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Netflix's SEC Football

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Netflix's SEC Football

In a 4-8 season with a 1-7 finish in the SEC, the highlights of Kentucky‘s 2024 campaign are few and far between compared to the lowlights. Unfortunately for the Wildcats, Netflix‘s SEC Football: Any Given Saturday found none of the former and all of the latter.

The documentary crew wasn’t there for the 31-0 weather-shortened shutout in the opener against Southern Miss, the respectable home effort that saw the Cats lead No. 1 Georgia into the fourth quarter, the upset win at No. 6 Ole Miss or even Cutter Boley’s promising second half at No. 3 Texas. Instead, they showed up for Kentucky’s most humiliating moments from start to finish: the 31-6 loss to open SEC play vs. South Carolina, the 48-20 midseason loss at Florida to save Billy Napier’s job and the 41-14 rivalry beatdown to put a bow on the stink vs. Louisville.

Fun, right?

Shane Beamer takes the early spotlight in Lexington

Netflix certainly went into the USC matchup in Lexington with a UK angle in mind, only to abort mission after watching things unravel for the blue and white. Instead, we got way too much Shane Beamer, who called his shot with the Gamecocks before kickoff.

“Put the whole SEC on notice right now, because we’re just getting started,” he told his team in the pregame huddle.

Then-redshirt freshman LaNorris Sellers was also making his first SEC start at quarterback, finishing 10-14 for 166 yards and two touchdowns in the blowout win. Considering the stage and moment as a double-digit underdog, his coach put him up there with the likes of one of the best dual-threat talents in football history.

“I’ve been around some freshman quarterbacks like Michael Vick at Virginia Tech. It’s exciting to see LaNorris get ready to take the next step, because you know it’s coming,” Beamer said.

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

As the final horn blew, the 48-year-old coach pulled his daughters aside on the field and told them the outcome was never in doubt.

“Y’all weren’t worried, were you?” he said.

Beamer said in a follow-up interview that the win at Kentucky was when he knew South Carolina could put together something special the rest of the way, despite entering the year picked to finish 13th in the SEC.

“Even I walked off the field and said to myself, ‘I think we’ve got a chance to do some really big things this year.’”

It was a performance that left national analysts rethinking both teams’ trajectories — the Gamecocks potentially being a sneaky contender for the College Football Playoff and the Wildcats, well, not.

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

“South Carolina absolutely destroyed Kentucky,” On3’s Andy Staples told the folks at Netflix. “… South Carolina’s been in the SEC since 1992, and the Gamecocks have been underdogs pretty much the entire time. They’re playing against all these teams that have won national titles. Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Auburn, LSU. If South Carolina dominates the LSU game, we have to completely revise what our expectations are for that team.”

Anything the Cats can do to help.

Kentucky helps Billy Napier keep his job at Florida

Speaking of that, how about Napier staying alive in Gainesville? Florida had started the season 3-3 with the third-year coach’s seat blistering hot. Fall to the Wildcats once again after losing both matchups before in 2022 and 2023 — including a 33-14 blowout in Lexington the year prior — and his office would be cleaned out by Sunday morning.

“For years and years, Florida never lost to Kentucky,” Michael Bratton, otherwise known as SEC Mike, said on the show. “This is one of the biggest sticking points that people have with Billy Napier. He cannot beat the Kentucky Wildcats.”

“Napier? A dead man walking as there is in the coaching business right now,” ESPN’s Paul Finebaum added. “We would find out whether DJ Lagway was enough to save and salvage Billy Napier’s career.”

Like Sellers, Lagway was making his first SEC start at quarterback, replacing the injured Graham Mertz — out for the year with a torn ACL, suffered in a 23-17 overtime loss at No. 8 Tennessee the week before.

He’d go on to throw for 259 yards in a 48-20 win that saw Florida outgain Kentucky 476 total yards to 309, the fanbase all smiles, singing “I Won’t Back Down” by Tom Petty at the top of their lungs inside Ben Hill Griffin Stadium.

