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Rec Sports

Youth Sports May 21, 2025

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• LACROSSE

Coeur d’Alene Lacrosse Classic: Boys in grades 1-8 and girls in grades 3-8 participated in the tournament, hosted by North Idaho Youth Lacrosse, last weekend at the Canfield Sports Complex in Coeur d’Alene. Teams from Coeur d’Alene, Sandpoint, Kalispell, Helena, Great Falls and Missoula, as well as from Spokane, Richland and Kennewick participated.

The North Idaho Youth Lacrosse 1/2 Grade Falcons team took second place.

The NIYL 3/4 grade Falcons team took first place in the Silver Division.

The NIYL 5/6 Falcons Green team took second place in the Gold Division.

The NIYL 5/6 Falcons White team took third place in the Gold Division.

• RATHDRUM PARKS AND RECREATION

Soccer

May 10

U4 Soccer 

Reliable Towing vs. Smile Squad 

Reliable Towing: Oaklyn Wunder (3), Henry Johnson (1), Karson LaForce (2), Boone Sanders (1) 

Smile Squad: Ewan Owens (1), Jaxon South (6), Ava Busso (2) 

The Local Deli vs. Mike White Ford 

The Local Deli: Addison Allen (4), John Zwonitzer (2) 

Mike White Ford: Jaxston Finney (1) 

Les Schwab vs. Mihara Law 

Les Schwab: Jolee Foster (2), Bowen Pruitt (2), James Walker (1) 

Mihara Law: Taylor Davenport (2), Cameron Lancaster (6), Archer South (1) 

Ziply Fiber vs. Lake City Auto Care 

Ziply Fiber: Mason Grover (2), Gabriel Howell (7) 

Lake City Auto: Lena Hittle (1), Carter Cliff (7) 

The 208 vs. Generations Memory Care 

The 208: Conor McAllister (6), Kathleen Warringer (1) 

Generations Memory Care: Maddox Emmett (2) 

U6 Soccer 

Lake City Auto Care vs. Wildgrain Woodworking 

Lake City Auto: Olivia Green (1), Storie Woodcock (1) 

Wildgrain Woodworking: Addilyn Nordlie (1), Kyzer Meyer (1), Michael Boissoneau Jr. (1) 

Smile Squad vs. Cole’s Automotive 

Smile Squad: Jericho Foster (2) 

Cole’s Automotive: Everett Bogart (1) 

Sweet Lou’s vs. Cloud 9 

Sweet Lou’s: Tia Rinaldi (3) 

Cloud 9: Aedan Russell (2), Easton Sanders (1), Jacob Rasmussen (1) 

Kootenai Ductless vs. Selkirk RV 

Kootenai Ductless: Channing Biggs (1), Steele Seaman (1), Jaxson Allen (6), Morgan Basler (7) 

Selkirk RV: Harper Clifton (1) 

Ziply Fiber vs. Young Construction 

Ziply Fiber: Scarlett Sitar (1) 

Young Construction: 0 

U8 Soccer 

Kootenai Ductless vs. Les Schwab 

Kootenai Ductless: 0 

Les Schwab: Bentley Karst (2), Sawyer Grover (1), Waylon Peters (2), Jackson Henry (1), Olivia Schelin (1) 

Ziply Fiber vs. Cobalt Land Management 

Ziply Fiber: Kohen Schumacher (2) 

Cobalt Land Management: Zachery Eschrich (1) 

Jenna Wynand Real Estate vs. Ferguson Concrete 

Jenna Wynand Real Estate: Austin Higgins (1), Kalvin Kotecki (1) 

Ferguson Concrete: Gabriel Librande (1) 

Precision Landworks vs. CDA Soccer Club 

Precision Landworks: Roguen Kraft (1), Adam Terry (3), Rowen Tate (5) 

CDA Soccer Club: (0) 

Young Family’s Foundation of North Idaho vs. Mihara Law 

Young Family’s Foundation: Isla Tucker (1), Cayben Bird (2) 

Mihara Law: Ember Weitz (1), Beckett Waldo (1) 

U10 Soccer 

NNAC vs. Aldrich Co. 

NNAC: Alayna Sternberg (1), Andi Cathey (1), Britney Wright (2), Camden Shafer (1), Ryder Griffin (2) 

Aldrich Co.: William Porter IV (1) 

Ziply Fiber vs. Alpha Angler 

Ziply Fiber: Davin Callan (3) 

Alpha Angler: Cheyenne Streibeck (1), Zade Herman (1) 

U12 Soccer 

Bruised Bananas vs. Copius Heat & Air 

Bruised Bananas: Penney Oswell (1), Luke Bishop (1), Kalel Creed (1) 

Copius Heat & Air: Dylan Hill (1), Tyce Dunbar (1)  

Site 3D vs. Quality Stoves 

Site 3D: Westley Dyk (1) 

Quality Stoves: Christopher Thompson (2), Ella Weaver (1), Brylen Cox (1), Owen Hunt (1), Talon Higgins (1), Lincoln Swanson (2)  

U14 Soccer 

Surf Shack vs. Inland NW Tech 

Surf Shack: Cooper Oswald (2), Ben Woodcock (1), Jude Ellis (2) 

Inland NW Tech: Wyatt Thompson (1), Andrew Sullivan (1) 

May 17

U4 Soccer 

Lake City Auto Care vs. Mike White Ford 

Lake City Auto Care: Banks McGuffin (3), Mac McGuffin (1), Lena Hittle, (1), Carter Cliff (5) 

Mike White Ford: Madelyn Mills (1), Jaxston Finney (1) 

Smile Squad vs. Les Schwab 

Smile Squad: Jaxon South (2), Emmett Emch (4) 

Les Schwab: Jolee Foster (2), Twila DeGruy (2), Bowden Pruitt (1), James Walker (5) 

Reliable Towing vs. Ziply Fiber 

Reliable Towing: Oaklyn Wunder (7), Kalliyan Drake (1), Henry Johnson (1), Karson LaForce (5) 

Ziply Fiber: Mason Grover (3), Gabriel Howell (6) 

Generations Memory Care vs. The Local Deli 

Generations Memory Care: Chloe Mills (1), Grayson Scyphers (1), Ezra Posey (3), Jett Pruitt (1) 

The Local Deli: John Zwonitzer (6) 

The 208 vs. Mihara Law 

The 208: Judson Ball (2) 

Mihara Law: Graidyn Nelson (2), Cameron Lancaster (8), Dalton Hilton (1) 

