Rec Sports
Players Era day 2 observations: How point differential pushed Michigan, Gonzaga into final
LAS VEGAS — In some ways, the Players Era Festival has a distinctly youth basketball tournament vibe. Lots of the best players in their respective classes roaming around hotels (or getting their caffeine fix at Starbucks, like Iowa State star Milan Momcilovic), former college All-Americans sitting courtside (Carmelo Anthony, Jackie Young and Nick Collison among them), overpriced concessions and entry tickets.
And then, of course, there are the scheduling quirks.
“It’s bringing me back to the AAU days,” Michigan’s Roddy Gayle Jr. said shortly after the No. 7 Wolverines annihilated San Diego State 94-54 on Monday night at Michelob Ultra Arena in Mandalay Bay. “It reminds me of what it feels like to be young.”
Gayle, a 22-year-old senior guard, is not exactly close to collecting Social Security checks. But we see his point: Three games in three days is often reserved for the high school crowd. The same goes for point differential.
Point differential reemerged this week as one of the tiebreaking criteria used to determine who’s playing for the championship (and additional cash). No. 7 Michigan, which blasted No. 21 Auburn 102-72 on Tuesday, was the clear No. 1 seed for the championship game. They’ll meet second-seeded Gonzaga with an extra $1 million on the line (second place gets $500,000), after the No. 12 Zags beat Maryland 100-61. No. 17 Tennessee and Kansas will play for third place.
The point differential tally led to an awkward in-game situation. On Tuesday afternoon, No. 15 Iowa State led Creighton 78-60 with the clock winding down. Bluejays coach Greg McDermott gave Iowa State coach TJ Otzelberger his start, hiring him in 2006 as an assistant at ISU. Otzelberger considers McDermott a mentor and good friend, so he didn’t want to run up the score.
On the game’s final possession, Momcilovic had the ball. He glanced up at the scoreboard, then turned to the sideline to ask Otzelberger if he should shoot, clearly aware of the point differential criteria that would help determine Iowa State’s third opponent. Momcilovic ultimately opted not to shoot, holding the ball and solidifying Iowa State’s overall margin at plus-19. And because of that, the 2-0 Cyclones will meet 0-2 Syracuse in what could easily become a blowout.
After all of the results Monday and Tuesday, here’s how the tiebreakers worked:
1. Record
2. Head-to-head
3. Plus/minus tiebreaker (capped at 20 points per win)
4. Total points scored
5. Total points allowed
6. AP ranking as of Monday
Important caveat: In seeding the first four teams, previous or future schedules were not considered. For teams seeded Nos. 5-18, schedules were considered.
Fortunately, we, the sportswriters, were not in charge of figuring out the math and who was seeded where. So with the help of the math professionals, here’s the upcoming schedule (note that the four “worst” teams have Wednesday off and will play Thursday instead. Happy Thanksgiving to them.)
Schedule
| Date | Matchup | Venue | Time (PT) | Network |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Nov. 26 |
Syracuse vs. Iowa State |
MGM Grand Garden Arena |
10 a.m. |
TNT |
|
Nov. 26 |
Notre Dame vs. Houston |
MGM Grand Garden Arena |
12:30 p.m. |
TNT |
|
Nov. 26 |
Kansas vs. Tennessee |
MGM Grand Garden Arena |
4 p.m. |
TNT |
|
Nov. 26 |
St. John’s vs. Auburn |
Michelob ULTRA Arena |
5 p.m. |
truTV |
|
Nov. 26 |
Gonzaga vs. Michigan |
MGM Grand Garden Arena |
6:30 p.m. |
TNT |
|
Nov. 26 |
Baylor vs. SDSU |
Michelob ULTRA Arena |
7:30 p.m. |
truTV |
|
Nov. 26 |
Maryland vs. Alabama |
MGM Grand Garden Arena |
9 p.m. |
TNT |
|
Nov. 27 |
Oregon vs. Creighton |
Michelob ULTRA Arena |
11 a.m. |
truTV |
|
Nov. 27 |
UNLV vs. Rutgers |
Michelob ULTRA Arena |
1:30 p.m. |
truTV |
St. John’s rebounds against Baylor
No. 14 St. John’s has two losses already, and when it’s still November and you’re living in Rick Pitino’s orbit, that can be an uncomfortable setting. Pitino was salty Monday after losing by a point to Iowa State, but his mood shifted between games.
