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High School Sports

Sunday's high school scores and highlights

ROUNDUP SOFTBALL Claire Puglielli tied the game with a double in the seventh then won it two innings with a sacrifice fly to give No. 11 Reading (19-2) a 4-3 win over No. 22 Doherty in a Div. 2 first-round contest. Ava Kiley scored all four runs for the Rockets. Kiley Hogan threw a no-hitter, […]

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Sunday's high school scores and highlights

ROUNDUP

SOFTBALL

Claire Puglielli tied the game with a double in the seventh then won it two innings with a sacrifice fly to give No. 11 Reading (19-2) a 4-3 win over No. 22 Doherty in a Div. 2 first-round contest. Ava Kiley scored all four runs for the Rockets.

Kiley Hogan threw a no-hitter, striking out 13 as No. 6 Tyngsboro (17-4) defeated No. 27 Rockland 12-0 in a Div. 4 first-round contest. Kristin Deschenes went 3-for-4 with a three-run homer to propel the offense.

Alivia Baldwin hit a three-run homer and Mia Rousseau pitched five shutout innings as No. 12 Andover (16-5) defeated Wellesley 3-1 in a Div. 1 opener. … Bella Silva drove in Mylee Ramer with the game-winning run in the last of the seventh to give No. 5 Bishop Feehan (17-5) a 5-4 win over No. 28 Peabody.

GIRLS LACROSSE

Kat Conover and Cat Colvin each scored four goals, while Ella Palmer and Sydney Trout chipped in with hat tricks to lead No. 7 Pentucket (16-5) to a 21-8 win over No. 26 Stoneham in a Div. 4 second-round contest. … Avery Laundry netted five goals and teammate Chloe Puzzo added four as No. 11 Swampscott (14-4) rolled to an 18-5 win over Hull. … Emily Regan and Aine Norton registered hat tricks as top-seeded Cohasset (18-2) defeated No. 33 Hoosac Valley, 20-3.

Cate Noone scored her 200th career goal as No. 5 Foxboro (14-5) defeated No. 28 Watertown 19-8 in a Div. 3 opener. … Jenna Braga and Abby Bradley had four goals apiece, while Cece Levrault and Jayleigh Howarth added hat tricks as No. 8 Apponequet (17-3) coasted to a 17-5 win over No. 25 Tewksbury.

BASEBALL

Cole Arruda went the distance as two-time defending Div. 4 state champion Seekonk (13-8) opened with a 5-2 win over No. 7 Upper Cape in an opening-round contest. … Ryan Amerault homered and drove in five runs as No. 4 St. John Paul (19-2) rolled to a 34-0 win over No. 29 Lunenburg.

Cam Hasenfus struck out seven and allowed three hits in six innings as No. 4 King Philip (18-4) blanked No. 36 Medford 9-0 in a Div. 1 first-round contest. Aiden Astorino and Drew Herlin each drove in a pair of runs for the Warriors.

Matty Taylor allowed two hits and struck out nine as No. 7 Sandwich (16-5) blanked No. 26 Dover-Sherborn 8-0 in a Div. 3 first-round game. James Lehane had two hits and an RBI for the Blue Knights. … Landon Cardoza allowed five hits in six innings as No. 5 Bishop Stang (14-5) blanked No. 28 Belchertown, 8-0. … Lucas Tremblay doubled in the tying and winning runs in the seventh as No. 16 Apponequet (11-10) defeated No. 17 Taconic, 5-4. … Jack Zimmerman struck out 13 and Michael DeMaino went 3-for-4 as top-seeded St. Mary’s (20-3) edged No. 33 Martha’s Vineyard, 3-2.

Ty Southall fanned six in six innings as No. 16 Georgetown (11-10) defeated No. 17 Lenox 3-1 in a Div. 5 first-round contest.

Jackson Buckland’s game-winning single in the eighth gave No. 17 Billerica (11-10)  a 4-3 win over 16th-seeded Hingham. Nolan Dawson went the distance for the Indians.

Ben Barrasso fired a 1.2 inning scoreless save while Phil Lombardi went 3-for-4 as No. 27 Tewksbury (12-12) upset sixth-seeded Auburn (17-3), 8-5, in the Division 3 Round of 32.

Anthony DiFranco and Joey Barletta each collected two hits for the Redmen who advance to the Round of 16

CLASS NOTES

Bedford athletic director Keith Mangan announced the hiring of Ru Sweeney as the school’s new girls soccer coach, while Scott Wilson takes over as the boys hoop coach. Sweeney previously served as head coach at Acton-Boxboro, while Wilson was an assistant at North Andover.

SCORES

BASEBALL

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Andover 7, Bridgewater-Raynham 5

Bishop Feehan 2, Boston Latin 0

Franklin 4, Durfee 1

King Philip 9, Medford 0

Leominster 2, Weymouth 0 (9 inn.)

St. John’s Prep 6, Newton South 0

Wachusett 3, Attleboro 2

Wellesley 12, North Quincy 5

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Catholic Memorial at Xaverian, 4

Lincoln-Sudbury at St. John’s (S), 4

Natick at Pope Francis, 4

Waltham at BC High, 4

Winchester at Taunton, 4

North Andover at Lawrence, 4:30

Shrewsbury at Chelmsford, 4:30

Springfield Central at Braintree, 5

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Billerica 4, Hingham 3 (8 inn.)

Bristol-Plymouth 5, Duxbury 1

Hopkinton 1, Whitman-Hanson 0

Mansfield 7, Marblehead 3

Woburn 3, Algonquin 1

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Bay Path at Plymouth North, 4

Longmeadow at Somerset Berkley, 4

Minnechaug at Walpole, 4

Masconomet at North Attleboro, 4

Melrose at Milton, 4

Oliver Ames vs. Dartmouth, 4 (NB)

Plymouth South at Westwood, 4

West Springfield at Reading, 4:15

Shepherd Hill at Canton, 4:30

Grafton at Middleboro, 6:30

Westfield at Milford, 7

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Apponequet 5, Taconic 4

Bishop Stang 8, Belchertown 0

Foxboro 3, Pentucket 2 (8 inn.)

