Rec Sports
The U.S. Ski Team Star You Won’t See on Snow This Weekend – FasterSkier
On Friday afternoon, as World Cup sprinters snap into their skis in Trondheim and the SuperTour fields gather in Fairbanks, one of the United States’ most electrifying young Nordic athletes will step onto an entirely different stage. Stanford University, the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Women’s Soccer Tournament, is marching toward the College Cup—and at the center of it all is a player who, in just a matter of days, will also begin her bid for the U.S. Olympic Cross-Country Ski Team.

The athlete is Sammy Smith: 20 years old, a national-team skier, an Environmental Systems Engineering major, and a starter for one of the most dominant college soccer programs in the country. The U.S. Ski Team views her as one of the most promising sprinters of her generation. And yet this weekend, instead of warming up on hard-packed snow in Norway or chasing early-season points in Alaska, she’ll be preparing to face Michigan State with advancing to the NCAA Championship Game on the line.
“Get ready to cheer for one of the U.S. Ski Team’s top skiers this weekend,” you might tell Nordic fans. “Just… not on skis.”
From the outside, the collision of seasons looks impossible to manage. For Smith, it is simply the life she has known since childhood.

Idaho in Two Parts
Smith grew up in a pattern that almost feels mythic now: winters in Sun Valley, summers and the rest of the year in Boise. Her family built the rhythm—her mom moving the kids north each winter so they could ski full-time and homeschool them in those snowy months.
“I kind of grew up splitting time between Boise and Sun Valley,” Smith says. “My mom would move up to Sun Valley during the winter with my siblings and me so we could ski, and she would homeschool us up there… I did that all through high school.”
In Boise, she was a typical public school student. In Sun Valley, she became a multi-sport anomaly. Her childhood was not just active—it was encyclopedic.

“Growing up, I played about every sport one can imagine,” she says. “I ran track and cross country all through high school… I played hockey for a long time. Played football. Yeah, like, you name it, I pretty much did it.”
Soccer was the constant. She started as soon as a child could sign up—though the Smiths occasionally bent age rules to make sure she could play with older kids. When her older sister started soccer, she was right behind her.
“It’s probably like three years old when I started,” Smith says.
And then there was freestyle skiing—a considerable part of her identity, something she expected to pursue more seriously than Nordic. Until one day, she couldn’t.
“I ended up fracturing my tibia in my sophomore year,” she says. “And so I focused on Nordic that winter… I ended up having a great season, and then haven’t really looked back since.”
The transition was abrupt, but the groundwork had already been laid: years of downhill confidence, years of skiing, years of learning to read terrain and push limits.
“I’ve been on skis my entire life,” she says. “Very comfortable on downhills… I love to ski aggressively.”
The athlete emerging in those years was already something unusual. The athlete she would become—balancing multiple sports at world-class levels—was still unimaginable.

Against the Specialization Tide
From the outside, Smith’s career appears to defy the common wisdom of modern youth sports. Increasingly, top athletes specialize early; by high school, many are all-in on one discipline.
Smith resisted that. Not because she lacked ambition, but because multiple sports gave her joy—and made her better.
“I think that’s something I’ve really thought a lot about,” she says. “There’s been more and more pressure to specialize… but growing up and doing so many different sports just kind of added to different components of skiing that I think are really important.”
Soccer, for example, translates directly into sprint racing.
“It’s a very high-paced game,” she says. “There’s a lot of change of direction, a lot of accelerating and decelerating. Particularly when you’re looking at heats, a lot of it is reacting to other people’s moves, trying to find little gaps and squeeze through.”
The skill set becomes a competitive edge: quickness, agility, and decision-making under pressure.
“That ability to shift gears really quickly and take openings when you can really emulates in soccer,” she says.
Freestyle skiing contributed something else entirely: creativity and courage on skis, especially in chaotic or technical downhill sections.