“I think what I enjoyed the most last night was the devastation in the eyes of our players,” Pitino said. “And you really know a team with class — I don’t mean the way they act off the court, which they act great — but a class team really, really focuses in, doesn’t hang their heads, and brings it, and these guys did.”
The Johnnies responded with a dominant 96-81 win over Baylor on Tuesday. Pitino said he could tell how dialed in his players were during film because of how many questions they asked, then said it was the best walk-through they’ve had all season.
It certainly helped the offense. Both Bryce Hopkins (26 points) and Oziyah Sellers (22 points) scored season highs, and the Johnnies shared the ball well, finishing with 19 assists. The one lowlight was Baylor grabbing 26 offensive rebounds one day after St. John’s allowed Iowa State to grab 17. Pitino says that with his team’s athletes up front — he’s starting three bigs in Hopkins, Zuby Ejiofor and Dillon Mitchell — that’s an area where they should be better, but he was bubbling with optimism.
“I think this team has potential to be a good team as we grow,” Pitino said. “But they’re new to each other. We see a lot of mistakes by being new to each other. … When you get guys that are just as crushed as the coaching staff, you got the makeup of a good basketball team.”
— CJ Moore
St. John’s bounced back against Baylor and can still come out of the Players Era tournament 2-1 with a win Wednesday. (Ian Maule / Getty Images)
Lipsey likely a game-time decision for Iowa State
One of the newsiest nuggets from the first day of the Players Era tournament? Iowa State guard Tamin Lipsey — an All-Big 12 honoree last season, and one of the better veteran guards in the country — took a groin shot with 2:09 left in the Cyclones’ eventual 83-82 win over St. John’s, which immediately sent him to ISU’s locker room. Otzelberger said afterward that Lipsey was “day to day” with a lower-body injury.
Lipsey didn’t suit up Tuesday against Creighton. Considering the Bluejays beat the Lipsey-less Cyclones six weeks ago in a preseason exhibition, it was fair to wonder how Iowa State would respond.
But Iowa State didn’t need its star guard at all in a resounding 78-60 win.
The Cyclones led for the entirety of the second half, with Otzelberger’s typically stingy defense making life hell for Creighton. The Bluejays only made 12 of their 30 2-point attempts — and three of their 14 layups — and were forced into 17 turnovers, which ISU converted into 19 points. And just to show how good the Cyclones have been defensively this season, en route to the program’s first 6-0 start since 2022? Those 17 turnovers are actually going to lower the Cyclones’ average per game; they entered Tuesday eighth nationally in turnovers forced, with 18.6 on average.
ISU’s other guards — French freshman Killyan Toure and graduate Nate Heise — more than stepped up. Heise played a season-high 39 minutes in his first start of the year, while Toure — a sub-100 recruit who has emerged as a surprise every-game starter — poured in his best college effort yet, with a game- and career-high 20 points.
“Killyan out there showed everything that he’s learned from Tamin,” Otzelberger said, “and put that into play.”
As for Lipsey’s status Wednesday, Otzelberger said he had “no idea,” but noted that while ISU wants to win every game it plays, Lipsey’s long-term health — especially as it relates to the Cyclones’ Big 12 and national title goals — is more important than one result.
“We want him to be healthy,” Otzelberger said. “We want his body to feel great, and we want him to be at his best. And we’ll be disciplined until that time comes.”
— Brendan Marks
All bets are … stressful?
It’s interesting to be at such a big event in Las Vegas given how much gambling has been in the news lately — and not in a positive light. A handful of former college hoopers have been banned for life by the NCAA for various gambling infractions. And NCAA membership backtracked on legalizing betting on pro sports for college athletes.
