Rec Sports
Battle of the titans: France, Spain meet again in title decider
BELGRADE (Serbia) – Two of the biggest powerhouses in youth basketball will face off in the Final of the FIBA U18 EuroBasket 2025 as five-time winners Spain will take on four-time champs France to see who will hoist the trophy in Belgrade.
France, last victors in 2016, defeated Latvia in their Semi-Final and will play in their eighth final. Spain followed suit later in the Serbian capital, by rallying to beat Italy.
The Third Place Game will have Latvia hoping to reach the podium for a fourth time while Italy shoot for their 14th medal.
Stay up to date with the tournament and check out the latest results, group standings and competition system for all the information you need.
Key Storylines
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Five-time winners Spain pull away from Italy in second half;
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Four-time champs France end Latvian fairytale run;
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Belgium and Sweden are relegated to Division B;
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Bulgaria, North Macedonia set up relegation decider.
Semi-Finals
The first Semi-Finals had France as heavy favorites against a Latvia side which had lost all three games in the group stage but then took on a Cinderella characteristic with knockout stage wins over Lithuania and Germany to reach the Semi-Finals for the first time since 2018.
France made sure though that the fairy tale ended at that stage and rolled to a 92-63 victory.
The game was still tied at 19-19 after 10 minutes but that’s when Maxence Lemoine started taking over with a barrage of three-pointers. The French point guard already had 18 points at halftime and the four-time champs took the second quarter 34-15 to decide the game. Elise Prodhomme’s team then allowed only eight points for Latvia in the final frame to end any doubts.
Lemoine finished with 31 points while Jahel Trefle came up with some flashy plays for 11 points and Bastien Grasshoff added 10 points and 7 assists for the winners.
France’s opponents in the Final will be Spain, who rallied from 10 points down to beat Italy 84-62 in the second Semi-Final. The game was a matchup of generations that met up in the Final of the FIBA U16 EuroBasket 2023, won by Spain. And a number of players from both teams were facing off again.
Italy had a strong start to the game led for more of the first half thanks to Patrick Hassan big first half. Things started falling apart for the Italians in the third quarter, even leading to the ejection of head coach Marco Sodini. Spain had surged ahead and led 60-49 after 30 minutes and Italy never could muster a serious fight.
Spain dominated the rebounding, including 21 offensive rebounds and Raul Villar ran the show with 20 points. In addition, Ian Platteeuw was unstoppable in the paint with 14 points and 10 rebounds.
Hassan finished with 22 points for the Italians, who will take on Latvia for the third spot on the podium.
Top Performers
Daniel Hinkov helped keep Bulgaria alive in the fight against relegation with a massive game in the team’s 80-59 victory over Sweden in Classification 13-16 action. Hinkov scored 26 points to go with 6 rebounds, 3 assists and 5 steals for an efficiency of 33.
Or Faran Frenkel takes a spot in the Top Performers for his outstanding showing in Israel’s 95-86 win over Austria in Classification 9-12. The guard came into the game having totalled 19 points and he outdid himself in the one contest with 22 points. Faran also had 5 rebounds, 3 assists and 4 steals for an efficiency of 29.
Maxence Lemoine was unstoppable for France in rolling past Latvia 92-63 in the Semi-Finals. The point guard tallied 18 of his 31 points in the first half and he also picked up 2 rebounds, 2 assists and 3 steals. That gave him an efficiency of 28.
Just like Hinkov, Grigorij Gjorgjevikj carried his nation, North Macedonia, to a massively important 81-72 victory against Belgium in Classification 13-16 action to avoid for now relegation to Division B. Gjorgjevikj nailed 4 three-pointers in scoring 22 points and added 4 rebounds, 7 assists and 1 steal. That gave him an efficiency of 28.
Arturas Butajevas had his best game of the tournament for Lithuania in the Classification 9-12 – a comfortable 90-60 victory against Greece. The center scored 25 points to go with 16 rebounds – 10 of them from the offensive glass. Butajevas, whose previous bests in Belgrade were 18 points and 11 rebounds, also had 1 assist in registering an efficiency of 27.
