High School Sports
Athletes Davis, Mehen To Join Wheeling Hall of Fame
WHEELING — A pair of Wheeling natives who went on to hall-of-fame athletic careers elsewhere will be among the latest to be inducted into the Wheeling Hall of Fame. Champion golfer Scott Davis and late professional basketball player Richard “Dick” Mehen will be part of the 12-person Class of 2025. The two are being inducted […]


WHEELING — A pair of Wheeling natives who went on to hall-of-fame athletic careers elsewhere will be among the latest to be inducted into the Wheeling Hall of Fame.
Champion golfer Scott Davis and late professional basketball player Richard “Dick” Mehen will be part of the 12-person Class of 2025. The two are being inducted under the category of sports and athletics.
The 2025 induction ceremony will take place at 6 p.m. Saturday, June 28, at WesBanco Arena. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased online at WesBancoArena.com or by calling the arena box office at 304-233-7000, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. The last day to buy tickets is June 25.
Scott Davis
Born May 6, 1956, in Wheeling, Davis dedicated his entire career to growing the game of golf in West Virginia. After graduating from Triadelphia High School — where he was a three-sport athlete in football, basketball, and golf — he was recruited to play golf at Marshall University by coach Joe Feaganes.
It was in Huntington where his career took off.
At Marshall, Davis met his mentor Harold Payne and played as a sophomore on the 1976 NCAA Tournament team while not a member of a Division I conference. The Thundering Herd finished 17th in team standings, and Davis won the NCAA Long Drive title in Albuquerque, New Mexico As a junior, he helped the Herd win the Marshall Invitational.
As a senior, he was the individual medalist in the Marshall Invitational, leading the Thundering Herd in stroke average and receiving All-Southern Conference honors in 1978.
Later that year, Davis won the West Virginia Amateur championship, recording a round of 64 to tie the all-time tournament record. He birdied six of the first 11 holes on the Old White course at The Greenbrier Resort.
After graduating from Marshall, Davis worked as an assistant golf professional under Karen Murphy at Speidel Golf Club in Wheeling, where he directed the Wheeling Junior Golf Association. A love of working with the junior golfers sparked Davis’ career.
Now a Hurricane resident, Davis has been a Professional Golf Association of America and West Virginia PGA Golf Professional for four decades. The majority of his time was spent in the Tri-State PGA Section as Head Golf Professional at Scarlett Oaks Country Club and Edgewood Country Club in southern West Virginia. In 2004, he received the PGA of America Bill Strasbaugh Award in the Tri-State Section. This award represents Davis’ career, his dedicated involvement in charitable and community activities as well as his mentoring of PGA Golf Professionals.
As a competitor, he won West Virginia Open championships in 1982, 1990, 1995, and 1998. He also was a four-time Low Senior at the Open, the 10-time West Virginia PGA Player of the Year, four-time Senior West Virginia PGA Player of the Year, Tri-State PGA champion, Tri-State Tour Championship champion, and Tri-State Match Play champion, and has competed in 18 National Club Professional Championships and six Majors Championships.
Inducted into the Marshall University Sports Hall of Fame in 2004, he also was enshrined in the West Virginia Golf Hall of Fame in 2017. The state honor cited him in this way, “Scott Davis is a trained instructor, a golf mentor, an accomplished player, a tournament director, event planner, club fitter, and merchandiser, but most importantly: A friend to the game.”
Richard “Dick” Mehen
Mehen and his older brother Bernie Mehen, who was inducted into the Wheeling Hall of Fame in 1992, probably are the most acclaimed brother athletes from Wheeling. Dick Mehen was born in Wheeling on May 20, 1922, and both brothers earned basketball fame at Wheeling High School, the University of Tennessee, and in the early era of professional basketball.