During the Kansas-Syracuse game Tuesday, I was sitting next to a group of rabid Orange fans who were living and dying with every shot, clearly stressed about how few points ‘Cuse was putting on the scoreboard. I asked the fan next to me if they had money riding on the game. He nodded gravely.
“A lot,” he said. “Like, if we lose (the bet), borderline we might not be able to fly home.”
They assured me that putting money on the game doesn’t make it less enjoyable to watch — it’s just a more intense experience as they “ride the highs and lows of the betting rollercoaster.”
Just a reminder that the 2028 men’s Final Four will also be in Vegas.
— Lindsay Schnell
Rec Sports
3 young kids killed in house fire; 4-year-old, parents and grandmother seriously injured
JACKSON COUNTY, Ky. (WKYT/Gray News) – Authorities say three children, the oldest of whom was 3, were killed in a house fire in Kentucky. A fourth child, the parents and a grandparent were all injured in the fire.
The Kentucky State Police received a request from local authorities to help with a Jackson County house fire just before midnight Tuesday. A preliminary investigation revealed three children, ages 7 months, 2 and 3, were killed in the fire, according to a press release.
A 4-year-old child was taken to the University of Kentucky Albert B. Chandler Hospital before being transferred to Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, for further treatment.
Three adults were also taken to UK Chandler Hospital for treatment of injuries from the fire. They have been identified as 23-year-old Tyler Monst, 22-year-old Morgan Johnson and 76-year-old Florence Johnson.
The children’s uncle says Monst and Morgan Johnson are their parents, while Florence Johnson is his mother.
“Christmas is meant for joy and happiness, and obviously, this community is not experiencing that this year,” said Chief Zachary Bryant with the McKee Police Department.
Neighbor Orvel Hisel says he saw multiple first responders head down the road to the scene. There are expected to be numerous fundraisers for the family announced in the coming days.
“It’s just a sad time for our whole community. The loss of children and lives,” Hisel said. “What kind of means can we help that family? There’s a child that’s been flown to Columbus. That’s a ways off. If the family can go there, they are going to want to.”
KSP’s press release said the cause of the fire and the circumstances surrounding the deaths remain under investigation.
Copyright 2025 WKYT via Gray Local Media, Inc. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Ocean View’s Maury Young made mark by breaking 39-year-old record
Maury Young’s reason for running might surprise you.
Simply put, it makes him feel free.
For the past two seasons, Young surprised many but never himself. The Seahawks senior distance running standout said he regularly sets goals, and after making a trip to the CIF State cross-country championships as a junior, the expectations rose while the list got shorter.
What was left? The school record.
The record book may not stay forever Young, but it is for now. Young made the school standard his own during a sterling senior season that also saw him return to the state meet.
For his achievements, Young is the Daily Pilot Boys’ Cross-Country Athlete of the Year.
Young went into the Ocean View record book on Oct. 18, when he lowered his lifetime-best 3-mile time to 14 minutes 36.2 seconds in the Orange County championships at Oak Canyon Park in Silverado.
The time bettered the previous record of 14:51, established by Haissam Sabra at the Dana Hills Invitational in 1986.
“I always tell my coach what I want to do,” Young said. “Before a race, I’ll tell him, ‘I want to run this time,’ or, ‘I want to get in this position,’ and most of the time, that’s where I get and that’s what I get. O.C. Champs, I was already feeling sick, but I knew my training wasn’t bad. I knew my health wasn’t bad. It’s just [that] I was sick. I knew the only biggest problem I was going to have running was my breathing. … I tried to run a faster time, but I’m really grateful for the time that I did run.”
Young also claimed the Empire League championship, adding to his accomplishments after taking home the Golden West League title the previous season.
As a senior, Young was a known commodity, oftentimes serving as a measuring stick for others. Young remembers what it was like to look up to others, including Edwin Montes, who graduated from Ocean View in 2019.
