High School Sports
Meet the TSWA Division II TSSAA all
The Tennessee Sports Writers Association has released its Division II all-state football teams for the 2024 TSSAA season. Wide receivers: Jay’len Mosley, Jackson Christian; Harrison Brownlee, Columbia Academy, Sr.; Grayson Scragg, Donelson Christian, Jr. Division II-A Offense Offensive line: Jimmy Bryson, Baylor School, Sr.; Michael Ray, Memphis University School, Sr.; Moussa Seck, McCallie School, Jr.; […]

The Tennessee Sports Writers Association has released its Division II all-state football teams for the 2024 TSSAA season.
Wide receivers: Jay’len Mosley, Jackson Christian; Harrison Brownlee, Columbia Academy, Sr.; Grayson Scragg, Donelson Christian, Jr.
Division II-A
Offense
Offensive line: Jimmy Bryson, Baylor School, Sr.; Michael Ray, Memphis University School, Sr.; Moussa Seck, McCallie School, Jr.; Chauncey Gooden, Lipscomb Academy, Sr.; Jon Adair, Lipscomb Academy, Sr.; Charlie Edgeworth, Baylor School, Jr.Defensive backs: Mason Eckerson, The King’s Academy, So.; Jackson Usherwood, Columbia Academy, Jr.; Brayden Waller, Trinity Christian, Sr.; Mac Jackson, Columbia Academy, Sr.Quarterbacks: Jared Curtis, Nashville Christian; Austin Kelley, Jackson Christian, Sr.; Stephen Nieves, Columbia Academy, Sr.Offensive line: Sam Davis, Trinity Christian, So.; Daniel Cepicky, Columbia Academy, Jr.; Pryor Browning, Nashville Christian, Sr.; Dylan Davenport, Friendship Christian, Sr.; Graham Peeler, Nashville Christian, Sr.; Kaden Buchanan, Friendship Christian, So.Athlete: Kaden Grigsby, Nashville Christian, Jr. Kicker: Maddox Stevenson, Grace Christian-Franklin, So.
Defense
Defensive line: Ethan Utley, Ensworth School, Sr.; Jayden Hudgins Key, McCallie School, Jr.; Brandon Collins, Ensworth School, Sr.; Fisher French, McCallie School, Jr.Quarterbacks: George MacIntyre, Brentwood Academy, Sr.; Briggs Cherry, Baylor School, Jr.; Taylor Hasselbeck, Ensworth School, Jr.Defensive backs: Jamyan Theodore, Baylor School, Jr.; Carson Lawrence, McCallie School, Sr.; CJ Jimcoily, Lipscomb Academy, Sr.; Kolby Barrett, Baylor School, Jr.Punter: Owen White, Middle Tennessee Christian, Sr.Division II-AAOffenseQuarterbacks: Hutson Chance, Christ Presbyterian Academy, Sr.; Kaedyn Marable, Battle Ground Academy, Jr.; Weston Edmondson, Grace Christian-Knoxville, Sr.Running backs: Noah Spencer, University School of Jackson, Sr.; Ladarius Hollingsworth, Chattanooga Christian, Sr.; Rawls Patterson, Christ Presbyterian Academy, Jr.Wide receivers: Owen Cabell, Christ Presbyterian Academy, Jr.; Arnett Hayes, Battle Ground Academy, Sr.; Jawell Rodgers, Lausanne Collegiate, Jr.Offensive line: Zane Fields, Christian Academy of Knoxville, Sr.; Caleb Howard, Boyd Buchanan, Sr.; Blaze Raschke, Boyd Buchanan, Jr.; Keilan Neal, Franklin Road Academy, So.; Skyler Smith, Christ Presbyterian Academy, So.; Brady Smith, Christ Presbyterian Academy, Sr.Athlete: Terrion Thomas, Grace Christian-Knoxville, So.Kicker: Ethan Lane, Boyd Buchanan, Sr.DefenseDefensive line: Mason Bates, Boyd Buchanan, So.; Collin Crider, Christian Academy of Knoxville, Jr.; Nate Fleming, Battle Ground Academy, Jr.; Tyre Brown, Chattanooga Christian, So.Linebackers: David Green, Boyd Buchanan, Jr.; Alex Wallace, University School of Jackson, Sr.; Malik Lee, Chattanooga Christian, Sr.; Lincoln Meshell, Silverdale Baptist, Sr.Defensive backs: Omarii Sanders, Franklin Road Academy, So.; Sebastian Jones, Boyd Buchanan, Jr.; Hal Niendorff, Knox Webb, Sr.; Cannon Rogers, Silverdale Baptist, So.Punter: Roman Mathis, Davidson Academy, Sr.
Division II-AAA
Offense
Running backs: Nix Fullen, Tipton-Rosemark; Montae Baldwin, Columbia Academy, Sr.; Duece Lawrence, Jackson Christian, Jr.Reach sports writer George Robinson at georgerobinsontheleafchronicle.com and on the X platform (formerly Twitter) @Cville_Sports. Linebackers: Nixon Love, Columbia Academy, So.; Sean Birkofer, Providence Christian, Jr.; Hayden Holleman, Friendship Christian, Sr.; Kai Wyatt, Jackson Christian, Sr.
Punter: Elliott Arnold, McCallie School, Sr.Defensive line: Maki Bell, The King’s Academy, So.; Hank Miller, Trinity Christian, Jr.; J.R. Adkins, Columbia Academy, Sr.; Car’Lando Barton, Friendship Christian, Sr.Kicker: Philippe Laforge, Baylor School, Sr.
Defense
Below are the all-state teams for DII-A, DII-AA and DII-AAA.Linebackers: Joel Lowenberg, Baylor School, Sr.; Cooper Gentle, McCallie School, Jr.; Kris Thompson, Lipscomb Academy, Sr.; Sam Haley, Ensworth School, Sr.Wide receivers: Tyreek King, Knox Catholic, Jr.; Joakim Dodson, Baylor School, Sr.; Kesean Bowman, Brentwood Academy, So.Running backs: David Gabriel Georges, Baylor School, So.; Shekai Mills-Knight, Baylor School, Sr.; Keylan Syam, McCallie School, Sr.
Athlete: Justin Hopkins, Ensworth School, Jr.
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High School Sports
Broomfield playwright's unique work highlights barriers to LGBTQ health care, acceptance in society
With his work “gay play (NO HOMO),” a Broomfield playwright uses a satirical lens to explore the barriers to LGBTQ health care and acceptance in society. Drake Susuras grew up in Broomfield and said his start there helped shape him into the playwright he is today. “It was at Broomfield High School that I really […]