U6 Soccer 

Cloud 9 vs. Young Construction 

Cloud 9: 0 

Young Construction: Barrett Thompson (1), Freya Dyk (1), Zaiden Gonzales (2) 

WildGrain Woodworking vs. Smile Squad 

WildGrain Woodworking: Abigail Peters (1), Michael Boissoneau Jr. (1) 

Smile Squad: Jericho Foster (2) 

Cole’s Automotive vs. Ziply Fiber 

Cole’s Automotive: Owen Gallinger (2), Axel Librande (1) 

Ziply Fiber: Scarlett Sitar (1) 

Selkirk RV vs. Sweet Lou’s 

Selkirk RV: Maverick McMillan (2), Raelynn Burkey (1), Harper Clifton (2) 

Sweet Lou’s: 0 

Lake City Auto Care vs. Kootenai Ductless 

Lake City Auto Care: Storie Woodcock (1) 

Kootenai Ductless: Morgan Basler (4), Teddy Snodgrass (2) 

U8 Soccer 

Ferguson Concrete vs. Young Family’s Foundation of N.I. 

Ferguson Concrete: Josslynn Thies (2) 

Young Family’s Foundation: Isla Tucker (1), Lena Asburry (1), Malin Loder (1), Owen Sonderman (1), Cayben Bird (1), Tobin Bird (1) 

CDA Soccer Club vs. Mihara Law 

CDA Soccer Club: 0 

Mihara Law: Esther Mihara (1), Xavier Piasecki (1), Eli Oswell (2), Beckett Waldo (1) 

Jenna Wynand Real Estate vs. Ziply Fiber 

Jenna Wynand Real Estate: Harlee Wynand (1), Autumn Kramer (1), Kilian Winn (1) 

Ziply Fiber: Wyatt Drake (3) 

Kootenai Ductless vs. Precision Landworks 

Kootenai Ductless: Ethan Landrum (1) 

Precision Landworks: Roguen Kraft (1), Hudson Roraback (4), Rowen Tate (4) 

Les Schwab vs. Cobalt Land Management 

Les Schwab: Bently Karst (2), Sawyer Grover (3), Waylon Peters (2), Clyde Pacotti (2), Jackson Henry (2), Olivia Schelin (1) 

Cobalt Land Management: Zachery Eschrich (1) 

U10 Soccer 

NNAC vs. Ziply Fiber 

NNAC: Wyatt Williamson (3), Davin Callan (3) 

Ziply Fiber: Wyatt Williamson (3), Davin Callan (3) 

Les Schwab vs. Gregory Construction 

Les Schwab: Coleton Price (1), Hudson Hess (1) 

Gregory Construction: Jess Gregory (1), Zackaree Hester (2), Jack Rice (2) 

U12 Soccer 

Site 3D vs. Bruised Bananas 

Site 3D: Westley Tanner (1), Rylan Burnett (2) 

Bruised Bananas: Penney Oswell (1)  

NNAC vs. Encompass Electric 

NNAC: Logan Strong (3), Gio Balsimo (1) 

Encompass Electric: 0  

U14 Soccer 

Surf Shack vs. Spirit Lake Parks & Recreation 

Surf Shack: Cooper Oswald (1), Ben Woodcock (1), Logan Hice (1) 

Spirit Lake Parks & Recreation: Blake Neel (2), Brooke Grey-Trask (2) 

• POST FALLS PARKS AND RECREATION

Soccer 

Week 6 

May 17 

U14 Division 

3 Truck Insurance Office, Inc: Dylan Mortier (2), Dexter Berdan (1) 

2 Stateline Speedway:  Cayson Brown (1), Asher Taylor (1) 

 

1 St. Maries Family Medicine: Brennen Suchoski (1) 

7 Stateline Subs: Marshall Smith (3), Jonah Taylor (2), Carter Holden (1), Hattie Ortiz (1) 

 

4 Viking Construction, Inc: Traigen Hance (2), Sean Abernathy (1), Jason Kuplack (1) 

2 Specialty Forest Products: Liam White (2) 

U11 Division 

10 Mill Town Strength & Conditioning: Kellan Shea (3), Gunnar Stover (3), Tate Lamb (2), Olivia Evenson (1),  

Elijah Nickerson (1)) 

0 Specialty Forest Products:  

 

8 Calvary Lutheran Church: Atlas Lepley (4), Jaxon Zenk (2), Lincoln Mackenzie (1), Madysen (1) 

1 Core Directional Services, LLC: Joseph Johnson (1)  

 

3 Peach Orthodontics: Kyson Davis (2), Derek Angele (1) 

1 The English Inspector: Sebastian Enfield (1) 

 

2 Silver Ridge Construction: Marek Graves (2) 

3 Serenity Dental: Hannah Ortiz (1), Lincoln Whitmire (1), Zander Whitmire (1) 

 

3 Stateline Speedway: Braiden Beck (2), Silas Millar (1) 

1 The English Inspector: Sebastian Enfield (1) 

U8 Division 

1 Morrison-Maierle: Lincoln Eades (1) 

1 Schaffer’s Towing,LLC: Cami Hance (1) 

 

2 Young Construction Gruop: Non-Roster (2)  

2 Post Falls Bike Shop: James Ledford (1), Zoey Mongan (1) 

 

0 HMH Engineering:  

2 Teremark Electrical Group: Levi Cooper (1), Hunter Thornton (1) 

 

2 Scotty’s Backflow: Brielle Lindsay (1), Nicholas Polisciuc (1) 

1 Post Falls ER & Hospital: Athena Fowler (1) 

 

1 Hayden Cars: Kennedy Noah Williams (1)  

4 Teremark Electrical Group: Levi Cooper (2), Ava Alt (1), Paige Yancey (1) 

Mini 6 Yr. Olds 

1 Post Falls Kiwanis: Aiden Leon (1) 

4 Knudtsen Chevrolet Co.: Liam Chacon (2), Briar Lindsay (1), Non-Roster (1) 

 

3 Post Falls Brewing: Benjamin Hunter (1), Phoenix Orth (1), Non-roster (1) 

1 Dairy Queen Post Falls:  Non-Roster (1) 

 

1 Northwest Rides: Arvo Kokkonen (1) 

0 CDA Paving & Concrete Specialties:   

 

4 Northwest Specialty Hospital: Ryker Tibbits (2), Tommy Tietz (2) 

0 Post Falls Family Dental: 

Micro 5 Yr. Olds 

4 The Litle Gym Post Falls: Kameron Biddle (4) 

3 North Idaho Garage Door: Jocelyn Clark (1), Camille Nelson (1), Jaxson Olsen (1) 

 

2 Taco Bell Post Falls:  Liam Rodriguez (2)  

1 Precision Diesel Repair, LLC: Kenzie Tibbits (1) 

 

4 Body by Scotty: Brynlee Cornett (2), Landon Korzen (1), Camryn Micolichek (1) 

5 Mill Town Strength & Conditioning: Hope Evenson (4), Zoe Ban (1) 

 

2 ALK Source Materials: Jaxon Buchanan (1), Owen Johnson (1) 

2 Nagrone Contracting, LLC: Eleanor Fenenbock (1), Lincoln Gibbs (1) 

• SPIRIT LAKE PARKS AND RECREATION

Soccer 

Week of May 14 

5&6s 

NextHome 365 Realty vs. Cup of Grace; Scoring for NextHome 365 Realty was Aria D’Avanzo 3. 

