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Addison DeRoche throws a no-hitters for Cheverus
Addison DeRoche throws a no-hitters for Cheverus
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Nick Wilcox scored the first run of the game in the bottom of the first inning, then the sophomore made it stand up on the mound. Legend Haskew got the RBI single in the first, then Wilcox pitched a one-hit shutout as the Mountain View baseball team beat the Highclimbers 1-0 on Friday in the […]
Nick Wilcox scored the first run of the game in the bottom of the first inning, then the sophomore made it stand up on the mound.
Legend Haskew got the RBI single in the first, then Wilcox pitched a one-hit shutout as the Mountain View baseball team beat the Highclimbers 1-0 on Friday in the 3A bi-district play-in game.
The Thunder, the No. 3 team in the 3A Greater St. Helens League, now advance to face Kentlake on Tuesday in Kent in a loser-out game to open the 3A bi-district playoffs.
J Taylor led off the bottom of the first by reaching on an error for Mountain View, and Wilcox followed by reaching on a fielder’s choice.
Wilcox went to third on a single by Brendon Lawson. Then Haskew delivered a two-out single to right to score Wilcox.
Wilcox held Shelton to a two-out double in the fourth inning. He struck out six and did not walk a batter.
HOCKINSON 5, WASHOUGAL 1 — Skyler Liddie held Washougal to one run on four hits as the Hawks secured the No. 5 seed to the 2A district playoffs.
To reach the double-elimination portion of the bracket, Hockinson will host Centralia at 4 p.m. Saturday in a loser-out game.
Noah Tadema went 2 for 4 with a double and two RBI for the Hawks. Anthony Cline and Chase Bonife also went 2 for 4.
RIDGEFIELD 8, WOODLAND 3 — Wyatt Hemmelman had a three-run triple as part of a six-run second inning as the Spudders wrapped up the No. 3 seed to next week’s district playoffs with the win.
ELMA 6, COLUMBIA-WHITE SALMON 0 — The Bruins saw their season with a loss at home in a 1A district play-in game.
Kai Brasuell pitched six solid innings, but the Bruins could only manage three this off the Eagles.
PRAIRIE 13, HERITAGE 1 — Mackenzie Moore struck out 10 over six innings and went 3 for 4 with a double as the Falcons remained in first place in the 3A Greater St. Helens League.
The Falcons are 6-1, tied with Kelso, with one league game to play.
Kylie Moore went 3 for 4 with a double and three RBI. Jaila Ellis went 2 for 2 with a home run for Heritage.
Spudders, Rapids win Spudder Classic — McKenna Calkins won both the 100 and 200 meters to lead the Ridgefield girls to a narrow win over Columbia at the Spudder Track and Field Classic in Ridgefield.
Calkins won the 100 in 12.24 seconds and the 200 in 25.52 seconds as the Spudders edged River 95-91 in the team standings.
Danica Allen posted wins in the 1,600 (5:15.10) and 3,200 (11:15.49) for the Spudders. Tyler Merlock won the javelin (114-6).
Other local winners included Casie Kleine of Castle Rock (400, 58.43), Sojourner Yokum (800, 2:24.06) and Peyton Dukes (long jump, 16-2.75) of Columbia River, Shaylie Haij of King’s Way Christian (100 hurdles, 15.18), Elsie Herold of Mark Morris (300 hurdles, 46.70).
In the boys meet, Revac Banfield raced to wins in the 100 (10.82) and 200 (21.67) as the River boys easily outdistanced Ridgefield for the team title.
River also got dual wins from Lucas Fish in the shot put (51-8.5) and discus (149-10) and John Reeder in the long jump (21-6) and triple jump (44-2).
Other local winners included Madsen Richardson of Hockinson (400, 50.85), Carter Sherry of La Center (800, 1:57.66), Davis Sullivan of Ridgefield (1,600, 4:22.29), Niel Valerio of Woodland (110 hurdles, 15.60), Joe Callerame of Seton Catholic (javelin, 173-10), Caleb Silva of King’s Way Christian (high jump, 6-4) and Christan Sternagel of Mark Morris (pole vault, 13-0).
When looking back on the past school year, West-Oak High School athletic director Tim Sheriff succinctly summed it up regarding the Warriors’ wrestling team winning its fourth straight state championship in February. “Not much you can say,” he said with a laugh. 1
When looking back on the past school year, West-Oak High School athletic director Tim Sheriff succinctly summed it up regarding the Warriors’ wrestling team winning its fourth straight state championship in February.
“Not much you can say,” he said with a laugh.
