hunter Brown got his bow season started on October 2 when he arrowed a 140 inch, 12-point buck in Bienville Parish. Louisiana Sportsman requires the minimum measurement to be featured in the magazine to be 140 inches and Brown got in just under the wire and he was excited to make the cut. I know; I was right there with him.

I was there with Jacques Dugas hunting in Avoyelles Parish on October 3 when a little six-point buck stepped out. We were excited because every time that little fellow appeared, a big buster of a buck always followed him. Sure enough that afternoon, the trophy 13-point followed along and Dugas got him with an arrow, a buck measuring over 182 inches of antler.

On November 14, I was looking over Ross Wigginton’s shoulder as he sat on his back porch that morning in Concordia Parish when an outstanding 17-point buck stepped into his back yard and his crossbow did the trick on the buck with antlers measuring almost 190 inches.

I was with Chad Allison on November 8 when he crawled into the boughs of a fallen cedar near Shongaloo and the buck stuck his head out at 10 feet. Scared us both to death. Thankfully the big 14-point stepped out again at 100 yards and Allison got him. He scored 174 2/8 inches of antler.

LS BUCK 2021 - KAITLYN BOLTONThe vast majority of the hunters enjoying success were adults with ages from early twenties to seniors growing a bit long in the tooth. At least two, though, were teenagers, a young lady, Kaitlyn Bolton, age 15 and an eighth-grader, Tommy Suggs, also 15.

Kaitlyn had to good fortune of being drawn for a youth lottery hunt on Floy McElroy wildlife management area, the state’s most unusual management area in that only youth and physically challenged individuals are allowed to hunt. I was there on December 11 with Kaitlyn and her dad when she managed to drop the biggest buck ever taken on the area, an 11-point with antler measurements of 159 inches.

Then there is Suggs, hunting with his dad, Tommy, on one stand and his dad on another in Catahoula Parish. Hunting alone, except of course with me in a manner of speaking there looking over his shoulder, Tommy got the crosshairs of his scope on the shoulder of a big 10-point buck that measured 151 inches.

Now that the books are closed on deer season 2021-22, I can finally get some rest. All that typing can wear a body out.


The miracle of parking a phone while driving

Texting, texting all day long,
on my hand-held telephone.

Kitchen, den or patio,
I can text while on the go!

My favorite place to text outside
Is when I’m cruising in my ride.

The road belongs to me alone
When I want on my telephone.

 I drive, but still I answer rings
Since driving, I can do four things:

That’s texttalkdrive AND hit your car.
It takes some skill, but I’m a star!

This won’t make a dent in what my small brain perceives to be a big problem, but, as country crooner Lyle Lovett said, or perhaps texted while driving his horse, “A man has to try. What are you if you don’t try?”

I am not an extremely intelligent person. I’m probably in the same IQ category as the guy who took a laxative and a sleeping pill on the same night.

You’ll see a fish riding a bicycle before you see me accepting any academic awards.

I’m not a bright man.

But, I do have my moments. I married a smart person. I will stop and ask for directions. I know to come in out of the rain. I can change a flat. And I long ago retired from texting while driving.

Each of us knows by now, personally, of at least a dozen accidents caused by people reaching for their dropped cell phones or talking or texting while driving. A grandfather told me last week of his teenaged grandson who had recently wrecked while texting and is now paralyzed from the waist down.

A bigger goofball than me you’ll be hard-pressed to find, but this is serious business.

I am not a good driver to begin with. In fact, I’m probably the second worst driver in the world, and I will take over the top spot should my dad pass away. So I need all hands on deck while steering a vehicle.

It has not escaped my attention, though, that most people are circus acts while driving. I sat outside the house this week and counted the first 10 cars that came by. Seven drivers were on their phones.

I tried again later. Eight out of 10. Must be fires everywhere.

This week I was at a red light and the guy behind me was hit by the woman behind him. Both were on their phones. A conversation on my home phone with a friend two months ago ended with, “Oops, I’ve got to call you back. I just hit a car.”

What the…

I am probably more uneasy about this than most because I was on the front end of getting rear-ended back when cell phones were making their initial splash. A woman picked me off at a Dallas intersection. Just a dent, but a nice dent. She was very nice: she handed me her insurance information and her cell phone number and – this is the honest truth – she never got off her phone the whole time. She had to be the National Security Advisor or the head of the Central Intelligence Agency, is all I can figure. In 1999, was the head of national security blonde, female and mid-40s? Had to be…

On the wide open road, I can understand talking and driving. Otherwise, these are my rules, which my family knows: I can text or talk and drive if I am on fire, if I’m bleeding, or if I’m taking a call about a liver transplant. Short list. Otherwise, my phone’s in park, for my safety and for yours.

