Rec Sports
New complex hosts Road to Lincoln Midwest Classic
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – In much lighter news, while college athletes compete in the Men’s College World Series, 15 youth teams from eight states are taking the field in Lincoln for the Inaugural Road to Lincoln Midwest Classic. Hosted by Washington-based West Coast Premier. The 13-and-under and 14-and-under tournament is scheduled around the CWS, so […]

LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – In much lighter news, while college athletes compete in the Men’s College World Series, 15 youth teams from eight states are taking the field in Lincoln for the Inaugural Road to Lincoln Midwest Classic.
Hosted by Washington-based West Coast Premier. The 13-and-under and 14-and-under tournament is scheduled around the CWS, so players can compete during the day and catch evening games in Omaha.
Organizers said the brand-new Sandhills Global Youth Sports Complex was the perfect venue for the event.
“All seven turf fields in one place having you know playability through potential inclement weather, getting the teams so that they can play their games no matter what,” said Drew Reiners, West Cost Premier Tournaments. “These fields are incomparable to anything that I’ve seen in this region, and really even in the Southwest we don’t. We don’t find a lot of facilities that are like this.”
Organizers said Lincoln is a hidden gem for youth sports and they hope to make this an annual event with even more teams in the years ahead.
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Copyright 2025 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Hoops coaches clinic run by Arizona grad Mendes aimed at enhancing local youth development
Share Tweet Share Share Email Since Pueblo High School graduate Lafayette “Fat” Lever began an 11-year NBA career in 1983, only three other players from a Tucson-area high school advanced that far. The short list includes Arizona great Sean Elliott of Cholla (in the NBA […]

Since Pueblo High School graduate Lafayette “Fat” Lever began an 11-year NBA career in 1983, only three other players from a Tucson-area high school advanced that far.
The short list includes Arizona great Sean Elliott of Cholla (in the NBA from 1990 to 2001), Dave Feitl of Santa Rita (1987-92), and Bryce Cotton of Palo Verde (2015-16).
In the same timespan, Phoenix-area prospects who made it to the NBA totals 27. That’s counting only public-school products, not those who played a national schedule at a prep school.
That’s a substantial margin, 27 to 4, with only one Tucson-area player making that far in the last 25 years. And that one player — Cotton — played in only 23 games over two seasons with three different NBA teams.
The population difference between the Phoenix metro area and Southern Arizona is a major factor. The development of young players in the Tucson area also plays a part.
.@SacHornetsMBB assistant @AugustMendes, who has a long history of working with Mike Bibby at Shadow Mountain HS and now Sac State, conducting a free coaches clinic at Sunnyside. Salpointe and Arizona grad with history of coaching elite prep teams in national competition. The… pic.twitter.com/YCqCxAwldo
— Javier Morales (@JavierJMorales) August 16, 2025
An effort to educate local youth and high school coaches, thereby enhancing the development of players, took place Saturday at Sunnyside High School with former Salpointe assistant and Arizona graduate, Dr. August Mendes, conducting a clinic.
Mendes has joined the Sacramento State coaching staff under Arizona Hall of Famer Mike Bibby (a Phoenix Shadow Mountain graduate who played 14 years in the NBA).
“Tucson is really special to me,” Mendes said. “I want to make sure I help anybody I can here because they helped me so much, whether it’s teachers, educators … these coaches who give their time, the community of Tucson … It’s just so important and I care about it a lot. I want to help everybody I can.”
Mendes, who earned a PhD in general psychology from Grand Canyon University last year, achieved bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Arizona. The bachelor’s degree, which he earned in 2010, was in physical education, and the master’s degree, completed in 2014, was in education leadership.
A Chicago native, Mendes served as an assistant coach at Salpointe from 2012 to 2014 while attending Arizona and working with the Wildcat Club.
“Going to the U of A means a lot to me, too,” Mendes said. “Just helping this community is special.”
Sunnyside graduate and former Pima Community College assistant coach Mateo Garcia organized the free event, which attracted 15 coaches from the middle school and high school levels, as part of his newly formed non-profit organization, CAM AVE Partnership.
The mission statement of CAM AVE Partnership: “Dedicated to empowering youth and athletes in Tucson’s underserved communities through free, high-level basketball opportunities.”
