Connect with us

High School Sports

Section V playoffs heat up in all spring sports

ROCHESTER, N.Y. – Section Five high schools are gearing up for a busy week of playoff action. Despite Memorial Day giving students a break, the sports schedule is packed with events that fans won’t want to miss. Baseball fans can look forward to the Triple-A best-of-three series between McQuaid and Fairport starting Tuesday at Monroe […]

Published

on

Section V playoffs heat up in all spring sports

ROCHESTER, N.Y. – Section Five high schools are gearing up for a busy week of playoff action. Despite Memorial Day giving students a break, the sports schedule is packed with events that fans won’t want to miss.

Baseball fans can look forward to the Triple-A best-of-three series between McQuaid and Fairport starting Tuesday at Monroe Community College. Classes A, B, and D will play their quarterfinals on Tuesday, while Double-A and C will compete in the semifinals on Wednesday. Finals for Classes Double-A through D are set for Friday.

In softball, Classes Triple-A, Single-A, C1, and C2 have their quarterfinals on Tuesday. Semifinals for B1 and B2 are also scheduled for Tuesday. Thursday will see the semifinals for AAA, AA, A’s, the C’s, and the D’s, with finals planned for Saturday.

Girls lacrosse action kicks off with Class B and C quarterfinals on Tuesday. The Class A and D semifinals are set for Wednesday, with championships scheduled for next week. Class C and D’s championships are scheduled for Tuesday, June 3, while A and B are planned for Wednesday, June 4. On the boys’ side, all classes will host their quarterfinals on Tuesday, with semifinals beginning Friday. Title games are planned for next week. Class C and D’s championships are scheduled for Monday, June 2, while A and B are planned for Tuesday, June 3.

Flag football is set to crown a Class A champion Tuesday night at 6 pm in a matchup between Penfield and Fairport. Classes B and C will have their championship games on Wednesday. All flag football finals will take place at Monroe Community College.

News10NBC will provide highlights and scores throughout the week. Classes are determined by school enrollment, and more information on that can be found here.

AI assisted with the formatting of this story. Click here to see how WHEC News10NBC uses AI

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

High School Sports

Providence Journal All

AI-assisted summaryThe Providence Journal’s High School All-States Awards Show will be held on June 18 at the Providence Performing Arts Center.Over 300 athletes will be recognized, with Player of the Year awards given in various sports.Rhode Island FC midfielder Clay Holstad will be the guest speaker at the event.PROVIDENCE — The Providence Journal is excited […]

Published

on

Providence Journal All


AI-assisted summaryThe Providence Journal’s High School All-States Awards Show will be held on June 18 at the Providence Performing Arts Center.Over 300 athletes will be recognized, with Player of the Year awards given in various sports.Rhode Island FC midfielder Clay Holstad will be the guest speaker at the event.PROVIDENCE — The Providence Journal is excited to announce that the annual High School All-States Awards Show will be held on Wednesday, June 18, at the Providence Performing Arts Center. This year’s show will feature Rhode Island FC midfielder Clay Holstad as its guest speaker.The show will recognize more than 300 Providence Journal first-team All-State athletes, and award Player of the Year honors to more than 30 high school athletes. In each of the three high school sports seasons, The Providence Journal names All-State teams to recognize the top student-athletes in each sport. All first-team All-Staters are also nominees for that sport’s Player of the Year award, which will be announced during the June 18 show. Several premier awards also will be given out, including overall boys and girls athletes of the year, coaches of the year and the annual courage award.”No one covers high school sports in Rhode Island better than The Providence Journal, and our sports staff has been honoring All-State athletes for more than 80 years,” said Journal sports editor Bill Corey. “We are so very much looking forward to sharing the PPAC stage with Rhode Island’s top high school athletes!”Rhode Island FC's Clay Holstad will be the guest speaker at The Providence Journal All-States awards ceremony on June 18.Past featured guests in the annual show have included Pedro Martinez, David Ortiz, Rob Gronkowski, Paul Pierce and others.This year, student-athletes will hear about Holstad’s journey. He grew up in Birmingham, Alabama, where he played youth and high school soccer before playing for the University of Kentucky, where is also earned a degree in chemical engineering. A second-round selection of the Columbus Crew in the 2023 MLS SuperDraft, Holstad, 25, joined Rhode Island FC in 2024. Last season, he played in 33 RIFC games, scoring four goals.Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

Clay Holstad, RIFC

The show would not be possible without the support of our sponsors, which this year include Tasca Automotive Group, Dave’s Fresh Marketplace, Tommy’s Clam Shack and R1 Indoor Karting Entertainment Center.

