Rec Sports
NFL player leads youth football camp in Triad hometown
An NFL star returned to his Triad roots to pass his sports skills on to a new generation of players.D.J. Reader is heading into his second season as a defensive tackle for the Detroit Lions. The NFL veteran was drafted in 2016 by the Houston Texans, but his career began when he was a player at Grimsley High School in Greensboro.”This is the beginning of it for me,” he said, standing on Grimsley’s field. “I’m on year ten, the latter half of my career, and this game’s done so much for me.”Get the latest news stories of interest by clicking hereThat’s why he returned to lead his eighth Youth Football Camp, which is open to kids ages 6 to 15 at no cost. He says they get to learn the fundamentals of football from throwing the ball to zig-zagging across the field. He says over the years, returning players have built their skills.”There’s some kids I see every year, so it’s awesome to see them all the time,” he said. “I got some kids that last longer this year already because they’ve made it through the stretch line. So, we’re doing good.”Keep up with the latest news and weather by downloading the WXII app here.Reader says growing up in Greensboro, his mother and late father instilled in him a sense of service, which is why he launched his A Son Never Forgets Foundation. He says his goal is to help kids reach theirs.”It’s a blessing to see them getting ready to come out here and enjoy what can take them wherever they want to go in the world,” he says.Watch: NOWCAST streaming newscastsHe says the lessons don’t end when the kids leave the field.”I just hope these kids learn to work hard and just understand that it’s just fun to get out there with your friends,” he said. “Have a good time. Be outside. Be around with people, and just be around the community, and that’s really all I hope they get from it.”NAVIGATE: Home | Weather | Watch NOWCAST TV | Local News | National | News We Love |
An NFL star returned to his Triad roots to pass his sports skills on to a new generation of players.
D.J. Reader is heading into his second season as a defensive tackle for the Detroit Lions. The NFL veteran was drafted in 2016 by the Houston Texans, but his career began when he was a player at Grimsley High School in Greensboro.
“This is the beginning of it for me,” he said, standing on Grimsley’s field. “I’m on year ten, the latter half of my career, and this game’s done so much for me.”
Get the latest news stories of interest by clicking here
That’s why he returned to lead his eighth Youth Football Camp, which is open to kids ages 6 to 15 at no cost. He says they get to learn the fundamentals of football from throwing the ball to zig-zagging across the field. He says over the years, returning players have built their skills.
“There’s some kids I see every year, so it’s awesome to see them all the time,” he said. “I got some kids that last longer this year already because they’ve made it through the stretch line. So, we’re doing good.”
Keep up with the latest news and weather by downloading the WXII app here.
Reader says growing up in Greensboro, his mother and late father instilled in him a sense of service, which is why he launched his A Son Never Forgets Foundation. He says his goal is to help kids reach theirs.
“It’s a blessing to see them getting ready to come out here and enjoy what can take them wherever they want to go in the world,” he says.
Watch: NOWCAST streaming newscasts
He says the lessons don’t end when the kids leave the field.
“I just hope these kids learn to work hard and just understand that it’s just fun to get out there with your friends,” he said. “Have a good time. Be outside. Be around with people, and just be around the community, and that’s really all I hope they get from it.”
NAVIGATE: Home | Weather | Watch NOWCAST TV | Local News | National | News We Love |
Rec Sports
Time to vote for Rockford-area athlete of the week for Dec. 8-13
Dec. 16, 2025, 1:46 p.m. CT
The winter sports season is firing, and so are the stars from the Rockford area. So it’s time for you to vote for the Rockford Register Star high school Athlete of the Week poll, sponsored by Gustafson’s Furniture & Mattress, for the week of Dec. 8-13.
Go to our poll and vote now. We ask that you vote only once per day, to keep the polls fair.
To nominate an athlete for our AOTW poll, send an email to jtaft@rrstar.com by 10 a.m. Monday mornings, with information and stats on why you think they deserve to be nominated.
Almost every week for the rest of the school year, we will compile a list of athletes from the Rockford area who had standout weeks and let you, the reader, vote on who you think deserves the AOTW award. Every week you will be able to find the nominees as well as the poll at rrstar.com.
The AOTW poll will stay open until noon on Friday.
This week’s nominees are:
Dominic Alvarado, Belvidere basketball
Alvarado buried five 3-pointers and scored 21 points to help Belvidere hang on for a 72-71 win over Boylan in boys basketball last Wednesday. Alvarado and the Bucs were off to a 7-2 start after Monday’s win over Stillman Valley.
