High School Sports
Furr, Johnson Added Women's Basketball Staff
FAYETTEVILLE – Arkansas women’s basketball head coach Kelsi Musick has hired assistant coaches Alex Furr and Brad Johnson to her staff. Furr and Johnson will join current assistants Lacey Goldwire and Nick Bradford, director of basketball operations Amber Shirey and video coordinator Evan Johnston on Musick’s staff. Furr joins the Razorbacks from SMU, where she […]

FAYETTEVILLE – Arkansas women’s basketball head coach Kelsi Musick has hired assistant coaches Alex Furr and Brad Johnson to her staff.
Furr and Johnson will join current assistants Lacey Goldwire and Nick Bradford, director of basketball operations Amber Shirey and video coordinator Evan Johnston on Musick’s staff.
Furr joins the Razorbacks from SMU, where she served as an assistant coach and the director of player development for the Mustangs since June of 2023. Prior to her time in Dallas, Furr served as the associate head coach for North Texas in 2022-2023. Furr went to UNT after three seasons as head coach at Panola College in Carthage, Texas, where she compiled a record of 50-29, led the Fillies to three straight double-digit win seasons and finished ranked No. 24 in the final NJCAA of the 2021-22 season. Furr was named to the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association 30 Under 30 in 2020.
Furr started her coaching career in 2016 as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator for New Mexico Junior College. She was named the 2018 WBCA JUCO Assistant Coach of the Year and the following year, the Thunderbirds finished as the NJCAA Tournament runner-up.
A native of Athens, Texas, Furr earned both her bachelor’s in community health (2014) and master’s in sports psychology (2016) degrees from Fresno State, where she was a five-year letterwinner and played in 133 games with 80 starts. Furr ranks in the Fresno State all-time top 10 in 3-pointers made and career free throw percentage.
While playing at Athens High School, Furr earned all-state recognition three years in a row, recorded 3,169 career points, and made 337 total three-pointers. She was a McDonald’s All-American nominee and earned Texas Association of Basketball Coaches “Miss Texas” in 2010.
Furr’s Coaching Experience
2016-19 New Mexico JC (Assistant Coach/Recruiting Coordinator)
2019-22 Panola College (Head Coach)
2022-23 North Texas (Associate Head Coach)
2023-25 SMU (Assistant Coach/Director of Player Development)
Brad Johnson, a longtime high school coach in Arkansas, will bring his basketball prowess to the Razorback bench and enter the college ranks for the first time. Johnson recently completed his 16th season as the Farmington High School girl’s head coach. Over the last three seasons, Johnson coached the Lady Cardinals to an impressive record of 105-3 and back-to-back-to-back state titles, including the program’s first 5A state championship in March.
Johnson has coached 26 Farmington players to the college level, including Arkansas’ Jenna Lawrence.
Overall, Johnson finished his high school coaching career with 419 wins, four state titles, eight conference titles and seven state finals appearances. The Dardanelle, Arkansas native previously coached at Plainview-Rover, Elkins, Dardanelle, Springdale Har-Ber and Gravette before taking the Farmington job in 2009.
Johnson received his undergraduate and graduate degrees from Arkansas Tech in physical education and health, and educational leadership, respectively. He and his wife, Amber, live in Farmington.
For more information on Arkansas women’s basketball, follow @RazorbackWBB and @coachkmusick on social media.
High School Sports
CIF
The CIF-SS playoffs continued Friday with first round baseball. D2: West Ranch 4, Palm Desert 3 D4: Thousand Oaks 5, La Quinta 1 D6: Shadow Hills 2, Arroyo Valley 1 D6: Rancho Mirage 7, Rancho Verde 2 Stay with KESQ News Channel 3 for continuing coverage of local high school sports. BE PART OF THE […]


The CIF-SS playoffs continued Friday with first round baseball.
- D2: West Ranch 4, Palm Desert 3
- D4: Thousand Oaks 5, La Quinta 1
- D6: Shadow Hills 2, Arroyo Valley 1
- D6: Rancho Mirage 7, Rancho Verde 2
Stay with KESQ News Channel 3 for continuing coverage of local high school sports.