There is no admission charge to this year’s show, but all All-State first-team athletes must register to attend the event, and can bring up to six guests (also for free). High school athletic directors have forwarded the registration link to the All-State athletes. We also ask that athletes indicate how many people will be attending in their party.

Doors to the PPAC will open at 6 pm, and will feature a red-carpet experience for athletes and their families. The show starts at 7 p.m.

Former Patriots star Devin McCourty on stage with Journal writers Bill Koch and Eric Rueb in 2023.
Continue Reading

College Sports

WWE Worlds Collide 2025 Review

Braden Herrington and Davie Portman host a special edition of upNXT as they review WWE x AAA Lucha Libre: Worlds Collide! Review starts at 15 mins: El Hijo Del Vikingo vs Chad Gable (AAA Mega Championship) Lince Dorado, Cruz Del Toro & Dragon Lee vs Octagon Jr, Aerostar & Mr Iguana Stephanie Vaquer & Lola Vice vs Dalys & […]

Published

on

WWE Worlds Collide 2025 Review
WWE Worlds Collide 2025 Review | upNXT

Braden Herrington and Davie Portman host a special edition of upNXT as they review WWE x AAA Lucha Libre: Worlds Collide! Review starts at 15 mins:

  • El Hijo Del Vikingo vs Chad Gable (AAA Mega Championship)
  • Lince Dorado, Cruz Del Toro & Dragon Lee vs Octagon Jr, Aerostar & Mr Iguana
  • Stephanie Vaquer & Lola Vice vs Dalys & Chik Tormenta
  • Legado Del Fantasma vs El Hijo De Dr Wagner Jr, Pagano & Psycho Clown
  • Ethan Page vs Je’Von Evans vs Rey Fenix vs Laredo Kid (NXT North American Championship)

The lads review the show in full and also discuss all the call backs to AAA x WCW “When Worlds Collide” from 1994, Mr. Iguana stealing the show (and our hearts), Konnan on commentary, plus MITB and more! 

Hear the second half of this show featuring thoughts on WWE Money in the Bank & more in the video below, or by following/subscribing to POISONRANA in your podcast app or on YouTube!

Join our live NXT POST Shows every Tuesday night at YouTube.com/POSTWrestling

Follow more of Davie and Braden’s work at Poisonrana.ca, with a weekly show covering everything in the world of wrestling, Shot in the Dark, Eagles Don’t Hunt Flies, and more!

This week on the POISONRANA Patreon and Free Feed:

  • Detox w/ Braden Herrington & Jordan Goodman (Poisonrana Free Feed)
  • Reviews From The 6ix: AAA When Worlds Collide (Poisonrana Patreon)
  • POISONRANA LIVE: Worlds Collide & Money In The Bank Review (Poisonrana YouTube & Free Feed)

Last week on the POISONRANA Patreon and Free Feed:

  • The Champ Is Here #9 w/ Benno & Hamflett: WrestleMania XXVI (Poisonrana Patreon)
  • POISONRANA LIVE: Weekly News Show (Poisonrana YouTube & Free Feed)

Only $5 for “Friend” tier to access all these shows and everything in the back catalogue! Movie reviews, PPV reviews and so much more!!! Patreon.com/Poisonrana

Photo Courtesy: WWE

upNXT Theme by: Warren-D, PXCH and Shaheen Abdi

Poisonrana Merch: https://www.chopped-tees.com/Poisonrana
Subscribe: https://www.postwrestling.com/subscribe
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/702343790308154
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/Poisonrana
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@PoisonranaPod
Discuss: https://forum.postwrestling.com

Continue Reading

High School Sports

California (CIF) High School Baseball Regional championship game roundup

The high school baseball season in California is complete. The records weren’t so sparkling among the final 20 teams left standing in the California (CIF) regional baseball finals, but wow, were the games competitive. Eight of the 10 championship games were decided by a single tally. The other two were 4-0 and 3-1. The final […]

Published

on

California (CIF) High School Baseball Regional championship game roundup

The high school baseball season in California is complete.