“At World Juniors last year,” she recalls, “everyone was in the track. I hopped out of the track, went far on the inside, and just double poled… It was a risky move, but it was something I saw.”
She paused for only a moment before going all-in. It worked.
The blend—soccer fuel, freestyle instinct, Nordic engine—gives her a uniqueness rarely seen in American skiing.
U.S. Ski Team head coach Matt Whitcomb sees it clearly.
“She’s a world-class athlete,” Whitcomb says. “She’s already exhibited the early signs of being a World Cup star.”
That she is doing this while starting for Stanford’s soccer team? To him, it’s not a contradiction. It’s part of the magic.

Why Stanford — and Why Now
Choosing Stanford was not simple. Smith had options—many of them. But a few factors stood out.
“I really value my education,” she says. “Stanford’s a great school. It’s where my mom went. And my sister is also on the soccer team, so the opportunity to get to play college soccer with her is pretty hard to pass up.”
Her academic path—Environmental Systems Engineering with an energy concentration—fits a pattern among elite U.S. skiers. Many of the top men (Gus Schumacher, Ben Ogden, et al.) have gravitated toward engineering. Smith sees the overlap, too.
“You look at a skier and the training that they do,” she says. “They’re very self-motivated, very committed. So I’m sure certain aspects translate pretty well.”
The challenge, of course, is that Stanford is far from snow. It is not close to ski culture. It is not close to the European World Cup circuit. It is very near, however, to one vital piece of equipment:
“Fortunately, I have a classic roller-ski treadmill… in a little office space,” she says. “That’s been an irreplaceable part of my training.”
She uses it for high-quality sessions, often squeezed between classes, labs, or soccer obligations. Running remains a central component, helped by the demands of soccer conditioning.
But she knows her preparation is different—less volume, more precision. Not ideal. Not textbook. Not expected. And yet:
“I think I’ve tried to accept that,” she says. “I know that I am not at my best, but skiing is a sport you can do for a very long time. I don’t necessarily need to be the best skier I can be at 20 years old.”
Again, Whitcomb backs the long view.
“We’re willing to postpone that timeline,” he says. “We’re just happy for Sammy being happy in her current environment. We’ll take what we can get at this moment, but we want more down the road, and we’re excited for it.”
This, in many ways, is the crux of the story: the U.S. Ski Team is betting on Sammy Smith not despite her dual identity, but because of it.

The Final Four — and Then the Sprint Start Line
The most astonishing part of Smith’s season is its timing.
If Stanford beats Michigan State on Friday in Kansas City, they move directly to the College Cup championship game. The semifinal is December 5th; the final is December 8th, Monday. Smith has already mapped out the days that follow.
“We’ll get back Tuesday night from Missouri… I have a final at 8 a.m. Wednesday morning,” she says. “I’m going to fly out right after my final, and then I’ll have one day of snow on Thursday in Alaska, and then I’ll be hitting that sprint on Friday.”
She says this calmly, matter-of-factly, like someone describing a standard weekend trip.
The Anchorage SuperTour sprint is not just any race—it is her re-entry into skiing, her first day on snow of the season, and a crucial tune-up before U.S. Nationals in Lake Placid, where she hopes to qualify for the Olympic team.
The Anchorage races, she says, are not performance indicators—they are simply a way to “bust the rust off.”
“Obviously, a lot of other skiers will have been on snow for well over a month, and I won’t,“ she says. “It’ll just be an opportunity to get on skis, do something fast.”
Her real focus is the 10-day window between Anchorage and Lake Placid.
“For me, as more of a sprinter, and the way the criteria is set up, I’ve got to target the qualifiers,“ she says. “So being really deliberate… knowing exactly what I’m going for.”
The stakes are simple: she must race well at U.S. Nationals to have a shot at Milano-Cortina.
The stakes are also massive.

The Domestic Gamble
If Smith had a regular ski season—if she weren’t in the NCAA Tournament—she might have chased World Cup points, fought to crack the top 45, and used international racing to establish selection priority.
But that route is closed.
“If you’re only racing a few of the international races, it’s incredibly challenging to get into that top 45,“ she says. “Whereas if you were able to do all of them, it’s a lot more feasible.”
She knows she has “had some really good World Cup sprints,“ and she wonders—without bitterness—what might be possible in a different academic or athletic setup.
But this year, it is the domestic route or nothing.
“That’s what I’m planning on,“ she says. “I need to have some killer races at U.S. Nationals.”
What sounds like a gamble is, for her, simply the version of the sport she can access this season. And she is okay with that.
“Just being consistent… being intentional,“ she says. “Doing what I can.”