Mason Howell, the youngest player in the 125th U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club, won’t be playing the weekend, but he proved he belonged in the 156-player field. The 17-year-old from Thomasville, Georgia, hovered around the cut line for more than half of the second round before ultimately being undone by a string of bogeys. […]
Mason Howell, the youngest player in the 125th U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club, won’t be playing the weekend, but he proved he belonged in the 156-player field.
The 17-year-old from Thomasville, Georgia, hovered around the cut line for more than half of the second round before ultimately being undone by a string of bogeys. Howell was in the middle of his final hole when second-round play was suspended because of lightning in the area. Howell had shot a +5 on the day and was sitting at 12-over for the tournament, with the projected cut sitting at +7.
Still, the incoming high senior recorded a better round than reigning U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau, who shot 7-over in the second round and missed the cut with a +10 for the tournament. Howell also carded the same score over two days as two-time major winner Justin Thomas and finished better than three-time major winner Justin Rose, who finished 14-over for the tournament.
After a par on his opening hole of the second round, Howell knocked in a birdie on hole No. 2 and followed with some tough par saves. But things started to unravel on the seventh hole, which began a string of four bogeys in six holes. He recorded an impressive birdie on No. 14, but he followed that up with three consecutive birdies to push him well below the projected cut line.
Howell, who gained a berth in the 2025 U.S. Open by tying for first at the qualifying tournament in Atlanta, has much to look forward to: his senior year at Brookwood School, where he will seek another state title, before heading to the University of Georgia in 2026 to play golf for the Bulldogs.
USA TODAY Sports followed Howell’s second round at the U.S. Open. Scroll below for a full recap:
Mason Howell shot a 7-over-par 77 in the first round, hovering right around the cut line. Keep track of his second-round scores here.
The second round of the 2025 U.S. Open was suspended due to lightning in the area, with Howell still needing to finish his final hole. Howell had played his second shot, an approach from the primary rough on the par 4, 498-yard 18th hole, onto the fairway, leaving him 103 yards to the hole. Howell was among a handful of golfers who could not finish the round due to weather.
The final hour of Howell’s stay at Oakmont has not gone well. He recorded his third consecutive bogey, carding a 5 on the par 4, 305-yard 17th hole. Howell dropped to 5-over for the round and +12 for the tournament with one hole remaining.
The dream of playing the weekend in the U.S. Open basically came to an end for Howell after a bogey on the par 3, 238-yard 16th hole. That bogey dropped the incoming high school senior to 4-over for the round and +11 for the tournament with two holes remaining and the projected cut still sitting at +7.
One hole after an impressive birdie, Howell recorded his fifth bogey of the day on the par 4, 489-yard 15th hole to drop back to +10 for the tournament and +3 for the round. With the projected cut at +7, Howell would need to birdie each of his three remaining holes.
After recording a par on the par 3, 161-yard 13th hole, Howell scored just his second birdie of the day on the 14th. Howell’s second shot from the fairway on the 368-yard, par 4 hole landed just three feet from the cup, and he tapped in for his first birdie since hole No. 2. Howell now stands at +2 for the round and +9 for the tournament. The projected cut remains at +7.
After recording a par on the 406-yard, par 4 11th hole, Howell found immediate trouble on the 12th hole. His tee shot on the par 5, 647-yard hole landed in the intermediate rough, and his second shot traveled just 33 feet into the primary rough. His third shot put him back on the fairway, and his fourth landed on the green, but he could not connect on a 36-yard par putt. He tapped in for yet another bogey – his fourth in six holes – dropping him to 3-over for round and +10 for the tournament.
Howell recorded his third bogey in the past four holes as he began his back nine. Howell could not save par on the 10th hole and had to tap in for bogey on the par 4, 472-yard 10th hole. That dropped him to +9 for the tournament (+2 for the round) and below the cut line, which has been fluctuating from +7 to +8.
Howell, who was sitting right on the cut line at +7, but he dropped another shot after a bogey on the par 4, 465-yard ninth hole. It was his second bogey of the day and second in three holes. He nearly made another impressive par save, but his fourth shot came up just inches from the hole. The bogey drops him to +1 for round and +8 for the tournament, one stoke over the projected cut.
Another erroneous tee shot on the par 3 eighth hole left Howell in danger of dropping another stroke, but he followed that up with a brilliant second shot from the immediate rough to leave himself a 6-foot putt for par. Howell connected to remain at Even for the round and +7 for the tournament, right on the cut line.
Howell hit an erroneous tee shot on the par 4, seventh hole which landed in the left bunker. But the 17-year-old nearly made a miraculous par when his nearly 49-yard putt stopped just inches before the hole. He settled for a tap-in bogey and dropped to +7 for the tournament and even on the day.
