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State champion Louisville to look for new coach

Louisville high school basketball video beating St Ignatius at buzzer Video of Brayden Gross muscling in a shot from the right side of the lane & the celebration as Louisville boys basketball beats St. Ignatius in OT. LOUISVILLE ‒ Like raising a son from birth to manhood, Tom Siegfried has tended to Louisville boys basketball […]

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LOUISVILLE ‒ Like raising a son from birth to manhood, Tom Siegfried has tended to Louisville boys basketball for the last 18 years. 

Watching it mature. Watching it fail. Watching it succeed — and the Leopards succeeded to the highest degree under Siegfried. 

The Louisville High School boys basketball program is all grown up now. Siegfried feels it’s the perfect moment to let it go. 

Siegfried is stepping down as Leopards coach after his tenure culminated in a Division III state championship last month. He spoke to the team about his decision Monday morning. 

There are many reasons the time is right for Siegfried to make this move, most notably his desire to watch his point guard and son, Beau, play at Ashland University next year. 

But it still wasn’t an easy decision, not after almost two decades of time and toil to build a basketball power in a football town. 

“I’ll never take that for granted because I remember what it felt like when it wasn’t that way,” Siegfried said. “That’s the frustrating part for me, knowing you did all this building to get to the top, and then to release it. It’s almost like you’re releasing your children to college or adulthood or whatever, and you have to trust that whoever comes next, it’s going to be in good hands.” 

The 50-year-old Siegfried will stay on as the history department head and assistant athletic director at Louisville. He also has a fence and deck business he runs during the summer. 

Louisville athletic director Terrie Horn knew Siegfried was considering stepping away as coach. 

“I still got choked up when he told me,” Horn said. “I know what we’ll be missing and I know those shoes are big ones and it’s going to be very hard to fill them.” 

Louisville went 270-155 under Siegfried, making him the winningest coach in program history by a mile. Louisville was strong for most of Siegfried’s career, with 15 winning seasons overall and 12 straight to finish his time as coach. 

It went to another level the last four years, with an 86-20 record, a boatload of significant wins, two district titles and the first state championship in program history. The 2022 district title was Louisville’s first in 29 years. Louisville went 24-5 this season — the most single-season wins in program history after it had tied the record last year when it went 23-3. 

These last four years included his son on varsity. Beau Siegfried is Louisville’s all-time leader in assists and 3-pointers. 

“Not too many coaches can say they went out on a win with their son,” Tom Siegfried said. 

Siegfried guided the Leopards to four NBC titles before the league unceremoniously dumped Louisville in 2018. 

He coached the last four Repository Stark County Players of the Year: Will Aljancic twice, Hayden Nigro and Brayden Gross. 

He watched Louisville’s scoring record be broken four times during his tenure, first by Drew Noble (1,078), then by Chris Libertore (1,146), Aljancic (1,409) and Nigro (1,434). Bob Gladieux’s record of 1,024 had stood for 51 years when Noble broke it in 2016. Overall, Siegfried coached the top five scorers in Louisville history, with Gross finishing third with 1,167 points. 

Siegfried’s final two wins were the stuff of movie scripts. 

The Leopards rallied to beat Garfield Heights and Ohio Mr. Basketball Marcus Johnson 49-48 in a state semifinal that included 4,120 fans in a rocking Memorial Field House. 

They then survived a furious rally by Cincinnati Aiken to win the state final 63-61 in front of 7,178 fans at University of Dayton Arena. 

“When I was younger and we were trying to build it and do it the right way, and you have some losing seasons, you just want people to have trust and faith in you,” Siegfried said. “You know you’re working hard and you’re going to get there at some point. And now that we’ve got there, it’s hilarious selling out a game in a 4,500-seat place like the Field House. I can remember having 350 people at a Friday night game. Basketball was just something the football players did in the offseason. Now, this town has become basketball.” 

Horn, in her eighth year as AD, explained Siegfried’s role in the emergence of Louisville basketball like this: “He has a passion like no other. He gives 100 percent to everything he does. The time he spends planning, organizing, building relationships with not only the kids but the parents and the community, it’s second to none. I’ve never seen anything like it.” 

