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HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP

When two girls tennis teams with winning records match up, you expect a real battle. That is exactly what happened when Mashpee took on Sandwich on Monday. The Falcons (7-2) came away with a 3-2 win over the Blue Knights (5-4) for their second straight victory. The Falcons won all three singles matches to seal […]

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HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP


When two girls tennis teams with winning records match up, you expect a real battle.

That is exactly what happened when Mashpee took on Sandwich on Monday.

The Falcons (7-2) came away with a 3-2 win over the Blue Knights (5-4) for their second straight victory.

The Falcons won all three singles matches to seal the win. At first singles, Mashpee’s Mariele Henley beat Senja Kravitz (6-2, 6-0). At second singles, Mashpee’s Hannah Rogers beat Cora Tedeschi (6-3, 6-2). At third singles, Mashpee’s Esme Milde beat Tenley Rothera (6-0, 6-0).

At first doubles, Sandwich’s Sadie Clarkin and Casey Pestelli beat Hayden Shvonski and Emily Doolan (6-4, 6-3). At second doubles, Sandwich’s Lauren Meyer and Izzie Bar beat Paige Shvonski and Addison Wood (6-3, 6-1).

Also in high school sports action:

Girls Tennis 

Bourne 4, Seekonk 1: The Canalmen (2-6) won for the second time in their last four matches.

At second singles, Bourne’s McKinley Wenzel beat Julia Tortolani (6-7 (7-5), 6-1, 6-2). At third singles, Bourne’s Zoe Noonan beat Olivia Escaler (6-0, 6-1).

At first doubles, Bourne’s Lily Russell and Sofia Halunen beat Lyla Owens and Grace Baldassi (6-2, 6-2). At second doubles, Bourne’s Addie Dion and Ella Swierkowski beat Abigail Visnick and Chloe Machado (6-1, 6-2).

Monomoy 4, Nantucket 1: The Sharks (6-2) topped the Whalers (3-3) for their fourth win in a row.

At first singles, Monomoy’s Hanadi Rezk defeated Elis Vieth (6-3, 6-3). At second singles, Monomoy’s Ella Cutter beat Viki Bozinkova (7-5, 6-3). At third singles, Monomoy’s Darcy Addison beat Vicki Todroya (6-3, 8-6). At second doubles, Monomoy’s Lauren La Salva and Olivia Rezk beat Gabby Fee and Press Penkoya (6-2, 6-1).

At first doubles, Nantucket’s Sara Dusseault and Sutton LeBreent beat Cecelia Hand and Madison Mahfouz (4-6, 7-3).

St. John Paul II 5, Falmouth 0: The Lions (10-1) topped the Clippers (3-4) for their 10th straight win.

For the Lions, at first singles, Lily Walker won (6-3, 2-6, 11-9). At second singles, Bella Scioletti won (6-0, 6-3). At third singles, Grace Walker won (6-0, 6-0).

At first doubles, Ava Cai and Kayla Katziff won (4-6, 6-1, 12-10). At second doubles, Joey Duhamel and Emily Desruisseaux won (6-1, 6-2).

Boys Tennis

Sandwich 4, Mashpee 1: The Blue Knights (6-3) topped the Falcons (3-5) for their fifth straight win. In first singles, Sandwich’s Andrew Emmel beat Colin Burdge (6-2, 6-3). At third singles, Sandwich’s Joey La Scola beat Liam Assad (6-2, 6-2).

At first doubles, Sandwich’s Kallen Kestenbaum and Finn Wheldon beat Colby Rogers and Cam Hughes (6-1, 6-2). At second doubles, Sandwich’s Liam McLaughlin and Oakley Guly beat Matt Duvall and Coti Wieden (6-2, 6-1).

At second singles, Mashpee’s James Benners beat Quinn Johnston (6-3, 6-0).

Bourne 3, Seekonk 2: The Canalmen (4-5) won their second out of their last three matches.

Falmouth 5, St. John Paul II 0: The Clippers (6-1) topped the Lions (0-7) for their second straight win.

Baseball

Old Rochester 10, Bourne 4: The Canalmen (1-9) lost their ninth straight. Bourne scratched out four hits from Luca Finton, Ronan Kelly, Griffin Kelly, and Tucker Muldoon. Cam Polczwartek pitched strong to start, allowing four earned runs. Aiden Sufretti, pitched three innings, with one earned run, was strong in relief.

