It was a perfect day for the Scarborough Red Storm, plus Thornton Academy and South Portland won.
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AI-assisted summary Ruston High School sophomore Ahmad Hudson earned LSWA Class 5A All-State honors in both basketball and football. He intends to play both sports in college but prioritizes a program that feels like home. Hudson also participates in track and field to stay in shape. It’s good to be Ahmad Hudson right now and […]
It’s good to be Ahmad Hudson right now and things are only going to become more fun over his next two years of high school.
Ruston High’s super sophomore was recently crowned the outstanding player on the 2025 LSWA Class 5A All-State boys basketball team. In the fall, Hudson was named to the LSWA Class 5A All-State football first team as a tight end.
The 6-foot-8, 230-pound son of former Alma Brown (now Lincoln Prep) and LSU standout Antonio Hudson was elated to find out he’d earned his latest signature award.
Ruston’s Hudson, Huntington’s Hamilton top the ’25 LSWA Class 5A All-State basketball team
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“I’m pretty happy with it,” Hudson told the USA Today Network. “I lost the race for Gatorade player of the year, so this made up for it. I was happy to accomplish something that really hasn’t been done at Ruston in a while.”
Just about every SEC school with a recruiting budget has paid their respects to the Shreveport Times All-Area first teamer as he now holds about 20 scholarship offers in both football and basketball.
And Hudson is very specific in what he’s looking for in a college without divulging where he might be headed.
“The option to play both sports. The opportunity to put in the time/effort and be able to play as a freshman,” he said. “The option of getting my degree after being drafted. Staff/coaches who have relationships on and off the field. A staff that will continue to develop the skills I already have.”
Hudson averaged 21 points, 14 rebounds and three blocks per game last season in leading the Bearcats to the state quarterfinals, while being selected the All-District 2-5A MVP.
He’d like to play both sports at the collegiate level, something that has proven nearly impossible to accomplish except by the elite few.
“I do indeed plan on doing both,” he said. “But it won’t play a factor in which college I choose. I want to go where I can play both, but the most important thing is it has to feel like home wherever I go.”
Hudson has already taken a few college visits and has a few more planned for this summer, providing time permits in his prodigious schedule.
One recent Tuesday afternoon, Hudson had changed his focus from football and basketball to track and field, a sport in which he’s yet to receive all-state honors.
“I didn’t make it last year because I was a little nervous,” he said of the regional meet.
His two best events are the discus (122 feet best throw) and the high jump (6-0), both of which need to be improved to become all-state quality.
“I’m still learning how to do both,” he said. “And all (track and field) is for me is staying in shape.”
Jimmy Watson covers Louisiana sports for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at jwatson@shreveporttimes.com and follow him on Twitter @JimmyWatson6.
The 2025 Preakness Stakes featured a field of nine horses competing on a dirt track at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore for a distance of 1 3/16 miles, all vying for the prestigious Middle Jewel title. With coveted trainers such as Bob Baffert returning to Pimlico, there was a lot of intrigue around this race, […]
The 2025 Preakness Stakes featured a field of nine horses competing on a dirt track at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore for a distance of 1 3/16 miles, all vying for the prestigious Middle Jewel title.
With coveted trainers such as Bob Baffert returning to Pimlico, there was a lot of intrigue around this race, even if Kentucky Derby winner Sovereignty opted out of the race in order to focus on the Belmont Stakes. Regardless, Derby runner-up Journalism entered the race as the odds-on favorite for the win at Pimlico, just as the horse did at Churchill Downs. This time though, Journalism didn’t disappoint.
After a slow start, and getting pinned to the railing around the last turn, Journalism kicked into high gear down the final straightaway, squeezing in between horses, then moving to the outside of Gosger, who had been in front for almost the entire race. Journalism took the lead at the absolute last second, winning by less than a length to take the crown at the Middle Jewel.
Here’s everything that happened at the 2025 Preakness Stakes:
Figures based on $2 bet (odds in parentheses)
*Horses listed alongside their pre-race odds
Pre-race favorite Journalism won the race in exhilarating fashion. After trailing for the first three-quarters of the race and being bumped into the inside railing on the last turn, Journalism found an extra gear on the final straightaway, pulling ahead of runner-up Gosger at the last possible second. Those two horses were far out in front of third-place Sandman, but that did not at all take away from the intensity that the race brought.