Spirit Lake Lightning vs. Snowy Mountain Doodles; Scoring for SL Lightning were Lincoln Bazzar 2, Benjamin Alcala 1, and Maeverly Miller 1. Scoring for Snowy Mountain Doodles was Beau Dunbar 1. 

7&8s  

NextHome 365 Realty vs. Encompass Electric; Scoring for Encompass Electric were Thorin Hill 4, Kian Aga 1, and Eleanor Beuving 1. Scoring for NextHome 365 Realty were Lillee Dippolito, B Lampert 1, and Andrew Wessling 1. 

Mi Pueblo Mexican Restaurant vs. Bazzar Tech Repair; Scoring for Mi Pueblo were Stetson Schneider 1, Easton Reyes 1, Rosie Mitchell 1, and Chet Small 2. Scoring for Bazzar Tech Repair were Mason Mauri 1, and Harrison Alcala 1. 

9&10s 

MGT Professional Tree Care vs. Aldrich Co.; This was a tough battle with the game ending in a tie, 0-0. 

Glidden Group vs. Alpha Angler; Scoring for Glidden Group was Charlie Salie 1. No points were scored by Alpha Angler. 

11&12s 

Copius Heat & Air vs. LX Products, LLS; Scoring for Copius Heat & Air was Dylan Hill 3. Scoring for LX Products were Riley Johnson 1 and Tayla Jacobs 1. 

Quality Stoves vs. Plummer Forest Products; Scoring for Quality Stoves were Christopher Thompson 1, Kaylee Landrum 2, and Owen Hunt. Scoring for Plummer Forest Products were Isaiah Duprey 1, and Jonathan Beuving 1. 

13&14s 

Mihara Law vs. Inland NW Tech; Scoring for Mihara Law were Sydney Thompson 1, Lucas Link 1, and Emeric Bullington 1. Scoring for Inland NW Tech were Andrew Sullivan 1 and Oliver Salie 1. 

• HAYDEN RECREATION AND COMMUNITY EVENTS

Soccer

May 17

Mini-Kickers (3-4 Yrs.Old)

Aesthetica Skin and Beauty Bar: Grayson Johnson 2-goals; Liam Robertson 1-goal

Air Technology West: Liam Volz 3-goals

Back 40 Real Estate Investments: Riggins Moore 2-goals; Adaline Pierson 3-goals; Oliver Power 3-goals

Crandall Law Group: Blair Crandall 2-goals; Lux Flores 2-goals; Colette Crump 1-goal; Malachi McNeil 1-goal; Colette Crump 4-goals

Crushers: Maclean Price 4-goals

Daum Construction: Brixton Clelland 4-goals; Calla Dale 1-goal; Hogan Dale 1-goal

Dr. Dance Dentistry for Kids: Evelyn Holmes 1-goal

Fred’s Plumbing: Bernie Bauer 3-goals; Blake Erwin 2-goals; Keziah Peahu 1-goal

Henbest Health: Layke Baker 3-goals; Evie Cash 1-goal; Daphne Simone 2-goals

Henry-Griffitts: Rowan Brooks 1-goal; Emmett Fenstermaker 1-goal

Honeysuckle Speech Therapy: Rylee Gallis 1-goal; Beckett Hampton 1-goal

Inspire PT Idaho: Logan Clinton 1-goal; Alexander Gallion 2-goals; Clarke Sand 1-goal; Cleo Sand 1-goal

Kait McKay Photography: Luka Brown 2-goals; Levi Hansen 1-goal; Ronan Ward 1-goal

Kicking & Screaming: No Stats Available

Kinder Prep Learning Center: Declan Butler 1-goal; Parker Leffler 1-goal; Audrey Zbinden-Cole 2-goals

Lake City Dental Specialties: Noah Casasola 1-goal; Finley Keller 2-goals; Charlotte Kern 2-goals; Jack Troutman 1-goal 

Legacy Heating and Cooling: Korbin Ferguson 1-goal

McCauley Bond Agency: Lane Tommerup 3-goals; Milo Walker 1-goal

McDonald’s: Max Grace 1-goal; Oliver Jespersen 3-goal; James Kenda 1-goal

NexTitle: Cooper Godfrey 3-goals; Ezra Skala 2-goals

NOBell Excavators: Nathanael Darrow 1-goal; Gideon Griswold 2-goals; Paisley Noble 5-goals

Saccone Electric: Andrew Bell 1-goal; Maverick Meeks 1-goal

Selkirk Sport: No Stats Available

Silverlake Automotive: Beck Bertolino 2-goals; Reese Kennedy 1-goal

Slick Rock Tanning & Spa: Ava Kaplan 1-goal; Ava Linn 1-goal; Adeline Veneman 1-goal

Super 1 Foods: Jones Norman 1-goal

Team Sonic: Lawson Engelstad 3-goals; Camille Litzko 2-goals; Jack Richardson 8-goals; Lewis Thompson 6-goals; Thomas Williams 6-goals

True North Heating and Cooling: Carter Jones 1-goal; Robert Lambert 1-goal; Ariana Mckeeman 1-goal

Micro-Kickers (5-6 Yrs. Old)

ACI Northwest: Skylin Chapman 1-goal

Axial Northwest: Brixton Appoldt 3-goals

Belle’s Brunch House: Lainey Crosby 4-goals; Mason Hubbard 1-goal

Bighouse Automotive: Gryffin Otten 1-goal; Sawyer Rouse 1-goal

CDA Clean Team: Royal Morris 1-goal

Coeur d’Alene Kids Dental: Devin Cole 3-goals

Costa Fab: Tucker Arnold 1-goal; Calvin Cromer 1-goal; Penny Lambert 2-goals; Rowan Moore 2-goals