Gloucester 1, North Middlesex 0

North Reading 8, Medfield 0

St. Mary’s 3, Martha’s Vineyard 2

Sandwich 8, Dover-Sherborn 0

Tewksbury 8, Auburn 5

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Fairhaven at Falmouth, 4

Greater New Bedford at Wakefield, 4

Holliston at Hanover, 4

Latin Academy at Dighton-Rehoboth, 4

Medway at Arlington Catholic, 4

Newburyport at Shawsheen, 4:30

Oakmont at Norwell, 4:30

Tantasqua at Weston, 6

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Clinton 9, Mashpee 0

Millbury 10, West Bridgewater 1

Northbridge 9, Rockland 3

St. John Paul 34, Lunenburg 0

Seekonk 5, Upper Cape 2

Stoneham 3, Abington 1

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Amesbury at Lynnfield, 2:30

Minuteman at Pittsfield, 3:30

Oxford at Uxbridge, 3:30

AMSA at Dennis-Yarmouth, 4

Cohasset at Case, 4

Monomoy at Monument Mountain, 4

Hampshire at East Bridgewater, 4:15

Blue Hills at Hamilton-Wenham, 4:30

Manchester-Essex vs. Salem, 4:30 (Salem State)

Old Colony at Frontier Regional, 5

DIVISION 5 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Bartlett 6, Sutton 5

Charlestown 6, Millis 3

English 16, Mt. Greylock 2

Georgetown 3, Lenox 1

Hopedale 13, Hull 4

Mt. Everett 10, Rockport 0

Ware 10, Easthampton 1

DIVISION 5 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Ayer Shirley at Greenfield, 3:30

Boston International at Westport, 3:45

Franklin Tech at Bromfield, 4

Maynard at Westfield Tech, 4

McCann at Athol, 4

Monson at Hopkins, 4

Mystic Valley at Carver, 4

Pathfinder at Drury, 5

West Boylston at Pioneer Valley, 6

BOYS LACROSSE

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

BC High 16, Attleboro 4

Concord-Carlisle 17, Boston Latin 4

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Acton-Boxboro 16, Belmont 4

Andover 16, Chelmsford 5

St. John’s Prep 19, Medford 1

Winchester 15, Shrewsbury 2

Wellesley 9, Wachusett 8

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Bishop Feehan 20, Barnstable 6

Catholic Memorial 14, Lexington 6

Central Catholic 9, St. John’s (Shrewsbury) 8 (ot)

Lincoln-Sudbury 19, Framingham 2

Needham 9, Arlington 5

Westford 18, Haverhill 4

Xaverian 18, Chelmsford 3

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Waltham at Franklin, 3:30

Newton North at Natick, 6

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Central Catholic at BC High, 6:30

Xaverian at Bishop Feehan, 7

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Catholic Memorial at Concord-Carlisle, 5

Wellesley at St. John’s Prep, 5

Winchester at Westford Academy, 7

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Natick/Newton North at Lincoln-Sudbury, 7

Needham at Andover, 7

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – TBA

Franklin/Waltham at Acton-Boxboro

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Reading 17, Marblehead 2

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Algonquin 9, Methuen 4

King Philip 9, Canton 6

Minnechaug 8, North Attleboro 7

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Duxbury 13, Milford 2

Walpole 16, Melrose 4

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Hingham 17, Plymouth North 7

Marshfield 17, Masconomet 4

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Silver Lake at Agawam, 4

Westborough at Sharon, 4

Bridgewater-Raynham at Mansfield, 5

Milton at Longmeadow, 5

West Springfield at Plymouth South, 5

Grafton at North Andover, 6

Tantasqua at Billerica, 6

Hopkinton at Westwood, 6:30

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Burlington 17, Foxboro 8

Dover-Sherborn 11, Bishop Stang 6

East Longmeadow 18, Northampton 2

Nashoba 15, Amherst-Pelham 1

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Arlington Catholic 14, Archbishop Williams 2

Scituate 18, Tewksbury 1

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Falmouth 18, St. John Paul 5

Hanover 12, Bedford 9

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Essex Tech at Dracut, 4

Monty Tech at Nauset, 4

North Middlesex at Holliston, 4

St. Mary’s at Medfield, 5

Groton-Dunstable at Newburyport, 5

Apponequet at Shawsheen, 6

Ashland at Wakefield, 6

Old Rochester at Pembroke, 6

DIVISION 4 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Friday

Hull 14, Granby 5

DIVISION 4 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Saturday

Old Colony 5, Stoneham 4

DIVISION 4 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Sunday

Dennis-Yarmouth 13, McCann 3

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Sandwich 13, Rockland 3

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Lynnfield 21, Bourne 9

Pentucket 17, South Shore 6

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Manchester-Essex 17, East Bridgewater 4

Oakmont 15, Bellingham 8

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Cohasset 17, Hull 0

North Reading 11, Medway 4

Winthrop 10, Tyngsboro 5

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Lenox at Nantucket, 1

Monomoy at Littleton, 4

Hoosac Valley at Nipmuc, 4:30

Fairhaven at Swampscott, 5

Dennis-Yarmouth at Norwell, 5

South Hadley at Ipswich, 5

AMSA at Abington, 6

Old Colony at Weston, 6

GIRLS LACROSSE

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

North Andover 15, Barnstable 4

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Andover 18, New Bedford 7

Belmont 12, Braintree 6

Bishop Feehan 11, Peabody 9

King Philip 17, Brookline 6

Westford Academy 13, Winchester 6

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Central Catholic 20, Natick 3

Chelmsford 20, Waltham 9

Lexington 18, Bridgewater-Raynham 10

Lincoln-Sudbury 22, Newton South 5

Needham 11, Acton-Boxboro 10

Newton North 16, Boston Latin 4

Shrewsbury 9, Beverly 8

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Wellesley 18, Attleboro 6

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Weymouth at Franklin, 2

Arlington at Concord-Carlisle, 5

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Billerica 12, Nashoba 7

Burlington 15, Marshfield 14

Duxbury 16, Shepherd Hill 3

Methuen 17, Hopkinton 9

Northampton 8, Westborough 7

Scituate 10, Algonquin 8

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

East Longmeadow 20, Norwood 2

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Hingham 19, Malden Catholic 3

Longmeadow 15, Mansfield 3

Melrose 16, Whitman-Hanson 3

Notre Dame (Hingham) 19, Westfield 4

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Tantasqua at Westwood, 4:30

Dartmouth at West Springfield, 5

Marblehead at Grafton, 6

Masconomet at Reading, 6

North Attleboro at Walpole, 7

DIVISION 3 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Thursday

Groton-Dunstable 12, Martha’s Vineyard 1

Shawsheen 12, St. Bernard’s 9

Watertown 15, Greater Lowell 1

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Dover-Sherborn 15, St. John Paul II 6

Nauset 17, Archbishop Williams 15

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Friday

North Middlesex 12, Bishop Stang 7

Old Rochester 11, Wakefield 6

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Cape Cod Academy 16, Medway 3

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Apponequet 17, Tewksbury 5

Ashland 14, Pembroke 7

Falmouth 16, Holliston 5

Foxboro 19, Watertown 8

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Wilmington at Bedford, 3:15

Dighton-Rehoboth at Ursuline, 4

St. Mary’s at Bishop Fenwick, 4

Chicopee at Wayland, 5

Essex Tech at Hanover, 6

Groton-Dunstable at Medfield, 7

Shawsheen at Newburyport, 7

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Ipswich 18, Old Colony 0

Sandwich 18, Dennis-Yarmouth 2

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Fairhaven 13, Lunenburg 8

Lynnfield 15, Oakmont 5

North Reading 16, Monomoy 7

Tyngsboro 21, Mashpee 9

Weston 16, Hopedale 5

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Manchester-Essex 17, Mt. Greylock 2