The records weren’t so sparkling among the final 20 teams left standing in the California (CIF) regional baseball finals, but wow, were the games competitive.

Eight of the 10 championship games were decided by a single tally. The other two were 4-0 and 3-1. The final day of the 2024-25 CIF season was indeed tight.

De La Salle (North) and St. John Bosco (South) won the highest levels, taking Division 1 championships. Check the roundup below with all the results from Saturday title games.

South — No. 1 St. John Bosco 4, No. 7 Patrick Henry 0: Freshman Brayden Krakowski and Jack Champlin combined on a three-hitter with four strikeouts as the host Braves finished the season 30-4. James Clark had a double, triple and an RBI, while Jaden Jackson, Noah Everly and Miles Clark also drove in runs. After Bosco struck for four runs in the first two frames, Jimmy Gunn pitched four scoreless innings, allowing one hit and striking out three.

North — No. 1 De La Salle 5, No. 3 Serra 4: Host De La Salle (29-4) scored three runs in the bottom of the seventh to win its third NorCal D1 title in four years. Nico Baumgartner walked it off with an infield single, scoring Antonio Castro with the winning run. Stanford-bound junior shortstop Tyler Spangler had a pair of run-scoring doubles and Castro and Ethan Sullivan also had two hits. Serra (28-7), which fell behind 2-0 in the first, scored four unanswered runs in the middle innings, half of those on a two-run double by Davis Minton and another on a run scoring double by Evan Bradshaw, who went 3-for-4. READ STORY

high school basketball, California

De La Salle dogpile in right field after a 5-4 walk-off NorCal Division 1 home win over Serra on June 7 2025 / Photo by Todd Fierner

South — No. 8 Rancho Bernardo 2, No. 6 Point Loma 1: Freshman Brayden Kotera and senior Chris Bayne combined on a four hitter with three strikeouts to lead the Broncos (21-13) to the surprising championship. Along the way, Rancho Bernardo upset No. 1 Fountain Valley (4-2) and No. 4 Eastlake (8-5). Hugo Gonzalez had three hits and Brady Strachan and Nathan Bembenek each drove in runs. Druw Frost had an RBI double for Point Loma (22-13-1), which beat the Broncos twice earlier in the year, 10-2 and 3-1.

North — No. 1 Yuba City 3, No. 2 Saint Francis 2: After both teams scored twice in the first, the host Honkers scored in the bottom of the seventh to win their 14th straight game to finish 31-5. Max Guth, Ashton Decker and Brandon Pelechowicz each drove in runs and Julian Garcia and Cesar Guzar had two hits each. Guth’s single in the seventh won it. Saint Francis, which got RBIs from Gino Cappellazzo and Henry Dommer, finished 22-11.

South — No. 5 University City 3, No. 2 Mt. Carmel 1: Jayden Parker had a two-run double and AJ Curry doubled in a run, keying the victory for University City (23-12) in another all San Diego Section final. Curry pitched four innings and struck out nine, while sophomore Thiago Quillin fired three scoreless innings. Carson Weber had two hits and an RBI for Mt. Carmel (23-13).

North — No. 3 Rancho Cotate 2, No. 1 Roseville 1: Camden Henington and Jeff Derammelaere combined on a two-hitter with seven strikeouts for the Cougars (19-13), who advanced out of the North Coast Section as the 15th seed. They got RBI signles from Luke Morie and Derammelaere. Austin Chang drove home Roseville’s only run and pitchers Cyrus Young, Colton Wolfe and Dustin Holcomb combined to give up just five hits and two earned runs. Roseville finished 23-11.

South — No. 2 Ridgeview 1, No. 1 Banning 0: Adrian Bravo drove home the only run of the game with a double in the top of the seventh and winning pitcher Joel Guitierrez did the rest, allowing three hits, walking none and strike out five. Losing pitcher Matthew Gonzalez allowed just hits and one run while going the distance.

