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PAGE 14 DECEMB E R 30 , 2021 2 0 2 1 Y E A R I N R E V I E W YE L LOW SPR INGS NEWS Send your student a bit of home with the News student subscription, only $45/yr. ysnews.com/subscribe YELLOW SPRINGS NEWS HOME SCHOOL. YSHS GIRLS BASKETBALL Th 30 @ Northeastern 7:30 p.m. January Mo 3 @ Bethel 7:30 p.m. We 5 @ Greenon 6 p.m. McKINNEY BOYS BASKETBALL January Tu 4 vs. Waynesville 6:30 p.m. McKINNEY GIRLS BASKETBALL January Tu 4 vs. Waynesville 5:30 p.m. YSHS BOWLING January Mo 3 @ Emmanuel Christian at Woodman Lanes, Dayton 4 p.m. Bold type indicates home game N E X T W E E K’S S C H E D U L E for runs batted in, with 23, and third for runs scored, with 20. Baseball The high school baseball team dedicated its season to former athletic director and longtime baseball coach Chris Rainey, who died Dec. 12, 2020. Tennis The tennis team’s sectionals tournament May 11 in Troy featured hard-fought wins by senior Ian Sherk, sophomore Henry Smith-Heston and the doubles team of sophomores Ethan and Jason Knemeyer. After winning his first match and advanc- ing to round two, Sherk lost to the No. 1 singles district seed. Smith-Heston cruised through his first two matches, winning handily, but was eliminated in the third round. The Knemeyer duo, who entered sectionals as the No. 1 seed in doubles play, won all their matches to advance to the district tournament on May 20 in Mason, where their progress was stopped by the No. 2 seeded doubles team. Track and Field The high school boys and girls track team hosted 11 schools at the annual Bulldog Invitational, which took place at Greeneview High School on May 5. The event, also known as the John Gudgel Invitational, was held at Greeneview while work on the Yellow Springs track was being completed. • The annual Metro Buckeye Confer - ence track and field championship on May 15 saw individual Yellow Springs athletes finishing on top of their events. Then- sophomore Cheyan Sundell-Turner ran to victories in the 1,600 (5:35.7) and 3,200 meter (12:32.35) races, and senior Annlyn Foster sped to a season best time with a first-place finish in the 100 meter hurdles (16.24). • The Division III district track and field meet on May 22 at Northmont High School saw several Bulldogs earn finishes qualifying them for regionals the follow- ing week. Senior Haneefah Jones was crowned the district champion in the long jump with a first-place jump of 16’3½”, and Sundell-Turner was victorious in the 3,200-meter race (12:25.18). Foster ran a personal best time in the 100 hurdles (15.88) for a runner-up finish, and the girls 400-meter relay team of Jones, Malaya Booth, Avery Reeder and Foster ran a season-best time (52.86) for a hard-fought second-place finish. Rounding out the girls squad in qualifying for the regionals was Booth in the 100 meters (13.67), by finish- ing fourth. Junior Yanne Gilley led the boys team, earning a trip to the regional meet in the long jump, finishing second (19’3½”), and narrowly missing competing at regionals in the 200 meter dash, finish- ing fifth. • The Division III regional meet May 26 at Troy Memorial Stadium saw two Bull- dogs earn medals. Foster achieved an eighth-place finish in the 100 hurdles, and Sundell-Turner placed eighth in the 3,200 meters. SUMMER REC SPORT S Minor and Major League youth base- ball took to the Gaunt Park diamonds in June. The Nipper’s Corner Brewers won the Minor League championship, and the Peach’s Grill Pirates clinched the Majors title. • Per r y League T-ball returned to Gaunt Park for each of the five Fridays in July, with beloved longtime coach Jimmy Cheshire announcing his retirement at the end of the season. FAL L For the fall sports season, the Bullddogs fielded teams in boys and girls soccer, cross-country and volleyball. • The annual one-mile Mills Lawn Ele - mentary Bulldog Chase took place Sept. 16, with 51 Mills Lawn students participating. Sixth-grader Violet Matteson ran to first place in the girls race, while third-grader Lloyd Grant placed first in the boys race. • On Sept. 30, the Southwest Ohio Track Club sponsored the “Fastest Bulldog” competition, which featured elementary students running a 100-meter dash. The winner for the girls race was four th- grader Hazel Castilow; sixth-grader Matteo Chaiten won the boys race. YSHS boys soccer wins conference Undefeated in regular season play, the Yellow Springs High School boys soccer team won the Metro Buckeye Conference championship in a home game against Dayton Christian High School on Oct. 5. McKinney girls XC wins conference The McKinney Middle School girls cross- country team won the Metro Buckeye Con- ference championship for middle school girls on Oct. 16 at Cedarville University. The quintet of Rebecca DeWine, Hannah Finney, Lauren Finney, Vivian Grushon and Sasi Dress-Johnson brought home the first- place trophy. Grushon, a seventh grader, crossed the finish line in first place, while teammate Drees-Johnson earned all-league honors with a sixth-place run. At the same conference meet, the Yellow Springs High School girls were led by two-time defend- ing champion Cheyan Sundell-Turner, who once again crossed the line in first place, while teammate Josie DeWine earned all- league honors with an 11th-place finish. For the boys, Ted Horvath ran to a sixth-place all-league finish. Volleyball second in conference The Yellow Springs High School vol- leyball team finished its regular season play with an overall record of 16–2 and a conference record of 8–2, putting the Bull- dogs second to undefeated Dayton Chris- tian in the Metro Buckeye Conference’s