Siegfried started referring to Louisville basketball as “The Program” about 10 years ago. The ostentatious moniker, which irked opposing coaches and fans at times, was part of Siegfried’s plan to give an identity to Louisville basketball beyond just the varsity team. 

He saw it as a top-to-bottom vision for hoops in Louisville, and he lived it by being heavily involved with youth basketball. 

“That’s what started all of this, I believe,” Horn said, “was building those relationships and showing up for those kids and showing them that he cared.” 

Siegfried called the state championship “icing on the cake” of his career, not the reason to step away now. 

He felt there was symmetry in finishing with this year’s rotation, which consisted of eight seniors who basically were born the year he became head coach. 

Another reason he feels comfortable stepping away at this point is the overall health of the program. 

Louisville’s junior varsity and freshman teams went a combined 34-4 this past season. 

“We definitely are not in a rebuilding stage anytime soon here at Louisville,” Siegfried said. “They should have the opportunity to do a lot of winning here coming up and keep this thing going. That kind of lent itself to being a good time for fresh thoughts and fresh ideas to come in with some of the foundation that I’ve laid and the expectations we’ve laid as a staff.” 

Siegfried expects varsity assistant coach Owen Gramoy and JV coach Dave Wertz to be among the candidates applying to succeed him. 

A 1993 Alliance High School graduate, Siegfried is in his 26th year at Louisville. He spent two years as the freshman girls basketball coach, then six years with the boys basketball program under Matt Miglich before becoming the head coach in 2007. He also spent 14 years coaching with the baseball program. 

His tenure as head coach covered four athletic directors, four principals, five superintendents, five girls basketball coaches and five football coaches at Louisville by his count. 

Siegfried does not consider this a retirement from coaching. He assumes he’ll return to the sideline at some point down the road. The college ranks always have intrigued him. 

For now, he won’t officially be “Coach Siegfried,” but chances are he’ll always be Coach Siegfried at Louisville. 

“It does become part of your identity,” he said. “You always feel like you have your guard up, trying to do what’s right for a million different people, whether it’s a Little Dribbler, a varsity player or past alumni. 

“Those relationships will still be there. They’ll just be a little different.” 

Reach Josh at josh.weir@cantonrep.com 

On X: @jweirREP 



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Transgender track athlete wins gold in California state championships despite Trump threat

Overcoming intense pressure to quit from President Trump, dozens of local protesters and other prominent critics of transgender athletes in girls’ sports, 16-year-old AB Hernandez bounded past many of her peers to win multiple gold medals at California’s high school track and field championships Saturday. The transgender junior from Jurupa Valley High School — who […]

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Overcoming intense pressure to quit from President Trump, dozens of local protesters and other prominent critics of transgender athletes in girls’ sports, 16-year-old AB Hernandez bounded past many of her peers to win multiple gold medals at California’s high school track and field championships Saturday.

The transgender junior from Jurupa Valley High School — who competed despite a directive from Trump that she be barred from doing so — won state titles in the girls’ triple jump and the girls’ high jump and took second place in the girls’ long jump.

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Hernandez’s success at the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships in Clovis came amid high heat — with temperatures above 100 degrees for much of the day — and under an intense spotlight.

Earlier in the week, Trump had said on social media that he was “ordering local authorities, if necessary, to not allow” Hernandez to compete, wrongly alleging she had won “everything” in a prior meet and calling her “practically unbeatable.” Protesters gathered outside the meet Friday and Saturday to denounce her inclusion and the LGBTQ+ friendly state laws allowing it.

Despite all that, Hernandez appeared calm and focused as she competed. When her name was announced for the long jump, she waved to the crowd. When she was announced for the high jump, she smiled.

Hernandez beat out all other competitors in the triple jump, though the runner-up was also awarded 1st place under new rules established by the California Interscholastic Federation after Trump issued his threats.

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Hernandez tied with two other girls in the high jump, with the three of them all clearing the same height and sharing the gold.

Hernandez’s mother, Nereyda Hernandez, heaped praise on her after the events in a statement provided to The Times, saying, “As your mother, I cannot fully express how PROUD I am of you.”

