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Plethora of youth has Indians excited for present and future | Sports

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Coming off identical 7-3 marks in their dual meets, the Indian River High School boys’ and girls’ swim teams have veteran coaches Colin Crandell and Donna Smith back leading the charges with several key returnees. However, maybe more importantly, there are a lot of fresh faces to help restock the cupboards for the present and future of the Indians’ programs.

Crandell has been walking the decks of the pool for 16 seasons now, and has expressed excitement with all the new talent that has joined the boys’ team for the 2025-2026 season.

“We have eight new swimmers to the team who have never competed before,” disclosed Crandell. “All show promise, but they are young, and will need time to develop.

“I’m looking to lay down a foundation this season that will last for the next four years. With half the team being freshmen, the goal is simple — to develop. As always, I expect my upperclassmen to set the culture and model success, which includes trying to make state cuts and reaching individual goals in their races. It’s more about each of them reaching small obtainable goals and building step-by-step from those marks.”

Back for the Indians this season are seniors Landon Arauz and Andres Lucenti, juniors Caiden Clark and Harrison Benner, and sophomore John Lovellette.

Newcomers on the roster as of this writing include senior Braden Jones, juniors Dade Kappes and David Miller, and freshmen Mark Cappo, Aiden Crooks, Logan Deane, Gonzalo Lagos-Magnere, Fisher Lints, Calvin Nuttle, Colby Sneaker and Ethan Thompson.

“Every match for us is key this season,” said Crandell. “We are very young and new, so each meet is an opportunity for growth and learning.”

The Indians are already off on the right foot for this campaign with a pair of wins against Milford (102-52) on Friday, Dec. 5, and Dover (99-52) on Monday, Dec. 8.

Against the Bucs, the Indians swept all but one match — the 100 breaststroke — while winning all three relays —- 200 medley (1:57.44), 200 free (1:39.88), and 400 free 4:36.94 — in the meet.

Double-winners in individual events featured Lovellette – 200 IM (2:34.56) and 100 back (1:05.49), Clark – 50 free (24.34) and 100 butterfly (1:05.07), and Arauz -200 free (2:19.34) and 100 free (56.00). Lucenti picked up an individual win of his own in the 500 free with his time of 6:31.03.

Against the Senators, the Indians won 8-of-11 events with the 200 medley (2:21.14) and 400 free (3:47.95) relay teams amongst the winners.

Arauz picked up a pair of individual wins in the 200 free (2:14.45) and 50 free (24.78), while Clark was a two-time winner in the 200 IM (2:34.26) and 100 free (54.43). Benner was victorious in the 500 free (7:14.28), and Lovellette added a win in the 100 back (1:05.22).

The IR girls will once again be coached by Smith, who was the original girls’ coach when the program started back in 2009-10. She coached the team through the 2013-14 season before stepping away for a couple seasons. She rejoined the staff following her retirement from elementary teaching back in 2018, which makes this her eighth year back — second as its head coach during this tenure — and 13th overall with the team.

Smith and the Indians have a great group of returnees as well as some exciting newcomers that should provide more competition and depth for the roster.

Returning seniors for IR include Kassidy Berhorner (distance freestyle in the 200 and 500 free), Natalie Moran (backstroke, IM, freestyle), Leila Hernandez (sprint freestyle), and Jewelian Griffith (breaststroke events).

Juniors back in the fold features multi-time school record holder and state level finalist in the 100 butterfly and 100 back last year Macyn Hockman, Emily Davis, Maddie Moore, and Harper Stanley, who will all provide the necessary depth the team needs for success.

Sophomores Grace Clark, Lucille Feathers, Ellie Walls, and True Jaeger are back, and according to Smith, “All swam well at conferences and/or states last season, and I look forward to their improvements this season.”

Some key newcomers for the green-and-gold this season include freshmen Grace Barthelmess, Harper McDavid, Libby Greene, Sophie Dawson, Bethany Erazo, Payton Geier and Kaitlyn Turak.