Results of the Day
Semi-Finals
Latvia 63-92 France
Italy 62-84 Spain
Classification 5-8
Germany 78-91 Slovenia
Serbia 76-51 Türkiye
Classification 9-12
Lithuania 90-60 Greece
Austria 86-95 Israel
Classification 13-16
Sweden 59-80 Bulgaria
Belgium 72-81 North Macedonia
Final
Spain vs France
Third Place Game
Italy vs Latvia
Classification 5-6
Serbia vs Slovenia
Classification 7-8
Türkiye vs Germany
Classification 9-10
Israel vs Lithuania
Classification 11-12
Austria vs Greece
Classification 13-14
North Macedonia vs Bulgaria
Classification 15-16
Belgium vs Sweden
FIBA
Rec Sports
3 kids steal and crash car into home after watching YouTube tutorials, police say
NEWBURGH HEIGHTS, Ohio (WOIO/Gray News) – Three children, ages 8, 11 and 12, stole a car and crashed it into a home after watching how-to videos on YouTube, according to police.
On Saturday, officers were in pursuit of a stolen car in Ohio when it crashed into a men’s recovery home, causing minor damage.
Officers caught the three children who tried to run away after crashing the car.
Thankfully, no one was injured.
Newburgh Heights police told WOIO the 11-year-old was driving the car.
The children allegedly told police that they watched YouTube videos on how to steal cars.
Police said the children were later released to their parents and charges will be filed in juvenile court.
Copyright 2025 WOIO via Gray Local Media, Inc. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Binghamton mayor talks housing, public safety
This week, JoDee Kenney sits down with Binghamton Mayor Jared Kraham.
Binghamton Mayor Jared Kraham takes the Spectrum News team on a walk-and-talk to various projects around the city. Mayor Kraham talks about the overseeing of significant developments in Dickinson, including the largest housing construction project, Town and Country apartments, with 256 units of affordable housing. He shares how the project is valued in tens of millions and features modern, energy-efficient units, and addresses past issues of crime and poor housing conditions. Mayor Kraham highlights how the city is also developing a new Recreation Center, repurposed from a local church, to serve as a hub for youth sports and community activities. He shares how the recreation center includes a full-size gym, classroom space, and a commercial kitchen. Mayor Kraham explains that these initiatives aim to enhance community life and provide permanent, affordable housing options.
Mayor Kraham also talks about community policing and emphasizes the need for increased staffing to allow officers to engage with the community effectively. He highlights the city’s low crime rate, attributing it to community policing, gun violence reduction initiatives funded by $1 million from the American Rescue Plan Act, and the use of advanced technology like license plate readers and street cameras. Mayor Kraham also details the revitalization of Clinton Street, a historic downtown area, through a $10 million state initiative to create a walkable, eclectic district that supports housing and regional tourism.
And finally, Mayor Kraham talks about being inspired by his father’s government service and his own interest in public communications. He discusses being a Syracuse University dual major in political science and broadcast journalism and emphasizes the importance of local politics and student engagement. He highlights his efforts to support small businesses, influenced by his experience working at his parents’ furniture store. Mayor Kraham also talks about his passion for local music, dining, and sports, and outlined his 2026 goals: revitalizing Clinton Street, enhancing public safety, and addressing affordable housing to foster neighborhood development.
You can watch the full interviews above. And be sure to tune in for a look inside the biggest issues impacting upstate New York, on In Focus with JoDee Kenney — every Sunday on Spectrum News 1.
Rec Sports
Power of basketball to connect people around the globe celebrated with World Basketball Day
Can basketball be a force that helps bring a divided nation, a divided world together?
That’s the dream of World Basketball Day. A day — designated by the United Nations to be commemorated every Dec. 21 — where we celebrate the power of basketball to unite communities and connect people around the world.
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“There’s increasingly few spaces left where we humanize each other, where we actually spend time face-to-face, eye contact, wordlessly negotiating and sharing and creating space with and between each other — doing the kinds of intimate, continuous, fluid communication that the space of a basketball court fosters,” said David Hollander, an NYU professor who helped create World Basketball Day. “The game itself is an empathy lab. And so, yes, I believe it is one of the greatest exercises that people can engage in to begin to knit back together the social fabric.”
It’s a dream shared by the NBA and people who love basketball around the globe — and it’s a chance to give back to the community through the game.