With his work “gay play (NO HOMO),” a Broomfield playwright uses a satirical lens to explore the barriers to LGBTQ health care and acceptance in society.
Drake Susuras grew up in Broomfield and said his start there helped shape him into the playwright he is today.
“It was at Broomfield High School that I really was allowed to flourish,” he said. “I was given opportunities there to flourish and thrive but also was given the space to fail and try new things, which helped me be able to throw myself into anything and adapt and learn.”
Susuras performed his play “gay play (NO HOMO)” at Denver Fringe Festival this year, the annual event that focuses on a wide variety of unusual, bold and fringe performing art. With its unique premise and unflinching critique of modern queer politics, Susuras’ work fits right in.
“It follows this main character trying to get an STD test at a free clinic, and meeting all of these comical barriers to highlight what it’s like in America right now,” Susuras said. “It gets into the logistics of donating blood at a clinic and comprehensive sex education for LGBTQ individuals and flips everything on its head.”
Susuras said the character navigates those barriers as best he can but becomes the projected perception of what a gay man is supposed to be. It points a finger at the audience, asking, Susuras said, “Are you entertained now? Am I enough yet?”
Susuras said the play looks at the current political moment, using his experience to highlight the issues of marginalized groups far beyond his own identities.
“Now more than ever, queerness is inherently political,” he said. “Not just myself as a white gay man, but looking further into what a Black trans woman would experience, or the immigrants being raided by (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) or the people suffering in Palestine.”
Cole Franklin is Susuras’ partner and did the costume design for the play, and said the show was a unique look into a journey that’s very personal for every member of the LGBTQ community.
“Everybody has their own coming out story, and everybody has their own grappling they have to do with being gay in society, and everybody’s experience is different,” Franklin said. “I pretty much grew up gay — I was a really gay kid and came out very early, but (Susuras) did not.”
Franklin said his partner’s experience with coming out later in life gives them two different perspectives, and with Susuras doing so much of the play himself, the work served as a reflection of his experiences.
“Theater is such a collaborative art form — there’s lots of people attached to it, unlike a painter whose work is pretty much just themselves,” Franklin said. “It’s always interesting and refreshing to see a work of theater that’s coming from one vision and one mind, and it’s a testament to his talent and education that he was able to do this by himself.”
The play was a small production, with Susuras writing, directing, producing and starring in the play. The only other actor in the show, Devon Lainie, played the nurse at the testing clinic.
“It feels like there’s a new wave of playwriting, especially with younger playwrights, of very personal works,” Lainie said. “I had a great experience with it — I thought it was really funny but it also looked hard at our society and took a deeper look at the world we’re living in today.”
Susuras said the juxtaposition of those two ideas were central to the play.
“We don’t necessarily have to stop finding the fun or humor in things, but we also have to clock in and take things seriously … marrying the serious with the comedic is something that shows up in a lot of my work,” he said. “Ultimately, if we’re not loud, if we’re not expressive, then we’ll disappear, and I don’t think we’re too far from that moment.”
Originally Published:
High School Sports
Fryer
Going into this just-completed high school sports year, the 35th consecutive year of covering Orange County high school sports, the thinking was that I had seen everything. Nope. The Dana Hills baseball team committed eight errors but still won the game. The unranked Dolphins beat Aliso Niguel — ranked 13th in Orange County — 9-8 […]

