High School Sports
Prep highlights (April 30)
Led by the No. 1 doubles team of Taryn and Hailey Kerker, the Camas girls tennis team wrapped up the 4A Greater St. Helens League title outright Wednesday with a 4-2 victory over Skyview. The Kerker sisters cruised to a 6-0, 6-0 victory as the Papermakers swept all three doubles matches. Taryn Kerker, a 4A […]


Led by the No. 1 doubles team of Taryn and Hailey Kerker, the Camas girls tennis team wrapped up the 4A Greater St. Helens League title outright Wednesday with a 4-2 victory over Skyview.
The Kerker sisters cruised to a 6-0, 6-0 victory as the Papermakers swept all three doubles matches. Taryn Kerker, a 4A state doubles champion in 2023, and Hailey Kerker, a 4A state singles champ in 2022 and 2023, are playing doubles together for the first time as high school players.
The three-time reigning 4A state team champion, Camas is 8-0 in 4A GSHL play with one match to go.
No. 1 single player Annie Sheppert earned a win for Skyview by beating Liya Zhao in a hotly contested match 6-3, 2-6, 6-4.
- Columbia River girls tennis beat Washougal 6-0 to finish a 12-0 run through the 2A Greater St. Helens League season and wrap up its 11th consecutive league title.
Smith pitches Ridgefield softball past Woodland
Faith Smith scattered six hits and walked none as Ridgefield softball beat Woodland 6-1 to move into second place in the 2A Greater St. Helens League.
Smith also had an RBI double in Ridgefield’s four-run fourth inning.
Madeline Bruguier and Bailey Wolski each had two hits for the Spudders.
Ridgefield is alone with second place at 8-3 with three league games remaining. Woodland and Columbia River are one game back at 7-4.
Stars of the day
- Ruby Lew, Columbia River softball, had 12 strikeouts in six innings, allowing two unearned runs in a 12-2 win over R.A. Long.
- Stella Genova, Washougal softball, went 1 for 2 with a home run, two RBI and three runs scored in a 15-5 win over Hockinson.
- Conrad Pfeifer, Columbia River baseball, went 2 for 3 including a two-RBI double that keyed a seven-run first inning as the Rapids beat Woodland 8-5.
- Chase Bonife, Hockinson baseball, went 3 for 4 with three RBI in a 12-8 win over Hudson’s Bay.
- Addy Harmier, Skyview softball, went 2 for 4 with a three-run homer in a 14-0 win over Camas.
- Mylee Burrows, Battle Ground softball, went 2 for 4 with four RBI in a 10-5 win over Union.
- Skylar Richie, Kelso softball, went 4 for 4 with two doubles, a triple, four runs scored and two RBI in a 19-3 win over Evergreen.
- Mackenzie Moore, Prairie softball, had 13 strikeouts over seven innings and went 1 for 3 with two runs scored in a 4-2 win over Mountain View.
- Samuel McKee, Washougal baseball, went 2 for 4 with two RBI and was the winning pitcher in a 7-6 victory over Mark Morris.
- Bryceson Petracca and Easton Ross, Seton Catholic boys soccer, each scored two goals in a 4-0 win over Fort Vancouver.
- Toren Baker, Skyview boys soccer, assisted on both goals in a 2-1 win over Battle Ground.
High School Sports
New Bedford top stories
As we head into a new week, let’s take a look at the news from this past week. A former nursing home at 4586 Acushnet Ave. could be redeveloped into 63 apartments under a proposal before the City Council. The 53,662-square-foot building comes on a 3.67-acre lot near the East Freetown line. Most of the […]

As we head into a new week, let’s take a look at the news from this past week.
A former nursing home at 4586 Acushnet Ave. could be redeveloped into 63 apartments under a proposal before the City Council. The 53,662-square-foot building comes on a 3.67-acre lot near the East Freetown line. Most of the apartments would be two-bedroom, with the rest single-bedroom and studios.