“World Basketball Day is a chance to celebrate the game and impact it has on people everywhere,” the Celtics’ Jayson Tatum said. “Basketball has had such a positive influence on my life, and I hope I can pass along the joy and skills I’ve learned, both on- and-off the court, to the next generation.”
The NBA is doing this in part by announcing the extension of its longstanding relationship with the YMCA, collaborating on year-long youth basketball and community-focused programming that will reach 6 million youth in the next year. World Basketball Day also means events to connect with youth around the nation and around the globe.
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“World Basketball Day takes on a special meaning this year as we commemorate the 175th anniversary of the YMCA, where the sport was first invented 134 years ago,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. “We are thrilled to join our many friends in the basketball community to celebrate the game’s impact and influence around the world.”
What is World Basketball Day?
World Basketball Day is the brainchild of Hollander, an NYU professor with the Preston Robert Tisch Institute for Global Sport. Holland teaches a course at NYU called “How Basketball Can Save the World.”
“It’s a very popular elective that treats basketball like a philosophy,” Hollander said. “I created principles that I believe basketball stands for — the way you play basketball can be understood as a really good guide for how we can behave with each other. The way the game was intended to be structured can tell us a lot about how we ought to structure a society, and it’s a game intrinsically of hope.”
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He eventually turned that course into a book, in which he drafted a UN resolution for World Basketball Day. That idea took off in a way he did not fully expect.
“Basketball was always intended to be stateless, borderless, global right from the very start,” Hollander said. “And as the world tries to solve the problems that only a whole world can solve, I suggested that we ought to start somewhere where the whole world is happy and the whole world comes together, and the whole world agrees. And, I said, that place is basketball, and it should have a day.
“That’s how it began.”
World Basketball Day was established in 2023 by the United Nations. Not coincidentally, World Basketball Day is observed each year on Dec. 21, the date in 1891 that Dr. James Naismith hung up the peach baskets and first introduced the game of basketball at the YMCA in Springfield, Mass.
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Part of what World Basketball Day has become is a focus on the future and connecting people. For example, last week marked the third annual United Nations diplomats basketball game, in which more than 60 diplomats from 30 countries played pickup at the local YMCA.
“In other words, these peacemakers are actually doing the thing that I hope basketball on a grand scale achieves,” Hollander said.
It’s not just the NBA and the United States celebrating this, it is FIBA — the international governing body of basketball — and its coaching clinics and camps in Africa on this day. It’s local hoopers and content creators from Australia, Indonesia, Japan and the Philippines featuring World Basketball Day content across the NBA’s localized channels in those countries.
“Basketball has always been global,” Hollander said. “Dr James Naismith sent emissaries to teach basketball in 1895, as soon as he could right after he invented the game, to Europe to Australia, to China to South America. So it is no surprise to me that coming from all corners of the world are some of the most eloquent speakers of the language of basketball.”
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That language of basketball and how it can be a unifying force deserves to be celebrated. And, much like Christmas, we could use more of that force and spirit all year-round.
Rec Sports
Saratoga Springs Youth Ballet performs ‘The Nutcracker’
ALBANY — The Saratoga Springs Youth Ballet brought its presentation of “The Nutcracker” to the UAlbany Performing Arts Center on Saturday.
A Christmas classic, the ballet is based on “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King,” an 1816 short story written by E. T. A. Hoffmann. The version performed by the youth ballet, choreographed and re-staged by Cristiane Santos and Joan Kilgore Anderson, featured more than 120 local dancers between the ages of 5 and 18, according to the nonprofit dance group’s website.
The show featured special guests such as Sarah MacGregor and Jethro Paine of Boulder Ballet and Andre Malo Robles as Herr Drosselmeyer.
Another performance is scheduled for Sunday at 2 p.m. That show is sold out, according to the event website.
Rec Sports
Obituary: Donny Wayne Stricklin, Jr.

Funeral services for Donny Wayne Stricklin, Jr., 54, of Bremen, AL will be 2 p.m. Sunday, December 21st at Hanceville Funeral Home Chapel. Burial will follow the service at Bethany Baptist Church. Bro. Brandon Stripling & Bro. Jay Washburn will officiate services. The family will welcome friends for visitation at Hanceville Funeral Home on Saturday, December 20th from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Donny was a man whose life was defined by service, loyalty, and a deep love for people. Known for his big heart and even bigger sense of humor, Donny never met a stranger—only friends he hadn’t made yet.