“I look forward to seeing which even Grace excels in as she comes to us with plenty of experience from her years swimming with the Sea Colony Sharks,” Smith said. “There’s no rush or pressure on Grace as a freshman, but maybe she will go after her older sister’s (IR grad Emma Barthelmess) records in the free and breaststroke events.

“Harper and Libby also bring SC Shark experience with them to the pool, so I have confidence they can handle the high school events very well. Sophie, Bethany, Payton, and Kaitlyn are swimmers who caught our eye at tryouts, and we look forward to seeing how they progress in the water with stroke technique and speed.”

As far as key matches on the scheduled this season, Smith — like Crandell — feels that every meet is important for the growth of their team.

“We believe every swim meet in our dual season is important for our team to grow and learn as a competitor,” confirmed Smith. “But some close meets will be Dec. 15 at Caesar Rodney, at Lake Forest on Jan. 16, home meets against Sussex Tech on Jan. 23 and Sussex Central on Jan. 26, and the last meet on Jan. 29 at Polytech.”

The numbers on the roster are equal to last season, but the quality of the depth is what has Smith excited thanks to the experience that the girls have swimming outside of the school’s program.

“Our depth is greater this season than last,” Smith said. “With our new ‘Super Seven’ freshmen, we have to work on stroke technique development and building speed. Our pool space is extremely tight, which limits the types of workouts we can create. We do the best with the space we have, often creating a dryland ‘Lane 6’ to strengthen swimmers. So, all that considered, It would be fantastic to maintain the 7-3 (record) season like last year or improve upon that. I look forward to many more personal best times from our swimmers along with some new team records being set in 2026.

“I’d like to take a moment to say thank you to Sea Colony’s Freeman Fitness Center and Sussex Academy Aquatic Center for working with us, and allowing us to buy pool space this season. Thank you to our Athletic Director Todd Fuhrmann for his athletic department leadership and support this season.”

Like the boys, the girls got things going already this season.

Against Milford, the Indians won the meet 124-24 with Behornar and Hockman each earning double wins. Behornar won the 200 free (2:27.46) and 500 free (7:00.03), while Hockman took the 100 free (59.14) and 100 back (1:05.48).

Hernandez won the 50 free with her time of 28.63, and Griffith touched the wall first in the 100 breast at 1:27.15. McDavid picked up her first individual varsity win with a 1:24.50 in the 100 butterfly.

The Indians won all three relay events as well with Hockman, Clark, McDavid, and Hernandez winning the 200 medley (2:15.97). Moore, Clark, Moran, and Hernandez combined for the 200 free relay win (no time disclosed), while four freshmen — McDavid, Greene, Dawson, and Turak – combined for the 400 free relay victory in 5:23.41.

No results were available as of press time for the meet against Dover.



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‘Golden’ Tiara Bolden forges her own path to stardom at Oregon State

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CORVALLIS — Tiara Bolden admits she didn’t inherit an aptitude for music from her family. Or dance moves.

But she can cook, she said. Meals and defenders.

“My mom, she played basketball, track, all that,” Bolden said. “My dad’s side, it’s nothing but musicians or NARPs. Non-athletic regular people.”

The star guard for Oregon State women’s basketball gives her father Dennis credit, however: he and his brother Chris contributed to a platinum record with writing, production and arrangement credits on “EV3,″ the third studio album from 90s girl group En Vogue.

Both brothers — particularly Bolden’s uncle Chris — have a lengthy history in the music business. Dennis is a talented pianist who loves to play the organ. Bolden said her father and his siblings pursued a record deal and thought they might be the next Jackson 5, then known as the “Golden Boldens.”

That nickname has stuck with Bolden among some of her OSU teammates, she said with a grin.

Music is a binding force for Bolden’s family, but so is sports. Bolden first got into basketball by watching older brother Denzel, who she speculates is named after another icon of the 90s: Denzel Washington.

In second grade, Bolden signed up for youth basketball. Growing up in Eugene, she had a chance to watch Sabrina Ionescu and the Ducks play up close. But it wasn’t until the OSAA state tournament her junior year of high school that the Churchill High School graduate said she fell in love with the game.

