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As George Pickens acclimates to Cowboys, WR's speed highlights work with Dak Prescott
FRISCO — George Pickens is about to end the offseason comfortably. The Cowboys’ new wide receiver is showing his speed in offseason workouts, particularly when he’s on the field with CeeDee Lamb and is getting acclimated with the offense and his new quarterback Dak Prescott. “It’s getting better and better every time,” Pickens said after […]

FRISCO — George Pickens is about to end the offseason comfortably.
The Cowboys’ new wide receiver is showing his speed in offseason workouts, particularly when he’s on the field with CeeDee Lamb and is getting acclimated with the offense and his new quarterback Dak Prescott.
“It’s getting better and better every time,” Pickens said after the second day of the mandatory minicamp on Wednesday. “Learning the plays, the more I’m here and the minutia of how he wants to run his plays. So yeah, we’re connecting for sure.”
The speed is the biggest thing Pickens is bringing to an offense that seeks it in different ways, whether it’s using rookie running back Jaydon Blue or with receiver KaVontae Turpin.
“It just makes everything clear for the QB and then faster if guys are in a zone, you show up faster,” Pickens said.
Briefly
DE Micah Parsons did some individual drills during Wednesday’s practice session. … DT Osa Odighizuwa did individual drills only, due to a minor health issue. … QB Joe Milton III got work with the second-team offense. … In a two-minute/seven-on-seven drill, QB Dak Prescott connected on a TD pass to TE Jake Ferguson and then found rookie RB Jaydon Blue to convert the two-point conversion. … RBs Javonte Williams and Miles Sanders worked with the first-team. … C/G Dakoda Shepley got snaps at center on second-team behind starter Cooper Beebe. … The rain on Tuesday night forced the Cowboys to hold practice inside the Ford Center. … Thursday is the final day of the mandatory minicamp. The Cowboys are scheduled to have their first training camp practice on July 22.
In the lab: See photos from second day of Dallas Cowboys minicamp at The Star in Frisco

Find more Cowboys coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
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High School Sports
'Make the county proud'
Prince George is a small town in southern Virginia, located between the state capital of Richmond and the North Carolina border, with a population of roughly 2,300 residents. It seems an unlikely source of professional athletes. But Prince George has had a surprising amount of success producing pros – including former MLB players Johnny Oates […]


Prince George is a small town in southern Virginia, located between the state capital of Richmond and the North Carolina border, with a population of roughly 2,300 residents. It seems an unlikely source of professional athletes.
But Prince George has had a surprising amount of success producing pros – including former MLB players Johnny Oates and Jackie Bradley Jr., NBA player Reggie Williams and NFL player Larry Brooks.
Not only did tiny Prince George High School turn out those professional athletes, but also more recently sent two from the same team to the pro baseball ranks – the only high school in the county to do so.
And as unlikely as that may be, they both ended up in the same system and on the same minor league team.
Infielder Tevin Tucker and pitcher Konner Eaton were high school teammates at Prince George. Now, they are together again chasing their professional baseball dreams with the Spokane Indians.
Tucker, primarily a second baseman, graduated a couple of years before Eaton and went to West Virginia University, signing with the Colorado Rockies as a free agent in 2023. Eaton, a left-handed starting pitcher, attended George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, and was selected by the Rockies in the sixth round of the 2024 MLB draft.
Tucker started the season as a reserve and recently moved into the starting lineup. Eaton has been a mainstay of the rotation all season.
The two have known each other “since I was about 6 years old,” Eaton said.
Tucker and Eaton’s older sister were classmates and played rec sports together.
Eaton was a freshman on the high school baseball team when Tucker was a senior.
“It’s just really cool that we’re able to get out here, all the way across the entire country, in Spokane, Washington, to be on the same team again,” Eaton said.
“Being able to go on the same journey together, especially starting from the same place and then going and trying to end it at the same place together – it’s really just something special.”
“It’s unique,” Tucker said. “Not a lot of people can say that they’ve done anything like that. It’s a blessing, very unique, and hopefully, we’re just trying to make the county proud.”
Tucker calls himself a “basketball nerd,” and he spends “all day” watching basketball videos and highlights.
He had offers to play the sport out of high school but chose baseball.
“(Baseball) runs in the family,” he said. “I’ve been around a baseball field since I was super young, so I don’t know. It was just – I just put my all into baseball.”
Tucker had several baseball opportunities for college, but chose the West Virginia program that has grown significantly on the national scene over the past decade. He’s proud to have been part of that effort.
“It’s definitely grown so much,” he said. “Just to see the trajectory of that program, it’s really phenomenal, and they’re in great hands with (coach Steve) Sabins. They just did a wonderful job of building it up.”
Tucker, 25, wasn’t drafted out of WVU, but he played with the West Virginia Black Bears in an MLB draft league and was signed by the Rockies later that summer.
“I’ve always wanted to play pro ball since I was a kid,” he said. “So it was something I just tried to take in stride, tried to keep working. That process was stressful, but it was fun, getting calls from major league scouts and stuff like that.”
Eaton is a self-professed “country boy,” and spends any downtime during the season fishing or golfing. He’s an avid hunter during the offseason.
“It’s ‘country’ where we’re from,” Tucker said. “(Eaton) lives far out in the country. I live in, like, the neighborhood.”
Eaton likes the solitude that is inherent with fishing and hunting.
“It’s really being able to get my brain to reset during that time period and really get to focus on (hunting and fishing), because it’s something I love to do,” he said.
Eaton, 22, is 5-4 for the Indians this season with a 3.15 ERA. He leads the Northwest League in innings pitched (91⅓) and strikeouts (100).
“This league is very good, and you also face these guys multiple times, just because there’s only five (other) teams,” he said. “It makes you adjust to these guys a lot, because obviously they’re adjusting to you each and every week after facing them four or five or six times.”
The Rockies are quick to promote players, and if Eaton continues his success he may get bumped up to Double-A before he knows it.
“I’m just sticking to my routine, not looking too far ahead,” he said last week. “I feel like I’ve done a good job of that so far. … I’m just getting my feet wet in my first pro season. I don’t really have too many expectations.”
High School Sports
Montana Rush soccer camp reflects Great Falls' fast
Montana Rush’s summer camp highlights the rapid rise of soccer in Great Falls, bringing in international coaches and offering players chances to grow on and off the field. Adam Rodriguez SWX Local Sports GREAT FALLS, Mont. – Soccer is continuing to grow across the country — and in Great Falls, that momentum is becoming more […]