Sunnyside alum Mateo Garcia, a former Pima College assistant, talks about organizing a free coaches clinic involving high school and youth basketball coaches with Sacramento State assistant August Mendes (former Salpointe assistant and Arizona graduate). Garcia started a… pic.twitter.com/dYow0pPyeX
— Javier Morales (@JavierJMorales) August 16, 2025
“I’m from Sunnyside, it’s my alma mater; also born and raised on the Southside,” Garcia said. “Coming here, and also playing sports here, it was really important that people like myself had opportunities to not only play a sport, but to be competitive in a sport.
“Over time, going to camps, clinics and tournaments, it can cost hundreds, if not thousands of dollars at a time. I just wanted to give an opportunity for kids to be competitive in a sport. Today, we’re having a coaches clinic, but for me, the coaches are interacting with kids on a daily basis. It’s important that they’re having enhanced learning, too.”
Mendes spoke for an hour at Sunnyside’s auditorium to the group of coaches, noting that in years to come, “we’ll fill this place” for the clinic.
His speech included a film study that touched on individual defense, post-entry passes, adjustments during a game based on scouting reports, not allowing opponents to become comfortable by finding small advantages and practicing them, scheduling higher-ranked teams, and charting free throws.
He also touched on social media and the dangers involved with youth, including bullying and the possibility of posts affecting the mental health of a player.
The last hour of the clinic shifted to Sunnyside’s gymnasium, where Mendes demonstrated drills to run in practice with the aid of two of his former players at Salpointe — Cam Denson and Jaylen Juan.
.@SacHornetsMBB assistant @AugustMendes talks about conducting a free coaches clinic at Sunnyside and his background with Arizona legend Mike Bibby, the new Sac State coach of whom he has an extended background starting at Shadow Mountain HS. pic.twitter.com/S2I9LxnHs0
— Javier Morales (@JavierJMorales) August 16, 2025
“Out of this, I’d love to see coaches more educated on the current literature, what’s going on in the world, like mental health for kids and different cyber-bullying things,” Mendes said. “Things like how to prepare our kids to navigate through the social media world that we’re dealing with, including parents. Parents being educated, too. What they share affects recruiting. They may not know, but I’m watching what the parents do.
“For these coaches outside the drills, that’s easy, everybody has their own drills, but studying film, I think that can give a huge advantage to these guys that maybe they don’t have. And academics, reading, and just that gritty, scrappy mentality that you didn’t have before. Last thing, pouring into kids a positive spirit because you don’t know what they’re dealing with. You want to help them and build trust.”
After he completed his master’s degree at Arizona in 2014, Mendes became the associate head coach at Shadow Mountain, working alongside Bibby.
During his time at Shadow Mountain from 2014 to 2019, the school captured four consecutive state titles, amassed a 157–21 overall record, and maintained a 72-game winning streak. That includes an undefeated streak at home for six straight years. The program also became the first public school in Arizona history to qualify for the Dick’s National Tournament featuring future collegiate and NBA players.
“It’s been really special,” Mendes said of his relationship with Bibby. “He’s been able to help me. He’s challenged me a lot to become a better coach and how I prepare. He trusts me a lot.
“I’m super grateful for him bringing me to this next step (at Sacramento State), and us doing this next step together. His preparation, his trust, all of his experience, keep growing. I’m just really fortunate to keeping it going and creating a new legacy.”
Before joining Bibby’s staff at Sacramento State (the Arizona great was hired as the Hornets’ head coach in April), Mendes served as the Director of NIL Strategy and assistant coach for the Nike EYBL National Team at Bella Vista College Prep in Phoenix.
Under his guidance, Bella Vista posted a 21–6 record, winning Arizona’s first Beach Ball Classic championship, as well as the Nike EYBL Scholastic regular season conference title in what is one of the most competitive high school basketball leagues in the country.
Mendes also helped lead Bella Vista to its first appearance at the Chipotle Nationals tournament, one of the most prestigious high school events in the country. It was his fourth overall trip to the tournament during his coaching career. The team closed the season ranked eighth in the nation by ESPN.
He was also the assistant coach and video coordinator at national powerhouse Arizona Compass Prep in 2022–23, when the team finished 24–6 and earned a national runner-up finish at GEICO Nationals. The program produced seven Division I commits, including the school’s first McDonald’s All-American, Mookie Cook.
Mendes has also served as scout for the Puerto Rican U19 National Team (2022) and contributor to basketball operations at the NBA Draft Combine (2015–20).