As Journalism won Saturday’s 150th edition of the Preakness, surviving one of the most rough-and-tumble stretch runs you’ll ever see and coming back from what seemed like an impossible position with 1/8th of a mile to go, you can understand why the state of Maryland is about to invest $400 million to give Pimlico Race Course the facelift it deserves
But, as thrilling as Saturday’s race was, and as great of a horse as Journalism appears to be, did anyone but the sport’s dwindling die-hards care? The answer, of course, is not really. The moment Kentucky Derby winner Sovereignty was withdrawn from consideration for the Preakness, the race was essentially rendered meaningless in the greater sports landscape.
And it didn’t have to be that way. — Dan Wolken
Click here to read Wolken’s full column on the 2025 Preakness and the state of horse racing.
The 157th running of the Belmont Stakes will take place on Saturday, June 7 at 6:50 p.m. ET. The race will actually be shorter than the usual 1.5 miles though. The race will be hosted by the Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, New York, which boasts a smaller dirt track.
The final leg of horse racing’s triple crown sets up as a showdown between Preakness champion Journalism and Kentucky Derby winner Sovereignty.
Journalism got its name from one of its co-owners, Aron Wellman, who was a former sports editor of his high school newspaper in Beverly Hills, California.
Wellman and other owners bought the horse for $825,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale in 2023, but had some difficulty in coming up with a name off its sire and dam — Curlin and Mopotism, respectively — so they settled on Journalism. − John Leuzzi
The 150th running of the Preakness Stakes will be held Saturday, May 17. Post time is 6:50 p.m. ET
The 150th Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course is set for Saturday, May 17, 2025. Fans can watch the race, which will be streamed on Peacock, NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports.
Watch the 2025 Preakness States on Fubo
Here’s where each horse landed, and morning-line odds:
The Kentucky Derby winner trained by Bill Mott, Sovereignty, will not compete in the Preakness Stakes, disappointing hopes for a Triple Crown winner for the seventh consecutive year. The Triple Crown, consisting of the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes, is one of the most coveted titles in horse racing. Sovereignty’s victory over the favorite Journalism at Churchill Downs, with a time of 2:02.31, was a surprise. His withdrawal from the Preakness Stakes was an even bigger shock.
The purse amount for the 150th annual Preakness Stakes has not yet been disclosed. Last year’s winner, Seize The Gray, received a Woodlawn Vase and $1.2 million from the total $2 million purse.
Every Kentucky Derby-winning trainer has the same day-after script when it comes to bringing their horse to the Preakness. And the line is usually some non-committal variation of “they’ll tell us” if they’re physically ready to run back just two weeks later in the second jewel of the Triple Crown.
Well, Bill Mott wasn’t kidding Sunday, the morning after Sovereignty’s victory. You could almost see the thought bubble forming around his words, telling everyone not to be too surprised if he and the management team at Godolphin, which owns the horse, decided to take a pass on Baltimore. — Dan Wolken
Ed DeRosa writes, “As I discussed in a Courier Journal video, the win pool of this race will be very interesting given how inefficient that same pool was in the Kentucky Derby. I am referencing No. 2 Journalism being 3-1 in the win pool but closer to 2-1 in other pools. Sovereignty was the fourth choice in win wagering but second choice in the other pools. I bring this up because there is no sense trying to get cute with exactas, trifectas and such when a horse like Journalism — easily one of the top 3-year-olds in the country and the best/most accomplished horse on paper among this group — might be more than even money. I will bet him to win at odds of 6-5 or better. No. 3 American Promise should run better here than in the Derby. That seven-week layoff is an eternity for a D. Wayne Lukas trainee. No. 8 Clever Again is the “new shooter” with the heaviest artillery.”
Staff writes the following with an added finish order: “For the Preakness, I am looking at the newcomers to the Triple Crown trail for a winner. Clever Again, Goal Oriented and River Thames all have potential to improve here. Clever Again was very impressive at Oaklawn in the Hot Springs Stakes, and as a son of American Pharoah, he should have no problem with the distance. The allowance race win by Goal Oriented at Churchill on Derby Day was tremendous, and he’s undefeated in two starts with a license to get better. And as impressive as Sovereignty was in the Derby, we shouldn’t forget that the horse that finished a neck behind him in the Fountain of Youth Stakes was River Thames. It’s tough to separate these horses, but here it is:”
The Preakness Stakes will enjoy its 150th running. It will take place at the iconic Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland.
It’s become a trend in recent years to see Derby winning horses opt out of the Preakness. With load management becoming a more popular training technique, it appears that many trainers are opting out of the Preakness for their horses’ health.
The short two-week turnaround between the Derby and Preakness can sometimes prevent horses from recovering fully after their race at Churchill Downs. Even Sovereignty’s trainer, Bill Mott, hinted that he’d rather focus on the Belmont Stakes, which is set for five weeks after the Derby, in order to give Sovereignty more time to recover. While the Triple Crown is a coveted achievement worth chasing, many trainers are focusing on maintaining their horses’ health and long-term success instead.