Ocean View coach Daniel Hurtado compared Young to Montes and brothers Ryan and Jason St. Pierre, all key contributors to the Seahawks’ rise.
Ryan St. Pierre led the pack when Ocean View captured the Golden West League team title in 2016. Edwin Montes and Jason St. Pierre started on back-to-back state-qualifying teams, including the Seahawks’ initial state berth in 2017.
“With Edwin, there were multiple times, [same with] Maury, a minute faster than all of your teammates,” Hurtado said. “Most of his workouts, he did by himself. There were multiple instances at the park where I would just be writing down his splits, and I almost wished there were more people around to be like, ‘Did you see that?’
“It never looks like he is running as fast as he is, and that’s the same feeling I would get when I was coaching Edwin,” Hurtado added. “There’s just a fluidity on his stride. Then again, the competitiveness, knowing when to compete because the competition matters more than the times, and when to go for times. That’s something I feel like it reminded me of the St. Pierres.”
Ocean View placed second to Fullerton, 40-58, in the Empire League and came close to making it to the state meet as a team. Young said every time he needed motivation, he didn’t have to look further than his teammates, citing a bond formed from a preseason trip to Big Bear.
“My coach is big on our team’s connection,” Young said. “We have this Big Bear trip where we all kind of open up. Everyone on my team, I know their story, and they know mine. Every time I am unmotivated, [then] every time I see them, I’m motivated and it’s gone. Every hard feeling, everything I’m down about, it’s gone. When I’m running, I kind of block all of that off, and it’s just me and my team.”
Ocean View boys’ cross-country coach Daniel Hurtado hugs his runners after his team finished eighth in the Division 4 race of the CIF Southern Section finals on Saturday at Mt. San Antonio College.
(James Carbone)
COACH OF THE YEAR
Daniel Hurtado
Ocean View
Ocean View fell short of its goal to advance to the state meet as a team this year, but it wasn’t for lack of trying. The Seahawks were the first team left out of the dance, finishing 16 points behind Big Bear for seventh place in the CIF Division 4 final. Under Hurtado’s leadership, Ocean View, the second-place team in the Empire League, was one of three local boys’ cross-country teams to advance to the section finals this season, a group that also included Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach.
Huntington Beach senior Michael Appell crosses the finish line third in the Sunset League finals on Saturday, Nov. 1.
(Andrew Turner)
FIRST TEAM
Michael Appell
Huntington Beach | Sr.
The Oilers’ frontrunner broke the 15-minute barrier in September with a time of 14:54.5 in the Woodbridge Classic, giving him a new personal record and something to build on for the rest of the season. Roughly a month later, he was a top-five finisher in the medium schools varsity race of the Orange County championships. He placed third in the Sunset League finals, helping the Oilers finish fourth as a team and qualify for the CIF preliminaries.
Ocean View senior Connor Dixon competes in an Empire League cluster meet on Sept. 10 at Central Park in Huntington Beach.
(Vincent Carabini)
Connor Dixon
Ocean View | Sr.
Dixon saved his best for last, as the senior established a new lifetime-best time of 15:31.5 on the Mt. San Antonio College rain course during the CIF finals. His 36th-place finish was a 41-position improvement from his junior year, a big reason the Seahawks found themselves in the hunt to make it to state as a team. The performance marked his fourth personal record of the season.
Fountain Valley junior Logan Kwong completes the course in the Sunset League finals on Saturday, Nov. 1 at Central Park in Huntington Beach.
(Andrew Turner)
Logan Kwong
Fountain Valley | Jr.
Kwong’s consistency saw him deliver four sub-16-minute times in six 3-mile races, including a personal record of 15:33.7 in the boys’ sweepstakes race of the Orange County championships. He finished eighth in the Sunset League finals, helping the Barons secure a spot in the CIF preliminaries with a second-place team showing behind Los Alamitos.
