Month: March 2020

Two Cents from the Franklin Mint: Unprecedented Times

Just a few weeks ago, sports as we know it was brought to a grinding halt. Who would have ever thought that an organism one billionth of our size would take out every single athlete from playing the sports they love and void every spectator of one of life’s most enjoyable escapes? 
But has anyone thought about the totality of this recent chain of events? 
Organized sports originated in 1869 with the advent of American Football while baseball came two years later. In 1875, ice hockey began it’s long standing run in Canada while a Canadian, Dr. James Naismith, would invent the American game of basketball in 1892. Pierre de Coubertin would help revive the Olympic Games in 1889, with the first Olympiad taking place in Athens in 1896.
But it wasn’t until the year 2020, when all of these fun events were suddenly stopped.
As I approach my 40th birthday, I began to recall events since 1900 that voided the world of athletic competitions. But, it’s only the recent events of COVID-19 that has shut down everything. International, national, collegiate, high school, recreation, and youth leagues have had forms of disruptions over time, but never in the history of sports have we ever seen a full shutdown of sporting events.
Here’s a look at some of the most notable disruptions.

1) WAR
Following the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in 1914, the world went into war. As a result, the 1916 Olympic Games in Berlin were canceled. Berlin would host the games 20 years later in 1936.
In 1940, following Nazi Germany’s invasion of Poland one year prior, the Olympic Games in Tokyo were forfeited as a result of Japan’s involvement in the Second Sino-Japanese War. The games were then awarded to Helsinki, Finland. But due to the “Winter War” between Finland and the Soviet Union compiled with the various conflicts of the European Theatre, the games were eventually canceled.
Likewise, the 1940 Winter Olympics were also canceled. Originally scheduled to be held in Sapporo, Japan, the Olympics were moved twice. The first to St. Moritz, Switzerland and then later to Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. But as a result of the German invasion of Poland, the games were canceled. Sapporo would later host the 1972 Winter Games.
In 1944, London was set to host the Summer Olympic Games. They too faced cancellation as a result of World War II. London would later host the games in 1948. The Italian Alpine resort city of Cortina d’Ampezzo was slated to host the Winter games that same year, but these games were also canceled by WWII. Cortina would later host the Winter Olympics in 1956.
World War II also was responsible for the cancellation the 1942 and 1946 editions of the FIFA World Cup. 
Despite the international impact, professional leagues in the United States as well as collegiate sports and high school sports all continued.

2) 9/11
On that faithful Tuesday, America changed forever. In the immediate aftermath, major American sporting events were postponed or canceled. 
Major League Baseball postponed games up to one to three days following the tragedy. This would eventually delay the playoffs and cause the World Series between the New York Yankees and Arizona Diamondbacks to be played for the first time in November.
The National Football League postponed its’ Week Two games and made them up one week after the conclusion of the season. This obviously caused a delay of the playoffs and Super Bowl XXXVI.
NCAA College Football also postponed games. Games scheduled for September 13 & 15 were eventually played in early December, or canceled as a result of the inability to find opponents.
The 2001 Ryder Cup that was scheduled to be contested at The Belfry in England was postponed by a year. Other team based golf events (Presidents’ Cup & Solheim Cup) were also postponed and played a year later.
More closer to home, high school and local events faced minimal disruption. 
I was living in McDowell County at the time and saw a few events in volleyball and soccer postponed to later dates. Football, however was still on schedule as most football stadiums were large remembrance venues, with patriotism on full display. The local youth football league also did not face any postponements.
There were memorials worldwide, but there were no mass cancellations.