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

“In what has been a nightmare season, in the blink of an eye, everything can change,” Bratton said. “Because all of a sudden, as a Florida fan, you’re starting to see reasons for optimism. Now, it’s the DJ Lagway show.”

“I had written Billy Napier off completely this season. I thought they were done,” Staples continued. “They proved me wrong.”

“All the talk, all the ‘dead man walking,’ all the ‘Billy Napier is done, stick a fork in him,’ all of that disappeared,” Finebaum added to finish yet another disappointing segment for the Wildcats.

Part of Diego Pavia’s rise to superstardom

The only clips of Kentucky we see until the finale come in episodes three and five featuring Vanderbilt, highlighting Clark Lea’s time in Nashville ahead of and during the Diego Pavia craze. To start, former Commodore quarterback Mike Wright is seen rushing for a long touchdown inside Kroger Field in 2022 to lead the program to its first SEC win since 2019. Then we get a brief look at Pavia leading Vanderbilt to back-to-back SEC wins over Alabama and Kentucky to start the season 4-2.

“I’ll tell you one thing, Vanderbilt is a team you gotta look out for,” Pavia said confidently on the Kroger Field sidelines following the 20-13 win in Lexington.

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

Playing for pride against Louisville

Then comes the Kentucky spotlight in the season finale for both the series and team, the Wildcats hosting the Louisville Cardinals in a game with nothing on the table but pride. They weren’t going to a bowl game, but they could at least earn bragging rights against their bitter in-state rival and end things on a positive note with optimism looking ahead to 2025.

It was also one final game with soon-to-be draft selections, Maxwell Hairston and Deone Walker — the featured names in the segment.

“As cutthroat as the end of the season is for playoff contenders, the stakes are different for a team like Kentucky,” Staples said of the significance of the 2024 Governor’s Cup. “Kentucky is out of the playoff mix. They’re 4-7. They’re playing against Louisville, their in-state rival. What does Kentucky have to play for? Pride. On top of that, some of the Wildcats are working toward their NFL future.”

Maxwell Hairston and Deone Walker draft profiles

First, an individual spotlight on the draft names, starting with the future first-round selection in Hairston.

“After college, I’m hoping that I’m a successful NFL player,” he told Netflix. “The SEC prepares you for that next level, because most of the guys I’m playing against now is guys I’m gonna play against on Sundays.”

“Maxwell Hairston is a blazing-fast cornerback from Michigan,” Staples said. “He’s faster than pretty much every receiver he plays, and right now, he’s trying to run his way into the first round of the NFL Draft.”

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

“A pick machine is what he is,” Bratton added. “He’s perceived by many to be the top corner in the Southeastern Conference.”

“This is a guy that can go on day one,” ESPN’s Harry Lyles Jr. foreshadowed, Hairston later picked No. 30 overall by the Buffalo Bills.

There, he’d be joined by Walker, also selected by the Bills in the fourth round at No. 109 overall.

“Deone, that’s my brother, both being from Detroit, Michigan. I’ve known him since high school, but we really got close being here together,” Hairston said of Walker.

After Kentucky defensive back Zion Childress told the Netflix crew to “zoom in on his head” to see Walker’s “rolls” — “He’s got a franks package on his head,” he said — the 6-7, 345-pound defensive tackle explained his ‘why.’

The game-wrecking talent wants football to be the reason his family lives comfortably.

“I want to be a ten-plus-year player in the NFL,” he said. “After watching my parents struggle, I want to make it to a point where they never have to worry again.”

“There is not another human being in the sport of football that looks or plays like Deone Walker,” Staples added. “He’s a 6-7, 350-pound dude who can move. He’s going to make an NFL team so happy.”

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

NFL teams are looking to see if “you give a crap”

The draft chatter aligned with their desire to prepare for a meaningless football game with nothing left to play for — on paper, anyway. Hairston wanted to prove to NFL teams he’d always give it everything he had, whether the season was going as planned or not.

“You can never know too much about your opponent, so the night before the game, I just wanted to make sure I get those last-minute notes and small details that I put down,” he said, reading his Week 14 scouting breakdown with the following words prominently featured on the cover: “Attitude. Toughness. Discipline. Pride.”