Sandwich 10, Mashpee 0: The Blue Knights (4-5) topped the Falcons (1-3) for their third win in their last four games.

Blue Knights pitcher Matt Taylor struck out eight batters, and added a 2-for-4 with two RBIs day at the plate. Joe Coughlan went 1-for-3 with an RBI and a double. James Niemiec went 1-for-2. First baseman Cotter Bolton made good plays defensively.

St. John Paul II 30, Sturgis 0: The Lions (9-0) stayed perfect with a win over the Storm (0-4). For the Lions, Brian Mancinelli went 4-for-4 with four runs, 10 RBIs, and one double. Brandon Gomes went 3-for-5 with two runs and five RBIs. Colin Buckley had four runs, four RBIs, and one double. Drew Richards pitched a no-hitter through four innings, with five strikeouts.

Upper Cape 11, Bristol Aggie 0 (5 inn.): The Rams (5-2) won for the third time in their last four games. Tyler Weston and Brady Sprague combined on a one-hitter. Patrick Acord had four hits, a walk, and two runs scored, while Mitchell Kirkland had a three-run, inside-the-park home run. Asher Graff, Matt Niemiec, Logan Ewell, and Jake Ewing each had hits.

Old Colony 28, Cape Tech 0: The Crusaders (1-3) lost their third straight.

Softball 

Upper Cape 25, Bristol Aggie 10: The Rams (5-2) won with a big day at the plate. Kaiya Thomas went 4-for-5 with five runs, six RBIs, one triple, and one double. Lucy Pesta went 3-for-5 with two runs scored, and four RBIs. Jaelynn Harraden went 1-for-3 with three runs, three RBIs, three walks, and one double.

Old Rochester 13, Bourne 1: The Canalmen (0-11) remained winless. Michaela Muldoon went 2-for-3, while Jaylyn Bullock was 1-for-2 with an RBI for Bourne.

Old Colony 18, Cape Tech 0: The Crusaders (1-2) lost their second straight.

Boys Lacrosse

Sandwich 15, Hull 6: The Blue Knights (6-3) won their fourth in a row.

Cole Rodgers (five goals, three assists), Reece MacKinnon (two goals, and dominated face-offs), Tucker Carline (two goals), Michael Pitta (two goals), Kurt Moniz (one goal, one assist), Luke Rodgers (one goal, one assist), and Nick Pearce (one goal) paced the offense.

Than Hunt made five saves in a first-half shutout (13-0 at the half). Liam Hallett also made five saves.

Blue Hills 8, Cape Tech 7: The Crusaders (1-8) fell for their second straight defeat.

Cohasset 18, Mashpee 1: The Falcons (5-5) lost their second in their last three games.

Girls Lacrosse 

Falmouth Academy 13, Sturgis West 6: The Mariners (2-4) beat the Navigators (1-7) for their second win in a row.

For the Navigators, Cora McDade (three goals), Maeve Malloy (three goals), and Ceci O’Connor (25 saves and one assist) played well.

Bristol Plymouth 10, Upper Cape 7: The Rams (2-6) lost their third in a row.

Nantucket 17, Dennis-Yarmouth 4: The Whalers (4-1) beat the Dolphins (5-4) for their second straight victory.

Girls Golf

Monomoy 3.5, Martha’s Vineyard 2.5: The Sharks (6-0) topped the Vineyarders (0-2) to stay perfect.

Monomoy’s Fiona Moore beat Allie Branca, 5-4. Monomoy’s Gianna LaRocco beat Laila Brance, 1-up. Monomoy’s Georgia Storey beat Alyssa Viera, 4 and 3.

Monomoy’s Ava Larocco and Piper Blau split their match.

Martha’s Vineyard’s Jocie Smith beat Monomoy’s Emily Layton, 3-2. Martha’s Vineyard’s Callie O’Teri beat Ashley Anderson, 1-down.

Adam Kurkjian covers high school sports for the Cape Cod Times. You can contact him at akurkjian@gannett.com and follow him on X at @AdamKurkjian.

Thanks to our subscribers, who help make this coverage possible. If you are not a subscriber, please consider supporting quality local journalism with a Cape Cod Times subscription. Here are our subscription plans.