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Cohasset 20, South Hadley 3

Nipmuc 19, South Hadley 3

Pentucket 21, Stoneham 8

Swampscott 18, Hull 5

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Wahconah at Nantucket, 4

Seekonk at Norwell, 6:15

Bromfield at Littleton, 6:30

Rockland vs. Hamilton-Wenham, 7 (Gordon)

BOYS RUGBY

DIVISION 1 SEMIFINAL – Wednesday

Belmont at Xaverian, 6

DIVISION 1 SEMIFINAL – Thursday

Weymouth at BC High, 6

DIVISION 2 SEMIFINAL – Friday

Algonquin at Hanover, 5

DIVISION 2 SEMIFINAL – TBA

Chelmsford at Brookline

GIRLS RUGBY

DIVISION 1 SEMIFINAL – Tuesday

Brookline at Belmont, 6

DIVISION 1 SEMIFINAL – Wednesday

Weymouth at Lincoln-Sudbury, 5

SOFTBALL

DIVISION 1 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Thursday

Belmont 5, Diman 4

DIVISION 1 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Friday

Medford 13, Everett 0

DIVISION 1 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Sunday

Framingham 9, Revere 1

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Central Catholic 15, Lexington 0

Chelmsford 14, Shrewsbury 2

Marshfield 3, New Bedford 0

St. Paul 10, Concord-Carlisle 3

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Needham 6, Whittier 3

Newton North 9, North Andover 3

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Andover 3, Wellesley 1

Attleboro 12, Newton South 2

Bishop Feehan 5, Peabody 4

Bridgewater-Raynham 13, Acton-Boxboro 3

Franklin 22, Springfield Central 2

Wachusett 10, Medford 1

Weymouth 6, Beverly 2

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Framingham at King Philip, 3:45

Haverhill at Lincoln-Sudbury, 4:30

Belmont at Taunton, 6

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Marblehead 3, Leominster 0

Wakefield 10, North Attleboro 5

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Walpole 4, Mansfield 0

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Reading 4, Doherty 3 (9 inn.)

Tewksbury 12, Notre Dame (Hingham) 7

Westfield 12, Woburn 0

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Agawam at Plymouth South, 4

Milton at Silver Lake, 4

Oliver Ames at Bedford, 4

Whitman-Hanson at Westwood, 4

Norwood at Stoughton, 4:30

Somerset Berkley at East Longmeadow, 4:30

Duxbury at Milford, 5

Shepherd Hill at Hopkinton, 5

Hingham at Middleboro, 6:30

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Tuesday

Bristol-Plymouth at Malden Catholic, 4

DIVISION 3 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Sunday

Auburn 9, Pope Francis 2

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Archbishop Williams 7, Taconic 2

Monty Tech 8, Notre Dame (W) 6

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Medway 5, Cardinal Spellman 4

Seekonk 16, Danvers 2

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Bishop Fenwick 22, Hanover 14

Gloucester 5, Medfield 3

Norton 6, Blackstone Valley 0

Pentucket 4, Greater Lawrence 1

St. Mary’s 10, Dedham 0

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Wilmington at Nipmuc, 3:30

Essex Tech at Dighton-Rehoboth, 4

Fontbonne at Tantasqua, 4

Pope Francis at Tri-County, 4

Triton at Greater New Bedford, 4

Worcester Tech at Apponequet, 4

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Tuesday

Hudson at Foxboro, 4

DIVISION 4 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Thursday

Amesbury 8, Minuteman 0

Rockland 12, Cristo Rey Boston 0

West Bridgewater 6, Old Colony 5

DIVISION 4 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Friday

Blue Hills 4, Southwick 1

Sutton 16, Randolph 2

Upper Cape 11, St. Bernard’s 6

DIVISION 4 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Sunday

Manchester-Essex 5, Foxboro Regional Charter 0

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Lynnfield 5, Oxford 4

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

AMSA 16, Blue Hills 1

Douglas 10, Lunenburg 5

Tyngsboro 12, Rockland 0 (5 inn.)

Uxbridge 13, West Bridgewater 1

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Monomoy at Pittsfield, 3:30

Amesbury at Case, 4

Ayer Shirley at Frontier Regional, 4

Bellingham at Clinton, 4

Cohasset at Gardner, 4

Manchester-Essex at Abington, 4

Sutton at East Bridgewater, 4

Monument Mountain at Millbury, 4:30

Upper Cape at Hampshire, 4:30

Northbridge at South Hadley, 5

Littleton at Wahconah, 6:30

DIVISION 5 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Thursday

Mohawk Trail 23, Boston Collegiate Charter 1

DIVISION 5 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Friday

Academy of Notre Dame 19, Norfolk Aggie 4

Bartlett 24, Kennedy Academy 0

Lee 5, Muniz 0

Pathfinder 22, Neighborhood House 0

Springfield International 11, Excel 1

Sturgis East 5, Mystic Valley 2

Westport 23, English 0

DIVISION 5 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Saturday

Rising Tide 6, Bromfield 3 (8 inn.)

Whitinsville Christian 25, TechBoston 7

DIVISION 5 PRELIMINARY ROUND – Sunday

Pioneer Valley Regional 24, Madison Park 4

DIVISION 5 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Tahanto 9, Granby 0

DIVISION 5 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Millis 11, Mt. Greylock 9

Wareham 19, Ware 8

DIVISION 5 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Georgetown 12, Springfield International 3

Hopedale 8, Academy of Notre Dame 3

Hopkins 13, Pathfinder 3

Lenox 3, Lee 2

Maynard 16, Mohawk Trial 1

West Boylston 12, Bartlett 0

DIVISION 5 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Westport at Hoosac Valley, 3:30

David Prouty at McCann, 4

Drury at Monson, 4

Pioneer Valley at Narragansett, 4

Sturgis East at Greenfield, 4

Whitinsville Christian at Franklin Tech, 5

Rising Tide at Turners Falls, 5:30

BOYS TENNIS

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Belmont at St. John’s Prep, 3:30

Newton South vs. Brookline, 4 (Waldstein)

Shrewsbury vs. Needham, 4:15 (Newman)