Daum Construction: Lochlan McLuskie 1-goal

Dr. Dance Dentistry for Kids: Delilah Jackson 1-goal

Fred’s Plumbing: Isaac Bews 1-goal; Elijah Mendoza 1-goal; Amora Posada 1-goal; Everette Seronko 1-goal

Hippo Car Wash: Jackson Fenstermaker 3-goals; Avery Maher 1-goal

Lakeside Pediatrics:

Lancaster Market: Aiden Aschenbrener 1-goal; Alder Jacklin 1-goal

Lincoln Excavating: Waylon Hendry 1-goal

McDonald’s: Oz Barnes 1-goal; Chance Brockett 5-goals; Colton Cole 1-goal

Nick Shriner Real Estate: Adrianna Peters 1-goal

Northwest Pediatrics: Grace Britton 1-goal; Silas Chase 1-goal; Stella Newman 1-goal; Graciela Padilla 1-goal

Northwest Realty Group: Bennett Grambeau 1-goal; Nathan Livensov 5-goals; Owen Murray 2-goals; Daphne Simpson 3-goals

Progressive Natures Excavation: Lucy Baumgartner 1-goal; Cooper Behmer 2-goals; Forrest Kinsey 1-goal

Saccone Electric: No Stats Available

Saturday Night Inc.: No Stats Available

Scotty’s Backflow: Darcy Cheney 1-goal; Ava Kropf 1-goal; Redford Price 1-goal; Bria Scott 8-goals

Selkirk Sport: Wyatt Barnes 1-goal; Rosie Clark 1-goal; Edith Vandelinde 1-goal

Slick Rock Tanning and Spa: No Stats Available

Super 1 Foods: Malakai Acker 3-goals; Adeliah Carlson 2-goals; Oliver Goranson 1-goal

Timberline Adventures: Sylvie Buttars 1-goal; Mikyah Campbell 1-goal; Olivia Disanzo 1-goal

Van Zandt Financial: Cash O’Hara 2-goal

Viking Construction: No Stats Available

White Pine Wealth: Bode Dale 2-goals; Benjamin Santos 3-goals

Ziply Fiber: Rhett Goodwin 2-goals; Cora Looney 1-goal; Lennox Van Hill 2-goals

U8 Coed

Alpine Village School & Farms: Bodhi Christopherson 2-goals; Luca Clark 1-goal

Awaken Coffee: Logan Erwin 2-goals; Ryder Hardisty 1-goal; Ryatt Maestas 2-goals

Back 40 Real Estate Investments: Jack Goodwin 1-goal; Kylar Smith 1-goal; Leo Suazo 1-goal

Cannon Hill Industries: No Stats Available

David Evans & Assoc.: Gavin Orona 2-goals

Goal Getters: Owen Briggs 2-goals; Jayden Long 2-goals

Hubof’s Landscaping: Vaughn Barnes 1-goal

McCauley Bond Agency: Leo Grace 1-goal; Isaiah Vaderrodt 2-goals

New Leaf Nursery: Wesley Christen 1-goal; Aston Wilson 1-goal

North Idaho Eye: Dance Shepherd 1-goal

Polar Excavation: Israel Olson 3-goals, Gavyn Williams 1-goal

Powerhouse Electric: Louise Bjurstrom 2-goals

Progressive Nature’s Excavation: No Stats Available

SCJ Alliance: June Cash 1-goal; Miller Meeks 1-goal

U10 Coed

Barton Flooring & Trim LLC: Aiden Barton 1-goal; Everly Brozek 1-goal

Bighouse Automotive: Kip Bighouse 1-goal; Logan Troup 1-goal

Cannon Hill Industries: Aiden Jeffreys 1-goal; Logan Whipp 2-goals

CDA Heating & Cooling: Aaron Clyde 2-goals

Ginno Construction: Liam Dooley 1-goal; Hannah Simpson 1-goal; Gaizka Ugarte 2-goals

Hayden Canyon Charter: No Stats Available

Merlin’s Comedy Club: No Stats Available

North Idaho Aircraft Refinishing: Ethan Anderson 3-goals; Carson Molyneaux 4-goals; Wesley Molyneaux 1-goal; Silas Tolson 1-goal

Sharp Detailing, Inc.: Nolan Busch 2-goals; Boss Gustafson 2-goals; Andrey Klimovych 1-goal; Lawson Sattler 1-goal

Viking Construction: America Peck 1-goal

U12 Coed

Christian Center School: Flint Barton 1-goal; Austin Cooper 1-goal; Tommy Cooper 3-goals; Rebecca Hart 1-goal; Emery McKee 3-goals

Emergency Pet Care: Levi Dunn 2-goals

Manna Sourdough: Reese Truman 2-goals; Weaver Hudson 1-goal

Zip’s Drive-In: No Stats Available

U15 Coed

Ballers: Charles Charlebois 1-goal; Sebastian Guitron 1-goal

Chomper Cafe: Eliysha Klimovych 1-goal; Owen Morrow 1-goal; Kolton Rants 1-goal

JWS Builders: Josiah Klement 2-goals

MGT Professional Tree Care: Nathaniel De Patter 1-goal

Urban Edge Salon: Beckham Hayes 2-goals; Ryder Morrison 1-goal

Ziply Fiber: Banyan Sisson 1-goal

May 19

U8 Coed

Awaken Coffee: No Stats Available

David Evans & Assoc.: Ledge Karbo 1-goal; Margaret Leahy 1-goal

Goal Getters: Owen Briggs 2-goals; Ivey Roland 1-goal; Jayden Long 1-goal; Logan Wakefield 2-goals

McCauley Bond Agency: Leo Grace 1-goal; Isaiah Vatterrodt 1-goal

Polar Excavation: Max Warker 1-goal; Gavyn Williams 1-goal

Progressive Nature’s Excavation: Teagan Gilbert 1-goal; Taylor Sterling 1-goal

U10 Coed

Hayden Canyon Charter: Chase Beardslee 1-goal

Sharp Detailing, Inc: Nolan Busch 2-goals; Boss Gustafson 1-goal

U12 Coed

Christian Center School: Tinsley Anderson 1-goal; Tommy Cooper 1-goal; Emery McKee 2-goals

Emergency Pet Care: Josiah Potter 2-goals

U15 Coed

Ballers: Luke Blasick 1-goal; Paige Fish 1-goal; Sebastian Guitron 2-goals

JWS Builders: Michael Lee 1-goal; Landen Skaggs 1-goal

Submit items for youth and non-varsity high school sports by noon Tuesday for publication Wednesday. Email stories and photos (in .jpg format) to sports@cdapress.com. 