Dick and Bernie became the first two West Virginia high school basketball players to earn all-class, first-team All-State honors three times. Dick graduated from Wheeling High in 1940, two years after Bernie. Dick was a 6-foot-5, 195-pound Wildcat center who was honored as All-State captain as a senior when the Wildcats posted a 23-1 record and won the school’s second state title in three years. In 1938, with both Dick and Bernie in the starting lineup, the Wildcats went 24-0 and won a state title for coach Everett Brinkman, a Hall of Fame honoree for the city, Ohio Valley Athletic Conference, West Virginia, and the Upper Ohio Valley Dapper Dans.
The Wildcats were 64-3 in the three years Dick was a standout. As a senior, he scored 556 points to lead the Ohio Valley – and likely the state – in that low-scoring era. He ended his prep career with more than 1,300 points, a rare total for that period. He also competed as a high jumper for the Wildcat track and field team.
Dick joined Bernie at the University of Tennessee and twice earned All-Southeastern Conference first-team honors in 1942-43. He was a second team All-American in 1942. His career was interrupted by U.S. Air Force service, in 1944-45 during World War II, but he managed to finish school in 1947.
He then played five seasons of pro basketball as a power forward/center, starting with the Toledo Jeeps of the National Basketball League (coached by Wheeling Hall of Famer Jule Rivlin) in 1948. Dick Mehen played with the Waterloo Hawks two years (one in NBL, one in NBA) before playing with three NBA teams in 1950-51 – the Baltimore Bullets, Boston Celtics and Fort Wayne Pistons.
He ended his pro career in 1952 with the Milwaukee Hawks. He earned All-NBL 1st Team honors in 1949. His pro career totals for 193 games were 2,067 points, 505 rebounds, and 480 assists.
Mehen was inducted into the OVAC Hall of Fame, Legends category, and the University of Tennessee Athletic Hall of Fame. He passed away on December 14, 1986, in North Olmsted, Ohio.
High School Sports
Wonderful Winter For Journal
It wasn’t as great as the fall sports, but honestly, it would be hard to match the amazing fall season by Journal-area prep sports teams. The winter sports season still had some champions, but more individual compared to team titles. Check back next week for the conclusion of this series with a look at the […]


It wasn’t as great as the fall sports, but honestly, it would be hard to match the amazing fall season by Journal-area prep sports teams.
The winter sports season still had some champions, but more individual compared to team titles.
Check back next week for the conclusion of this series with a look at the spring sports season that recently wrapped up.
Here’s a look back at top winter sports highlights in the Journal-area:
Girls Basketball:
State Runner-Up: Fremd (lost 65-44 to Kenwood in Class 4A title game)
Fourth Place at State: Loyola Academy (lost 54-44 to Alton in Class 4A third place game)
Sectional Champions: Fremd (4A), Loyola Academy (4A), Willows Academy (1A)
Regional Champions: Prospect (4A), Fremd (4A), Maine South (4A), Loyola Academy (4A), Rolling Meadows (4A), Hersey (4A), Glenbrook South (4A), St. Viator (3A), Regina Dominican (2A), Willows Academy (1A)
Boys Basketball:
Highlights: Rolling Meadows advanced to the supersectionals, falling to eventual state runner-up Warren 60-48 to finish in the top eight at state in Class 4A. Fremd and Loyola Academy each fell in the sectional finals.
Sectional Champion: Rolling Meadows (4A)
Regional Champions: Rolling Meadows (4A), Loyola Academy (4A), Fremd (4A), Hersey (4A), Stevenson (4A), St. Viator (3A)
Boys Bowling:
Highlights: Rolling Meadows is new in boys bowling, but Jayden Ramel has been bowling for a while and it showed at state as he finished third overall individually. Only Notre Dame’s Justin Sanetra (2010; 3rd place), Notre Dame’s Tom Ochal (2015; 2nd), Stevenson’s Zach Singer (2016; 1st), Stevenson’s Richy Zenner (2016; 2nd) and Stevenson’s Lucas Pinkus (2018; 5th) have finished top five at state before. Stevenson’s Jude Snider finished 82nd at state this year as well. No Journal-area team qualified for state.