Westford Academy at Newton North, 4:30

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

St. John’s (Shrewsbury) at Concord-Carlisle, 4

Wellesley at Lexington, 4

Winchester at BC High, 4:30

Andover at Acton-Boxboro, 6

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Longmeadow 3, Canton 2

Marblehead 3, Algonquin 2

Westborough 5, Reading 0

Westwood 4, Oliver Ames 1

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Burlington 4, Northampton 1

Hopkinton 5, Whitman-Hanson 0

Mansfield 3, Masconomet 2

North Attleboro 4, Somerset Berkley 1

North Quincy 4, Plymouth South 1

Scituate 4, Melrose 1

Sharon 5, Malden Catholic 0

Wayland 5, Milford 0

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Duxbury 5, Billerica 0

Hingham 5, Somerville 0

Walpole 3, Grafton 2

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Sunday

Duxbury 5, Marblehead 0

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Longmeadow at Hopkinton, 3:30

Plymouth North at Dartmouth, 3:30

North Attleboro at Scituate, 4

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Burlington at Hingham, 3:45

Westwood at Wayland, 4

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Mansfield at Westborough, 4

Walpole at North Quincy, 4:30

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – TBA

Plymouth North/Dartmouth at Sharon

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Medway at Cape Cod Academy, 2:30

Groton-Dunstable at Martha’s Vineyard, 3

Latin Academy vs. Apponequet, 4 (SB)

Old Rochester at Bedford, 4

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Wakefield vs. Medfield, 2 (Medway Middle)

North Reading at Weston, 3

Falmouth at Holliston, 4

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Dover-Sherborn vs. Newburyport, 4 (Pentucket)

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Nantucket at Lynnfield, 1:30

Hamilton-Wenham at Sutton, 4

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Bromfield vs. Manchester-Essex, 3:30 (Gloucester)

Sandwich vs. Fairhaven, 3:45 (Hastings)

Bourne vs. Monomoy, 4 (Brooks)

Falmouth Academy vs. Cohasset, 4 (Milliken)

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – TBA

Lenox at Sturgis West

Pioneer Valley Chinese Immersion at Mystic Valley

GIRLS TENNIS

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Acton-Boxboro 5, Wachusett 0

Bishop Feehan 5, Bridgewater-Raynham 0

Concord-Carlisle 4, Algonquin 1

Lexington 5, Methuen 0

Lincoln-Sudbury 5, Plymouth North 0

Natick 5, Shrewsbury 0

Needham 5, Central Catholic 0

Winchester 5, King Philip 0

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Franklin 3, Hopkinton 2

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Andover 3, Brookline 2

Arlington 3, Waltham 2

Boston Latin 5, Beverly 0

Newton North 4, Belmont 1

Newton South 5, Cambridge 0

Wellesley 5, Malden 0

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Westford Academy 5, Framingham 0

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Franklin at Wellesley, 4

Needham vs. Winchester, 4:15 (Spy Pond)

Natick at Newton South, 4:30

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Newton North vs. Boston Latin, 3 (Carter)

Bishop Feehan at Lincoln-Sudbury, 4

Concord-Carlisle at Lexington, 4

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Arlington vs. Westford Academy, 4:15 (Robinson)

Andover at Acton-Boxboro, 4:30

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Tuesday

Canton 3, Ludlow 2

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Oliver Ames 3, Holliston 2

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Duxbury 5, Burlington 0

Marblehead 3, Masconomet 2

Milton 5, West Springfield 0

Sharon 3, Bishop Stang 2

Ursuline 3, Scituate 2

Wayland 5, Melrose 0

Westborough 4, Minnechaug 1

Westwood 4, Dartmouth 1

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Amherst-Pelham 5, Westfield 0

Bedford 4, East Longmeadow 1

Hingham 5, Stoughton 0

Longmeadow 5, Somerset Berkley 0

Plymouth South at North Attleboro, 3:45

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Notre Dame (Hingham) 5, Reading 0

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Duxbury at North Attleboro, 3

Oliver Ames at Westborough, 3:30

Marblehead at Wayland, 4

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Bedford at Longmeadow, 3:30

Ursuline at Hingham, 4

Westwood at Milton, 4

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Canton at Notre Dame (Hingham), 4

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – TBA

Sharon at Amherst-Pelham

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Belchertown 4, Whitinsville Christian 1

Danvers 4, North Reading 1

Hanover 4, Dedham 1

Medfield 4, Foxboro 1

Medway 4, Watertown 1

Wilmington 5, Pembroke 0

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Bishop Fenwick 3, Norwell 2

St. John Paul II 5, Academy Notre Dame (T) 0

Swampscott 5, Nauset 0

Weston 5, Cape Cod Academy 0

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Apponequet 5, Tewksbury 0

Dover-Sherborn 5, Wareham 0

Latin Academy 5, Falmouth 0

Newburyport 5, Sandwich 0

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Martha’s Vineyard 4, Seekonk 1

DIVISION 3 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Old Rochester 4, Auburn 1

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – Sunday

St. John Paul 3, Medway 2

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Medfield at Wilmington, 4

Swampscott at Dover-Sherborn, 4

Bishop Fenwick at Belchertown, 5

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Latin Academy at Martha’s Vineyard, 3

Weston at Hanover, 4

DIVISION 3 SECOND ROUND – TBA

Apponequet at Newburyport

Danvers at Old Rochester

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Tuesday

Bourne 4, Mt. Greylock 1

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Amesbury 3, Mashpee 2

Cohasset 5, Hampden Charter 0

Lenox 3, Frontier 2

Lynnfield 5, Uxbridge 0

Millis 5, Lee 0

Monomoy 5, Tyngsboro 0

Quaboag 4, Quabbin 1

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

AMSA 5, Pioneer Valley Chinese Immersion 0

Bromfield 3, Blackston-Millville 0

Hamilton-Wenham 5, Rising Tide 0

Ipswich 5, Hopedale 0

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Palmer 3, Sturgis East 2

Sutton 5, Case 0

DIVISION 4 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Manchester-Essex 4, Rockport 1

Nantucket 4, Randolph 1

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – Friday

Lynnfield 5, Bourne 0

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Lenox vs. Cohasset, 4 (Milliken)

Manchester-Essex vs. Amesbury, 4 (Gloucester)

Millis vs. Hamilton-Wenham, 4 (Pingree)

Sutton at Ipswich, 4

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Quaboag at Bromfield, 4

DIVISION 4 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Palmer vs. Monomoy, 3:30 (Brooks)

AMSA vs. Nantucket, 4 (Backus)

VOLLEYBALL

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Weymouth 3, Wellesley 1

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Lowell 3, Boston Latin 0

Milford 3, Chelmsford 1

Newton South 3, St John’s Prep 2

St. John’s (Shrewsbury) 3, Springfield Central 2

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Acton-Boxboro 3, Brockton 0

Braintree 3, Arlington 1

Brookline 3, Greater New Bedford 0

Lexington 3, Medford 0

New Bedford 3, BC High 1

Newton North 3, Revere 0

Winchester 3, Methuen 2

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Barnstable 3, Cambridge 1

Needham 3, Woburn 1

Taunton 3, Nipmuc 1

DIVISION 1 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Natick 3, Andover 0

