Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in
Shopping cart 0
Cart

Search

Search

Home The Columbian-Progress

Domain menu for Columbianprogress (main)

  • Home
    • Newsletter Email Sign Up
    • FAQ
    • Our Staff
    • About Us
    • Notifications
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our Awards
    • Contact Us
    • Rack Locations
    • Wedding Policy
    • Privacy Policy
  • Post
    • Post Dashboard
    • Payment Settings
    • Leaderboard
  • Top Stories
  • Most Recent
  • Most Read
  • Local News
  • State
  • National
  • More News
    • Features
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyles
    • Crime
    • Politics
    • Associated Press
    • Press Releases
    • Public Notices
    • Submit News
    • Documents
    • Videos
  • Sports
  • E-Edition
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Editorials
    • Cartoons
    • Letters
    • Polls
    • Comments
    • My Two Cents
    • Submit Letter
    • Submit My Two Cents
  • Obituaries
  • Social
    • Weddings/Engagements
    • Anniversaries
    • Births
    • Submit Wedding
    • Submit Engagement
    • Submit Anniversary
    • Submit Birth
    • Submit School News
  • Submit News
  • Schools
  • Comics
  • Games
  • Communities
  • Subscribe
  • Advertising
  • Archives
  • Home
    • Newsletter Email Sign Up
    • FAQ
    • Our Staff
    • About Us
    • Notifications
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our Awards
    • Contact Us
    • Rack Locations
    • Wedding Policy
    • Privacy Policy
  • Post
    • Post Dashboard
    • Payment Settings
    • Leaderboard
  • Top Stories
  • Most Recent
  • Most Read
    • Most Read This Week
    • Most Read This Month
    • Most Read This Year
    • Most Read All Time
  • Local News
  • State
    • Other State Websites
    • Most Read Statewide
    • Most Recent State News
  • National
  • More News
    • Features
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyles
    • Crime
    • Politics
    • Associated Press
    • Press Releases
    • Public Notices
    • Submit News
    • Documents
    • Videos
  • Sports
    • Local Sports
    • State Sports
  • E-Edition
    • Newspaper E-Edition
    • Magazine E-Edition
    • Special Section E-Editions
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Editorials
    • Cartoons
    • Letters
    • Polls
    • Comments
    • My Two Cents
    • Submit Letter
    • Submit My Two Cents
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Social
    • Weddings/Engagements
    • Anniversaries
    • Births
    • Submit Wedding
    • Submit Engagement
    • Submit Anniversary
    • Submit Birth
    • Submit School News
  • Submit News
    • Submit Obituary
    • Submit Wedding
    • Submit Engagement
    • Submit Birth
    • Submit Anniversary
    • Submit News
    • Submit School News
    • Submit Letter
  • Schools
  • Comics
  • Games
  • Communities
  • Subscribe
  • Advertising
    • How to Advertise
    • Classifieds
    • Ad Staff
    • Pay Bill
    • Ad Rates
  • Archives

Ole Miss shoots — literally — for state’s first Division I team national crown

By Rick Cleveland - Mississippi Today , READ MORE > 1,095 Reads
On Thu, 03/04/2021 - 2:04 PM

Below is a sports column from Rick Cleveland:

Stanford has won 126 NCAA Division I team national championships, the most of all colleges and universities. UCLA has won 118. Among SEC schools, Arkansas has won the most with 47, followed by Georgia with 33.

No Mississippi team has ever won one — not a D-I team championship. Delta State has won NCAA Division II and AIAW national championships. Ole Miss, State and Southern Miss athletes have won individual titles. But there have been no team championships at the highest NCAA level. That could change next week in Columbus, Ohio, and you’d probably never guess in what sport.

Rifle.

Ole Miss will go into next weekend’s NCAA Rifle Championships as the No. 2 ranked team nationally and with a legitimate chance to win the national crown. Here’s something else you probably did not know: The Ole Miss team is made up entirely of women and the head coach is a woman.

They compete against men.

NCAA rifle is a coed sport. Women compete with — and against — men. In the case of the Ole Miss Rebels, they more than hold their own. These ladies can shoot. They have defeated both Army and Navy, which might give you pause until you realize how proficient these Ole Miss women are at what they do.

Marsha Beasley, the head coach, can tell you all about it. Although no Mississippi team has ever won a national championship, Beasley has coached eight national championship teams at West Virginia, which was a national rifle powerhouse back before Ole Miss even had a rifle program.

Says Beasley of the Rebels’ national championship hopes, “Certainly, we have put up scores this season that could win a championship on any given day.”

We will get to that. But first, we should get into a little Ole Miss rifle history here.