Post 6 has produced 17 winners at the event since 1909 with the most recent being 2021 winner Rombauer. Triple Crown winner Justify in 2018 ran out of Post 6 at the Preakness.
Here’s a full list of the Preakness winners out of Post 6 since 1909:
*All horses listed in order of post position; odds via TwinSpires.com
1) Goal Oriented 7-1
2) Journalism 6-5
3) American Promise 9-1
4) Heart of Honor 20-1
5) Pay Billy 11-1
6) River Thames 9-1
7) Sandman 5-1
8) Clever Again 5-1
9) Gosger 19-1
Advertisement May 17 high school baseball highlights Updated: 7:53 PM EDT May 17, 2025 It was a perfect day for the Scarborough Red Storm, plus Thornton Academy and South Portland won. It was a perfect day for the Scarborough Red Storm, plus Thornton Academy and South Portland won. Advertisement 0
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May 17 high school baseball highlights
It was a perfect day for the Scarborough Red Storm, plus Thornton Academy and South Portland won.
It was a perfect day for the Scarborough Red Storm, plus Thornton Academy and South Portland won.
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It was a light Saturday for high school sports across the Cape and Islands with just five games on the schedule across three sports. Mashpee (7-12) and Barnstable (4-14) baseball were the lone Cape matchup, which the Falcons won 11-4 to halt a three-game losing streak. Jake Kross went 2-for-3 with a triple and a […]
It was a light Saturday for high school sports across the Cape and Islands with just five games on the schedule across three sports.
Mashpee (7-12) and Barnstable (4-14) baseball were the lone Cape matchup, which the Falcons won 11-4 to halt a three-game losing streak.
Jake Kross went 2-for-3 with a triple and a run scored, while Matt Gaitane went 1-for-3 with a triple, a RBI, and a run scored for the Red Hawks in the loss.
In other high school sports action:
Nantucket 5, O’Bryant 4; O’Bryant 7, Nantucket 4: The Whalers (7-10) split a pair of games in a double-header against O’Bryant.
Old Colony 9, Bourne 8: Janice Bouchard tallied a four goals, but the Canalmen’s (4-10) comeback fell short as they dropped to a second straight defeat. Taylor Simard had two goals, while Ava Tosca Tessa Stone had one goal each. Eliza Denientolis, Mallory Doyle and Lila Moerman played well on defense, and Mia Lowden totaled 12 saves.
Plymouth North 7, Barnstable 5: The Red Hawks (8-9) fell in a non-league matchup, which was their third defeat in the last five games.
Nantucket 16, Whitman-Hanson Reg. 3: The Whalers (9-4) beat Whitman-Hanson Regional for the second time this season.
Allen Gunn covers high school sports for the Cape Cod Times. You can contact him at agunn@gannett.com and follow him on X at @allentgunn.
Thanks to our subscribers, who help make this coverage possible. If you are not a subscriber, please consider supporting quality local journalism with a Cape Cod Times subscription. Here are our subscription plans.
MCLA James Birge awaits the graduates’ traditional walk through the college’s gates on the way to commencement. See more photos here. NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — MCLA’s Class of 2025 was reminded to move forward with love, kindness, and pursuing what is just. “I grew up wanting to be like my grandmother. When my grandmother was […]
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — MCLA’s Class of 2025 was reminded to move forward with love, kindness, and pursuing what is just.
“I grew up wanting to be like my grandmother. When my grandmother was alive, she always talked about us living in the end times, but somehow her acceptance that we were living in the world’s last movement made her capacity for kindness even higher. It made her want to be better at love,” said keynote speaker Kiese Laymon, an award-winning author and Rice University professor.
“She understood that all great human beings do not get a ceremony, but we must be ceremonious to all human beings in this world.”
Per tradition, graduates marched through the iron gates on Church Street before receiving 187 undergraduate and 38 graduate degrees in the sciences, arts, business, education, and more. This was the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts’ 126th annual commencement.
“MCLA is a small institution, but it delivers big results,” said Paul Paradiso, who earned a master of business administration.
“I’m standing here alone only because I’ve been surrounded by a community of students and faculty. We’re here because of both group effort and individual drive. We work independently on projects, yet none of us got here entirely on our own.”
President James Birge reminded students that this day is a culmination of years of academic work and accomplishment.
“During your time at MCLA, you have compiled a long list of accomplishments and inspired us with your success in the classroom, in the lab, on the stage, in the gallery, on the athletic playing surfaces, and in the community. You’ve studied abroad, conducted research, participated in service trips and internships, and created community service programs to meet the needs you saw in our community,” he said.