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Barnstable at St. John’s (S), 6

Acton-Boxboro at Braintree, 6:30

DIVISION 1 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

New Bedford at Newton North, 4:30

Weymouth at Lexington, 5:30

Lowell at Needham, 5

Winchester at Natick, 5:30

Newton South at Brookline, 6

Taunton at Milford, 6

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Wednesday

Pioneer Valley Christian 3, Millis 0

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Thursday

Greater Lowell 3, Somerville 1

Medfield 3, O’Bryant 1

Southwick 3, South 1

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Friday

Bellingham 3, Doherty 1

Fitchburg 3, HS Science/Technology 2

Lynn Classical 3, Norton 2

Wayland 3, Assabet Valley 0

West Springfield 3, Billerica 0

Minnechaug at East Longmeadow, 6

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Saturday

Chicopee Comp. 3, Frontier Regional 0

Longmeadow 3, Randolph 0

Westfield 3, Granby 0

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Sunday

Agawam 3, Springfield International 0

DIVISION 2 FIRST ROUND – Monday

Milton at Latin Academy, 4

University Park at Marlborough, 4:30

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Monday

Medfield at Longmeadow, 5

Greater Lowell at Wayland, 6

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Tuesday

Pioneer Valley Christian at Westfield, 4

Fitchburg at Chicopee Comp., 5:30

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – Wednesday

Lynn Classical at West Springfield, 5

DIVISION 2 SECOND ROUND – TBA

Bellingham at Agawam

Milton/Latin Academy at East Longmeadow

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High school highlights for Monday, Aug. 18, 2025

GIRLS TENNIS NON-CONFERENCE • Lucy Beckman and Addison Ahrens won in three sets at No. 3 doubles, helping Lake City to a 4-3 win over John Marshall in non-conference action. Lake City No. 3 singles player Bauer Gemma also prevailed in three sets. ADVERTISEMENT By Staff reports Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline […]

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High school highlights for Monday, Aug. 18, 2025

GIRLS TENNIS

NON-CONFERENCE

Lucy Beckman and Addison Ahrens won in three sets at No. 3 doubles, helping Lake City to a 4-3 win over John Marshall in non-conference action. Lake City No. 3 singles player Bauer Gemma also prevailed in three sets.

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Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.

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Redwood Area Arts highlights four photographers

Ava LundEditor Redwood Area Arts hosted a photography exhibit and artist reception on Thursday, Aug. 14 where four photographers shared examples of their work. Photographers… Featured Local Savings 2

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Redwood Area Arts highlights four photographers

Ava LundEditor Redwood Area Arts hosted a photography exhibit and artist reception on Thursday, Aug. 14 where four photographers shared examples of their work. Photographers…


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BYU sports vs. LDS Church leader

Provo • When Tanner Wall grew up in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., his weekends fell into a familiar rhythm. He would play his games on Friday, watch BYU on Saturday and pile into the church pews on Sunday. His uncle, J.R. Thulin, played offensive line for the Cougars’ football team and his aunt, Brooke […]

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BYU sports vs. LDS Church leader

Provo • When Tanner Wall grew up in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., his weekends fell into a familiar rhythm.

He would play his games on Friday, watch BYU on Saturday and pile into the church pews on Sunday. His uncle, J.R. Thulin, played offensive line for the Cougars’ football team and his aunt, Brooke Thulin, was a midfielder on the soccer team. Wall dreamed of following in their footsteps one day, mixing faith and athletics at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ flagship school.

Meanwhile, he watched his favorite team punch above its weight class every weekend. It was part of the charm of BYU fandom — rooting for the plucky school that could spring an upset, flash on the national scene, but never really blossom into a behemoth. Fans understood: Faith came first in Provo, and BYU would never spend like Alabama or Texas.

Wall took pride in it, vowing one day to join BYU’s fight. But that fight looks different these days.

“I can remember some of the one-off times. Like Jimmer [Fredette] and [four-star quarterback] Jake Heaps coming to BYU. But national success was never consistent,” said Wall, now a captain on BYU’s defense. “Now it has grown so much. And I think the more success that we have, the more attention it brings to the school and the church. It’s great.”

Not everyone in Provo feels that way, though.

Seemingly overnight, the perception of BYU athletics has changed. Since joining the Big 12, the Cougars have signed head football coach Kalani Sitake to a lucrative extension and put together enough money to reel in a potential NBA head coach, Kevin Young, to lead the hoops program. BYU’s total athletics budget has more than doubled since 2020.

(Tyler Tate | AP) Anicet “AJ” Dybantsa Jr., the number one player in the 2025 class and BYU commit, stands with the fans during the second half of an NCAA basketball game between BYU and West Virginia Saturday, March 1, 2025, in Provo, Utah.

In the past year alone, the donor base has pooled millions to sign some of the best recruits in the country. Potential top NBA draft pick AJ Dybantsa picked BYU over Kansas, North Carolina and Alabama for a reported sum of $4.5 million. That was followed by five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons choosing the Cougars over powerhouses USC and Oregon. The teenager, who is about to serve a one-year mission for his church, will reportedly make $3 million before ever playing a snap.

BYU made its name as a scrappy underdog playing for a higher power and adhering to different standards. Now it’s a program expected to make runs to the Final Four and College Football Playoff.

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Brigham Young Cougars fans celebrate with Brigham Young Cougars safety Tanner Wall (28) after the game between the Utah Utes and the Brigham Young Cougars at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Sunday, Nov. 10, 2024.

It has led some to ask the uncomfortable question: Is this modern version of Cougar athletics at odds with BYU’s mission?

“There’re two seemingly incongruous principles at play here,” said Matt Harris, a history professor and a leading Latter-day Saint expert at Colorado State University Pueblo. “One is they have this spiritual and religious mission they want to uphold. On the other hand, they want to compete in the Big 12. I do not see those as congruent.”

Standing for something more

The church’s commissioner of education Clark Gilbert, who, as a general authority Seventy, is one of the highest-ranking Latter-day Saints, had a similar upbringing to Wall in at least one way: He grew up rooting for his faith’s school every Saturday.

“Somehow on the weekends when BYU was winning all those games, it said to me that I’m part of something special. My faith isn’t something so strange and so weird that we can’t perform,” Gilbert said last October on the “Y’s Guys” podcast. “They stand for something more.”

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Clark Gilbert speaks at the J. Reuben Clark Law Society 2025 Annual Fireside.

But after BYU jumped out to a 7-0 start in football last season, the general authority drew a clear line in the sand for BYU athletics. While he was happy the school was winning, he said, the church would never allow athletic success to distract from BYU’s true mission. That’s “helping people find Jesus Christ and his gospel,” BYU’s athletics department said.