North — No. 5 Menlo School 2, No. 3 Santa Clara 1: Ben Salama and Fletcher Cahill, a freshman, drove in rush in the fourth inning and pitchers Jackson Flanagan, Liam Widner, Salma and Jack Freehill made it stand up for the Knights (24-8), who finished the season winning 21 of their last 22. They also snapped a 20-game win streak for Santa Clara (29-4), which scored in the sixth on an RBI single by Drew Diffenderfer. Jaxton Chao and John Kepner combined to allow five hits and struck out five, but came up short.

South — No. 3 Pioneer 4, No. 1 Corcoran 3: The host Panthers (27-5) trailed 4-0 heading into the bottom of the sixth and scored three unanswered runs over the next two frames, but it wasn’t enough for Pioneer of Whittier which finished 20-14. The Titans won the regional title despite finishing 4-6 in league play.

North — No. 1 Etna 6, No. 2 Stevenson 5: The host Lions (21-7) put up five runs in the bottom of the first, then held on for dear life while winning their first NorCal title. Stevenson actually outhit Etna 9-4 but couldn’t quite get over the hump while scoring three in the fifth and single tallies in sixth and seventh. Tono Borgomini and Phinn Thomas each had two hits for Stevenson (21-9), which made the mammoth 440-mile drive only to come up a run short.

Continue Reading

High School Sports

AP PHOTOS

NEW YORK (AP) — This photo gallery, curated by AP photo editors, showcases highlights from the 2025 Tony Awards. 0

Published

on

AP PHOTOS

NEW YORK (AP) — This photo gallery, curated by AP photo editors, showcases highlights from the 2025 Tony Awards.

Continue Reading

High School Sports

Multiple area athletes capture state gold

LYNCHBURG — In a matter of milliseconds, Turner Ashby junior Devin Smiley knew what crossing the finish line first on Saturday was going to mean. As Smiley had the advantage around 30 meters from the finish line in the boys 100-meter dash, the multi-sport Knights athlete knew he was about to etch his name into […]

Published

on

Multiple area athletes capture state gold


LYNCHBURG — In a matter of milliseconds, Turner Ashby junior Devin Smiley knew what crossing the finish line first on Saturday was going to mean.

As Smiley had the advantage around 30 meters from the finish line in the boys 100-meter dash, the multi-sport Knights athlete knew he was about to etch his name into the history books.

“I thought about it before I crossed the finish line,” Smiley said. “I thought about, ‘I’m about to be the state champion.’”

With a blistering time of 10.90 seconds, Smiley was a state champion.

“I’m just really thankful to see how far I came,” Smiley said. “In indoor [track], I felt like I was going to win but I didn’t, so I feel amazing. … I’m just thankful.”

Later that day, Smiley became the state champion in the 200-meter dash by setting an all-time meet record time of 21.41, and his victories were a pair of many notable highlights by local track stars at the Virginia High School League Class 3 state meet at Liberty University.

“It just feels amazing,” Smiley said. “To break a state record is amazing.”

Smiley had much of his family in attendance to watch him become a two-time track and field state champion, and whether it’s his family or other runners watching on, the support fuels his fire.

“It helps me run faster to know people are supporting me and want to see me do well,” Smiley said.

Another Valley standout who earned a pair of state title victories was Broadway senior Tristan Yoder, who set an all-time meet record in the 3200-meter run with a time of 9:06 and captured first in the 1600-meter run with a time of 4:13.

“Winning the team title in cross country was a really cool day,” Yoder said. “I’d say, individually, as far as Broadway performances, I’d say this is my best one. … Today, my goal was to just go out and dominantly win the 32 and 16, and that’s how I felt I did. I was really happy with it.”

Yoder’s wins played a major role in the Broadway boys placing third in the final team results.

In both races, Yoder hung back in the pack and waited for his moment to pounce.

Then, he turned on the jets and cruised to dominant wins in both events.

