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High School Sports Highlights

District Tournament play is underway in East Tennessee as the chase to Spring Fling in Murfreesboro heats up. Science Hill boys tennis took down Dobyns-Bennett for the district crown – carrying off the girls title from the day before – to clinch a spot in regionals. Meanwhile, tournament play in baseball took center stage on […]

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High School Sports Highlights

District Tournament play is underway in East Tennessee as the chase to Spring Fling in Murfreesboro heats up.

Science Hill boys tennis took down Dobyns-Bennett for the district crown – carrying off the girls title from the day before – to clinch a spot in regionals.

Meanwhile, tournament play in baseball took center stage on Wednesday with some teams surviving to keep their season alive, while others boosted their chances to bring home a crown by advancing.

SCORES REPORTED:

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High School Sports

Editorial

The Editorial Board How is it possible that legislation to expand the statute of limitations for child sex-abuse victims to sue their abusers has virtually no opposition whatsoever among Missouri legislators — and yet for the third straight year, failed to pass during the recent legislative session? The answer is both simple and appalling: It’s […]

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Editorial

How is it possible that legislation to expand the statute of limitations for child sex-abuse victims to sue their abusers has virtually no opposition whatsoever among Missouri legislators — and yet for the third straight year, failed to pass during the recent legislative session?

The answer is both simple and appalling: It’s because it isn’t ultimately those legislators who decide what bills live or die in Jefferson City. The real power lies with monied special interests — in this case, the insurance lobby — whose political contributions control those lawmakers like puppets on strings.

The sex abuse survivor bill’s supporters say they will bring it back again next year. They should. But the fact that it’s this difficult to pass a reform that has such wide and bipartisan political support highlights a much broader problem with Missouri’s political system.

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Under current Missouri law, child sex abuse victims have until they turn 31 to sue their abusers. Experts have long said there should be a much longer statute of limitations for civil liability in such cases, or no limitation at all, because of the nature of this particular offense. Victims may suppress, for many years, memories of such horrific abuse suffered when they were children.

That’s why most states today have extended or eliminated their statutes of limitation for such action. Missouri is one of just 18 states in which the victim must sue before turning 35.

The measure that failed to pass this year would have given abuse survivors until age 41 to sue. It passed the House with a vote that was split only because of unrelated provisions; it had little or no opposition in the Senate, yet failed to win passage.

“I’ve never received a ‘no’ vote on that legislation, ever,” said the bill’s frustrated sponsor, state Rep. Brian Seitz, R-Branson, as reported by the Missouri Independent.

But there was opposition from some powerful unelected players in the state Capitol. The Missouri Chamber of Commerce testified against the measure in committee and the tort reform and insurance lobbies opposed it. That’s because the measure would, by design, mean more litigation against sexual abusers, which in turn means insurance companies would have to pay out more in judgments against individuals or entities covered by insurance policies.

How do such narrow business interests overcome public and political support for this commonsense reform? With their checkbooks.

Missouri has campaign contribution limits to individual politicians but no limits on contributions to PACs that support individual politicians. It creates a neat little loophole that effectively allows business lobbies to give as much as they want to any sitting lawmaker.

Then there are Missouri’s term limits for legislators. Whatever the merits of those limits, they inevitably mean elected politicians aren’t in the Capitol long enough to become nearly as savvy at working the system as are the professional lobbyists who rubs shoulders with them and who are under no such term limits.

“In the Missouri Capitol, there’s a power structure,” says Seitz, as quoted by the Missouri Independent: “At the top are the lobby groups. Secondarily, the bureaucrats. Thirdly, the leadership of either party. Fourth, the House and Senate. And fifth, the janitor.”

He added that “the difficulty with getting commonsense legislation through is, does it have lobby backing? Is there lobby money behind it? Is there opposition from a lobby group?”

If Seitz and other lawmakers want to change that situation, they should start by closing the PAC campaign-contribution loophole and looking for other ways to limit the power of lobbyists.

Meanwhile, backers of the sex-abuse survivors bill should gear up for a unified, very public push to overcome that lobbyist influence next year and get this thing passed. Otherwise, in the words of state Sen. Brad Hudson, R-Cape Fair, a co-sponsor of the legislation: “We are going to become a sanctuary state for pedophiles.”

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High School Sports

Baseball Highlights

Decatur, IN (46733) Today Partly cloudy skies during the morning hours will become overcast in the afternoon. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. High 84F. Winds WSW at 10 to 15 mph.. Tonight A few clouds. Low 69F. Winds SSW at 5 to 10 mph. Updated: June 20, 2025 @ 2:20 am 1

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Baseball Highlights

Decatur, IN

(46733)

Today

Partly cloudy skies during the morning hours will become overcast in the afternoon. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. High 84F. Winds WSW at 10 to 15 mph..

