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Hellgate’s Shannon Kane and Jacob Finch

MISSOULA — As the high school calendar winds to a close, as we do every year, it’s time for the annual KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards that honor local outstanding student-athletes. Every year, the honors court nominates a male and female student-athlete from the five high schools in Missoula, and on May 14 at the sports awards […]

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MISSOULA — As the high school calendar winds to a close, as we do every year, it’s time for the annual KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards that honor local outstanding student-athletes.

Every year, the honors court nominates a male and female student-athlete from the five high schools in Missoula, and on May 14 at the sports awards banquet, we’ll announce the winners, which include a $1,000 scholarship.

It’s time to meet the nominees from Hellgate High School in Shannon Kane and Jacob Finch.

Shannon Kane has been a four-year athlete for basketball and softball for the Knights.

Watch the full video here:

2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Hellgate’s Shannon Kane and Jacob Finch

She was a co-captain in both sports this year, and twice in basketball was part of a Hellgate program that went to the Class AA state title game.

She’s a 4.0 student, has helped out as a volunteer with Animeals and at an assisted living facility and as a youth coach, while also serving in student government at Hellgate.

Watch related coverage: 2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Sentinel’s Peyton Size and Jace Koshatka

2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Sentinel’s Peyton Size and Jace Koshatka

After high school, Shannon is headed to Bozeman, where she’ll attend Montana State as she pursues a degree in nursing.

“I think that anyone that is a student-athlete has a lot of talents,” Kane said. “It’s pretty difficult to be able to maintain school and keep up with homework and all of that, as well as playing sports, because that takes a lot of your time obviously. It’s been special to be able to have a community around me, both at school and outside of school, family. And it’s just been amazing.”

Watch related coverage: 2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Big Sky’s Kyler Latrielle and Mason Fulford

2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Big Sky’s Kyler Latrielle and Mason Fulford

Jacob has competed in four sports at Hellgate in football, basketball, track and field and baseball.

He saw Hellgate basketball win state his sophomore year, and he’s been a captain in both football and basketball for the Knights.

Watch related coverage: 2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Loyola’s Drew Lamb and Declan Harrington

2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Loyola’s Drew Lamb and Declan Harrington

He’s a 4.0 student at Hellgate, is a member of the student government, has volunteered as a basketball camp counselor and has also been an elderly assistance volunteer.

After high school, Jacob is headed to Butte, where he’ll attend Montana Tech as he pursues a degree in construction management.

Watch related coverage: 2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Valley Christian’s Sydney Schneider and Ethan Wornath

2025 KPAX-Scheels Sports Awards: Valley Christian’s Sydney Schneider and Ethan Wornath

“Coming in here, I knew some kids from sports and I’ve deepened those friendships as I’ve been here,” Finch said. “You spend all your time with those people through three months of the year and you just don’t want to lose those friendships as you go forward.”

We’ll announce the winners of this year’s KPAX Sports Award on Wednesday evening, following the celebration banquet.





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County moves forward with 4.1 million dollar design phase for sports complex, Commissioner Yates address rumors — DavidsonLocal.com

Representatives with the engineering firm, Providence Partners, said these are preliminary concept plans, which will include traffic, environmental, first responder response and other impact studies. The final construction plans will be voted on by the county commissioners once the concept plan is completed.  The design phase is estimated to take between six to eight months, with construction […]

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Representatives with the engineering firm, Providence Partners, said these are preliminary concept plans, which will include traffic, environmental, first responder response and other impact studies. The final construction plans will be voted on by the county commissioners once the concept plan is completed. 

The design phase is estimated to take between six to eight months, with construction lasting approximately one year. The anticipated opening of the park is set for summer of 2027. 

Several members of the community spoke during the public comment period of the commissioners meeting, some in support, but most in opposition of the project, which county officials refer to as the Southmont Community Center. 

