Gritty group from MCC showed more than talent
By Fredie
Carmichael / Executive Editor
The Meridian Star

MERIDIAN —
When the Meridian Community College golfers gathered to accept
their award as the NJCAA Div. I National Runner-up and Freshman
Brandt Garon as the individual national champion in Huntsville,
Ala., on Friday, I swelled with pride.
But it wasn’t really about what they had accomplished, though I
was certainly impressed by how they performed. My pride was
about who they were as men and one unforgettable moment.
As the players, families and friends gathered around the
clubhouse of Robert Trent Jones Hampton Cove, the loudest
applause from the MCC golfers didn’t come from the announcement
you might have expected.
It came when defending national champions McLennan Community
College (Texas) was announced as the 2010 champions.
The MCC players parted, giving the players space. Then as each
McLennan player passed, they applauded loudly and offered
personal congratulations and patted each player on the back.
This was an especially poignant moment considering the subdued
reaction some from the McLennan team had moments earlier when
Brandt was awarded the national title as the overall individual
winner.
It was also special considering this MCC team — who was in
second place and 9 shots back of McLennan heading into Friday’s
final round — never got their chance at a comeback after the
tournament was limited to 54 holes due to rain.
This MCC team entered the tournament as a certain underdog. In
only their second year at the Division I level, they arrived in
Huntsville as the 8th ranked team in the country. Few expected
them to even be in the final pairing, much less threatening to
win the entire tournament.
But this team believed. Despite having three players under
5-foot 7 inches tall — including the national champion and an
All-American — they made the 7,300-yard links-style course with
large, undulating greens look like it was Lakeview, Meridian’s
public course.
On some holes, the McLennan players — tall and lanky — bombed
their drives 50 yards past the MCC players and drained long
birdie putts. It didn’t seem to phase the MCC players. They
fought and kept plugging along.
But in the end, it was the way they responded by not winning
that was most impressive.
And it was a reflection of their coach.
One of the first things my friend Sean Covich, head coach at
MCC, told me he wanted to accomplish as coach: teaching his
players respect for the game and sportsmanship.
Throughout the year, he made his team stay at the course after
every tournament, despite how they fared, and congratulate the
winning team and personally thank the host golf pro at each
course and the host golf coach. It’s a practice that served them
well in the end.
“I just want them to fight like crazy on the golf course but
then show ultimate respect and honor to the game after they’re
done,” Covich said. “I’m fortunate to have a great group of
guys.”
And their sportsmanship wasn’t lost on the other players or
coaches. MCC was the underdog most were pulling for to upset
McLennan. Similar to me, most were probably relieved to see a
trait so often lacking in today’s athletes. Sportsmanship, a
trait natural to most of us in the past, seems to have eluded so
many these days. It was for that reason that the behavior of our
own, MCC golf’s best, was so refreshing.
Moments after Central Alabama Community College’s Coach Dave
Jennings presented Garon with the national title, he joked to
the crowd: “They just joined Division I two years ago. They’ve
been a real thorn in our side … but I tell you, they are an
awesome team. Sean Covich and his guys are top notch.”
One parent from Brevard Community College of Florida told me,
“that is the grittiest bunch I’ve seen.”
I couldn’t agree more.
And I couldn’t have been more proud of this year’s NJCAA
National Runner-Up team from MCC: Brandt Garon, freshman from
Baton Rouge; Clemens Dvorak, freshman from Vienna, Austria; Cory
Williamson, sophomore from Collins, Miss.; Garrett Westbrook,
sophomore from Baton Rouge; and Nick Hawkes, sophomore from
London, England.
Fredie Carmichael is executive editor of The Meridian Star
and played for MCC’s golf team from 1998-2000 and competed in
the NJCAA Div. II National Championship in College Station,
Texas in 2000. E-mail him at
editor@themeridianstar.com.
Character outweighs talent every time
By Fredie Carmichael / editor
The Meridian Star
May 2007
(SCOTTSBORO, Ala.) - I always find it interesting when
people say golf is a boring sport, a sport that lacks
excitement. Some of those same people don’t believe golf can
be a team sport.
Those people obviously have never experienced the game — or
watched the Ryder Cup.
On Friday, I watched some pretty intense moments as a golf
spectator. I was in picturesque Scottsboro, Ala., watching
five young men from Meridian Community College compete in
the 2007 NJCAA National Championship Tournament at Goose
Pond Colony.
I saw 18- and 19-year-old young men exhibit unmistakable
courage, grit and character — all under extreme pressure.
Here’s how the drama unfolded in the shadows of the
foothills of the Appalachian Mountains:
It all started with little technical glitch near the end of
the tournament. In this age of PDAs (personal digital
assistants), cell phones and text messaging, information is
always at your fingertips in an instant. The problem: that
information isn’t always accurate.
MCC was playing the final round in the final pairing,
starting the day in third place out of 20 teams in the
four-day tournament.