Who She Wants to Be
Ask Smith what success looks like decades from now, and she doesn’t list medals or championships.
“You look at Jessie’s legacy,“ she says, referencing Jessie Diggins. “The amount of skiers she’s inspired and how much she’s done for the sport… I want people to look back on my career and feel like I’ve done a lot for the sport, inspired the younger generation of skiers, and brought a lot back to my community.“
It is the kind of answer that feels too mature for her age, but entirely in character.
She is not racing to avoid mistakes—she is racing toward something: possibility, growth, a long future. Maybe a future on the World Cup. Maybe a future in engineering. Maybe a future doing both.
But first, she has Michigan State.

The Athlete You’ll Watch Twice This Month
When you tune in this Friday—whether you are a Nordic diehard refreshing live timing from Trondheim, or an American fan checking SuperTour results—remember that one of the most important U.S. prospects in cross-country skiing will be competing too. She just happens to be wearing soccer cleats instead of ski boots.
And next week, she’ll be back on snow, sprinting against the country’s best, staking her claim for a place on the Olympic team.
The duality is not a distraction for Sammy Smith.
It is her identity.
It is what built her.
And it might be what carries her into the future of American skiing.
“She’s been playing a ton this year,“ Whitcomb says. “Of course, we want her all to ourselves… but we want more down the road, and we’re excited for it.”
This weekend, she wants one thing: a berth in the College Cup Final.
Next weekend, another: a ticket to the Olympics.
Two worlds.
Two uniforms.
One athlete.
A lot of people will be cheering for Sammy Smith this month. Nordic fans just get to do it twice.
*You can watch #1-ranked Stanford vs. #2-ranked Duke in the women’s College Cup semifinal tomorrow, Friday, December 5, at 8:45 p.m. EST on ESPNU. The game can also be streamed on the ESPN app, Fubo, or Hulu.
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Rec Sports
A-K Valley athletes of the week: St. Joseph’s Bella Bartolovic, Springdale’s Robby Simmen
By:
Saturday, December 20, 2025 | 4:17 PM
Bella Bartolovic
School: St. Joseph
Class: Sophomore
Sport: Basketball
Claim to fame: Bartolovic dropped a season-high 27 points against Leechburg on Tuesday. She then followed that up with 19 against Eden Christian on Thursday to lead St. Joseph to a 2-0 week. The sophomore guard leads the Spartans with six double-figure scoring games and 20.5 points per contest.
St. Joseph is 5-2 (3-0) and will prepare for a meeting with Aquinas Academy (6-0, 2-0) on Monday.
What do you believe is the potential of this team, even with it being a young one?
It is a great start, and we look to continue this streak. I believe this team has a lot of potential this season to make it far, even though we’re young.
What has been working well for you as you’ve taken a scoring leap?
I have a very supportive team and coaching staff, which allows me to play without the worry of making mistakes.
If you maintain your scoring, how will you respond when teams begin to put you at the top of the scouting report?
I will take this as a compliment. I will continue to work on improving my game and trusting my teammates.
What can you say about the contributions the team has gotten from senior Kasey Cienik and junior Jocelyn Spinelli?
Their leadership has been very important because they encourage us all to do our best and boost our confidence.
What is a must-do when you have a day off from school and basketball?