“We were fortunate enough to play against Crater, and this is like the biggest game of the year for everybody,” Bolden said. “And we played it in Gill Coliseum. I had the time of my life in that game. I hit this little step back three and everybody went crazy and it blew up on Twitter.”

That game made Bolden realize she could play at the next level. After Churchill’s state tournament run was over, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Bolden played one last, truncated high school season the following summer and made the jump to junior college.

After one season at Eastern Arizona College in remote Thatcher, Arizona near the New Mexico border, Bolden transferred to Division I La Salle in Philadelphia. Time far away from home helped Bolden grow as a person and hone her game with hundreds of shots per day behind the scenes, she said.

After one season with the Explorers, an opportunity with Scott Rueck and OSU popped up. In a family full of Ducks, Bolden decided she would be a Beaver.

“My whole family, they all went to U of O, they graduated from there,” Bolden said. “And I was the one kid that was like, ‘You know what? I want to do something to my family hasn’t done.’ I wanted to go to Oregon State. Out of all the places that I’ve been to, one of the biggest things that I gave as, like, a piece of advice for other people, is to go where you’re wanted, but also go where you feel like you’re going to be supported the most.

“I’ve told Scott (Rueck), I wish I was here for all four years. Just because of the experiences and the way that people welcome you with open arms, it’s very special.”

Bolden averaged 8.1 points per game in her first season with the Beavers in 2024-25. But this season, after an eventful camp which included a season-ending knee injury to leading returner Catarina Ferreira, Bolden has stepped into a leading role by averaging a team-high 16.1 points per game on better than 50% shooting.

That 10-game run included tying her career-high with 25 points against Illinois, pulling down a team-high 11 rebounds against Utah State, and a return home to Eugene, where she finished with 16 points in a loss to the Ducks. The Beavers are 6-4 entering a matchup with undefeated Arizona State on Sunday.

With family packing the stands at Matthew Knight Arena, Bolden described the game at Oregon as “weird” but meaningful. It was another chance to draw parallels between the life she grew up with and the one she’s been able to find at OSU.

“We all grew up in a competitive household, whether it was games, cooking competitions, talent shows, things like that,” Bolden said. “But our family is definitely one that sticks by each other through thick and thin. And my family’s so big that it felt like every person I saw in town was basically like my cousin.

“So, that’s where basically my sense of community came from, how I grew up. And that transcends into college sports with me wanting to be in this community (at OSU). I’ve always had a big family that is always going to be there to support me no matter what.”



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Records Fall For Women’s Basketball In Kids Day Romp Over Coastal Georgia, 136-74

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STATESBORO – Georgia Southern gave the kids what they wanted on Friday for its annual Kids Field Trip Day game, setting several records en route to a 136-74 victory over Coastal Georgia at the Jack and Ruth Ann Hill Convocation Center.

The Eagles (7-3) set school records for the most points in a game and the most three-pointers hit (15) in the victory over the Mariners, an NAIA school from nearby Brunswick, Ga.

Both teams set the tone early in an explosive first quarter that saw 64 points scored between the two teams. Georgia Southern led, 39-25, at the end of one, then held the Mariners to just 11 points in the second quarter as they built a 65-36 lead at halftime.

The second half opened up with exactly what the announced crowd of 4,167 elementary, middle and high schoolers anticipated as Kayla Cleaveland’s shot in the paint gave the Eagles 67 points. It was two of Cleaveland’s game-high 35 points, setting a new freshman scoring record at Georgia Southern.

The Eagles got the record-breaking total points and the record-breaking three-pointer with 31 seconds left as Kyla Bryant hit a three to make the score 136, surpassing the 133 points scored by Georgia Southern against Carver on December 13, 2021. The 15 threes broke the previous record of 14 threes set three times previously, the last time on January 8, 2021 vs. Appalachian State.

As a team, the Eagles shot 68.5% from the field (50-of-73), the third-best single-game shooting performance in school history. Georgia Southern also dished out 33 assists, which is third-most in a single game, and the 50 field goals rank fifth in school history. Finally, the 62-point margin of victory is tied for the seventh-best.