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

“NFL teams want to know, ‘Do you love football?’ Because once you get those millions of dollars, if you don’t, you’re not going to have that same sense of urgency,” Staples said. “Well, if you’re playing on a 4-7 team and you’re still trying to ball out, that tells those NFL teams exactly what they want to know.”

“That is something that they care about,” SEC Network’s Alyssa Lang added. “‘How much do you care? How much do you give a crap?’”

“You know who runs Kentucky.”

The Wildcats had won five straight against the Cardinals with a combined score of 217-88. This roster only knew the feeling of beating Louisville — and comfortably.

No matter how things had gone in the first 11 games of the year, all bets were off for game No. 12.

“Don’t come to Kentucky thinking it’s not gonna be a dogfight,” Hairston said. “I’ve never lost to Louisville so I don’t plan on losing to them now. They haven’t beaten us in five years. In-state rivalry, but you know who runs Lexington. You know who runs Kentucky.”

“How do we want to end it off?” Walker added. “Are we going to get blown out or are we going to come out and play the caliber of football that we know we can play, end off with a W?”

Louisville would outgain Kentucky 486 total yards to 328 — 358 of those yards for the Cardinals coming on the ground, leading to four scores. You saw the Wildcats do nothing but chase a cloud of dust, Netflix showing off the sad players and empty stands inside Kroger Field far too well.

“It’s hard to watch a Kentucky team get physically whooped,” the commentator said.

Photo via Netflix (SEC Football: Any Given Saturday)

Hairston’s goodbye to Big Blue Nation

There wasn’t much more to say from there, but Hairston did want to make it clear he came in prepared and felt he left it all out there — not only against Louisville, but every game wearing Kentucky across his chest.

Now, it was time to take his talents to the next level and prove himself in the league.

“Even though the scoreboard might not have said what we wanted it to say, it showed me that I could still go out there and compete to a very high level. I studied a lot and I feel like I went out there and I executed as much as I could,” he said. “I gotta do whatever I can do to finally accomplish my dream. First, graduation, and then I’m going to declare for the draft. … I didn’t get to accomplish everything I wanted to do this season. It’s just the beginning of a long football career.”

He was closing one chapter of his football journey ahead of the rest to come once his name was called on draft night. It didn’t end the way he had hoped, but he’ll always be grateful for his time in Lexington.

“Kentucky’s a place I’ll never forget about, you know?” Hairston said. “I’ll always represent Kentucky, even when I’m in the NFL.”

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High School Sports

Watch Thursday 9.4 JSZ Football Highlights

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Watch Thursday 9.4 JSZ Football Highlights

We’ve got Thursday night football to kick off Week 1 around the Garden State as JSZ brings you three games from the gridiron. Princeton and Allentown meet in a Mercer County thriller, Demarest looks to start strong against Bergen Tech plus Washington Township tries to reach 2-0 against Pennsauken in the WJFL. Check back as the highlights are posted throughout the night!


Down 6-0, senior Ellinton Hinds who already had an interception on the first drive of the game, made one of the best catches in all of New Jersey high school football so far this season to keep Princeton (2-0) undefeated in 2025. Hinds had two leaping catches from QB Quinton deFaria, who threw for 109 yards and a TD. The Tigers beat Allentown (0-2) for the first time since 2005 and look to keep their win streak alive with a Week 2 matchup against Ewing.

JSZ’s Tyler Mroz has the highlights + reaction from Allentown: 

Jersey Sports Zone’s coverage of Princeton and Allentown is brought to you by Princeton Orthopaedic Associates.


The Minutemen took care of business in their home opener by racing out to a 35-0 halftime lead and cruising the rest of the way. Colin Beeler scored a pair of touchdowns to lead a bruising rushing attack in the victory. Paris Pratt hauled in a touchdown and added a fumble return touchdown for Washington Township (2-0). Pennsauken (1-1) will look to bounce back next Thursday against Highland.