3) BLIZZARDS
While not events that affected events nationally or abroad, winter weather events can be something to behold in North Carolina.
In early March of 1993, I as a 13 year old lad was an outfielder for my middle school – playing in the balmy 78 degree heat. I remember coming home to a ring around my neck, and no, that wasn’t from dirt. It was the sunburn. My arms also got a nice coating of pink. (I don’t tan, I burn….even today). 
Two weeks later, the great portion of Western North Carolina (ranging from the Georgia/South Carolina/Tennessee border counties to the I-77 corridor) was under a massive blanket of snow ranging from 15 to 48 inches, with a three-inch layer of ice underneath. At my parents’ home in southern McDowell County, we had a solid 19 inches. 
On that Saturday, a normal 15-minute drive to Marion for supplies turned into a six-hour trek due to the horrible road conditions. To a good portion, electricity was the biggest concern in addition to trying to reign in our patience. Power was restored a week later, just in time for the beginnings of March Madness.
Given the time of the event, high school sports faced minimal disruption as it occurred during the week of the state basketball championships, which were postponed a week. High school baseball, softball, and track & field also faced minimal time off as their seasons had not began.
In 2000, the Triangle faced one of it’s biggest winter weather emergencies as 20 inches of snow fell in 24 hours. As what we faced in the mountains seven years prior, the same effect was prevalent in Central North Carolina. Given it’s time frame in late January, basketball games, wrestling matches, and swim meets all faced uncertain futures with postponements. 
But it did produce one of the best diversions – the basketball game between Maryland and North Carolina. This was the game that could not be attended by the “Wine and Cheese” faithful (the alumni members of The Rams Club members) but instead by the students. After a thrilling win by the Tar Heels that saw the students storm the Smith Center floor, it unleashed a immense amount of controversy. For years, students tried every way possible to get more closer to the action – much to the dismay of Rams Club members who didn’t want to give up their seats.
In both cases, the snow melted, roads cleared, and events resumed.

If you look at all three of these circumstances, certain sects of sports faced a form of disruption. But never in the history of sports have we ever seen a total disconnect with the cancellation of tournaments, postponement of season play, and even to postpone the largest sporting event in the world, the Olympic Games – all at one time.
While the future is grave and completely uncertain, we are living in times that we might not see again. But as a sports fan, I’m hopeful that breakthroughs can be made to return athletes to play and the fans to the stands.

Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: Braedon Thompson

This week;s Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week is senior lacrosse midfielder Braedon Thompson. For the past four years, Thompson has played lacrosse and football at Cedar Ridge, becoming the third member of the Thompson family to participate in sports at the school. As a freshman, Thompson played for the 3A/2A/1A Eastern Regional Championship Cedar Ridge lacrosse team, which played for the state championship inside Sahlen’s Stadium at WakeMed Soccer Park. Thompson was also a team captain for the football team last fall. His father, Mason, is an assistant coach with the football team. With school currently under hiatus because of the Coronavirus pandemic, Thompson hopes to resume lacrosse season in April. Until then, he will continue to study towards graduation. He plans to attend Western Carolina University this fall to start studying Emergency Management.

Green Eggs and Hamlin: Don’t feel for me. Feel for them.

Well, this whole “not have a game stuff” certainly puts it all into perspective, doesn’t it?

Too much perspective, if you ask me.

(Ed. note: in the interest of fairness, that quote is from “This is Spinal Tap.” I don’t have an ear for most modern pop culture references, and Spinal Tap is old but timeless)

The most amazing thing regarding the coronavirus pandemic is how quickly the spring sports landscape in Hillsborough, and everywhere else, went from rich to barren. On March 10, the Orange baseball team beat East Chapel Hill. The following day, they were taking batting practice preparing for the second game of the series on Friday.

No one had any idea that, in all likelihood, it would be their final practice together. Or that the North Carolina High School Athletic Association would suspend the spring sports season less than 24 hours later.

When you’re a senior in high school, things are never as final as they seem. Many of the students who will graduate in the Smith Center in June (if they’re allowed to) will eventually live in Orange County or somewhere near it. Many of them will continue to carry friendships with people they’ll turn the tassels with, hopefully closer than five feet apart.

Yet the Class of 2020 will hold a unique place in history, but locally and abroad. Especially those that play spring sports.

Hopefully all of them live a long, rich life. And when they get to my age, they can look back and talk about their incomplete senior year. Every other athlete in the history of Orange and Cedar Ridge had the chance to succeed or do otherwise, based on their own abilities.

With each passing day, it feels like the Class of 2020 won’t be able to even say that. Their chance was taken away by an invisible enemy that has shut down everyday life like nothing we’ve seen before it. And hopefully never will again.

Last Saturday night, I received a DM from a friend who graduated with me from Orange in 1991. She asked if I was doing OK. Like many freelancers, I depend on games to make ends meet and the media paradigm isn’t as steady as it once was. I didn’t have a good answer for her because, after 30 years of covering sports, this is all so new to me.

