Rec Sports
Maui Classic returns Dec. 19–20 for elite women’s hoops : Maui Now
December 1, 2025, 8:00 AM HST

The Maui Classic, one of the premier women’s basketball tournaments in the nation, returns to Maui for its 9th annual event on Dec. 19–20, 2025.
Organizers say the vision of the Maui Classic is to bring elite women’s basketball programs to Maui while inspiring the athletic and educational aspirations of local youth. The tournament serves as a fundraiser for Vertical Sports Maui, a local nonprofit equipping youth through sports.
This year’s tournament, hosted by Oregon State University, will be played at Seabury Hall in Makawao.
Four programs will compete for the crown:
- Oregon State University
- University of Hawaiʻi
- Montana State University
- Liberty University
Tournament Schedule
- Friday, Dec. 19
- 5:00 p.m. — Oregon State vs. Montana State
- 7:30 p.m. — Hawaiʻi vs. Liberty
- Saturday, Dec. 20
- 3:30 p.m. — Hawaiʻi vs Montana State
- 6:00 p.m. — Oregon State vs Liberty
Tickets

Community Impact
Beyond competition, the Maui Classic is about building bridges between student-athletes and Maui’s youth. In the days leading up to the tournament, team members from each university will visit local schools to “inspire and equip” students through Q&A sessions and playing time.
Fundraising Efforts
An online digital auction, as well as merchandise sales,will run alongside the tournament, raising funds to support Vertical Sports Maui’s programs that empower island youth through mentorship, sports and leadership development.
“The Maui Classic is a celebration of competition, community and connection,” said Shannah Jarc, executive director of Vertical Sports Maui. “We are honored to welcome these four outstanding teams, provide a unique event for our community, and to continue inspiring Maui’s youth both on and off the court.”
Rec Sports
Hot Start Sets Tone In Maryland’s 73-58 Win Over Old Dominion
COLLEGE PARK, MD — Maryland jumped out to a commanding 17-0 lead and never looked back in the Terps’ (7-6) 73-58 win over Old Dominion (4-10) on Sunday night at XFINITY Center in their final non-conference game of the regular season. Maryland allowed a season-low in points while four Terps scored in double figures.
Darius Adams led the way with 18 points, hitting a pair of threes in his 11-point first half. Isaiah Watts contributed 17 points, all of which came in the first half. He shot 4-of-5 from three-point range in the opening half in his big night.
Isaiah Watts slams it down 🤩 @TerrapinHoops
📺: @BigTenNetwork pic.twitter.com/jPyVNJqthP
— Big Ten Men’s Basketball (@B1GMBBall) December 28, 2025
The Terps exploded out of the gate, scoring the game’s first 17 points and they’d never surrender. Maryland’s 17-0 run was its largest of the season and the program’s longest to start a game since 2003.
Solomon Washington posted a season-high 13-point, 13-rebound night to claim his first double-double of the season. He knocked down five free throws as the Terps shot 14-of-17 from the charity stripe.
SOLO WITH THE WINDMILL 😱😱
📺 @BigTenNetwork pic.twitter.com/W1lsiNueDh
— Maryland Men’s Basketball (@TerrapinHoops) December 29, 2025
Maryland stayed in the gifting mood during the holiday season, tallying 14 assists on the Terps’ 24 total field goals. David Coit led the team with six and Andre Mills posted a career-high five assists as a part of his 11-point day.
Andre Mills for 3️⃣ @TerrapinHoops
📺: @BigTenNetwork pic.twitter.com/XMrJNd61ZM
— Big Ten Men’s Basketball (@B1GMBBall) December 28, 2025
Maryland hit 11 three-pointers on a night where head coach Buzz Williams and his squad donned “Buzz’s Bunch” shirts to raise awareness for Williams’ outreach program centered around inclusion in youth basketball.
It’s go time 🔥 pic.twitter.com/Nq9rmy9veC
— Maryland Men’s Basketball (@TerrapinHoops) December 28, 2025
Maryland turns its focus to conference play. 18 Big Ten games await the Terps in the new year, starting with a meeting with Oregon on Jan. 2.