JSZ’s James Mooney has the highlights from Sewell:

Jersey Sports Zone’s coverage of Washington Township is made possible by Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey.


With lead running back Reed Kauderer unavailable for the majority of the game, the Norsemen needed their other playmakers to step up. They ultimately answered the bell. Quarterback Joseph Yun accounted for three total touchdowns as Demarest (1-0) begins their 2025 season with a bang. Daejuan Joseph caught a pair of touchdown passes in the win. Bergen Tech (0-1) will now turn their focus to a game against Ferris next week.

JSZ’s Sean Dugan has the highlights from Little Ferry:


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High school football

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High school football

Five games dotted the high school football schedule Thursday night.

In Class AA, Butte stormed past Billings Skyview 33-13 on the road while Missoula Sentinel knocked off No. 3 Great Falls CMR 6-0. A big showdown in 8-Man lived up to its billing as No. 3 Fort Benton beat No. 2 Belt 24-22.

Check out the highlights and details below:

CLASS AA

Missoula Sentinel 6, No. 3 Great Falls CMR 0

After a scoreless first half, Sentinel struck with a 32-yard touchdown pass from Rudy Hess to Kyler Haslam. That ended up being the game’s only score, as the Spartans’ defense kept Great Falls CMR off the scoreboard entirely.

WATCH THE HIGHLIGHTS:

Missoula Sentinel knocks off No. 3 Great Falls CMR in defensive slugfest

Sentinel held CMR to six first downs, and 0-for-9 showing on third down and 132 total offensive yards. The Spartans’ Jake Boggust recovered a fumble on a promising CMR drive in the fourth quarter that helped preserve the shutout.

Butte 33, Billings Skyview 13

Hudson Luedtke caught three touchdown passes from Brooks Vincent to lead Butte to a road victory. Peyton Johnson had a scoring run and Jaeger Hansen returned an interception for a TD as the Bulldogs built a sizable first-half lead.

WATCH THE HIGHLIGHTS:

Butte picks up convincing win at Billings Skyview

The Falcons got their points on two touchdown passes from Jaxon Zagata to Jackson Carter.

At halftime, Skyview celebrated the 30th anniversary of its 1995 state title team. That year, the Falcons went 11-1 under coach Rob Lebsock and won the Class AA championship with a 27-20 victory over Bozeman.

1995 Billings Skyview

The 1995 state champion Billings Skyview Falcons are honored at Daylis Stadium on Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025, in Billings.

8-MAN

No. 3 Fort Benton 24, No. 2 Belt 22

Truman Giese’s fourth-quarter touchdown and two-point conversion gave Fort Benton the lead and two defensive takeaways in the final minutes helped maintain it as Fort Benton knocked off Belt in a ranked matchup.

WATCH THE HIGHLIGHTS:

No. 3 Fort Benton knocks off No. 2 Belt in 8-Man showdown

Blake Waldner set an early tone for the Huskies with a 29-yard touchdown run, but Giese scored from 3 yards out to help tie it 8-8 in the second quarter.

Slater Lords had a long catch and run for a touchdown, putting Belt up 16-8, but a Giese-to-David Olson TD pass tied the game again. In the third, Waldner turned a Huskies interception into another touchdown run as Belt grabbed a 22-16 advantage. But it didn’t hold up.

Other Thursday scores:

8-Man

Fairview 64, Poplar 0

6-Man

Highwood 62, Alberton 0

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What is the Fastest Tennis Serve of All Time?

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What is the Fastest Tennis Serve of All Time?

In this countdown, we look back at the fastest recorded tennis serves of all time.

Service speed remains a dominant feature in the modern game and can become a player’s trump card out on the court.

With players getting stronger and cutting-edge technology in tennis racquets making leaps and bounds, serves today are faster than ever.

We take a look at the fastest serves ever recorded by men and women out on the tennis court.

Men’s fastest tennis serve

Sam Groth – 263.4kph (163.7mph.)

Australian Sam Groth has the honour of having the fastest recorded tennis serve of all time.