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High School Sports
Spring turkey
WOMEN WITH TOM TURKEY PHOTO PROVIDED/AERIAL IMAGE OF MORMON RIDGE BY GARRY BRANDENBURG Spring wild turkey hunting ends Sunday, May 18 after a long run that began on April 7. Hunters in stealthy camouflage clothing, or inside pop-up blinds, waited patiently and called seductively to see if a tom turkey would come close. It worked […]


WOMEN WITH TOM TURKEY PHOTO PROVIDED/AERIAL IMAGE OF MORMON RIDGE BY GARRY BRANDENBURG
Spring wild turkey hunting ends Sunday, May 18 after a long run that began on April 7. Hunters in stealthy camouflage clothing, or inside pop-up blinds, waited patiently and called seductively to see if a tom turkey would come close. It worked over 14,000 times as the statewide count as of mid week was 14,123 registrations made into the Iowa DNR reporting system. Today’s featured turkey huntress is Melissa Ream, who shot her big tom on May 8. It hit the scale at 23 pounds, had one inch long spurs and a 10-inch long beard. The aerial image shows a portion of Ream’s hunting vicinity, Mormon Ridge, and the adjacent Arney Bend Wildlife Area across the Iowa River. Forest habitats are key components for turkeys to roost, nest and search for insects and other foods.
WILD TURKEYS are a huge game bird, one of the largest. Mature tom turkeys can weigh from 20 to 24 pounds, have a wingspan of 4.5 feet and stand just under 4 feet tall.
Flight speeds once up at full speed can be 55 miles per hour. They can run on the ground at 25 mph. Their eyesight is phenomenally acute to see things and pick up potential dangers from ground or avian predators. They are a native bird of North America.
They have been successfully brought back from very low numbers to a level now sufficient to allow a regulated harvest across the State of Iowa. Hunters in the year 2023 took 11,366.
In 2024 with more favorable weather, hunters registered 14,585. Now with 2025 almost at its end point this coming Sunday, the tally is currently at 14,123 (midweek). Final numbers will be forthcoming and will be very similar to 2024.
For Native Americans, wild turkeys were just one food source. Settlers new to the east coast soon learned the same thing — this big bird had a lot of meat on its frame.
What settlers did not know then was how easily it was going to be to over hunt this species. Of course at that time, the priority of survival was more important than what seemed to be inexhaustible wildlife.
Now with modern and scientifically based wildlife management well established, the species has been brought back from very low numbers to well over seven million now. Wildlife managers in cooperation with the National Wild Turkey Federation have helped trap and reintroduce turkeys to many former habitats.
There are six subspecies of wild turkey, all native to North America. Those names are Eastern, Rio Grande, Ocellated, Merriam’s, Osceola, and Gould’s. Iowa has the Eastern.
For Iowa hunters, counties with extensive forested habitats always produce the most. Top counties in 2025 are Clayton (560), Allamakee (555), and Jackson at 413. Warren County just south of Des Moines has recorded 342 toms so far.
Every Iowa county has wild turkeys, all depending upon habitat. Low-take counties include Osceola with 8, Pocahontas at 15 and Sac with 18.
Calhoun has just 4. Marshall County is in the mid pack range with 93. Our surrounding counties are Tama (180), Poweshiek (100), Jasper (151), Story (47), Hardin (104) and Grundy (14).
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An interesting series of wildlife stories can be found on the website titled The Venatic, a well read Outdoor Newsletter for all things North America. Following are just a few samples to absorb.
The first concerns Polar Bears, a big white bear that specializes in hunting seals and walrus in arctic environments of Norway to Siberia to Alaska to northern Canada to Greenland. Every circumpolar setting is where bear populations exist. Overall the populations are doing very well, contrary to activist propaganda.
Many countries allow subsistence hunting by arctic living native peoples. Such is the case for the Inuit community of Nunavut, the northernmost lands of northern Canada.
A subsistence hunt was underway and in full accord with regulations that allow a certain number of the big white bear to be killed. The Inuit conduct the bear hunt as one part of their cornerstone culture.
The bears provide food, clothing and income from the sale of hides and also for guided hunts. An annual quota has to be adhered to.
Just in northern Canada, this polar bear population is estimated at 16,000. A small quota of off-takes will not negatively impact that population.
Then this happened. “A pair of Turkish wildlife photographers found themselves with their feet firmly planted in their mouths”, said Ryan Wilby, editor of The Venatic newsletter. “The pair posted a boisterous and uniformed video criticizing the subsistence hunters. The pair became agitated that the legal hunt had messed with their so-called righteous plans, when they were told to vacate the area for safety reasons and to respect the ongoing subsistence hunt. The photographers were barred by local outfitters from approaching the ice floe where the hunt was taking place.”
The Turkish photographers were frustrated, so they posted a video condemning the hunt as unacceptable. The local Inuit community saw the action as a misguided action like many who ignorantly oppose something they know nothing about.