Play more basketball
What is the best basketball shoe out right now?
Sabrina’s
What are your plans for the holidays?
To spend time with family and friends
What is your favorite Christmas song?
“Jingle Bell Rock.”
You have a matchup against Aquinas Academy on Monday, a rematch of last year’s No. 2 teams in Section 1-A. What will be the keys to staying undefeated in section play against the Crusaders?
The keys to Monday will be staying composed and working as a team.
Robby Simmen
School: Springdale
Class: Junior
Sport: Basketball
Claim to fame: Simmen went off for a season-high 39 points to lead Springdale to a Section 1-2A win over California on Tuesday. He then scored 15 in an overtime loss to Bentworth on Friday. Simmen has reached double digits in all six games for the Dynamos (2-4, 1-2) and leads them with 20.5 points a game.
After graduating eight seniors last year, how have you and other underclassmen stepped up and filled in leadership roles?
Many of our current juniors and our senior that have been on the team last year know what it takes to be a leader from experiencing our games and practices. The past seniors and our coaches set a great example for us. We stepped up by continuing to do what makes us better as a team, which is lifting each other up as well as giving everyone the confidence they need on and off the court.
What has been the biggest improvement in your offensive game this season?
In the offseason, I work on all of my skills. I feel I improved most in my speed and strength. It gives me a lot more opportunity to be an all-around threat on offense.
In three out of five games this year, the team has had two double-digit scorers. Liam Dexter has two of those games. How have you seen him grow as a player in your three years together?
Liam has always had the skill to do what he does. We’ve played together on a youth basketball team since third grade. His ability to shoot and play in the paint makes him a difficult player to guard.
What is a must-do when you have a day off from school and basketball?
When I’m not playing basketball or in school, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends.
Who is your favorite music artist, and is it the same person for pregame?
My favorite artists are probably Zach Bryan or Drake. Drake is more for pregame, though.
What are your plans for the holidays?
Go spend time with family.
What Christmas movie is a sneaky contender for the best of all time?
“Home Alone.”
Tags: Springdale, St. Joseph
Rec Sports
Commanders young RBs – The Athletic
The Commanders will have nearly two dozen players hit free agency in March, so these final three games are a lot like preseason games, as glorified tryouts. Chris Rodriguez Jr., a Commanders sixth-round pick in 2023, stuck around with the regime change in ’24 and has really come on this season to become the team’s de facto starter after Austin Ekeler went down with an Achilles injury. He will be a restricted free agent in March, and as Washington tries to revamp the entire roster, his play this evening could carry significant weight in deciding his future here.
Rookie Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt could play heavily into that. Bill has shown flashes of his quickness, speed and vision behind the line of scrimmage, and leads the team in both rushing yards (646) and rushing touchdowns (five) through Week 15. But his development into a complete back, who can block and catch passes out of the backfield, will be key to him becoming more of a featured back.
Rec Sports
TWRA Youth Fish Art Contest Now Open