As I’ve written before, high school sports has usually carried on through even the worst disasters, locally and nationally. Three days after 9/11, I was doing play-by-play for Northern Durham at J.F. Webb in Oxford. It may have been the most numb atmosphere for a game I’ve ever seen (especially since Northern won 67-0), but they still played. Well, at least Northern did.

The last thing anyone should do is feel bad for me.

But here’s who I do feel bad for:

Braden Thompson and Braxton Mergenthal: They’re senior lacrosse players at Cedar Ridge. When Thompson was a freshman, the Red Wolves defeated Chapel Hill 11-8 to win the 3A/2A/1A Eastern Regional Championship. They became the first lacrosse team from Hillsborough to play for a state championship in lacrosse. Mergenthal was a defenseman who helped the Red Wolves shut out Roxboro Community School 16-0 in the season opener. It appeared Cedar Ridge was set to battle Orange for the Conference 9 Championship.

Wyatt Jones, Noah Davis and the rest of the seniors on the Orange lacrosse team: Orange tied the best start in school history last Friday at 6-0. Orange coach Chandler Zirkle approached the game with a sense of finality, which appears to be prescient. Jones is the first lacrosse player from Orange to commit to a Division I school. Hopefully next spring, Mercer won’t have its season interrupted like the rest of the spring sports teams, high school and college, did this year.

Cameron Hartley, Chris Pearce, Grant Fox and Fransisco Martinez: The Cedar Ridge baseball team is a young one, but Coach Bryson Massey got a win over The Burlington School on March 6. It wasn’t easy. It was a blustery night and Martinez got some big outs while wind gusts of 25-miles-per-hour swirled around him. I hope Martinez, Hartley, Fox and Pearce all get a chance to play again.

Joey Berini: Somehow, it would be prophetic if Joey Berini’s last game at Orange is the East Chapel Hill one from March 10. That would mean that Berini hit a grand slam in his last official at-bat. (He drew a walk in his final plate appearance in the sixth inning, but that doesn’t count as an at-bat.) Joey has started at Orange for four years at shortstop. I’ve interviewed him about eight times and he’s never cracked a smile once. He also isn’t known for long answers. Our last discussion was one minute and 37 seconds, mainly comprised of me filling up time with run-on sentences. Joey was always high on production even when he was low on words. Hopefully East Carolina beat writers will enjoy his production as much as Orange fans have.

Dayne Watkins: In Orange’s first game of the year, Dayne injured his hamstring running out a ground ball against Western Alamance. He was set to play again last week against East Chapel Hill, which never happened. Dayne also kindly asked me for a video interview despite not playing the past three games. Dayne, we’ll do that soon. What else am I going to do, watch March Madness?

Emma Roby: Taking the place of a three-year starter is not easy. Emma replaced Kymberlie Thacker as catcher for Cedar Ridge’s softball team and was off to a solid start. Thacker had a .370 career batting average with seven home runs and 57 RBIs. Roby went 2-for-4 in her first game against Cardinal Gibbons, an 11-7 Cedar Ridge win.

Cailyn Thornton: A starter for Cedar Ridge in right field, she opened the year 6-for-12 with five RBIs. Also made the state playoffs as a volleyball player last fall. She deserved a chance to win another Big 8 Conference Championship in softball.

Alyssa and Rachel Serre: Two more Cedar Ridge softball seniors who finally had a chance to start together for the first time at the varsity level.

Grace Andrews: As a freshman, she started at 2nd base for Orange’s 3A state championship team. Maybe Grace doesn’t need anyone weeping for her, after all. But she did deserve a chance to finish her career with a chance to win a conference title, one that Orange tied Cedar Ridge for last year. She already had two.

Maddy Bartlett and Rachel Tilley: Orange’s softball team was already dealt a tough hand with season-ending injuries to three infielders before practice started. Yet Bartlett and Tilley fought through all that to propel Orange past East Chapel Hill 10-8 on March 10, despite trailing 7-1. I know Maddy’s cousins, Mia and Montana Davidson, were proud in Starkville, MS.

And the list goes on and on. There are women’s soccer players. Men’s tennis players. Track & field athletes. All of whom are sidelined by something they can’t even envision.

Two weeks ago, I was out in the freezing cold at Cedar Ridge Softball Field to do play-by-play for Cedar Ridge vs. West Johnston. It was 49 degrees at first pitch and it only grew worse with 25-mile-per-hour winds. It was as if I had never left Appalachian State.

In the midst of all this, I though to myself “This is a weird way to make a living.”