Going into this just-completed high school sports year, the 35th consecutive year of covering Orange County high school sports, the thinking was that I had seen everything.
Nope.
The Dana Hills baseball team committed eight errors but still won the game. The unranked Dolphins beat Aliso Niguel — ranked 13th in Orange County — 9-8 in a South Coast League game on April 25. Sophomore Ryan See’s line drive down the left-field line in the bottom of the seventh inning sent home Tommy Moro with the winning run.
That was one highlight from another entertaining high school sports year that ended this month. There was too much good stuff to include it all here. And some not-so-good stuff.
Let’s take a look back and a look ahead to the 2025-26 high school sports year. …

Mater Dei, Edison and Portola won CIF Southern Section football championships. Raul Lara’s first season as Mater Dei head coach also yielded a CIF State championship. …
The upcoming football season brings some new coaches, like Carson Palmer at Santa Margarita. Palmer was a star quarterback for the Eagles before going on to greatness at USC and in the NFL. …
Among many other football coaching changes, Mitch Olson, Kennedy’s football coach for many years, is the head coach now at Fountain Valley; former Irvine coach Erik Terry is at Northwood; and Jason Jellerson replaces the retired Doug Case at Foothill. …
Servite still is figuring out where to play some of its football home games. Some will be at Orange Coast College, some at Santa Ana Stadium – and there is talk of a game or two on campus. …
Richard Shearer retired after six years as CIF-SS assistant commissioner in charge of football, baseball and other sports. It’s a big job. …
Releaguing completed for the 2026-27 and 2027-28 school years for non-football sports moved Laguna Beach to a north county conference and expanded the Trinity League to a Trinity Conference that brings in Crean Lutheran, Pacifica Christian, Sage Hill and St. Margaret’s and returns Rosary to the Trinity group. …
Mater Dei won a second straight CIF-SS Division 1 girls volleyball championship. …
Katy Daly resigned as girls volleyball coach at Santa Margarita after a successful run there. …
The fastest-growling sport is girls flag football. The CIF Southern Section had its first CIF-SS championships. Orange County’s Northwood, Orange Lutheran and Troy won CIF-SS titles. …

In boys water polo, Newport Harbor beat JSerra 11-10 in the CIF-SS Open Division final. JSerra beat Newport Harbor in the CIF Southern California Regional Division I final 11-9 for Newport Harbor’s only loss. …
Mega-successful girls basketball coach Kevin Kiernan is returning to Troy to coach there in 2025-26 after 17 seasons at Mater Dei. His 900 career wins is the most in California girls basketball history. …
Trabuco Hills senior Holly Barker won the CIF-SS Division 1 girls cross country championship. Dana Hills senior Evan Noonan won a third consecutive CIF State boys cross country championship. Noonan is one of the all-time greats in O.C. cross country. …
Fairmont Prep, Los Alamitos and Santiago won CIF-SS boys basketball championships. …