On the par 3, 192-yard sixth hole, Howell’s tee shot landed in the rough, leaving him in a perilous position to get up and down. His second shot left him roughly 9 feet from the hole, but he sank the ensuing par putt to remain at +6 for the tournament. The current projected cut line is +7.
Howell came up just short on a 21-foot, 6-inch putt for birdie on the 420-yard, par 4 fifth hole, but he knocked in a 3-foot par putt to remain -1 for the day and +6 for the tournament.
Howell missed a prime opportunity for a birdie at the par-5 fourth hole, holding steady at 6-over. Howell tapped in for par after his fourth shot left him a couple of feet from the hole.
Howell remains at 6-over for the tournament after getting up and down on the par 4, 454-yard third hole.
Howell began with a par on his opening hole of the second round. He followed that up with a birdie on the par 4, 359-yard second hole to move to 6-over.
Mason Howell will be in the 2:31 p.m. grouping off No. 1 alongside Joakim Langergren and Chris Gotterup.
APOPKA, Fla. – A family that has lived in the United States for more than two decades is facing a painful separation as deportations continue. The couple, who have four children — all American citizens — are being torn apart by immigration enforcement actions. Apopka family faces separation What we know: A family that has […]
APOPKA, Fla. – A family that has lived in the United States for more than two decades is facing a painful separation as deportations continue. The couple, who have four children — all American citizens — are being torn apart by immigration enforcement actions.
What we know:
A family that has lived in the U.S. for over 20 years is facing separation due to deportation. The father, Esvin Juarez, was deported to Guatemala after a routine ICE check-in where his deferred action status was not honored. His wife, Rosmeri Miranda, is currently being held in Orange County Jail awaiting deportation. Their four children, aged 9 to 17, are U.S. citizens.
What we don’t know:
It remains unclear what will happen next in Rosmeri Miranda’s case and whether state officials will intervene to prevent her deportation. The family’s long-term legal options and potential outcomes for reunification are still uncertain.
The backstory:
The Juarez family came to the U.S. illegally 24 years ago and sought deferred action to avoid deportation. Deferred action is a discretionary policy allowing certain immigrants to temporarily delay removal. Despite this, ICE chose not to honor the father’s deferred status, resulting in his deportation. The family and community argue they have contributed positively to their community and do not pose a threat.
Local perspective:
This case highlights ongoing tensions around immigration enforcement, especially for families with U.S.-born children. Local supporters, including elected officials, are rallying for justice and reform, pointing to what they see as failures in the system to protect due process and family unity.
What they’re saying:
A community rally in Apopka took place on Friday to support the family and demand justice.
“They are not criminals. They are pillars of the community,” said daughter Beverly Juarez of her parents. “Do what’s right!”
Elected officials from the city, county, and state have joined the growing chorus of support.
“I hear this rhetoric all the time: ‘Do it the right way.’ I hate to break it to the American people, but there is no right way in this country that works,” said State Rep. Anna Eskamani, D-Orlando.
Many of the speakers at Friday’s rally talked about the justice system, arguing the Juarez family’s rights were violated.
“We are here today because something deeply important is at stake,” said Felipe Sousa-Lazaballet, the Hope Community Center Executive Director. “The right to due process.”
The family’s attorney criticized the handling of the case, saying the Juarez family’s rights to due process were violated.
“I voted for Trump. I voted for the border to be closed. I voted… I voted for the deportation of illegal people who were criminals,” attorney Grisel Ybarra said. “Not for this, not for people like this.”
Beverly Juarez is still hoping someone will intervene and bring her family back together.
“The country right now has a chance to right this wrong.”
STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 35 ORLANDO:
The Source: This story was written based on information shared by the family of Esvin Juarez, including daughter Beverly Juarez, Felipe Sousa-Lazaballet, the Hope Community Center Executive Directorand, and attorney Grisel Ybarra.