“It’s hard to go out and lead the whole race,” Yoder said. “I wanted to make sure I won both. Just finding a spot where my opponents are the weakest and just going. … My coach always says, ‘Make sure it’s the last move of the race.’”

Another state title-winning performance came from Spotswood senior Madison Doss, who captured the crown in the girls long jump with a first-place mark of 17-11.5.

“I never really thought I’d make it back to where I was,” Doss said. “Not that I wasn’t progressing well and having a great season. I had a really big [personal-record] and just had a really good day. Coming into finals, I was ranked second-to-last. To have that big jump and have confidence in myself and really feel like I was fully back was really great. That’s how I want to go out.”

It’s a story of a comeback from Doss after suffering a significant ACL injury nearly two years ago, one she never expected to fully overcome.

On Saturday in Lynchburg, Doss was able to reflect on a rollercoaster of the last two years for her that culminated with a state championship victory.

“One bump in the road should never fully knock you down,” Doss said. “You just keep on moving. I think that’s kind of helped me over the last year-and-a-half. To have that show up this weekend as well, I think it definitely made me reflect and be like, ‘This is what I’ve done the last year-and-a-half, what’s one more day? I can do this today just as much as I have the last year.’”

On the first day of events, Spotswood’s girls 4×800-meter relay team of freshmen Lillian Myers, Hayley Mancini, Anna Lowe, and Marykate Miller placed fourth with a combined time of 9:50.

Turner Ashby junior Jeffrey Jackson became the state champion in the boys shot put with a mark of 55-4.







Tristan Yoder

Broadway’s Tristan Yoder rounds a turn during the 3,200.




After taking the state crown in shot put the day prior, Jackson posted a fifth-place effort in the boys discus throw with a mark of 156-5.

East Rockingham senior Alliyah McNair took state runner-up in the girls discus throw with a mark of 123 feet, while her fellow senior teammate Shanna Robertson nabbed 10th in the girls pole vault, marking at 9-6.

McNair, a three-sport athlete in volleyball, track, and tennis, later took fifth for the Eagles in the girls shot put with a mark of 34-0.5.

“You can always want to have more and always look back on it and see the things you could’ve done differently,” McNair said. “At the end of the day, it’s how you perform at that time and how you perform under the pressure of it. I’m very proud of myself for being able to go out there and get fifth in shot and get second in discus. On top of that, playing tennis, I didn’t get as much practice time. Being able to accomplish that is really big to me.”

Two spots ahead of McNair in shot put was Spotswood senior Jenna Townsend, who took third with a mark of 35-7.

“Going in ranked third definitely took a lot of pressure off of me,” Townsend said. “I’m not completely satisfied, but it’s all right. I have a state ring already. It was definitely hard but we still got top three. That’s all I kind of wanted — top three.”

Turner Ashby junior Alana Dennis took seventh in the girls triple jump with a mark of 35-1.75.

Broadway’s boys 4×800-meter relay squad of seniors Gavin Diehl, Asher Ryan, Grayson Jacquez, and Yoder earned fifth with a total time of 8:06.

On the second day of events, East Rockingham senior Xavia Brown placed sixth in the boys long jump, leaping to a mark of 21-1.75. The Eagles standout later finished ninth in the boys 300-meter hurdles with a time of 40.91.

Spotswood senior Ashland Dickel earned state runner-up in the girls 3200-meter run with a time of 11:02, while her freshman teammate, Mancini, took fourth with a time of 11:23.

“I’m glad with how the two-mile [3200-meter] went,” Ashland said. “It wasn’t my [personal-record] but I’m glad I got second and it was fun racing with [first-place finisher Kiera Lowman (Alleghany)].”

Finishing strongly in second behind Yoder in the boys 3200-meter run was Spotswood senior Peyton Kenee, who clocked in a time of 9:19 in his final race of a decorated career with the Trailblazers.

“If anything, it’s somber,” Kenee said. “Four years of running pretty much every day, coming to an end is pretty sad. I’m also really [proud] of how far I’ve come. From running 5:05 [mile times] as a freshman and now I’m running 9:19s for two-miles. It’s such a big jump and I’m so appreciative of how far I’ve come and getting second [in the 3200] today was just the cherry on top.”

