Rec Sports
PHOTOS: Richmond Jammers at Jalen’s Jamboree
Kyle Pillar – Sports Editor HAMLET — A new addition to a local fundraiser made its first appearance Sunday. For the fourth year, Jalen’s Jamboree was played at Hamlet Middle School to raise money for the Jalen A. David Scholarship Foundation. Usually, only men’s and women’s player-alumni games have been played in the past. New […]

Kyle Pillar – Sports Editor
HAMLET — A new addition to a local fundraiser made its first appearance Sunday.
For the fourth year, Jalen’s Jamboree was played at Hamlet Middle School to raise money for the Jalen A. David Scholarship Foundation.
Usually, only men’s and women’s player-alumni games have been played in the past. New this year was the incorporation of a local youth travel program.
The Richmond Jammers organization, which was founded by Lady Raider basketball coach Taneika Reader more than 20 years ago, kicked off the event with a pair of games.
Following the youth games, both alumni teams defeated the current Raiders and Lady Raiders.
All of the games played featured two 20-minute halves with a running clock.
In the first Jammers game, the Purple Jammers defeated the White Jammers 53-32. That was followed by a 53-27 win for the White Jammers over the Purple Jammers in the second game.
Jalen David played basketball for Richmond Senior High School before he passed away in 2020. He was a member of the program since his freshman year.
All of the money raised through admissions and concessions Sunday went to the scholarship. One student from Richmond who has at least a 2.50 grade point average and plans to attend a two or four-year school will receive the scholarship money later this spring.
Rec Sports
DVIDS – News – Locations, schedules, NFL athletes announced for military installations receiving free ProCamps youth football events
By DeCA Corporate Communications FORT GREGG-ADAMS, Va. – Children in eight military communities will get the opportunity to attend a free football ProCamps event courtesy of a Procter & Gamble (P&G) promotion available near select commissaries and exchanges. The two-day camps, led by NFL football players, are open to the children (ages 6-14) of […]

By DeCA Corporate Communications
FORT GREGG-ADAMS, Va. – Children in eight military communities will get the opportunity to attend a free football ProCamps event courtesy of a Procter & Gamble (P&G) promotion available near select commissaries and exchanges.
The two-day camps, led by NFL football players, are open to the children (ages 6-14) of active-duty military, reservists, retirees and Department of Defense (DOD) civilian employees.
Camp locations, dates and participating athletes are:
• McChord Air Force Base (Joint Base Lewis-McChord), Washington (June 13-14), Noah Fant, Seattle Seahawks
• Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California, (June 24-25), Tre Harris, Los Angeles Chargers
• Fort Benning, Georgia, (June 27-28), Tyler Allgeier, Atlanta Falcons
• Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, (June 30 – July 1), Emery Jones, Baltimore Ravens
• Naval Weapons Station Charleston, South Carolina, (July 11-12), Robert Hunt, Carolina Panthers
• Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, (July 14-15), George Karlaftis, Kansas City Chiefs
• Fort Bragg North, North Carolina (July 15-16), Austin Corbett, Carolina Panthers
• Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, (July 19-20), Grady Jarrett, Chicago Bears
Overseas ProCamps events have already occurred. March 22-23, Jevón Holland, a safety from the New York Giants, hosted the Vogelweh, Germany, camp at the Kaiserslautern High School, with autograph signings at the Kaiserslautern Military Community Center and Ramstein Air Base Commissary.
April 12-13, Morgan Fox, a defensive end with the Atlanta Falcons, hosted the other overseas camp, at the Yokota Air Base High School, Japan, with autograph signings at the Yokota Air Base Commissary and Exchange.
The eight installations qualified for a camp based on purchases and displays of P&G products in their local commissaries and exchanges during March and April. The camps are designed to accommodate up to 150 children.
Campers will experience various stations to learn football fundamentals, participate in games and competitions, receive coaching from an NFL player, and compete for a chance to win signed merchandise and more P&G product samples through “Camper of the Day” awards.