Information: 208-664-8176, Ext. 1205 

    Courtesy photo The North Idaho Youth Lacrosse 3/4 Grade Falcons team took first place in the Silver Division at the Coeur d’Alene Lacrosse Classic last weekend at Canfield Sports Complex in Coeur d’Alene. In the front row from left are Rogan Zentner, Kamran Rosenberger, Noxon Turrell, Gabe Heavener and Jameson Whitcomb; second row from left, oby Beckett, Noah Wijma, Walker Angle, Will Krull and Jamison Lunsford; third row from left, Leo Lawhead, Brix Turrell, Charlie Alberton, Hazen Hutchison, Ben Espinoza and Luke Johnson; and back row from left, coach Ryan Lunsford, coach Josh Whitcomb, coach Hans Wijma and coach Nick Espinoza. Not pictured is Nolan Shumway.
 
 

    Courtesy photo The North Idaho Youth Lacrosse grade 5/6 Falcons Green team took second place in the Gold Division at the Coeur d’Alene Lacrosse Classic last weekend at Canfield Sports Complex in Coeur d’Alene. In the front is Connor Smalley; second row from left, Lucas Perry, Wyatt Secord, Gabe Stearns (behind), Luke Nicholson, Joe Dauncey-Scheler, EJ Dahlin, McCoy Jolley, Keegan Rosenberger and Camden Glindeman; and back row from left, Boston Parsons, Troy Hill, Levi Tebbe, Monty Montgomery, Blake Parkinson, Bricen Cornett, Liam Clark and Benji Whitcomb.
    Photo by LAKOTA STORLIE The Sting Soccer Club 2013 Girls Academy soccer team closed out its Washington Inland Premier League season with a 4-1 victory over the WE Surf SC G13 Premier on Sunday. Sting goals were scored by Addison Salas, Nevie Sousley, Nora Schock, and Kyal Carlson, cementing the team’s second-place finish in the league standings. Pictured from left are Sting defenders Novalee Hoel, Kinsey Kiefer and Felicity Miller. Tryouts for this team will be held this week on Wednesday and Thursday. Information: www.stingsc.com/tryouts
    Photo by LINDSEY KNOLL The 2013 Sting Boys Academy soccer team returned this past weekend to Boise and beat the Palacious Futbol Club 3-1 in the semifinals of the Idaho State Cup. In the finals, the Sting fell to the Idaho Juniors to finish second. In the front row from left are assistant coach Jon Baune, Caleb Larson, Crew Kuhlmann, Vance Corbeill and Brody Brennan; second row from left, Carter Mitchell, Levi Pooler, Luke Baune, Asher Engles, Asher Witherwax and Xander Weeks; and back row from left, assistant coach Chad Kuhlmann, Nolan Bode, Maverick Sargent, Jasper Meyer, Keaton Knoll, Kai Blue and coach James Grothe.
    Photo by KAYLEAN MAY The 2024 state cChampion Sting 2009 Girls Academy soccer team returned to Boise this past weekend to play Idaho Falls Football Club in the semifinals of the Idaho State Cup, and secured a 2-0 victory. The finals were a 2024 rematch between Sting and Idaho Rush Soccer Club, ending in a 2-2 draw after double OT. The Sting came up short in penalty kicks, and came home as the second-place team in Idaho. From left are coach Ty Kovatch, Taryn Young, Lucia Barton, Olivia Smith, Mady Witherwax, Anna Katherine Christman, Samantha Leaverton, Phinalley Voigt, Savannah Spencer, Ellia May, Nell Hutchins, Adelynn Blessing, Aspen Liddiard, Katie Kovatch, Chloe Murphree, Audrey Linder, Addy Kerley and assistant coach Dan Linder.
    Courtesy photo The Sting SC 2010 Girls soccer team took Silver at the Idaho State Cup over the weekend. In the front row from left are Katie Foster, Cate Storey, Mallory Morrisroe, Calla Kuhlmann, Selah McNiel, Anya Low and Grier Scott; and back row from left, Finley Wright, Ava Roberts, Jersey Larson, Emily Tanneberger, Jordynn Walker, Kendalyn Bowlby, Averyn Jones, Lila Moreau and Tayla Ruchti.
    Courtesy photo On Saturday the BVB IA CDA 2016 boys Black soccer team capped off its spring season with a 12–2 win over Spokane Shadow Jr B2015 Anderson Valley in Hayden. Competing in an older age bracket in the Washington Inland Select League (WISL), the BVB IA team finished the season undefeated. From left are Waylon Wood, Greyson Guy, Onyx Barnes, Mitchell Volland, Max Stover, Weston Kramer, Hugh Erickson, Peyton Schock, Colin Happeny; and rear, coach John O’Neil.
 
    Courtesy photo Sunday, the BVB IA CDA U12/U13 Boys soccer team secured a 3–1 victory over Spokane Shadow B12 Shale at Coeur d’Alene High School. In the front row from left are Owen Irwin, Luca Riley, Merrick Morse, Maverick Paine, Greysen Higgins, Conrad Cortes and Vincent Nyist; and back row from left, coach John O’Neil, Knolyn Kuhn, Caleb Wurster, Mateo Ethan Mariano, Patrick Langer, Weston Borges, Kleh Rogers, James Doalson and William Tell.
    Courtesy photo The Sting SC 09 boys Academy soccer team brought home the Idaho State Cup championship trophy in the U16 boys division. Games were played at the Simplot Sports Complex in Boise. Saturday the Sting played in the semifinals against BYSL IFFC 09 and won 4-0. Blake Wise scored the first goal of the game with an assist from Isaac Lowder. Lowder went on to score a hat trick, including a header assisted by Taylor Smith. Landon Brinkmeier maintained the shutout in goal. On Sunday the championship game was against the BTT 09 Boise Timbers and the Sting won 2-0. There was no score in the first half. Blake Wise scored the first goal and then assisted Isaac Lowder with the second goal. Landon Brinkmeier and Grant Johnson teamed for the shutout in goal. With the win, the Sting earned the opportunity to play in the Far West Regional tournament in Boise on June 20-25. In the front row from left are Ethan Luna, Brooks Judd, Kesh Pohlman, Blake Wise, Jacob Shaporda, Mason Taylor and Rowan Wyatt; and back row from left, coach Andy Vredenburg, Luc Buckland, Vann Tate, Miles Hart, Gus Penrose, Landon Brinkmeier, Grant Johnson, Isaac Lowder, Jacob Melun, Taylor Smith and Payson Shaw.
 