It outraged the Inuit, who called the stunt an attack on their way of life. Reluctantly, the Turkish pair took down their video post, but it was ultimately judged to be a failed attempt to say we are sorry.
According to Wilby, “the incident underscores a recurring challenge: the clash between external perceptions and legally-sanctioned hunting seasons, whether for Indigenous communities or the general public. Tourists often arrive with preconceived notions about wildlife and hunting, and thus misunderstandings happen. For the Inuit people, they have to live in a tough environment, they live a life that respects nature in all of its raw reality, and then to be told by outsiders, who do not live in the Arctic, that what the Inuit are doing is wrong, does not sit well. The Inuit will decide what works for them, not outsiders.”
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Lastly, this fish and game law enforcement story is also thanks to permission granted from The Venatic web site. The case comes from Ohio and is a great credit to two Wildlife Officers, Isaiah Gifford and Matt Roberts of the Ohio DNR.
These men were awarded the prestigious Pope and Young Club’s Wildlife Law Enforcement Officer Award at the recently completed convention held in Phoenix, Ariz. Here is a rundown of the case about a large antlered buck which was illegally taken, how the investigation unfolded, and the court findings for the guilty men.
The ordeal began when a poacher named C. J. Alexander, age 28, let greed conduct his actions. The deer was illegally taken in Clinton County, Ohio.
When online postings about the deer came to the attention of other hunters and ultimately conservation officers, a search for the truth began to unravel the story line. The investigation was complex.
In the end, Alexander was charged with 23 felony charges, including illegal hunting without permission, theft by deception, hunting without a license, and tampering with evidence. Additional misdemeanor charges included falsification and illegal sale of wildlife parts. An accomplice had several misdemeanor charges filed against him for his accompanying actions in this wildlife crime.
At the Pope and Young Club convention, a video was presented by the officers to summarize the lengthy investigation, crime scene documentation, and a host of online posting and cell phone conversations and texts that implicated criminal intent. Alexander pleaded guilty to 14 counts. His penalties included a 10 year hunting license suspension, five years of community control, and a restitution payment of $35,071.73 — the highest ever for a single deer in Ohio history.
According to The Venatic newsletter web site, Officers Gifford and Roberts’ meticulous investigative work was instrumental in bringing C.J. Alexander to justice. Their efforts were supported by public tips received through Ohio’s Turn in Poacher Hotline.
Officer Gifford is a 2023 graduate of the Wildlife Officer Training Academy after graduating from Pensacola Christian College in 2019 with a degree in criminal justice. Officer Roberts is a 2005 graduate of the Wildlife Officer Training Academy.
He graduated from Hooking College in 2001 with a degree in wildlife management, and then went on to obtain another degree in 2002 in forest management. He has worked for the Ohio DNR since 2003. The work these officers accomplished helps to emphasize the importance of ethical hunting and the respect for private property rights.
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A reminder to those youth age 12 or older who want to attend a Hunter Safety Class, the date is fast approaching. May 22 (6-9 p.m.) and May 24 (8 a.m. to 4 p.m.) are the times for the Marshall County classroom course. The sign up is online by going to GoOutdoorsIowa.com
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Garry Brandenburg is the retired director of the Marshall County Conservation Board. He is a graduate of Iowa State University with a BS degree in Fish & Wildlife Biology. Contact him at: P.O. Box 96 Albion, IA 50005
High School Sports
Sports Highlights from around the Permian Basin on May 16, 2025
High School Sports
Quincy's Parker and Fickle, Bronson's Calloway qualify for MHSAA State Track and Field finals
EAST JACKSON – Teams from across the region made the trip to East Jackson High School on May 16 looking both for team and individual postseason glory with the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA) Division 3 Regional 25 track and field meet. For athletes to qualify for the MHSAA Division 3 state finals, an […]

EAST JACKSON – Teams from across the region made the trip to East Jackson High School on May 16 looking both for team and individual postseason glory with the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA) Division 3 Regional 25 track and field meet.
For athletes to qualify for the MHSAA Division 3 state finals, an individual must finish in the top two of their respective events or meet a pre-determined time or distance for their chosen event.
In team standings the top two teams advance on to the MHSAA State Finals based on points earned throughout the meet. In the girls portion of Friday’s meet none of the three Branch County teams that traveled to East Jackson earned a spot in the state finals, however several individuals did reach that milestone. The team from Grass Lake won the regional girls title on Friday with a score of 84 points while the team from Lumen Christi took second with 64 points. The Quincy Orioles suffered a bit of heartbreak, missing the cut by a single point, finishing in a tie for third place with 63 points. The Orioles tied with Homer for third place in the event. Union City finished in a tie for eighth place with 37 points while Bronson finished in 16th place with 17 points.
