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High School Sports

David surpasses 50 career points in first season for D

Undefeated no more. Barnstable (5-6) handed Cape Cod Academy (7-1) its first loss of the season in girls lacrosse following a close 11-10 victory on Thursday. The Red Hawks notched their second win in a row and a third in their last five games behind Emelie Jonsson, who led the way with five goals and […]

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David surpasses 50 career points in first season for D


Undefeated no more.

Barnstable (5-6) handed Cape Cod Academy (7-1) its first loss of the season in girls lacrosse following a close 11-10 victory on Thursday.

The Red Hawks notched their second win in a row and a third in their last five games behind Emelie Jonsson, who led the way with five goals and an assist. Shelby Locascio added a hat trick and two assists, and Morgan Mueller made 15 saves in goal.

Claire Kayajan, Caroline Curley, Avery Croteau all tallied a goal and an assist. Kera Clifford had an assist for the Red Hawks.

In other high school sports action:

Girls Lacrosse

Monomoy 11, Martha’s Vineyard 3: The Sharks (8-1) recorded their fifth straight win in a Cape and Islands matchup with the Vineyarders (4-3). Tessa Grodzicki scored four goals and tallied an assist for Monomoy. Cassadi Manchuk had a hat trick. Paige Nash and Abrielle Long (one assist) both scored twice. Gaby Bassett had an assist.

Dennis-Yarmouth 12, Sturgis West 6: The Dolphins (6-5) ended a two-game losing streak behind seven goals from Jenna Richard. Kourtney David added five goals and two assists to surpass 50-career points in her first varsity season as a sophomore. Mya Cerqueira made 10 saves in goal.

The Navigators (1-8) are without a win in their last five games.

Cora McDade scored four goals and tallied an assist, while Savannah Roy notched a pair of goals. Ceci O’Connor made 19 saves.

Nauset 17, Falmouth Academy 6: Julia Kipperman scored seven goals and Zoe Labdon added six goals to propel the Warriors (5-4) to a fourth straight win. Laurel Ricard, Cleo Donovan, Abby Powers and Shannon Brown all found the net once.

The Mariners (2-6) have lost two in a row.

Nantucket 9, Falmouth 5: Dylan Damian led the way with three goals and Claire Genthner added two for the Whalers (5-1). Louisa Beni tallied a goal and an assist, Mayson Lower and Maddie Lombardi each scored once, and Myah Johnson had an assist. Ella Douglas made six saves in goal.

The Clippers (4-6) have dropped their last four games.

St. John Paul II 18, Sturgis East 5: The Lions (6-2) won their fifth straight game at the expense of the winless Storm (0-8).

Akira Umbrello notched four goals and three assists, Sophie Philbrick added a hat trick and two assists, Mia Curley tallied four goals, Lex McCarthy chipped in two goals and a trio assists, Raegan Dillon and Victoria Coholon both scored twice, and Caitlyn McGrail recorded a goal and an assist for JPII. Grace Tucker, Kiera O’Malley and Julia Johnson all had an assist. Avery Crapo made seven saves in goal.

Boys Lacrosse 

Falmouth 10, Nantucket 3: The Clippers (7-3) picked up their second straight win, including one over a Cape and Islands Atlantic Division foe to stay undefeated in league play.

Gavin Powderly kept the Clippers in the game before they were able to gain the offensive edge, making 12 saves. Travis smith won 13 face-offs and Jackson Smith scored three of his four goals in the fourth quarter. Nathan Bushy had two goals and an assist and picked up six ground balls. Connor Cusolito, Owen Meserve, Charlie Meserve, and Jack Good all scored one goal each. Jacob Porkka was good defensively.

The Whalers (6-2), who led by a goal at halftime, saw their two-game win streak end.

St. John Paul II, 17 Sturgis East 3: The Lions (4-5) picked up back-to-back wins for the second time this season as they beat the Storm (0-8) in a division matchup.