The 6ft 4 Australian set the record during an ATP Open Challenger match in Busan, South Korea, in 2012 against Belarusian tennis player Uladzimir Ignatik.

Groths serve clocks in at a staggering 263.4kph (163.7mph).

Honorable mentions

Second Fastest Recorded Serve in Tennis

Albano Olivetti – 257.5 kph (160mph)

Frenchman Albano Olivetti holds the record for the second-fastest serve ever recorded. The French tennis pro also remains the second person to break the 160mph serve speed barrier.

Olivetti’s serve came in 2012 at the challenger level during the Internazionali Trofeo Lame Perrel–Faip.

Albano Olivetti

Albano Olivetti holds the second-fastest record serve on the tour.

Third Fastest Recorded Serve in Tennis

John Isner – 253 kph (157.2 mph).

It would be hard not to include the American giant John Isner in this list. The 6ft 10 American is known best for his monster serves, which are delivered consistently throughout.

His monstrous serve is thanks in part to his stature. Isner clocks in as the third-tallest tennis player on the ATP behind the Croatian giant Ivo Karlovic and American young gun Reilly Opelka (both 6ft 11 inches). Ivo Karlovic currently holds the record for the fourth fastest recorded tennis serve.

Isner currently holds the third fastest serve in tennis. The Americans serve, clocking in at 253 kph (157.2 mph) during a 2016 Davis Cup tie against Bernard Tomic.

John Isner also holds the record for playing the longest match in Grand Slam history against Nicolas Mahut. During Wimbledon 2010, Isner beat Mahut in 5 sets: 6–4, 3–6, 6–7, 7–6, 70–68. The match lasted 11 hours and 5 minutes.

Isner’s serve is the fastest recorded serve in tennis, recognised by the ATP.

Fastest Tennis Serve Female

Georgina García Pérez – 220kph (136.7 mph)

Spaniard Georgina Garcia Perez holds the record for the fastest recorded tennis serve by a woman.

Perez clocked a serve of 200kph (136.7 mph) during the Hungarian Ladies Open in 2018.

Georgina Garcia Perez

Georgina Garcia Perez holds the record for the fastest serve by a female.

Why is it nearly impossible to hit a 160 mph tennis serve?

A considered calculation of stature, technique, coaching, mechanics and good old practice is said to make the perfect concoction for a fast serve.

A direct correlation has been proven between the height of a player and power during a serve. Therefore, it is no coincidence that the top servers of the game are all giants by nature.

The trajectory of a serve remains ever important. Players who are 6ft 7 or above have the ability to hit the ball with a downward trajectory, whereas those who are under that height are unable to do so.

Modern technology has also greatly aided in the incremental increase of server power over time. The changeover from wooden rackets to today’s modern racket is a huge factor in determining serve power. Advancements in string technology and racket materials also play a huge part in determining a fast serve.

Other mitigating factors include court conditions. Faster serves are much more likely to happen on a hard court and during hotter temperatures, where there is less resistance to air density, translating to faster speeds.

When you compare the fastest tennis serve with other sports, you can see how fast it is.

Fastest Football shot – 114 mph by David Hirst in 1996
Fastest Baseball pitch – 105.1 mph by Aroldis Chapman in 2010
Fastest Cricket Bowling speed – 100.2 mph by Shoaib Akhtar in 2003

What is the average tennis serve speed?

The average tennis serve speed differs between both men and women, as well as between pros and amateurs. Data shows us that for professional male tennis players, the average tennis serve speed is approximately 114 mph (on their first serve) and 93 mph (on their second serve).

For women, the average tennis serve speed clocks in at 98 mph (on their first serve) and 82 mph (on their second serve).

This data was recorded between 2002-2013, so bear in mind the average speeds have likely increased by a few miles per hour in the modern era, as racquet technology and athletes continue to evolve and adapt within the sport.

Check out Wired’s video, which covers the topic more in-depth.