Thrown together by the D-Day Invasion of Normandy 81 years ago, an American serviceman’s kindness to four French children created a lasting bond between two families. U.S. Navy Seabee Maurice Louis Rene Dore’s actions were celebrated at the Westport VFW on June 6 on the anniversary of D-Day, with the visit of the descendants of those children, now in their fifth generation.
Make sure to keep up with high school sports with scores, game highlights, and Player of the Week voting at https://www.southcoasttoday.com/sports.
And here are the most-read stories of the week on https://www.southcoasttoday.com:
Mayor Jon Mitchell, together with leadership from New Bedford Public Schools, hosted the Mayor’s List ceremony on June 11, which honored New Bedford High School’s academic Top 10 class of 2025 seniors on the eve of their graduation.
The ceremony — held this year at New Bedford Art Museum — marked the 13th Mayor’s List since Mitchell began the tradition.
The New Bedford Whaling Museum has recently experienced a significant surge in visitors, reaching its highest attendance levels in over 10 years.
The museum reports that, compared to the same period in 2024, overall visitation during the first quarter of 2025 rose by 16.2% across all categories. Notably, the number of school groups touring the museum jumped by 27.9% year over year.
It’s estimated that 17 out of 30-plus people arrested in New Bedford during ICE’s Operation Patriot are Guatemalans.
And that 90% of the Guatemalans detained are of Mayan ethnicity. Adrian Ventura, executive director of the Centro Comunitario de Trabajadores, provided those estimates when asked about the background of those being detained by ICE.
In the northwest corner of the Stanley Stankiewicz baseball field, Bishop Stang’s players shared one hug after another as their remarkable season and playoff run to a fourth straight MIAA Div. 3 Elite 8 had come to an end on June 8.
Bishop Stang managed just two hits as the No. 5 Spartans were shut out for the first time this year, losing, 4-0, to 13th-seeded Wakefield Memorial.
A New Bedford man posted $10,000 bail after being arraigned June 4 on charges in connection with allegedly driving in the wrong direction on Interstate 95 in New Hampshire leading to a crash in Massachusetts that killed an Endicott College police sergeant.
Keoma Duarte, 40, was arraigned on two felony counts of reckless conduct and one misdemeanor count of disobeying an officer in Hampton District Court in New Hampshire.
Read these stories in their entirety at https://www.southcoasttoday.com.
High School Sports
'This is a culture'
Since seeing thousands of comments justifying the recent murder of a teenage TikTok star in Pakistan, Sunaina Bukhari is considering abandoning her 88,000 followers. “In my family, it wasn’t an accepted profession at all, but I’d managed to convince them, and even ended up setting up my own business,” she said. Then last week, Sana […]


Since seeing thousands of comments justifying the recent murder of a teenage TikTok star in Pakistan, Sunaina Bukhari is considering abandoning her 88,000 followers.
“In my family, it wasn’t an accepted profession at all, but I’d managed to convince them, and even ended up setting up my own business,” she said.
Then last week, Sana Yousaf was shot dead outside her house in the capital Islamabad by a man whose advances she had repeatedly rejected, police said.
News of the murder led to an outpouring of comments under her final post — her 17th birthday celebration where she blew out the candles on a cake.
In between condolence messages, some blamed her for her own death: “You reap what you sow” or “it’s deserved, she was tarnishing Islam”.
Yousaf had racked up more than a million followers on social media, where she shared her favourite cafes, skincare products and traditional shalwar kameez outfits.
TikTok is wildly popular in Pakistan, in part because of its accessibility to a population with low literacy levels. On it, women have found both audience and income, rare in a country where fewer than a quarter of the women participate in the formal economy.
But as TikTok’s views have surged, so have efforts to police the platform.
Pakistani telecommunications authorities have repeatedly blocked or threatened to block the app over what it calls “immoral behaviour”, amid backlash against LGBTQ and sexual content.
TikTok has pledged to better moderate content and blocked millions of videos that do not meet its community guidelines as well as at the request of Pakistan authorities.
After Yousaf’s murder, Bukhari, 28, said her family no longer backs her involvement in the industry.
“I’m the first influencer in my family, and maybe the last,” she told AFP.