Taylor Richardson led with five goals and two assists, while Parker Philbrick added two goals and five assists for JPII. Liam Morrissey scored twice. Kelin MacAleese, Ollie Affonso, Brayden O’Malley, Griffin Mayo, Jacob Smith all tallied a goal and an assist each. Alex Morin, Sean Monaghan, Grady O’Dea chipped in one goal apiece. Ruari Moore had 11 saves.

Monomoy 22, Cape Cod Academy 11: The Sharks (7-3) exploded for 22 goals against the Seahawks (0-5) to end a three-game losing streak.

Tamer Khalil scored eight goals and Harry Michaud added six goals to lead the way for Monomoy. Aidan Stone and Colin Valero had three goals each, and Isaiah Freeman recorded a pair of goals. Jake Giorgio made 17 saves, while Nathan Holtz and Emmett Giorgio each grabbed a bunch of ground balls.

Barnstable 13, Martha’s Vineyard 5: The Red Hawks (5-4) have won two of their last three after the win over Martha’s Vineyard (5-6).

Kaden Sykes (four goals, one assist), Jack Bunnell (five goals, one assists), and David Abreu (four goals, one assist) led the Barnstable offense, while Ryan Sharlet had 11 saves.

John Hoff (three goals, two assists), Will Hoff (two goals, one assist), and Fin Callen (one assist) led the Martha’s Vineyard offense, while Michael Perry (seven) and Peyton Tavares (four) combined for 11 saves.

Dennis-Yarmouth 15, New Bedford 3: The Dolphins (6-4) made an immediate bounce-back for their fourth win in their last five games.

Girls Tennis 

Falmouth 5, Dennis-Yarmouth 0: The Clippers (4-6) improved to 3-3 in league play and stopped a two-game losing streak in the process.

Maia Ledwell defeated Tristin Bradford 6-0, 6-0 in first singles, Genevieve Maranchie defeated Kelsany Gurung 6-0, 6-0 in second singles, and Victoria Chbarbi defeated Maddy Stewart 6-3, 6-2 in third singles.

Alexis Christian and Phoebe Hodgson defeated Maddy Burgess and Aimee Teague 6-0, 6-1 in first doubles, and Kirkland O’Leary and Liliana Pariseau defeated Willasia Thompson and Alana Carnegie 6-0, 6-1 in second doubles.

The Dolphins (1-8) have dropped eight straight matches.

Nauset 4, Sandwich 1: The Warriors (4-3) have won their last two matches. Anjali O’Brien defeated Abby Binienda 6-0, 6-0 in first singles, Sophia Votteler defeated Senja Kravitz 6-1, 6-4 in second singles, and Haley Jackson defeated Cora Tedeschi 5-7, 7-6 (7-4), 10-5 in third singles for Nauset. Faye Adams and Chloe Hand defeated Tenley Rothera and Sadie Clarkin 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 in first doubles.

Lauren Meyer and Izzie Bar defeated Elexa Malouin and Callie Murphy 7-6 (7-3), 6-3 in second doubles. The Blue Knights (5-6) dropped to a third defeat in a row.

Bourne 4, Fairhaven 1: The Canalmen (4-6) swept all three singles matches and added a win in first doubles.

McKinley Wenzel defeated Mikayla Smith 7-6 (7-2), 6-3 in first singles, Ainsley Hopwood defeated Emily Glammalvo 6-2, 6-3 in second singles, and Zoe Noonan defeated Madeline Gamelin 7-6 (7-3), 6-3 in third singles.

Lily Russell and Sofia Halunen defeated Hazel Hochella and Emma Cabral 6-4, 6-0 in first doubles.

Boys Tennis

Sandwich 3, Nauset 2: The Blue Knights (7-4) are right back in the win column with a gutsy victory over the Warriors (3-5).

Andrew Emmel beat Lucas Wilson-Bevington 6-3, 6-0 in first doubles and Joey LaScola topped Will Christopher 6-3, 11-9 in second singles for Sandwich. Liam McLaughlin and Kallen Kestenbaum clinched the match with a win over Siren Jones-Carlson and Wyatt Carroll in straight sets (6-4, 7-6) in first doubles.