How It Happened:
1st Half:
- Mills got the night’s scoring started with a three-pointer.
- Watts got on the board with an early dunk.
- Adams drained a three as Maryland opened a 17-0 lead.
- Old Dominion got its first points 5:56 minutes into the game.
- Adams’ second three of the night put the Terps up 20-2.
- Mills hit his second three midway through the half.
- A Watts three put Maryland ahead 26-12.
- Adams reached double figures with his third three.
- Mills’ third three of the half put UMD up 34-12.
- Watts and Mills reached double figures in the first half.
- Maryland used a 22-6 run over the final eight minutes to extend the lead late in the half.
- The Terps led 45-18 at the break.
2nd Half:
- Adams got the Terps on the board in the second half with a layup.
- A Washington dunk pushed Maryland past the 50-point mark early in the half.
- Elijah Saunders hit a three to put the Terps up 63-38.
- Maryland closed out the game to snatch a 73-58 win.
Double-Digit Days
- Adams (18 points) scored in double figures for the ninth time in his career.
- Watts (17 points) reached double figures for the second time this season and the 18th time in his career.
- Washington (13 points) posted a season-high 13 points as he reached double digits for the second time this season and the 19th time in his career.
- Mills (11 points) scored 10+ points for the seventh time in his career.
Mastering The Monarchs:
- Sunday’s game was the seventh all-time meeting between Maryland and Old Dominion.
- The Terps extended their winning streak over the Monarchs to three games and improved to 6-1 in the series.
- Maryland improved to 4-0 against ODU at home.
- The Terps’ biggest win in the series was an 87-67 win in 1983.
Familiar Faces:
- Maryland welcomed former Terrapin coach and current ODU head coach Mike Jones back to XFINITY Center.
- Caelum Swanton-Rodger returned to College Park after playing two seasons at Maryland.
- Former Terp and current NBS star Aaron Wiggings’ younger brother, Zacch Wiggins, scored 14 points for ODU on Sunday.
Buzz’s Breakdown:
- “I think our guys have been incredibly resilient over all that has transpired in the first semester, no matter what’s happened.”
- “This group is continuing to have a positive trajectory.”
- “Watts is really smart. He’s able to take what I say to someone else, and apply it to himself.”
Watt’s Wonderful Night:
- “What worked for us was moving the ball, sharing the ball, and playing as a unit and as a collective.”
- “We trust in each other. We trust in our coaches. Everybody from our managers to our coaches, even the athletic trainers.”
- “It was a great confidence booster.”
Adam’s Awesome Sunday:
- “It was definitely important. We had things we needed to do in order to win this game.”
- “We know it’s going to be a challenge for us coming up in Big Ten play, and we know we need to lock in even more.”
Numbers To Know:
- 6: Maryland blocked a season-high six shots.
- 7: The Terps utilized their seventh different starting lineup of the season.
- 8: Maryland only turned the ball over eight times to tie its season low.
- 11: With Watts drawing his first start as a Terp, 11 different Terps have started at least one game this season.
- 14: The Terps had 14 assists in the win.
- 17: Maryland’s 17-0 run to start the game was its longest run of the season and longest to start a game since Jan. 11, 2003, when the Terps opened on an 18-0 run in a 89-62 win over Florida State. That was just the ninth-game ever at Comcast/XFINITY Center.
- 18: ODU’s 18 points in the first half are the fewest the Terps have allowed in a half this season.
Up Next:
- Maryland hosts Oregon in the Terps’ first home conference game on Jan. 2. Tipoff is set for 7:30 PM and the game will air on Peacock.
Rec Sports
Texarkana’s Wacha family builds something bigger than a camp
TEXARKANA, Texas — Last January, hundreds of kids packed into Pleasant Grove’s indoor athletic facilities, trading a cold Saturday morning for a shot to run drills with professionals, high school standouts and three siblings who grew up just down the road.