Originally ran April 3, 2011. Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Lang’s Locks: If you like action, this is your week

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

Last week was a light schedule with only the Honda Classic on the golf scene.

Well, if you like action, strap in for a wild ride on this go-round of Lang’s Locks.

Every week, we will post picks for the week’s golf tournaments. We will also appear for other plays when they pop up. Let’s make a little money!

Last week, we dropped just less than 1 unit.

We’re going all over the world this week.

Notes

All bets are measured in units. For instance, if your normal bet on a game is $100, that is one unit. If the bet is listed as .2 units, it’s a $20 bet.

Best line (as of Tuesday) is listed in parenthesis. Find the best price, one key to being a successful sports bettor! Shop around!

Sportsbook legend

CAE: Caesar’s
FD: Fan Duel
MGM: Bet MGM
DK: DraftKings
BS: Barstool

LANG’S LOCKS

Last week recap: .98-unit loss

THIS WEEK’S SELECTIONS

Golf

PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational

Win bets

Jon Rahm, +850, .1 unit (CAE)
Kevin Na, +12500, .1 unit (FD)

Top 20 Bets

Aaron Wise, +500, .5 units (DK)
Martin Laird, +450, .4 units (DK)
Sergio Garcia, +250, .4 units (FD)
Si Woo Kim, +350, .3 units (FD)
Seamus Power, +290, .3 units (FD)
Charles Howell III, +500, .2 units (DK)
Taylor Pendrith, +600, .2 units (DK)
Corey Conners, +270, .2 units (FD)
Thomas Pieters, +480, .2 units (FD)
Taylor Moore, +500, .2 units (FD)
K.H. Lee, +480, .2 units (FD)
Anirban Lahiri, +1300, .2 units (FD)
Alex Smalley, +700, .2 units (FD)
Tom Hoge, +350, .2 units (FD)

PGA Tour, Puerto Rico Open

Win bet

Tyler Duncan, +6150, .1 unit

Top 20 Bets

Tyler Duncan, +260, .8 units (DK)
Bill Haas, +260, .8 units (DK)
Chris Gotterup, +550, .7 units (CAE)
Nick Hardy, +220, .6 units (DK)
Scott Gutschewski, +300, .5 units (CAE)
David Lipsky, +170, .4 units (DK)
Chad Ramey, +220, .4 units (DK)
Kiradech Aphibarnrat, +300, .4 units (DK)
Peter Uihlein, +170, .4 units (DK)
Seth Reeves, +260, .3 units (CAE)
Dylan Wu, +190, .3 units (CAE)
Max McGreevy, +400, .3 units (DK)
Brice Garnett, +240, .3 units (DK)

European Tour, Magical Kenya Open

Win bet

Yannik Paul, .1 unit, +8200 (MGM)

Top 20 Bets

Richard Mansell, +650, 1.2 units (FD)
Marcus Helligkilde, +410, .9 units (FD)
Yannik Paul, +360, .7 units (FD)
Andrew Wilson, +750, .7 units (FD)
Daniel Gavins, +410, .6 units (FD)
Marcel Schneider, +900, .6 units, +900 (FD)
Garrick Porteous, +700, .5 units, (FD)
Alfredo Garcia-Heredia, +500, .5 units (CAE)
Dale Whitnell, +700, .5 units (FD)
Oliver Farr, +850, .5 units (FD)
Frederic LaCroix, +410, .5 units (FD)
Thirston Lawrence, +600, .5 units (FD)
Nicolai Von Dellingshausen, .5 units, +1000 (FD)


Bugs Beat: Perfect weekend causes Mudbugs to look for Logans

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

Sunday, Shreveport Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell was scouring the waiver wire and list of 2022 draft eligibles for Logans. Logan who? It doesn’t matter.

“We’re trying to draft anybody with the first name Logan, a middle name Logan or maybe they go by Logan,” Campbell told The Journal. “We’ve used a lot of our tenders, so we’re looking at draft picks or free agents.”