 
    Courtesy photo Lauren Rook of Hayden won Rookie of the Year for District 3, and qualified for the state finals in barrel racing and pole bending. The state finals are June 7-14 in Pocatello; the national finals are July 13-19 in Rock Springs, Wyo. Rook is a junior who studies online through Venture High School in the Coeur d’Alene School district. Competitors earn points for finishes in each event throughout the season. There were six rodeos in the fall, all in Lewiston, and five in the spring, all in Cambridge, culminated by the district finals rodeo on May 17 in Cambridge. The top six qualifiers after the 11 rodeos advance to the state finals.
    Courtesy photo Members of the Sting 09 boys Academy soccer team posed with their moms after a Mother’s Day game during the Bill Eisenwinter Hot Shot Tournament. In the front row from left are Payson Shaw, Alyssa Shaw, Megan Pohlman, Kesh Pohlman, Laura Taylor, Mason Taylor, Amber Lowder and Isaac Lowder; and back row from left, Vann Tate, Audrey Buckland, Luc Buckland, Megan Johnson, Grant Johnson, Stacy Smith, Taylor Smith, Becca Brinkmeier, Landon Brinkmeier, Rowan Wyatt, Erin Wyatt, Tiffany Wise, Blake Wise, Brooks Judd, Kim Judd, Amber Melun, Jacob Melun, Lara Penrose, Gus Penrose, Jacob Shaporda, Ethan Luna, Sharon Luna, Miles Hart and Heidi Hart.
    Photo by KRISTEN DVORACEK The Sting 2011 Boys Academy team traveled to Boise last weekend for the second weekend of the Idaho State Cup. Pictured is Jay Blue of the Sting, going for a header on a throw-in.
    Photo by JULIE SPEELMAN Kenzie Rix, right, of the Sting Girls 11 soccer team plays the ball in a game against the Big Sky Futbol Club in the recent Bill Eisenwinter Hot Shot Tournament.
 
 

  

  

  

 

  

  

  

  

  



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Sure, the newspaper informed. But as it fades, those who used it for other things must adjust, too – Butler Eagle

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This photo shows a completed Montana Standard crossword sitting on a chair in Colleen Elliott’s home on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP

The sun would rise over the Rockies in Butte, Mont., and Robin Gammons would run to the front porch to grab the morning paper before school.

She wanted the comics and her dad wanted sports, but the Montana Standard meant more than their daily race to grab “Calvin and Hobbes” or baseball scores. When one of the three kids made honor roll, won a basketball game or dressed a freshly slain bison for the History Club, appearing in the Standard’s pages made the achievement feel more real. Robin became an artist with a one-woman show at a downtown gallery and the front-page article went on the fridge, too. Five years later, the yellowing article is still there.

The Montana Standard slashed print circulation to three days a week two years ago, cutting back the expense of printing like 1,200 U.S. newspapers over the past two decades. About 3,500 papers closed over the same time. An average of two a week have shut this year.

That slow fade, it turns out, means more than changing news habits. It speaks directly to the newspaper’s presence in our lives — not just in terms of the information printed upon it, but in its identity as a physical object with many other uses.

“You can pass it on. You can keep it. And then, of course, there’s all the fun things,” says Diane DeBlois, one of the founders of the Ephemera Society of America, a group of scholars, researchers, dealers and collectors who focus on what they call “precious primary source information.”

“Newspapers wrapped fish. They washed windows. They appeared in outhouses,” she says. “And — free toilet paper.”

The downward lurch in the media business has changed American democracy over the last two decades — some think for better, many for worse. What’s indisputable: The gradual dwindling of the printed paper — the item that so many millions read to inform themselves and then repurposed into household workflows — has quietly altered the texture of daily life.

American democracy and pet cages

People used to catch up on the world, then save their precious memories, protect their floors and furniture, wrap gifts, line pet cages and light fires. In Butte, in San Antonio, Texas, in much of New Jersey and worldwide, lives without the printed paper are just a tiny bit different.

For newspaper publishers, the expense of printing is just too high in an industry that’s under strain in an online society. For ordinary people, the physical paper is joining the pay phone, the cassette tape, the answering machine, the bank check, the sound of the internal combustion engine and the ivory-white pair of women’s gloves as objects whose disappearance marks the passage of time.

“Very hard to see it while it’s happening, much easier to see things like that in even modest retrospect,” says Marilyn Nissenson, co-author of “Going Going Gone: Vanishing Americana.” “Young women were going to work and they wore them for a while and then one day they looked at them and thought, ‘This is ludicrous.’ That was a small but telling icon for a much larger social change.”

Nick Mathews thinks a lot about newspapers. Both of his parents worked at the Pekin (Illinois) Daily Times. He went on to become sports editor of the Houston Chronicle and, now, an assistant professor at the University of Missouri’s School of Journalism.

“I have fond memories of my parents using newspapers to wrap presents,” he says. “In my family, you always knew that the gift was from my parents because of what it was wrapped in.”

In Houston, he recently recalled, the Chronicle reliably sold out when the Astros, Rockets or Texas won a championship because so many people wanted the paper as a keepsake.

Four years ago, Mathews interviewed 19 people in Caroline County, Virginia, about the 2018 shuttering of the Caroline Progress, a 99-year-old weekly paper that was shuttered months before its 100th anniversary.

In “Print Imprint: The Connection Between the Physical Newspaper and the Self,” published in the Journal of Communication Inquiry, wistful Virginians remember their senior high school portrait and their daughter’s picture in a wedding dress appearing in the Progress. Plus, one told Mathews, “My fingers are too clean now. I feel sad without ink smudges.”

The many and varied uses

Flush with cash from Omahans who invested years ago with local boy Warren Buffett, Nebraska Wildlife Rehab is a well-equipped center for migratory waterfowl, wading birds, reptiles, foxes, bobcats, coyotes, mink and beaver.

“We get over 8,000 animals every year and we use that newspaper for almost all of those animals,” Executive Director Laura Stastny says.

Getting old newspapers has never been a problem in this neighborly Midwestern city. Yet Stastny frets about the electronic future.

“We do pretty well now,” she says. “If we lost that source and had to use something else or had to purchase something, that, with the available options that we have now, would cost us more than $10,000 a year easily.”

That would be nearly 1% of the budget, Stastny says, but “I’ve never been in a position to be without them, so I might be shocked with a higher dollar figure.”

Until 1974, the Omaha World-Herald printed a morning edition and two afternoon ones, including a late-afternoon Wall Street Edition with closing prices.

“Afternoon major league baseball was still standard then, so I got to gorge on both baseball and stock market facts,” an 85-year-old Buffett told the World-Herald in 2013, By then, he had become the world’s most famous investor and the paper’s owner.