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High School Sports

LIKE KINGS! Kingwood wins first Texas high school baseball championship in 20 years

Two of the top high school baseball teams in the country will meet Saturday afternoon with a UIL Class 6A state championship on the line. In the first year of the UIL using split divisions in Classes 2A-6A, Tomball, the defending 6A champion, takes on Humble Kingwood for the Division II crown. First pitch is […]

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LIKE KINGS! Kingwood wins first Texas high school baseball championship in 20 years

Two of the top high school baseball teams in the country will meet Saturday afternoon with a UIL Class 6A state championship on the line.

In the first year of the UIL using split divisions in Classes 2A-6A, Tomball, the defending 6A champion, takes on Humble Kingwood for the Division II crown.

First pitch is slated for noon at Dell Diamond in Round Rock.

Tomball (34-6-1) has played its way into the state final with 13 straight wins. The Cougars, ranked No. 24 in the nation by High School On SI and inside the national top 25 all year, are a perfect 11-0 in the playoffs. They’ve outscored opponents 79-8 in that stretch behind a deep and balanced roster led by juniors Karson Reeder (.275 average, 12-1 on the mound) – the winning pitcher in the 2024 championship as a sophomore and the likely starter again on Saturday – CJ Sampson (.332 / 12-2) and their batterymate, the aptly named Catcher Hopkins (.389).

This marks Tomball’s fourth appearance in the state tournament and the program is trying to win its fourth championship. The Cougars swept through the playoffs with convincing series wins over Langham Creek, Willis, Tyler Legacy, Cypress Woods and Lewisville Marcus after opening with a 7-0 shutout of Magnolia West.

Kingwood (38-4) brings just as much firepower into the weekend. The Mustangs opened 2025 with a 16-game win streak and pieced together another 16-game run that stretched through the end of the regular season and deep into the playoffs. They have also gotten national love, ranking as high as No. 9 in the latest version of High School on SI’s final in-season national rankings and have won 10 of 11 in the postseason.

Kingwood had to battle to get here. The Mustangs swept their first four playoff rounds, then outlasted Dripping Springs in a gritty three-game semifinal series. They closed it out in nine innings with a 6-5 win in Game 3. Senior standouts Caden Callaway (.382), Brian Schumacher (.330) and Braden Fuentes (.333) and junior Graham Charboneau (.395) lead a lineup full of veterans, and the pitching staff is anchored by senior Ben Mayorga (10-2), junior Will Fiedler (7-0) and sophomore Brock Hill (10-1).

Follow High School on SI – Texas for full coverage of all the UIL state championship games from Round Rock, including live updates from Saturday’s 6A final between Tomball and Kingwood.

Lineups

Kingwood

Caden Callaway, SS; Brian Schumacher, CF; Graham Charboneau, RF; Braden Fuentes, 1B; Nick Spetter, 3B; Joshua York, DH; Blake Risko, C; Evan Morris, LF; Bryce Baker, 2B; Ben Mayorga, P.

Tomball

Catcher Hopkins, C; CJ Sampson, 3B; Karson Reeder, P; Brycen Romberg, 2B; Brady Burrow, LF; Harper Gates, SS; Nolan Rush, DH; Cooper Nansen, CF; Gehrig Heckathorn, RF; Pierson Jackson, 1B.

The start of this game is delayed due to the Class 1A championship running a bit long. Player introductionas are just beginning.

Top 1: Kingwood 0, Tomball 0

Karson Reeder opened the game with a fastball at 92 mph, but also a four-pitch walk. Kingwood’s Caden Callaway reaches.

Reeder appeared to have Callaway picked off at first, but the first base umpire jumps in and waves it off. He says Reeder balked and awards second to Callaway. Tomball coach Doug Rush did not agree and came out to argue.

BIG PLAY! Catcher Hopkins caught a pitch and hopped into a throw and nailed Callaway stealing third. It’s a huge play as Brian Schumacher hit his sixth triple of the season into the right field corner right after Callaway was caught.

RUN(s) – Baylor commit Graham Charboneau lifted a sacrifice fly to right to score Callaway. Tomball right fielder Gehrig Heckathorn made a tremendous diving catch on the play. Kingwood, 1-0.

Bottom 1: Kingwood 1, Tomball 0

CJ Sampson ripped a single to center for Tomball’s first baserunner with 1 out in the inning and moved to second on a passed ball.

Karson Reeder walked to put runners at first and second with 1 out for the Cougars, and both runners moved up on a grounder to short by Brycen Romberg. Sophomore Brady Burrow walked on five pitches to load the bases.

RUN(s) – Junior Harper gates singled on a bloop to left that dropped in on a 1-2 pitch to drive in a pair of runs, giving Tomball a 2-1 lead.

