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Aaron Judge arrives in Sacramento, just as A's owner John Fisher dreamed

Want the latest Bay Area sports news delivered to your inbox? Sign up here to receive regular email blasts, plus “The Dime,” our twice-weekly sports newsletter. Aaron Judge has been hitting at a record clip in major-league parks across the nation. Now we’ll see what he can do in a minor-league park. The New York […]

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Aaron Judge arrives in Sacramento, just as A's owner John Fisher dreamed

Want the latest Bay Area sports news delivered to your inbox? Sign up here to receive regular email blasts, plus “The Dime,” our twice-weekly sports newsletter.

Aaron Judge has been hitting at a record clip in major-league parks across the nation.

Now we’ll see what he can do in a minor-league park.

The New York Yankees are in California’s capital for a three-game weekend series against the Sacramento-based A’s — meaning Judge will take his mighty hacks at tiny Sutter Health Park as undoubtedly the biggest attraction to visit the restructured facility since the A’s debuted there six weeks ago.

“I miss Oakland,” Judge told The Standard last month at his Yankee Stadium locker. “I always enjoyed going to Oakland and playing at the Coliseum, with all the history there. So it’ll be a little different going to Sacramento.

“But it’s still Major League Baseball. There’s still a game to be played. It doesn’t matter where we play and what the situation is. You have to be ready to go.”

The situation is this: The Yankees flew to Sacramento instead of the Bay Area because A’s owner John Fisher pulled the team from Oakland after a 57-year run that featured four World Series championships, six pennants, 21 postseason appearances, and countless memories for generations of fans.

Throughout the series, all eyes will be on Judge, the most dominant hitter in either league. The 6-foot-7 right fielder got off to a historic start by posting some whopping numbers that rank him first in the majors in several categories — .400 batting average, .491 on-base percentage, and 1.241 OPS — and he’s tied for the major-league lead in home runs (12) and RBIs (34).

Now it’s time to swing away at Sutter Health Park. Judge grew up in Linden, two hours east of the Coliseum, and made many trips to the Bay Area to watch A’s and Giants games. In that regard, he was not keen on the A’s leaving the East Bay.

“Growing up in California, a big San Francisco Giants fan, a big A’s fan as well, also knowing the history of what the A’s did, and my dad telling good stories of going to the Coliseum back in the day, it’s tough to see,” Judge said. “They had some good teams my first few years in the big leagues and some really good players that are still in this game and scattered around the league now, especially Matt Chapman at third base for the Giants. It’s definitely sad, but we’ll see what the future holds for them.”

Sacramento is closer to Linden than Oakland, and Judge isn’t unfamiliar with the A’s temporary stadium, which will be in use if and when construction is underway in Las Vegas. He visited as a kid on a school field trip when it was known as Raley Field and played there with Fresno State against Sacramento State. On March 26, 2013, he collected two hits in a 3-2 Bulldogs victory.

“There are quite a lot of baseball fans in the Central Valley, especially in Sacramento,” Judge said. “They’ll get a chance to see some big-league baseball a little closer to them. That’s pretty exciting for some of the kids with San Francisco or L.A. maybe a little too far, so now they get a chance right there in Sacramento to see some of their favorite players come through.”

A’s crowds haven’t been as large as anticipated. In 18 home dates, the team is averaging 9,839 fans per home game, fewest in the majors. Capacity is 14,014, and the team announced one sellout, on opening night: 12,119 (plus comps).

It’s a far cry from the Coliseum, where an A’s-Yankees regular-season game in 2004 attracted 54,613. In the A’s final playoff game at the Coliseum, they drew 54,005 in 2019 with the Rays in town.

The organization was scrapped in recent years under Fisher, who downsized the product on many fronts, turning away A’s fans who refused to support an owner who wouldn’t support them.

Fisher grew tired of the disenchanted fanbase and skeptical East Bay politicians and escaped to the comfort of Sacramento, where his buddy, Vivek Ranadivé, owner of the Triple-A River Cats and NBA Kings, cut a sweet deal for the A’s to use his facility for three or four seasons. Fisher is still able to pocket TV money from his NBC Sports California deal.

Meantime, Fisher’s dream could come true this weekend. When he announced at an April 2024 news conference that Sacramento would be the A’s interim site, he continued to turn off fans when mentioning how “some of the greatest players in baseball” will “launch home runs out of the most intimate ballpark in all of Major League Baseball.” He mentioned Judge by name but no A’s players.