As MCC competed the final 9 holes, Sean Covich, one of my
best friends who is in his first year as MCC’s golf coach,
asked me to find out the score that Tyler (Texas) posted.
Tyler entered the day in fourth place, a few shots behind
MCC. Before I made the long walk, I decided to check the
scores online. Clinton Hales, who played golf at MCC a few
years after Sean and I did, used his cell phone to go to the
course’s Web site and find the scores.
Tyler wasn’t a threat; they didn’t post a low round. But
John A. Logan (Ill.), who began the day in fifth place,
posted an even par total of 288, according to the course Web
site. What that meant: MCC would have to finish no worse
than 11 over par as a team to a secure third place finish.
And in a tournament where the difference between first
through fifth is so close, the competition is fierce.
MCC’s top four players finished the first 9 holes at 2-over
par. But all four players had shaky starts to the back 9.
Still, MCC looked to be in great position to secure third
place. We felt pretty good about our position.
Then came the surprise: the score originally posted on the
Web site was wrong. John A. Logan had actually shot 3-under
as a team, meaning instead of 11-over, MCC could do no worse
than 8-over to stay in at least a tie for third.
A few text messages and quick math lessons later, we
discovered that MCC was at 8-over par as a team. That meant
the final three players on the course — Justine Eaves,
Dustin Petit and Scottsboro, Ala. native Jarrod Lemaster —
would have to finish the final two holes at a combined
1-under to take sole possession of third place.
Simple pars wouldn’t do it.
There was no room for error.
Everyone was on edge.
The final two holes provided two par 4s, a dogleg left and a
dogleg right.
Lemaster was the first to play the two holes. He gutted out
two pars, both after bad drives. He even calmed his nerves
to nestle in a slippery, 5-foot par put on 18.
As Lemaster made par on 18, Eaves was making some major
noise on 17.
Eaves, who became the second MCC golfer to finish as an
All-American in back-to-back years (quite the accomplishment
considering the quality of MCC’s golf program), used a long
drive and a dead-on approach shot to give himself a 12-foot
birdie put. He drained it with ease — an appropriate word
considering his demeanor and last name.
Eaves then recovered from a bad tee shot near the trees on
18 to hit the green with his approach shot. The problem: he
had a 40-foot putt, with a double break, that he had to
two-putt in front of more than 100 spectators. He not only
got it down in two, he nearly knocked it in for birdie.
It looked like he felt no pressure, like he was playing golf
with his buddies on a Saturday afternoon.
Moments later, Petit — who had an outstanding tournament and
finished second out of 131 of the nation’s top junior
college golfers — split the fairway with his drive, hit a
perfect approach shot and easily tapped in for par, giving
MCC sole possession of third place.
The relief set in. Later, as I watched MCC’s players accept
their trophies and certificates, it hit me: I was proud of
this MCC team for more than their third place finish.
Talented, yes. But more importantly, they had character.
They could have easily given up after the first day. That’s
when Bryant Self had a stomach virus and couldn’t finish.
The fact that he was able to get through that virus and
finish the tournament the way he did was remarkable by
itself. That same day, Joshua Ivy broke his driver.
They had even more bad luck that day when Lemaster shot an
uncharacteristically bad round. They ended Day 1 in 10th
place. They fought back every day after that to make up
seven spots and finish third.
Ivy, a Quitman native, known for his strong integrity and
grind-it-out golf game, provided the best example of the
character of this team as he walked off the 16th green. Ivy,
a freshman, is the kind of young man you can instantly tell
was reared by quality, good ‘ole down-home country parents.
He’s a “yes sir” and “no mam” with a southern drawl.
He completed three solid rounds in the 70s in the first
three days — a steady performance that really helped MCC
during the tournament.
But he struggled on Friday. And as he stood on the 17th tee,
Covich walked up to Ivy and informed him that Bryant Self
had posted a 78. That meant Ivy, who was already 7 over at
the time, could relax because his score wouldn’t be needed.
Ivy let out a long exhale, then stepped up to the tee and
hit a solid drive on 17. As the players made their way down
the fairway, Ivy turned back around and headed towards a
group of MCC supporters, which included former MCC Golf
Coach Lou Hart.
“How is everyone else doing, OK?” Ivy asked with a serious
voice.
“What about Dustin, is he still playing well?”
After he was updated on the scores, a wide grin emerged on
Ivy’s face. “Yes, that’s awesome,” he said, then clutching
his fist as he walked down the 17th fairway.
Even though he’d had a bad day knew his scored wouldn’t be
needed, he was happy for one simple reason: his teammates
did well, which is all that mattered for him. There was no
pity party for him. He didn’t sulk or pout.
That character, more than anything else, is what I’ll
remember about this MCC golf team. Nothing could have made
me more proud of Sean Covich and his MCC Eagles.
Fredie Carmichael is editor of The
Meridian Star. He also played golf for MCC between 1998-2000
and competed in the 2000 NJCAA National Tournament in
College Station, Texas. E-mail him at editor@themeridianstar.com.