Girls Bowling:
Individual State Champion: Elk Grove’s Julia Korzen won the wheelchair division at state for her first career state title.
State Team: Hersey finished 22nd with Annalyse Johnson, Abby Stonequist, Lizzie Waltz, Audrey Neill, Freedom Toll and Angela Colletti.
Also of note: Hersey won a regional title and a sectional title, the only Journal-area team to do so in 2025 for girls bowling.
Boys Wrestling:
Individual State Champions: Niles Notre Dame’s Ray Long won the 106 lbs. state title in Class 2A. Fremd’s Evan Gosz (47-2 record) won the Class 3A title at 144 lbs.
State Team Trophy: Hersey finished a program-best fourth at state in the dual competition (Hersey won state in 1970-71 and 1971-72 under the old format that ran from 1936-83). Hersey beat Edwardsville 40-27 in the state quarterfinals for their first ever dual state win, before falling 55-15 in the semifinals to eventual state champion Marmion. In the third place match, Joliet Catholic won 46-22 over Hersey.
Team Sectionals: Northridge qualified for the team sectionals for the first time ever in Class 1A. Niles Notre Dame qualified for sectionals in Class 2A, while Hersey qualified in Class 3A.
State Individual Medalists: Loyola Academy’s Niko Ordiotti (2nd at 106 lbs.), Loyola’s Kai Calcutt (2nd at 215 lbs.), Hersey’s Elijah Garza (4th at 132 lbs.), Buffalo Grove’s Oleksandr Havrylkiv (4th at 113 lbs.), Maine South’s Tyler Fortis (4th at 485 lbs.), Hersey’s Maksim Mukhamedaliyev (5th at 144 lbs.), Fremd’s Owen Jakubczak (5th at 285 lbs.) and Fremd’s Drew Fifield (6th at 138 lbs.) in Class 3A. Notre Dame’s John Sheehy (4th at 126 lbs.) also medaled in Class 2A. Northridge’s Adam Haddad (3rd at 165 lbs.) in Class 1A became the first Knights’ wrestler to medal in program history.
Also of note: There were additional individual state qualifiers from Elk Grove, Fremd, Hersey, Maine South, Maine West, Niles Notre Dame, Northridge, Prospect, Rolling Meadows, Stevenson and Wheeling.
Girls Wrestling:
Individual State Champion: Loyola Academy’s Harlee Hiller won her second career state title, claiming the 115 lbs. championship two years after winning the 105 lbs. title.
Also of note: Wheeling’s Elise “Leaf” Burkut (125 lbs.) and Prospect’s Viola Pianetto (135 lbs.) were state runner-up finishers this season. Maine West’s Lillian “Lilly” Garrett (34-7) picked up the first IHSA state medal for the program with a fifth place finish at 170 lbs. Leyden’s Zoey Dodgers (5th at 105 lbs.) and Sabrina Bono (5th at 120 lbs.) earned the first state medals ever for the Eagles. There were also state qualifiers from Elk Grove, Conant, Stevenson and Fremd.
Competitive Cheerleading:
State Runner-Up: Buffalo Grove (coed division)
Also of note: Stevenson finished fourth in the coed division, while Hersey grabbed seventh. Elk Grove finished 11th, while Palatine (15th) and Conant (17th) also competed at state in the coed division. Prospect finished 15th and Maine South was 16th in the large division at State. St. Viator was 24th in the medium division.
Competitive Dance:
State Runner-Up: Stevenson placed second in Class 3A with 95.88 points.
Other State Teams: Fremd (6th; 93.48 score), Maine South (11th; 90.26), Glenbrook South (18th; 85.16), Loyola Academy (21st; 84.12), Conant (24th; 82.72) and Prospect (26th; 82.47) in Class 3A. Buffalo Grove (19th; 81.41) and Maine East (25th; 79.1) both competed in Class 2A, while St. Viator finished 22nd in Class 1A.