Behind Yoder and Kenee, East Rockingham junior Cade Yancey finished fifth with a time of 9:35 while Broadway senior Jaiden Santos Nguyen was close behind in sixth with a time of 9:36.

Rocktown junior Jaleel De La Cruz came home eighth in the boys 110-meter hurdles with a time of 16.01.

While she led much of the race, Spotswood senior Marika Dickel took fourth in the girls 1600-meter run with a time of 5:00. Lillian Myers took seventh with a time of 5:12 and Ashland Dickel earned eighth with a time of 5:13.

“I’m happy with the [1600] but also a little disappointed that I was so close to breaking five [minutes],” Marika said. “It was a good end to high school running and I think it shows promise for the future.”

Trailing Yoder in the boys 1600-meter run was East Rockingham senior Hayden Fox, who claimed third with a time of 4:19.

Meanwhile, East Rockingham sophomore Hayden Paulette placed eighth in the girls long jump with a mark of 17-0.75.

Broadway junior Uriah Rutan placed state runner-up in the boys 400-meter dash, clocking in at 48.94, and later earned sixth in the boys 200-meter dash with a time of 22.15.

Rounding out the day was Spotswood’s girls 4×400-meter relay team of Doss, junior Carla Argueta-Romero, sophomore Macey Myers, and Marika Dickel placing fourth with a combined time of 4:06.

In the final team results, Broadway scored 38 points to place third behind runner-up Western Albemarle (47) and state champion Fauqier (63). Turner Ashby tied Grafton for fourth place with 34 points.

For the girls, Spotswood took fourth with 47 points, behind third place Western Albemarle (55), runner-up Abingdon (65) and state champion Heritage (99).

Continue Reading

High School Sports

Seven high school sports takeaways from an action

Sharon’s Nina Kyei-Aboagye celebrates as she crosses the finish line to win the 100-meter dash during the MIAA’s Meet of Champions at Fitchburg State. Danielle Parhizkaran/Globe Staff The semifinals are here. Ten days into the MIAA postseason, every semifinal has been determined with six exceptions (three in baseball, two in softball, and one in girls’ […]

Published

on

Seven high school sports takeaways from an action

Sharon’s Nina Kyei-Aboagye celebrates as she crosses the finish line to win the 100-meter dash during the MIAA’s Meet of Champions at Fitchburg State.
Danielle Parhizkaran/Globe Staff

The semifinals are here.

Ten days into the MIAA postseason, every semifinal has been determined with six exceptions (three in baseball, two in softball, and one in girls’ lacrosse).

So let’s break down the brackets a bit.

The lowest seed remaining? No. 21 Bishop Fenwick girls’ tennis, which will face top-seeded Dover-Sherborn in the Division 3 semifinal Tuesday at Newton North.

The highest seed eliminated? It’s a four-way tie. Three No. 1 seeds have been knocked out in the baseball brackets (D1’s Taunton, D3’s St. Mary’s, and D5’s Turners Falls), but only one other No. 1 seed has fallen across all sports and divisions: Boston Latin girls’ tennis, which was knocked out of the Division 1 tourney by eighth-seeded Winchester.

The lowest seed remaining in each sport?

Boys tennis: No. 13 Latin Academy in D3.

Boys’ lacrosse: No. 10 Westwood in D2.

Girls’ lacrosse: No. 6 Westford in D1.

Softball: No. 10 Greater New Bedford in D3.

Baseball: No. 14 Chelmsford in D1.

Why didn’t you include boys’ volleyball or rugby? Because both volleyball divisions and all three rugby divisions (boys and girls) went to chalk, with only the top seeds still standing.

Most semifinals get started Tuesday, with a few boys’ tennis semis on Monday, plus the final six quarterfinal matchups, three of which are suspended games that will be resumed.

Now onto Sunday’s results, including the final day of the Meet of Champions and lots of other exciting results.

1. Reading list

2. Walkoff wins

Freshman Drew Cantrell kept Walpole’s season alive with the winning hit in the bottom of the 12th inning to defeat Mansfield, 2-1, in the Division 2 quarterfinals.