Those interested in the upcoming camps should visit their local commissary, exchange or contact the local youth sports office for details. This year, autograph sessions with the host athletes will be at the camp locations at the end of the first day.
“As a military dad, I appreciate the opportunities these free camps offer for the children in our communities,” said Navy Command Master Chief Mario Rivers, senior enlisted advisor to the DeCA director and CEO. “Our military children get to socialize with others, learn some football basics. However, the most important thing is they have fun.”
-DeCA-
About DeCA: The Defense Commissary Agency operates a worldwide chain of commissaries providing groceries to military personnel, retirees, disabled veterans and other authorized patrons and their families in a safe and secure shopping environment. Commissaries provide a military benefit, saving authorized patrons thousands of dollars annually on their purchases compared to similar products at commercial retailers. The discounted prices include a 5-percent surcharge, which supports the costs of building, modernizing and sustaining commissary facilities. A core military family support element and valued part of military pay and benefits, commissaries contribute to family readiness, enhance the quality of life for America’s military services and their families, and help recruit and retain the best and brightest men and women to serve their country.
Date Taken: | 05.29.2025 |
Date Posted: | 05.29.2025 09:33 |
Story ID: | 499156 |
Location: | FORT GREGG-ADAMS, VIRGINIA, US |
Web Views: | 67 |
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Rec Sports
USA Lacrosse Girls’ Youth Nationals
Ready to Rise to the Challenge? Join the nation’s premier youth lacrosse event — where top 13U–15U girls’ teams compete for glory. Experience elite competition, national exposure, professional game footage, and a shot at recruitment, all in a first-class setting that champions sportsmanship and community. Apply now and be part of the story. Roster Requirements […]


Ready to Rise to the Challenge?
Join the nation’s premier youth lacrosse event — where top 13U–15U girls’ teams compete for glory. Experience elite competition, national exposure, professional game footage, and a shot at recruitment, all in a first-class setting that champions sportsmanship and community. Apply now and be part of the story.
Roster Requirements
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2025
2024
2024 Champions
15U: Yellow Jackets Stadler
14U: Mass Elite Red
13U: Yellow Jackets Friedman
Rec Sports
Aaron Judge hitting coach shares secrets with Billings youth
BILLINGS — How does a 70-year-old grandpa blast a ball off a tee quicker than a teenager in his prime? The short answer is technique. Rich Schenck (pronounced “Skenk”) not only has it, but he also teaches it to some of Major League Baseball’s biggest stars. “Most people push their bat forward. I believe it […]

BILLINGS — How does a 70-year-old grandpa blast a ball off a tee quicker than a teenager in his prime? The short answer is technique.
Rich Schenck (pronounced “Skenk”) not only has it, but he also teaches it to some of Major League Baseball’s biggest stars.
“Most people push their bat forward. I believe it needs to be like a Nike swoosh and go backward before it goes forward,” Schenck explained recently to MTN Sports.
WATCH THE VIDEO:
Swinging for success: Aaron Judge’s hitting coach shares secrets with local youth
Master that technique, and you might make the big leagues, like New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge, whom Schenck coaches. Judge is hitting nearly .400 this season — far ahead of any other MLB player.
Schenck was recently at Pirtz Field in Billings, letting young local hopefuls in on his secret.
“My swing has been under,” said 15-year-old Tanner Stiegemeier, demonstrating in thin air. “I’m hoping I can get it more up.”
Teammates Chase Langford and Gehrig Hust also had their own beat on how to swing a better bat.
“I got to get my hands quick,” said Hust, 13.
“Probably quick hands and bat speed … bat velocity,” added Langford.
Schenck, who also shared advice with coaches, made the quick day trip to Billings while visiting his daughter’s family in Belgrade. It was sort of a favor to his son-in-law, J.D. Stephenson, who is friends with Billings coach Bobby Beers. They work together with the Montana Institute of Sport.