This weekend at Corpus Christi, Mudbugs Logan Heroux, Logan Gotinsky, Logan Furstenau and Logan Valkama combined for six goals and 10 points in one of the most important series of the season. Behind Team Logan, Shreveport’s playoff hopes took a remarkable leap with a sweep of the Rays across the street from the shore of the Gulf of Mexico.

The Logans were four of nine different players to score in the 7-1 and 5-3 victories. A total of 17 Mudbugs collected at least one point during the weekend.

“(The wide-ranging production) is everything,” Campbell said. “You need that secondary scoring. You need all four lines chipping in; it’s exactly what we had. To get that over one weekend is great. We’ve really needed it.”

The sweep completed a seven-game road trip. Incredibly, as the Mudbugs move back to George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum for three games this week, they could move into a playoff position by Saturday night.

Shreveport is four points behind Wichita Falls and Odessa, teams tied for the final two playoff slots.

Given the Mudbugs’ troubling start to the season and the depth of the North American Hockey League’s South Division, the fact such an opportunity is present is a testament to the team’s perseverance.

“It feels great; we’ve experienced that this year,” Campbell said. “We could have quit a couple of times this season. Instead, we just did it. It says something about our

willingness to compete. I just like that about our group. It doesn’t take any pressure off, but we did our job.”

Former Mudbug suffers stroke

Jack Smiley, who played 35 games for Shreveport during the 2019-20 season, suffered a stroke on Feb. 21 at 22 years old. Smiley last played Jan. 28 for Endicott College.

A GoFundMe started by Jessica Leventry has already raised more than $16,000. Many Mudbugs teammates and fans are already on the list of donors.

“Jack will be undergoing intensive rehab and will likely be there for an extended period. We hope to help fund his rehab process and get him back to full recovery,” said a post on the page.

Last week’s 3 Stars

1, Logan Heroux, one of his two goals was biggest tally of the weekend – broke 3-3 tie in third-period Saturday

2, Timofei Khokhlachev, five-point weekend (G, 4A) for “Koko”

3, Lukas Sedlacek, collected three assists and a mind-numbing plus-6 rating for the two games

NAHL South Division standings

New Mexico (32-12-3), 67 points
Lone Star (28-10-8), 64
Wichita Falls (23-15-7), 53
Odessa (24-17-5), 53
Shreveport (22-17-5), 49
Corpus Christi (22-24-2), 46
Amarillo (21-22-3), 45
El Paso (13-29-4), 30

*top four make the playoffs

Team leaders

Goals: Austin Brimmer, Connor Gatto, 12
Assists: Brimmer, 23
Points: Brimmer, 35
Penalty Minutes: Davis Goukler, 131
Game-winning goals: Connor Gatto, 4
Goals-against average: Devon Bobak, 2.10
Save percentage: Bobak, .918

Up next

After three weeks on road, Shreveport stays home for a busy weekend at The George with two games against Odessa (Friday, Saturday) and a single game against division-leading New Mexico (makeup for Feb. 4 postponement).

Photo courtesy SHREVEPORT MUDBUGS


‘Desperation’ hockey nothing new for Shreveport

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

The past couple of weekends haven’t been kind to the Shreveport Mudbugs. Consequently, the work from a 14-wins-in-18-games stretch has nearly been nullified. The Mudbugs, eight points off the final playoff spot in the North American Hockey League’s South Division, aren’t quite to must-win mode with 18 games remaining in the regular season, but there is no denying desperation is the name of the game until the finish in early April.

“The numbers don’t lie,” Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell told The Journal.

As Shreveport kicks off a two-game series at scenic Corpus Christi on Friday, don’t expect the Mudbugs to act much differently.

“We’ve been (in desperation mode) for a while now,” Campbell said. “We should probably just call it playoff hockey. Hopefully we can learn how to win some hockey games.”

Wins are much needed. Shreveport (20-17-5) rests in sixth place in the South. They trail Wichita Falls and Odessa, the teams tied for third and fourth (the final qualifying position) place, by eight points.

Corpus Christi (22-22-2) is in a similar position. Although the Rays are one point ahead of the Mudbugs, they are more desperate for points as they have just 14 games remaining in their regular season.

Make no mistake, Shreveport’s position in the South is perilous. However, the franchise that hasn’t missed a postseason since entering the NAHL in 2016 has something on its side.

Games in hand.

Shreveport has four more games to play than Odessa and the Rays, and three more than Wichita Falls. Wins equal two points, so it doesn’t take a mathematician to unlock the formula for success.