A significant achievement for Mendes was being selected as the lead coach at the 2019 Jordan Brand Invitational in Taiwan. There, he coached the event’s top 52 collegiate prospects in the country, focused on player development, film study significance, and leadership skill building.
“I had a chance to (speak) at Jordan Brand in Taiwan, and that was the first time stepping out there across the whole world and putting myself in a different position,” he said. “High-level stuff. It kind of gave me the blueprint of how to do it, coaching high-level guys and coaching university kids or professional staffs.
“Now doing my doctorate, I want to help push academics. I think academics isn’t talked about enough. If I can help educate these coaches so much in preparing their kids. Stuff they don’t think of is all in writing. They just have to look. I want to help present that.”
FOLLOW @JAVIERJMORALES ON TWITTER!
ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com publisher, writer and editor Javier Morales is a former Arizona Press Club award winner. He is a former Arizona Daily Star beat reporter for the Arizona basketball team, including when the Wildcats won the 1996-97 NCAA title. He has also written articles for CollegeAD.com, Bleacher Report, Lindy’s Sports, TucsonCitizen.com, The Arizona Republic, Sporting News and Baseball America, among many other publications. He has also authored the book “The Highest Form of Living”, which is available at Amazon. He became an educator in 2016 and is presently a special education teacher at Sunnyside High School in the Sunnyside Unified School District.

Rec Sports
Seeking money for youth activities?
MONTICELLO, NY — The Sullivan County Youth Bureau is accepting grant applications from organizations serving children and youth under the age of 21 within Sullivan County. Organizations who would like to be considered for funding must submit completed applications by Friday, August 22. “The New York State Office of Children and Family Services provides funding […]

MONTICELLO, NY — The Sullivan County Youth Bureau is accepting grant applications from organizations serving children and youth under the age of 21 within Sullivan County. Organizations who would like to be considered for funding must submit completed applications by Friday, August 22.
“The New York State Office of Children and Family Services provides funding to the Youth Bureau for programs focused on youth development in these three funding areas: Youth Development, Sports Education Opportunity Funding and Youth Team Sports,” explained Youth Bureau Manager Catherine Paci. “I encourage everyone to visit our page at www.sullivanny.gov to learn which one will best meet the needs of their programs.”
Youth Development Programs: Applications for this funding are encouraged to focus on programming that includes, but is not limited to, citizenship/civic engagement, community, economic security, physical and emotional health, education, safe harbor/anti-trafficking, and family supports.
Youth Sports Education Opportunity Funding: Applications for this funding are focused on organized activities that encourage movement, including physical fitness activities such as yoga, hiking, dance and active outdoor pursuits for youth ages 6 through 17.
Youth Team Sports: Applications for this funding are focused on organized sport activities in under-resourced areas for youth under the age of 18.
Eligible applicants include private nonprofit organizations, schools and municipalities. Applications and additional descriptions of requirements for each funding source can be found at www.sullivanny.gov/Departments/Youthbureau.
All applications must be submitted with original signatures either in person at the Youth Bureau (Government Center’s first floor, 100 North Street, Monticello) or by mail to the Sullivan County Youth Bureau, 100 North Street, Monticello, NY 12701, Attn: Cathie Paci.
Questions may be submitted to Paci at catherine.paci@sullivanny.gov or by calling 845/807-0394.
Rec Sports
Youth Outdoor Activity Day at Alexandria Shooting Park set for Aug. 24 – Alexandria Echo Press
ALEXANDRIA — The annual Youth Outdoor Activity Day at the Alexandria Shooting Park is set to run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 24, 2025. The event is free admission and features over 45 activities, including archery, a climbing tower, fishing, and a scavenger hunt. The event also includes free t-shirts and […]

ALEXANDRIA
— The annual Youth Outdoor Activity Day at the Alexandria Shooting Park is set to run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 24, 2025.
The event is free admission and features over 45 activities, including archery, a climbing tower, fishing, and a scavenger hunt.
The event also includes free t-shirts and a free lunch. Items such as slingshots, rods and reels, duck calls, binoculars, and tomahawks will be given away.
For more information, go to
.
Sam Stuve covers a variety of sports in the Douglas County area. Sam is a December 2021 graduate from Iowa State University. Sam joined the Echo Press in January 2022 and became the Sports and Outdoors Editor in February 2023.