Fancy writing for us: Apply to become a Sports Writer at the Sporting Ferret

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Poudre tennis top singles player Owen Addington voted Blue FCU Athlete of the Week

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Poudre tennis top singles player Owen Addington voted Blue FCU Athlete of the Week

It’s the second edition of Blue Federal Credit Union‘s Fort Collins-area Athlete of the Week for the 2025-26 high school sports season.

And this week’s honor is hitting the local tennis courts with a top singles player.

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Poudre boys tennis player Owen Addington took top honors in the Fort Collins area for the week of Aug. 25-30 after a couple of dominant sweeps.

Playing on the No. 1 singles line, the Impalas senior dropped just six games in four sets across two match wins over Windsor and Northglenn’s top players.

He beat Windsor’s Joseph Bisceglia (6-2, 6-3) and followed that up with a 6-0, 6-1 over Northglenn’s Emrah Mehidic.

Poudre's Owen Addington bends down to hit a shot during a city rivalry boys tennis dual on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Fort Collins High School in Fort Collins, Colo.

Poudre’s Owen Addington bends down to hit a shot during a city rivalry boys tennis dual on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 at Fort Collins High School in Fort Collins, Colo.

Addington, also a basketball player and tennis team captain, has helped Poudre get off to a 3-1 start this season that also included a team tournament title at the Thompson Valley Invitational.

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The senior and third-year varsity player is the first tennis player to earn Blue FCU Athlete of the Week honors in the award’s third school year. He joins Rocky Mountain’s Bode Nesbitt as the first winners in the 2025-26 prep sports season.

Poudre fans pushed Addington atop the polls, giving him the victory with 51.5% of the fan vote.

That propelled him past these other four outstanding Athlete of the Week nominees:

  • Brooke Pravlik, PSD flag football (runner-up at 36.7%)

  • Taylor Morgan, Wellington softball

  • Judd Nikkel, Fossil Ridge boys golf

  • Nora Ebel, Rocky Mountain girls cross country

The Blue Federal Credit Union Athlete of the Week series features five nominees on Mondays, with voting at Coloradoan.com until 11:59 p.m. every Wednesday.

Fans can nominate their favorite athletes (deadline: 11:59 p.m. every Sunday), and the Coloradoan Sports staff will ultimately select the nominees each week.

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If you have nominations for a future Athlete of the Week, please send them via email to ChrisAbshire@coloradoan.com for consideration.

View the full results:

Chris Abshire covers high school and community sports for the Coloradoan.

This article originally appeared on Fort Collins Coloradoan: Poudre tennis’ Owen Addington voted Blue FCU Athlete of the Week

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7 high school takeaways from Thursday, or as we call it High School Football Eve

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7 high school takeaways from Thursday, or as we call it High School Football Eve

BB&N senior Sam Kelley (right) announced he will play football at Brown. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff

With sincere apologies to all the games played Thursday, here at Globe Schools it feels a lot like Christmas Eve, with a full slate of high school football arriving under the tree Friday evening.

Over the last two weeks we talked to nearly 200 football coaches and wrote more than 30,000 words previewing every team in Eastern Mass. There’s still time for a cram session!

Team-by-team previews for every Eastern Mass. program

Trevor Hass wrote about Whittier football coach Kevin Bradley, who is continuing to coach the team while battling tongue cancer. Read coach Bradley’s inspirational story.

The first three football games of the season were played Thursday night, with Pentucket topping Northeast (26-22), Waltham holding off Belmont (24-12), and Brookline beating Lexington (27-10).

1. Milestones

▪ Two golf teams made history, as Canton set a new low home score at Blue Hill Country Club, scoring a 138 as a team to best Mansfield by 15 strokes thanks to 1-under-par 33s from senior Joey Ryan and freshman Chase Thomas.

▪ Rockport set a record for most points on its home course, Rockport Country Club, posting a 168-151 win over Hamilton-Wenham behind a 38-point showing from Sam Kesterson, who shot a 1-under-par 34 with three birdies.

▪ St. John Paul II field hockey coach Leah Pierce got her first win with the program, beating Bishop Stang, 3-0. Ariana Liakos got her first win helming the Pembroke girls’ volleyball, beating Falmouth, 3-1. And Acton-Boxborough girls’ soccer coach Manny Lopes notched his first victory, 4-0, over Algonquin.