“Watching you rise above months of being targeted, misunderstood, and judged not by peers, but by adults who should’ve known better, has left me in awe of your strength,” her mother said. “Despite it all, you stayed focused. You kept training, you kept showing up, and now you’re bringing THE GOLD HOME!!!

During some of Hernandez’s jumps, a protester could be heard on a bullhorn from outside the Buchanan High School stadium chanting, “No boys in girls’ sports!” California Interscholastic Federation officials banned protest signs inside the facility, but outside protesters held diverse ones — including ones that read No Child Is Born in the Wrong Body,” “Trans Girls Are Boys: CIF Do Better,” and “She Trains to Win. He takes the trophy?”

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Josh Fulfer, a 46-year-old father and conservative online influencer who lives near the stadium, said he was the protester on the bullhorn. He said Hernandez should not have been competing — regardless of how she placed — because her presence in the competition had a negative “psychological effect” on her cisgender competitors.

“I stand with truth,” he said. “Males should not be pretending to be females, and they shouldn’t be competing against female athletes.”

Loren Webster, a senior from Wilson High School in Long Beach who beat Hernandez in the long jump, said she wasn’t giving Hernandez much thought — instead, she was focused on her own performance.

“It wasn’t any other person I was worried about. I knew what I was capable of,” Webster said. “I can’t control the uncontrollable.”

A child holds a protest sign with a family member and others opposed to transgender athletes competing.

A child holds a protest sign alongside a family member and others opposed to transgender athlete AB Hernandez competing in the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships, at Veterans Memorial Stadium at Buchanan High School in Clovis, Calif. (Tomas Ovalle / For The Times)

The intense focus on Hernandez over two days of competition Friday and Saturday reflected a broad rise in conservative outrage over transgender girls competing in sporting events nationwide, despite their representing a tiny fraction of competitors. It also reflected a concerted effort by Trump and other prominent conservative figures to single out Hernandez, individually, as an unwitting poster child for such concerns.

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Recent polls, including one conducted by The Times last year, have shown that many Americans support transgender rights, but a majority oppose transgender girls participating in youth sports. California has long defended transgender kids and their right to participate in youth athletics, but other states have increasingly moved to limit or remove such rights entirely.

Marci Strange supports protesters as they protest against transgender athlete AB Hernandez.

Marci Strange supports protesters as they protest against transgender athlete AB Hernandez competing In the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships, at Veterans Memorial Stadium In the campus of Buchanan High School in Clovis, Calif. (Tomas Ovalle / For The Times)

Trump first latched onto transgender issues with fervor during his presidential campaign, spending millions of dollars on anti-transgender political ads. Since being elected, he has issued a wave of executive orders and other policies aimed at rolling back transgender rights and protections.

Again and again, Hernandez has been singled out in that discussion.

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Earlier this week, Trump referenced Hernandez in a social media post in which he said his administration would cut federal funding to California if it didn’t block her from competing in this weekend’s state finals and more broadly get in line with his executive order purporting to ban transgender youth from participating in school sports nationwide.

The following day, U.S. Justice Department officials referenced Hernandez again, announcing the launch of an investigation into whether California, its interscholastic sports federation and the Jurupa Unified School District are violating the civil rights of cisgender girls by allowing transgender students such as Hernandez to compete in sports.

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez stands in front of other competitors on a field.

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez competed for Jurupa Valley High School in the high jump at the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships at Buchanan High School in Clovis, Calif. (Tomas Ovalle / For The Times)

At the meet Friday and Saturday, Hernandez often blended in with the hundreds of other athletes, hardly drawing attention. She was less conspicuous by far than the protesters there to denounce her for competing.

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Hernandez’s mother has pleaded with Trump and other adults in recent days to show her daughter compassion, calling it heartbreaking “every time I see my child being attacked, not for a wrongdoing, but simply for being who they are.”

She has said her daughter “is not a threat,” while the harassment directed at her is “not just cruel, it’s dangerous.”