Boys Swimming:
Individual State Champions: Glenbrook South’s Ryan Eidelman won the 50-yard free for Athletes with Disabilities (AWD), 100-yard free for AWD, 200-yard free for AWD and 100-yard breaststroke for AWD. Conant’s Trevor Hanson was competing in a different level for AWD events and he won the three events he competed in, winning the 50-yard free AWD, 100-yard free AWD and 100-yard breaststroke AWD.
State Teams: Loyola Academy (5th place; 133.5 points), Stevenson (6th; 127 pts.), Glenbrook South (7th; 124 pts.), Niles West (14th; 74 pts.), Buffalo Grove (18th; 35 pts.), Maine South (24th, 18 pts.), Maine East (26th; 16 pts.), Fremd (31st; 9 pts.), Hersey (33rd; 7 pts.), Prospect (35th; 6.5 pts.), Conant (36th; 6 pts.) and Rolling Meadows (40th; 4 pts.).
Individual/Relay State Highlights: Loyola’s Velizar Filipov, Devon Bone, Gus Koh and Luke Helm finished third in the 200-yard medley relay, while Glenbrook South (5th) and Stevenson (6th) also finished in the top 10. Glenbrook South’s Taylor Isaac was runner-up in 1-meter diving, while Maine South’s Caleb Lakin (4th), Buffalo Grove’s Michael Surowaniec (8th) and Hersey’s Nathan Mabry (10th) all finished in the top 10 behind Isaac. Niles West’s Ethan Chung was third in the 100-yard fly, while Loyola’s pair of Velizar Filipov (5th) and Gus Koh (6th) also finished top 10 at state. Glenbrook South’s Lucas Fernandez-Geddes was fourth in the 100-yard free and he was part of the 200-yard free relay team that finished fourth, just ahead of Stevenson (5th) and Niles West (6th). The Journal-area had five swimmers in the top 10 in the 100-yard back with Stevenson’s Kasper Lee (3rd), Loyola’s Filipov (4th), Loyola’s Koh (6th), Niles West’s Chung (8th) and Fremd’s Marcus Wirkowski (10th). Glenbrook South’s Noah Chen finished fifth in the 100-yard breast. Loyola also picked up a third place finish in the 400-yard free relay. Maine East’s David Rozenbergas finished 10th in the 200-yard IM and ninth in the 100-yard free to earn the Blue Demons their first state medals in 53 years.
Girls Gymnastics:
Highlights: Palatine’s Jolee Waddington finished sixth in all-around at state with a 36.975 score. Waddington was runner-up at state in parallel bars (9.55) and fifth on floor (9.4). Hersey’s Maria Reyes took third on floor. Prospect, Stevenson and Glenbrook South were among the schools with state qualifiers as well.
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High School Sports
Woodward Park City reflects on winter season, highlights summer activities and X Games partnership
Woodward Park City General Manager Gar Trayner shares details about the past winter season, their summer camp and X Games partnership. The successful winter season experienced challenges with weather but overall good visitation. Local numbers are growing, while destination numbers are stable. The summer season has opened with five mountain biking trails and various camps, […]


Woodward Park City General Manager Gar Trayner shares details about the past winter season, their summer camp and X Games partnership.
The successful winter season experienced challenges with weather but overall good visitation. Local numbers are growing, while destination numbers are stable.
The summer season has opened with five mountain biking trails and various camps, including a growing mountain bike summer camp.
Woodward will also participate in the Summer X Games, offering skateboard and BMX clinics.
High School Sports
Alumni game highlights friendly Pleasantville, Atlantic City rivalry
The Boys and Girls Club of Atlantic City invites the community to experience an afternoon of basketball, hometown pride and family fun at the Legacy and Legends Alumni Basketball Game. The event will run from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, June 28 at Evolution Arena, 317 N. Pennsylvania Ave. It will showcase the friendly rivalry […]


The Boys and Girls Club of Atlantic City invites the community to experience an afternoon of basketball, hometown pride and family fun at the Legacy and Legends Alumni Basketball Game.