Friday afternoon high school playoff highlights AFTER A DAY OFF, THE SOX ARE BACK IN ACTION WITH THE YANKEES AT FENWAY. GARRETT CROCHET STARTS ON THE MOUND FOR BOSTON. HIGH SCHOOL LACROSSE PLAYOFFS…#9 GARDINER AT #1 YORK LATE FIRST QUARTER… .GARDINER TAKES A 2-1 LEAD AS REMINGTON LAMOREAU FIRES POINT BLANK…. YORK DOMINATES THE REST […]
Friday afternoon high school playoff highlights
AFTER A DAY OFF, THE SOX ARE BACK IN ACTION WITH THE YANKEES AT FENWAY. GARRETT CROCHET STARTS ON THE MOUND FOR BOSTON. HIGH SCHOOL LACROSSE PLAYOFFS…#9 GARDINER AT #1 YORK LATE FIRST QUARTER… .GARDINER TAKES A 2-1 LEAD AS REMINGTON LAMOREAU FIRES POINT BLANK…. YORK DOMINATES THE REST OF THE QUARTER, EVAN ANASTAS THE ONE-TIMER TO TIE IT… WILDCATS SCORE FIVE STRAIGHT, QUINN WALENTA TO BRETT ACETO… YORK 20 GARDINER 7 IN CLASS C BOYS.. NYA BOYS HOSTED THE NORTHERN MAINE CO-OP FROM AROOSTOOK COUNTY. PANTHERS FELL BEHIND 2-0 BUT THEN GOT THE OFFENSE GOING..ZACH LEINWAND IS ABLE TO SNEAK THE BALL PAST THE GOALIE FEW MINUTES LATER, MAX SIEBERT RACES IN AND TIES THE GAME UP… NYA 17 NORTHERN MAINE 3 CLASS ‘C’ PLAYOFFS….#1 WELLS HOSTING #8 ERSKINE END OF THE FIRST QUARTER, KENDALL MAXON FEEDS CAITLIN ROONEY…JUST BEATS THE BUZZER, 5-0….WARRIORS 2ND QUARTER, A MILESTONE FOR ROONEY THE JUNIOR NETS HER 100TH CAREER GOAL WELLS 13 ERSKINE 2 WARRIORS MOVE ONTO SEMIFINALS. IN CLASS ‘A’ GIRLS, 13TH SEEDED CAPE ELIZABETH TRIED FOR ANOTHER UPSET AGAINST CHEVERUS. CAPERS LED 7-4 AT THE HALF, BUT SYDNEY BRUNELLE MAKES IT A ONE GOAL GAME IN THE THIRD QUARTER… CAPE RESPONDS EARLY IN THE FOURTH. CAMPBELL DEGEORGE MAKES IT A 10-8 GAME. THEN WITH CHEVERUS SERVING A PENALTY, PHOEBE EVANS PASSES TO CAMI JOHNSON FOR THE GOAL CAPE ELIZABETH 11 CHEVERUS 10 IN SOUTHERN A SOFTBALL, TOP SEEDED CHEVERUS HOSTED KENNEBUNK. STAGS LOAD THE BASES WITH TWO OUTS IN THE FIRST AND ABBY KELLY HITS THE BLOOP SINGLE TO KNOCK IN A PAIR OF RUNS. THAT IS MORE THEN ENOU
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Addison DeRoche throws a no-hitters for Cheverus
Addison DeRoche throws a no-hitters for Cheverus
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Perhaps the biggest recruiting weekend for Vanderbilt football this summer so far will kick off Friday as the third batch of official visitors this month arrives on West End. The Commodores’ 2026 class is off to a strong start and actually starting to fill up, as 13 players have already committed as of Friday afternoon. […]
Perhaps the biggest recruiting weekend for Vanderbilt football this summer so far will kick off Friday as the third batch of official visitors this month arrives on West End. The Commodores’ 2026 class is off to a strong start and actually starting to fill up, as 13 players have already committed as of Friday afternoon.
Vandy currently sits at No. 27 in the industry-generated 247Sports Composite Team Rankings. It will be hard for the ‘Dores to maintain that ranking through the end of the recruiting cycle without signing at least two or three 4-star prospects, a feat that gets more and more difficult as Georgia attempts to flip 4-star cornerback commit Caden Harris.
One possible 4-star commit is on campus this weekend as Vandy will make what essentially will be its final pitch in a tight battle against in-state rival Tennessee. And a number of other priority targets will be in Nashville, too, with the possibility of committing. Meanwhile, two commits will take their official visits as they serve as additional recruiters.
Here’s what you need to know about the Commodores’ recruiting action this weekend and which storylines to monitor.
MARINETTE — As cliche as it is to say that time moves so quickly that you’ll miss it if you blink, the last year of high school sports certainly flew by. It seems like a short time ago that kids were showing up for their first day of practice for fall sports, but now with […]
MARINETTE — As cliche as it is to say that time moves so quickly that you’ll miss it if you blink, the last year of high school sports certainly flew by.
It seems like a short time ago that kids were showing up for their first day of practice for fall sports, but now with school officially out for summer, the time is ripe to look back on all the milestones and accomplishments that local student-athletes achieved over the course of the 2024-25 school year.
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