“We have to win all those four games in hand and maybe get some help from the rest of the league,” Campbell said.

Shreveport has enjoyed success against Corpus Christi this season. After the Rays took the initial meeting, the Mudbugs have rattled off three straight wins in the series while outscoring Corpus Christi 13-2 in those contests.

This weekend ends Shreveport’s three-week, seven-game road trip. The Mudbugs will be at home next weekend to face Odessa.

Former Mudbug celebrates 1,000th game

The first stop for Derek Nesbitt following his college hockey career at Ferris State was Shreveport-Bossier City, where he was reunited with then-Mudbugs head coach Scott Muscutt, an instructor at a hockey school organized by Nesbitt’s father and former NHLer, Dave McIlwain.

Nesbitt played seven games for the Mudbugs as an “amateur signee.”

Those playoffs capped the 2004-05 season.

Nesbitt, 39, is still playing.

Friday, the Atlanta Gladiators of the ECHL will honor Nesbitt, who recently broke the 1,000-game plateau.

Seventeen years ago, Nesbitt racked up five assists (he was the team’s fourth-highest point total) during a seven-game series against the Wichita Thunder (Bossier-Shreveport lost 4-3).

“If you could model yourself after anyone outside of your own family (Muscutt) is a guy, one of the best human beings I’ve ever met,” Nesbitt told Scott Burnside of Daily Faceoff.

Mudbugs at Corpus Christi
Friday, Saturday, (7:05 p.m.)
American Bank Center

Photo courtesy Shreveport Mudbugs


Bucks beginning to shed antlers

There is a remarkable annual act of nature starting to take place any day now. A couple of years ago, I was turkey hunting when I saw something that fascinated me. As I sat overlooking a food plot, a deer stepped out 40 yards or so away followed by a second and then a third deer. They lingered just long enough for me to get a good look at them but no time to snap a photo.

The interesting thing I noticed about these three deer, something I’d never seen before, was that all three were bucks that had only recently shed their antlers. Each of the three had prominent circles – pedicles – on their heads where last year’s antlers had grown.

Here’s what happens in the world of the deer. Buck deer drop their antlers in late winter or early spring. Soon after losing their headgear, they start growing a new set of antlers they’ll have until this time next year. This new set begins as fuzzy knobs growing on the pedicles which are located on the buck’s head between his eyes and ears. The newly formed antlers are soft and subject to damage and for this reason, bucks are shy and reclusive; they’re protective of this new growth.

A couple of months before shedding antlers, bucks use them to hook and thrash bushes, brush and small saplings and to fight other bucks to establish dominance. Bushes and bucks are in no danger of being gored and thrashed in spring and summer because he is protecting his newly forming soft antlers.

According to a source I read about the growth of deer antlers, velvet is described as “vascular skin that supplies oxygen and nutrients to the growing bone.” This amazing material causes the antler it covers to grow at an amazing rate. In fact, deer antlers grow faster than any other mammal bone. This fast rate of growth actually is a handicap to a buck because of the incredible nutritional demand on deer to re-grow antlers annually.

Once the antlers achieve their full potential for the year, usually by mid-September in our part of the world, the velvet has served its purpose. As it dries and is rubbed off on bushes by the buck, the antler bone actually dies. Here’s something I read that gave me pause. What deer hunters see, when that big buck comes slipping by the stand, is an animal sporting a head full of dead bone.

A fun activity many deer hunters like to pursue, now that hunting seasons are over, is to search for dropped antlers. There is a measure of excitement to hold in your hands the head gear of a big buck that will whet your appetite for what he’ll look like once hunting seasons roll around again this coming fall.

So, how do you find shed antlers? Where are the best places to look? I have had good luck stumbling upon sheds while scouting for wild turkeys. While looking for turkey tracks, I have on several occasions spotted an antler among the leaves and litter that has been cast aside by a buck.

Go where deer hang out, especially food plots, bedding areas and trails. One of the most likely locations where you might find dropped antlers is to follow a trail where it crosses a small stream or a fence. The antler is more likely to be found near where the deer touched down after hopping the obstacle.

The entire process of bucks growing velvet-covered, delicate antlers, to them becoming hardened and eventually being shed, just to do it all again every year is one of nature’s most amazing and fascinating feats.


The MVPs of Mardi Gras

How we made it through Mardi Gras parades without them, only our excretory systems know for sure.

Those were archaic and tawdry times.