At the same news conference, Ranadivé played up the anticipation of Judge — “you’re going to see Aaron Judge hitting home runs out there” — and mentioned Shohei Ohtani, though the Dodgers don’t play in Sacramento this season.

As for how he anticipates the A’s ballpark to play, Judge said he noticed “the ball flying out of there” in early-season games but added, “It’s tough to say until we actually get there and get a chance to hit on the field.”

The A’s aren’t the only big-league team playing in a minor-league park. The Rays are based this season at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa in the wake of Hurricane Milton destroying Tropicana Field. It’s the Yankees’ spring training ballpark, which made it odd for the Yankees to be the visiting team in a mid-April series.

“We played in London, we played in a cornfield in Iowa, a lot of different places,” Judge said. “So I think going to a minor-league park isn’t going to be much different.”

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Seniors Celebrated for Their Hard Work at Awards Night

Seniors gathered to celebrate their many achievements at Seniors Awards Night on Wednesday night. The school also honored 14 juniors for their outstanding abilities in various subject areas.  The night started with the Menlo-Atherton Awards, which are chosen by M-A faculty and departments. First came awards for students in AVID, with senior Yandel Hernandez Nunez […]

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Seniors gathered to celebrate their many achievements at Seniors Awards Night on Wednesday night. The school also honored 14 juniors for their outstanding abilities in various subject areas. 

The night started with the Menlo-Atherton Awards, which are chosen by M-A faculty and departments. First came awards for students in AVID, with senior Yandel Hernandez Nunez winning the Spirit of AVID Scholarship for embodying what it means to be in AVID by being hardworking and committed to continue his education. 

Next, the Computer Academy gave 11 scholarships to students going to a four-year college and four scholarships to students going to a two-year college. 

M-A also recognized students with the Faculty Departmental Awards for Academic Excellence, which ranged from art to science. One of the students who won was senior Luis Licea Fuerte for his achievements in English as a Second Language.

“It really means a lot to me because I’ve been working hard for this award and I started learning English four years ago, as a freshman. Since then, I’ve been trying hard to keep up and start to stay strong in the language and keep learning more,” Licea Fuerte said. He also won five other awards throughout the night.

One of the awards given was the Rick Longyear Enthusiast Award, which honored a student who embodied the late M-A science teacher and water polo coach Rick Longyear. The award was given to senior Lucas Selvik for his love and dedication to science and math.

“My family are always so supportive, whether in terms of academics or athletics, they gave me the support I needed to really give everything my all,” Selvik said.

The next section of awards was the Community Awards and Scholarships, which started with the 49ers Cal-Hi Sports CCS Scholar-Athlete of the Year. This honor was given to senior Trevor Cadigan for impressive work as a student athlete.

M-A also honored 16 seniors with the California Scholarship Federation Life Members for being part of the California Scholarship Federation for four semesters from sophomore to senior year, and 23 seniors for being California Scholarship Federation 100% Members by being part of the Federation for all six eligible semesters.

Alli Schindler / M-A Chronicle Senior Paulina Cisneros walks to receive her award.

While dozens of seniors were honored as National Merit Commended Students for their excellent scores of the PSATs, M-A also had 15 seniors achieve National Merit Finalist status through their scores and essays they wrote for the competition. In addition, seniors Lilah Chen and Celine Chien* were awarded National Merit Scholarships based on their outstanding performance in the nationwide competition.

To end the night, seniors Mattea Harris, Haniyah Knight, Nevaeh Knight, and Tatiola Sobomehin* were given Ubuntu Scholarships. The scholarships are given to Black students who embody Ubuntu, or the idea that “I am because we are.”

Alli Schindler / M-A Chronicle Students who have received awards.

“There were so many amazing awards and so many amazing students and I think that all our hard work really reflects tonight. It’s truly a privilege to be able to recognize all of these amazing students,” senior Corbin Nam, who received a Faculty Departmental award in mathematics, said.

“Everyone was being very supportive and clapping after all the awards, even for people that we didn’t know, we were still clapping. It just felt like a positive uplifting community,” senior Josh Pfistner, who won the Louis Armstrong Jazz Award, said.

*Celine Chien and Tatiola Sobomehin are journalists for the M-A Chronicle.