Now, as I finish writing this in 70-degree temperatures on a calm night at the American Tobacco Campus, I can honestly say I can’t wait to feel that weird again.

Alumni Update: Riley wins one more for Liberty baseball as season ends

Landon Riley: Liberty Baseball ended its year with a 10-7 record. The Flames defeated Kent State 7-2 on March 9 in Lynchburg, VA. Riley earned his second win of the season. He came out of the bullpen to throw two-and-two-thirds innings of shutout baseball. Riley faced eleven batters and scattered two hits and struck out two. It was a short but solid season for Riley. In seven appearances, he had a 2-0 record with four saves and a 1.46 ERA. In 12.1 innings, Riley had 15 strikeouts, allowed only three walks, six hits and two earned runs.

Bowen Collins: The Division II Lenoir-Rhyne men’s lacrosse team ended the year ranked #5 in the country. On March 10, the Bears defeated Assumption 17-12 at Moretz Stadium in Hickory. Collins scored a goal with 12:00 remaining in the game. Lenoir-Rhyne also defeated #1 Limestone 18-16 in the Crown Lacrosse Challenge at Hough High School in Cornelius on March 8. Collins scored two goals for the Bears, including a man-up goal in the second quarter to put the Bears ahead 7-4. He scored again with 36 seconds remaining in the third quarter. Collins ends the year with seven goals and six assists in seven games. Since he is a senior, Collins can take advantage of another year of eligibility that was extended by the NCAA on Friday after the rest of the season was canceled because of the Coronavirus.

Zach Wright: Wright had a goal for Division II Mars Hill in a loss to 19-8 loss to North Greenville on March 11 at Meares Stadium in Mars Hill. Wright scored an unassisted goal with 1:15 remaining in the third quarter. This season, Wright had four goals and two assists in eight games. He is also a senior.

Jaylin Jones: Jones assisted on a goal for Pfeiffer in a 16-8 loss to Guilford at Afmfield Athletic Center in Greensboro. Jones set up Quinn Becraft on a goal that reduced the Falcons’ deficit to 10-5 with 8:55 remaining in the third quarter. Jones, a junior, played in five games this year for Pfeiffer.

Luke Hernandez: The former Cedar Ridge Red Wolf also played for Pfeiffer against Guilford. Hernandez, a sophomore, saw action in Pfeiffer’s last three games, including a 23-6 win over Averett on March 7. Pfeiffer went 2-4 this season.

Tyson Wolter: The former Orange High lacrosse goalkeeper is now at Division III Guilford after transferring from Pfeiffer. On March 11, Wolter faced Pfeiffer after he replaced starter Jack Rogers. Wolter plays 6:36 and made four saves. A freshman, Wolter played in two other games this season for the Quakers.

Aidan Poole: The Division III Greensboro men’s lacrosse team defeated Hampton 15-11 at Pride Field in Greensboro on March 11. Poole, who was an All-Big 8 Conference player at Cedar Ridge, started on defense for the Pride. He assisted on a goal scored by Austin Abourjilie in the third quarter. He also had a ground ball and created a turnover. Greensboro was 4-3.

Kate Burgess: The UNC rowing team finished 3rd in the Clemson Carolina Cup on March 7 at Lake Hartwell in Clemson, SC. Burgess, a freshman who made the rowing team last fall, was on the Varsity 8 team that finished fourth in a five-team race at a time of 7:38.63. Kate Pierce paced the boat that Burgess was rowing, along with Charlotte Melgard, Gabrielle Labrazzi, Juliana Micchia, Hannah Davis, Zoe Sang, Nicole Van Liew and Neeva Wernsman Young. This was the first, and only, race of the spring for UNC’s rowing team.

Orange Panther of the Week: Joey Berini

This week’s Orange Panther of the Week is senior shortstop Joey Berini. On Tuesday night, Berini hit a grand slam as the Panthers won its Big 8 Conference opener over East Chapel Hill 9-4. Berini has had an outstanding career at Orange. He started at shortstop since his freshman year. Since then, he has started in 80 of Orange’s 82 games. Last season, Berini was the Big 8 Player of the Year after he hit .541 with 33 hits, 35 runs scored and 26 RBIs. He also led the team with 12 doubles. This season, Berini has hit lead off as the Panthers got off to a 2-2 start before the hiatus caused by the Coronavirus. Last November, Berini formally signed with East Carolina to play baseball. His younger brother, Jackson, has played in all four games for Orange and will be the next generation of the Berini family to play in Hillsborough. Fittingly, Joey hit his first career grand slam on the night his younger brother got his first start. In fact, Berini knocked his younger brother in on the grand slam. If Orange doesn’t return to action this year, it will go down as Berini’s 84th and final hit for Orange.