The Wacha Family All-Sports Camp is coming back to Texarkana on Jan. 10, and if last year’s turnout was any indication, this event has outgrown the label of just another fundraiser.
What started as a grassroots idea — three siblings offering a few hours of sports instruction to local youth — has grown into a major community effort. It now draws support from multiple school districts, professional athletes and a long list of volunteers who carve out time each winter to give something back.
Michael, Lucas and Brette Wacha, all former athletes at the college or professional level, lead the camp. Along with coaching support from schools like Texas High, Liberty-Eylau, Arkansas High, Pleasant Grove and others, the siblings will help kids rotate through stations in baseball, basketball, football, volleyball and soccer.
Last year’s event brought in more than 200 kids, despite freezing temperatures and widespread power outages across the region. The PG gym and indoor field stayed buzzing throughout the day, with Michael’s Kansas City Royals teammate and fellow pitcher Seth Lugo and former Liberty-Eylau and Boston Red Sox standout Will Middlebrooks among the guest coaches.
While the camp focuses on skills and fun, the bigger win is what happens off the field. Proceeds from the event go directly to the Salvation Army. In 2025, the camp and its banquet raised nearly $50,000, money that funds scholarships for those who can’t afford after-school care or summer programs.
According to the Salvation Army, the need is real. Most of the kids in the program rely on some form of financial assistance, and leaders say events like this help keep doors open and services running.
The camp’s impact also extends beyond youth athletics.
Last year, Texas A&M University-Texarkana joined as a partner, offering scholarships to students or returning adults who show a strong track record of community involvement. Two recipients shared their stories during the banquet, including one who had spent part of his childhood living in the local Salvation Army shelter.
The camp started as a way for the Wacha family to give back to their hometown. It’s grown each year with help from local coaches, athletes and volunteers, and organizers expect another strong turnout this January.
Wacha recognized for philanthropy
In June, Michael Wacha was named one of the 2025 season’s Most Valuable Philanthropists by the MLB Players Trust.
The award, given to six players throughout the season, honors those who showed a strong commitment to charitable work and positive social impact beyond the field. In recognition of Wacha’s efforts, the Players Trust awarded a $10,000 grant in his name to Make-A-Wish Missouri and Kansas.
Wacha has supported a range of charities during his career, with much of his focus on helping kids and families.
——
(This article is part of a continuing series that will spotlight the Wacha Family and Friends All-Sports Camp before it returns in January.)
Rec Sports
Petaluma Police Arrest Suspect For Hate Crime Targeting Former Globetrotter and Youth Coach
After initially suspending the case due to lack of evidence, Petaluma police arrested a suspect who was allegedly caught on video surveillance tracing racial slurs and swastikas onto the dusty windows of local youth mentor and former Harlem Globetrotter William Bullard’s SUV.
As KRON4 reports, the Petaluma Police Department reviewed a week’s work of surveillance footage from early December, which was obtained from the garage where Bullard’s SUV was parked, and identified Corey Newman, 20, of Petaluma, allegedly defacing Bullard’s windows.
As SFist previously reported, the police department initially dropped the case before reviewing the footage, claiming there wasn’t sufficient evidence. The case has since been reopened, per the Chronicle, likely due to Bullard’s posts about the incident, shared to his large following — not to mention the subsequent media coverage.
“I’m doing this for awareness. I’m doing this to educate people, and I’m trying to let them know don’t be afraid to speak up for yourself if something happens like this,” he said, per KGO earlier this month. “Like, what’s the worst thing that can happen? It can be ignored by the police, OK, but at least you spoke up.”
“The Petaluma Police Department takes all hate-related incidents seriously and remains fully committed to conducting thorough and impartial investigations,” said the police department in a press release. “Crimes motivated by bias have a profound impact not only on those directly affected, but also on the sense of safety and well-being of the entire community.”
Police arrested Newman during a traffic stop on Christmas Eve. He was booked into the Sonoma County Jail for the commission of a hate crime and vandalism, per KRON4.