Sage Hill’s Zack Longo competes in the boys’ Division 5 race of the CIF Southern Section cross-country finals on Nov. 22 at Mt. San Antonio College.
(James Carbone)
Zack Longo
Sage Hill | So.
Longo won’t be a longshot to make some noise in the postseason as his career progresses. The emerging talent dropped his lifetime-best time to 15:29.9 at the Dana Hills Invitational, adding top-10 finishes in the Pacific Hills League finals (seventh) and the Brentwood Small School Invitational (ninth). He closed with a time of 15:37.6 (23rd) in the CIF Division 5 final.
Fountain Valley senior Ulysses Rios leads the pack during the Sunset League finals at Central Park in Huntington Beach on Saturday, Nov. 1.
(Eric Licas)
Ulysses Rios
Fountain Valley | Sr.
When he stepped on the scene as a sophomore, Rios had already contributed to the team score in a Surf League championship for the Barons two years ago. As a senior, Rios navigated to the front of the pack to pace Fountain Valley. He was the runner-up in the Sunset League finals, seven seconds behind Los Alamitos senior Matthew Mayhue. He broke the 15-minute barrier with a time of 14:49.8 in the Orange County championships at Oak Canyon Park.
Corona del Mar senior Kevin Steinman, right, races to the finish line in the Sunset League finals on Saturday, Nov. 1 at Central Park in Huntington Beach.
(Andrew Turner)
Kevin Steinman
Corona del Mar | Sr.
Max Douglass, the CIF Division 4 titleholder and the Daily Pilot Boys’ Cross-Country Athlete of the Year in 2024, was a tough act to follow. Steinman gave it a go and heated up late, placing fourth in the Sunset League finals, then following it up with a second-place finish in the Sea Kings’ heat of the CIF preliminaries. It proved vital, as CdM made the section finals with a cushion of just six points over Brea Olinda.
Fountain Valley senior Empire Vo-Courtney placed sixth in the Sunset League finals on Saturday, Nov. 1 at Central Park in Huntington Beach.
(Andrew Turner)
Empire Vo-Courtney
Fountain Valley | Sr.
In the category of you can’t make this stuff up, the Barons started an Empire. Vo-Courtney hadn’t broken 16 minutes before this season, then did it in five of six 3-mile races as a senior. He posted his personal record of 15:37.8 in the Central Park Invitational, then replicated the outing at the same venue in the Sunset League finals in a sixth-place showing.
SECOND TEAM
Name, School, Year
Aidan Algazi, Corona del Mar, Sr.
Zachary Byerley, Edison, Jr.
Khyler Bonaparte, Newport Harbor, Jr.
Elisha Case, Ocean View, Jr.
Ross Day, Corona del Mar, Jr.
Liam McRae, Laguna Beach, Sr.
Maddox Vann Nguyen, Marina, Jr.
Nate Yoo, Sage Hill, Jr.
Rec Sports
New ‘Community Playbook Academy’ to revolutionize youth sports leagues in the U.S.
Pine Bluff, Ark. (KATV) — Life lessons in youth athletics tend to stick with kids for years, and even a lifetime.
Past memories of competition typically remain with the majority of those who live to still share accounts of those days to anyone willing to listen.
Lucas Armstrong, a key community figure in the city of Pine Bluff, has remained steadfast in his effort to assure those times that shaped countless young people never go in vain through athletics, mentorship, and community service.
Through the Youth Basketball Association, those stories continue to echo today amongst those who were under his tutelage.
“So when I took over the team, they were the Merrel Center Tarheels,” said Armstrong.
“Jacqueline Robinson, over the Merrill Center, she is the one who was dealing with kids, trying to keep them off the street. I just came in and gave them basketball structure.”
During discussions with Robinson, Armstrong navigated through coaching opportunities until getting his first coaching opportunity under YBA in 2016.
“As that was happening, we had Parks and Recreation basketball league [Pine Bluff Parks and Recreation] starting, and that’s when we started the Tarheels,” said Robinson.
One player, out of the original 75 who received an opportunity to suit up and compete did not take the opportunity for granted.