Alumni Update: Davidson joins exclusive club before season suddenly ends

What started out to be a promising spring sports season for athletes across the region ended suddenly on Thursday. The NCAA announced that national championships for all spring sports would be canceled because of the corona virus pandemic.

On Friday, the NCAA extended the eligibility of athletes on spring sports teams one year to make up for the season lost to the coronavirus. An athletics official at an East Coast school told The Associated Press that the NCAA Division I Council Coordination Committee sent an email notifying schools of the eligibility decision.

Most prominently, that will impact Brad Debo, the former Orange High catcher who was already underway with his senior season on the N.C. State baseball team.

Also, former Orange lacrosse player Bowen Collins will have another year of eligibility on the Lenoir-Rhyne men’s lacrosse team. The Bears had already defeated Limestone and Adelphi, ranked #1 and #3, respectively, in Division II, when the season was canceled.

Mia Davidson: Davidson ended the year with a bang as Mississippi State softball defeated Southern Miss 7-2 at USM Softball Complex in Hattisburg, MS on Wednesday. Mia went 4-for-4 with two home runs and four RBIs. Davidson came up for her final at-bat needing a triple for the cycle, but hit another home run instead. It was the 41st multi-homer game in Mississippi State history.

Against UT-Martin, Davidson hit a home run to become the 23rd player in Southeastern Conference history to hit 50 home runs. She’s one of nine active players in Division I to reach that mark.

In the final weekend of the season, Mississippi State won the Bulldog Slamboree in Starkville. On March 6, the Bulldogs defeated Bryant 5-1, then shut out Mississippi Valley State 6-0. On Saturday, Mississippi State swept another doubleheader, beating Southeast Missouri State 2-0 and Mississippi Valley State 20-3 in five innings. On Sunday, the Bulldogs edged Southeast Missouri State 2-0.

In the second game against MVSU, Mia reached base in all four plate appearances, scoring three times. She finished 2-for-2 with a double and a single.

Mia ends the 2020 season with a .330 batting average in 28 games. She hit seven home runs and 21 RBIs, and a team-high two triples.

Montana Davidson: Montana started at 3rd base in all five games in the Bulldog Slamboree. She went 1-for-2 in the opening win over Bryant. Montana ends her junior season with a .224 batting average. She started in 27 of the Bulldogs’ 28 games. Mississippi State was supposed to open its SEC slate against Kentucky this weekend.

Brad Debo: The N.C. State designated hitter played in nine games with four starts. He hit .263 with one double. N.C. State finished with a 14-3 overall record, 1-2 in the ACC.

Phillip Berger: Berger played in Division III William Peace University’s final game of the season, a 13-9 win over Dean College at the USA Baseball Complex in Cary. Berger threw two-thirds-of-an-inning, striking out one batter. On March 7, Berger started against Piedmont. He threw six-and-one-thirds-innings, and allowed five runs on eight hits. He took a no-decision as Peace won in the 9th inning 6-5 in Cary. Berger was named the USA South Athletic Conference Freshman of the Week after his victory over Mary Washington on February 23. In that victory, he threw seven shutout innings and allowed three hits. Berger appeared in seven games this season. He finished 1-1 with a 5.79 ERA with 20 strikeouts and four walks.

We’ll have a look at lacrosse, wrestling and basketball players coming up on Monday.

Orange lacrosse routs Roxboro Community on “Senior Night”

Photo by Tracy Thompson

The Orange lacrosse team is off to its best start ever and won its Conference 9 opener decisively.

And now it may all be over.

That was a reality that the team disguised well during its 15-0 rout of Roxboro Community School in Person County on Friday night. The game started roughly five hours before the suspension of the spring sports season, mandated by the North Carolina High School Athletic Association, would go into effect because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Of course, no one on the field wanted the season to end Friday, but there sure was a sense of finality.