Today, we are more civilized out there on the parade highways and byways, all thanks to the upright and rectangular 3-D miracles of translucent roofs and vents, and the miraculous pairing of high-density aluminum and polyethylene.

They are no question the MVPs of the Mardi Gras parade season.

Most Valuable Potties.

Look at them, will you? Admire them. Lay flowers and rolls of toilet paper at their feet, which is probably a worn spot in the grass where quick-stepping, over-served revelers hurried to take advantage of their favors.

They are the figurative port in the storm. Or the literal Port-O-Let in the storm.

A mere few feet off the parade route, they stand there as silent sentries, loyal soldiers, dutiful and dependable, ready if called upon, available but not obvious.

On the streets and in our ’hood they go by names like “Honey Bucket” or “Porta-Loo” or “Johnny-on-the-Spot.” The business community that makes a living renting, servicing, and supplying these crucial devices to the Great Unwashed call them portable toilets or chemical toilets.

But the way most of us first came to appreciate them was when we heard the phrase “Port-o-Let” or “Port-a-Jon” or “Porta Potty.” It should come as no surprise that each starts with a “P.”

Poetic justice is served.

Hemingway said once that Paris is “a moveable feast.” Had the outhouse of his day been mobile, he’d have said the same thing of the Port-o-Let.

The street where I live is perpendicular to the four-lane that marks the end of the route of Shreveport-Bossier’s two largest parades. By largest, I mean a quarter-million of our closest friends turn out to enjoy what krewes have worked (and played) all year to assemble. There are smaller parades in town and in the area, but these two pulled in the most bladders.

Thus, the Potty Patrol is needed. Down that otherwise unassuming street that marks the parades’ end, these portable must-haves stand stately for a quarter mile, maybe a bit more. They are rented by people who have reserved “spots” along the route, and the envied contraptions will be picked up next week. But right now, they are assurance and insurance for the renters, who can sleep well, knowing that on The Big Day, help will be just one opening of a plastic door away.

If you didn’t rent one and you need to “go,” well, you’ll find out who your friends are come parade time. You think you’re No. 1 and might just find out that you’re No. 2.

Sad, but such is the human condition. There will come a time when relief is demanded for the laboring kidney, the anxious bladder, the suspect colon. Those who fail to prepare are prepared to fail, and this is the kind of failure that does not go quietly into that dark night.

When Mardi Gras in our area was new, in pre-Port-o-Let days of yore, the make-believe portable potty was a shrub, a shadowed tree, the side of an unassuming garage.

That was rural fare. Tacky. We’ve since come a long way.

Who could have known then that instead of going to the bathroom, the bathroom would one day come to us. And usually, not a second too soon.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Bugs Beat: Mudbugs win Sunday to avoid disastrous weekend

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

The Shreveport Mudbugs salvaged two points with a 3-2 victory on Sunday at Wichita Falls, but it was the lone bright spot on the three-game trip to Texas.

In a strange twist, Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell thought Sunday produced the “worst” effort of the weekend.

“I was hoping we could get two of three games,” Campbell told The Journal. “That didn’t happen. It’s a funny game. I feel like (Sunday) might have been our worst performance, but it was a huge, huge win for us to try stay in the playoff hunt. I’m just thankful we got it with some timely goals and good goaltending.”

The Mudbugs dropped the first two games of the series and fell eight points behind the final playoff spot with 18 games remaining in the regular season.

Victories in 14 of 18 games nearly erased the deficit created by losing 11 of 12 games early in the 2021-22 season, but a three-game losing streak came at the wrong time.

In Friday’s opener, a goal from Austin Brimmer’s team-leading 12th goal helped the Mudbugs get within one in the third period, but the Warriors held on for a 3-2 victory.

Things weren’t as close on Saturday, even though Shreveport’s Drake Morse opened the scoring early in the second period. Wichita Falls scored the next four goals and applied a considerable amount of pressure on the Mudbugs in Sunday’s finale.

Shreveport responded and ended the losing skid, but finds itself in unfamiliar territory. The Mudbugs have not missed the playoffs as a member of the NAHL and were absent just once during their 14 professional seasons.

Shreveport does have games (three on Wichita, four on Odessa) in hand on the two teams tied for third and fourth place, but victories are needed in those just to earn a tie as things stand now.

Half of Shreveport’s remaining games will be played on George’s Pond at Hirsch Coliseum.