“In three short years, we’ve been able to get into 200 schools, develop P.E. curriculums, support coaches and create opportunities for youth sports,” said Stephenson, CEO of the organization.
“I think one of the things kids this young don’t understand is the consistency it takes (to succeed at a high level),” Beers added.
Schenck’s background in developing the Nike swoosh technique truly rewinds time.
“This thing called the internet was new, and I started going online to get information to help my boys enjoy the game better,” Schenck recalled.
He never did play pro ball but was a Division II college catcher who aspired to hit like Barry Bonds.
“He was the best hitter in the game at that time, and maybe forever,” Schenck said.
So, Schenck set up a hitting station with video recordings in his basement.
“I would ask, what’s his lead arm doing … my lead arm doing? What’s his head doing … my head doing? What’s his bat doing, my bat … my leg, his leg?” he explained.
Schenck mastered the philosophy he teaches today — “launch quickness,” he calls it — and his big break came when he delivered a breakthrough for a young Aaron Judge, who was struggling in the minor leagues nine years ago.
“The first day I was with Aaron, I put a ball on a tee for him and a ball on a tee for me. I was 62 years old and looked like this … and he was 24 and just a physically cut specimen. And he could not hit the ball before me,” Schenck said.
Judge figured it out, endorsed Schenck on Twitter, and the lives of both men changed forever. Judge went on to win American League Rookie of the Year the following season in 2017, the first Yankee to do so since Derek Jeter.
Schenck, meanwhile, blossomed to help other Major League stars and continues to tutor teens — and he’s still quicker.
Rec Sports
California track-and-field final enters spotlight for rule change after trans athlete’s success
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California’s high school track-and-field state championships starting Friday are set to be the testing ground for… SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California’s high school track-and-field state championships starting Friday are set to be the testing ground for a new participation and medaling policy for competitions that include transgender athletes. The California Interscholastic […]

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California’s high school track-and-field state championships starting Friday are set to be the testing ground for…
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California’s high school track-and-field state championships starting Friday are set to be the testing ground for a new participation and medaling policy for competitions that include transgender athletes.
The California Interscholastic Federation will let an additional student compete and potentially offer an extra medal in three events in which a trans athlete is competing. The athlete, high school junior AB Hernandez, is the second seed in the triple jump and will also participate in the long jump and high jump.
It may be the first effort by a high school sports governing body to expand participation when trans athletes are participating, and it reflects efforts to find a middle ground in the debate over trans girls’ participation in youth sports.
“The CIF values all of our student-athletes and we will continue to uphold our mission of providing students with the opportunity to belong, connect, and compete while complying with California law,” the group said in a statement after announcing its rule change.
State law allows trans students to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity.
President Donald Trump threatened this week to pull federal funding from California unless it bars trans female athletes from competing on girls teams. The U.S. Department of Justice also said it would investigate the state federation and the district that includes Hernandez’s high school to determine whether they violated federal sex discrimination law by allowing trans girls to compete in girls sports.
What the new participation and medaling policy will look like
The meet, which is taking place at a high school near Fresno, will open up the girls triple jump, long jump and high jump to one additional athlete each who would have qualified had Hernandez not participated. Hernandez will compete in the preliminaries Friday for a chance to advance to the finals Saturday.
Under the pilot policy, if a transgender athlete medals, their ranking would not displace a “biological female” student from medaling, the federation said.
The federation said the rule would open the field to more “biological female” athletes. One expert said the change may itself be discriminatory because it creates an extra spot for “biological female” athletes but not for other trans athletes.
The federation did not specify how they define “biological female” or how they would verify whether a competitor meets that definition.
Medical experts say gender is a spectrum, not a binary structure consisting of only males and females.
The two-day meet is expected to draw attention from a coalition of protesting parents and students. Critics have objected Hernandez’s participation and heckled her in qualifying events earlier this month. Leaders from the conservative California Family Council joined Republican state lawmakers Thursday for a press conference blasting the policy change and saying Hernandez shouldn’t be allowed to compete.
