Rec Sports
Rogue Rowing Junior athletes headed to nationals – Ashland News
Six to represent Rogue Valley in Florida, including first ever team in para event
By Holly Dillemuth, Ashland.news
The water at a nearly full Emigrant Lake reflected bright blue skies and expanding horizons for the Rogue Rowing Juniors as they carried their boats to the dock Saturday morning.
The irrigation lake is a training ground for the team of student-athletes who have rowed their way to a competition at the national level next month. Representing Ashland, St. Mary’s, and North Medford high schools and Logos Public Charter School in Medford, the Ashland-based team will compete with rowers from around the country at the U.S. Rowing Youth National regatta in Sarasota, Florida June 12 through 15.


The qualifying team, made up of two seniors and four underclassmen, is raising funds to make the trip. As of Monday, rowers had fundraised more than $5,200 for the trip through a Go Fund Me, just shy of their $6,000 goal. Crowdfunding has allowed rowers to focus their efforts on training for the event.
The following student-athletes qualified for nationals in 2,000 meter races:
- Ashland High School sophomore Tobias Pew and AHS junior Marcel Starbird: Men’s Youth Para Inclusive Double. Pew also qualified for a non-para event in the U17 Single Scull
- AHS senior Amelie Requejo: Youth Single
- Requejo, senior Brianna Brownlee, junior Esme Medley, and junior Kiva Dilansa: Youth Quad (four-person boat)
A Rogue Rowing veteran, Requejo will make her fourth visit to nationals in June, her last big race as a member of the team.
Dilansa, also acquainted with the competition, will return for her second time qualifying for nationals.
It’s the first time Pew and Starbird, both 16, Brownlee, 18, and Medley, 17, have qualified for the competition.


On land after practice, Starbird said he is just hoping to do as well as he can at nationals, as he supports his teammate, Tobias Pew. The duo will compete together in the first para event for the Rogue Rowing Juniors team. Pew, whose right foot isn’t fully developed, competes with a prosthetic foot on his right leg.
“It’s harder to press on the foot plate, so you don’t get quite the amount of power, energy,” Pew said.
But don’t let that fool you though — about his abilities or his determination.
“He’s pretty gritty,” Starbird said of teammate Pew, “And he can be really motivating. I know he’s always going to be giving it his all, so I’ve got to give it my all.”


Pew qualified for nationals in the single boat division, but entered the para division to broaden his opportunities in the sport. His coach encouraged him to get certified to compete in para rowing events last year.
Born in China, Pew was adopted in the United States when he was 18 months old. He credits his mom with getting him into the sport in seventh grade after quitting baseball. His mom knew a master rower through the adult rowing club and after getting into it, he’s hooked.
“I’m so integrated into this club, I can’t imagine not being in it,” Pew said.
“The first year I came here (2022), I didn’t know how far you could go,” he added. “It quickly became a goal of mine to make it to nationals, compete, represent the Rogue Valley down in Florida. I’m definitely super excited to finally fulfill that item on my bucket list.”
He’s also looking forward to reuniting with friends from around the United States he has met since starting the sport.
“We’re going to compete against three other boats, and it’ll be pretty cool,” Pew said.
Requejo, team captain of the Rogue Rowing Juniors, is poised to compete in June in Youth Single and Youth Quad (four-person boat) with Brownlee, Medley, and Dilansa.


As a four-time nationals qualifier, Requejo recalls the humidity and the heat in Florida as well as the “hustle and bustle” of national competition.
“It’s just a much bigger regatta than anything we’ve ever been to (as a team), so making sure that we can stay focused on the boat and how we’re rowing instead of everything around us is really important,” she told Ashland.news via phone.
“We know how to row,” she added. “We do it every day, and making sure we don’t forget that is really important.”
Goal-wise, Requejo said she just wants the team to do their best, both in single and quad events.
“This is the second time I’ve been rowing a quad, and I think there’s something different about being able to row a quad at nationals than just a single,” Requejo said. “You’re bringing your teammates with you, which is really nice to have their support, and they’re going through the training with you.”
Requejo also is looking ahead to a bright future beyond the youth national competition.
“I’ve been recruited to row at Stanford, so this team has been very transformative for me,” she said.
For Requejo, it all started with a summer camp at the age of 12.
“I started rowing right before COVID,” she said. “I wasn’t really wanting to do it, but I got into a boat the first day and loved it.”
Going to practice, seeing friends, getting a workout in, and getting outside were important to her.
“I’d say the most amazing time is in the morning when the sun hasn’t quite risen, so you get to see the first rays of light and the water is just glass,” Requejo said. “It’s really magical.”
That affinity for the water and sport have led her to give back, too.
“For my senior project, I started coaching a little bit, so I think whether it be rowing or coaching, I’m going to try and stay around it,” she said.
A culture of support
After sending the rowers out on the lake on Saturday, coaches Mattea Fountain and Jillian Deller each followed along in motorboats. Using a bullhorn, Fountain called out directions to rowers during their warm-up sequence on the water.