“You were inducted into honor societies, held office in the student government, produced works of art, theater, dance, and spoken word, scored goals, runs, and baskets, and crossed finish lines. Some of you returned to school after time off, bringing with you professional and life experiences that enriched class discussions and that underscored the importance of lifelong learning.”
Birge said he and his colleagues are called to their work at MCLA by one common purpose: to contribute to the education of the next generation of leaders.
Brigh Cote, a communications major with a concentration in public relations and corporate communication, explained that she has transferred colleges twice and joined the Army, where she currently serves as a sergeant. Cote’s time at MCLA has “meant the world for me” for a variety of reasons, one being its inclusive nature.
“The very first time I heard about this school, I was sitting in my kitchen after having a meeting with my previous college that informed me that I was being fined $50 for being in a relationship with someone of the same sex. I knew I had to get out of a place like that,” she explained.
“How could I attend a college where being myself cost me money? I immediately began googling hockey teams that needed players, when my sister called me to tell me that a college named Massachusetts, College of Liberal Arts, was looking for players as they were about to start a program. I emailed the coach, and it wasn’t even 20 minutes after I sent the email that we set up a phone call.”
Cote had only one question for MCLA’s hockey coach: Can I be gay on your team? She reported that the line went silent for a minute before her phone buzzed and a photo of two LGBTQ+ mugs appeared on the screen.
“He returned to the phone and said, ‘I will have to ask my athletic director and her wife to see if that will be a problem,'” Cote reported, followed by laughs and cheers from the crowd.
During her first hockey season, which was also the first time in MCLA history that the women’s team was established to take part in a regular season, little girls from around the city would stand outside the team’s door before they entered the ice and gave out high-fives.
“I learned a lot from them without them even knowing. At the last home game of the season, I’m about to take the ice for the third period when I feel the tap on my shoulder. It was one of the little girl’s moms, and she told me, ‘I just wanted to tell you, you’re my daughter’s favorite player. You’re super feisty, and she enjoys watching you play,’ I said, ‘Thank you,’ and I had to skate onto the ice,” she explained.
“…It hit me at that moment that we had an impact on this town, showing little girls from the Berkshires that they could be just like us.”
A “heartbreaking” injury in 2024 ended Cote’s college athletic career, but she became the official voice of the MCLA women’s hockey league. “This had helped me overcome the intense feelings I had because of not playing, but gave me a sense of purpose,” she explained.
Cote told fellow graduates to be the person they once needed.
“Be the teammate, the friend, the voice, the encouragement, the safe space, because out there, someone is hoping to find the kind of community we have built here at MCLA,” she said.
“Don’t shrink yourself to fit into places that you weren’t built for. Expand them, fill them with your truth.”
During the ceremony, honorary doctorates were conferred to Laymon, NAACP Berkshire County Branch President Dennis L. Powell, North Adams Public Schools Superintendent Barbara Malkas, and state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier.
Laymon spoke about Sesame Street, grandmothers, and style.
His grandmother did not have a commencement ceremony at home in Mississippi because she could not go to any high school, college, or university, and instead, had to drop out of high school to work.
“My grandmother was the greatest human being in my life, but she could not vote in our state by law until her late 30s. Her third child, my mother, did not go to school with white children until she was a junior in high school in 1969. Sesame Street also debuted in 1969,” he explained.
Six months later, Mississippi voted to remove the children’s show from televisions across the state. The rationale leaked to the New York Times was “Some of the members of the commission were very much opposed to showing the series because it used a highly integrated cast of children,” Laymon reported.
Twenty-two days later, his grandmother joined others in publicly challenging the decision not to air Sesame Street and won. Six years after the show aired, Laymon was born and received the teachings of Sesame Street along with those of a “Palestinian, Jewish character in this big old book called the Bible named Jesus.”
“‘They’re the same teachings,’ she would say,” he reported.
“Treat folks as we want to be treated, share, be honest, be kind, admit mistakes, accept others’ mistakes, and revise, and finally, fight tyranny by all means necessary. I wasn’t a great student, but I was a great student of my grandma.”
He said his grandmother passed away a few months ago at the age of 95, around the time of statewide diversity, equity, and inclusion bans.
“Our desire to organize, our capacity for kindness, and our desire to revise all that we have is the only thing that will save us; it is all that has ever saved us from tyranny,” Laymon said, asking that graduates exhibit love in honor of his grandmother.