– ‘Fear of being judged’ –
Only 30 percent of women in Pakistan own a smartphone compared to twice as many men (58 percent), the largest gap in the world, according to the Mobile Gender Gap Report of 2025.
“Friends and family often discourage them from using social media for fear of being judged,” said a statement from the Digital Rights Foundation (DRF).
In southwestern Balochistan, where tribal law governs many rural areas, a man confessed to orchestrating the murder of his 14-year-old daughter earlier this year over TikTok videos that he said compromised her honour.
In October, police in Karachi, in the south, announced the arrest of a man who had killed four women relatives over “indecent” TikTok videos.
These murders each revive memories of Qandeel Baloch, dubbed Pakistan’s Kim Kardashian and one of the country’s first breakout social media stars whose videos shot her to fame.
After years in the spotlight, she was suffocated by her brother.
Violence against women is pervasive in Pakistan, according to the country’s Human Rights Commission, and cases of women being attacked after rejecting men are not uncommon.
“This isn’t one crazy man, this is a culture,” said Kanwal Ahmed, who leads a closed Facebook group of 300,000 women to share advice.
“Every woman in Pakistan knows this fear. Whether she’s on TikTok or has a private Instagram with 50 followers, men show up. In her DMs. In her comments. On her street,” she wrote in a post.
In the fifth-most-populous country in the world, where 60 percent of the population is under the age of 30, the director of digital rights organisation Bolo Bhi, Usama Khilji , says “many women don’t post their profile picture, but a flower, an object, very rarely their face”.
“The misogyny and the patriarchy that is prevalent in this society is reflected on the online spaces,” he added.
A 22-year-old man was arrested over Yousaf’s murder and is due to appear in court next week.
At a vigil in the capital last week, around 80 men and women gathered, holding placards that read “no means no”.
“Social media has given us a voice, but the opposing voices are louder,” said Hira, a young woman who joined the gathering.
The capital’s police chief, Syed Ali Nasir Rizvi, used a press conference to send a “clear message” to the public.
“If our sisters or daughters want to become influencers, professionally or as amateurs, we must encourage them,” he said.
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High School Sports
6.14.25 Highlights
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Despite abrupt end, Pine
By: Ted Sarneso Saturday, June 14, 2025 | 11:46 PM Andrew Palla | For TribLive Pine-Richland’s Cate Gentile (7) and Mt. Lebanon’s Quinn Murdoch (31) race for a loose ball in the WPIAL Class 3A championship game May 22 at Upper St. Clair. Andrew Palla | For TribLive Mt. Lebanon’s Chloe Shea (4) advances the […]

By:
Saturday, June 14, 2025 | 11:46 PM
Pine-Richland girls lacrosse coach Shannen Wood wishes the team’s season had ended differently.
After putting together another outstanding season, making a third WPIAL championship game appearance and a third straight trip to the PIAA state playoffs, the Rams’ season came to an end in a 18-3 loss at the hands of Manheim Township in the PIAA second round.
“I give credit to Manheim. They’re a phenomenal program,” Wood said. “The biggest thing for us was we self-combusted offensively. I think our girls weren’t anticipating how fast Manheim was. The first quarter we were already down six or seven goals, and that’s a tough deficit to come back from.”
For a team with offensive firepower like Pine-Richland (19-4), which scored 16.2 goals a game in the regular season, being held to three goals was very uncharacteristic.
“That was not a reflection of this team or our program,” Wood said. “But for us to make it to states three years in a row is a phenomenal accomplishment.”
The Rams’ road to a third straight PIAA playoff appearance began in March in the first game of the season against Upper St. Clair, which in Wood’s mind was a tone setter.
“That is a big rivalry for us, and the girls wanted to come out and play well against them,” Wood said. “Playing them first was sort of like, all right, how do we want this season to go? And our girls came out guns ablazin’ and they wanted to win.”
The Rams took down Upper St. Clair, 17-6, in that opening game en route to a 6-0 start, averaging 18.3 goals a game.
The team’s only two regular season losses came at the hands of Olentangy and Olentangy Liberty, two schools in Ohio, on April 4 and 5.