Last week’s 3 Stars

1. Lukas Sedlacek, scored twice Sunday. His tally 6 minutes into the third period proved to be the difference

2. Connor Gatto, opened the scoring Sunday and sparked a desperate Shreveport squad to a much-needed victory

3. Simon Bucheler, collected his first win in net since Jan. 1 with 31 saves on Sunday

NAHL South Division standings

New Mexico (31-11-3), 65 points
Lone Star (26-10-8), 60
Wichita Falls (23-15-7), 53
Odessa (24-17-5), 53
Corpus Christi (22-22-2), 46
Shreveport (20-17-5), 45
Amarillo (20-21-3), 43
El Paso (13-27-4), 30

*top four make the playoffs

Team leaders

Goals: Austin Brimmer, 12
Assists: Brimmer, 22
Points: Brimmer, 34
Penalty Minutes: Davis Goukler, 107
Game-winning goals: Connor Gatto, 4
Goals-against average: Devon Bobak, 2.14
Save percentage: Bobak, .917

Up next

Shreveport’s road trip concludes with an opportunity to climb a spot in the South standings. The Mudbugs will play a pair of games against Corpus Christi on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico on Feb. 25-26.

Photo by CHRISTI LANG


SBJ Q&A w/… McDonald’s magnate Roy Griggs

The ever optimistic, energetic, encouraging CEO and President of Griggs Enterprise, Roy Griggs has been a philanthropist, volunteer, and solid neighbor for the past 40 years he’s lived in Shreveport. At 17, he began working at a McDonald’s in his Meridian, Miss., hometown. At 20, he was the restaurant’s first black manager. Now the owner of 17 McDonald’s restaurants in north Louisiana and east Texas, Griggs graciously and gladly took a few minutes to talk with SBJ about his life and loves, faith and motivation, and the two-sided coin called failure.

SBJ: How is Black History Month and what it signifies important to you? “We need to know our history so we don’t repeat some things of the past. It’s so important for me to remember the struggles of those who came before. I didn’t get where I am on my own effort; it was their effort that paved the way for me and others like me to own a McDonald’s restaurant. Some years ago, I couldn’t have even gone inside one. Kids need to know that, the history; it makes them appreciate of where we are today.”

SBJ: What’s your advice to young people who ask? “Find that one thing you really enjoy doing, what you’re passionate about. When you begin a career you don’t enjoy, and you’re going after what gives you a certain amount of cash, that’s not what’s driving your passion; it can eventually ‘break’ you. Work hard and follow what you do well and the money will come.”

SBJ: Was there the ‘moment’ you knew you could do this? “When I opened my first restaurant. You prepare but still all kinds of emotions are running through you. Fear of the unknown. I’d invested all I had. I had to hope and trust and believe in God, that he’d prepared me for this. Failure was not an option. Success is all about strategizing and planning. Nobody wakes up and says, ‘I’m going to fail today.’ But you can if you haven’t planned. And I you do fail, that doesn’t mean it’s over. Evaluate, don’t give up, and try again. The difference in winners and losers is winners don’t give up.”

SBJ: Your reaction when employees come back years later to say thanks? “It makes you feel good about yourself that you could put a couple of words into someone’s life and those words or encouragement made a difference, and that they’d thank you for the helping hand. That motivates me to try to ‘pull the next one up.’ Someone might get distracted and can’t see something in themselves — but someone else can see it and then remind them to believe in themselves, to have faith. To see them succeed is one huge thing that motivates me.”

SBJ: Any thoughts of retiring? “I’m still enjoying what I do. Business is a bit different now with the pandemic, but I’m still inspired and motivated to keep moving on. If I lost my passion, I’d quit. (Laughing) But I don’t see that in the foreseeable future.”

SBJ: Your favorite McDonald’s meal? “Quarter Pounder on a hamburger bun, mustard and ketchup, hot fries, strawberry shake … got to have the strawberry shake…”

SBJ: Do you get a discount? “Sometimes I do! Then again, there are times where they make me pay. And that’s all right too.”

— Teddy Allen, SBJ


What’s next for the area’s 16 NFL players (Part 2)

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

Today we complete our look at the area stars who play in the NFL.

A reminder: An area the size of Dallas/Fort Worth would have to boast more than 200 NFL players to match the per capita production of Northwest Louisiana. Los Angeles County would have to provide more than 400 players. There are only 1,696 players on the NFL’s 53-man rosters.