seven-team roster. In the final games of the regular season, several players passed significant milestones. Senior Aaliyah Longshaw reached 500 kills and 750 digs for her high school career and senior Angie Smith eclipsed the 1,000 digs mark. Junior Josephine Zinger ended the season having reached 1,000 assists. Girls soccer The high school girls soccer team started the season with 18 players — five returning, six who hadn’t played in a few years and seven who had never played soccer before. Despite many mismatches and several scoreless games, senior captain Tahlia Potter finished the season second in the Metro Buckeye Conference. or MBC, with 15 goals, and freshman Gema Brizuela led the conference with 172 saves in the regular season. Four players were also selected for of ficial conference honors. Potter and Sparks were voted onto the MBC First Team, and senior Myrah Burton earned a spot on the MBC Second Team. Senior Sophia Lawson earned the Sportsmanship Award for Yellow Springs. Regional and postseason contests • The 35th annual Young’s Cross-Coun - try Invitational took place Oct. 19 at Young’s Jersey Inn, with over 800 high school and junior high runners participating. • The high school cross-country boys and girls squads competed Oct. 23 in the postseason Division III meet at Cedarville University, where 28 schools toed the start line. Sundell-Turner, for the third year in a row, qualified for the regional contest, where on Oct. 30 she became the first YSHS girls cross-country runner since Lois Miller in 2012 to qualify for the state meet. At the state contest Nov. 6, Sundell-Truner finished 65th in a field of 187 runners. • After a 17-game streak of undefeated play, with 14 straight wins during the regu- lar season and three in the postseason tour- nament, the Yellow Springs High School boys soccer team saw its run come to an end Oct. 30 with a 4-0 loss to Mariemont, out of Cincinnati, in the final game of the district level tournament. Wagner commits to Notre Dame Yellow Springs native Aamil Wagner, a senior at Wayne High School where he was an offensive lineman on the Division I football team, made a verbal commit- ment in November to play for Notre Dame University next fall. He is the youngest son of Teresa Bondurant-Wagner and Lee Wagner. NEW WI NT ER S EASON With first games in November, the winter sports season was at the half-way point at the end of December. Boys and girls bas- ketball, bowling, cheerleading and a newly formed swim team are all in play. --Carol Simmons The LAUREN HEATON SCHOLARSHIP FUND for Aspiring Journalists Established in 2019 in memory of Lauren Heaton, writer, journalist, Yellow Springs native and graduate of Yellow Springs High School, the fund seeks to enable a qualifying YSHS senior to pursue studies in journalism. To donate, mail a check to the Yellow Springs Community Foundation, P.O. Box 55, YS, OH 45387, or online at bit.ly/LaurenHeatonFund The Lauren Heaton Scholarship Fund For Aspiring Journalists is seeking donations. The YELLOW SPRINGS NEWS Since 1880 BRYCE HILL INC. LANDSCAPE MATERIALS • Concrete Pavers • Clay Pavers • Concrete Retaining Walls • Paving Stone • Natural Stone brycehill . com See US oN FAcebooK! 937-325-0651 • 2301Sheridan Ave. Springfield, OH 45505 Mon–Fri: 7:30–5 • Sat: 8–Noon Despite classes continuing online in the first months of 2021, Yellow Springs Schools completed a winter sports season with boys and girls basketball teams com- peting at the high school level, a combined coed basketball team playing at the middle school level, a high school bowling team also competing and a cheer squad keeping energy high at boys and girls basketball games. A swim team did not come together, however, as the local practice venue, the Antioch College Wellness Center, was not available because of the ongoing pandemic. WI NT ER Girls Basketball At the star t of 2021, girls basketball standout Angie Smith, then a junior, had scored 1,260 points in her high school career, going on to net about 125 more points before the end of that season. Now a senior, Smith’s most recent total is about 1,600, with eight scheduled games left this season. Her total would surely be even higher if the pandemic hadn’t reduced the team’s number of games. Bowling • The Bulldog bowlers traveled to Marian Lanes on Feb. 10 for the Division II Southwestern District Sectional tourna- ment. Then-sophomore Krishan Miller finished 48th out of 142 bowlers, qualifying him for the district meet Feb. 19, where he represented Yellow Springs well, but did not advance to state. SPR I NG High school teams fielded for spring play were baseball, softball, tennis and track and field, representing the first season in two years for spring athletes following the 2020 shutdown. Softball Yellow Springs senior softball player Bre Wallace was selected to play in the Ohio Southwest District Softball Coaches Senior All Star Game on June 10 at West Carrollton High School. Wallace played catcher for the Bulldogs, and her .571 batting average was tops in the Metro Buckeye Conference. Wallace was also second in the conference PHOTO BY KATHLEEN GALARZA The YSHS Boys varsity soccer team routed Northeastern 10–0 in a tournament game on Oct. 23. From left, Grayson Horn head- butts the ball away as Jason Knemeyer and Eli Eyrich play their positions. PHOTO BY KATHLEEN GALARZA YSHS runner Malaya Booth, then a junior, showed poise and speed at the Metro Buckeye Conference Champion- ship on May 15. Booth finished as the runner-up in the 100- and 200-meter sprints. S P O R T S A N D R E C R E A T I O N

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