“A project of this size and shape doesn’t fit well in Southmont,” said David Chase. “There is a lot to consider before making a quick judgment. There has to be a better location or scale it down from a mini theme park…to more of a community park.” 

Mike Lida said he was disappointed in the lack of communication with property owners near the sports complex, and that there were concerns about the county commissioners pushing forward without taking input from the citizens.  

“Show citizens of Davidson County that you actually care about the impact on us,” said Lida. 

Sammy Antonelli, head soccer coach at Oak Grove High School, spoke in support of the new sports complex, saying he understands the emotions this project has garnered, but it is important to support activities for the youth.  

“We all know there is a growing issue, that the youth have nothing to do in this county,” said Antonelli. “This is the perfect opportunity to give kids something to do, something to be proud of. I understand there are a lot of issues, but we need to think who is this for, it’s for the kids.” 

Commissioner Todd Yates, who owns Yates Grading and Paving, addressed the crowd following the public comment period concerning recent rumors on social media indicating that he has some kind of personal or professional interest in the project. He said that he will not profit in any way from this project. 

“I didn’t own land in Southmont. I’m sorry if you think I’m a thief or no good. It’s tough to hear how I’ve taken millions of dollars, I have not made one penny…The sports complex is too big for my company (to do the paving), even if I could make a bid,” said Yates. 

Also during the meeting, the county commissioners approved a sponsorship proposal developed by the Davidson County Parks and Recreation Department for naming rights for amenities to be built at the sports complex. 

The sponsorships start at $5 million for the overall naming rights of the sports complex, $1 million for the aquatics center, and $500,000 for the community center for a 10-year period.  

Naming rights for the championship soccer/multipurpose field will be $75,000, and $50,000 for the championship baseball field. The lesser soccer and baseball fields are $10,000.  

Other sponsorship levels include $50,000 for the campground, $15,000 for the pavilion over a five-year period. Also $10,000 for the two disc golf courses and the four pickleball courts and $5,000 for the two tennis courts and the cross-country track. 



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What You Need to Know About U.S. v. Skrmetti

On June 18, 2025, the Supreme Court decided U.S .v. Skrmetti, a case about a Tennessee law banning gender-affirming hormone therapies for transgender youth (SB-1), which was challenged as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution by discriminating based on sex and transgender status. Chief Justice Roberts, writing for a 6-3 conservative majority, […]

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On June 18, 2025, the Supreme Court decided U.S .v. Skrmetti, a case about a Tennessee law banning gender-affirming hormone therapies for transgender youth (SB-1), which was challenged as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution by discriminating based on sex and transgender status. Chief Justice Roberts, writing for a 6-3 conservative majority, held that the state only needed to show a “rational basis” for the law, and allowed SB-1 to go into effect, banning hormone therapies for transgender youth in that state. Although the decision is hugely consequential for transgender children, their families, and friends, it leaves unanswered important constitutional questions about protections for transgender people. Justice Sotomayor, joined by Justices Kagan and Jackson, dissented.

The ruling allows for discrimination against transgender youth in healthcare based on the majority’s finding that SB-1 merely makes age and medical distinctions by barring the use of hormone therapies for youth with gender dysphoria. The majority does not reach the foundational constitutional questions of whether laws targeting transgender people violate equal protection and whether laws drawing distinctions based on transgender status are subject to the same “heightened scrutiny” (meaning the court requires a stronger justification for such laws) that has always previously been applied to laws that differentiate based on sex. Rather, the majority reasons that SB-1 does not rely on sex-based classifications – it just “prohibits healthcare providers from administering puberty blockers or hormones to minors for certain medical uses, regardless of a minor’s sex.” U.S. v. Skrmetti, 605 U.S. ___ (2025), slip op. 10.