Ainsley Hughes, Hononegah basketball
While Hughes scored 16 points in Hononegah’s loss to Freeport on Friday, she drained a pair of 3-pointers and tallied 17 points in a 60-37 win over Guilford earlier last week.
Paityn London, Freeport basketball
London has been on a tear to start the season, and she continued the past week, helping Freeport to a 9-1 record headed into this week. She scored 24 points and grabbed eight steals and eight rebounds during Freeport’s 64-50 win over Hononegah in a key NIC-10 showdown on Friday, and she sparked the Pretzels in an 85-64 win over Jefferson last Wednesday with 30 points, nine assists and seven rebounds.

Jeremiah Luke, Lena-Winslow wrestling
Luke earned a quick first-period pin as well as a technical fall to stay undefeated as Lena-Winslow battled on the wrestling mat over the weekend. Luke also had an 18-second pin last Tuesday that capped off Le-Win’s comeback from down 35-0 to Oregon to beating the Hawks 37-35.
Isaiah Perez, Oregon wrestling
Perez outdueled Lena-Winslow’s Brandon White 8-5 as two of the state’s top 126 pounders went at it last Tuesday.
Sienna Peterson, Eastland basketball
Peterson led Eastland with 23 points and 10 steals in a win over Earlville on Saturday, and she had 20 points in a win over Milledgeville earlier the same day. She also scored 16 points in a game last Tuesday.
Aniyah Sarver, Oregon basketball
Sarver scored a season-high 25 points to spark Oregon past Orangeville 50-42 at the Pearl City Tournament on Saturday.
Hailee Vogt, Forreston basketball
Vogt helped Forreston to the 48-21 win over West Carroll on Saturday by dropping in 25 points and adding eight rebounds and four steals. She also had 14 points and 12 rebounds in an 11-point win on Wednesday. Forreston moved back up to .500 (5-5) headed into the week.
Emma Withers, Stillman Valley basketball
Withers sparked the Cardinals to the 77-44 win over Rochelle last week with 33 points, eight rebounds and seven steals.
Jay Taft is a Rockford Register Star sports reporter. Email him at jtaft@rrstar.com and sign up for the Rockford High School Sports Newsletter here at rrstar.com. Jay has covered a variety of sports, from the Chicago Bears and Blackhawks to local youth sports, since the turn of the century at the Register Star.
Rec Sports
Flora Dedeaux
Digital Content Manager
Biloxi, MS

Flora Dedeaux was born and raised in Gulfport, Mississippi. She graduated from Mississippi State University in 2022 with a communication degree, concentrating in broadcast and public relations and minoring in marketing.
Flora began working at WLOX in June 2022 as a Digital Content Producer. In October 2023, Flora was promoted to Digital Content Manager.
In addition to writing stories, creating social media content and managing the digital team, Flora enjoys working on multi-media projects and documentaries. In fact, Flora has won multiple awards for investigative and in-depth projects throughout her time at WLOX.
Flora loves editing, videography and photography, discovering new music genres, learning about media law, watching documentaries, writing, trying new restaurants, and traveling. She also sings, plays guitar, and writes/records her own music, which can be found on Spotify and Apple Music by searching for “On Our Own,” her first released single.
If you have a news tip or digital-related questions, you can contact Flora on Twitter @FloraDedeaux or email her at flora.dedeaux@wlox.com.
Rec Sports
Packers players encourage literacy with reading events at Green Bay, Oneida schools
ONEIDA (WLUK) — Hundreds of students at Oneida Nation Elementary School have new books to read over the holiday break.
Book fair day is always a big day, but it was even more special this year after the Green Bay Packers donated over 2,400 books to the school and its students.
Packers players encourage literacy with reading events at Green Bay, Oneida schools (WLUK)
“Reading, to me, means that it’s very imaginary for me, and I like reading because it puts pictures in my mind and it makes a book come to life for me,” said sixth grader Eliia White.
On Monday, students in pre-K through eighth grade got to shop for books that peaked their interests.
According to Principal Tracy Christensen, “They got to choose what they wanted to read. So now, they have three books for the winter break that they can read and have that opportunity to continue their education, even over break.”
The Packers not only bought each student their three books, but the team also provided an additional 250 books to the school.
“The Big Cheese” was a popular choice, as it was one of two books read to students by Green Bay Packers players Lecitus Smith and Dalton Cooper.