A devoted and lifelong Alabama football fan, Donny proudly supported the Crimson Tide with passion that was impossible to miss even if it meant delaying an important event. To his grandchildren, he was lovingly known as “Pee Pee,” a title he cherished and lived up to every day through his constant presence, encouragement, and love. Donny worked for several years at Sansom Equipment, where his role went far beyond a job description. He treated his coworkers as family, always showing up for them—whether it was work-related or not. His loyalty and care for others were hallmarks of who he was.
A dedicated volunteer firefighter and EMT for many years, Donny selflessly served his community, willing to help in moments when others needed him most. His commitment extended to youth as well, as he devoted countless hours to Cold Springs Athletic youth sports, including Upwards Basketball, and proudly supported the RCBC Youth Council. He believed deeply in guiding and uplifting young people. Donny was truly a “friend’s friend”—someone who would stand by anyone, whether he knew them well or had just met them. His love for jokes and playful spirit were legendary, often expressed through perfectly timed—or hilariously inappropriately timed—music, guaranteeing laughter wherever he went.
Above all else, Donny loved his family. His loving wife, children and grandchildren were the center of his world, and he poured his heart into being present, supportive, and proud of each of them. Donny leaves behind a legacy of kindness, service, laughter, and love that will live on in the many lives he touched. He will be deeply missed and forever remembered.
Survivors include his loving wife, Lorrie Stricklin; children, Brennen (Allyson) Stricklin and Hannah Stricklin; grandchildren, Agustus Wayne Stricklin, Ivy Faye Stricklin and Omari Cooper Stricklin; father, Donald Wayne Stricklin Sr. (Rita); siblings, Danny Stricklin (Gloria), Devan Ponder (Brian), David Still (Kimberly) and James Still (Jennifer), step-brother, Tim Busbee (Rebecca); brother-in-law, Jamie Akin (Jan); grandfather, Leldon Stricklin; and a host of many nieces, nephews and cousins.
Mr. Stricklin was preceded in death by his mother, Modene Campbell Stricklin; grandparents, Mae Stricklin and Ogle & Oleta Campbell; step-sister, Tonya Busbee; niece, Rhianna Busbee; and mother and father-in-law, Gary and Linda Akin.
To celebrate his passion for Alabama football, the family asks that guests consider wearing causal Alabama football attire on Saturday or your favorite college football team.
Also, he was cared for beautifully by the liver transplant team, ABTX team, SICU team, and PCCU team at UAB.
Hanceville Funeral Home is honored to serve the Stricklin Family.
Rec Sports
DB3 Boxing to host free community holiday event in Norfolk
DB3 Boxing hosts a free community holiday event on Monday, Dec. 22, in Norfolk with gifts, games, youth activities, and family-friendly fun.
NORFOLK, Va. — DB3 Boxing, a nonprofit organization focused on youth development through athletics and mentorship, will host a free community holiday celebration on Monday, Dec. 22, at Lambert’s Point Community Center in Norfolk.
The event, titled DB3 Boxing Community Day: Home for the Holidays, is scheduled from noon to 6 p.m. and is open to the public. Organizers say the gathering is designed to bring families together while offering recreational activities and seasonal support at no cost to attendees.
DB3 Boxing was founded by the Davis family and emphasizes discipline, education, and positive engagement for young people through sports. According to the organization, the Community Day will feature gift giveaways, free haircuts and hairstyling, nail services, youth dance performances, basketball games, and family-friendly attractions such as a bounce house.
The event will take place at Lambert’s Point Community Center, located at 1251 West 42nd Street.
The three brothers, professional boxers Keyshawn Davis, Kelvin Davis, and Keon Davis who are from Norfolk, have represented the city at the national and international level and remain involved in community-based initiatives through DB3 Boxing.
In addition to the on-site activities, organizers said attendees will have an opportunity to learn about DB3 Boxing programs and a chance to connect with the organization during Super Bowl week events in San Jose, California.
Admission is free, but registration is available through Eventbrite for those seeking additional information or to reserve tickets. Organizers note that the event is intended as a community-wide holiday gathering and does not require prior involvement with DB3 Boxing to attend.
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