The dissent points out the inherent contradiction in claiming that discrimination based on “gender dysphoria” is somehow distinct from discrimination based on sex: 2 “In addition to discriminating against transgender adolescents, who by definition ‘identify with’ an identity “inconsistent” with their sex, that law conditions the availability of medications on a patient’s sex. Male (but not female) adolescents can receive medicines that help them look like boys, and female (but not male) adolescents can receive medicines that help them look like girls.” Sotomayor dissent, slip op. 2.

Justice Sotomayor illustrates the point with this example:

Consider the mother who contacts a Tennessee doctor, concerned that her adolescent child has begun growing unwanted facial hair. This hair growth, the mother reports, has spurred significant distress because it makes her child look unduly masculine. The doctor’s next step depends on the adolescent’s sex. If the patient was identified as female at birth, SB1 allows the physician to alleviate her distress with testosterone suppressants. What if the adolescent was identified male at birth, however? SB1 precludes the patient from receiving the same medicine. Id. at 11.

While the majority opinion’s strained reasoning is dubious and draws on questionable prior precedent that declined to find pregnancy related to sex, the way in which the case was resolved leaves open the possibility of other challenges to laws that restrict gender-affirming care and otherwise discriminate against transgender people.

Questions & Answers

What is the immediate impact of this case?

This decision will have devastating impacts for transgender youth, their parents, and medical providers. It means that whether youth can access gender-affirming care, even with parental consent, will depend on where they live. The ruling does not impact care in states without bans. However, in addition to Tennessee, twenty-six other states have enacted bans on gender-affirming care for minors. In two of those states – Montana and Arkansas – existing court orders continue to prevent those bans from going into effect. Cases challenging bans in other states will continue and are likely to make their way up to the Supreme Court to consider this issue again.

The harm to transgender children and their families in states with bans is great. As the dissent puts it, “access to care can be a question of life or death.” Id. at 4. The American Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Psychological Association, and American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry all agree that care for gender dysphoria is appropriate and medically necessary. Id. In states with bans, families are denied basic care that has been shown to “meaningfully improve the health and wellbeing of transgender adolescents, reducing anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation, and (for some patients) the need for more invasive surgical treatments later in life.” Id. at 5 (cit. om.).

Although the ruling heightens anxieties for transgender youth and their families, advocates for transgender rights have made clear that they will not be deterred. Chase Strangio, Co-Director of the ACLU’s LGBTQ & HIV Project, who argued the case on behalf of the challengers, said: “We are as determined as ever to fight for the dignity and equality of every transgender person and we will continue to do so with defiant strength, a restless resolve, and a lasting commitment to our families, our communities, and the freedom we all deserve.”

What does this mean for Trump’s attempt to ban gender-affirming care for people under 19?

On January 28, 2025, President Trump issued an executive order that seeks to prevent transgender and intersex youth from accessing recommended health care by removing coverage for gender-affirming care from federal health insurance policies, modifying requirements under the Affordable Care Act, and preventing hospitals or other medical providers who accept Medicare or Medicaid (or who receive federal funding for research or education) from providing gender-affirming care of any kind to people under the age of 19. Federal lawsuits challenging this executive order are ongoing. Courts deciding those cases will take the Skrmetti decision into account, but the plaintiffs in those cases continue to have strong arguments that Trump’s nationwide restrictions constitute an unlawful exercise of power, and they can point to the Administration’s demonstrations of animus and overt cruelty toward transgender people as violating constitutional equal protection. There is strong precedent that attacks targeting a disfavored minority group based on animus violate equal protection.

Federal lawsuits challenging this executive order are ongoing. Courts deciding those cases will take the Skrmetti decision into account, but the plaintiffs in those cases continue to have strong arguments that Trump’s nationwide restrictions constitute an unlawful exercise of power, and they can point to the Administration’s demonstrations of animus and overt cruelty toward transgender people as violating constitutional equal protection. There is strong precedent that attacks targeting a disfavored minority group based on animus violate equal protection.

What does this mean for other cases about transgender rights, such as sports bans and bathroom bans?