Lucas Patton beat Quinn Johnston 6-0, 6-2 in second singles, and Ronan O’Brien and Andrew Tobin battled back for a three-set win (4-6, 6-3, 7-5) over Andrew Morrison-Sheppard/Oakley Gully in second doubles for the lone victories for the Warriors.

Falmouth 5, Dennis-Yarmouth 0: The Clippers (8-2) rebounded from their defeat on Wednesday with a sweep of the Dolphins (3-6), who lost their third straight match.

Brady Keyser defeated Landon Richter 6-0, 6-0 in first singles, Jacob Faidell defeated Collin Caron 6-1, 6-0 in second singles, and Quinton Hefferan defeated Michael O’Reilly 6-0, 6-0 in third singles.

Jack Beardsley and Fofi Versylycke defeated Ryan Clarke and Aidan Karras 6-1, 6-0 in first doubles and Jeff Howe and Joe Lednick defeated Lucas Woods and Ben Soltis 6-0, 6-1 in second doubles.

Mashpee 4, Randolph 1: The Falcons (5-5) improved to .500 after picking up their second straight win and a third in their last five matches.

Colin Burdge defeated Andrew Vo 6-0, 6-0 in first singles and James Benners defeated Louis Le 6-3, 6-4 in second singles.

Matt Duvall and Colby Rogers defeated Christian Nguyen and Azgan Hussain 6-0, 6-2 in first doubles, and Cam Hughes and Coti Wiedman defeated Randy Nguyen and Vincent Huyah 6-1, 7-5 in second doubles.

Fairhaven 4, Bourne 1: The Canalmen (4-7) dropped to a second straight defeat. They’ve lost three out of their last five.

Girls Golf 

Monomoy 3.5, Martha’s Vineyard 2.5: The Sharks made an immediate bounce-back after they swept the season series with the Vineyarders (1-3). Emily Layton beat Branca 3&2 in the third pairing. Ashley Anderson won her match against Laila Branca 2-up, and Gianna LaRocco defeated Alyssa Vieira 5&4.

The Vineyarders won the first two matches out on course. Piper Blau beat Ava LaRocco 4&2 in the top pairing, while Jocie Smith defeated Lexi Goode 3&2. Callie Oteri halved her match with Fiona Moore.

Nauset 3.5, Barnstable 2.5: The Warriors (4-2) ended the Red Hawks (4-2) four match win streak.

Falmouth 4.5, Dennis-Yarmouth 1.5: The Clippers (2-6) ended a four-match losing streak as they topped the Dolphins (0-6) at Falmouth Country Club.

Softball

Monomoy 28, Mashpee 1 (5 inn.): The Sharks (9-0) remained undefeated behind a big day at the plate, where they pushed 14 runs across in the third inning.

Kiley Mawn (2-for-2, one run), Lilly Furman (3-for-5, four runs) and Lexi Totten (2-for-4, four runs) all tallied four RBIs. Alana Lojko, who was walked three times, recorded three RBIs and scored a run. The Sharks had 16 hits in the game as a team. Lojko pitched a complete game, gave up three hits, three walks and allowed one earned run.

Jordan Eagan went 2-for-2 at the plate with a RBI for the Falcons (0-9).

Bristol Plymouth 19, Upper Cape 1: The Rams kept it close for the most of the game, but a couple of late innings got away from them.

Taysia Lopes had five strikeouts and a timely single in the seventh inning. She scored the lone run for Rams (6-3). Jaelynn Harraden made several put-outs in center field. The play of the game was made by second basewoman Amya Irving, who grabbed a ricochet off Kenley Thomas and turned a beautiful double play. 

Diman 10, Sandwich 5: The Blue Knights (7-6) lost for the third time in five games.