Canyon senior Brandon Benjamin was Orange County boys basketball player of the year. He was county player of the year as a sophomore at Canyon, spent his junior season at Mater Dei and returned to Canyon. …
Mater Dei junior Luke Barnett scored 55 points in a game to break the school boys basketball single-game record of 53 points set by Tom Lewis in 1983. …
Nate Klitzing left Crean Lutheran after the 2024-25 season to become boys basketball coach at Orange Lutheran, his alma mater. Austin Loeb was promoted from assistant coach to head coach at Crean. …
Ringo Bossenmeyer resigned as Tustin boys basketball coach after 25 years at that post. He was known for getting the most out of his roster. Jonathan Antolin, an assistant at Foothill, replaces him. …
Matt Kanne replaced Tony Davis as basketball coach at Servite. …
Richard Smith retired as athletic director at Los Alamitos. Long ago Smith was a county basketball coach of the year at Servite. Nathan Berger, this past season’s county boy basketball coach of the year, assumes the A.D. duties and remains Griffins’ basketball coach. …
Jon Hamro retired as athletic director at San Clemente. He is replaced by former Tesoro football head coach Matt Poston, who also will be a Tritons football assistant coach. …
Trinity League boys basketball teams will play each other one time in league play next season and finish the regular season with a league tournament, like they’ve done in the Pacific Coast League. …

(Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Esperanza freshman Sammy Sanchez won everything that could be won in wrestling, including CIF section and state championships. Marina freshman Aubree Gutierrez and Esperanza junior Olivia Davis won CIF State girls wrestling championships. …
Alan Clinton resigned as Servite wrestling coach, but he will continue to be involved as a consultant/assistant coach. …
JSerra boys soccer won CIF-SS and CIF SoCal Regional titles, and was named national champion. …
Beckman won a national cheer championship. …
Anaheim, El Dorado and Laguna Beach were CIF-SS girls water polo champs. …
The Newport Elks baseball tournament is no more. It was a great season-opening tournament. …

Estancia was Orange County’s only CIF-SS baseball champion, winning the Division 6 title. Sometimes it’s difficult to know how good a middle- or lower-division player is until that player is in an all-star game. Estancia catcher Sawyer Atkinson, the CIF-SS Division 6 player of the year, proved in the county all-star game that he was a Division 1-type of player. …
The Santa Ana Unified School District removed David Casper as Segerstrom principal and Erasmo Ramirez as the school’s varsity baseball coach after the CIF Southern Section found that the school’s baseball program violated CIF rules. …
Servite’s group of freshmen and sophomore sprinters set Orange County records in the 4×100, 4×200 and 4×400 relays. No California team has gone under 40 seconds in the 4×100 – until next year. …
Santa Margarita senior swimmer Teagan O’Dell was the county girls athlete of the year for the second time in three years. Future Olympian. …
The very-early Orange County football preseason Top 10: 1. Mater Dei; 2. Santa Margarita; 3. Mission Viejo; 4. Orange Lutheran; 5. Servite; 6. San Juan Hills; 7. JSerra; 8. Edison; 9. Crean Lutheran; 10. Tustin. …
The even-earlier Orange County boys basketball preseason Top 10: 1. Mater Dei; 2. Santa Margarita; 3. JSerra; 4. Fairmont Prep; 5. Orange Lutheran; 6. Crean Lutheran; 7. Pacifica Christian; 8. Los Alamitos; 9. La Habra; 10. Corona del Mar.
Getting older means the list of departed friends annually gets too many new additions. Difficult good byes to John Dahlem, CIF historian and former president of the CIF-SS Council and the greatest adventurer one could know; Jerry DeBusk, such a great basketball coach at Newport Harbor and Santa Margarita; Fran Ursini, football ref and supporter of high school athletics in every way possible; Villa Park boys basketball coach Kevin Reynolds, smart coach and a kind, funny man; and Ed Arnold, TV sportscaster who did so much for Special Olympians of high school age and other age groups. …
I need and accept all the help I can get. Thank you to my Register teammates: Dan Albano, David Delgado, Martin Henderson, Michael Huntley, Dan Nilsen, Brian Patterson and Lou Ponsi. Thanks also to a bunch of people who give me great information and ideas including the people at CalHiSports, Thom Simmons at the CIF Southern Section office, Ed Duffy, Rich Gonzalez at PrepCalTrack and Dick Sands. …
Special thanks to all of the athletic directors, coaches and the sensational athletes. All of you people are the greatest.
Originally Published:
High School Sports
WDIV expands coverage of Metro Detroit high school sports with 50+ live games
DETROIT – WDIV Local 4 has partnered with STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network to expand our coverage of high school sports in Metro Detroit, including more than 50 live game broadcasts. Local 4, Detroit’s most trusted source of local news and sports, is greatly expanding our coverage of high school sports on all platforms through our […]