Montana Rush’s summer camp highlights the rapid rise of soccer in Great Falls, bringing in international coaches and offering players chances to grow on and off the field.
GREAT FALLS, Mont. – Soccer is continuing to grow across the country — and in Great Falls, that momentum is becoming more visible than ever.
At this year’s Montana Rush soccer camp, participation is up, energy is high, and the city’s soccer community is thriving.
“This year at camp we have about 20 more campers than we had last year,” said Montana Rush Technical Director Jeremiah Kirschman. “There’s a lot of energy right now in Great Falls for soccer. We’re about a thousand players part of our program right now, which is a huge percentage of the city of Great Falls.”
That growth extends far beyond the local fields. Kirschman says players have traveled to Florida and even Brazil to compete in high-level indoor soccer tournaments — an opportunity that wouldn’t have existed in the area just a few years ago.
The growth hasn’t gone unnoticed internationally either. Irish coach Richie Barber, who leads the Ireland Armed Forces men’s national soccer team, returned to camp this year after seeing its potential in 2023.
“To see how much it’s improved in just one year is a credit to the club and to the technical director,” Barber said. “This club is really moving in the right direction, and I’m delighted to be a small part of it.”
Players like Great Falls High Junior Liam Buffington say that exposure to international coaches like Barber helps them grow in new ways.
“Learning from a coach from Ireland is super beneficial,” Buffington said. “They play the game way different there — there’s way more you can pick up from getting that kind of exposure.”
Sophomore Brylee Schruth adds that for young players, consistency is key: “The more you play, the better you get — and the more you like it. Even when it’s hard, it gets better.”
And that’s the ultimate goal for coaches like Brendan Gribek, an assistant with the University of Providence men’s soccer team.
“We just want to get them involved and loving the game,” he said. “That’s what grows the game — making sure everyone’s enjoying it and wants to keep working.”
Whether it’s local players going global — or global voices taking note — soccer in Great Falls isn’t just growing. It’s thriving.
High School Sports
Super Spring For Journal
Spring sports proved to be successful again for Journal-area high school teams, with multiple state champions crowned and numerous state trophies making their way back to area schools.While it was the most recent sports season, here’s a refresher of 2025 spring sports highlights for the Journal-area: Girls Water Polo:State Champion: StevensonState Qualifiers: Stevenson, Fremd Boys Water Polo:State […]
High School Sports
CIF titles highlight Santa Maria Valley school year in sports
The St. Joseph boys basketball team won its second CIF Central Section Division 1 championship in the last three seasons. Sign up to receive headlines in your inbox! Breaking News | Local Sports | Daily Headlines | Local Obituaries | Weather | Local Offers 1


The St. Joseph boys basketball team won its second CIF Central Section Division 1 championship in the last three seasons.
High School Sports
Ivey highlights summer learning during Cullman STEM camp visit
CULLMAN — In Leanna Smith’s classroom at East Elementary School on Tuesday morning, third graders worked in small groups to construct robots tasked with collecting materials from the surface of a makeshift Mars. 1

CULLMAN — In Leanna Smith’s classroom at East Elementary School on Tuesday morning, third graders worked in small groups to construct robots tasked with collecting materials from the surface of a makeshift Mars.
High School Sports
National Meet Merge
This year’s slate of national championships more than lived up to the hype, but some of the best performances of the national postseason came from up-and-coming sophomores who gave us a preview of what’s to come over the next two years. Whether it’s Bullis School’s (Md.) next star, Cameron Homer, or the newly minted 800m […]
This year’s slate of national championships more than lived up to the hype, but some of the best performances of the national postseason came from up-and-coming sophomores who gave us a preview of what’s to come over the next two years.
Whether it’s Bullis School’s (Md.) next star, Cameron Homer, or the newly minted 800m national record holder, Justin Northwest’s (Texas) Cooper Lutkenhaus, the Class of 2027 is filled with some of the best high school athletes in the country.
Here are the top 50 sophomore boys from last month’s national championship weekend.
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