“If they have to create special exceptions and backdoor rule changes to placate frustrated athletes, that’s not equality, that’s a confession,” Sophia Lorey, the council’s outreach director, said in a statement. “Girls’ sports should be for girls, full stop.”
CIF Executive Director Ron Nocetti urged participants and bystanders to behave respectfully toward all student-athletes in a message shared in the championship program.
Nationwide debate over trans athletes’ participation
A recent AP-NORC poll found that about 7 in 10 U.S. adults think transgender female athletes should not be allowed to participate in girls and women’s sports at the high school, college or professional level. That view was shared by about 9 in 10 Republicans and roughly half of Democrats. Trump won Fresno County, where the meet will be held, in 2024.
Hernandez told the publication Capital & Main earlier this month that she couldn’t worry about critics.
“I’m still a child, you’re an adult, and for you to act like a child shows how you are as a person,” she said.
She noted that she has lost some of her events, saying that disproved arguments that she can’t be beat.
Hernandez is expected to perform well, particularly in the triple jump, in which she has a personal best of over 41 feet (12.5 meters). That is more than 3 feet (1 meter) short of a national record set in 2019. She’s the fifth seed in the long jump but ranked much lower in the high jump.
California’s state championship stands out from that of other states because of the number of competitors athletes are up against to qualify.
More than 57,000 high schoolers participated in outdoor track and field in California during the 2023-2024 school year, according to a survey by the National Federation of State High School Associations. California had the second-largest number of high school outdoor track-and-field athletes, only behind Texas.
Of the 12 high school athletes who have set national records in the girls triple jump between 1984 and 2019, eight have been from California, according to the national sports governing body.
Davis Whitfield, the national federation’s chief operating officer, called a state championship “the pinnacle” for high school student-athletes.
“It’s certainly a once-in-a-lifetime experience in some cases to participate in a state championship event,” he said.
___
Austin is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Austin on X: @sophieadanna
Copyright
© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.
Rec Sports
Brush fire chars about 20 acres west of Winnemucca | Fire Watch
…FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM SATURDAY MORNING THROUGH SUNDAY EVENING FOR GUSTY WINDS, LOW HUMIDITY AND ISOLATED LIGHTNING FOR PARTS OF WESTERN NEVADA AND THE EASTERN SIERRA… The National Weather Service in Reno has issued a Fire Weather Watch for gusty winds and low humidity and isolated dry lightning, which is in effect from […]

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM SATURDAY MORNING THROUGH SUNDAY EVENING FOR GUSTY WINDS, LOW HUMIDITY AND ISOLATED LIGHTNING FOR PARTS OF WESTERN NEVADA AND THE EASTERN SIERRA... The National Weather Service in Reno has issued a Fire Weather Watch for gusty winds and low humidity and isolated dry lightning, which is in effect from Saturday morning through Sunday evening. * Affected Area...Fire Weather Zone 274 Southern Mono County, Fire Weather Zone 420 Northern Sierra Front including Carson City, Douglas, Storey, Southern Washoe, Western Lyon, and Far Southern Lassen Counties, Fire Weather Zone 421 Southern Sierra Front including Alpine, Northern Mono, Southern Lyon, and Western Mineral Counties and Fire Weather Zone 429 Lahontan Basin including Churchill and Eastern Mineral Counties. * Winds...Southwest wind gusts 30 to 40 mph. Gusts to 50 mph in wind prone areas. * Humidity...10-15% during the day with poor overnight recoveries around 20-35%. * Thunderstorms...10-15% chance of isolated dry thunderstorms with gusty, erratic outflow winds primarily in the Sierra. * Duration...8 to 12 hours. * Impacts...The combination of gusty winds and low humidity can cause fire to rapidly grow in size and intensity before first responders can contain them. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Avoid outdoor activities that can cause a spark near dry vegetation, such as yard work, target shooting, or campfires. Follow local fire restrictions. Check weather.gov/reno for updates and livingwithfire.info for preparedness tips. &&
Rec Sports
Bruce P. Colon | News, Sports, Jobs
Bruce P. Colon, 84, of Lake Placid, passed away on Saturday, May 24, 2025. Bruce was born in Athol, Massachusetts, to Katherine P. and Percy “Bill” Colon on Aug. 17, 1940, the youngest of three children. After graduating from Athol High School in 1958, Bruce attended Paul Smith’s College, where he was a vital member […]

Bruce P. Colon, 84, of Lake Placid, passed away on Saturday, May 24, 2025.
