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How Julia Johnson Won Last Week's Magnolia Invitational

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A double bogey on the 17th hole threw Julia Johnson off her game at the Magnolia Invitational – but not for long. Photo by Petre Thomas/Ole Miss Athletics


It was on a golf cart ride heading back to the 18th tee box to start a playoff when Julia Johnson first felt it.
Moments earlier, she was a nervous wreck, but suddenly, a feeling of calm came over the freshman from St. Gabriel, Louisiana.
One hour earlier, the Ole Miss Rebel drained a birdie putt on the 15th hole to take a three-stroke lead with three holes left to play in the inaugural Magnolia Invitational. It looked like Johnson was home free, ready to wrap up a two-championship sweep for her team at its co-hosted tournament. But paired with her closest competitor–Memphis sophomore Abby Herrmann–Johnson was in for a wild finish.
On the 16th green, Herrmann sank a tough birdie putt to make it just a two-stroke lead with two to go. Then, the nerves came.
The final two holes at Old Waverly Golf Club are picturesque as they are perilous, wrapping around Lake Waverly into the shadow of the clubhouse. The 17th is a 170-yard par-3 with a small green that juts out into the lake, which lines the left side of the hole. Johnson landed her tee shot on the beach, leading to a double-bogey. Lead: gone.
“I’m one for the dramatics, aren’t I?” Johnson said after the match. “The 17th hole was bad. That’s when you look at the scorecard and go, `That’s a freshman, she’s nervous. She has two holes to play and is too far up.'”
Johnson approached the 18th tee box still kicking herself over her only double-bogey of the entire tournament. With just her ninth over-par hole of the tournament still in the back of her mind, Johnson’s tee shot took a hard left and splashed into Lake Waverly.
“The tee shot on 18, I let 17 get in my head,” she said. “That is on me. That was mental.”
But seconds later, the Memphis Tiger who recorded only seven bogeys all tournament found the very same water. As if cleansed by trips to the water hazard, the two calmly took their drops and hit their third strokes to within five feet of one another at the back of the green. There, they faced one of the toughest putts on the course–a sharp drop off of the shelf that cuts down the middle of the 18th green. Johnson and Herrmann both rose to the challenge, dropping it within a five feet of the cup before confidently finishing with matching bogeys.
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Julia Johnson with Ole Miss Women’s Golf Team head coach Kory Henkes at the Magnolia Invitational at Old Waverley Golf Club in West Point, MS. Photo by Petre Thomas/Ole Miss Athletics


Then came the hard part–waiting for what felt like an eternity for the field to finish and the playoff to begin. Fortunately, Johnson had everything she needed to make it through.
Exactly one year prior to the Rebels’ trip to Old Waverly for the Magnolia, Johnson was on her official visit to Ole Miss. Johnson, Conner Beth Ball and Macy Holliday toured the Rebel facilities together as recruits, envisioning their future and the future of Rebel Golf. The three eventually signed and officially became Rebels.
“I knew 100 percent that I was going to be a better golfer after I stepped foot on the Ole Miss campus,” Johnson said. “I know the quality of coaching I have. Our facilities are great. We have everything available to us to make us better golfers.”
They’ve been on campus less than three months, but those three months have brought countless intensive practices, not to mention early morning kickboxing and weightlifting sessions. It’s been tough work, but already the Rebels are seeing the fruits of their labors.
“I’ve worked harder than I ever thought I could,” Johnson said. “Coach Kory and Coach Drew have pushed us this year harder than I’ve ever been pushed, and I can tell the caliber of our game and the quality of our team has improved so much.”
The hard work led to Johnson being in contention for the first individual title by a freshman in a 54-hole event in school history. But when she got there, she needed some assistance.
About six holes through the second round, Johnson used a lifeline and called up a professional caddie: her head coach, Kory Henkes. Henkes has caddied professionally on the LPGA Tour for her college teammate at South Carolina, Kristy McPherson, and on the Web.com Tour for her brother, Kyle Thompson. And she’s now walked the course with two individual champions at the collegiate level.
“I need Coach Kory. She’s caddied on tour, so essentially she’s a professional caddie. She’s just so good at what she does,” Johnson said. “She keeps me calm. She keeps me in the moment. To have a coach you feel that comfortable around and to have a coach who is that strong is amazing.”
With Henkes’ guidance, Johnson filled the final 12 holes of her second round with two birdies, 10 pars and zero bogeys to take the lead heading into Round 3. The morning of the final 18 holes, Johnson came to her coach, wanting her to be with her every step of the way as she fought for her first collegiate championship. Henkes simply said, “I’m here.”
“Julia is such a fighter,” Henkes said. “It’s fun to walk with her. When she gets it in her mind that she’s going to do something, she does it. She’s extremely confident out there. That’s the key to playing good golf, and it’s a great quality that she has.”
Henkes helped Johnson fight her way into the tournament lead, but after pulling back-to-back tee shots to the left, and looking at another trip up the water-lined 18th hole, Johnson wasn’t feeling so confident.
Everyone let the freshman have some alone time in the tense moments between the end of her round and the beginning of the playoff. 
Assistant coach Drew Belt found Johnson sitting next to her golf cart, waiting for the signal to head back to the 18th tee. He didn’t give a famous rousing Coach Drew Speech. That wouldn’t work with this freshman–she needed some strategy. Belt explained mechanically why Johnson’s tee shots were going left, which helped clear the young golfer’s head.
“When I get off the course and I’m feeling something mechanically wrong with my swing, I pull Coach Drew over and within five minutes, I have it fixed,” Johnson said. “Coach Kory and Drew both have such huge strengths, and honestly that’s why I’m here today. I wouldn’t have won this tournament without the two of them. They’re both awesome, and I appreciate them both so much.”
After the talk with Belt, and with Henkes still at her side, Johnson headed back down the cart path to the 18th tee for the first playoff hole. At that moment, Johnson knew that she would win the Magnolia.
“When the playoff started and we were driving back to the 18th tee, I felt this weird sense of calm come over me,” Johnson recalled. “I just knew that the outcome was going to be what I wanted it to be.”
Johnson and Herrmann played to gutsy pars in the first playoff hole and headed back down the cart path again–and before long, Johnson’s feelings became reality. The Louisianan planted her second shot safely on the green, while Herrmann left hers in the rough short and to the left of the putting surface. The Memphis sophomore struggled to make it out of the rough, and with a win just two putts away, the Rebel stepped onto the green with a familiar pep in her step, ponytail bobbing, and no nervousness in sight. Johnson closed the door with a definitive par putt to secure the 21st individual title in program history and its eighth sweep of both the individual and team honors.
It was a crazy ride to arrive at that conclusion, but with a foundation laid, Johnson was up for the challenge.
“I knew where my game was. I knew that I’d be in good shape if I could roll a few putts in this week,” Johnson said. “I love Old Waverly. To be on a course that I’m familiar with, to be with great coaches, to feel good about my swing–it was all a perfect storm this week. It was awesome.”
Story courtesy of OleMissSports.com.
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