Baseball

Monomoy 17, Cape Tech 0: The Sharks (7-3), who broke the game open with a 10-run fourth inning, blanked the Crusaders (2-4) in a crosstown rivalry matchup. Chase Yarletts drove in four runs on five hits. Lincoln Standford surrendered two hits and zero runs in four innings of work, striking out four and walking three.

Allen Gunn covers high school sports for the Cape Cod Times. You can contact him at agunn@gannett.com and follow him on X at @allentgunn.

Thanks to our subscribers, who help make this coverage possible. If you are not a subscriber, please consider supporting quality local journalism with a Cape Cod Times subscription. Here are our subscription plans.

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High School Sports

State superintendent highlights big changes happening in Georgia schools

ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – As more than 1.7 million students and 125,000 teachers return to classrooms across Georgia, education leaders say this school year will be about more than just test scores. State School Superintendent Richard Woods said the Georgia Department of Education is emphasizing literacy, teacher support, mental health and equity across […]

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State superintendent highlights big changes happening in Georgia schools

ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – As more than 1.7 million students and 125,000 teachers return to classrooms across Georgia, education leaders say this school year will be about more than just test scores.

State School Superintendent Richard Woods said the Georgia Department of Education is emphasizing literacy, teacher support, mental health and equity across districts.

“I’m excited about being able to make a difference in a student’s life,” Woods said.

Investing in literacy

This year, the department is investing over $14 million in literacy efforts. That includes expanding access to reading coaches and training teachers in a curriculum model called the “Science of Reading,” which focuses on decoding and phonics to improve comprehension.

Woods said 60 coaches were sent to underperforming schools last year and helped boost reading performance by 15 points.

“I think that if a kid can read, then every door opens up,” he said.

Teacher retention, recruitment

Georgia’s investment in teacher pay raises in recent years has led to a teacher retention rate that now exceeds the national average. Still, recruitment remains a challenge in some areas.

The state is partnering with colleges and universities to offer incentives for hard-to-fill teaching positions.

“Georgia is known as the Peach State. Well, we want to be known as the ‘Teach State’ as well,” Woods said.

Mental health and student support

The state has increased funding for school counselors and mental health resources, with a new focus on reaching rural students.

Through partnerships with outside agencies, telehealth services are being introduced to provide access to care in underserved communities.

“You’ve got to feel safe before you’re worried about ABCs and 123s,” Woods said. “It’s a comprehensive plan to make sure everyone is on the same page.”

Addressing equity

For the first time, Georgia’s education funding formula includes additional support for districts with high numbers of low-income students. Woods said the change is intended to bridge long-standing equity gaps.

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High School Sports

Cincinnati Enquirer high school sports 2025 fall preseason coverage

It’s go time for Greater Cincinnati high school sports athletes primed to compete in the fall 2025 season. Most sports teams begin practicing Aug. 1, though Ohio golf season already started and some Kentucky teams have been practicing. The Cincinnati Enquirer high school sport staff, however, never really let up the gas after the 2024-2025 […]

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Cincinnati Enquirer high school sports 2025 fall preseason coverage

It’s go time for Greater Cincinnati high school sports athletes primed to compete in the fall 2025 season.

Most sports teams begin practicing Aug. 1, though Ohio golf season already started and some Kentucky teams have been practicing.

The Cincinnati Enquirer high school sport staff, however, never really let up the gas after the 2024-2025 school season ended, providing fall preview content throughout July.

Writers James Weber, Brendan Connelly, Alex Harrison and Jack Schmelzinger, with an assist from Xavier University beat writer Shelby Dermer, have been churning out by-position lists for football, soccer and volleyball as well as some features and league/sport previews in between vacations and, in Shelby’s case, a wedding.

Our roster of preseason content planned for August is strong from start to finish. Our athlete of the week voting is expected to begin Aug. 25, after the first Friday/Saturday Night football weekend.

Here are links to all of our stories so far. The Enquirer will update this file throughout August as content is published.

General

Cross country

Coming in August.

Golf

Field hockey

Coming in August.