Freshman designated hitter Nolan Rush walked with two outs to load the bases. Also of note: Kingwood starter Ben Mayorga is approaching 40 pitches in the first inning.

Mayorga got out of the inning on his 39th pitch, a slow roller to short that Cooper Hansen almost beat out at first base.

Top 2: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Nick Spetter and Joshua York led off Kingwood’s second inning with singles to put runners on first and second.

Reeder struck out senior catcher Blake Risko for a big out in the second. Evan Morris followed with a sacrifice bunt to move the runners to second and third with 2 outs.

Reeder came up with three more huge pitches. He struck out Bryce Baker on three pitches, catching him looking to end the threat.

Bottom 2: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Gehrig Heckathorn led off Tomball’s second inning with a single to center.

The half inning took a turn in Kingwood’s favor when Heckathorn got caught stealing and Catcher Hopkins struck out on the next pitch and Mayorga finished the inning with back to back punchouts.

Top 3: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Reeder got two quick outs to start the third and then Graham Charboneau doubled with 2 outs. Charboneau’s hit looked like your average single to left. But Charboneau got aggressive when the left fielder didn’t play it aggressively and he beat the throw to second.

BIG PLAY! After his aggressive move resulted in a double, Charboneau got picked off of second by Tomball catcher Catcher Hopkins (who back-picked him) for the third out of the inning.

Bottom 3: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Mayorga pitched a 1-2-3 third with a pair of groundouts.

Top 4: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Reeder matched Mayorga with his own 1-2-3 inning, including a strikeout.

Bottom 4: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Mayorga, pitching in a rhythm and dialed in, got a pair of strikeouts in the fourth and completed his third straight 1-2-3 inning.

Top 5: Tomball 2, Kingwood 1

Reeder got a first-pitch groundout, but then walked Evan Morris, Bryce Baker singled on a 1-2 pitch and Caden Callaway walked to load the bases with 1 out.

RUN(s) – Brian Schumacher turned around an 0-2 pitch and tied the game 2-2 with an RBI single. BIG PLAY! On Schumacher’s single, Tomball right fielder Gehrig Heckathorn threw out Bryce Baker at the plate for the second out.

RUN(s) – Braden Fuentes smacked a 2-2 single into left field. The RBI gave Kingwood the lead, 3-2.

RUN(s) – Nick Spetter joined the party with an RBI single to make it 4-2.

RUN(s) – Joshua York got hit by a pitch with the bases loaded as the wheels fell off for Tomball and Karson Reeder in the inning. Kingwood extended its lead to 5-2 and that finished Reeder’s day. CJ Sampson was summoned to the mound for Tomball.

Sampson got a strikeout on four pitches to end the inning and strand the bases loaded. Remember Heckathorn’s outfield assist later in this game if Tomball makes a comeback. That inning could have been much worse.

Bottom 5: Kingwood 5, Tomball 2

Gehrig Heckathorn led off Tomball’s fifth with a single and CJ Sampson followed with a 1-out single to put runners on the corners.

RUN(s) – Brycen Romberg singled with 2 outs to cut into Kingwood’s lead, making it 5-3.

RUN(s) – Brady Burrow smacked an RBI single to pull Tomball within a run, 5-4.

Burrow’s hit finished Mayorga. Reliever Ryder Renfro, a sophomore, took his place on the mound with runners at first and second and 2 outs.

Renfro got the big pitch Kingwood needed – coaxing a flare to center to get out of the inning.

Top 6: Kingwood 5, Tomball 4

Evan Morris and Bryce Baker opened Kingwood’s sixth with successive singles off Sampson to put runners on first and second.

BIG PLAY! For the second time today, Tomball catcher Catcher Hopkins throws behind a runner at second base (this time it’s Evan Morris) and picks him off. The first out of the inning was huge for the Cougars.

BIG PLAY! Kingwood runs itself out of the inning. A wild pitch went to the backstop and Baker tried to score from second on the play, but Hopkins got the ball and threw it to Sampson (covering home) for the out. It was the third out of the inning.

Bottom 6: Kingwood 5, Tomball 4

Renfro did not look like a sophomore pitching in a 1-run state championship game in the bottom of the sixth. He breezed through the inning with a strikeout to keep Tomball off the board.

Top 7: Kingwood 5, Tomball 4

Graham Charboneau continued to be a problem for Tomball. He smacked his second double of the game – this one with 1 out – to give Kingwood a chance at adding some insurance.