Rec Sports
States rethink a long-held practice of setting speed limits based on how fast drivers travel
(AP) – Rose Hammond pushed authorities for years to lower the 55 mph speed limit on a two-lane road that passes her assisted living community, a church, two schools and a busy park that hosts numerous youth sports leagues. “What are you waiting for, somebody to get killed?” the 85-year-old chided officials in northwest Ohio, […]

(AP) – Rose Hammond pushed authorities for years to lower the 55 mph speed limit on a two-lane road that passes her assisted living community, a church, two schools and a busy park that hosts numerous youth sports leagues.
“What are you waiting for, somebody to get killed?” the 85-year-old chided officials in northwest Ohio, complaining that nothing was being done about the motorcycles that race by almost daily.
Amid growing public pressure, Sylvania Township asked county engineers in March to analyze whether Mitchaw Road’s posted speed is too high. The surprising answer: Technically, it’s 5 mph too low.
The reason dates back to studies on rural roads from the 1930s and 1940s that still play an outsized role in the way speed limits are set across the U.S. — even in urban areas.
Born from that research was a widely accepted concept known as the 85% rule, which suggests a road’s posted speed should be tied to the 15th-fastest vehicle out of every 100 traveling it in free-flowing traffic, rounded to the nearest 5 mph increment.
But after decades of closely following the rule, some states — with a nudge from the federal government — are seeking to modify if not replace it when setting guidelines for how local engineers should decide what speed limit to post.
Drivers set the speed
The concept assumes that a road’s safest speed is the one most vehicles travel — neither too high nor too low. If drivers think the speed limit should be raised, they can simply step on the gas and “vote with their feet,” as an old brochure from the Institute of Transportation Engineers once put it.
“The problem with this approach is it creates this feedback loop,” said Jenny O’Connell, director of member programs for the National Association of City Transportation Officials. “People speed, and then the speed limits will be ratcheted up to match that speed.”
The association developed an alternative to the 85% rule known as “City Limits,” which aims to minimize the risk of injuries for all road users by setting the speed limit based on a formula that factors in a street’s activity level and the likelihood of conflicts, such as collisions.
The report points out the 85% rule is based on dated research and that “these historic roads are a far cry from the vibrant streets and arterials that typify city streets today.”
Amid a recent spike in road deaths across the country, the Federal Highway Administration sent a subtle but important message to states that the 85% rule isn’t actually a rule at all and was carrying too much weight in determining local speed limits. In its first update since 2009 to a manual that establishes national guidelines for traffic signs, the agency clarified that communities should also consider such things as how the road is used, the risk to pedestrians, and the frequency of crashes.
Leah Shahum, who directs the Vision Zero Network, a nonprofit advocating for street safety, said she wishes the manual had gone further in downplaying the 85% rule but acknowledges the change has already impacted the way some states set speed limits. Others, however, are still clinging to the simplicity and familiarity of the longstanding approach, she said.
“The 85th percentile should not be the Holy Grail or the Bible, and yet over and over again it is accepted as that,” Shahum said.
Rethinking the need for speed
Under its “20 is Plenty” campaign, the Wisconsin capital of Madison has been changing signs across the city this summer, lowering the speed limit from 25 mph to 20 mph on local residential streets.
When Seattle took a similar step in a pilot program seven years ago, not only did it see a noticeable decline in serious injury crashes but also a 7% drop in the 85th percentile speed, according to the Vision Zero Network.
California embraces the 85% rule even more than most states as its basis for setting speed limits. But legislators have loosened the restrictions on local governments a bit in recent years, allowing them to depart from the guidelines if they can cite a proven safety need. Advocates for pedestrians and bicyclists say the change helps, but is not enough.
“We still have a long way to go in California in terms of putting value on all road users,” said Kendra Ramsey, executive director of the California Bicycle Coalition. “There’s still a very heavy mindset that automobiles are the primary method of travel and they should be given priority and reverence.”
But Jay Beeber, executive director for policy at the National Motorists Association, an advocacy organization for drivers, said following the 85% rule is usually the safest way to minimize the variation in speed between drivers who abide by the posted limit and those who far exceed it.
“It doesn’t really matter what number you put on a sign,” Beeber said. “The average driver drives the nature of the roadway. It would be patently unfair for a government to build a road to encourage people to drive 45 mph, put a 30 mph speed limit on it, and then ticket everyone for doing what they built the road to do.”