The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (TWRA) is encouraging youth across the state in grades K-12 to submit their original artwork of any Tennessee native fish for the national Art of Conservation: Fish Art Contest. The contest was created by the nonprofit Wildlife Forever to encourage youth to become connected to the outdoors.
The contest is free to enter, and students can submit one 2D piece and one 3D piece. All participants must enter original artwork of a Tennessee fish in a natural habitat and may not replicate another artist’s work. Photos or videos used as a source material for inspiration of the artwork are allowed. Goldfish, guppies, bettas, and koi are not eligible for this contest.
Additionally, TWRA is adding its own specialty award this year, The Bill Dance Signature Lakes Award – in honor of the legacy of fishing legend Bill Dance and the TWRA’s work to develop premier fishing destinations across the state. To be considered for the award, students should enter artwork of largemouth or smallmouth bass or art featuring bass fishing.
All submissions must be entered through an online entry form. More information regarding rules, submission form, and requirements can be found on the Wildlife Forever Art of Conservation website. The last day for submitting artwork is Feb. 28, 2026.
The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency is responsible for protecting, managing, and conserving fish and wildlife species for the benefit of Tennesseans and visitors. The Agency also maintains public safety through law enforcement and safety education on waterways.
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Rec Sports
Obituary: George Harry Leaman Apt
George Harry Leaman Apt
WESTBROOK – George Harry Leaman Apt, 76, of Westbrook, passed away peacefully at home on Dec. 17, 2025.
He was born March 17, 1949, in Portland, to Marie Gilberty Deschenes Apt and Arthur Leaman Apt.
A devoted husband, father, and grandfather, George’s life was rooted in service to his family, community, and country. He shared a lifetime of love with his beloved wife, Patricia Apt, and was a dedicated father to his son, Kevin Apt and his wife, Michelle, and to his daughter, Kelly Apt Hutton. He was a proud and loving grandfather to Kaylin Apt, Kaleb Apt, and Madison Hutton.
George worked for many years as a skilled machinist and honorably served four years in the United States Navy. Deeply involved in his community, he devoted countless hours to youth athletics, serving as President of Westbrook Little League, coaching Westbrook Tuffy Football and Little League Baseball, and umpiring baseball for many years. He also served on the board of the Western Maine Umpires Association and was a proud member of the Lions Club.
A lifelong sports fan, George especially loved the New York Yankees and Duke athletics. His legacy of leadership, generosity, and quiet dedication lives on in the many lives he touched. He will be deeply missed and fondly remembered.
A funeral service will be held on Tuesday Dec. 23, at 4 p.m. at the Westbrook Chapel of Dolby, Blais & Segee, 35 Church St., Westbrook. Visit 2 to 4 p.m. Interment will be held in the spring. To express condolences please visit http://www.DolbyBlaisSegee.com.
In lieu of flowers, donations in George’s name may be made to:
Westbrook Lions Club
C/O Roger Vaillancourt
P.O. Box 495
Westbrook, ME 04098
Rec Sports
North Charleston basketball league inspires youth on and off the court
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) — In North Charleston, the High Hoops Basketball League is making a significant impact on nearly 500 kids from schools across the Lowcountry.
The league, organized by Dr. Justin Beaufort, aims to mirror the excitement of the NBA with media highlights, player jerseys, and post-game interviews.
“If I’m a kid, second or third grader walking down the hallway and I see my face on the screen at school, I’m definitely excited about that,” Beaufort said. “I wanna do everything in my power so I can get that same feeling next week as well.”
READ MORE | “Carolina Champion: Group combines basketball and faith to inspire youths in the Lowcountry”
The league not only focuses on basketball skills but also emphasizes academic engagement.
“We only play our games on Saturdays, so the kids can focus on the scholastic aspect of things throughout the week,” Beaufort explained. He believes the program helps lower criminality by keeping kids engaged.
However, the league faces challenges in finding enough courts to accommodate its growth.
“The lack of resources as far as gyms inside the community, we’re not able to get into ’em,” Beaufort said. “It just puts us inside a situation where we have to go rent gyms in order to do it.”
Beaufort is hopeful for community support to expand the league. “We would love that opportunity and we think that we can raise the number of kids that can be a part of it,” he said.
With backing from the city of North Charleston, Beaufort envisions the league growing from 448 kids to 4,000, which he sees as a win for everyone.
Rec Sports
Crystal Community Ski Club honored by national ski organization
PSIA-AASI Central serves more than 3,500 teaching professional members in the Midwest through snowsports education, certification and promotion, according to the organization’s website.
“We are extremely thankful for all in our CCSC community who have contributed to our success as a club,” the organization said in a press release. “It is due to this community that we have been awarded PSIA-AASI Central Member School of the Year.”
The release said members and supporters of the club played a role in its efforts and recognition.
“It is a huge honor coming from one of our premier partners,” said Hunter Steinkamp, executive director of the Crystal Community Ski Club, in an interview with the Record Patriot. “Using their materials and education, we’ve been able to train some of the most highly trained coaches in the state. That allows them to be as effective as possible in our programs.”
The Crystal Community Ski Club operates as a youth-focused nonprofit, offering a range of skiing programs designed to build skills and interest in winter sports among young people in northern Michigan. Programs include alpine and Nordic teams, holiday camps, race academies, junior ski patrol and instructor training for middle and high school students, from beginners to competitive athletes.
The club also has initiatives such as the Nordic Rocks program, aimed at introducing elementary school students to cross-country skiing, often at little or no cost. The club partners with school districts and community organizations and offers scholarships to help reduce financial barriers and expand access to the sport.
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