Smith read “The Big Cheese” and Cooper tackled “Hope is a Rainbow.”
“Just to be able to come in and read to the young kids, I know they’ll never forget it. They’re going to cherish this moment forever. And I hope it inspires them to come in the library and school library and pick up books, if they don’t already,” said Smith.
Reading is fundamental. It doesn’t matter if you’re into something cheesy or hopeful — there’s always something to gain with a book in your hand.
Smith said, “To the kids, I mean, they have a future. I mean, what’s a world? What’s this country alone without books? So, just putting a book in the kids’ hands and into the future’s hands — I mean, come on.”
In addition to reading to kids at Oneida Nation Elementary School, Smith and Cooper also took their reading talents to Doty Elementary School in Green Bay.
Rec Sports
Fort Wayne mayor reports youth violence down, discusses casino and Google data center
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WPTA) – Youth violence appears to be down in Fort Wayne, Mayor Sharon Tucker said during her year-in-review interview with 21Alive News.
This past summer, both Tucker and Police Chief Scott Caudill recognized an uptick in violent crimes involving young people. So far this year, eight people 21-years-old or younger have been killed in the city.
In August, the mayor laid out a plan to address the problem. The city awarded grants to nonprofits fighting violence. Tucker also appointed a community liaison within the police department to work proactively with young people.
“Well, right now, youth violence is down, I’m very excited to announce that,” Tucker said. “It’s been a great collaboration amongst the City of Fort Wayne’s Police Department, Fort Wayne Community Schools and all of the nonprofits that have worked with us.”
The city says current data shows overall crime in Fort Wayne from January 2025 to November 2025 is down 18.45%.
Casino debate continues
During the year-end interview, Tucker also spoke about her push to bring a new casino to Fort Wayne.
She maintains that there is a possibility the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma could build a casino in Fort Wayne. She says she wants to get ahead of that with a state-regulated casino instead.
A group fighting against the casino — the Coalition for a Better Allen County — points to a letter from the Miami Tribe. It says the land it owns in Fort Wayne will “always be used for cultural activities and will never be used for gaming purposes.”
The mayor is clearly skeptical.
She has traveled to the Statehouse twice to testify. There are currently two bills up for debate in Indiana that deal with the potential of a casino in Allen County.
Senate Bill 70 would allow the move of the Rising Star Casino from Ohio County to Allen County. House Bill 1038 would instead add another casino license instead of relocating an existing license.
The mayor says moving the Rising Star Casino to Allen County would be more expedient.
Mayor Tucker and all three members of the Allen County Board of Commissioners have written a letter to state lawmakers to express support for bringing a casino to Allen County.
The letter expresses that 60% of the tax revenue from a new casino would be distributed to communities in Allen County based on population. 40% would be put into a fund for non-profits to “help improve mental health and combat homelessness, addiction, and other challenges.”
The letter also says a board would be appointed to oversee how the funds are distributed.
“The relationship that we have with Allen County Commissioners, with the signed document, we are not going to fight against each other on where it is located,” Tucker said during our interview. “It would be up to the casino operator. But what we have agreed to is that no matter whether it is built in the city of Fort Wayne or in unincorporated Allen County, that everyone in Allen County should benefit.”
The mayor says some of the tax revenue from a new casino would go into a humanitarian fund to help improve mental health, combat homelessness, addiction and other challenges.
Google data center faces opposition
21Alive also asked Mayor Tucker about the Google data center.
You’ll remember, Tucker was present during the groundbreaking shortly after she became mayor. At the time, she spoke about a trip she took to an already completed data center in New Albany, Ohio. She said she was convinced while she was there that Google would be a good fit for the community.
View all of our previous reports here.
“We were driving back to Fort Wayne. My heart on the inside was saying, ‘What a tremendous opportunity for our community, for the city of New Haven, for the City of Fort Wayne, for the State of Indiana,’” Tucker said during the groundbreaking. “How could we miss an opportunity to welcome Google to our community?”
The center is located near East Paulding and Adams Center roads. Since the groundbreaking, groups have formed to fight against the data center, and protesters have been making their voices heard at city council meetings. Some worry about the environmental impact. Others think it may lead to higher energy costs.
“I believe that the pushback is because residents feel that they have questions and that those questions aren’t being answered, and then that leads to frustration and, of course, frustration leads to a growing cry out for answer my questions,” Tucker said. “If I had my choice, I would support a broader level of transparency.”