The World-Herald ended its second afternoon edition in 2016 and Buffett left the newspaper business five years ago. Fewer than 60,000 households take the paper today, according to Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, down from nearly more than 190,000 in 2005, or about one per household.

Time marches on

Few places symbolize the move from print to digital more than Akalla, a district of Stockholm where the ST01 data center sits at a site once occupied by the factory that prints Sweden main newspaper, Kaun says.

“They have less and less machines, and instead the building is taken over more and more by this colocation data center,” she says.

Data centers use huge amounts of energy, of course, and the environmental benefit of using less printing paper is also offset by the enormous popularity of online shopping.

“You will see a decline in printed papers, but there is a huge increase in packaging,” says Cecilia Alcoreza, manager, of forest sector transformation for the World Wildlife Fund.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution announced in August that it would stop providing a print edition at year’s end and go completely digital, making Atlanta the largest U.S. metro area without a printed daily newspaper.

The habit of following the news — of being informed about the world — can’t be divorced from the existence of print, says Anne Kaun, professor of media and communication studies at Södertörn University in Stockholm.

Children who grew up in homes with printed newspapers and magazines randomly came across news and socialized into a news-reading habit, Kaun observed. With cellphones, that doesn’t happen.

“I do think it meaningfully changes how we relate to each other, how we relate to things like the news. It is reshaping attention spans and communications,” says Sarah Wasserman, a cultural critic and assistant dean at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire who specializes in changing forms of communication.

“These things will always continue to exist in certain spheres and certain pockets and certain class niches,” she says. “But I do think they’re fading.”

This photo shows the Montana Standard lying on Colleen Elliot’s doorstep on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP

This photo shows a Montana Standard article about Colleen Elliot’s daughter, Robin Gammons, that was cut out of the paper and put on Elliott’s refrigerator, on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP

This photo shows a Montana Standard article about Colleen Elliot’s daughter, Robin Gammons, that was cut out of the paper and put on Elliott’s refrigerator, on Oct. 18 in Butte, Mont. Colleen Elliott via AP





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Bay Area man arrested in racist vandalism of youth basketball coach’s vehicle – East Bay Times

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A 20-year-old Petaluma man has been arrested in connection with the racist vandalism left on the vehicle belonging to a well-known local youth basketball coach and former Harlem Globetrotter, police said.

The suspect, Corey Newman, was linked to the vandalism through surveillance video, police said. He was arrested Wednesday during a traffic stop and taken into custody without incident.

RELATED: San Jose high school investigating ‘human swastika’ formed by students in photo on campus



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Giving children a chance – Observer-Reporter

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The Ks Foundation recently held a toy drive for children in the area.

Kia Rose believes every child deserves the opportunity to play a sport.

“Sports play a vital role in fostering physical health, teamwork, discipline and confidence for these young kids,” said Rose.

Unfortunately, said the Uniontown mom of six, some families can’t afford to do so.

Through her nonprofit the Ks Foundation, Rose wants to remove the financial obstacle. The foundation, started in July, will cover registration for youth sports for families that make $49,000 or less yearly.

All of her children are sports-oriented, Rose said, and there were times that she found it difficult to pay for their participation.

“I see how much sports can affect kids and how far it can go for them to excel in anything,” Rose said. “I created this foundation so it can take away the financial barriers for children and families so they at least have a chance to get out of the house.”

Rose, a 2013 graduate of Uniontown Area High School, said everything is private, so no one will know who is asking for the help.

The Ks Foundation has held a number of events to raise funds for the cause, such as a Night at the Oscars Gala in November at the Uniontown Country Club.

On Dec. 20, the foundation held a Christmas Toy Drive and were able to help at least 40 families, said Rose.

“I’m so grateful and thankful for our community as a whole to be able to get together and help these children so (they were) able to open up something during this holiday season,” she said.

On Jan. 25, the Ks Foundation is holding the “Dodge for a Cause” dodgeball tournament at the Uniontown YMCA.

While the focus is currently on children in Fayette County, Rose hopes to expand the foundation’s reach, first to neighboring counties. Then, said Rose, she hopes to take it statewide.

“It has to start somewhere. Every child deserves a chance to play, grow and succeed,” she said.

Those interested in contributing can contact the foundation on its Facebook page or by calling 724-434-9061. Rose said the foundation is in the process of establishing a website.



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A Life: Joseph Shattie ‘just loved being around people’

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HARTFORD — Some people have no business coaching youth sports. Then there are those like Joseph Shattie who seemed to have been born for the role.

A standout athlete at Rice Memorial High School in Burlington and a Division I baseball player in college, Shattie certainly knew the game of baseball. He would later learn to ice skate and coach hockey, while also officiating youth and high school games.

But coaching impressionable youths takes more than an understanding of the fundamentals and game strategies.

Joseph Shattie demonstrates a referee call to his youngest son, Bryce, 6, at Barwood Arena. Shattie, who died in June, learned to skate as an adult and also coached and officiated hockey. His decision to know about ice hockey started when his three sons were young and expressed an interest in skating. All three, Jason, Kellen and Bryce, played the sport. (Family photograph)

“He just had a way of connecting with kids,” said Bob Gaudet, a close friend and former longtime head coach of the Dartmouth men’s hockey team. “He was really respected. Joe was a big guy, but a Teddy Bear with a big smile. He had a way of communicating with the kids. He spoke to them at their level and made them feel comfortable.”

Shattie, who died June 23, at the age of 73 after a decades-long battle with heart disease, emphasized to his players what some might consider old school attributes such as doing the right thing, discipline and character.

“Joe was all about that stuff,” said Gaudet, who first met Shattie when their children played youth sports together in the 1990s. They stayed close over the years.

Sports were a thread that went through much of Shattie’s life.

He was born in Winooski, Vt. When he was just 3, his father died from an injury he had suffered during World War II and his mother moved him and his brother, Sam, to Florida to live with their aunt. He later returned to Vermont to finish high school at Rice and went on to play baseball at the University of Missouri.

His first career was in the bar and restaurant business in Burlington which led him and a friend to open Than Wheeler’s in White River Junction, which has since closed. It was there he met his future wife, who was playing in a women’s softball league at the time.

“It was my first summer playing and a friend on the team was celebrating her birthday so we went over there,” Cheryl Shattie recalled.

Joseph Shattie on a cruise with his wife, Cheryl, in 1996. Shattie, a longtime youth sports coach who died in June, was remembered for his big heart and big smile. (Family photograph)

The couple were married almost 47 years before Shattie’s death. Together, they raised three sons, Jason, Kellen and Bryce.