Image: NEW YORK, NY – DECEMBER 19: William ‘Bull’ Bullard of The Harlem Globetrotters Ring The NASDAQ Closing Bell at NASDAQ MarketSite on December 19, 2014 in New York City. (Photo by Steve Zak Photography/FilmMagic)
Previously:Hate on the Rise: Ex-Globetrotter’s SUV Defaced in Petaluma, San Jose Teens Form Human Swastika
Rec Sports
Eckols Funeral Home » Jewel Annette Devall RodgersEckols Funeral Home
Jewel Annette Devall Rodgers was born on September 29,1954 to Harman and Marcy Devall in Beeville, Tx. She entered Heaven’s gates on December 26, 2025, with her mother, sisters, and children by her side. She was 71 years old.
Jewel grew up in Pettus and attended school there, graduating in 1973. She married her High School Sweetheart, Robert Rodgers, on June 8, 1974. She, like both of her sisters, was an LVN, working in home health after years of working as an ER nurse. Jewel was also a licensed beautician. She took great pride in her family and loved staying involved in everything she could to spend time with her kids and grandkids. She was a fixture for years at her kids and later her grandkids’ sporting events, whether it be a youth sports organization, or her favorite team, the Pettus Eagles. She was a member of the First Baptist Church in Pettus.
She loved camping and often shared her cherished memories of times spent at the lake in Mathis or from her times on the Frio River. There were trips to Louisiana and Cancun she spoke of often. It was time she spent with her entire family, often sharing her RV or renting a cabin, enjoying time away from reality as she called it with those she loved the most in life. You could always count on a game of dominoes or Yahtzee at her campsite, clean up to the time everyone else at the table either started cheating or conspired to keep her from winning. If nothing else, she always was competitive, even after she retired.
Jewel was someone who loved and truly valued each of her many friends that she made over the years. She held each of them close to her heart. She would do anything for anyone and give anything she had to anyone in need. Whether she had it to spare or not. She spent countless hours listening to and sharing with anyone who’d listen along with her, her music from the 60’s. It was nothing to have her ask you to download a certain song because she had someone on her heart and that song reminded her of that person. Music and the joy it brought her accompanied every memory she had with every single person she encountered in life.
She was preceded in death by Maternal grandparents Ray and Francis Crepps. Paternal grandparents Harman Leavette and Jewel Devall. Her Father, Harman Devall, her husband, Robert Rodgers, a granddaughter, Victoria Lyssy, and two grandsons, Gavin Rodgers and Richard Gomez III.
Left to cherish her memory are her mother Marcella Devall of Pettus, sister Carman (Johnny) Gisler of Pettus, sister Fran (Bobby) Pargmann of Pettus, daughter Shannon (John) Hodge of Pettus, son Robert (Jena) Rodgers of Beeville, and son Michael (Misty) Rodgers of Mineral. Grandchildren John Robert Hodge, Marcella Hodge (Shonn), Chris (Kristen) Lyssy, Maddisyn Rodgers, Robert Rodgers, Darryn Rodgers, Savannah Rodgers, Stephen Perez, Brandy (Kiara) Perez, Dara Gomez, and Krystal Gomez. Great Grandchildren Patton Lyssy, Hayden Lyssy, Kinsley Gomez and Richard “Little Pops” Gomez. Many nieces, nephews, cousins and her many friends she loved like family.
Visitation will be held on Tuesday, December 30, 2025 from 10am until 11am at Eckols Funeral Home in Kenedy, Tx. A service will be held at the funeral home chapel beginning at 11am, with a graveside service to follow at the San Domingo Cemetery in Normanna. Pallbearers are John Robert Hodge, Robert Rodgers, Darryn Rodgers, Stephen Perez, Chris Lyssy, and Matt Helford.