The event will run from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, June 28 at Evolution Arena, 317 N. Pennsylvania Ave.
It will showcase the friendly rivalry between alumni from Pleasantville High School and Atlantic City High School, a matchup sure to spark memories and celebrate the athletic talent that has shaped local sports history.
Proceeds from the event will support the club’s mission to inspire and enable all young people to reach their full potential as productive, caring, responsible citizens.
“This game is an opportunity to honor the legacy of our schools, celebrate the power of community, and uplift the next generation,” Boys and Girls CEO Tracey Triniwell said. “By supporting this event, you’re helping us continue to provide life-changing programs for the youth who need us most.”
The event will feature a halftime show by the ACHS Cheerleading Team.
Attendees also can enjoy snacks and refreshments from the concession stand, staffed by youth leaders from the Torch Club and Keystone Club, two of the Boys and Girls Club’s premier character and leadership development programs.
High School Sports
All
Liverpool, N.Y. — Athletes, coaches and families from across Section III had a blast on Tuesday night at syracuse.com’s 2025 All-Central New York High School Sports Awards Show. There were laughs, smiles, free ice cream and even a dancing cow inside the Liverpool High School auditorium. 0


Liverpool, N.Y. — Athletes, coaches and families from across Section III had a blast on Tuesday night at syracuse.com’s 2025 All-Central New York High School Sports Awards Show.
There were laughs, smiles, free ice cream and even a dancing cow inside the Liverpool High School auditorium.
High School Sports
Here are the 24 Mountain West players who will appear at this year's football media days
This year’s Mountain West football media days will be held July 16 (players) and July 17 (coaches) at Las Vegas’ Circa Resort and Casino, which will host the event for the third straight summer. The Nevada Wolf Pack, under second-year head coach Jeff Choate, will be represented by QB Chubba Purdy and DT Thomas Witte. […]


This year’s Mountain West football media days will be held July 16 (players) and July 17 (coaches) at Las Vegas’ Circa Resort and Casino, which will host the event for the third straight summer.
The Nevada Wolf Pack, under second-year head coach Jeff Choate, will be represented by QB Chubba Purdy and DT Thomas Witte.
Purdy is entering his second season at Nevada after backing up Brendon Lewis last year. Purdy made one start in 2024 and for the year completed 18-of-25 passes for 239 yards with one touchdown and one interception. He also rushed 13 times for 60 yards and caught two passes for 10 yards. Purdy entered the transfer portal this offseason before returning to Nevada after Lewis hit the portal. Witte is Nevada’s only return starter on defense. A former walk-on, he enters his sixth season in the program. Witte has 73 career tackles, including 10 for loss, and one sack.
Here is the full list of MW athletes at this year’s media days; players will meet with the media July 16 with coaches meeting with the media July 17.
Air Force – Bruin Fleischmann, Sr., TE; Luke Freer, Sr., P
Boise State – Kage Casey, Jr., OL; Jayden Virgin-Morgan, Jr., EDGE
Colorado State – Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi, Jr., QB; Mukendi Wa-Kalonji, Sr., DL
Fresno State – Jacob Spomer, Sr., OL; Al’zillion Hamilton, Sr., CB
Hawaii – Pofele Ashlock, Jr., WR; Jamih Otis, Jr., LB
Nevada – Chubba Purdy, Sr., QB; Thomas Witte, Sr., DT
New Mexico – Richard Pearce, Sr., OL; Gabe Lopez, Sr., EDGE
San Diego State – Ross Ulugalu-Maseuli, Sr., OL; Chris Johnson, Sr., CB
San José State – Walker Eget, Sr., QB; Taniela Latu, Sr., LB
UNLV – DeAngelo Irvin Jr., Jr., WR/KR/PR; Jake Pope, Jr., DB
Utah State – Bryson Barnes, Sr., QB; Gabriel Iniguez Jr., Sr., DT
Wyoming – John Michael Gyllenborg, Sr., TE; Jack Walsh, Sr., OG
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