Lakeith Smith expressed gratitude for Robinson and Armstrong’s effort in giving young people an outlet, even if it meant meeting them where they are to help see them strive.
“She is really like the foundation. As long as we stayed out of trouble, she wanted to be a part of it, said Smith.
“She had a summer school program, and he [Lucas Armstrong] used to come up there and I guess he saw us play one day and wanted to start a team.”
Smith later went on to become the first recipient of a scholarship award worth $500 under YBL.
After one team started up in 2016, even more began to sprout under the league. The league name was titled “Youth Basketball Association”, until Armstrong’s arrival.
“I grew up in it,” said Armstrong, on his early experiences in YBA.
The Pine Bluff native later returned with a new approach that prioritizes community, looking to help strengthen the league.
“When I looked at it the first year, it had gone down. We didn’t have that many kids. When we took it over that first year, and we brought it back up instantly. I brought the community in, and that’s how we started to build the league back up.”
Under Armstrong, the league leaned more into community and displayed acts of gratitude to those who may or may not even support.
Outreach efforts, as well as additional acts of kindness started to spread across Pine Bluff as the league continued to grow.
“We started doing back-to-school events, honor programs where we recognize those who came before us,” said Armstrong.
Since 2017, under his leadership, YBL has remained a basketball hub for youth who have went on to continue playing after their time is up.
Watson Chapel junior Maranda Emerson shares her journey to scoring 1,000 career points
As Amstrong’s time with YBA/YBL reaches a decade, he desires to introduce a new tool that millions of people across the U.S. can access and launch their own youth sports league.
Structured as an immersive, innovative resource for an aspiring coach or league owner, the Playbook Academy has a slew of information offered in a layout for users to learn at their own pace.
“My goal is to go around the United States speaking and helping build communities through the youth sports industry.”
Launched in November of 2025, the Community Playbook Academy offers online courses that youth sports organizations of all sizes can benefit from.
It is subscription based, priced at $65 a month.
Aside from the modules, online lessons will be provided every week on how to build a sports organization.
“It covers everything I’ve done over the last 10 years. There are people out there who aspire to help kids through sports, but don’t know how just like I didn’t know at one point,” said Armstrong.
YBL’s impact on athletes have carried over to those who also feel the need to provide tools and guidance — a new generation of individuals aiming to push youth athletics to greater heights in Pine Bluff.
“It’s basically showing you step by step how to create your organization, how to get it under a non-profit, and really show you how important it is to develop the talent within the league,” said Ryan Hayes, a mentee under Armstrong.
“In order for you to put a product out, and for people to be receptive to that product, you have to sacrifice and give time which is what we do now to train these kids.”
Hayes, through the mentorship of Armstrong, started his own training organization for youth, called the Dribble Academy.
When asked what’s the best approach to help push youth development in sports, Hayes emphasized engagement.
“You have to be hands on with it, which requires sacrificing a lot of your time. So with me being alongside him when he was creating the playbook, I’m actually seeing what is on paper, but what’s actually in reality as well.”
Rec Sports
My Christmas wish this year? Less diapers, more sleep
Guy Dossi, Sports Editor
Dear Santa,
Well, it’s that time of year again – the time when hundreds of thousands of young children, and one 37-year-old sports editor, sit down to write you their annual letter. I know you’re busy fielding Christmas present requests, but I was hoping that maybe this year you could find it in your heart to make one or two of my wishes come true.
First, as the father of a 2-and-a-half-year-old and a 6-month-old, I want the same thing every parent in my situation wants: sleep. To say I haven’t had a good night’s sleep in a while would be an understatement.
I remember when we were a one-child family. Back then, I got plenty of sleep. When the baby cried, he needed to eat – a request only the lovely Mrs. Dossi could fulfill – so I simply rolled over and went back to sleep.