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Simone Biles' social media post 'good thing guys don't compete against girls' resurfaces

Conservative sports activist Riley Gaines used Olympian Simone Biles’ own words against her Sunday as their feud over transgender athletes reached a fevered pitch. Gaines — a former University of Kentucky swimmer vehemently opposed to trans participation in women’s sports — unearthed a nearly decade-old tweet that the gymnastics icon posted in which she appeared to agree with Gaines’ stance. “ahhhh good thing guys don’t compete […]

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Simone Biles' social media post 'good thing guys don't compete against girls' resurfaces

Conservative sports activist Riley Gaines used Olympian Simone Biles’ own words against her Sunday as their feud over transgender athletes reached a fevered pitch.

Gaines — a former University of Kentucky swimmer vehemently opposed to trans participation in women’s sports — unearthed a nearly decade-old tweet that the gymnastics icon posted in which she appeared to agree with Gaines’ stance.

“ahhhh good thing guys don’t compete against girls or he’d take all the gold medals !!” Biles wrote in the 2017 tweet, apparently responding to the men’s division results at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Canada.

Gaines — who Biles referred to as a “sick bully” for her anti-trans stance Friday — let the Olympian have it.

“Oop don’t you hate it when your past self completely undermines your current nonsensical argument?” she wrote while retweeting Biles’ post.

An old social media post from Olympic gymnast Simone Biles resurfaced amidst her feud with Riley Gaines over transgender athletes. Getty Images
Gaines hosts the “Gaines for Girls” podcast on OutKick, and has been outspoken about transgender athletes competing in women’s sports. Independent Women’s Forum

“How has 2025 Simone reconciled with the fact 2017 Simone was a ‘truly sick bully’ by her own standard?” she added.

The spat between the athletes started Friday when Biles aimed an unprompted tweet at Gaines, 25, amid furor over a Minnesota trans high-school softball pitcher whose shutout performance in the state finals Thursday helped win the championship.

“@Riley_Gaines_ You’re truly sick, all of this campaigning because you lost a race,” 28-year-old Biles tweeted, referencing Gaines’ tie during a race with trans University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas at the 2022 NCAA championship.  

“Oop don’t you hate it when your past self completely undermines your current nonsensical argument?” Gaines wrote on X in response to the 2017 post. Getty Images

“Straight up sore loser. You should be uplifting the trans community and perhaps finding a way to make sports inclusive OR creating a new avenue where trans feel safe in sports. Maybe a transgender category IN ALL sports!!” Biles wrote.

“bully someone your own size, which would ironically be a male,” she later added.

Gaines quickly called Biles’ comments “disappointing” and said it wasn’t her task to figure out how to include trans people in sports.

Simone Biles poses with the bronze medal during the Women’s Balance Beam Final medal ceremony on day eleven of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Getty Images

“It’s not my job or the job of any woman to figure out how to include men in our spaces. You can uplift men stealing championships in women’s sports with YOUR platform. Men don’t belong in women’s sports and I say that with my full chest,” Gaines said.

But it didn’t end there — Gaines went so far as to drag Biles’ battle with former Team USA gymnastics doctor and prolific sex criminal Larry Nassar into the fray.

“All the horrific sexual abuse @Simone_Biles witnessed and spoke out against caused by one man, yet [she] believes women should be forced to strip naked in front of men to validate the man’s feelings,” Gaines wrote in another tweet.

Biles helped take down Nassar, who is serving up to 175 years in prison for molesting her and hundreds of other female gymnasts, including stars Aly Raisman and Gabby Douglas.

“You know how many gold medals you’d have if your ‘inclusive’ dream came true? Zero,” Gaines added to Biles.

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We have reached the point of no return – BG Falcon Media

The House v. NCAA settlement, announced Friday night, officially marks the end of the college sports landscape that we all love and know and the beginning of a dark future for non-Power Four conference schools. The settlement does nothing but allow the Power Four conferences to expand their powers and silence the voices of the […]

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The House v. NCAA settlement, announced Friday night, officially marks the end of the college sports landscape that we all love and know and the beginning of a dark future for non-Power Four conference schools.

The settlement does nothing but allow the Power Four conferences to expand their powers and silence the voices of the Group of Five schools.

The main subject of the settlement is an annual cap for universities to directly pay athletes for their name, image and likeness (NIL).

However, the kicker is that the amount is based on a percentage of a defined set of Power Four athletics department revenues, with not all colleges factored in.