Bruce was born in Athol, Massachusetts, to Katherine P. and Percy “Bill” Colon on Aug. 17, 1940, the youngest of three children.
After graduating from Athol High School in 1958, Bruce attended Paul Smith’s College, where he was a vital member of the ski team. He graduated with an associate’s degree in forestry in 1960. He served in the U.S. Army from 1962 to 1964 and then earned his bachelor of science degree from the University of New Hampshire in 1967.
Bruce returned to the Adirondacks in 1967 to teach and coach football, golf and Alpine skiing at Saranac Lake High School. From 1968 to 1977, he held the position of assistant headmaster at Northwood School in Lake Placid, where he led the history department and coached baseball, golf, football and Alpine skiing. By his second year at Northwood, he had led the football team to an undefeated season, and two members of his ski team were selected for the U.S. National Junior Team. He also played a key role in transitioning Northwood School to a coeducational institution and establishing its women’s sports programs. Bruce was an influential volunteer in championing Lake Placid community youth sports as a Little League baseball coach, area golf instructor, and Lake Placid Sports Council member. In 1977, he was appointed Women’s Alpine Director for the 1980 Olympic Winter Games.
One of Bruce’s lasting legacies is as a founder of the New York Ski Educational Foundation. Since its inception in 1973, the Whiteface Alpine Training Center, later re-named NYSEF, has become a nationally recognized program that has trained thousands of youth in Alpine, Nordic, freestyle and snowboard programs over the past 50-plus years. In 2018, Bruce was an inaugural inductee into the NYSEF Hall of Fame. Following his tenure at Northwood School, he established and served as the first headmaster of Carrabassett Valley Academy in Maine and later headed Alpine ski programs at Mount Bachelor in Oregon, Mount Alyeska in Alaska, and Aspen, Snowmass and Crested Butte in Colorado. Dozens of Coach Colon’s athletes went on to compete and/or coach at national, international and Olympic levels. In 2003, Bruce was honored with U.S. Ski and Snowboard Chairman’s Special Recognition “Tom Reynolds Award for Lifetime Achievement in Coaching.”
Upon retirement, Bruce returned to Lake Placid, where he pursued his passion for golf, perfected his craft of custom bamboo fly rod building and relished spending time with his children and grandchildren.
Bruce is survived by his four children, Laurie (Johnny) Woods of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Clarke (Elizabeth) Colon of Waterbury, Vermont, Lisa (Shawn) Holes of Boise, Idaho, and Eric Colon of Silt, Colorado; eight grandchildren, Eliza (Kent) True, William Holes, Logan Holes, Mazie Holes, Heath Colon, Davis Colon, Levi Colon and Claire Colon; four great-grandchildren; his friend and former wife, Nancy Colon of Lake Placid; and his girlfriend of 20 years, Carol Nevulis of Lake Placid. He also leaves behind numerous nieces and nephews and countless former students and athletes whose lives he positively impacted.
He was preceded in death by both his parents; brother Frazier P. Colon; and sister Joan E. Duncan.
A celebration of life will take place later this summer. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to NYSEF, PO Box 300, Wilmington, NY 12997 or nysef.org.
The M. B. Clark, Inc., Funeral Home in Lake Placid is overseeing arrangements. Visit www.mbclarkfuneralhome.com to share a memory or leave condolences.
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