Sampson got a pair of fly balls to escape the threat with no damage.

Bottom 7: Kingwood 5, Tomball 4

Kingwood will entrust its dynamic sophomore, Ryder Renfro, to nail now the final three outs.

Catcher Hopkins and CJ Sampson grounded out to second base for the first two outs. Karson Reeder followed with a hot shot to shortstop that was misplayed for an error, which put the tying run is at first base with 2 outs.

Brycen Romberg hit a 2-strike single to keep Tomball’s season alive. Reeder went to second representing the tying run with 2 outs.

With two strikes, Brady Burrow singled to center. Reeder held at third to load the bases with two outs. What a game.

GAME OVER! Renfro gets Gates to fly out to center with the bases loaded and the sophomore comes through for Kingwood. The High School On SI national No. 9 Kingwood Mustangs take down No. 24 Tomball in an all-time classic.

Final: Kingwood 5, Tomball 4

The state championship is the first for Kingwood in 20 years – and its first trip to the state tournament since winning that title back in 2005. … Ben Mayorga picked up the win on the mound after allowing 4 runs on 7 hits with 4 strikeouts and 3 walks in 4.2 innings. Sophomore Ryder Renfro stepped up in a big way for Kingwood. He took over for Mayorga with two outs in the fifth inning and Kingwood clinging to a 5-4 lead. He escaped a jam that inning, escaped a jam with the bases loaded in the bottom of the seventh – sparked on an error on what should have been the final out of a 1-2-3 inning that would have ended the game. The right hander finished with 2.1 impressive innings of scoreless relief on 2 hits and 1 strikeout to earn the save.

Nick Spetter, Brian Schumacher, Graham Charboneau and Bryce Baker all had two hits for Kingwood. Charboneau finished with a pair of doubles.

CJ Sampson, Brycen Romberg, Brady Burrow and Gehrig Heckathorn had two hits each for Tomball. Reeder lost for only the second time all season. The junior finished 12-2 after allowing 5 runs on 8 hits with 4 walks and 3 strikeouts in 4.2 innings. Sampson pitched the final 2.1 innings in relief, allowing no runs on 3 hits with 1 strikeout and no walks.

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High School Sports

Blair Oaks girls soccer falls in Class 1 state title game; Helias settles for fourth in Class 3

Blair Oaks girls soccer suffered a 6-1 loss to Elsberry-Silex in the MSHSAA Class 1 finals Saturday afternoon in Fenton. Sophomore Mia Antweiler scored the lone goal for the Falcons, slicing the ball through the net with 19:03 remaining in the first half to trail 2-1. Elsberry junior Grace White scored four first-half goals for […]

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Blair Oaks girls soccer falls in Class 1 state title game; Helias settles for fourth in Class 3

Blair Oaks girls soccer suffered a 6-1 loss to Elsberry-Silex in the MSHSAA Class 1 finals Saturday afternoon in Fenton.

Sophomore Mia Antweiler scored the lone goal for the Falcons, slicing the ball through the net with 19:03 remaining in the first half to trail 2-1.

Elsberry junior Grace White scored four first-half goals for her team in the win, while the other two goals were credited to freshman Ella Burbridge and sophomore Rylen Jensen.

Elsberry secured the Class 1 state title and finished its season with an 18-2-1 overall record.

Blair Oaks finished in second place with a 16-8-1 record.

Helias girls soccer blanked by Notre Dame de Sion

Helias girls soccer fell 2-0 to Notre Dame de Sion in the MSHSAA Class 3 third-place game in Fenton.

The Crusaders were shut out for the sixth time this season, and the Storm goals were scored by seniors Aubrey Nichols and Taelyn Smith.

Notre Dame de Sion claimed third place in Class 3 with a 13-11 overall record.

Helias finished in fourth with a 18-9 record.

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High School Sports

Arching overhead aquarium highlights $4.4M Windermere lakefront estate

A home with a fish tank isn’t unique. But what about a 650-gallon arched saltwater aquarium that you walk under to enter the living room? “It was custom-made for this space and I believe it was a $150,000 fish tank just to put it in,” said listing agent Harif Hazera with Premier Sotheby’s International Realty. […]

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Arching overhead aquarium highlights $4.4M Windermere lakefront estate

A home with a fish tank isn’t unique. But what about a 650-gallon arched saltwater aquarium that you walk under to enter the living room?