Fountain, a former coxswain herself, noted the athletes’ devotion to their sport and to each other.
“A lot of these kids wouldn’t be friends (otherwise) because they’re from different school districts, different grades. But because of rowing and spending so much time together, they’ve all gotten really close,” Fountain said. “The team has a really good culture, supporting each other no matter what. That’s been really special to watch.”
Fountain praised all of the athletes heading to nationals, and shared how the sport prepares them for life.
“It gives you so many opportunities,” Fountain said. “Rowing is the no. 1 sport for scholarships for women.”
Two of the athletes headed to nationals this year have scholarships waiting for them after graduation.
“(Brownlee) … it’s only her second year in the sport and she got recruited to row for Washington State (University) and she’s going to nationals,” Fountain said. “She is so strong and has such amazing awareness.”
“Rowing is good as a sport to keep you in shape and to get you moving and outside and meeting people, but it’s also really good for life lessons and learning how to work with people and how to work hard,” Fountain added. “It’s just a great way to learn how to be a person and how to be responsible for yourself. I think I’d be a very different person if I hadn’t rowed in high school.”


Recruiting always open for the team
Rogue Rowing Juniors, formerly known as Ashland Rowing Club, rows at Emigrant Lake almost daily, with weekday morning and Saturday morning practices added in to prepare for nationals.
The club used to have more than 70 rowers in its ranks prior to 2020, according to Fountain.
“After COVID, it kind of dwindled down, and we’re currently trying to rebuild,” Fountain said. “It’s a really cool sport. Getting to be out on the water in the afternoon … it’s really special, but it’s hard to convey that in schools. It’s hard to get our name out there.”
Coach Jillian Deller has been working with Rogue Valley schools, attending eighth grade open houses and P.E. and weight room classes to help spread the word about the team. No experience is necessary to join the team.
The team has two seasons, fall and spring, making it easy to work with athletes who are in different sports.
“We really do recruit all year-round,” Deller said, with summer and fall being among the most popular seasons to try it out.