The Rams try to do a trip every other year and two years ago, they played some teams in Rochester, N.Y., where Wood is originally from.
“That’s the only way our program gets better is by playing these different programs, different teams,” said Wood. “I was really trying to be strategic about our schedule this past season, which I give thanks to our athletic director as well for helping me create the best schedule I can to help these girls get better. It also served as a team bonding experience, for them to be together for those two or three days.”
What might have hurt the Rams is a large group of players are in different clubs and school programs, and that trip to Ohio came over spring break when a lot of the players were out of town on a Future Business Leaders of America trip.
“It was challenging because a lot of our starters weren’t there, but it was also good for the program because it gave a lot of girls who weren’t on varsity or weren’t getting a lot of time a chance to step up into leadership roles,” Wood added. “It also gave us a chance to test out a new defense.”
Coming out of the road trip to Ohio, the Rams put together another winning streak, winning their next 10 games and claiming a Section 2-3A title with a record of 8-0.
They also locked up the top overall seed and a first-round bye in the WPIAL Class 3A playoffs.
As a competitor, Wood loved that her team went on another winning streak to close out the regular season.
“For these girls and these coaches, we put so much time in that lacrosse is literally our lives,” Wood said. “Having a great record that reflects the hard work we put into it I think is awesome.”
After dispatching Shady Side Academy, 16-5, in the second round and beating Moon, 16-6, in the semifinals, Pine-Richland faced off against No. 3 seed Mt. Lebanon in the championship game.
Two weeks earlier, the Rams thumped the Blue Devils, 20-8, and they felt really good heading into the title game.
Up 12-7 in the third quarter, it looked to be all sewn up for the Rams, but Mt. Lebanon fought back and came away with a 15-14 win.
“We weren’t firing on all cylinders,” Wood said. “When our defense would step up, our offense couldn’t capitalize and vice versa. The hard part is Mt. Lebanon is a great school, a great program. They are a team that capitalizes on mistakes, and they capitalized where we couldn’t.”
It was the second straight year that the Rams lost to the Blue Devils in the WPIAL championship game.
“The loss hurt, especially for our group of seniors,” Wood said. “That was their big goal: to come away with another championship before they graduated. I know how much that upset them. As a coaching staff, we felt like we let them down.
“To this day, we’re asking what could we have done differently. But it is what it is. At the end of the day, we still had a great season, had a winning record. Every team is going to lose eventually.”
Even with their confidence slightly shaken, the Rams headed into the state playoffs looking for ways to learn and grow from the loss to Mt. Lebanon.
“When we came out and played State College in the first round, we kind of proved to ourselves that we’re a really good team. We just need to be consistent across the board for that to happen,” Wood said.
The Rams took care of State College, 15-10, and a couple of players reached some important milestones.
Senior midfielder Kendyll Jerry reached 100 career goals and sophomore midfielder Claire Mill surpassed 100 career points.
But those weren’t the only Rams to reach milestones this season.
Senior midfielder Madeline Mill and junior attacker Cate Gentile each surpassed 200 career goals and 300 career points and sophomore attacker Mallory Boivin also surpassed 200 career points.
“Those girls were our top five scoring or assisting threats,” Wood said. “Yes, they have a ton of goals, but a ton of assists. They were always looking to set up their teammates as well, which was huge.”
During the year, Gentile led the team with 88 goals and 47 assists. Boivin was second in goals with 85 and had 42 helpers. Madeline Mill was third on the team with 64 goals and added 24 assists.
Continuing down the scoring chart, Claire Mill had 52 goals and 13 assists and Jerry produced 31 goals and 19 assists.
“Our offense has scored 800 goals over the last few years. The offense has been very effective,” Wood said. “To have such massive milestones from multiple players throughout the season is a reflection of their hard work.”
What really gets overlooked with how explosive the Rams were on offense was how dominant they were on defense.
Including the playoffs, the Rams scored 15.5 goals a game, but they were second by only a tenth to Upper St. Clair in goals against a game with 7.3.