“It was custom-made for this space and I believe it was a $150,000 fish tank just to put it in,” said listing agent Harif Hazera with Premier Sotheby’s International Realty. “It is definitely one of the most unique things I’ve ever seen in a home period. Bar none.”

An offer is pending on the home on 2nd Avenue in Windermere, which offers five bedrooms, six bathrooms, 5,639 square feet and is listed for $4.395 million, according to GrowthSpotter.

The living room features a 650-gallon arched saltwater aquarium that was custom-built for the space. (Photo by Uneek Photography)
The living room features a 650-gallon arched saltwater aquarium that was custom-built for the space. (Photo by Uneek Photography)

The seller has only owned the place for a little over a year and has put more than $350,000 worth of improvements into it.

“It’s just so bright in there, tons of natural sunlight. It really does epitomize what lakefront living is all about in Windermere or in Central Florida,” Hazera said. “It’s really, truly spectacular and move-in ready.”

The serene family room and kitchen are bathed in natural light, with accordian-style glass sliders opening out to the pool. (Photo by Uneek Photography)
The serene family room and kitchen are bathed in natural light, with sliders opening out to the pool. (Photo by Uneek Photography)

This is the second time Hazera has sold this home recently.

“[The seller] got relocated for work. That’s the only reason he’s selling. He made all of these improvements and now someone else is going to enjoy it, but he did not get a chance to enjoy them himself.”

Part of the updates included new windows and doors, a kitchen, landscaping, and paint.

One of the things that hasn’t changed much since the home was built in 2008 is the theater room, which Hazera said is his favorite feature in the house. It includes milled eucalyptus wood features, dual Sub-Zero wine refrigerators, and a star-strewn ceiling.

“It’s very, very expensive, over half a million dollars in that movie theater alone, just on soundproofing, lighting, the screen, just everything in there. It’s very, very well done,” he said. “You never have a reason to go to the movie theater. Truly, it’s exceptional.”

The theater is adorned with eucalyptus wood millwork, a backlit glass bar, Busby cabinetry, dual Sub-Zero wine refrigerators, and a starry ceiling that brings celestial charm to every screening. (Photo by Uneek Photography)
The theater is adorned with eucalyptus wood millwork, a backlit glass bar, Busby cabinetry, dual Sub-Zero wine refrigerators, and a starry ceiling that brings celestial charm to every screening. (Photo by Uneek Photography)

An elevator and a staircase with clear railings go between the floors.

Similar clear barriers are part of the balcony.

“You can see panoramic views of the Wauseon Bay, and [the home] flows really, really nicely,” Hazera explained.

Smart home system controls everything from the window coverings to the lights and pool features.

“Everything can be controlled from either your phone or from different wall panels that look like mini iPads all throughout the house.”

Hazera said the home’s location is what first attracted the buyer.

The pool and landscaping were upgraded by the sellers, who only lived in the home for about a year. (Photo by Uneek Photography)
The pool and landscaping were upgraded by the sellers, who only lived in the home for about a year. (Photo by Uneek Photography)
This new double-height dock on Wauseon Bay is part of the $350,000 in improvements sellers invested in the property. (Photo by Uneek Photography)
This new double-height dock on Wauseon Bay is part of the $350,000 in improvements sellers invested in the property. (Photo by Uneek Photography)

“Being on the Wauseon Bay on 2nd Avenue is a huge draw for people that love the Butler Chain of Lakes lifestyle, but don’t want to be in a neighborhood with an HOA, so [this house] attracts a different type of clientele that appreciates that.”

Another plus was a brand new $85,000 dock the owner just put in.

“The seller never got a chance to use it or enjoy it, so it’s brand new and that was a big appeal.”

Have a tip about Central Florida development? Contact me at Newsroom@GrowthSpotter.com or (407) 420-6261. Follow GrowthSpotter on Facebook and LinkedIn.

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High School Sports

Watch Tyrese Haliburton's High School Highlights and See Where It All Began

Source: Brennan Asplen / Getty Watch Tyrese Haliburton’s High School Highlights and See Where It All Began Before Tyrese Haliburton became the clutch-shooting NBA star leading the Indiana Pacers to the Finals, he was making waves at Oshkosh North High School in Wisconsin. Known for his court vision and smooth shooting, Haliburton’s skills were evident […]

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Watch Tyrese Haliburton's High School Highlights and See Where It All Began

Indiana Pacers v Miami Heat
Source: Brennan Asplen / Getty

Watch Tyrese Haliburton’s High School Highlights and See Where It All Began

Before Tyrese Haliburton became the clutch-shooting NBA star leading the Indiana Pacers to the Finals, he was making waves at Oshkosh North High School in Wisconsin.