DETROIT – WDIV Local 4 has partnered with STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network to expand our coverage of high school sports in Metro Detroit, including more than 50 live game broadcasts.
Local 4, Detroit’s most trusted source of local news and sports, is greatly expanding our coverage of high school sports on all platforms through our new partnership with STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network.
STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network is the premier provider of Michigan high school sports in the state.
“High school sports are where passion, talent, and community come together,” WDIV Vice President and General Manager Bob Ellis said. “When you want to be the best, you work with the best. STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network is the best in Southeast Michigan, and this partnership allows us to elevate that experience for families, fans, and athletes throughout Metro Detroit and beyond. Together we will be THE source for this content that binds our communities together.”
Starting this fall, Local 4 viewers will get expanded live game coverage, highlights, and exclusive behind-the-scenes content from schools across Southeast Michigan. It will be available on air, online, via streaming, and on our social media platforms.
STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network has built a strong reputation for energetic and professional coverage of high school sports, live streams, in-depth interviews, and gameday excitement.
STATE CHAMPS! content will be built into WDIV’s daily sports segments, online sports coverage, and Local 4+ streaming.
“The high school athletic experience truly brings athletes, families, and communities into perspective,” STATE CHAMPS! President Lou Bitonti said. “State Champs covers the high school athlete from freshmen year through senior year. This partnership lets us showcase even more schools, sports, and standout moments — and bring them to a bigger audience than ever before.”
Full high school sports coverage
Here’s what this partnership will include:
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An aggressive schedule of more than 50 live games of several boys’ and girls’ sports on the station’s streaming channel, Local 4+.
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Expanded coverage of high school sports on Local 4 News, including a weekly football highlight show each Friday night during football season.
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Weekly power polls to rank the best teams in the state in all sports to get a real-time pulse of the teams destined for postseason success.
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A weekly magazine show with content and features about all high school sports airing Saturday morning following Local 4 News and NBC’s The Today Show.
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Expanded live coverage of the Catholic League of Detroit, founded in 1926 — the largest Catholic sports league in the United States with 33 member schools competing in more than 20 sports.
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Each week during the school year, recognition for a Team of the Week, during which one team is celebrated from a different school for their accomplishments both on the field and in the classroom.
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A special MIPics feature section on ClickOnDetroit, where fans and families can send their photos from high school competitions of all kinds to be featured on the news and the station’s website, ClickOnDetroit.com.
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Weekly short programs on the station’s streaming channel, Local4+, featuring experts from STATE CHAMPS! and their analysis of several high school sports.
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A weekly high school sports newsletter on Thursdays covering high school sports and highlighting each week’s schedule of live game coverage.
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Showcasing of the often unseen and unappreciated support structure of high school sports, including parents, coaches, officials, athletic support staff, and cheerleaders on Live in the D, the station’s daily lifestyle show airing weekdays at 11 a.m.
High school football All-Star game
This coverage will begin Saturday, June 21, with the MHSFCA Coaches Association 2025 High School Football All-Star Game. The game will air live on Local 4 and Local 4+ at 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
Lawrence Tech is hosting 80 of the top senior football players from around the state of Michigan. The game will take on an East vs. West format, with Gladwin head coach Marc Jarstfer leading the West and Detroit Central head coach Jimmie Macon leading the East.
Prep Kickoff Classic
Football season on Local 4 begins Aug. 28-29 with a live broadcast of the Prep Kickoff Classic at Wayne State University.
Eight of the top high school football teams from the area will compete on the Warriors’ field, and you can watch all four games live.
High school sports live streams
We’ll also have a full slate of other live high school sports, including:
Fall sports:
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Volleyball (3-4 games).
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Boys soccer (3-4 games).
Winter sports:
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Hockey (10-12 games).
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Boys and girls basketball (6-8 games).
Spring sports:
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Girls soccer (2-4 games).
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Baseball (2-4 games).
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Softball (2-4 games).
Additional coverage:
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All-star games featuring top players from across the state.
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Catholic League championships for volleyball, hockey, basketball, softball, and baseball.
Follow Local 4, ClickOnDetroit, and our social media pages, as well as the STATE CHAMPS! social media channels for schedules, featured matchups, and other exclusive content throughout the season.
2025 high school football Game of the Week schedule
For the eight weeks following the Prep Kickoff Classic, the high school football Game of the Week presented by STATE CHAMPS! Sports Network will be Fridays at 7 p.m.
The broadcast will be live from the top game in Southeast Michigan that week.
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4 p.m. Aug. 28 (Thursday): Belleville vs. Clarkston
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7 p.m. Aug. 28 (Thursday): Northville vs. Lake Orion
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4 p.m. Aug. 29: Allen Park vs. Trenton
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7 p.m. Aug. 29: Cass Tech vs. Toledo Central Catholic
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7 p.m. Sept. 5: Warren De La Salle @ Davison
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7 p.m. Sept. 12: Rochester Adams @ West Bloomfield
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7 p.m. Sept. 19: Cass Tech @ MLK (played at Wayne State)
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7 p.m. Sept. 26: Rochester Adams @ Clarkston
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7 p.m. Oct. 3: Clinton Township Chippewa Valley @ Utica Eisenhower
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7 p.m. Oct. 10: East Kentwood @ Hudsonville
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7 p.m. Oct. 17: Howell @ Brighton
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Oct. 25 (Saturday): Detroit PSL vs Detroit Catholic League (played at Ford Field)
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High School Sports
How veteran Central NY high school coaches are attacking modern challenges
Syracuse, N.Y. — Marcellus girls soccer coach Laurie Updike’s cardinal rule for parents communicating with coaches was pretty simple: don’t talk to the coach directly after the game. Throughout Updike’s 26 years of coaching, parents have broken her rule just a handful of times. A few years ago, a parent was unsatisfied with the playing […]