80 is the new 55
Fears about oil prices prompted Congress in the 1970s to set a 55 mph national maximum speed limit, which it later relaxed to 65 mph before repealing the law in 1995 and handing the authority to states. Since then, speed limits have kept climbing, with North Dakota this summer becoming the ninth state to allow drivers to go 80 mph on some stretches of highway. There’s even a 40-mile segment in Texas between Austin and San Antonio where 85 mph is allowed.
Although high-speed freeways outside major population centers aren’t the focus of most efforts to ease the 85% rule, a 2019 study from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety — a research arm funded by auto insurers — illustrates the risks. Every 5 mph increase to a state’s maximum speed limit increases the chance of fatalities by 8.5% on interstate highways and 2.8% on other roads, the study found.
“Maybe back when you were driving a Model T you had a real feel for how fast you were going, but in modern vehicles you don’t have a sense of what 80 mph is. You’re in a cocoon,” said Chuck Farmer, the institute’s vice president for research, who conducted the study.
A town’s attempt at change
If elected officials in Sylvania Township, Ohio, got their way, Mitchaw Road’s posted speed limit would be cut dramatically — from 55 mph to 40 mph or lower. The county’s finding that the 85% rule actually calls for raising it to 60 mph surprised the town’s leaders, but not the engineers who ran the study.
“If we don’t make decisions based on data, it’s very difficult to make good decisions,” Lucas County Engineer Mike Pniewski said.
For now, the speed limit will remain as it is. That’s because Ohio law sets maximum speeds for 15 different types of roadways, regardless of what the 85% rule suggests.
And Ohio’s guidelines are evolving. The state now gives more consideration to roadway context and allows cities to reduce speed limits based on the lower standard of the 50th percentile speed when there’s a large presence of pedestrians and bicyclists. Authorities there recently hired a consultant to consider additional modifications based on what other states are doing.
“States have very slowly started to move away from the 85th percentile as being kind of the gold standard for decision-making,” said Michelle May, who manages Ohio’s highway safety program. “People are traveling and living differently than they did 40 years ago, and we want to put safety more at the focus.”
It’s unclear whether any of these changes will ultimately impact the posted speed on Mitchaw Road. After years of futile calls and emails to state, county and township officials, Hammond says she isn’t holding her breath.
“I just get so discouraged,” she said.
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Child porn plea brings 78-month federal prison term for former youth sports coach in Pulaski County
Dale Ellis Dale Ellis covers the federal courthouse beat for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, reporting on criminal and civil matters that impact Arkansans. He joined the newspaper in January 2018, working from the Pine Bluff bureau before taking up his current beat in January 2021. Dale started in news in 1998 at the Heber Springs Sun-Times […]

Dale Ellis
Dale Ellis covers the federal courthouse beat for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, reporting on criminal and civil matters that impact Arkansans. He joined the newspaper in January 2018, working from the Pine Bluff bureau before taking up his current beat in January 2021. Dale started in news in 1998 at the Heber Springs Sun-Times where he was a reporter and columnist. He has also worked at the Searcy Daily Citizen as managing editor and at the Wynne Progress as managing editor. Dale has state government, education, radio and television experience as well.
Rec Sports
Part of Dewey dubbed Joyner Lucas Ave. on Worcester rapper’s birthday
WORCESTER — Dewey Street was the site of much celebration the afternoon of Sunday, Aug. 17 as the City of Worcester officially dubbed a section of the street “Joyner Lucas Avenue,” after the Grammy-nominated rapper who grew up making music there. More than 200 people gathered at the intersection of Dewey and Chandler streets to […]

WORCESTER — Dewey Street was the site of much celebration the afternoon of Sunday, Aug. 17 as the City of Worcester officially dubbed a section of the street “Joyner Lucas Avenue,” after the Grammy-nominated rapper who grew up making music there.
More than 200 people gathered at the intersection of Dewey and Chandler streets to watch the unveiling of the new street sign and hear from Lucas himself, who happened to be turning 37 years old Sunday, Aug. 17.
“This is the best birthday gift I could ever ask for,” Lucas said.
At one point, a small child shouted out, “Happy birthday, Joyner Lucas,” to a huge cheer from the rest of the crowd.
Lucas was joined on the microphone by friends, relatives, City Councilors Khrystian E. King and Luis Ojeda, and Mayor Joseph M. Petty, who praised Lucas as, “born and raised right here in the city of Worcester…never forgotten his roots, a very strong advocate for ADHD and depression and against drug use.”