2. Upset city

▪ No. 4 Needham girls’ volleyball knocked off preseason No. 1 Brookline, 3-0, just a day after falling, 3-0, to No. 2 Newton North.

▪ On the pitch, No. 18 Medfield boys’ soccer shocked No. 10 Oliver Ames, the defending Division 2 state champions, with a 2-0 win powered by goals from Max Tillmann and Sebastian Cole.

3. College corner

Keene State freshman Kayla DiPasquale, a Marshfield High graduate, was named Little East Conference women’s soccer Rookie of the Week after scoring her first two collegiate goals in a 4-2 win over Rivier.

4. Commitment central

BB&N senior captain Sam Kelley, a 6-foot-2-inch, 228-pound two-way athlete from Natick, announced he will play football at Brown.

5. Soccer leaderboard

Goals

Talia Lowney, Greater Lowell, 5

Mary Kudarauskas, Sturgis West, 4

Rowan Malvey, Marshfield, 4

Miguel Armaczuk, St. John Paul II, 3

Cody Boghdan, St. John Paul II, 3

Jackie Fritz, Salem, 3

Linda Jenner, Sharon, 3

Leah Monahan, Lowell, 3

Angie Niz, Lynn Tech, 3

Devon Weafer, Medfield, 3

Bella Wen, Westwood, 3

Davide Vitale, Shawsheen, 3

Points

Lowney, Greater Lowell, 10

Kudarauskas, Sturgis West, 8

Malvey, Marshfield, 8

Kaylee Barrett, Lynnfield, 7

Jenner, Sharon 6

Lauren Sutliffe, Duxbury, 6

Vitale, Shawsheen, 6

Lyla Chapman, Tewksbury, 5

Ava Damiani, Lynnfield, 5

Jocelyn DeMedeiros, Sturgis West, 5

Zach Dziggle, Shawsheen, 5

Maddie Fernandes, Mansfield, 5

Sophie Hano, Manchester Essex, 5

Cory Lloyd, O’Bryant, 5

Sera Eramo, Greater Lowell, 5

6. Field hockey leaders

Goals

Hannah D’Angelo, Pembroke, 4

Dani Ekyman, Sutton, 4

Julie Pacheco, Somerset Berkley, 4

Anthony Ford, Lowell, 3

Alyssa Norden, St. Mary’s, 3

Abbie Poole, Malden Catholic, 3

Natalie Ramcharan, Malden Catholic, 3

Maura Richardson, Joseph Case, 3

Points

Emma Bouchard, Joseph Case, 5

Pacheco, Somerset Berkley, 5

D’Angelo, Pembroke, 4

Ford, Lowell, 4

Richardson, Joseph Case, 4

Vaught, Somerset Berkley, 4

Caitlin Patten, Hingham, 3

Sam Rudick, Hingham, 3

7. Girls volleyball leaders

Kills

Kiera Clark, Milton, 17

Kyra Ward, Chelmsford, 15

Julie Hall, Central Catholic, 14

Sadie Stants, Needham, 14

Norah Downey, Braintree, 11

Assists

Sophie Derwinski, Milton, 27

Madison Blanchet, Central Catholic, 24

Ellen Griswold, Chelmsford, 22

Bella Lee, Needham, 17

Audrey Manning, Lynnfield, 14

Digs

Alexia Vaquerano, Lynnfield, 14

Brooke Braswell, Lynn Classical, 12

Angelina Silva, Tewksbury, 12

Blocks

Alexia Faria, Central Catholic, 10

Downey, Braintree, 5

Manning, Lynnfield, 5

Aces

Morgan Etna, Hamilton-Wenham, 9

Hall, Central Catholic, 7

Maria Rosario, Greater Lawrence, 6

Downey, Braintree, 4

Stants, Needham, 4


Brendan Kurie can be reached at brendan.kurie@globe.com. Follow him on X @BrendanKurie.

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