This means that Bowling Green and other similar schools will have to continue dealing with bigger schools spending $20 million per year, which is over half of BGSU’s operating athletic budget. This will only allow the bigger schools to justify their spending, which will continue to make it harder for the majority of smaller schools to keep up and stay competitive.

The settlement does nothing but continue to widen the gap between the Power Four and non-Power Four schools.

In addition to being able to pay athletes directly, athletes will also be able to continue making NIL deals with entities other than their respective schools.

On the surface, this sounds fair. However, there’s another kicker.

A new entity will be assigned to watch over all of the non-university NIL agreements and make sure they do not violate any rules. However, the College Sports Commission is not an initiative by the NCAA but rather a collaboration among the Power Four conferences. In fact, the top figures in the organization who have the power to make the big decisions are ACC Commissioner Jim Philips, Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti, Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark and SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey.

All Division I athletes who have a deal with a non-university entity for $600 or more have to report to the College Sports Commission’s system called “NIL Go,” which will then be evaluated to determine whether the deal has a “valid business purpose” and is within “a reasonable range of compensation,” whatever those terms are eventually deemed to mean. The commission and commissioners will have full power to enforce their rules, whatever they end up being, and penalize rule-breakers.

Firstly, I’m not sure if it’s possible to make the details more vague if you tried. Secondly, do any of us trust the Power Four conferences and their commissioners not to take advantage of the landscape and find loopholes while limiting the power and abilities of non-Power Four schools — I do not.

I can almost guarantee that there will be more ensuing legal battles due to the recent settlement and that this is only the beginning of the college athletics landscape being altered forever. We have officially reached the point of no return. College sports are no longer college sports — they are now the minor leagues.

Ultimately, the settlement does nothing but continue to allow the Power Four conferences to expand their powers as we continue to head on a collision course toward a super conference, which will officially mark the death for non-Power Four schools.



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Manheim Central gearing up for PIAA Class 2A volleyball semifinal showdown against familiar foe York Suburban | Boys’ volleyball

Manheim Central’s boys volleyball team is simply sizzling.  Caution: Flammable.  There has been no slowing down the Barons over their previous five matches, which have all ended with dominating 3-0 victories.  Three of those came in the District 3 Class 2A tournament, when Central slayed Northern Lebanon, Linville Hill Christian and York Suburban by a […]

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Manheim Central’s boys volleyball team is simply sizzling. 

Caution: Flammable. 

There has been no slowing down the Barons over their previous five matches, which have all ended with dominating 3-0 victories. 

Three of those came in the District 3 Class 2A tournament, when Central slayed Northern Lebanon, Linville Hill Christian and York Suburban by a combined 9-0 to nab their second district title, and first since 2019.

That district crown came on the heels of Central winning its third straight Lancaster-Lebanon League Section 2 championship, before the Barons reached the league finale for the third year in a row. But after winning two straight L-L crowns, they were tripped up by Cedar Crest in the title match this time around. 

That loss has motivated Central, which has been sharp in all facets since that setback against the Falcons. Defense in the back? Check. Setting prowess? Check. Serve game? Check. Front-row play, including piling up kills and blocking everything left and right? Check and check. 

The Barons bagged a pair of PIAA Class 2A playoff wins last week, both via shutout, over Academy at Palumbo and Dock Mennonite Academy. Saturday’s victory in the quarterfinals against Dock Mennonite served as some payback for the Barons, who were knocked out by the Pioneers in the state quarterfinals in 2022. 


Manheim Central breezes past Academy at Palumbo for spot in PIAA Class 2A boys volleyball quarterfinals


Manheim Central drops Dock Mennonite Academy, barrels into PIAA Class 2A volleyball semifinals

Central (22-1 overall) is set to square off against a familiar foe in Tuesday’s state semifinals; the Barons will clash with York Suburban for the third time this season, and for the second time in 13 days. The Barons and the Trojans will duke it out at 5 p.m. at Penn Manor in Millersville. 

Central held off Suburban 25-23, 27-25 and 25-22 in a hotly contested nonleague match back on May 5 in York. In the rematch, on May 29 in Manheim, the Barons scarfed up a 25-21, 25-17, 25-19 win for district gold.

“We’ll have a lot of confidence going into the game,” Central defensive wizard Colin Rohrer said. “You always want to be confident, and I’d say we’re pretty confident right now. As long as we can stay consistent — getting our serves in, playing good defense, hitting the ball — we feel like we can probably beat any team in the state.” 