In an Aug. 14 email to the Telegram & Gazette, Lucas wrote that he learned of the Dewey Street honor very recently and that the news came as a pleasant shock.
“Usually, it takes for someone to die before they consider renaming a street someone’s name. That person would have had to have a huge impact and have a different type of importance to that state or city,” Lucas wrote. “The feeling I felt was a lot of gratitude mixed with emotion, because I know what that really means.”
Growing up on Dewey Street
Lucas grew up on the first floor of a three-decker at 132 Dewey St. recording songs in the Worcester Youth Center’s studio and finding various ways to make a buck while still living in his mother’s household.
“I spent a lot of time doing whatever I had to do to make money. I worked odd jobs, I sold drugs, I got in a lot of trouble just trying to figure out what I was going to do,” Lucas wrote on Aug. 14. “One thing about me, though, is I never ran with a gang, and I always stayed to myself and remained neutral with everyone.”
‘I was a horrible drug dealer’
At the ceremony, Lucas ran through a list of all the various Worcester spots where he had worked and joked about his brief foray into the local drug trade, saying, “I was a horrible drug dealer and that was never going to work.”
As a youth sports coach, Ojeda said, watched Lucas grow up on the basketball court, but could always tell that music would come first for him.
“There were so many avenues in this city where he could go and he stuck with his passion,” Ojeda said. “For me, as a city councilor, that’s somebody I can point to and say, ‘He’s doing it. You can do it.’”
Destination for Massachusetts rap fans
Lucas recalled that he would often sit in his room in the house on Dewey Street and plan out the shows, collaborations, connections and promotion strategies he would need in order to make it in the music industry without having to leave Worcester for New York or Los Angeles.
As his music began to blow up, something unexpected happened. The house became a destination for Massachusetts rap fans, a phenomenon that led him to realize just how popular he was becoming.
“I didn’t even realize the music and videos was actually working until people started showing up at my mother’s house, taking pictures of her and the house,” Lucas wrote in the Aug. 14 email. “Cars driving by real slow every day and people taking pics of the tour van I had parked outside. My mom started to get paranoid, and it became uncomfortable to the point I got rid of the van.”
Lucas rose to national fame with a series of mixtapes in 2015 and 2017, collaborations with Eminem and Chris Brown, and a single, “I’m Not Racist,” that sparked controversy with its depiction of a white man and a Black man discussing race in America.
When King spoke at the ceremony, he praised the music video for “I’m Not Racist,” which has gained 154 million views on YouTube in the years since its 2017 release.
“You’ve put us on the map, not only nationally, but internationally,” King said.
‘What can I do for the city of Worcester?’
Soon after the release of his debut studio album “ADHD,” in January 2021, Lucas received the Key to the City of Worcester, telling a crowd outside City Hall that “Worcester, Massachusetts, will always be my home.”
Petty’s speech called back to that 2021 ceremony and to a meeting last year where Lucas, “came to me and said, ‘What can I do for the city of Worcester?’
“He’s always come back for his family, taking care of people,” Petty said.
Returns to visit Worcester often
According to Lucas, though a career like his requires a lot of travel and time in major music-industry cities, he does return to visit Worcester often.
“I have a lot of family and friends here, so I spend a good amount of time in Massachusetts,” Lucas wrote. “It’s where I’m from and where I’m rooted, so I like to stay as grounded as I can.”
For Lucas, the most striking aspect of the honor he received Aug. 17 was its timing, at a point in his life when he still has plenty of time left.
“What’s crazy is on the intro of ‘ADHD 2,’ I said, ‘I’ll probably be dead before I ever get flowers,’” Lucas wrote. “I guess I was wrong.”
Not only did he get those flowers Sunday afternoon, Aug. 17, he also received a birthday cake as a surprise when the street sign was revealed and his children took the microphone to wish him a happy birthday while the crowd chanted his name.
During his remarks at the ceremony, Lucas recalled one birthday many years ago, before his music hit the mainstream.
“Everyone was calling my phone, telling me to go out, but I didn’t want to because I didn’t’ feel like I deserved to celebrate. What did I accomplish?” Lucas said. “I said, ‘I’m no longer going to celebrate for nothing.’ Fast-forward to Aug. 17, 2025, and I have a reason to celebrate.”
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