Tonight

A few clouds. Low 69F. Winds SSW at 5 to 10 mph.

Updated: June 20, 2025 @ 2:20 am

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High School Sports

Class of 2028 pass rusher picks up South Carolina offer after strong camp performance

Following another day of camp, South Carolina football offered a scholarship to class of 2028 EDGE Kylen Pope. Pope, a 6-3, 230-pound native of Cartersville, Georgia, had a good day working out in front of Gamecock coaches. His newest offer is far from his first. In fact, Pope holds power conference offers from Oregon, LSU, […]

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Class of 2028 pass rusher picks up South Carolina offer after strong camp performance

Following another day of camp, South Carolina football offered a scholarship to class of 2028 EDGE Kylen Pope. Pope, a 6-3, 230-pound native of Cartersville, Georgia, had a good day working out in front of Gamecock coaches. His newest offer is far from his first. In fact, Pope holds power conference offers from Oregon, LSU, Auburn, Miami, Michigan, Utah, Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas, Georgia Tech, Purdue, West Virginia, and Wake Forest.

With his extensive offer list, it should come as no surprise that Pope made On3’s class of 2028 watch list earlier this spring. The Cartersville High School product was one of 11 overall EDGE players to make the cut.

Stay on top of all things Gamecocks for just $1 for 7 days—lock in this special offer today!

As a player, Pope has lined up both at defensive end and outside linebacker. However, he has spent most of his time with his hand in the dirt. Pope has showcased explosive get-off, but he plays under control, a rare combination for a young player. His speed around the edge allows him to chase down plays from behind that were designed to run away from him.

Pope is better against the run than most freshman EDGEs, as he can read ballcarriers’ eyes and toss aside blockers to make plays. In passing situations, he can pin his ears back and go, but he is not a one-move-and-quit type of rusher. Instead, he continues to fight until the whistle, earning himself many extra sacks and tackles with his motor.

Pope has the potential to develop into an impact player at the collegiate level.

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High School Sports

Thursday's local scoreboard for June 19

Legion baseball Thursday’s results East Grand Forks 10,Omaha Electric 9 EGF 160 021 0 – 10 9 3 ADVERTISEMENT OMA 004 104 0 – 9 9 2 WP – Satterlund; LP – Bush Highlights – EGF: Jace Van Eps 2×3, HR, 2 runs, 3 RBI, Erickson 1×4, 2B, 2 RBI, McDonald 2×2, 2B, Nowacki 1×3, […]

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Thursday's local scoreboard for June 19

Legion baseball

Thursday’s results

East Grand Forks 10,Omaha Electric 9

EGF 160 021 0 – 10 9 3

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OMA 004 104 0 – 9 9 2

WP – Satterlund; LP – Bush

Highlights – EGF: Jace Van Eps 2×3, HR, 2 runs, 3 RBI, Erickson 1×4, 2B, 2 RBI, McDonald 2×2, 2B, Nowacki 1×3, 2 RBI, L. Anderson 1×3, 2B

Union Bank 4,East Grand Forks 1

UNI 002 000 2 – 4 10 0

EGF 000 010 0 – 1 5 2

WP – Culhane; LP – Hams

Highlights – EGF: Erickson 2×3, RBI, Varnson 1×3, run; UB: Vanis 4×4, 2B, Newton 2×3, 2 RBI, Yanez 2×4, 2B

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Grand Forks Royals 6,Westview 3

GRA 030 000 03 – 6 6 1

WES 001 000 20 – 3 1 2

WP – Haagenson; LP – Brown

Highlights – GF: Schauer 3×4, 2B, Hensrud 2×3, Haagenson 9 Ks; W: Sweeney 1×1

Bennington 10,Grand Forks Royals 2

GRA 100 10 – 2 6 1

BEN 111 52 – 10 9 0

WP – Utterback; LP – Tostenson

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Highlights – GF: Haagenson 2×2, 2 2Bs, Larson 2×2, 2B; B: Kortan 2×3, HR, 3 RBI, Gifford 2×2, 2B, 3 runs

Grand Forks Blues 16,Jamestown Blues 6

JAM 401 01 – 6 8 5

GRA 530 44 – 16 9 1

WP – Twedt; LP – Anderson

Highlights – J: Maulding 3×3, 2 2Bs, 4 RBI, Trumbauer 2×3, Dobson 1×2, 2B, 2 runs; GF: Widstrup 2×3, 2 runs, 2 RBI, 2B, Bouvette 1×4, 2B, 4 RBI, Houser 2×2, Waldorf 1×2, 2B, 2 runs, 2 RBI