In Central’s first encounter with Suburban this spring, Dylan Musser teed up 35 assists, Reagan Miller blasted 14 kills and Landon Mattiace had seven blocks to spearhead the Barons. 

In the district finale, Musser was everywhere with 34 assists, eight kills, five aces, five digs and a pair of blocks; Miller waffled 11 kills with 11 digs; Mattiace had 10 kills and a couple of blocks; Rohrer had 18 digs; and Weston Longenecker (8 kills, 9 digs) and Caleb Groff (5 kills, 8 digs) came up big from their outside hitter spots. 

That kind of balance has been the Barons’ calling card. 


Manheim Central serves up win against York Suburban, bags second District 3 Class 2A boys volleyball championship

MC-YS III will be for a spot in Saturday’s state championship match, set for 11 a.m. inside Penn State’s esteemed Rec Hall.

Central and Suburban are both 0-2 in PIAA championship matches. The Trojans bounced the Barons 3-1 in the state semifinals in 2019. 

Tuesday’s other Class 2A state semifinal is another dandy matchup, with District 10 winner and reigning PIAA champ Meadville taking on District 7 champ Shaler. 

Meadville, which features 6-foot-7 junior middle Luc Sorensen, a Team USA member and a Penn State recruit, beat Central 3-1 in last year’s state finale. Shaler won the PIAA Class 3A crown last spring compliments of a 3-0 win over Parkland — after the Titans eliminated Warwick in the semifinals.

Shaler dipped down to Class 2A this season, and finds itself right back in the state semifinals. 

Central is in the state playoffs for the eighth season in a row; the 2020 campaign was canceled because of COVID-19. Since 2017, the Barons are 15-7 in PIAA matches, with finals trips in 2018 (a loss to Northeastern York) and last spring (a loss to Meadville).

Central reached the quarterfinals in all eight trips, with semifinal appearances in 2017, 2018, 2019, 2024 and this spring. The Barons are a chiseled bunch, piloted by a veteran coach, Craig Dietrich, who knows how to steer a team through a playoff bracket. 

“It’s an exciting time,” Central middle Blake Neiles said. “We got to play in the state finals last year, and not many people get to experience that. Now we want to go back.”

It is chalk across the board in the PVCA Class 2A state rankings; Meadville is first, Central is second, Shaler is third and York Suburban is fourth. 


Setter of attention: Manheim Central senior standout steers Barons' successful volleyball program

TRIPLE TROUBLE IN TRIPLE-A

Three of the four teams still standing in the PIAA Class 3A bracket call District 3 home. That’s pretty impressive.

Tuesday’s semifinals will pit undefeated District 3 champ Cumberland Valley against District 3 third-seed Governor Mifflin, and District 3 runner-up Central York against WPIAL kingpin North Allegheny, which is angling for its 10th state crown.

Central York, which has captured 25 District 3 and seven PIAA titles, KO’d Governor Mifflin, the Berks County champ, in the district semifinals. 

North Allegheny was tripped up by Warwick in the first round last spring, so the Tigers are plenty motivated to get back in the winner’s circle this time around. 

It is also chalk in the PVCA Class 3A state rankings; Cumberland Valley is first, North Allegheny is second, Central York is third and Governor Mifflin is fourth. 



Cedar Crest gets defensive, dethrones Manheim Central for first L-L League boys volleyball championship


Here are your 2025 L-L League boys volleyball all-stars, section MVPs [list]

X: @JeffReinhart77

MORE L-L LEAGUE VOLLEYBALL COVERAGE



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Kya Crooke breaks long and high jump record at IHSAA girls track state meet

Kya Crooke breaks records at IHSAA girls track and field state meet Heritage Christian’s Kya Crooke broke records in the long and high jump at the girls state meet. Her success ties back to her father and coach, Val. Kya Crooke won the long jump with a leap of 20-4.75, breaking a 39-year-old state meet […]

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  • Kya Crooke won the long jump with a leap of 20-4.75, breaking a 39-year-old state meet record.
  • The Heritiage Christian senior also won the high jump, going 6-0.25 to break a 40-year-old state meet record.
  • The Arizona recruit views track as a way to reach others.

INDIANAPOLIS – Kya Crooke pleaded with her mother for tickets to see R&B artist SZA in St. Louis. In ordinary parental fashion, Julie Crooke initially told her daughter no since the concert was three days before the IHSAA girls track state meet. The Heritage Christian senior persisted. 

With her persistence came a pledge.