Known for his court vision and smooth shooting, Haliburton’s skills were evident even back then—but his rise to stardom was far from guaranteed.

RELATED | WATCH: Every Pacers Comeback Win From The 2025 Playoffs So Far

As a 3-star recruit, Haliburton wasn’t the most sought-after player in his class.

He received just four Division 1 offers before committing to Iowa State, where he began to refine the skills that now make him one of the league’s most exciting players to watch.

Now, you can take a trip down memory lane and see young Tyrese in action for yourself.

Watch his high school highlights in the embedded video and witness the early signs of the star he’d become.

Click play and experience the humble beginnings of one of basketball’s brightest talents!

107.5 Featured Video

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High School Sports

Campbell County rodeo athletes head to national finals

GILLETTE, Wyo. — Nine local junior high rodeo athletes are preparing to compete for world titles at the National Junior High Finals Rodeo in Des Moines, Iowa, from June 22 to June 28. The Campbell County contingent qualified for the national event after strong performances in their respective disciplines. Bridger Schwenke of Gillette will represent […]

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Campbell County rodeo athletes head to national finals

GILLETTE, Wyo. — Nine local junior high rodeo athletes are preparing to compete for world titles at the National Junior High Finals Rodeo in Des Moines, Iowa, from June 22 to June 28.

The Campbell County contingent qualified for the national event after strong performances in their respective disciplines.

Bridger Schwenke of Gillette will represent Wyoming as the state’s sole saddle bronc steer rider.

Other Gillette qualifiers include Claire Castleberry in barrel racing, Hayden Tarver and Grady Hicks in boys breakaway, Paislee Moore in girls breakaway and ribbon roping, Bella Moore in pole bending and Evan Martinson in ribbon roping.

Corbin Fisketjon, from Weston, qualified in boys goat tying and team roping. Hallie Session of Rozet will also compete in girls breakaway.

The National Junior High Finals Rodeo is billed as one of the largest rodeos globally. Around 1,200 top middle school students from 43 states, five Canadian provinces, Australia, and Mexico compete for thousands of dollars in scholarships and prizes.

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High School Sports

10 high school takeaways from Friday, when the boys' tennis semifinals solidified and …

Algonquin’s Logan Mutch (left) reaches for the ball on a lineout during a 64-5 loss at Hanover in the Division 2 boys’ rugby semifinals.Laura White/Algonquin High School After Friday’s action, which included multiple teams in multiple sports punching their ticket to the state semifinals for the first time in program history, the MIAA boys’ tennis […]

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10 high school takeaways from Friday, when the boys' tennis semifinals solidified and ...

Algonquin’s Logan Mutch (left) reaches for the ball on a lineout during a 64-5 loss at Hanover in the Division 2 boys’ rugby semifinals.Laura White/Algonquin High School

1. Boys’ tennis semifinals

Fourteen of the 16 semifinalists have been determined, and all four No. 1 seeds are still dancing. The only seed lower than No. 7 is No. 13 Latin Academy, which took down No. 5 Medfield, 3-2, in the quarterfinals. The field:

Division 1

No. 5 Concord-Carlisle vs. No. 1 St. John’s Prep

No. 6 Lexington vs. No. 2 Acton-Boxborough

Division 2

No. 4 Duxbury vs. No. 1 Hopkinton

No. 7 Westborough vs. No. 3 Sharon

Division 3

No. 13 Latin Academy vs. No. 1 Bedford

No. 2 Martha’s Vineyard vs. No. 6 Weston/No. 3 Newburyport

Division 4

No. 5 Cohasset vs. No. 1 Manchester Essex

No. 7 Sturgis West vs. No. 7 Mystic Valley/No. 2 Lynnfield

2. Rugby finals set

With top-seeded Hanover’s 64-5 demolition of Algonquin in the Division 2 semifinals, all three rugby championship matchups are solidified: No. 2 Xaverian and No. 1 BC High will face off in Division 1, and No. 2 Brookline and No. 1 Hanover battle for the Division 2 crown, both on June 14 at Curry College. No. 2 Lincoln-Sudbury faces No. 1 Belmont in the girls’ rugby championship game, also June 14 at Curry College.