Local protesters — some with ties to national conservative organizations — cast Hernandez’s competing in girls’ events in starkly different terms.

Before being escorted out by police, Sophia Lorey, outreach director for the conservative California Family Council, walked around the stadium Saturday wearing a hat reading, “Women’s Sports, Women Only.” She told members of the crowd that Hernandez was a boy and handed out pink “Save Girls’ Sports” bracelets and fliers directing people to an online petition calling on the California Interscholastic Federation to change its policies to bar transgender athletes from competition.

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Trump administration officials have taken a similar stance.

In a letter Wednesday to interscholastic federation executive director Ronald W. Nocetti, Assistant Atty. Gen. Harmeet Dhillon, who was appointed by Trump to head the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, called Hernandez’s success in recent track and field events “alarming.” And she said the California policies allowing Hernandez to compete are a potential violation of Title IX, the 1972 federal civil rights law prohibiting sex discrimination in educational programs and other activities that receive federal funding.

Dhillon also noted Gov. Gavin Newsom’s own recent remark to conservative activist Charlie Kirk that transgender girls competing in sports is “deeply unfair.”

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez sits with two other students in the shade.

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez competed in three events including the high jump, triple jump and long jump at the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships at Buchanan High School in Clovis. (Tomas Ovalle / For The Times)

The remark came in a conversation on Newsom’s podcast in March, in which Hernandez was also singled out.

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Kirk, a co-founder of the conservative organization Turning Point USA, asked Newsom whether he would voice his opposition to Hernandez competing in girls’ track and field events. Newsom said he agreed such situations were “unfair” but that he also took issue with “the way that people talk down to vulnerable communities,” including transgender people.

When Kirk suggested Newsom could say that he has “a heart for” Hernandez but still thinks her competing is unfair, Newsom again said he agreed.

Newsom has issued no such statement since. But the playing field has shifted in California for transgender athletes since Trump started talking about Hernandez.

On Wednesday, the CIF announced a change in its rules for this weekend’s championships. Under the new rules, a cisgender girl who is bumped from qualifying for an event final by a transgender athlete will still advance to compete in the finals. In addition, the federation said, any cisgender girl who is beaten by a transgender competitor will be awarded whichever medal she would have claimed had the transgender athlete not been competing.

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez competed in the high jump.

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez competed for Jurupa Valley High School in the high jump at the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships at Buchanan High School in Clovis, Calif. (Tomas Ovalle / For The Times)

The CIF did not mention Hernandez by name in announcing its policy change, but it did make direct reference to the high jump, triple jump and long jump — the three events in which she was to compete.

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Under the new rules, Hernandez shared her place on each of the event podiums with other girls.

The CIF did not respond to a list of questions about its new policy. A spokesman for Newsom applauded the change, but others were unimpressed.

Critics of transgender athletes rejected it as insufficient and demanded a full ban on transgender athletes. Fulfer, the protester on the bullhorn, said the CIF was “admitting that they’ve got it wrong for a long time” while still not doing enough to fix it — which Trump would see clearly.

“I hope Donald Trump sees what happens this weekend, and I hope he pulls the funding away from California,” Fulfer said.

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LGBTQ+ advocates also criticized the rule change, but for different reasons, calling it a crass capitulation that singled out a teenager to appease a crowd of bullies picking a political fight.

“The fact that these same political players continue to bully and harass one child, even after CIF changed its policy, shows this was never about sports or fairness,” said Kristi Hirst, co-founder of the public education advocacy group Our Schools USA.

“It was simply about using a child, while compromising their personal safety on a national scale, to score political points and distract from the serious issues families and communities in this country are actually concerned about,” Hirst said, “affording groceries, the loss of healthcare, and access to quality teachers and resources in their public schools.”

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez competed for Jurupa Valley High School in the long jump.

Transgender athlete AB Hernandez competed for Jurupa Valley High School in the long jump at the 2025 CIF State Track and Field Championships at Buchanan High School in Clovis, Calif. (Tomas Ovalle / For The Times)

Nereyda Hernandez said she hoped AB’s wins would serve as inspiration for other kids who feel “unseen.”