Thursday, we chronicled how eight locals in the NFC fared in 2021 and detailed their 2022 contract situations. Here is a look at the eight in the AFC (in alphabetical order).

L’Jarius Sneed, Kansas City (25, S, Minden)

Started career-best 15 games for the Chiefs and collected two interceptions. The fourth-rounder is now halfway through his rookie contract – four years, $3.929 million.

Marquez Stevenson, Buffalo (23, WR, Northwood)

Rookie played five games for the Bills and mainly served as a punt/kick returner when he saw action. He was inactive for both of Buffalo’s postseason games, but has just begun his four-year, $3.652 million rookie deal.

Trent Taylor, Cincinnati (27, WR, Evangel)

Terrific comeback story culminated in a Super Bowl appearance with the Bengals – he’d already been to one with San Francisco. Taylor hauled in the game-tying 2-point conversion in the AFC title game and was a rock for the Bengals as their punt returner. Former fifth-round pick of the 49ers played his first year in Cincinnati on one-year, $920,000 and will be an unrestricted free agent in 2022. Appears to be healthy and could be a force again.

Jerry Tillery, Los Angeles Chargers (25, DL, Evangel)

Played in 16 games (started 15) and posted a career-best 4.5 sacks. First-round pick in 2019 will play for another contract in 2022, the final segment of his four-year, $11 million rookie contract. There is a team option for a fifth year.

Ar’Darius Washington, Baltimore (22, S, Evangel)

The rookie signed with the Ravens as an undrafted free agent after the draft. The former Eagle made the team with an impressive preseason. He appeared in three games in 2021 and made one tackle before his season was cut short due to a broken foot. He’s set to enter Year 2 of a three-year, $2.44 million deal.

Tre’Davious White, Buffalo (27, DB, Green Oaks)

Recorded just one interception with the Bills in 2021, a career-low, but played just 11 games after he suffered a torn ACL against New Orleans on Thanksgiving. The two-time Pro Bowler completed the first year of a four-year, $69 million contract.

Greedy Williams, Cleveland (24, DB, Calvary)

After missing the entire 2020 season, Greedy played 16 games for the Browns in 2021 and collected his first two NFL interceptions. He also amassed 10 passes defended (tied for team-best) despite making just eight starts. Opposing quarterbacks had just a 74.0 rating when throwing toward the former LSU star. The former second-round pick seems to have found his stride and enters the final segment of a four-year, $6.458 million rookie deal.

Brandon Wilson, Cincinnati Bengals (27, DB, Calvary Baptist)

A bittersweet campaign culminated in a Super Bowl appearance for Wilson’s Bengals. The former Cavalier served as the team’s kick returner for nine games before his season ended prematurely with a torn ACL. Wilson made one start in the secondary in Week 4 vs. Jacksonville. In 2022, the former sixth-round pick will complete a two-year, $4.125 million contract.

What’s next for the area’s 16 NFL players (Part 1)


Mudbugs expect to mix things up in net for crucial tripleheader

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

As this weekend’s three-game series at Wichita Falls inched closer, Shreveport Mudbugs head coach Jason Campbell knew his workhorse goaltender, Devin Bobak, was going to get a break. However, he didn’t envision a break coming earlier.

However, after Bobak allowed four goals in the first 40 minutes at Lone Star on Saturday, Simon Bucheler – who hadn’t played since Jan. 7 – got the nod to finish things up. Although the Mudbugs lost the game, 5-2, rust be damned, Bucheler blanked the Brahmas and stopped the 11 shots he faced in the final 20 minutes.

With the Mudbugs set to face one of the league’s hottest teams, and the squad in the fourth and final playoff position in the North American Hockey League’s South Division, Campbell has a more complex situation.

“It’s a hard decision,” Campbell told The Journal. “It’s pretty clear one (goaltender) isn’t going to play all three games.

Ride Bucheler’s hot hand in Friday’s opener? Go immediately back to Bobak, who has started 20 of the past 21 games, is the reigning NAHL Player of the Month and is tied for most shutouts (five) in the league?

Bucheler posted a 3-5-1 mark over the first two months of the season before Bobak secured his position as the No. 1.

“I’ll talk with (goaltenders) coach Rich (Parent) and come up with a game plan,” Campbell said.

Sunday’s game replaces one of those cancelled during the scheduled Oct. 22-23 series at Wichita Falls. The Mudbugs will travel to Wichita Falls for a single game March 23 to complete the season series.