Orange Coach Chandler Zirkle was showered with a gatorade bath, hopefully with sanitized water, after the running clock ran out. Shortly afterwards, Roxboro Community School players gathered for two team photos–one for posterity, the other with as many zany faces as possible.

If the theme of the night could be summed up with one word, perhaps it wouldn’t be “finality” as much as “uncertainty.”

“It might be the off-season now,” said Orange senior Noah Davis, who finished with a goal and an assist. “We treated tonight as senior night and allowed a lot of seniors to get playing time. We were all a little bit upset about the news since we’re doing well this season. We think we can do well in the playoffs.”

This was Orange’s conference opener, after all. Openers aren’t supposed to end seasons.

“We really don’t know what’s going on,” said Orange senior Wyatt Jones, who has committed to play at Mercer. “We don’t know if we’re going to play anymore. We were just trying to make the most out of it tonight.”

If it was the end, Orange went out having fun, just as Zirkle wanted it.

After scoring two goals, Jones started playing with a longstick for the first time in his varsity career. By the fourth quarter, he was the goalkeeper. Jones was the final player to touch the ball in the game and joked he should have received credit for a save. Dylan Boyer and Caleb Davis, two of Orange’s top scorers, also took turns with the long pole.

All three of Orange’s goalkeepers played on the offensive end. There was even a goalkeeper-to-goalkeeper connection on Orange’s 13th goal when Chase Hawkins scored off an assist from Ethan Fortner. In fact, Forter, who earned the win in Wednesay’s thrilling game against J.H. Rose, had two assists.

Hawkins earned the win in the net. Malachi Bolton played most of the second half between the pipes.

Orange’s Seth Wolter scored the opening goal on an assist from Seth Davis with 9:32 remaining in the first quarter. Cy Horner assisted on consecutive goals from Boyer and Jones to boost Orange’s lead to 3-0. Davis, Jake Wimsatt and Nate Kaltz all scored goals in the first quarter.

Tom Wileman, Ryan Fedor and Jake Ray also scored for Orange. Hornet finished with four points, including one goal.

Once the lights were turned off at Roxboro Community School field on Friday night, there were hugs between teammates and coaches. Even though the season is only two weeks old, if this were a movie, it felt appropriate that “The End” would flash on the screen.

Orange’s players just hope it wasn’t the famous final scene.

“We’re one win away from having the best start of any Orange team ever,” Jones said. “It’s kind of sad. But hopefully we’ll play and get to 7-0 and maybe keep going.”

Orange midfielder/goalkeeper Wyatt Jones on RCS win

Orange senior midfielder Wyatt Jones played possibly his final game as a Panther on Friday night. Jones scored two goals in Orange’s 15-0 win over Roxboro Community School in Person County. The win puts Orange at 6-0, tying the best start in school history. Jones is the first Orange lacrosse player to sign with a Division I school. In December, Jones signed with Mercer. The North Carolina High School Athletic Association has suspended the spring sports season until April 6, leading to uncertainty whether Orange’s season will continue. The Panthers handled its game with the Bulldogs as senior night. After Jones scored two goals, he started playing as a long-stick midfielder. Then he shifted to goalkeeper, for the first time in his career, in the fourth quarter. Jones was also the starting quarterback for the Orange football team the past two years.

Orange senior midfielder Noah Davis on win over RCS

The Orange men’s lacrosse team won its Conference 9 opener against Roxboro Community School 15-0 on Friday night. Now, they hope it’s not the end. Going into the pandemic hiatus, which will last three weeks, Orange is 6-0 for only the second time in school history. Davis, who wrestled this season for Orange at 152 pounds, assisted on the opening goal from Seth Walter. Noah scored Orange’s tenth goal in the second quarter. The Panthers ended the week with three wins in four days. They defeated Heritage on Tuesday and J.H. Rose on Wednesday. Now Orange will spend the next three weeks hoping that their season will continue on April 6, when school will return to session in Hillsborough. For now, Orange is atop Conference 9, tied with Northern Durham at Cedar Ridge at 1-0. Davis was a junior when the Panthers defeated Northside-Jacksonville in the 3A/2A/1A State Playoffs last season.

Orange midfielder Noah Davis talks win over RCS

The Orange men’s lacrosse team won its Conference 9 opener against Roxboro Community School 15-0 on Friday night. Now, they hope it’s not the end. Going into the pandemic hiatus, which will last three weeks, Orange is 6-0 for only the second time in school history.