“I told my mom, ‘No, I have to be at that concert; I promise I’ll do good at state,’” Kya said. 

Julie granted permission. In turn, her daughter did better than good. Crooke set state meet records in the long jump (20-4.75) and high jump (6-0.25) Saturday at the IHSAA girls track and field state meet at North Central. The long jump record stood for 39 years, and the high jump record, 40.

“That record has been around for so long, so it’s been my goal this whole season to work toward breaking the long and high jump records,” Crooke said. “Coming out here and being able to do that, I can hear the people clapping with me. It’s just really cool to see.”

Crooke said she was anxious before her jumps but talked to friends to calm her nerves and “have fun,” claiming, “That’s when I’m at my best.” Her best left her dad, Val, at a loss for words.

“I’m speechless. To have the last meet of her senior year and to break the long and high jump records, that girl has something special,” Val said. “I just sat back and watched; I didn’t even have to coach anymore.”

Val trained his daughter since she began track and field. He ran track on his native Caribbean island of St. Kitts and later attended college at Anderson University. When Crooke was in middle school, Val and Julie started the SocaSpeed track club. With four state titles, including one in soccer her freshman year, Crooke said it’s “awesome to be the person the girls at Soca could look up to.”

“We talk about the little brown and black girls that get to see someone high jump and say, ‘I want to do that,’ and there are girls in St. Kitts now going, ‘What in the world, that girl is going crazy,'” Val said. “Now, I am going to have a ton of young ladies in the islands that want to high and long jump.”

Val’s confidence and excitement in his following comment released a strong Carribean accent.

“St. Kitts got the sprints covered,” he said. “We got the jumps now.”

Crooke hopes to compete for St. Kitts in future international competitions. After every meet, she sends videos to her grandparents and extended family on the island, and they often ask Val for ways to livestream her events.

“There’s a whole other country behind me,” Crooke said.

The City Female Athlete of the Year appreciates her domestic support as well. Born and raised in Indiana, Crooke acknowledged her parents, high school coaches and teammates for “pulling for her to be the best I can be.” She praised Indiana for granting multiple opportunities, like the Indiana All-Star track meet, for its athletes to gain experience and showcase their talents.

Crooke will attend Arizona in the fall, where she’ll be trained by decorated jumps coach Bobby Carter. As Crooke builds a ladder of achievements in track and field, Val recognizes his daughter’s inclination to carry others up with her. 

“She understands she has a plan and purpose for her life and gets to walk in it and bring people along. It’s not about her, it’s about others,” Val said. “At the end of the day, this is all about her love for Christ, so to see that play out in her athletics, where she gives God the glory for all of her successes, it brings tears to my eyes.”

For Crooke, her actions must reflect that she represents someone beyond herself.

“I had to learn that whether I’m doing bad or amazing, people are watching and can see how I handle certain situations. Track is my ministry, so I like people to see something different in how I handle things and ask, ‘Why did I do it that way?’” Crooke said. “My athletic ability is a gift from God, and I love that I can show that through a sport I love so much. 

“The biggest compliment I’ve received these past two years from people is that they can see Christ through me on the track, and that’s really why I’m out here. I want to continue to do that out in Arizona and whatever else is planned.”

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Volleyballers Continue In ECVA U21 Event

Bermuda’s women’s duo of Kayley Hamilton and Hailey Moss concluded competition in the Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association Under-21 Beach Championships after a tight three-set battle in the quarter-finals. Competing in windy conditions, the Bermudian pair lost 2-1 to Jassania Joseph and Jaya Carr of Antigua. Hamilton and Moss captured the first set 21-18 before the […]

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Bermuda’s women’s duo of Kayley Hamilton and Hailey Moss concluded competition in the Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association Under-21 Beach Championships after a tight three-set battle in the quarter-finals.

Competing in windy conditions, the Bermudian pair lost 2-1 to Jassania Joseph and Jaya Carr of Antigua. Hamilton and Moss captured the first set 21-18 before the Antiguan team rallied to win the next two sets 21-15 and 15-12 to advance.

In the men’s division, Bermuda’s team of Anijhaé Dos Santo Martin and Kyle Mello endured two defeats.

They fell 2-0 to Mervin Mingo and Bill Frederick from Dominica, with set scores of 21-11 and 21-9. In their second match, the Bermudian pair lost 2-0 to Trevon Smith and Shaquoy Reid of Anguilla, with scores of 21-19 and 21-10.

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