Here is a rundown of each Branch County team and their regional effort.
Quincy Orioles
Brookelyn Parker, Jr. – The junior hurdling ace for the Orioles captured not one, but two gold medals on Friday, sweeping up in the hurdle events. Parker won the 100-meter hurdles in a time of 15.98 seconds, followed by a win in the 300 hurdles in a time of 47.38 seconds, punching her individual ticket to the MHSAA state finals for both events.
Ashlyn Fickle, Freshman – Fickle picked the right time to jump to a personal best, doing so on the big stage and earning a trip to the MHSAA state finals in the process as Fickle took third place in the high jump with a state qualifying jump of 5 feet, 2 inches.
The MHSAA presents regional medals for the top eight places in each event. Earning a medal for their effort at the regional meet for Quincy was Elizabeth Longardner, seventh place in the 200; Elizabeth Craig, fourth place in the 400; Lainey Yearling, fifth place in the 3,200; the 800 relay team of Craig, Kora Timmons, Abby Tinervia, and Cheyenne Marske, eighth place; Hallie Jones, third place in the shot put; Addison Hasten, fourth place in the shot put and fourth place in the discus; Brooke McVicker, third place in the pole vault; and Abby Tinervia, sixth place in the long jump.Bronson VikingsAubree Calloway, Sr. – Calloway is the rare athlete who seems to be good no matter what she does. The Spring Arbor-bound senior proved that on Friday, earning herself a spot at the MHSAA state finals in her first year running track with a gold medal win in the high jump with a personal best jump of 5 feet, 3 inches.Also earning a top eight finish for Bronson was Miriam Sanchez, third place in the 800 and the 1,600-relay team of Itzel Albarran, Calloway, Alonna Goodsell, and Sanchez, eighth place.Union City ChargersSkyler Fraley, Sr. – Fraley qualified for the state finals in the 3,200-meter run, finishing in third place in a state qualifying time of 12 minutes, 03.62 seconds. Fraley, who broke the long-standing 3,200 meter school record last week in a win, broke her own record in her state qualifying run this week.More: Track: Coldwater girls wrap up win at Berrien Springs, boys finish fourth
Earning a medal with a top eight finish for Union City was Attica Hoath, sixth place in the 200; Alli Gautsche, fourth place in the 3,200; Alaina Labar, sixth place in the 100 hurdles; Kylie Creech, third place in the 300 hurdles and sixth place in the pole vault; the 400 relay team of Labar, Emme Eyre, Katie Johnson, and Hoath, eighth place; the 800 relay team of Johnson, Eyre, Addison Miller, and Hoath, fifth place; the 3,200 relay team of Alissa Skirka, Gautsche, Parker Williams, and Fraley, fourth place; and Addison Miller, seventh place in the pole vault.
All three teams will now look to finish out their team season on Wednesday when they travel to Quincy High School for the Big 8 conference championship. Union City enters the meet with an undefeated dual meet record and looks to wrap up their second straight conference crown.
For all things Branch County track and field stay tuned to The Daily Reporter at www.thedailyreporter.com or follow The Daily Reporter on all social media sites. For any questions or comments about this article or coverage in general please email sports editor Troy Tennyson at ttennyson@thedailyreporter.com.
High School Sports
Prep highlights
Addy Harmier belted three home runs as the Skyview softball team made quick work of both Mount Rainier and Puyallup at the 4A bi-district tournament in Kent, clinching a state berth with two lopsided wins. Harmier went 2 for 3 with a double, home run and four RBI in a 17-2 win over Mount Rainier […]


Addy Harmier belted three home runs as the Skyview softball team made quick work of both Mount Rainier and Puyallup at the 4A bi-district tournament in Kent, clinching a state berth with two lopsided wins.
Harmier went 2 for 3 with a double, home run and four RBI in a 17-2 win over Mount Rainier that lasted four innings.
Layla Royle went 3 for 3 with a double and four RBI.
Harmier was 2 for 3 with two home runs and four RBI in a 13-0 win over Puyallup in the quarterfinals that lasted 4.5 innings.
Maddie Milhorn and Emma Kauffman also hit home runs, and Royle was 2 for 3 with a double and an RBI.
Milhorn pitched six shutout innings in the two wins, striking out 13.
Skyview will face Graham Kapowsin in the semifinals at 12:30 p.m. Saturday.