Cleaveland’s 35 points led a sextet of Eagles in double figures. Mckenna Eddings registered a career-high 27 points, while Kishyah Anderson added 17 points. Shanti Simmons had 13 points, nine rebounds, five assists and five steals, while Destiny Garrett had 12 points and nine assists. Finally, Laney Scoggins registered a career-high 12 points as well.

Amanda Roach led four Mariners in double figures with 20 points.

Eagle of the Game

Cleaveland hit 12-of-15 shots from the floor, including 5-of-7 from three-point range, and added 6-of-8 from the free throw line for her 35 points, breaking the previous freshman scoring record of 34 set by Tracy Wilson at Charleston Southern on February 8, 1989. She is one of only six players in Georgia Southern women’s basketball to score 35 points in a game, joining Wilson, Phylette Blake, Terren Ward, Regina Days and Gwen Thomas.

Stat of the Game

The Eagles’ 44 points in the third quarter mark the first time that Georgia Southern has surpassed 40+ points in a quarter since the NCAA moved to the four quarter system in 2015-16.

Quotables

Head coach Hana Haden on the Kids Field Trip Day game against Coastal Georgia


“It was a great performance by our team today. It’s always fun to play on Kids Day, it was an awesome environment. They were a lively audience and I thought our girls gave a really good show. We played very well and shared the ball with 33 assists. Two huge performances by Ken [McKenna Eddings] and Kayla [Cleaveland], when they’re hitting shots, the basket can get very big for them. Proud of our effort and energy and the way we competed today.”

Freshman Kayla Cleaveland on the big shot to open up the second half

“It’s a fun opportunity to be able to be the 67th point. But I couldn’t have done it without my teammates. All they did was try and find me and give me the ball, they knew I had a hot hand and they were supporting me every step of the way.”

Next Up

Georgia Southern will open up Sun Belt Conference play on Thursday, December 18, hosting Georgia State in a 5 p.m. contest at The Hill.



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Petaluma coach finds swastikas — police suspend case

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A youth basketball coach and former Harlem Globetrotter posted videos this week showing his dusty vehicle covered in racial slurs and hate symbols outside his Petaluma home.

William “Bull” Bullard, 41, posted a video on Instagram showing his sport utility vehicle covered in swastikas, racial slurs and other hate symbols drawn into dust that had accumulated on Bullard’s vehicle. 

“Why do people think that vandalizing vehicles with racial slurs is OK?” Bullard said in a separate video posted to his Instagram. “A lot of y’all don’t understand that racism is not a game. … I’ve been a victim of it my whole life.”

Bullard goes on to say the incident has been disheartening for him since his move to the Bay Area to coach basketball and be a mentor to young people. 

Bullard said in his first post that this is the “third or fourth time” he has experienced racism since moving to the Bay Area from Detroit. He added in the video that he is seeking to press charges against whoever is responsible.

Petaluma police Lt. Zilverio Rivera told the Chronicle that an investigation into the incident was suspended after officers were unable to gather any evidence from the scene. The report first came in through the department’s online reporting system, but officers could not determine exactly where the crime happened after speaking with the person who made the report.

“Luckily, the insignia was a swastika drawn with a finger on a dusty vehicle,” Rivera said. “No damage was done besides obviously the concerns over the swastika.”

Bullard could not immediately be reached for comment. 





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NHL Power Players youth advisory board announced for 7th season 

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The NHL Power Players youth advisory board is back for its seventh season.

This season’s board is made up of 23 teens, aged 13-17 from the United States and Canada that were chosen from nearly 1,000 applicants.

Launched in 2019, the Power Players offer feedback and suggestions to the NHL on how to help grow the game amongst young people like themselves.

New board member Sophie Knakal, a 16-year-old from Manhasset, NY, is excited to have the opportunity to show kids her age what hockey has to offer.

