I’m still not sure what I said. The only evidence I have was a clip of a quote from a 2016 LNP | LancasterOnline article.

I’m certain I was nervous, but I’m sure I was ecstatic. I never imagined a golfer of my caliber — or lack thereof — would ever be interviewed.

The one nugget I recall is former LNP sports reporter Kevin Freeman walking the practice green at Highlands of Donegal Golf Course, seeking me out. I had shot a 77 during the Lancaster-Lebanon League Section Two match and tied for low medalist for the first time.

Still, I didn’t feel it was worthy of interview. And maybe that’s why the moment is a blur.

What then-17-year-old me didn’t realize is nine years later, I’d be walking the same courses I played as a member of the Lampeter-Strasburg golf team. I’d run into coaches and people I had connected with nearly a decade ago. I’d be in Kevin’s shoes, once a week, interviewing athletes that shared the same passion I had.

There are no statistics to back me up, but there can’t be many reporters in the country that get to take a trip back in time. I mean in the sense of covering the sport they used to play, nonetheless in the same league.

A LOOK BACK: L-L’s best ready to duke it out for league golf title, district berths

There were times this fall when I got chills. When I covered the Section Three match at Meadia Heights, that’s when déjà vu really set in.

Meadia was L-S’s home track, but it’s also where I worked in the bag room for six years. I reconnected with my former boss and head golf professional, Scott Sklar, and caught up with my former teammate, Patrick Holmes, who currently commands the Pioneers assembly.

Later in the season, I saw another former boss, Pete Kowalinski, as I followed his sons, Conestoga Valley’s Andrew and Thomas Kowalinski. Now-retired coach Greg Minnich captained Solanco when I was at L-S, and his former athlete, Conner Sheehan, who I played against, now oversees Manheim Central.

Again, how many reporters have that attachment?

The other neat spin to this season’s golf coverage was following the events that I didn’t meet the standard for in high school. I was a two-time league championships qualifier and missed the District Three tournament cut line by a few strokes both my junior and senior years.

I had covered districts and states in my four years working in Carlisle, but a focus on L-L golfers this season was a first. I had a front-row seat to the endings of historic careers for Cedar Crest’s Dylan Ramsey and Warwick’s Piper Smith. I chronicled the rises of Cedar Crest freshman Bryn Brandt and Annville-Cleona freshman Ben Allwein.

L-L golf gave me so much this year just as it had when I was a scholastic athlete. But now, I’ve experienced it through both lenses — something I’m eternally grateful for and will continue to cherish.

In many instances, I attempted to reflect on my interview with Kevin. I don’t think I’ll ever remember everything I said, but I’ll always have a reminder anytime I step on an L-L course.

I was filled with appreciation when Kevin took the time to speak with me. I still am — now the one holding the recorder and asking the questions.

Seventeen-year-old me is still hanging around. I may not have known what words to say then, but I’m sure going to try my hardest to use the right ones now.


L-L League golf history isn't complete without Cedar Crest's Dylan Ramsey, Warwick's Piper Smith [column]


Lancaster Country Club caddie becomes 'entwined' with history, tying course record of 62


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