The program was born in 1996 back when Pete Boone was the school’s athletic director and the Southeastern Conference was determined to improve its gender equity standing. The SEC mandated that each member school offer two more women’s sports teams than men’s in an effort to alleviate football’s effect on scholarship totals for men and women. At the time, Ole Miss offered scholarships in eight men’s sports and seven women’s sports. Boone did not want to drop a men’s sport so that meant adding three women’s sports. Ole Miss added softball, soccer and rifle, designating the rifle team as a women’s sport. Of the three, rifle was by far the least expensive.

Boone will tell you he never could have imagined what Ole Miss rifle would become, which is a national power. Says Boone, retired and living in Oxford, “It has been amazing to watch.”

If you didn’t know any better — and I didn’t — you would think that the Magnolia State might be a hotbed of rifle shooting prospects. After all, many young Mississippians — boys and girls — grow up shooting at deer, squirrels, doves and ducks. But the sport of rifle is a different kind of shooting, at stationary targets from different positions with both air rifles and smallbore (.22 calibre) rifles.

Although the Ole Miss rifle squad has included a sprinkling of Mississippi natives in the past, the current roster has none from anywhere near the state. Young ladies from New York, Oregon, Minnesota, Illinois, Maryland, Delaware, Texas and Connecticut dot the roster — and there is a freshman star, Lea Horvath, all the way from Hungary. Horvath, part of Hungary’s junior national team, made program history in January, shooting a perfect score in air rifle competition at West Virginia. In so doing, Horvath became only the 12th person in NCAA history to achieve the feat.

Ole Miss rifle recruiting has become international and Beasley credits her assistant coach Jean-Pierre Lucas, a former rifle All American for her at West Virginia, for much of that. Lucas, who competes himself internationally, has upgraded the Ole Miss talent level. Says Lucas, “We’re flat out recruiting the best team we can no matter where they are from.”

And here’s the deal: The Ole Miss rifle program has reached a point where sometimes the student-athletes recruit the school. That was the case with redshirt junior Jillian Zakrzeski from Constantia, N.Y., who reached out to Beasley.

“She took a chance on me,” Zakrzeski says of Beasley. “I walked on and I am grateful for that.”

As is the case with several on the team, Zakrzeski is an honor student. She majors in criminal justice and is exceedingly well-rounded, having competed in rifle, track and field, lacrosse and soccer, as well as ballet in high school.

As all the Rebels, she works at it. The NCAA allows for 20 hours a week of organized practice time. Beasley and Lucas make certain they use all of it. Not only do the shooters practice shooting, they spend much of their 20 hours in strength training, cardio work and yoga to improve their considerable skills. As is the case in all sports, excellence didn’t just happen. Yes, there’s innate skill involved, but they work hard.

Says Beasley, “I think what we are proudest of is how much better our athletes have gotten since they have been here.”

Ole Miss is one of eight schools that qualified for the NCAA team championships. Air Force, Alaska-Fairbanks, Kentucky, Memphis, Nebraska and defending national champ TCU are the others. Of the eight, Nebraska, TCU and Ole Miss are the three that compete with all-female squads.

Yes, there will be pressure — and plenty of it.

“Every athlete has to deal with the pressure,” Zakrzeski says. “You have to just focus, treat it as you would any other match. You can’t treat it like it’s the Holy Grail.”

Perhaps not, even if — where Mississippi and NCAA Division I championships are concerned — the Holy Grail seems a perfect metaphor.

-- Article credit to Rick Cleveland of Mississippi Today --

‹ PreviousNext ›

Most Recent

Mississippi lawmakers get big budget assist from feds

Below is a political analysis column by Bobby Harrison of Mississippi Today:

Mississippi Covid-19 Update : April 12, 2021
Secretary of State Watson faces criticism for saying ‘woke, uninformed’ college students shouldn’t vote
Hospital Association backs Mississippi Medicaid expansion ballot initiative
McRAE: Financial Education Month: The debt dilemma
SENATOR WICKER: Coca-Cola, MLB Spreading Lies

Most Read News Article

  • Week
  • Month
  • Year
  • All Time

Secretary of State Watson faces criticism for saying ‘woke, uninformed’ college students shouldn’t vote

Mississippi Secretary of State Michael Watson has drawn criticism and national attention this week… READ MORE

Does college hoops get any better? How could it? Ben Howland, Kermit Davis agree.
Court of Appeals Decisions - April 06, 2021
New Summit School operators allegedly fleeced the Mississippi Department of Education out of more than $2 million from 2017 to 2020 using a program that serves hospitalized children. They had been charging the program for over a decade.
Lawmakers pass bills that allow counties to donate taxpayer funds to non-profit organizations
SALTER: VMT tax proposal would penalize rural states without substantial public transportation