“I would watch them interact together and they had this special bond,” said Todd Bebeau, the Hartford High School boys hockey coach who worked with Shattie at the Quechee Golf Course for a couple of years. “I had so much respect for the love they shared.”

All three of the Shattie sons played sports and their dad often coached them.

“He was a firm believer in hard work and having fun,” said Bryce, who lives in East Hampton, Mass. “He thought you could be both competitive and a good sport. It was what we often talked about.”

Growing up in Florida, Shattie never learned how to skate, but when his children took an interest in skating and hockey, he decided to learn, which is not an easy task as an adult.

“It took a lot of courage to learn how to skate and learn the game of hockey,” Bebeau said. “But Joe did it because he wanted to be involved with his kids and the hockey community. Joe did things for all the right reasons. It is the type of father Joe was. If his kids were involved in something, he wanted to be fully engrossed in it.”

Shattie learned how to coach and referee hockey games, often traveling long distances after working his day job in Richmond, Vt., where he was a sales manager for Caterpillar equipment. Shattie joined Caterpillar after selling Than Wheelers. Despite the long drives every day to Richmond, Shattie maintained his commitment to his family and his children’s sports.

Joseph Shattie on vacation in Nantucket with his wife Cheryl in 2021. (Family photograph)

“He would drive 50 miles one way to work, drive 50 miles home and then hop in the car and drive us to where our sporting event was,” recalled his son, Kellen, who lives in White River Junction.

Even after his children had aged out of the recreation and high school sports scene, Shattie didn’t want to give up what he loved doing for the kids and his community.

“I said, ‘Why are we going all over the state of New Hampshire when we don’t even have a kid in any of this?’ ” Cheryl Shattie once asked her husband. “I just know how much he loved doing it.”

Shattie also was known for his easy-going temperament. Stephen DeFelice, Shattie’s neighbor whose son, Brad, played baseball with Shattie’s son, Bryce, remembers those qualities on display when Shattie was a hockey referee.

Some parents, who think their child is destined for the NHL, can get a little overzealous watching a game, DeFelice said.

“It was not uncommon for your neighbor to be hollering at you if you made a bad call,” DeFelice said. “It may not have been a bad call, but they thought it was. And Joe would just have this big grin on his face when people would holler at him.”

In addition to coaching, Shattie served on the Hartford Zoning Board of Adjustment and his work with the Rotary Club earned him the Paul Harris Fellow Award, the service organization’s highest award. Shattie also served on the Friends of Dartmouth Hockey, helping to raise money through events such as the annual golf tournament.

After retiring, Shattie, around the age of 70, took a job working at the driving range at the Quechee Golf Course and was soon known as the “Mayor of the Driving Range,” Cheryl Shattie said.

Bebeau, the Hartford hockey coach, has fond memories of his time with Shattie at the Quechee Golf Course, listening to his stories about his time on the road with Caterpillar.

“He didn’t need to work, but he just loved being around people,” Bebeau said. “He always had a big smile on his face and was a great storyteller. He was one of the most positive people I have known. People you talk to will tell you they were drawn to Joe because Joe was a quality human being.”

Health problems plagued Shattie beginning at age 40 when he suffered a heart attack that required stents. Ten years later, after another heart attack, Shattie had quadruple bypass surgery and finally, he had a third heart attack at age 66. Shattie’s many heart problems were hereditary and he worked hard, with an exercise routine and nutritious meals, to improve his health.

“Family was first for him and that was a big motivator,” Cheryl Shattie said.

Shattie, who was an avid birdwatcher who enjoyed their peaceful vacations in Upstate New York, knew he was lucky to survive his health scares and never took a day for granted, his son Kellen said.

“He really wanted to enjoy the time he had,” Kellen said.

Shattie used his own experience to help his neighbors, the DeFelices, when Dawn DeFelice had open heart surgery at the onset of COVID in 2020.

“Anytime my wife had a question, ‘Is this normal?’ or ‘Should this be happening?’ Joe had an answer,” Stephen DeFelice said. “He knew what she was going through and would call to check on her to be sure she was OK because we were isolated. Joe was a real godsend for us during that time.”

Gaudet began his remarks at a memorial service for Shattie by referring to a video of the Shatties filmed for Dartmouth Health. The couple talked about Shattie’s heart attacks and the care he received, hoping it would encourage others to pay closer attention to their health and not let the busy lives they lead prevent them from taking care of themselves.

Gaudet noted that Shattie began the video by saying, “Life is precious.”

It was a credo Shattie lived each day, Gaudet said at the memorial.

“All of us who knew Joe remember how uplifted we were in any encounter with him,” Gaudet said. “We miss him so much.”

Patrick O’Grady can be reached at pogclmt@gmail.com.



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Salineville Kiwanis Student of the Month | News, Sports, Jobs

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Allyssa Shroades

SALINEVILLE – Southern Local High School senior Allyssa Shroades has been selected as the Salineville Kiwanis December Kiwanis Student of the Month.

Shroades, the daughter of Christina Shroades of Salineville, is currently ranked seventh in her class and holds a 3.978 GPA. She has yielded successful athletic and academic careers, being a member of the SLHS volleyball and basketball teams. Shroades has received First Team EOAC, All-Conference OVAC, Second Team OHSVCA District 1, and MaxPreps Player of the Year in volleyball and earned various titles in basketball, includingFirst Team EOAC, All Star 2023, Second Team All Columbiana County All Star 2023, Second Team All-OVAC All-Star 2023, Honorable Mention All-Area Morning Journal 2023, Honorable Mention Northeast Inland District Division IV 2023, and First Team All-EOAC Honors for 2024-2025. She also currently holds the school records for three-pointers in a game, in a season, and in a career.

Additionally, Shroades is a member of student council, Spanish Club, Varsity Club, and National Honor Society and volunteers at youth basketball tournaments.

Following graduation, she plans to attend Kent State University and major in nursing.



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Youth Sportslight: Jerry West/Youth Basketball Action | News, Sports, Jobs

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The Inter-Mountain photos by Steve Chamberlain
Players take part in a Jerry West Basketball contest this past Saturday at the Elkins-Randolph County YMCA.

Players take part in a Jerry West Basketball contest this past Saturday at the Elkins-Randolph County YMCA.

Players take part in a Jerry West Basketball contest this past Saturday at the Elkins-Randolph County YMCA.

Players take part in a Jerry West Basketball contest this past Saturday at the Elkins-Randolph County YMCA.



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