To learn more about the fundraiser for their trip, visit https://www.gofundme.com/f/vqkqk-help-rogue-rowing-juniors-reach-nationals.
Donations pay for flights, food, registration fees, hauling boats (by Oregon Rowing Unlimited) and car rental fees while the team is at nationals.
To find out more about Rogue Rowing, visit https://www.roguerowing.org/about-us.
Rogue Rowing Juniors is also offering summer camps for youth ranging from eighth grade to senior year. To learn more, reach out to Fountain at [email protected].
Email Ashland.news staff reporter Holly Dillemuth at [email protected].
Rec Sports
Luke Friese, Schaeffer Academy Boys Basketball
ROCHESTER, Minn. (KTTC) – Schaeffer Academy’s Luke Friese knew he was playing well against Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons last week. He just didn’t know how well, exactly.
“I was just going, and I kept looking at the scoreboard like ‘we’re just going to keep winning,’” Freise said. “Our scoreboard doesn’t have the points of what player, so I was just out there playing. I had no clue what my stats were.”
“I asked our stat people at the end of the bench on the iPad, ‘how many does Luke have? And they said, ’29,’” head coach Tom Bance said. “We still had 5 minutes to go in the first half.”
Friese scored 36 points in the first half and 45 total in a Lions win. With the outing, he set the Schaeffer Academy single-game scoring record, breaking his own record from earlier this season.
“Since we have a close-knit community at Schaeffer, lots of people know that I play basketball and stuff, so it meant a lot to me that I got to get this record and get remembered at least a little part of Schaeffer that I scored the most points in a game.”
His massive performances are the result of a massive role. Last season he shared the floor with the Lions’ all-time leading scorer Ethan Van Schepen. This season, as one of just two seniors on the team, the offense flows through Friese.
“I really like being the go-to guy, but I also love passing it up to my teammates and making sure they get involved,” he said. “So I think we’ve found a good happy medium.”
A player willing to do whatever he needs to help the team.
“I’ve coached for a long time and he’s probably the best captain I’ve ever had, where he just leads those kids,” Bance said. “He’s encouraging the other guys to look for their shot and they’re doing a great job of getting better at that, but they’re still young, so Luke just knows ‘I’ve got to be the guy that’s going to have to score.’”
It’s a selfless approach to massive individual numbers. His ability as a three-level scorer is on display with each box score he fills and record he sets. As his name will live on in the Schaeffer Academy record books, it’s a perfect name to represent the Lions.
“He’s everything that I think Schaeffer basketball should be about: faith, hard work, dedication to the game,” Bance said. “So it couldn’t have happened to a better guy.”
Find stories like this and more, in our apps.
Copyright 2026 KTTC. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Portola boys basketball head coach Brian Smith achieves two milestones in one season –
Portola Coach Brian Smith leads his team in a game in December. (PHOTO: Tim Burt, OC Sports Zone).
Portola head boys basketball coach Brian Smith has been enjoying the 2025-26 season. His Bulldogs have a 15-5 overall record and are 2-0 in the Pacific Coast League.
In December, Smith celebrated his 300th career victory and after another game, his 100th career victory at Portola. It’s his 10th year running the Portola program, which is in its eighth year of varsity competitiion.
“That just says it’s a long career, I’ve been doing this a long time,” said Smith, who has been coaching for 30 years, 21 years as a head coach. “I’m very blessed to have coaches and players in New Mexico and here who played for me. I’ve opened two schools, there’s been a lot put into this career and I’m really enjoying this group right now, they’re making it more fun for me and my coaches do a great job.
“Those 300 wins, it’s all those other coaches and the players who played for me as well that make me do what I do.”
Portola hosts Woodbridge Tuesday night.
—Tim Burt, OC Sports Zone; timburt@ocsportszone.com
Rec Sports
Natalia Safatli
Rec Sports
SPORTS: Spotlighting strong hoop starts in area | News, Sports, Jobs
Many in the area have their attention in the sports world on the Buffalo Bills after the exciting win over the Jacksonville Jaguars in the wildcard round. But there is reason to be excited when it comes to boys high school basketball in the north county.
Both Fredonia and Dunkirk are off to fantastic starts — and have brought renewed energy to a rivalry that played out more than a week ago. For the first time in eight years, the Marauders were victorious over the Hillbillies.
Sixto Rosario, longtime advocate and youth basketball enthusiast, is the Dunkirk coach. His emotions came out once the buzzer sounded.
“I want to thank all the fans and everybody for believing,” Rosario said. “I love Dunkirk. I love the program. I love the kids. This is a great feeling.”
Both teams play again in February in Fredonia. Based on the current winning ways for both schools, the tilt will be highly anticipated.
Rec Sports
Chicago Snowballs Show Off Their Moves During Tryouts For ‘Sportstainment’ Baseball Team
ROSEMONT — The Chicago Snowballs, a new team mixing baseball and family-friendly entertainment, are gearing up for their spring debut, with the team hosting a scrimmage in Rosemont last week.
The Snowballs, who brand themselves as pro baseball’s first co-ed “sportstainment” experience, hosted tryouts all last week at the The Dome at the Parkway Bank Sports Complex in suburban Rosemont.
Tryouts culminated Friday with an event called Inside the Snowglobe, a benefit for local youth sports. Fans watched the prospective players sing, dance, perform trick plays and perform with the Jesse White Tumblers and the Bucket Boys. Proceeds from the benefit went to support youth sports organizations in Chicago.