Because the Court found that the Tennessee law drew distinctions based on age and medical treatment, the decision does not directly answer important questions about the rights of transgender people in many other important contexts, like youth sports and bathroom access.

The Court also declined to answer the question of whether its decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, 590 U. S. 644 (2020), applies beyond the Title VII employment context. This means that lower court decisions relying on Bostock’s reasoning that “it is impossible to discriminate against a person for being homosexual or transgender without discriminating against that individual based on sex,” id. at 660, remain good law.

What supports are available for transgender students?

NEA resources for supporting transgender students are available here: https://www.nea.org/advocating-for-change/racial-social-justice/tools-justice/lgbtqsupport-protection.



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Indianapolis native Trey Lyles to host free youth basketball camp

INDIANAPOLIS — NBA power forward and Indianapolis native Trey Lyles will host a free youth basketball camp at Arsenal Technical High School on Saturday, June 28. According to the press release, the camp is open to boys and girls aged 10 to 17. The camp aims to inspire the next generation of basketball players in […]

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INDIANAPOLIS — NBA power forward and Indianapolis native Trey Lyles will host a free youth basketball camp at Arsenal Technical High School on Saturday, June 28.

According to the press release, the camp is open to boys and girls aged 10 to 17. The camp aims to inspire the next generation of basketball players in Indianapolis, focusing on basketball and life skill development.

Lyles, who currently plays for the Sacramento Kings, played at Arsenal Tech and was selected 12th overall in the NBA draft, per the release.

The camp gives Lyles the chance to give back to the community at his high school alma mater.

“I’m happy to continue having this free camp in the city. It’s for and in the community that’s normally overlooked,” Lyles said in the press release. “A great opportunity for kids to see and be around basketball while having fun. I wish I had something like this to go to when I was younger. I’m happy I’m able to do this every year. It’s an honor.”

Only 250 spots are available, and a parent or guardian must sign a waiver. The doors open at 8:30 a.m. Registration is from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. The camp will run from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Lunch will be provided.





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Calallen sees significant numbers increase for girls basketball camp

The Lady ‘Cats coach attributes the jump both to the rise of the WNBA’s popularity and the success of Calallen’s women’s sports. CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — It’s no secret that the popularity of women’s sports is at an all-time high. All you have to do is look at the current ratings of the WNBA and […]

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The Lady ‘Cats coach attributes the jump both to the rise of the WNBA’s popularity and the success of Calallen’s women’s sports.

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — It’s no secret that the popularity of women’s sports is at an all-time high. All you have to do is look at the current ratings of the WNBA and this past softball world series, but now we’re starting to see that popularity trickle down to youth sports as well.

3NEWS stopped by Calallen’s Lady ‘Cat basketball camp Monday where Head Coach Juan Ozuna said their numbers have gone from about 65 last summer to over 100 this year. Those are girls ranging from kindergartners all the way to incoming high school freshmen.

Ozuna says many of his campers are looking forward to being future Lady ‘Cats thanks in part to big time stars like Caitlin Clarke, Paige Bueckers and A’ja Wilson in the WNBA, combined with the success of the women’s sports at Calallen, especially the three-time defending state champion softball team. 

“Now you see much younger girls kind of aiming to be the next Caitlyn Clark,” Ozuna said. “I think we also have a very good community here that is very invested in developing their young athletes, so we’ve got girls that want to be the next district champ and the next state champ.”

“Seeing that professional basketball is getting bigger, I just feel like more people want to watch,” incoming Calallen 9th grader Cody Forbes said. “(The camp) has grown a lot because we invite our friends and they keep inviting their friends and everyone just starts coming and it’s really fun.”

In addition to the powerhouse softball team, Calallen volleyball went perfect in district last season and the girls’ basketball team reached the area round. So the future looks bright for several Lady ‘Cats programs.