Rec Sports
Parks and Rec to offer youth swim lessons at Bemidji State
BEMIDJI — The city of
Bemidji Parks and Recreation Department
will host youth swim lessons at various times Feb. 2-April 15, at the Bemidji State University pool in the Gillett Wellness Center, 1801 Birch Lane NE.
Lessons are scheduled for the following times:
Mondays/Wednesdays Feb. 2 – March 2
Level 1 swim classes will run from 6:15 to 6:50 p.m.
Level 2 swim classes will be held from 6:55 to 7:30 p.m.
There will be no class on Feb. 16 due to President’s Day.
Registration opens at 9 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 5.
Tuesdays/Thursdays Feb. 3 – Feb. 26
Level 3 swim classes are set for 6:15 to 6:50 p.m.
Level 4 and 5 swim classes will be held from 6:55 to 7:30 p.m.
Registration opens at 9 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 5.
Mondays/Wednesdays March 23 – April 15
Level 2 swim classes are set for 6:15 to 6:50 p.m.
Level 3 swim classes will be held 6:55 to 7:30 p.m.
Registration opens at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, March 3.
The cost is $72 for the series. Class sizes are small with two instructors. No more than 8-9 participants age 5 and up are allowed in each level.
To register and for additional detailed information regarding each level, visit
www.ci.bemidji.mn.us.
Rec Sports
Inconsistency costs Tesoro in loss to St. Anthony at Ringo Bossenmeyer Holiday Classic –
Tesoro Coach Steve Garrett and his players congratulate St. Anthony after the loss Saturday. (PHOTOS: TIm Burt, OC Sports Zone).
Tesoro’s boys basketball team has had a remarkable season so far with a 14-3 record.
But the Titans, coached by Steve Garrett, weren’t able to finish Saturday, losing to St. Anthony 64-55 in a second round game of the Ringo Bossenmeyer Holiday Classic at Tustin.
Tesoro had a six-game winning streak snapped.
To see additional photos, click on the first picture:

Tesoro players warm up before Saturday’s game.

St. Anthony players head to the sidelines during a timeout after a big run.

St. Anthony (2-0 in Pool A) appears headed to the championship game of the eight team tournament Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. vs. Servite. Tesoro dropped to 1-1 in pool play.
“We weren’t consistent enough to earn a win tonight, that’s the main thing,” said Tesoro Coach Steve Garrett, now in his 25th year as head coach. “There were four or five defensive possessions in a row where we didn’t stick to our principles, four or five possessions where we had good drives to the lane and didn’t take it up strong, we didn’t earn the fouls, didn’t finish.
“We went away from the defense, we got to earn wins and I just didn’t think we were consistent enough.”
Tesoro was led by sophomore Owen Hatch, who had 17 points and his brother Carson Hatch, a senior, who had 12 points.
Jamil House led St. Anthony (6-5) with a game-high 24 points and seven rebounds. House, the only Saint in double figures, had 18 of his points in the first half to help the Saints move out to a 22-16 halftime lead.
St. Anthony led by five points after three quarters. Owen Hatch made a 3-point play with 5:26 remaining before the Saints regained control and finished with a win.
“There was a stretch where we were down two and we have five of our seven possessions at the rim and I just thought they weak takes,” Garrett said. “You got to put pressure on the refs with a strong drive and finish the play and then the couple we missed, we missed our free throws. We were seven of 17 from the line, we should have gotten to the foul line at least 25 times, not because of the refs, but because of us, that’s a big factor.”
Max Draper and Dean Mika added nine points each for Tesoro.
“The kids are great, all these guys have literally played together since fourth grade,” Garrett said. “They all know each other, they’re extremely close, they count on each other for their success. Tonight, I just know we could have been overall a little bit more consistent when we needed to.”
Tesoro plays another pool play game Monday vs Beckman at 1:30 p.m.
Saturday scores
Mercer Island 54, Beckman 49
St. Anthony 64, Tesoro 55
Huntington Park 50, Hawaii Baptist 43
Servite 54, Tustin 35
—Tim Burt, OC Sports Zone; timburt@ocsportszone.com
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