RELATED: Chicago Getting Its Own Savannah Bananas-Inspired Team
The players were spilt into teams that took turns scrimmaging and then would perform
dance and cheer routines for the fans during inning breaks.
CEO and co-founder Cherie Travis said the team will aim to give opportunities
to players who want to continue in baseball or softball and might not otherwise have
the chance to keep playing.
“If you played baseball or softball in college and you don’t make the majors or the
minors, you’re done,” Travis said. It was “the idea of creating another opportunity for
athletes; they don’t have to be the best pitcher. They need to be good ball players, and
they need to have a ton of fun and put that energy on the field.”
The Snowballs plan to play players a salary and profit share — and advertise equal
pay for male and female players.
“I feel like it was a great opportunity to come out and play coach, possibly get involved in management and help show that the women can compete with the men and have just as much fun,” said coach Allie Lacey.
KJ Gaiter, a youth baseball coach at Oz Park, said that his family and fiends encouraged him to try out.
“Playing baseball, I was always energetic, silly, goofy, but there’s a limit to it because you want to win at the same time,” Gaiter said. “To be able to be in a facility like this, an environment like this, where you can come out and play baseball and you can also be silly with it, it’s almost like being a kid playing baseball again. I feel like a kid in a playground.”
The Snowballs will play their first game May 3 at Kerry Wood Field, 3400 N. Rockwell St. in North Center.
The team will be based in Chicago and will tour the Midwest, operating in a similar fashion to the Harlem Globetrotters or the Savannah Bananas.
The Bananas, known for combining baseball with physical stunts, comedy, dancing and other skills, sold out Sox Park this summer and are making their way to Wrigley in July.
See more photos from Friday’s scrimmage:















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Rec Sports
The trans youth athletes in the US fighting for their rights: ‘Playing is an act of resistance’ | US news
The US supreme court on Tuesday is considering state laws banning transgender athletes from school sports.
The cases were brought by trans students who challenged bans in West Virginia and Idaho barring trans girls from girls teams. The outcome could have wide-ranging implications for LGBTQ+ rights. A total of 27 states have passed sports bans targeting trans youth while more than 20 states have maintained pro-LGBTQ+ policies.
As the highest court in the US debates their rights to participate in school sports, five trans youth and their families spoke to the Guardian about the role athletics has played in their lives. The students are based in California, a state that has long had trans-inclusive policies.
The youth described the joy sports brings them and how meaningful it has been to play on teams that match their gender identity. They said sports were about community, team-building, socializing and exercising, like they are for so many youth in the US. Some expressed frustration and anxiety about the national debates focused on “fairness” in competition, saying the legal battle was about fighting for their place in society and their fundamental rights to access the same opportunities as their peers.
Here are some excerpts of their reflections.
‘Sports is my escape’
Lina Haaga, a 14-year-old Pasadena student, has played sports since age four, starting with soccer: “My entire family is very athletic,” she says. “I wasn’t particularly good at soccer, but it helped me realize what an asset sports is in my life – as a release and an escape, but also a way to connect with other people and make new friends.” A trans girl who transitioned at a young age, Lina always played on girls’ teams, eventually doing basketball, swimming, water polo, lacrosse, tennis and track.
When she has faced stressors, “sports was always a place where I could find a reprieve and just think about the ball that was ahead of me or the next step in the race,” she says.
The attacks on trans girls in athletics have taken a toll, says Lina: “The political climate has put into question my relationship with sports. Instead of it being something innocent I can just enjoy without fear of being discriminated against, I’ve had to now worry every time I step on the track or the court that somebody might disagree with my participation. That’s been really scary, because it’s started to steal something that’s precious for me – that moment of bliss.”
There are times, she says, when she has avoided games out of fear someone might object.
Her message to the supreme court? “We’re still human. We’re just kids. We’re just trying to have fun … We’re not trying to be monsters or predators or anything malevolent. We’re just trying to find connection and community.”
Lina hopes other trans kids continue to pursue athletics: “Playing sports and loving being out there on the field is in its own beautiful way an act of resistance.”
‘I defied the president’
In May, AB Hernandez, a 17-year-old track and field athlete, won first place in the high jump, first place in the triple jump, and silver in the long jump in the California state finals. It should have been a moment of pure celebration for the high schooler from Jurupa Valley, a city east of Los Angeles, but she and her mom had to worry about something else: Donald Trump’s attacks.
The US president turned AB into a media spectacle, targeting her in a social media post and claiming he was “ordering local authorities, if necessary, to not allow” her to compete, writing her participation was “TOTALLY DEMEANING TO WOMEN”.
Now a senior, AB says she has learned to brush aside her detractors: “People are always gonna have negative thoughts to say about you … I just had to realize I need to be comfortable with who I know I am and be comfortable in my own skin and not let anyone get under it.”
“Victory,” she adds, “meant a lot, especially after all the internet drama. To come out on top and be number one. You can’t say anything besides argue with a wall. I’m still competing … Sports is my everything.”
She was touched that standing up inspired others: “People DM’d me to say: ‘I’m so happy you’re fighting. You’re making a really big impact for our community.’ … I thought I just went out and competed, but to others, it was like a movement. I defied the president, in a way. I was like, oh my god, I did do something.”
Her mom, Neredya Hernandez, says she won’t stop defending her daughter’s rights and hopes other parents will be moved to embrace their trans kids. “My message to other parents is: support your kids and be louder. We’re unaware of how much support we have within this community until you’re actually put in a position like we were. We’re not alone.”
‘We’d have to leave the country’
While anti-trans rhetoric has generally focused on restricting trans girls, the toxic climate has also been distressing for trans boys, some parents said. Several states with bans against trans girls have included restrictions impacting trans boys, too.
One 13-year-old trans boy in the Bay Area, whose name the Guardian is withholding to protect his identity, started playing soccer at age two and now also plays basketball and baseball. “Sports is how I made friends. It’s nice you have people to lean on who have your back,” he says.
Jennifer, his mother, says her son struggled to fit in on girls’ teams before he came out as a boy at age nine, but now is embraced by the boys’ teams and coaches. If he were barred from athletics due to being trans, “we would have to leave the country,” she says. “The message the country is sending deeply and negatively impacts his feeling of belonging in his own country.”
Jennifer, who asked to go by a pseudonym to protect her son’s identity, says the supreme court case “terrifies” her: “The sports issue is so important, because it fundamentally tells us whether people believe trans people exist. Trans girls are girls and belong on girls’ teams. Trans boys are boys and they belong on boys’ teams. Full stop. Once you take the position that trans girls are not girls for the purposes of sports, you have now dehumanized them. It’s a slippery slope to taking away rights after rights after rights.”
Her son says he didn’t understand why some people were so focused on stopping children from playing on teams: “I’m just a kid that wants to play sports with my friends. I’m not special. I just want to be left alone and hopefully be successful in sports. We’re not a threat. We’re not gonna tear down the world … If the Trump administration wouldn’t let me play sports, they would basically be taking away part of me.”
‘I’m used to slurs, but I’ll keep speaking up’
Lily Norcross, a 17-year-old track athlete from California’s central coast, says she has grown accustomed to negative news articles about her participation on the girls’ team, which sometimes lead to death threats and other harassment.
“I know this sounds really sad, but I’ve grown used to people calling me slurs. The news itself doesn’t bother me as much as what it causes. After Trump was inaugurated, people were far more comfortable openly being transphobic and hating minorities,” she says. “For me, it’s important to defend the rights of trans kids … because compared to others, I’m extremely lucky. Practically my entire family is supportive. I live in California, which is very liberal. My school board and most of my teachers support me. Most people aren’t in that situation … I’m speaking up for people in places like Texas, Ohio or Florida who don’t have these opportunities.”
Lily says she also wished Democratic leaders did more to stand up for her rights, noting it felt like their stance was: “Let trans people fight for themselves.” She urges lawmakers to have more empathy: “Put yourself in [our] shoes. Imagine if somebody said your people aren’t allowed to use bathrooms or play sports. How would you feel if you were segregated from everybody else?”
‘I feel hopeless’
Leonard, a 17-year-old swimmer in the Bay Area, says it was hard to be optimistic that his rights would remain protected, even in a state like California.
“I feel hopeless. I don’t like this supreme court and I don’t think they’re going to support trans people’s ability to play sports,” says Leonard, a trans boy who is also a fencer and asked to go by a pseudonym to protect his identity. “I’m scared of the precedent it’s going to set, maybe countrywide. I’m scared of what could happen to me and my friends.”
Leonard wishes people understood how meaningful it can be for trans youth to play on teams where they belong: “It made me really, really, really, really happy to be on the boys team affirming my gender identity, affirming I was as good as any cis boy. I know that I’m a boy, but being on a boys team proves to everyone and myself that I am, in fact, a boy and this is where I’m supposed to be.”
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