KENTRIDGE 2, BATTLE GROUND 1 — The Tigers saw their season come to end after Kentridge scored twice in the bottom of the seventh of a loser-out game.
Candice Torgerson doubled in the fifth inning and came around to score on an error.
That looked like all the Tigers might need as Mylee Burrows was one out away from a shutout.
But the Chargers tied the game on a triple and an error.
The next batter was hit by a pitch, then Kentridge won the game on an RBI double.
ROGERS-PUYALLUP 7, BATTLE GROUND 0 — Paige Vuylsteke got the only hit for the Tigers in a first-round loss.
TAHOMA 12, UNION 8 — Madison Wirth went 3 for 4 with two RBI as the Titans were unable to recover from a nine-run third inning by Tahoma.
Down 10-3 after three innings, Union rallied within in 10-7 in the sixth but got no closer.
Payton Millholin went 2 for 4 with a double and two RBI, Sophia Rickard was 2 for 3 with a double and an RBI; and Lucille Campbell was 2 for 3 with an RBI.
SUMNER 6, UNION 1 — Michaela Dupree went 2 for 3 as the Titans managed only three hits in an elimination game.
2A district
TUMWATER 3, MARK MORRIS 0 — The Monarchs suffered their first loss of the season when Ella Ferguson of Tumwater held them to a one-hit shutout in the championship game of the 2A district tournament in Chehalis.
Megan Fugelberg got the lone hit for Mark Morris. Makenzie Henthorn allowed three runs on six hits with seven strikeouts.
WOODLAND 6, W.F. WEST 2 — Addi Christensen hit a home run and pitched seven solid innings as the Beavers clinched their first trip to the 2A state tournament since winning the state title in 2019.
Woodland took 2-1 lead into the bottom of the third when Christensen hit a one-out home run to make it a 3-1 lead. The Beavers then went on to load the bases, adding two more runs on a walk and dropped third strike.
Christensen made that lead stand up, striking out six in the win.
Emma Barrow went 2 for 2 with an RBI, and Madison Walker, Ainsleigh Utter and Brynn Skelton added doubles.
ABERDEEN 4, RIDGEFIELD 0 — The Spudders got their share of baserunners of Lilly Camp, but Ridgefield could not find the clutch hit to drive in any runs in an elimination game.
Charlie Harris was 4 for 4 for Ridgefield, and Bailey Wolski added a double.
RIDGEFIELD 25, COLUMBIA RIVER 7 — Harris was 5 for 6 with a triple, home run and four RBI as the Spudders won a loser-out game against Rapids in a game that was resumed after being called for darkness on Thursday.
Wolski was 2 for 4 with two doubles and four RBI, Madeline Bruguier was 4 for 6 with two RBI and Josslyn Casteel was 3 for 5 with two doubles and five RBI.
Ridgefield took a 9-2 lead in the top of the fifth. River rallied to get with 9-6, before the Spudders put the game on ice with a 16-run seventh inning.
Brooklyn Vickery was 2 for 3 witeh a double, home run and two RBI for River.
1A baseball
MONTESANO 4, KING’S WAY CHRISTIAN 0 — The Knights got shutout on three hits in a winner-to-state game of the 1A district tournament.
King’s Way Christian will get another shot at advance to state in a winner-to-state/loser-out game against Tenino at 4 p.m. Saturday at Mountain View High School.
Adam Klotzer allowed just one earned run over six innings for the Knights.
CASTLE ROCK 5, TENINO 3 — The Rockets scored three runs in the top of the seventh to rally past Tenino and clinch a berth to the 1A state playoffs.
Tenino took a 3-2 lead into the seventh. But Stuart Teter’s RBI double tied the game at 3-3. Luke Farland delivered a two-out, two-run double to put the Rockets ahead.
Brady Hamer pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh to seal the win.
Girls tennis
Jenny Serebriakova won the singles title and Emma Lungwitz and Sydney Dreves won the doubles crown as the Columbia River girls tennis team won its seventh consecutive district team at the 2A district tournament in Olympia.
Serebriakova, a sophomore, beat Sophie Knutson of Aberdeen in the singles finals 6-2, 6-0. Emme MacArthur of Mark Morris also clinched a state tournament berth.
Lungwitz and Dreves beat Alice Anderson and Lyle Khlee of R.A. Long to claim the double title 6-0, 6-2.
Riley Schoonmaker and Katie Dumas of Columbia River also secured a state berth, along with Abby Vance and Ella Norman of Ridgefied.
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