Football

Features

League previews

Positional lists

Soccer

Positional lists

Tennis

Volleyball

Features

Positional lists

Water polo

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High School Sports

Prep Sports Plus

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Prep Sports Plus


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High School Sports

2025 Southwest, Central Virginia high school football schedules

Click here if you’re having trouble seeing scores on the 10 News app. Unfortunately, this page doesn’t auto-refresh. To get updates, you’ll need to refresh. Recommended Videos Click italicized scores to watch that game’s highlights! We do our best to keep up with all the changes in the schedule this season. If you see anything […]

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2025 Southwest, Central Virginia high school football schedules

Click here if you’re having trouble seeing scores on the 10 News app.

Unfortunately, this page doesn’t auto-refresh. To get updates, you’ll need to refresh.

Recommended Videos



Click italicized scores to watch that game’s highlights!

We do our best to keep up with all the changes in the schedule this season. If you see anything wrong, please contact jotey@wsls.com.

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High School Sports

Clark highlights Georgia's investments in education, safety ahead of new school year

GWINNETT COUNTY — As Gwinnett County students head back to class this week, State Rep. David Clark, R-Buford, who represents District 100, highlighted Georgia’s continued investment in education, teacher pay, student safety and literacy initiatives. While students may lament the end of summer break, Clark said the start of the school year offers families a […]

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Clark highlights Georgia's investments in education, safety ahead of new school year

GWINNETT COUNTY — As Gwinnett County students head back to class this week, State Rep. David Clark, R-Buford, who represents District 100, highlighted Georgia’s continued investment in education, teacher pay, student safety and literacy initiatives.

While students may lament the end of summer break, Clark said the start of the school year offers families a welcome return to routine and renewed opportunities for academic success.

“For many parents, the start of school brings a welcome return to routine and the reassurance that their children are stepping into classrooms filled with opportunity,” Clark said.

Among this year’s legislative accomplishments, Clark pointed to the state’s full funding of public education and an increase in teacher salaries. “Our teachers are now the highest paid in the Southeast,” he said. Salaries for Georgia’s pre-kindergarten teachers are also being raised to help attract and retain top educators as the state expands early learning access.

Clark said early literacy remains a top priority. “It’s critical that students learn to read by third grade so they can transition from learning to read to reading to learn,” he said.

To support this, the state has added literacy specialists in schools, implemented the Science of Reading in instructional practices and expanded early screenings for processing disorders such as dyslexia.

Clark also noted a new statewide law that will ban cellphone use in classrooms through eighth grade, starting in the 2026-27 school year. The measure, he said, is designed to minimize distractions and has been widely supported by parents and educators. Schools are already preparing for the transition.

The state is also continuing its focus on student safety through ongoing school security grants and new mental health initiatives. Every public school will receive funding to implement or upgrade security features, and the state will continue to support school resource officers.

To address root causes of school violence, lawmakers have expanded access to mental health services and approved measures to ensure that critical behavioral health information follows students when they transfer between schools or districts. Clark said the goal is to ensure students receive consistent care while protecting the broader school community.

“As your state representative, I’m committed to ensuring our children have every advantage and opportunity in a safe learning environment,” Clark said. “If you have any questions or ideas, I’d welcome your call.”

Clark closed with best wishes to all families for a successful 2025-26 school year.

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Settlers Day Highlights

Starting this Friday, Deer Park’s Settlers Day weekend features many old and new events to keep you hopping around town. People can see a lively parade, rodeo, fire station demonstrations, youth baseball tournaments, and a farm swap. Food vendors, live music, and family-friendly activities throughout the town. Additionally, there’s an opportunity to give back at […]

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Settlers Day Highlights

Starting this Friday, Deer Park’s Settlers Day weekend features many old and new events to keep you hopping around town. People can see a lively parade, rodeo, fire station demonstrations, youth baseball tournaments, and a farm swap. Food vendors, live music, and family-friendly activities throughout the town. Additionally, there’s an opportunity to give back at a Special Olympics fundraiser, complete with water fights involving local fire and law enforcement personnel.

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