“With the program, I wish to accomplish gaining more fans, getting more teenagers to become fans of the NHL,” Kankal said. “When I meet people, I love sports [so] the first thing I ask them is, ‘oh what’s your favorite sport?’ And I hardly ever hear hockey and I want to change that. It’s such an exciting and action-packed game.”

Knakal got into hockey thanks to her dad, a huge New York Rangers fan. She played two seasons of travel hockey as a kid. The family has had Rangers season tickets since she was 7 years old.

When she saw the NHL Power Players advertised while watching NHL Network every morning, she knew she had to join.

“I went online and looked at the Power Players website and thought it was really cool that they have this initiative where they have kids give them advice on how to market to them,” Knakal said. “I think it’s really smart because they want to market to kids. So, hearing from kids would be a great way to get that first-hand experience.”

The advisory board meets twice per month where they discuss their opinions on happenings around the League such as the players’ new relaxed dress code and how to increase reach to casual fans, especially females.

The program is also an opportunity for the members to develop leadership skills to benefit their future careers with many interested in a career in sports or advocacy. Perfect for Knakal, who plans on majoring in sports management in college and her dream is work for the NHL one day.

Peyton Tigchelaar, a 17-year-old from Vancouver, BC, joined the board to help increase outreach to diverse communities.

“My passion is increasing visibility to women’s sports and underrepresented ethnicities. I’m a girl and I’m also Chinese, so there aren’t very many people like me who are hockey fans or even play the sport itself. I would really like to diversify the fan base.”

Tigchelaar was inspired by her experience this past summer with the organization Black Girl Hockey where she had a blast working with professional athletes to teach girls of all ethnicities hockey.

Born into a hockey family, Tigchelaar started playing the sport in 2016 after joining the San Jose Sharks learn to play program when she lived in California. Both her parents played hockey and her grandfather played professionally.

Sophie, Peyton and may of their fellow board members will travel to two of the NHL’s marquee events this season, the 2026 Discover NHL Winter Classic in Miami and the 2026 Stadium Series Navy Federal Credit Union in Tampa Bay, where the members will be face to face together for the first time.

“I’m super excited for the Winter Classic,” Tigchelaar said. “I have been preparing for Miami for months now. I am so excited to meet the board because we don’t really get the chance to see each other in person. I’ve only met one of the Power Players so far in person and I just want to meet everyone else, so I think that’s going to be a great way to connect with everyone.”



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Long Beach Boys’ Basketball – The562.org

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City Agreement Ensures Oso Pony League Can Continue While Expanding Public Access to Sports Fields

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CORPUS CHRISTI, TX – The City of Corpus Christi has finalized an agreement that allows the Oso Pony League to continue operating at the Southside Sports Complex, located at 1901 Paul Jones Avenue, while also expanding access to more community groups. This move supports youth sports and ensures that taxpayer-funded facilities are available to the public whenever possible.

Under the License Use Agreement model, nonprofit organizations can rent fields at affordable rates, starting at $4.25 per hour or $5.25 per hour with lights. These low costs will enable the Oso Pony League and youth sports groups to concentrate on delivering high-quality programming rather than spending time on fundraising. The City will assume facility maintenance for its athletic fields with the Athletic Fields Maintenance Team within the Parks & Recreation Department.

Fields are available for practices, tournaments, and company events.

“Our goal is to remove barriers and maximize the public benefit of our city-owned assets,” said Robert Dodd, Parks and Recreation Director. “This new model ensures equitable access for all groups and prioritizes the youth sports programs that are so vital to our community’s future, all while keeping rental rates affordable.”

This approach mirrors the successful structure already in place at the Greenwood Sports Complex and follows best practices recommended by the National Recreation and Park Association (NRPA).

For more information about City of Corpus Christi Sports Fields, visit Sports Fields | City of Corpus Christi.

Go to Catalog – City of Corpus Christi Parks and Recreation Department for rental information. 

To learn more about Oso Pony League Baseball, visit https://osoponybaseball.org/. 

For more information, media representatives may contact Santos Villarreal, Senior Public Information Officer, at 361-826-3490 or by email at santosv@corpuschristitx.gov.  



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