Algonquin junior Preston Biamou is pulled down during a 64-5 semifinal loss at Hanover.Laura White/Algonquin High School

3. Upset city

With the two boys’ volleyball Cinderella’s, No. 26 Barnstable and No. 27 Taunton, both seeing their fairy-tale runs end in the Division 1 quarterfinals, there is now just one team seeded in the 20s remaining across all sports, and that’s No. 21 Bishop Fenwick girls’ tennis, which topped No. 13 Danvers, 3-2, Friday to advance to the Division 3 semifinals.

The first big upset of the girls’ tennis tournament saw No. 8 Winchester knock off No. 1 Boston Latin, so far the only No. 1 tennis seed to falter thus far.

And in softball, sixth-seeded Lincoln-Sudbury handed No. 3 King Philip a 4-1 loss in the quarterfinals, making the Warriors the highest-seeded team to be bounced from the softball brackets to date.

4. Three stars

Erin O’Day, Uxbridge — The junior, who is committed to UMass, was sensational, striking out 20 in a 1-0 one-hitter against Abington, and scoring the game’s only run. She now has 47 strikeouts in three playoff games.

Simon Vardeh, Newton North — The senior caught fire, slamming down a career-high 36 kills, including eight in a row during a stretch in the second set, to lead the Tigers to a 3-1 win over Lexington in the Division 1 quarterfinals. Teammate Paul Nelson dished 50 assists.

McCoy Walsh, King Philip — We don’t usually put athletes from eliminated teams here, but the junior did her best to keep the Warriors playing, striking out 14 and eclipsing 600 career strikeouts in a 4-1 Division 1 quarterfinal loss to Lincoln-Sudbury.

5. Going, going, gone

All four of the day’s home runs came from the same game, and represented four of the five runs scored in Lincoln-Sudbury’s win over King Philip. Nicole Lent launched a pair of shots for L-S, while her older sister, Ashleigh, hit one as well. Not to be left out, KP’s only run came on Liv Petrillo’s solo blast.

6. Daily lacrosse leaderboard

Goals

Avery Regan, Cohasset, 6

Sadie Lopez, Notre Dame (H), 5

Reese Hansen, Cohasset, 4

Cole Hogencamp, Mansfield, 4

Jill Martin, Chelmsford, 4

Holly Panttila, Norwell, 4

Points

Lexi Davos, Norwell, 8

Regan, Cohasset, 8

Kate Greer, Cohasset, 6

Lopez, Notre Dame (H), 5

Panttila, Norwell, 5

7. Daily strikeout leaderboard

Erin O’Day, Uxbridge, 20

McCoy Walsh, King Philip, 14

Lila Alvarez, Joseph Case, 13

Elsie Testa, Abington, 8

8. College corner

Texas Tech freshman Sam Lincoln, who pitched Taunton to its fourth-straight state championship just 12 months ago, made her College Word Series Finals debut, striking out four in three relief innings as Texas won, 10-4, to capture the national championship.

The Red Rangers trailed, 10-0, when Lincoln entered the game in the fourth inning. She didn’t allow a hit the rest of the way, walking two.

Lincoln a 6-foot lefthander, finished her freshman year with an 8-3 record and 3.65 ERA, striking out 52 in 69 innings.

Northeastern graduate student Will Jones, a Hamilton-Wenham graduate, was chosen as the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association District 1 Player of the Year.

A lefthanded pitcher, Jones went 11-1 with a 2.62 ERA, striking out 75 batters in 72 innings and tossing five shutouts. A first-team All-CAA selection, he was 11-0 with 1.82 ERA entering NCAA Regionals and set a Huskies single-season record for wins.

He is the second Northeastern player in a row to win the award, following Peabody native and St. John’s Prep graduate Tyler MacGregor.

Dedham has a new football coach.

The Marauders have hired Doug Carilli, most recently the defensive backs coach at Curry College. The Dedham resident, who played at Curry, has also worked at Rivers, Westwood, Weston, Framingham, and BC High, where he was defensive coordinator.

“Throughout the selection process, his commitment to the town, his vision for the future of our football program, and his focus on the growth and development of our student-athletes clearly distinguished him from a strong pool of candidates,” the school’s athletic department posted on X.

10. Star list

The Eastern Mass. Lacrosse Coaches Association All-Stars were announced Friday.


Brendan Kurie can be reached at brendan.kurie@globe.com. Follow him on X @BrendanKurie.

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