Prep baseball

Minn. Northwest Conference

All-conference team

Ada-Borup-West – Austin McCraven, Ames Fassino; Badger/Greenbush-Middle River – Taylor Davy; Fertile-Beltrami – Caleb Sather, Easton Petry; Fosston – Jakob Rudie, Will Christen; Kittson County Central – Brock Scalese; Norman Co. East/Ulen-Hitterdal – Will Jirik; Northern Freeze – Isaak Anderson, Alex Bray; Red Lake County – Will Gieseke, Gunnar Halverson, Ben Gullingsrud; Sacred Heart – Parker Erickson, Elliot Arntson, Nick Satterlund, Isaac Sundby; West Marshall – Derek Moehrle, Blaine Smith, Ethan Ellerbush; Win-E-Mac – Braylon Hamre, Bergen Howard, Owen Strom

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Conference awards

MVP – Parker Erickson, Sacred Heart

Offensive Player of the Year – Austin McCraven, ABW

Pitcher of the Year – Braylon Hamre, WEM

Coach of the Year – Mike Gullingsrud, RLC

All-Section 8A

Ada-Borup-West – Austin McCraven; Blackduck – Wilson Lien, Jayden Rockis; Fertile-Beltrami – Kolby Hemma, Bryer Strem; Fosston – Ryne Duppong, Jake Howard, Jakob Rudie; Mahnomen-Waubun – Easton Bevins; Norman County East/Ulen-Hitterdal – Trig Anderson; Red Lake County – Will Gieseke, Ben Gullingsrud, Kegan Schmitz, Brock Seeger, Gunnar Halverson; EGF Sacred Heart – Elliot Arntson, Parker Erickson, David Larson; West Marshall – Derek Moehrle; Win-E-Mac – Braylon Hamre, Bergen Howard, Kolten Schow, Owen Strom

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Coach of the Year – Mike Gullingsrud, Red Lake County

All-Section 8AA

Dilworth-Glyndon-Felton – Wes Hoover, Alex Anderson, Dylan Anderson; EGF Senior High – Jace VanEps, Brody Anderson, Carson McDonald, Rylee Hams; Hawley – Tommy Slette, Wyatt Jetvig; Ottertail Central – Erik Fick, Kale Misegades; Park Rapids – Deshawn Clark; Perham – Ashton Detloff, Drew Ellington, Ty Rooney, Gavin Griffin, Alex Blume; Roseau – A.J. Klint, Eli Wensloff; Thief River Falls – Gannon Zutz, Jaxon Hams, Noah Gonzales, Bodhi Mossestad; Warroad – Liam Grover, Kason Pietruszewski

Coach of the Year – James Mulcahy, Perham

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High School Sports

Warren County School Board Highlights Major Reductions in School Incidents, Staffing Gains

At its June 18 work session, the Warren County School Board heard a series of detailed reports highlighting positive trends in school safety, student discipline, and substitute teacher coverage across the division. The session began with a year-end update from School Resource Officer Sergeant Kristin Hajduk and continued with key data from Superintendent Dr. Chris […]

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Warren County School Board Highlights Major Reductions in School Incidents, Staffing Gains

At its June 18 work session, the Warren County School Board heard a series of detailed reports highlighting positive trends in school safety, student discipline, and substitute teacher coverage across the division. The session began with a year-end update from School Resource Officer Sergeant Kristin Hajduk and continued with key data from Superintendent Dr. Chris Ballenger and Education Staffing Solutions representative Amy Chandlee.

SRO Report: Criminal Investigations Drop by Over Half

Sergeant Kristin Hajduk opened the reports segment by presenting her annual review of school safety activity, comparing the 2023–24 and 2024–25 school years. Her data revealed a dramatic 57% decrease in criminal investigations across the division. Last year, SROs handled 280 criminal cases. This year, the number dropped to 120.

Sergeant Kristin Hajduk presents the annual School Resource Officer report, noting a 57% drop in criminal investigations and an 80% reduction in court petitions across Warren County schools.

“I think that just kind of speaks for the positive relationships and the things we’ve built with our students and schools,” Hajduk told the board.

The number of juvenile court petitions also saw a sharp reduction—down by 80% compared to the previous year. Sergeant Hajduk explained that the SRO program emphasized working with school administrators and families to resolve many situations informally when appropriate, rather than sending every case through the juvenile justice system.

“We want to make sure that kids are still being held accountable,” Hajduk said, “but not necessarily pushed into court when it can be addressed through the school or family.”

Other key decreases included a 76% drop in threat-related incidents, an 80% drop in weapons-related cases, and a 48% reduction in marijuana and THC vape possession. The most significant decline was in general vape-related offenses, largely due to changes in Virginia law that removed criminal penalties for simple possession in many cases.

Hajduk also introduced two new reporting categories—pending and prosecution declined—to provide more clarity about cases still under review or not pursued by juvenile intake. Additionally, she broke down data by offense types and demographics to give the board a fuller picture of the year’s safety landscape.