Syracuse, N.Y. — Marcellus girls soccer coach Laurie Updike’s cardinal rule for parents communicating with coaches was pretty simple: don’t talk to the coach directly after the game.
Throughout Updike’s 26 years of coaching, parents have broken her rule just a handful of times. A few years ago, a parent was unsatisfied with the playing time their daughter received on senior night, even though she started the game.
High School Sports
Long Island's new soccer team signs 16
Dylan Lopez can kick it with the pros. Long Island’s newest soccer team, the Fighting Tomcats, has signed the 16-year-old, a soon-to-be Connetquot High School senior varsity star, as the start-up squad’s youngest player. “They’re obviously much older than me,” Lopez told The Post minutes after inking his deal with the National Premier Soccer League […]

Dylan Lopez can kick it with the pros.
Long Island’s newest soccer team, the Fighting Tomcats, has signed the 16-year-old, a soon-to-be Connetquot High School senior varsity star, as the start-up squad’s youngest player.
“They’re obviously much older than me,” Lopez told The Post minutes after inking his deal with the National Premier Soccer League squad that calls Hofstra University home.
“I think just playing with them in this environment is really going to push me and just get used to a higher level,” added the midfielder, who dreams of taking his talents to Spain one day.
The Ronkonkoma native’s deep desire is exactly what the club’s owner — Massapequa soccer legend Jim Kilmeade, the brother of Fox News host Brian Kilmeade, who is also an investor — is shooting for with the new team of 30 that’s almost entirely local.
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“We believe that we can identify and launch players into European careers,” Jim said, adding that the Tomcats are also developing a free youth academy on Long Island.
Lopez gets the best of both worlds with his deal that has no compensation.
Playing with the Tomcats, formally called the American Soccer Club, won’t prohibit him from playing with his competitive Atlantic United travel team, or Connetquot next fall.
Long Island’s newest soccer team, the Fighting Tomcats, has signed 16-year-old Dylan Lopez. Photo courtesy of Dylan Lopez
“When you live on Long Island, you don’t really get opportunities like these,” Lopez said. “It’s usually those people in Europe that get these chances.”
Now, the teen being recruited by Sacred Heart University has the chance to show what he’s made of on a grander stage.
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The moment is a dream come true for his mom and twin brother, Brandon, with whom Lopez has played his entire life.
“He’s always been there,” Lopez said of his sibling, who is one minute younger. “Every time we’re on the field, it’s always a competition between us. And we just keep pushing each other — going back and forth. It’s really helped me … and he’s super excited for me.”