“We had a lot of people step up this year,” Wood said. “Erica Waite, a four-year varsity starter, was the backbone to the defense. Bridget Gilardi was a returning starter from last year. Lucy Kucinic, Ella Tarasovich and Reis Valenty were the three that would rotate between. We were really good with communication, one versus one, and we were a lot more aggressive this year.”
Kucinic was the team’s rookie of the year.
“She really stepped up, and I rarely subbed her off the field,” Wood said. “She filled some big shoes when she was in there.”
Every defender had their strong suits. If one of their players were weak in one area, the Rams were fortunate enough to have another player that excelled in that area.
“We were able to move players around to be adaptive to whatever an opposing team was playing,” Wood said. “Our midfielders were not only catalysts on offense, but came up with a lot of turnovers as well. They were the workhorses of the program.”
In net for the Rams, senior goaltender Claire Dosch eclipsed 300 saves this season.
Dosch also missed some games due to her commitment with other school activities, and sophomore Cara Murray stepped up and made some big saves for the Rams.
“Cara played in our Mars game and she was crucial to our victory in that game,” Wood remarked. “Both goalies are phenomenal.”
The Rams are graduating a lot from a squad that has played plenty of postseason games, including two seniors along the midfield, two defenders, two attackers and the starting goalie.
“We have a lot of positions open as we go into next season,” Wood said. “That being said, we have a lot of returning talent, which I’m very excited about.”
Madeline Mill will play at Pitt next year. Jerry will be playing at Youngstown State and Waite at the University of Charleston in West Virginia.
“I think of Madeline and Kendyll,” Wood said. “They both know their hustle and their grit is very hard to replace. I have nothing but positive thoughts on the girls who will be replacing them and girls who will be stepping up. We have a lot of leaders on our team, so I know we’ll be led to a winning mentality and record.”
Other graduating seniors include MacKay Young, Addie Robb, Sara Irwin, who was injured this season, and Dosch.
The only junior who is committed right now is Cate Gentile. She’ll be playing at Virgina Tech.
Wood said there are some things that might look different next year than they have in that past, but that’s just fine with her.
“We have had a great program the last three years, and I don’t see it not being great moving forward,” she said. “The girls hold themselves to a high standard, and I know they will go above and beyond my expectations to keep up the high intensity and winning that Pine-Richland is known for.”
Tags: Pine-Richland
High School Sports
Robust Montana boys sweep, Wyoming girls end skid in All
BILLINGS — It had been nine long years since the Wyoming girls tasted victory in its annual all-star basketball rivalry with Montana. WATCH THE HIGHLIGHTS: Robust Montana boys sweep, Wyoming girls end skid in All-Star Basketball Series But that streak came to an end Saturday at Lockwood High School, as the Cowboy State snared an […]

BILLINGS — It had been nine long years since the Wyoming girls tasted victory in its annual all-star basketball rivalry with Montana.
WATCH THE HIGHLIGHTS:
But that streak came to an end Saturday at Lockwood High School, as the Cowboy State snared an 81-75 victory to salvage a split in this year’s Montana-Wyoming series and win for the first time since June 10, 2016.
Meanwhile, the Montana boys had no designs on a split and rolled to a 98-73 victory a year after being swept by Wyoming, which snapped a run of 22 straight wins.
The Treasure State boys took command early, leading by 25 points in the first quarter, and didn’t look back.
Montana boys 98 , Wyoming 73
The boys from the Treasure State came into the week aware of Wyoming’s two-victories from last season, which ended a long run of dominance.
“We just wanted to get the streak back going,” said Box Elder’s Tracen Jilot. “We didn’t want to be that team that lost. Everybody’s watching you. You have people texting you, ‘You can’t lose this game.'”
Jilot, who helped Box Elder to two states titles and back-to-back undefeated seasons, did his part by scoring a team-high 19 points, including nine in the opening quarter as Montana built its advantage.
Missoula Loyola’s Reynolds Johnston added 15 points, not to mention an emphatic alley-oop dunk in the final seconds of the game that punctuated the victory. Johnston, the Montana Gatorade player of the year, scored 10 of his points in the first quarter.