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“To every young person watching, especially those who feel unseen or unheard, let AB be your reminder that authenticity, courage, and resilience shine BRIGHTER than hate,” she said. “It won’t be easy, but definitely worth it.”

Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.



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Mater Dei falls short against West Ranch in CIF Division 2 final pitcher’s duel –

Mater Dei players cheer for their teammates as the Monarchs try to rally in the seventh inning (PHOTOS: Jacob Ramos, For OC Sports Zone). .In a thrilling CIF Division 2 championship baseball game against West Ranch Saturday night, Mater Dei missed an opportunity for the school’s first baseball CIF title since 2010 losing 2-1 at […]

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Mater Dei players cheer for their teammates as the Monarchs try to rally in the seventh inning (PHOTOS: Jacob Ramos, For OC Sports Zone).

.In a thrilling CIF Division 2 championship baseball game against West Ranch Saturday night, Mater Dei missed an opportunity for the school’s first baseball CIF title since 2010 losing 2-1 at Goodwin Field at Cal State Fullerton.

The Monarchs fell in a pitchers’ duel between two NCAA Division I-committed starters.

To see the slide show, click on the first photo:

Losing the battle by a slight margin was Mater Dei’s Brandon Thomas, who will pitch at Fresno State in the fall. On the opposite end, recording the win was West Ranch’s Hunter Manning, who is signed to UC Irvine and will play there beginning in fall 2026.

Despite the loss, Thomas threw well. The senior only allowed two runs in his six innings, with one being unearned.

Throughout the night, he pitched to soft contact, only allowing five hits scattered across the game. Postgame, Mater Dei Coach Richard Mercado sang his ace’s praises for his performance Saturday.

“Brandon did what he normally does. He pounds the strike zone. Unfortunately, we had some miscues that just kind of led to both their runs,” Mercado said. “I’m just proud of [Thomas]. He gives us a chance. It’s all we ever asked him to do, and that’s all he ever delivered for us. 

Early this month, Thomas announced on X that he would be continuing his career at Fresno State. Mercado also spoke about the star right-hander’s commitment postgame.

“He’s a fantastic human being and he’s a great kid. He treats his teammates with respect. He cares about people, cares about the school, and on top of all that stuff, he’s a pretty damn good baseball player,” Mercado said.

Despite the phenomenal pitching, defense gave both teams scares in Saturday’s matchup. After trailing for the majority of the game, Mater Dei scored its only run in the seventh inning after an error allowed Thomas to reach base. A pair of singles then extended the inning, and scored Thomas for what would be Mater Dei’s sole run of the evening.

It was Brady Guth who had the hit of the evening for the Monarchs (19-14) driving a single into center field to score Thomas. Thomas then lit up the Monarch dugout and fanbase, yelling in excitement at Guth standing on first base.

In addition to the West Ranch misplay, Mater Dei had a pair of crucial errors, one of which proved to be a deciding factor Saturday, eventually leading to an unearned run for the Wildcats (25-9).

The Monarchs are a relatively young team, only carrying nine seniors this season and at one point starting four sophomores regularly. Mercado spoke about the approach for his program with such a young team playing in such huge moments.

“They looked a little nervous in the moment, and I’m not surprised, but this is a big moment for anybody,” Mercado said. “[But] we’re just playing a game and the last part of the game was great, man. They competed their hearts out and just came up a little bit short tonight.”

Mercado offered more thoughts on the feeling after coming so close to a CIF title.

“Anytime you lose a one-run game, you know it’s going to sting,” Mercado said. “I feel bad for the boys, because, man, they really compete. They’ve done it all season, they fought back tooth and nail, and I think they showed a lot of heart tonight, so I’m proud of them.”

Mercado also confirmed that his team will make an appearance at the upcoming CIF So Cal regional playoffs, beginning next week. Throughout his postgame media time, he beamed with pride about his team and the players’ efforts Saturday and during the season as a whole.

“It’s a great experience for us to be back in the [CIF] finals for some since 2010, so, I’m just excited for these guys. I’m super proud of them,” Mercado said with a smile.