Vaccine-resistant COVID-19 strain detected in Mississippi

A more infectious and vaccine-resistant variant strain of COVID-19 was detected in Mississippi on… READ MORE

Mississippi increases monthly welfare check for first time since 1999
Secretary of State Watson faces criticism for saying ‘woke, uninformed’ college students shouldn’t vote
As we move to the Final Four, let’s look at obvious NCAA selection bias
Wicker, Hyde-Smith Cosponsor Legislation to Honor Emmett Till’s Legacy
State Department of Health still taking comments on proposed telehealth regulations

COVID-19 hits Columbia schools

Columbia city schools have been in session for a little more than a week and already are dealing… READ MORE

Marion County starting to mask up
CHS catcher signs with Mississippi Delta CC
Shooting leave one man dead
Friday Night Lights: West tops Columbia in OT for county title
What is Mississippi getting for $350 million a year in workforce development? Leaders vow to find out

Board smart on sales tax

For too long the state and federal governments have either cut spending to local governments or… READ MORE

Aldermen make school board pick
Town hall meeting set to discuss drugs, addiction
Senate candidates enter stretch run
Rubbish pit relocation discussions continue
Board gives superintendent high marks

Social

New Summit School operators allegedly fleeced the Mississippi Department of Education out of more than $2 million from 2017 to 2020 using a program that serves hospitalized children. They had been charging the program for over a decade.

New Summit School operators allegedly fleeced the Mississippi Department of Education out of more… READ MORE

How public education fared during the 2021 legislative session
MDE: Legislature Passes Teacher Pay Raise, Increases Funds for State Board of Education Priorities
Parents of special needs students worry about New Summit School’s future after owner’s arrest
Stimulus packages offer big boost for Mississippi parents in need of child care
Day cares, education groups get another $3.5M in emergency education funds

Sports

Brian Dozier will be at home on Opening Day and loves it

Major League Baseball’s opening day is set for Thursday. All 30 big league teams will play, but for… READ MORE

Brian Dozier will be at home on Opening Day and loves it
In a season of baseball excellence, we should recall the ‘Willie Ball’
Does college hoops get any better? How could it? Ben Howland, Kermit Davis agree.
As we move to the Final Four, let’s look at obvious NCAA selection bias
Brian Dozier will be at home on Opening Day and loves it

Obituaries

No bond in double murder

Justice Court Judge Brandon Rowell denied bond for John Henry Wells, who is accused of murdering… READ MORE

Obituaries: Beverly Russell Vick
Obituaries: Carol Ann Vincent
Obituaries: Charles Dennis Head Sr.
Obituaries: David Lewis Hupp
Obituaries: Luther Fred "Luke" Johnson IV

cop_eEdition_button_ad_group

Sign Up for Notifications of Local Breaking News

Start E-mail NotificationsStop E-mail NotificationsStart Mobile NotificationsStop Mobile Notifications

cop_subscription_sidebar

Opinion:

There’s sharing and then there’s sharing

A few weeks ago, I saw something on social media that made my day. Yes, it was on social media. Any… READ MORE

A hobby can be the perfect prescription for sanity
What is SO hard about simply moving over?
Realizing there is more to people than seen
Numbers: the greatest all-time mystery
Can we just cancel ‘cancel culture?’

Weddings and Engagements

Cartoon Button

Comic Button

COMPANY COMMUNITY ADVERTISE E-EDITIONS MORE NEWS
Contact Community Calendar Subscribe Newspaper Archive Cartoons
FAQ/Help Obituaries Ad Rates Newspaper E-Edition Columns
Our History Engagements/Weddings Ad Staff Special Section Editorials
Our Staff Most Read My Account   Features
Statewide Most Recent Rack Locations    

Click on the city name to visit its website.

ACKERMAN  •  CARROLLTON  •  CHARLESTON  •  CLARKSDALE  •  COLUMBIA  •  DUMAS(Ark.)  •  EUPORA  •  FOREST  • 

FRANKLINTON(La.)  • GREENVILLE  •  GREENWOOD  •  GRENADA  •  HATTIESBURG  •  JACKSON  •  KOSCIUSKO  •  INDIANOLA  • 

LOUISVILLE  • MAGEE  • MENDENHALL  •  McCOMB  •  NEWTON  •  PETAL  •  QUITMAN  •  SENATOBIA  •  TALLULAH(La.)  •  WINONA  •  YAZOO CITY


Copyright 2020 - The Columbian-Progress | Privacy Statement | Help | Terms of Service

The Columbian-Progress - 318 Second St.- Columbia, MS 39429 - (601)-736-2611

Emmerich Newspapers proud to serve your local communities.

Thank you for visiting our website.