With just one child, if one parent needed a little extra R&R, the other could be on baby duty while the tired one caught some Zs. With two, that’s no longer the case. Sleep schedules are completely different, with one awake while the other is sleeping. There aren’t many time slots that allow Mama and Dada to get caught up on our slumber.
And there’s nothing quite like getting only a handful of hours of sleep before being woken up with a foot in my face or seeing a little boy’s smile just inches from my nose saying, “Hi, Dada.”
Speaking of my little boy, Santa, is there any chance you – or maybe even Mrs. Claus – could potty train him? I know that eventually he’ll be out of diapers. He can’t be going to the prom with his Huggies sticking out from his tuxedo trousers. But getting him to simply sit on the potty has been a battle we are just not winning.
Our little boy has become quite the talker and has an impressive vocabulary. But there’s nothing more demoralizing than changing his smelly, rancid diaper while he lies on his back saying, “That’s disgusting. That’s gross, Dada,” as I’m knuckles-deep in baby poo. I’m well aware it’s disgusting and gross. I don’t need the reminder.
We’ve tried potty training a couple of times, and each attempt has ended with the diaper going back on. At this point, I’d settle for him feeling comfortable using the cat’s litter box. At least it would be a step in the right direction.
Another thing I’d like for Christmas is for my little girl to stay this little. I won’t lie – the first few months of her life, she was not an easy baby. Her brother was the reason we wanted a second child, and she may be the reason there won’t be a third.
Then, one day, she went from being the worst baby imaginable to the sweetest, cuddliest, cutest baby I’ve ever seen. She just sits there, smiling and cooing, melting every heart in the room. Because she was so difficult early on, I’m really enjoying this stage and savoring just how adorable she is.
I know she’s going to grow, and those little coos will turn into words. While I’m excited for the day she says, “I love you, Dada,” I’m not looking forward to her discovering the dreaded word every parent fears: no.
So if there’s any way she could stay like this – at least until next Christmas – that would be great.
As for the lovely Mrs. Dossi, what do you get the woman who already has everything? She has two beautiful children and a husband who is constantly funny, never insensitive and just happens to be right about everything. You don’t need to bring her anything this year. Being married to me must feel like Christmas morning 365 days a year.
As you can see, Santa, my list isn’t very long this year. I would ask for the Dodgers to have a losing season, but I’m pretty sure you’re also on their payroll, so I’ll stick with realistic requests.
I look forward to a full night’s sleep, no longer changing poopy diapers, and being greeted every morning by the smile of my beautiful wife – not the cry of a little boy who doesn’t want to eat his pancake because the fork he was given was green instead of blue.
And even if none of my Christmas wishes come true, I’m still a pretty lucky Guy.
Merry Christmas, Santa.
Rec Sports
PROFILE | Red Star’s Damien Durand – from youth activity leader at 25 to Ligue 2 top-scorer at 30
“When your passion finally becomes your job, it’s an incredible feeling,” Damien Durand says in a recent interview. “At the age of 25, working as a youth activity leader, you tell yourself your chances are very limited.”
At 30 years-old, Durand is not meant to be here. At least, not according to the usual pathways. There was no academy conveyor belt, no early professional contract, no carefully managed ascent. Instead, there were years spent in the amateur divisions, balancing football with work as a youth activity leader in Morangis, playing for pleasure as much as ambition.
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And yet, midway through this season, Durand finds himself co-leading the Ligue 2 scoring charts and spearheading Red Star FC’s push at the top end of the table.
The Frenchman signed his first professional contract at 26, an age when many forwards are already peaking. Rather than trying to compress a career into fast-forward, he had to embrace each step. Discovered late by former Red Star manager Vincent Bordot while playing for Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois in the fourth tier, Durand stood out not through polish, but through honesty. “In terrible conditions, on a muddy pitch, I saw someone who didn’t hide,” Bordot recalled to Le Parisien. “He showed the simple pleasure of making runs, dribbling, playing football.” That simplicity has never left him.