Tags: graduation 2025, MCLA,
Leading off today: Catching up on a pile of news while trying to figure out where the week went … Top Section 5 basketball player leaving state Wayne basketball star Cam Blankenberg, a first-team all-state pick this season and strong contender for Class A player of the year next winter, is transferring to a Massachusetts […]
Leading off today: Catching up on a pile of news while trying to figure out where the week went …
Top Section 5 basketball player leaving state
Wayne basketball star Cam Blankenberg, a first-team all-state pick this season and strong contender for Class A player of the year next winter, is transferring to a Massachusetts prep school.
The 6-foot-6 junior confirmed his decision on social media. He will enroll at The Winchendon School, where Blankenberg intends to reclassify to the Class of 2027.
The two-time All-Greater Rochester Player of the Year led Wayne to back-to-back trips to the NYSPHSAA Class A final four. The Eagles reached the title game in 2024.
“It was a hard decision leaving Wayne,” Blankenberg said. “What they’ve done for me, it took a lot of time and thought into leaving. It wasn’t an easy decision, but it was a decision that had to be made in order for me to take that step in growing my basketball game.”
Following up on La Salle’s punishment
The Times Union did some additional reporting following yesterday’s breaking news that Section 2 has banned La Salle Institute from postseason play for the entire 2025-26 school year.
Yesterday’s blog referenced La Salle running afoul of Section 2 with eligibility problems in girls soccer in 2022 and 2023 as well as in football in 2023, but the schools history of recent run-ins with the section is more extensive than that.
“This marks La Salle Institute’s seventh documented violation since 2014 and its fifth since Fall 2022,” Section 2 Executive Director Doug Gejay wrote in an email to the paper. “The school remains on probation with Section 2 through October 20, 2027.”
Milestones
Anthony Raio of Half Hollow Hills scored four goals in a 22-8 lacrosse win over Commack last weekend to become Section 11’s all-time leader in goals.
Raio’s 255th goal eclipsed the mark set by West Islip’s Nicky Galasso and moved him within striking distance of all-time Long Island leader Jeff Cohen (260).
• Two Long Island goalies have blown past the presumed NYSPHSAA record for career saves in girls lacrosse, according to Newsday.
Port Jefferson’s Emma Batter had 706 saves and Cold Spring Harbor’s Maya Soskin had 687 through Monday, bettering the mark of 665 compiled by former West Genesee star Allie Hanlon, who now plays for Syracuse University.
• North Salem boys lacrosse coach Vin Savastano booked his 400th career win with a 16-4 victory last weekend over Albertus Magnus. In an interesting twist, longtime assistant coach Scott Berniker was also at his side for win No. 1 for Savastano at Hendrick Hudson.
NYSPHSAA announces its 2025 Hall of Fame class
The New York State Public High School Athletic Association will induct six new members into its Hall of Fame during a ceremony on July 30 in Schenectady:
• Bill Bryant, currently the executive director for Section 4 after previously coaching at Binghamton and serving as the AD at Spencer-Van Etten, Ithaca, Brockport, and Marcellus. The Owego graduate also served as NYSAAA president in 2007.
• Don Cupertino, still active as the girls soccer coach at Bronxville with a 544-135-37 record placing him in the top five in state history for wins. The Washingtonville graduate’s teams have earned 22 Section 1 championships in a 35-year career.
• Larry Gaultieri, who has officiated the sports of soccer, basketball, and baseball in Suffolk County since 1974, frequently representing Section 11 as an official at the NYSPHSAA boys basketball and soccer championships.
• Terence “T” McMahon, the all-time winningest boys varsity tennis coach in New York State and No. 3 in girls tennis, all while coaching at Orchard Park. Since 1975, he’s accumulated a 661-92 record with 41 sectional championships on the boys side and 400-28 from 1975-2000 on the girls side. He has been the Section 6 boys tennis coordinator since 1982.
• Marty Sherman, who coached multiple sports, making his mark with 304 wrestling wins at Corinth, where he was also the athletic director. Sherman has been the NYSPHSAA wrestling coordinator since 2008, helping make the dual-meet championship a reality in 2019 and leading improvements in the weight certification process.
• Carl “Rollie” Stichweh, who was a four-sport star for Mineola High from 1957-61 and then a four-year starter at quarterback for the U.S. Military Academy.
Texas goes high-tech in football
The governing body for Texas high school sports has approved expanded use of technology for football teams. Beginning next season, the University Interscholastic League will allow teams to use “wearable technology” to communicate with players for play-calling.
The communication will be in the form of texts from a coach in the coaching booth to players wearing a receiving device on his wrist.
The decision is in response to increasingly frequent complaints about sign-stealing.
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