Discipline Report: Middle Schools See Dramatic Improvement

Dr. Chris Ballenger, delivering the final discipline report of his tenure as superintendent, followed with a school-by-school comparison of May 2025 discipline incidents versus the same month in 2024.

Superintendent Dr. Chris Ballenger shares the May 2025 discipline report during his final school board meeting, highlighting major reductions in incidents at both middle schools.

Several elementary schools showed mixed trends. A.S. Rhodes reported seven incidents in May, up from zero the previous year. E. Wilson Morrison saw a slight decline, while Hilda J. Barbour cut its total in half—from 10 down to five. Leslie Fox Keyes Elementary experienced an increase from 12 to 18 incidents, and Ressie Jeffries reported a modest uptick as well.

“Unwanted or inappropriate physical contact was one of the main areas where we saw an increase,” Ballenger noted, especially at the elementary level.

But it was the middle schools that showed the most dramatic turnaround. Skyline Middle School dropped from 55 incidents in May 2024 to just 11 in May 2025. Warren County Middle School followed a similar path, reducing its total from 52 to 9.

“I really want to thank our middle school administration and staff,” Ballenger said. “That’s a huge reduction, and it reflects the consistent work they’re doing with students.”

At the high school level, results were more varied. Skyline High School saw an increase of 23 incidents compared to last year, while Warren County High School recorded a decrease from 38 to 17. Non-traditional programs, such as the Diversified Minds initiative, reported only two incidents for the month.

ESS Report: Fill Rates Improve, Staff Morale on the Rise

The evening’s final report came from Amy Chandlee, representing Education Staffing Solutions (ESS), the contractor responsible for substitute teacher staffing in Warren County Public Schools. Chandlee, who has worked closely with administrators this year, shared promising statistics and updates on community engagement.

Amy Chandlee of ESS reports a 99% effective substitute fill rate in May, earning praise from board members for improved staffing and strong community engagement.

May’s base fill rate reached 80%, and when in-building permanent substitutes were factored in, the district achieved an actual fill rate of over 99%. That marks the third consecutive month with at least 80% coverage—up from 75% for the 2023–24 school year overall.

Chandlee said more than 7,100 substitute jobs were filled this school year, and ESS hired 75 new staff members since last August. Another 20 to 25 are already in the hiring pipeline for next year.

“We’ve had new hires jump right in—they’re eager, they’re excited, and that enthusiasm is showing in the buildings,” she said.

Feedback from building administrators and office staff was overwhelmingly positive. A recent internal survey showed that 89.4% of respondents rated ESS’s performance as “good” or “excellent.” Classroom management was highlighted as a top area for additional training, which Chandlee said would be offered through summer enrichment programs.

Board members praised Chandlee for her leadership and the noticeable improvement in substitute support this year. School Board member Melanie Salins, who had previously voiced concerns about ESS service, publicly commended her: “You really have turned this around,” they said.

Chandlee expressed appreciation for the support and noted her personal investment in the work.

“I have three kids in the school system,” she said. “If I can support in any way, I’m happy to.”

Photos and Video by Mark Williams, Royal Examiner.

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Jett Washington, nephew of late Kobe Bryant, commits to Oregon Ducks

Looking at his family lineage, there’s no denying that Jett Washington comes from successful sports family. The nephew of the the late, great Los Angeles Laker legend and NBA Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant, Washington has made his mark at Bishop Gorman over the last few years earning five-star status. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Once his […]

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Jett Washington, nephew of late Kobe Bryant, commits to Oregon Ducks

Looking at his family lineage, there’s no denying that Jett Washington comes from successful sports family.

The nephew of the the late, great Los Angeles Laker legend and NBA Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant, Washington has made his mark at Bishop Gorman over the last few years earning five-star status.

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Once his high school career comes to an end, he’ll get to make that impact up in Oregon.

Washington announced his commitment to the Ducks on Thursday choosing Oregon over Alabama and USC.

247Sports ranks the 6-foot-5, 200-pounder as the No. 18 player in the class as well as the No. 2 safety and No. 1 player in Nevada. He finished his junior season with 38 tackles, five interceptions, two pass break ups and a forced fumble.

Oregon first offered Washington last April and he’s visited Eugene three times. His most recent visit came last week when he visited Eugene for his official visit.

Now Washington headlines a Ducks class that’s comprised of nine pledges. Of their nine commitments, two rank as top-50 prospects and one, four-star running back Tradarian Ball, is ranked as the No. 1 player in the class.

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Oregon’s other four-star commitment is tight end, and basketball standout, Kendre Harrison. The 6-foot-7, 243-pounder is the No. 48 player in the class.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY High School Sports Wire: 5-star safety Jett Washington commits to Oregon

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