Durand – an ever-present in Red Star’s rise
At Red Star, he became Mr Reliable. A number 7 whose qualities are deceptively effective. Compact, explosive over distance and difficult to read in one-on-ones, Durand thrives on timing rather than brute force.
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When current Rennes manager Habib Beye arrived in 2021 to steer a Red Star side to safety in the third tier, Durand was the main creative source. When Beye earned promotion to Ligue 2 with Red Star, the Frenchman was named in the Championnat National team of the season. When Grégory Poirier took the helm at the club and steered Les Audoniens to safety, it was Durand who had scored several key goals to keep the club in the second tier. At every step of evolution for Red Star comes the stepping up of their winger, nicknamed ‘DD7’ by his teammates and the club’s supporters.
Yet this season, the Frenchman, along with the rest of Poirier’s dressing room, have found yet another level. Eight goals in 16 Ligue 2 appearances have put him level with Saint-Étienne’s Zuriko Davitashvili and Troyes’ Tawfik Bentayeb. Sometimes confidence comes from experience, reliability, and the simple fact of taking pleasure in doing what you love.
GFFN | George Boxall
Rec Sports
Public Defender Melanie Sellers announces 2026 candidacy for Public Defender
Public Defender Melanie Sellers announces 2026 candidacy for Public Defender
Published 10:00 am Wednesday, December 24, 2025
District Public Defender Melanie Sellers has officially announced her candidacy for the 2026 Republican Primary and General Election. With the strong recommendation and support of retiring District Public Defender Jeff Kelly, Gov. Bill Lee appointed Sellers to the office of First Judicial District Public Defender effective March 1, 2025. Sellers will appear on the 2026 Republican primary ballot in Carter, Johnson, Unicoi and Washington counties to fill the remainder of Mr. Kelly’s unexpired term. Sellers is a seasoned attorney and a respected leader with more than 28 years of experience in law and public service.
“My leadership as District Public Defender is guided by a deep respect for the people we serve and the fundamental rights that ensure fairness in our justice system. I believe that careful, compassionate legal advocacy can secure those rights while also changing the course of a person’s life, strengthening families and improving communities. I strive to lead an office that values preparation, professionalism and empathy, where attorneys and staff are supported in providing meaningful, effective representation grounded in the Constitution. Justice is best served when every person is heard, their rights are fully protected, and each case is approached with care, integrity and a commitment to fairness.”
Sellers’ platform for District Public Defender centers on:
- Protecting constitutional rights and ensuring fairness in every case
- Treating every client with dignity and respect, regardless of charge
- Promoting professionalism, sound judgment and ethical practice
- Strengthening public trust in the justice system through consistency and integrity
- Mentoring and supporting attorneys and staff to do their best work
- Addressing barriers to client success before disposition
- Allocating resources to provide a meaningful opportunity for client communication
A longtime Carter County resident, Sellers is an honors graduate of East Tennessee State University and the University of Tennessee College of Law with a concentration in trial advocacy. Since bar licensure in 1997, Sellers has dedicated her career to criminal law, with more than 12 years as an assistant district attorney and more than 14 years as an assistant public defender. Sellers is particularly passionate about advocating for individuals facing challenges such as substance use disorder, mental illness or intellectual disability. She is a charter member of both the First Judicial District Felony Recovery Court and Northeast Tennessee Residential Recovery Court teams, which currently serve more than 130 individuals to support long-term recovery from substance use disorder and to reduce criminal recidivism.
Outside of her professional endeavors, Sellers is married to her husband, Rob, and is the proud parent of two sons, Bailey and Clay Gwinn. She has long been involved in youth sports, previously serving on the boards of several local organizations, including the former Carter County National League, the Cyclone Touchdown Club and the Cyclone Wrestling Booster Club. Additionally, Melanie served for five years as a commissioner on the Elizabethton Regional Planning Commission.
The First Judicial District Public Defender’s Office represents individuals who cannot afford an attorney in the General Sessions and Criminal Courts of Carter, Johnson, Unicoi and Washington counties. The office is currently averaging more than 5,700 cases per year.
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