“Winning expands the platform,” Gilbert acknowledged. “But here is the tension. The temptation is, if winning will do this, then we need to win at all costs. And that is what we have to preserve against. We want them to succeed, but there are a lot of pressures put on college athletics today. And it can be very tempting to become just like another college team and think the ends justify the means. BYU has to stand alone, and if we don’t, people will say ‘BYU who?’”

So he laid out boundaries to keep the university from “drifting away” from its bedrock principles. BYU would never pay coaches at the highest level or be the highest bidder on a player, he said. Athletes at BYU would always reflect the values of the church, whether that meant speaking at fireside chats or serving on mission trips.

More than anything, he said, the church would never let BYU be known as a “pay for play” school. Otherwise, Gilbert said, “this investment is hard to justify.”

“I hear people say, ‘We have to be like Texas and Alabama, more money, more facilities, higher payment. We have to catch up.’ And that is wrong,” Gilbert said. “We can never become a ‘pay for play’ culture. We would undermine everything at BYU if that comes out. It is tempting to buy one player at a time. If they don’t fit the mission, it would unravel everything.”

But the perception hasn’t always matched that ideal.

People around the college landscape view the Cougars as major spenders; BYU made a CBS list of the top three deepest-pocketed basketball programs right after national powerhouse Kansas and ahead of Kentucky.

The night Young was hired, he told The Salt Lake Tribune, “This place wants to win, and it has the [financial] backing to do it.”

He’s been right so far.

In basketball, BYU put together its best recruiting class in program history, thanks to a roster that costs more than $15 million. The prized recruit, Dybantsa, is set to make more than $4.5 million, CBS reported. BYU’s financial offer was enough to make even Kansas blush.

“Traditional powerhouses like the Kansas Jayhawks, which initially pursued Dybantsa, appear to be opting out of this bidding war,” Sports Illustrated reported.

(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Brigham Young Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) celebrates a 74-65 win over San Diego State, NCAA basketball in Provo on Friday, Nov. 10, 2023.

It wasn’t just Dybantsa. The Cougars poached Baylor guard Rob Wright III for a large name, image and likeness (NIL) payday, frustrating his old coach. Returning star Richie Saunders commanded a big paycheck, enough to delay his pursuit of playing in the NBA.

It led one BYU donor to boast to ESPN last February that “you’re not going to outbid us.”

School officials have since tried to walk that back, saying the booster spoke out of line.

“We will never lead out with money, and we won’t bring in recruits who are just searching for the highest bid. But we will be competitive in NIL and revenue share, to help bring in recruits who fit here and value the unique culture here,” BYU athletics said in a statement.

But the financial commitment is undoubtedly there.

The Athletic reported the average Big 12 basketball roster is worth $12.8 million. BYU’s men’s basketball payroll is widely expected to be above that.

On the football side, Sitake has also put together an unprecedented recruiting run. Lyons was the highest-rated recruit to commit to BYU in a decade. BYU also nabbed four four-star recruits and currently has a recruiting class ranked higher than Ole Miss, Texas Tech and other heavy spenders.

While BYU officials declined to be interviewed for this story, Cougars athletic director Brian Santiago has spoken proudly about the school’s new era.

“We’re going to be excellent. We’re going to be passionate about being nationally relevant,” he said. “In this world of college athletics, it’s imperative that we chase greatness. So, we’re not shying away from it.”

To some, that clearly fits with the school’s mission.

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Brigham Young Cougars sing with their fans after the loss against the Kansas Jayhawks in Provo on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024.

“I really do feel that BYU athletics, after probably our missionary program, is one of the biggest assets for the church, as far as exposure to the gospel of Jesus Christ,” said Wall, the BYU football captain who served a two-year mission in Brazil for the church before enrolling in Provo. “The more success we have, and the more we are in the spotlight, the athletes do a great job deflecting that back to BYU and back to Jesus Christ.”

Wall also believes BYU paying high-profile, non-Latter-day Saints is a positive. Former BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff, a Jewish athlete, and former basketball player Egor Demin, a Russian point guard now in the NBA, help to normalize the church to various audiences, Wall said, even if the backbone of the program is still return missionaries like himself. (BYU says 56 players on this year’s roster have served church missions.)

“It brings people’s guard down a little bit,” he said. “There’s a lot of tension about the church. So when they see normal, everyday people, or even people they might look up to as athletes, go to BYU, it’s like, ‘Oh, OK. These are great people who believe in God, believe in Jesus Christ.’”

In a statement, the BYU athletics department said its spiritual mission is “greatly enhanced when our influence is expanded” through winning teams and high-profile players. It added it needs “to be competitive” in NIL to do that.

“BYU is not a faith-based institution in name only. Our student-athletes are asked to do some different things here. The honor code asks a lot,” BYU athletics said. “All of our student-athletes are required to take religion classes as part of our curriculum. The impact of missionary service cannot be overstated. Service projects, devotionals, firesides and coaching staffs who are asked to live their religion earnestly and faithfully are all examples of ways that make BYU athletics a distinctive experience.”

Others remain skeptical.

Feeling a disconnect

Marc Buchanan, a lifelong BYU fan, is among those looking at BYU’s ascent with a side eye.

“I want to be competitive. I want to have a team to cheer for. But I also love what was special and unique about BYU. They were different, right?” he said. “If we hold ourselves up as being different, then we need to back that up and not play into becoming a football and basketball factory. There’s teams [that do that] if I want to cheer for Alabama. That’s out there for me.”

And that is the disconnect, according to scholars like Harris. The main goal of Alabama’s teams, after all, is to win. BYU’s athletic teams, at least on paper, largely exist to promote the faith, he said. As Gilbert said last year, “If it ever came down to the only way we stay [competitive] is to walk away from our values, that would be the end of BYU athletics.”

Harris said he is still struggling to understand how faith meshes with the money being spent on sports.

“They’re paying millions of dollars, and that changes the equation,” he said. “It’s just the perception. This is such a spiritual university, its mission. And all of a sudden now we’ve turned into a program that’s paying these kids, making these kids millionaires, right? How is this maintaining the spiritual mission of the university?”

Gilbert has heard these questions in his own dealings. “I have others who say, ‘We are the church of Jesus Christ on earth. We care about repentance and the gospel. We are helping poor people around the world. How can we be spending this much money on a game?” the education commissioner said.

Harris isn’t satisfied with BYU’s answers so far.

“They haven’t been able to articulate, in my opinion, a coherent vision of how all of this relates to their religious and spiritual mission,” he said. “One of the contradictions was, we’re competitive. We’re in this to win. Then in the next breath, they are saying‚ ‘We’re not spending nearly as much as other people.’ I’m just like, ‘Guys, you’re already in the water, own it.’”