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Dedicated Youth Sports Advocate Murray Johnson Of Atmore Passes Away : NorthEscambia.com

The Atmore community and beyond is mourning the loss of Murray Johnson, known for his passionate support of youth sports. Carlton Murray Johnson, Sr., 86, passed away peacefully with his family by his side. Johnson sold insurance in Atmore for decades. Murray’s commitment to youth sports in Atmore was unmatched. In 1968, he co-founded the […]

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The Atmore community and beyond is mourning the loss of Murray Johnson, known for his passionate support of youth sports.

Carlton Murray Johnson, Sr., 86, passed away peacefully with his family by his side.

Johnson sold insurance in Atmore for decades.

Murray’s commitment to youth sports in Atmore was unmatched. In 1968, he co-founded the Atmore Pee Wee Football League and served as its president for many years. That same year, he became involved with the local baseball league, where he coached and mentored young athletes. In 1973, Murray became president of both the Atmore Cal Ripken League and the Atmore Babe Ruth League, serving in those roles until 2023. He held the position of Babe Ruth League District Commissioner for Area 10 for an incredible 52 years. Murray oversaw and organized numerous district and state baseball tournaments, creating opportunities for young athletes to showcase their talents and fostering a sense of community among players, coaches, and families.

His civic contributions extended beyond sports. Murray was a past president of the Atmore High School Quarterback Club and served as Drive Chairman and board member of the Atmore United Fund. He was also a dedicated member of the Atmore Education Revenue Committee from 1971 to 2003. His passion for healthcare advocacy led him to serve as county co-chair for the Lurleen B. Wallace Cancer Center Hospital in Birmingham. In 2016, Murray received the Atmore Chamber of Commerce Lifetime Achievement Award.

A celebration of life for Murray Johnson will be held on Saturday, June 28, at the First Baptist Church of Atmore at 1:30 p.m. until service time of 3 p.m.

Murray Johnson is survived by his wife of 68 years, Jean, three children and numerous other family members.

In lieu of flowers, the family has asked for donations to be made to the City of Atmore Recreation Department, P. O. Drawer 1297, Atmore, AL 36504.

For the complete obituary, click here.



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Orcutt National 11’s three-peat as District 65 champions | Youth Sports

The Orcutt National Little League 11-year-old All-Stars have pulled off a three-peat. The Orcutt 11-year-old squad won the District 65 Little League 11’s Tournament for the third consecutive year, defeating Lompoc 13-9 at Atascadero Friday night to win the 2025 tournament title and cap an unbeaten run through the tournament. Many of the Orcutt National […]

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The Orcutt National Little League 11-year-old All-Stars have pulled off a three-peat.

The Orcutt 11-year-old squad won the District 65 Little League 11’s Tournament for the third consecutive year, defeating Lompoc 13-9 at Atascadero Friday night to win the 2025 tournament title and cap an unbeaten run through the tournament.

Many of the Orcutt National players have played together for three years.

Orcutt National advanced to the Section 1 Tournament, which District 13 El Rio Little League in Oxnard will host beginning July 10.      

Orcutt National catcher Sam Grindy went 4-for-4 in the District 65 tournament title game Friday night. Grindy doubled in the fourth inning, and singled in the first, second and sixth.

Orcutt National broke on top in the top of the first inning. Jax Walker was hit by a pitch, Rocco Kennedy walked then Andrew Siordia singled up the middle. Orcutt National tacked on two runs on a Lompoc error.

Dominic DeMarco extended the Orcutt National lead with an RBI groundout in the top of the second.

Lompoc rallied to tie the game at 7-7 in the bottom of the third then Orcutt National took control for good with five runs in the top of the fourth. Walker provided the biggest hit of the inning for Orcutt National with a two-run triple.

Baylor Baldwin pitched the last three innings in relief for Orcutt National. Baldwin gave up one earned run on no hits and struck out six. Kennedy, the Orcutt National starter, gave up one earned run on five hits over two innings and struck out five.

   

  



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