No matter which netminder gets the nod during games this weekend, Shreveport needs their best. The Mudbugs enter the weekend in sixth place, six points off the Warriors’ playoff pace. Wichita Falls’ five-game win streak is currently the third longest in the league.

“(Wichita Falls) just had a slow start,” Campbell said. “Coming into the season, I thought they’d be really good. And here they are. They are pretty hot. It’s going to be a real tough challenge.”

Mudbugs at Wichita Falls

Friday (7:05 p.m.), Saturday (7:05 p.m.) and Sunday (6 p.m.)
Kay Yeager Coliseum, Wichita Falls, Texas

Season series, tied 2-2

Dec. 16, Mudbugs, 4-1 (George’s Pond)
Dec. 17, Mudbugs, 4-2 (George’s Pond)
Jan. 7, Warriors, 5-3 (George’s Pond)
Jan. 8, Warriors, 2-0 (George’s Pond)

Missing pieces

Campbell believes captain Garrett Steele and forward Niklas Miller will miss Friday’s game and could miss the entire weekend.

Photo by CHRISTI LANG


What’s next for the area’s 16 NFL players (Part 1)

By ROY LANG III, Journal Sports

For decades, Northwest Louisiana has stocked the NFL with talent, including plenty of superstars. The Los Angeles Rams’ victory against Cincinnati in Super Bowl LVI on Sunday made one Shreveporter, former Fair Park star Robert Rochell, a world champion.

Incredibly, Rochell is just one of 16 locals on NFL rosters during the 2021 season. For reference, an area the size of Dallas would have to boast more than 200 NFL players to match the per capita production of this area. Los Angeles County would have to provide more than 400 players.

Is this the best era for locals in the NFL? That’s fodder for another time, but over the next two days, we take a look at how our current NFLers (in alphabetical order) fared in 2021, and we peer into their 2022 contract situations.

Up first, the eight locals who play in the NFC.

Henry Black, Green Bay (25 years old, DB, Woodlawn)

Played in all 17 games for the Packers this season. Recorded two passes defended, one interception and a forced fumble. Just completed a two-year, $1.39 million contract and is now an exclusive rights free agent (ERFA). That is used for a player with fewer than three accrued seasons and an expired contract. If his original team offers him a one-year contract at the league minimum (based on his credited seasons), the player cannot negotiate with other teams.

Terrace Marshall Jr., Carolina (21, WR, Parkway)

Second-round pick by Panthers played 13 games as a rookie and hauled in 17 passes for 138 yards. Season ended with a foot injury. Expect to see an expanded role as TMJ enters second year of his rookie contract – four years, $5.729 million.

Israel Mukuamu, Dallas (22, S, Parkway)

Played four games for Cowboys as a rookie after he was selected in the sixth round. Missed the postseason game with a hamstring injury. Enters second year of four-year, $3.61 million contract.

Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys (28, QB, Haughton)

Recovered from a devastating injury in 2020 and posted a career-high 37 touchdown passes in 2021. The Cowboys’ offense led the NFL in points, but Dallas was bounced in the first round of the playoffs. This capped the first segment of his four-year, $160 million contract.

Robert Rochell, Los Angeles Rams (23, DB, Fair Park)

The rookie played 11 games (started five) for the Rams and collected one interception before he found himself on injured reserve. The fourth-round pick will enter the second year of his four-year, $4.17 million deal.

Devin White, Tampa Bay (23, LB, North Webster)

Played every game this season (first time in his career) for the Buccaneers. The former first-rounder collected 3.5 sacks and amassed 128 tackles en route to the Pro Bowl. He enters the final season of his rookie contract – four-years, $29.315 million — and the Bucs have until May 2 to decide whether they will pick up White’s fifth-year option (would be worth about $11 million in 2023).

Rodarius Williams, New York Giants (25, DB, Calvary)

After he was drafted by the Giants in the sixth round, “LeeLee” played five games for the G-Men in 2021. However, his season came to an end when he tore an ACL against the Dallas Cowboys in Week 5. Enters Year 2 of a four-year, $3.653 million contract.

Donovan Wilson, Dallas Cowboys (26, S, Woodlawn)

Injury-plagued campaign caused Wilson to play in just nine games (three starts) in 2021. Drafted by the Cowboys in the sixth round in 2019. He’ll play the final season of a four-year, $2.657 million contract.