Added Buchanan, the BYU fan: “Maybe we’re not number one for the bidder. But it’s millions of dollars, and it feels like a disconnect to me.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) LaVell Edwards Stadium, BYU football in Provo on Saturday August 31, 2024.

Gilbert alluded to his disconnect last year, saying he would rather see BYU field average teams that hold true to the school’s mission rather than excellent teams “if the team doesn’t reflect the values of the church.”

Harris was thinking about how much the landscape has changed in recent years. When BYU got into the Big 12 conference, there was no NIL money or revenue sharing.

In his mind, BYU went into the Big 12 thinking it could operate the same way it always did and adhere to its traditional approach.

“Then the rug got ripped out from under BYU. They’re now in one of the world’s most competitive conferences, and they have to pony up all this money to compete. That something they were not expecting,” Harris said. “Now they’re scrambling to figure out how all of this money going out is compatible with the school’s mission.”

Sometimes he wonders, “Would they have bolted for the Big 12 after NIL was announced? Because they know if they’re going to be in this conference, they’ve got to pay the money out.”

Buchanan had similar thoughts.

“To me being a fan of BYU was always, ‘We’re going to be competitive, probably not going to win a national title.’ And now it seems like that’s shifted, where a lot of our chips are in on being competitive,” he said. “And is that really going to fill the mission? I don’t think so, personally.”

Buchanan joked that when he was a freshman at BYU, he would have answered differently. But now he has a daughter going to the school, and that mission is important to him.

He knows, along with many, that BYU isn’t likely to slow down on its path to athletic success anytime soon.

Note to readers • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.

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Fland on Brand in Working Back to Health

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – After watching his guys Euro-step through dummies and toss in a flurry of floaters, Taurean Green called for an extended 3-point shooting drill. For the next 25 minutes, sophomore Boogie Fland and freshman CJ Ingram launched long balls, with Fland, the combo guard, dropping 14 of 15 in one late stretch before Green […]

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Fland on Brand in Working Back to Health

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – After watching his guys Euro-step through dummies and toss in a flurry of floaters, Taurean Green called for an extended 3-point shooting drill. For the next 25 minutes, sophomore Boogie Fland and freshman CJ Ingram launched long balls, with Fland, the combo guard, dropping 14 of 15 in one late stretch before Green wrapped the session.
 
“Feeling good,” Fland nodded as he left the floor Friday. “Oh yeah.” 
 
Green, the Florida assistant coach and director of player development, flashed a smile.  
 
“He’s getting there,” Green grinned. 
 
There means healthy. For now, that’s the goal. Period. The basketball package is in place. No one will doubt that. But for Fland, the 6-foot-2, 184-pound combo guard and projected heir to first-team All American, Final Four Most Outstanding Player and NCAA champion Walter Clayton Jr. as the Gators’ PG1, the 2025-26 season is about feeling whole for the first time in his brief collegiate career. 
 
Fland, who just turned 19 last month, came to UF through the transfer portal and via Southeastern Conference rival Arkansas, where a year ago he was a heralded freshman and – out of New York City – one of the top play-making prospects in the country. The only point guards ranked ahead of Fland in his recruiting class were Dylan Harper (Rutgers) and Egor Demin (Brigham Young), both of whom had outstanding statistical freshman seasons and were selected second and eighth, respectively, in the 2025 NBA Draft. 
 
A similar one-and-done trajectory was Fland’s plan, but he arrived at Arkansas last summer with a tender hernia that he eventually (with input from team doctors) chose to play through. That was quite the task for a guy who thrived on explosiveness and elite speed, but Fland made due. Then came a thumb injury early in SEC play, half a season on the sidelines, a return to action in the NCAA Tournament and, eventually, a change of scenery. 
 
Now, it’s about a new season, new challenge and new team – at 100 percent. Hernia surgery was seven weeks ago. Fland has been on the floor for workouts for two weeks. He’s been a regular in the weight room in an effort to put on more muscle (13 pounds, so far). He’s on schedule to be cleared for the start preseason drills, which start Thursday, the first day of UF fall semester classes. 


(From @BoogieFland YouTube channel)

“I’ve always kind of played through stuff. You want to be tough,” said Fland, who in May pulled out of the NBA evaluation process to become a last-minute – and highly coveted – addition to the transfer portal. “So, I just feel like, this year, if I can start healthy and stay healthy and do everything to prevent those injuries – from being in the training room, investing in my body and believing in everything we’re doing here – that it will make a big difference. And I believe I am invested in everything we’re trying to do here.”
 
The feeling is mutual. 
 
“He’s definitely a great NBA prospect, and a guy that I anticipate not being on this campus for a long time,” UF coach Todd Golden said of a player whose game scouts have likened to NBA stars Darius Garland and Tyrese Maxey. “If he has a good year next [season], I would anticipate him moving on, which is awesome, and my hope is that we can help him get to that goal.”
 
The Gators, in looking to fill the voids left by Clayton and his remarkable perimeter mates, Alijah Martin and Will Richard, got a good one out of the portal early in Princeton’s Xaivian Lee, a first-team All-Ivy League selection. With a plan in place to move forward Thomas Haugh out to Richard’s wing spot, the roster appeared set, but then senior guard Denzel Aberdeen, set to take over at the point, surprised the UF coaches and bolted for Kentucky, thus leaving a huge hole on the ball. 
 
On that front, the addition of Fland was an orange and blue windfall. He’s the first former McDonald’s All American to join the program since Scottie Lewis and Tre Mann in 2019. He is one of only consensus two top-20 prep prospects (along with Lewis) to come to Florida since Billy Donovan bolted to coach in the NBA. 
 
“I thought he was a bucket when I first saw him in high school. A guy who was shooting a ton of 3s and attacking the basket,” said Florida associate head coach Korey McCray, who tutors the backcourt players. “But he’s become such a complete guard; score, shoot, pass, facilitate, smart and one of the best assist-to-turnover guys in the SEC last year. He’s just very talented … and really, really fast.” 
 
Johnuel Fland loved to dance as a toddler. So much that his mother nicknamed him “Boogie.” It stuck. So did his moves, the shaking and baking of which translated to the courts in the Bronx, New York, where Fland led Archbishop Stepinac to consecutive Catholic High School Association titles as a junior and senior and was named Most Valuable Player of the finals in both years. As a senior, he averaged 19.2 points, 6.5 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 2.4 steals per game. Fland originally signed early with Kentucky, but backed out when John Calipari made the stunning jump to Arkansas after the ’23-24 season. Fland was one of five current or incoming Wildcats who followed “Coach Cal” to Fayetteville.

At full strength, Boogie Fland figures to be one fastest players in college basketball, which will make him a perfect fit in the Florida system that puts a premium on tempo.