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Camden revives shuttered youth health and sports association

CAMDEN, N.J. (KYW Newsradio) — The Camden Health and Athletic Association, known as CHAA, shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic and never came back. Camden Mayor Vic Carstarphen and other Camden officials are now reviving the long-shuttered program prioritizing youth health through sports. Carstarphen also told KYW Newsradio that this time around, CHAA will focus […]

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CAMDEN, N.J. (KYW Newsradio) — The Camden Health and Athletic Association, known as CHAA, shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic and never came back. Camden Mayor Vic Carstarphen and other Camden officials are now reviving the long-shuttered program prioritizing youth health through sports.

Carstarphen also told KYW Newsradio that this time around, CHAA will focus on more sports beyond just hosting traditional basketball, football, and baseball leagues.

“Soccer components, continue to build on tennis, lacrosse for girls and boys,” he said. “Those are things we want to introduce.”

What makes CHAA unique, according to the Mayor, is the city and county’s partnership with nearby healthcare providers like Cooper to take a collaborative approach to youth health and wellness.
“We’ve coordinated and invested over $150 million in our parks and youth facilities, partnering with Camden County,” said Carstarphen. “Our facilities are there.”

The relaunch itself came after a $1 million investment from Cooper Health, The Norcross Foundation, and AmeriHealth. The Mayor also said the new association will be more efficient with a centralized database for facility management, fundraising, and the purchasing of equipment and uniforms.

“I’m excited,” said Carstarphen. “Sports has played a major part in my life, coaches, mentors when I was a kid helped me develop who I am today.”

Featured Image Photo Credit: Getty Images



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Mud Hens and Walleye fans team up at Toledo Library Takeover

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Youth Fishing Derby returning to Xenia

File Photo Shawnee Park in Xenia will play host to the city’s annual Youth Fishing Derby event, set to take place on June 14. Karen Rase | Greene County News Two boys came prepared to take on the competition at the 2024 Youth Fishing Derby and brought an array of their own equipment. Karen Rase […]

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Shawnee Park in Xenia will play host to the city’s annual Youth Fishing Derby event, set to take place on June 14.

Karen Rase | Greene County News

Two boys came prepared to take on the competition at the 2024 Youth Fishing Derby and brought an array of their own equipment.

Karen Rase | Greene County News

A pair take turns with the fishing pole and trying their luck at last year’s Derby.

Karen Rase | Greene County News

Josh Day and his sons are willing to take on the challenge of who can catch the most fish at the 2024 Derby.

XENIA — The City of Xenia will hold its annual Youth Fishing Derby on June 14.

The event will take place from 9 a.m.-12 p.m. at Shawnee Park. The event is free and open to children ages 4 to 15.

All supplies, including bait, will be provided and all participants are asked to bring their own fishing pole.

Children will be separated into three age categories, with 4-7, 8-11 and 12-15-year-old groupings. Four trophies per age group will be awarded. Presentation of door prizes and trophies will include first place, second place, third place, and biggest fish in each age group. Children registered are eligible for door prizes, which include fishing and camping supplies, sleeping bags, flashlights, and other prizes.

All children must be accompanied by an adult, and adults are only allowed to help with baiting hooks and taking fish off the line. No catch or throw nets, fly rods, treble-hooks, or multi-hooks are allowed, and children may only have two poles at most during the event.

On-site registration for the event begins at 8:30 a.m. at Shawnee Park Pavilion. The fishing competition will take from place 9-11:30 a.m., and awards are scheduled to start at 12 p.m.

For more information about the event, call Xenia City Clerk’s officer at 937-376-7235.

Reach Karen Rase at 937-502-4534.



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Trans athlete wins 2 girls events at California track and field finals | National

CLOVIS, Calif. (AP) — A transgender athlete bested the competition Saturday at the California high school track and field championship to take home gold in the girls high jump and the triple jump at a meet that has stirred controversy and drawn national attention. AB Hernandez competed under a new rule change that may be […]

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CLOVIS, Calif. (AP) — A transgender athlete bested the competition Saturday at the California high school track and field championship to take home gold in the girls high jump and the triple jump at a meet that has stirred controversy and drawn national attention.