The mayor says the recent town hall meeting with Google helped with that effort. Representatives from Google say they are building a website that will help address concerns. Activists say they worry that will be a frustrating tool to deal with.
Tucker says there will be enough water and electricity to operate the data center.
Mayor Tucker’s political future
The Allen County Democratic Party selected Tucker to be the late Fort Wayne Mayor Tom Henry’s successor in April of 2024.
Tucker will finish the remainder of Henry’s term, through January 2028.
We asked her if she plans on running for mayor during the next election.
“I love serving the city,” she said. “I love the opportunity I have before me.”
“We will have to wait and see how things go moving forward.”
Copyright 2025 WPTA. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Authorities seek more victims as suspect in child assault linked to local sports programs
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — Detectives from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department’s Sexual Assault Detail have arrested Sergio Reyes Rojas, 44, in connection with a sexual assault incident in Las Vegas.
Rojas faces multiple charges, including three counts of sexual assault against a child less than 16 years of age, one count of child abuse or neglect, and one count of first-degree kidnapping of a minor.
Authorities suspect there may be additional victims, as Rojas is linked to local youth sports programs.
Anyone with information or who may have been a victim is urged to contact the Sexual Assault Detail at 702-828-3421.
Anonymous tips can be submitted to Crime Stoppers at 702-385-5555 or online at www.crimestoppersofnv.com.
Rec Sports
Economic Liberties Senior Fellow Katherine Van Dyck to Testify Before US House Committee on How Private Equity is Gutting Youth Sports
Washington, D.C. — This morning at 10:00am EST, Economic Liberties Senior Legal Fellow Katherine Van Dyck will testify in front of the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education at a hearing titled, “Benched: The Crisis in American Youth Sports and Its Cost to Our Future.” The hearing will examine the growing role of private equity and financial consolidation in youth sports; the resulting rise in costs for families; declining access and participation; and the broader consequences for children’s health, safety, and community life.
“Youth sports in our country are beloved traditions and great equalizers, a place where children from all backgrounds can come together, learn teamwork and fair play, and build shared community bonds,” said Katherine Van Dyck, Senior Legal Fellow at the American Economic Liberties Project. “But it is quickly becoming the next victim of a financialized economy that has taken over virtually every aspect of American life. Private equity companies have been quietly and systematically capturing the youth sports industry across the United States, turning what was once an affordable public good into a profit-extraction machine. It is the same playbook that private equity used to consolidate industries as varied as veterinary clinics, nursing homes, hospitals, and firetrucks—stripping assets, raising prices, and degrading quality, and the consequences are devastating.”
Ms. Van Dyck’s testimony details how years of state and local budget cuts, combined with unfunded federal mandates and weak oversight, created a void that private equity firms have filled through serial acquisitions and vertical integration. She explains how dominant firms now control leagues, tournaments, facilities, apparel, technology platforms, travel and streaming services, and even governing bodies, allowing them to eliminate competition and force families into costly, non-negotiable arrangements. As a result, families now spend thousands of dollars per year on youth sports, participation gaps based on income are widening, and children face higher risks of burnout, overuse injuries, and exploitation.
“Private equity has become a predatory force in our society. It harms our children and threatens the stability of American society for profit, and it has turned its sights on youth sports,” Ms. Van Dyck added. “It is exploiting parents’ love for their children and their desire to give them opportunities to learn, grow, and succeed.”
In her testimony, Ms. Van Dyck calls on Congress to take bold action, including increased antitrust scrutiny of consolidation in youth sports, stronger consumer protection rules for families, and clear limits on private equity practices that prioritize financial engineering over children’s wellbeing. She argues that youth sports should not be a luxury good, but a broadly accessible public good essential to healthy childhood development and civic life.
Read Katherine Van Dyck’s full written testimony here.
Watch the full hearing here.
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The American Economic Liberties Project works to ensure America’s system of commerce is structured to advance, rather than undermine, economic liberty, fair commerce, and a secure, inclusive democracy. Economic Liberties believes true economic liberty means entrepreneurs and businesses large and small succeed on the merits of their ideas and hard work; commerce empowers consumers, workers, farmers, and engineers instead of subjecting them to discrimination and abuse from financiers and monopolists; international trade arrangements that promote promote balanced trade and benefit workers, farmers and small businesses; and wealth is broadly distributed to support equitable political power.
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