Despite dealing with some discomfort from the hernia, Fland was averaging 15.5 points, 5.9 assists and 3.6 rebounds when he injured his thumb Jan. 11 in a 71-63 home loss to the Gators. He had 15 points, four assists and played through the pain that game, as well as two games after that, before undergoing surgery 10 days later. He missed 15 games before returning for the NCAA Tournament, starting with an upset of 7-seed Kansas, but a rusty Fland managed just 12 points on 4-for-18 shooting over his three tournament games, including an overtime loss to Texas Tech in the Sweet 16. 
 
“It was a season filled with ups and downs. I loved my teammates, but trust, I think, was something we kind of lacked, but we pushed through,” Fland said. “When I got back [from the injury], everybody was playing their best, so I wasn’t looking to fill a greater role. I just wanted to fit in the best I could. It ended up being a rewarding season and I feel like everybody took something from it, as far as life’s lessons. For me, I did a lot of self-evaluation.”
 
The mirror-gazing lasted through his flirtation with the NBA — feedback was luke warm — and into his time in the portal. The Razorbacks wanted their point guard back, but Golden and his coaches hit a home run in their meeting with Fland and laid out their vision for his role on the defending national champions. He committed on his official visit.

Boogie Fland averaged 13.5 points on 38% shooting (34% from 3) during his freshman season at Arkansas, but finished second in the SEC in assist-to-turnover ratio (3.7). 

In landing both Fland and Lee, the Gators plan on rolling out a starting backcourt of two highly skilled and talented scorers, both known for their unselfishness. Over the last seven seasons, only one UF player (Andrew Nembhard in 2019-20) has averaged at least five assists. Both Fland and Lee averaged five-plus assists in ’24-25. Lee ranked 19th nationally in assist rate (36.8 percent), while Fland was 59th (30.6 percent), with an assist-to-turnover ratio of 3.7 that was 14th nationally and second in the SEC. 
 
Though a gifted scorer, Fland loves distributing the ball. Especially in transition. 
 
“I want everybody around me to smile. I thrive off that,” Fland said. “If everybody is having fun that means I’m doing my job.”
 
Figuring out how two high-usage combo guards can play together and off one another – while playing with the best and most experienced returning front court in the country, by the way – will be a challenging (and fascinating) task for the coaching staff in the run-up to the season. 
 
The ’24-25 Gators, remember, finished No. 2 in the nation in offensive efficiency on the way to averaging 84.8 points per game. The UF offense will not deviate far from its principles of playing through two bigs (and ball-screening defenders to death), but things are going to look different with Haugh at the “3” and crashing the glass. 

Golden, ever the believer, is confident the new pieces will fall into place.

“I see it working really, really well. I’m excited about it,” Golden said. “When you have two point guards that are out there making plays, I think it makes your offense really dynamic. So, we’re excited. I think you can have both those guys start the offense. They’re both going to have the ball in their hands a ton, being able to play out of the ball screen, being able to push in transition. They’re weapons that teams are going to have to account for.”

Ideally, sophomore guard Boogie Fland, currently 183 pounds, will build his strength and play at around 190 pounds this season. 

First things first: Fland needs to feel great; the best he has since leaving the Bronx.

He’s getting there.
 
And just in time to step into a situation of sky-high expectations, both for the program (as defending champion, there’s only one way to go) and for Fland (who was pegged to be in the NBA by now).
 
“I feel like that’s all stuff that comes with it. I feel like everybody knows the deal, especially coming to a place where the standard is high,” Fland said. “The goal has to be to go higher. That’s what we have to do and what I’m ready to do. You want those expectations. You want that pressure. That’s why you play the game of basketball, that’s why you love the game and everything that comes with it. You have to go out and perform.”
 
Email senior writer Chris Harry at chrish@gators.ufl.edu

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Brian Stuard Announced as 2025 Inductee in Jackson Golf Hall of Fame

Brian Stuard competes in the 2022 PGA Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club.  JTV Sports file photo. (August 18, 2025 10:34 AM ET) Brian Stuard, just the fourth Jackson golfer to reach and succeed at the game’s highest competitive level, is this year’s inductee into the Jackson Golf Hall of Fame. Stuard will become […]

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Brian Stuard Announced as 2025 Inductee in Jackson Golf Hall of Fame

Brian Stuard competes in the 2022 PGA Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club.  JTV Sports file photo.

(August 18, 2025 10:34 AM ET) Brian Stuard, just the fourth Jackson golfer to reach and succeed at the game’s highest competitive level, is this year’s inductee into the Jackson Golf Hall of Fame.

Stuard will become the 73rd member of the hall when he is inducted in ceremonies at 1:30 p.m. Sept. 21 at Sharp Park Golf Course. The public is invited to the induction ceremony at no charge.

“Brian Stuard is an example of what can be achieved with hard work and dedication,” Hall of Fame committee chair Elaine Crosby said. “His success on the PGA Tour was an inspiration to golfers in Jackson, who certainly enjoyed following Brian’s career. There is no question he belongs in the Jackson Golf Hall of Fame as one of the greatest to ever play the game here.”

A native of Jackson who graduated from Napoleon High School in 2001, Stuard played 12 years on the PGA Tour, winning one tournament and amassing more than $12.5 million in earnings.

He qualified for the PGA Tour in 2010, joining former tour golfers Dave and Mike Hill and former LPGA Tour player Crosby as Jackson natives who have made it to the big leagues in golf. In just his fourth tournament, Stuard finished second in the Mayakoba Classic. He lost his tour card for the following two seasons but returned in 2013 and played the tour full- time for the next 11 years.

In seven of those years, he finished among the top 100 in money winnings with at least $1 million, with a career-best 51st-place finish on $1.8 million in 2014. The highlight came in 2016, when he won a three-man playoff to capture the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Stuard totaled 13 top-five finishes and 24 top-10s on the PGA Tour.

His best finish in a major came in his only appearance in the Masters, when he tied for 36th in 2017. Stuard played in the U.S. Open seven times and the PGA Championship three times.

After winning the Division 3 individual state title as a senior at Napoleon, Stuard broke almost every school record at Oakland University, where he won the Summit League individual title and was named the league’s golfer of the year before graduating in 2005 and launching his professional career. When Stuard was inducted into Oakland’s Hall of Honor in 2016, he was recognized as the greatest golfer in program history and the most successful professional athlete the school has produced.

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Mariners vs. Mets Highlights

Francisco Lindor, Mark Vientos, and Clay Holmes on Mets winning series after rough stretchFrancisco Lindor, Mark Vientos, and Clay Holmes react to the Mets taking two of three games from the Mariners, their experience during the Little League Classic, and Vientos’ big home run. Now PlayingPausedAd Playing 2

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Mariners vs. Mets Highlights

Francisco Lindor, Mark Vientos, and Clay Holmes on Mets winning series after rough stretch

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