Other standouts for the Treasure State included Billings Skyview’s Zakai Owens, who had 15 points, and Manhattan Christian’s Christian Triemstra, who added 11. Montana finished with 10 3-pointers, two each from Johnston and Owens.
But Jilot credited his team’s performance on the other side of the floor.
“The big thing was our defensive pressure,” Jilot said. “The biggest thing you can control is your effort on defense. That’s one of the biggest things we focused on, just being relentless and letting our defense create our offense, and just being unselfish.”
Laramie’s Jaden Smith paced Wyoming with 16 points. Lane Hladky of Gillette Campbell County and Casper Natrona’s Tanner Hagar each added 12. Campbell County’s Truman DeGrange made three 3-pointers, account for his nine points for the Cowboy State.
Montana, following a 102-90 win at the Pronghorn Center in Gillette, Wyo., on Friday, now owns a 69-29 advantage in the longstanding series.
Montana was guided by longtime Three Forks coach Mike Sauvageau in lieu of Steve Keller, who was away due to responsibilities as head coach of the Great Falls Electric of The Basketball League.
Wyoming girls 81, Montana 75
In the midst of what was a back-and-forth first half, Montana was able to build a 10-point advantage in the second quarter. But Wyoming closed the half with a final-minute flurry, and the Cowboy Staters went into halftime trailing 43-39.
The teams were separated by just two points at the end of the third quarter, but after a hoop by Billings Skyviews’ Rae Smart on a pass from Huntley Project’s Paige Lofing, Montana jumped ahead 69-62.
A tough shot in the lane by Lofing gave Montana a 71-68 lead, but that was the last field goal the team made until Dillon’s Kenleigh Graham scored a bucket with 19 seconds left. In between, Wyoming took control.
A transition basket by MSU Billings-bound Lauren Kuhbacher of Gillette Campbell County put Wyoming in front 72-71 with 2:36 left, and a steal and hoop by Pinedale’s Elyn Bowers made the score 77-73 in favor of Wyoming with 55 seconds remaining.
Bowers, who is headed to play at Eastern Washington, scored 21 points and made 9 of 10 free throws in the fourth quarter as Wyoming won for the first time in the series in nearly a decade.
“We really upped our intensity,” Bowers said. “We kind of really came together. As a group, I think we hate losing. All of our teams — our high school teams — are highly successful. We just wanted to come together, bring the intensity and get a win.”
Lofing, who is headed to play at Gonzaga, led the Montana All-Stars with 13 points, though she was hounded by tight defense in the fourth quarter. The MSUB-bound Smart added 12. Miles City’s Alli Glasscock and Lockwood’s Tailey Harris each had nine points.
Douglas’ Lauren Olsen scored 14 points for Wyoming, and Cheyenne Central’s Karson Tempel had 11.
Montana, which prevailed 91-80 in Game 1 on Friday at the Pronghorn Center, still leads the all-time girls series by a 42-14 margin.
High School Sports
IHSAA softball state finals scores
The IHSAA softball season came to a close Saturday at Purdue’s Bittinger Stadium. Here’s who is leaving West Lafayette with state championship trophies: All-state: Coaches pick IHSAA’s top players More: Meet the five finalists for 2025 Indiana Miss Softball More: She’s confined to wheelchair — and now a state champ: ‘We’re so thankful she’s part […]

The IHSAA softball season came to a close Saturday at Purdue’s Bittinger Stadium.
Here’s who is leaving West Lafayette with state championship trophies:
HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATES.
Saturday, June 14
Class 4A: Crown Point 2, Center Grove 0 (READ MORE)
Class 3A: Cathedral 5, Hanover Central 4
Class 2A: Tecumseh 2, Andrean 0 (READ MORE)
Friday, June 13
Class A: North Newton 2, Clay City 0
Read more: 33 years later, North Newton trailblazers finally see Spartans win softball state title
Follow Brian Haenchen on Twitter at @Brian_Haenchen. Get IndyStar’s high school coverage sent directly to your inbox with the High School Sports newsletter.
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