AB Hernandez competed under a new rule change that may be the first of its kind nationally by a high school sports governing body. California’s governing body changed the rules ahead of the meet to allow more girls to compete and medal in events in which Hernandez competed.

Hernandez finished the high jump with a mark of 5 feet, 7 inches (1.7 meters), with no failed attempts. Co-winners Jillene Wetteland and Lelani Laruelle also cleared that height after each logged a failed attempt. The three shared the first-place win, smiling as they stepped together onto the podium.

Hernandez wrapped up the night with a first place finish in the triple jump, sharing the top spot with Kira Gant Hatcher who trailed by just over a half-meter. Earlier in the afternoon, Hernandez placed second in the long jump.

Olympians Marion Jones and Tara Davis-Woodhall previously set state championship records in the long jump in 1993 and 2017, respectively, both surpassing 22 feet (6.7 meters). This year’s winner, Loren Webster, topped 21 feet (6.40 meters), with Hernandez trailing by a few inches.

The California Interscholastic Federation announced the new policy earlier this week in response to Hernandez’s success heading into the championships. Under the policy, the federation allowed an additional student to compete and medal in the events where Hernandez qualified.

The two-day championship kicked off Friday in sweltering heat at a high school near Fresno. Temperatures reached the triple digits during Saturday’s finals.

The atmosphere was relatively quiet despite critics — including parents, conservative activists and President Donald Trump — calling for Hernandez to be barred from competing. Some critics wore pink bracelets and T-shirts that read, “Save Girls’ Sports.”

During Friday’s qualifying events, an aircraft circled above the stadium for more than an hour with a banner: “No Boys in Girls’ Sports!” Two groups that oppose transgender athletes participating in women’s sports — the Independent Council on Women’s Sports and Women Are Real — took credit for flying the banner.

California at center of national debate

The federation’s rule change reflected efforts to find a middle ground in the debate over trans girls’ participation in youth sports.

“The CIF values all of our student-athletes and we will continue to uphold our mission of providing students with the opportunity to belong, connect, and compete while complying with California law,” the group said in a statement after announcing its rule change.

A recent AP-NORC poll found that about 7 in 10 U.S. adults think transgender female athletes should not be allowed to participate in girls and women’s sports at the high school, college or professional level. That view was shared by about 9 in 10 Republicans and roughly half of Democrats.

The federation announced the change after Trump threatened to pull federal funding from California unless it bars trans female athletes from competing on girls teams. The federation said it decided on the change before then.

The U.S. Department of Justice also said it would investigate the federation and the district that includes Hernandez’s high school to determine whether they violated federal sex discrimination law.

California law allows trans students to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

The federation said the rule opens the field to more “biological female” athletes. One expert said the change may itself be discriminatory because it creates an extra spot for “biological female” athletes but not for other trans athletes.

The federation did not specify how it defines “biological female” or how it would verify whether a competitor meets that definition.

Sophia Lorey, outreach director with California Family Council, was among those at the stadium Saturday. She said the federation’s policy is not a fix for the issue and only ends up causing more confusion.

“At the end of the day,” Lorey said, “it shows the girls that we know this is wrong and we’re still letting it happen to you.”

Hernandez told the publication Capital & Main this month that she cannot worry about critics.

“I’m still a child, you’re an adult, and for you to act like a child shows how you are as a person,” she said.

Other students break records

California’s championship stands out from that of other states because of the sheer number of competitors. The state had the second-largest number of students participating in outdoor track and field in the nation during the 2023-2024 school year, behind Texas, according to a survey by the National Federation of State High School Associations.

The boys 100-meter heats also were a highlight, with junior Jaden Jefferson of De La Salle High School in Concord finishing in 10.01 seconds Friday, 0.19 seconds faster than a meet record set in 2023. But he fell just shy of making it count as a meet record with a final time of 10.27 seconds in Saturday’s final.

Athletes set new meet records in several events, including boys and girls relay races, hurdle competitions and the boys pole vault.


Associated Press writer Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed to this report.


Austin is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Austin on X: @sophieadanna





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