Bragging rights among family — and friends — are full-time for the food runner at Stella Trattoria in Blue Point, who had to call out of work when he got the good news.
“They’re all going to be shocked,” Lopez said. “It’s going to be a good senior year.”
Put your best foot forward as the sun is finally expected to shine this weekend, with two 5K runs that go for great causes.
The “Hope Is Here” run, which raises money for parental mental health awareness, kicks off at 9 a.m. Saturday at First Responders Memorial Park and Ball Field in Islandia, with a registration fee of $45.
The Sayville Fire Department is also hosting its annual 5K at the same time, with a registration fee of $40, starting at the town’s firehouse.
High School Sports
Editorial
The Editorial Board How is it possible that legislation to expand the statute of limitations for child sex-abuse victims to sue their abusers has virtually no opposition whatsoever among Missouri legislators — and yet for the third straight year, failed to pass during the recent legislative session? The answer is both simple and appalling: It’s […]


How is it possible that legislation to expand the statute of limitations for child sex-abuse victims to sue their abusers has virtually no opposition whatsoever among Missouri legislators — and yet for the third straight year, failed to pass during the recent legislative session?
The answer is both simple and appalling: It’s because it isn’t ultimately those legislators who decide what bills live or die in Jefferson City. The real power lies with monied special interests — in this case, the insurance lobby — whose political contributions control those lawmakers like puppets on strings.
The sex abuse survivor bill’s supporters say they will bring it back again next year. They should. But the fact that it’s this difficult to pass a reform that has such wide and bipartisan political support highlights a much broader problem with Missouri’s political system.
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Under current Missouri law, child sex abuse victims have until they turn 31 to sue their abusers. Experts have long said there should be a much longer statute of limitations for civil liability in such cases, or no limitation at all, because of the nature of this particular offense. Victims may suppress, for many years, memories of such horrific abuse suffered when they were children.
That’s why most states today have extended or eliminated their statutes of limitation for such action. Missouri is one of just 18 states in which the victim must sue before turning 35.
The measure that failed to pass this year would have given abuse survivors until age 41 to sue. It passed the House with a vote that was split only because of unrelated provisions; it had little or no opposition in the Senate, yet failed to win passage.
“I’ve never received a ‘no’ vote on that legislation, ever,” said the bill’s frustrated sponsor, state Rep. Brian Seitz, R-Branson, as reported by the Missouri Independent.
But there was opposition from some powerful unelected players in the state Capitol. The Missouri Chamber of Commerce testified against the measure in committee and the tort reform and insurance lobbies opposed it. That’s because the measure would, by design, mean more litigation against sexual abusers, which in turn means insurance companies would have to pay out more in judgments against individuals or entities covered by insurance policies.
How do such narrow business interests overcome public and political support for this commonsense reform? With their checkbooks.
Missouri has campaign contribution limits to individual politicians but no limits on contributions to PACs that support individual politicians. It creates a neat little loophole that effectively allows business lobbies to give as much as they want to any sitting lawmaker.
Then there are Missouri’s term limits for legislators. Whatever the merits of those limits, they inevitably mean elected politicians aren’t in the Capitol long enough to become nearly as savvy at working the system as are the professional lobbyists who rubs shoulders with them and who are under no such term limits.
“In the Missouri Capitol, there’s a power structure,” says Seitz, as quoted by the Missouri Independent: “At the top are the lobby groups. Secondarily, the bureaucrats. Thirdly, the leadership of either party. Fourth, the House and Senate. And fifth, the janitor.”
He added that “the difficulty with getting commonsense legislation through is, does it have lobby backing? Is there lobby money behind it? Is there opposition from a lobby group?”
If Seitz and other lawmakers want to change that situation, they should start by closing the PAC campaign-contribution loophole and looking for other ways to limit the power of lobbyists.
Meanwhile, backers of the sex-abuse survivors bill should gear up for a unified, very public push to overcome that lobbyist influence next year and get this thing passed. Otherwise, in the words of state Sen. Brad Hudson, R-Cape Fair, a co-sponsor of the legislation: “We are going to become a sanctuary state for pedophiles.”
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