Glenn Mello did the same for North Reading, walking off Apponequet with an RBI double for a 5-4 eight-inning Division 3 quarterfinal victory.

Over in Reading, the Rockets needed a wild pitch with two outs in the bottom of the seventh to score Sam Clark and force extra innings. And in the bottom of the eighth, Nate Vitarisi provided the walkoff single in a 2-1 Division 2 quarterfinal win.

On the lacrosse field, Westford senior Kassidy Carmichael, an Ohio State commit, split three defenders to net the winning goal with two minutes left in the second half of the first overtime, ending Lincoln-Sudbury’s season in the Division 1 quarterfinal.

Scituate senior Willy Robinson scored the last of his eight goals in overtime to send the Sailors past Dracut, 10-9, and into a semifinal matchup with Medfield that serves as a rematch of last year’s 2024 D3 title game.

3. Four stars

Three performances mirrored each other, but we also couldn’t leave out Wayland’s star hitter, so we decided to add a star.

Kiley Hogan, Tyngsborough — The junior got the Tigers started right with a two-run homer in the first inning, then pitched a complete game, allowing one earned run while striking out nine without issuing a walk as the Tigers topped AMSA, 3-2, in the Division 4 softball quarterfinals.

Delaney Moquin, Silver Lake — The senior tossed a 14-strikeout shutout and launched a two-run home run in the first inning to lead Silver Lake past Middleborough, 7-0, in Division 2 quarterfinals

Alyx Rossi, Bedford — The Boston College-bound senior struck out 18 in a three-hit shutout and blasting the first pitch she saw for a two-run homer (for the second-straight game) in the Buccaneers’ 6-0 Division 2 quarterfinal win over Tewksbury. Rossi has struck out 51 in 21 playoff innings without surrendering a run.

Finn Bell, Wayland — The junior slammed down 32 kills, adding 12 digs and four aces, as he surpassed 1,000 career kills in the Warriors’ 3-1 Division 2 quarterfinal win over Marlborough. “He’s missed five games in every season so far, and still hit 1,000 kills in his junior year, which is pretty unbelievable,” said coach Phil George.

4. Going, going, gone

Wachusett and Nipmuc both saw teammates go yard in their quarterfinal games, with Giana Johnason and Kendall Grady leaving the yard for Wachusett in a 4-1 Division 1 win over St. Paul, and Savannah Carr and Maya Vercruysse delivering dingers in Nipmuc’s 3-0 Division 3 victory against Tantasqua.

Also homering were Lynnfield’s Ty Adamo and Andrew Schmit of St. John’s (Shrewsbury), in addition to Rossi, Moquin, and Hogan.

5. Daily lacrosse leaderboard

Goals

Willy Robinson, Scituate, 8

Kassidy Carmichael, Westford, 7

Jenna Wong, Walpole, 7

Abby Beggans, Wellesley, 6

Tara Battaglino, Wellesley, 5

Oliva Comella, Wellesley, 4

Jackson Gearing, Billerica, 4

6. Daily strikeout leaderboard

Alyx Rossi, Bedford, 18

Delaney Moquin, Silver Lake, 14

Emily Atwood, Hopedale, 11

Cate Larson, Taunton, 11

Luis Mejia, English, 11

Luke Disilvio, Lynnfield, 10

Cormac Heney, Hamilton-Wenham, 10

Kiley Hogan, Tyngsborough, 9

Thurston Kiefer, Natick, 9

Brayden Mercier, St. John’s (Shrewsbury), 9

Matt Stuart, Chelmsford, 8

7. Getting the call

Ian Seymour, a 2017 St. John’s (Shrewsbury) graduate, was called up by the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday morning and is on the verge of making his MLB debut.

Seymour, a 26-year-old lefthander who played at Virginia Tech before being selected by the Rays in the second round of the 2020 draft, is 5-3 with a 2.95 ERA in 12 appearances (11 starts) for the Triple-A Durham Bulls, striking out 84 in 61 innings.

He was not one of three relievers the Rays used in a 3-2 win over the Marlins.


Brendan Kurie can be reached at brendan.kurie@globe.com. Follow him on X @BrendanKurie.

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending