Mendez scores game-winning goal, Orange soccer opens season with 1-0 win over Carrboro
The drawback for Orange men’s soccer is its goalkeeping position is young.
But their centerbacks and wingbacks are not.
On Monday night, the defensive backline of Jay Parker, Dallas Johnson, Eben Petrides and Logan Edwards defended strongly in front of goalkeeper Hector Garrido, who got a clean sheet in his first varsity start.
And what a time to do it.
Orange defeated Carrboro 1-0 for the first time in recorded history to open the season on Monday night at Orange Soccer Field. Yurem Tapia Mendez scored the game’s only goal after he received a through pass from senior Kace McAuley with 23:47 remaining in regulation.
MaxPreps.com records show that Orange and Carrboro had met five previous times dating back to 2010. The Jaguars and the Panthers played to a 1-1 tie last year at Jaguars Stadium. Carrboro, which opened in 2007, had gone 3-0-2 lifetime against Orange going into Monday night. Records date back to 2010.
After Mendez’s opener, Carrboro continued to press looking for the equalizer. The Jaguars amassed a series of corner kicks in the final 20 minutes, but Orange thwarted each attempt.
It was the second straight year that the Panthers won its season opener. Last year, Orange won at Durham School of the Arts.
Orange’s preparation for its season opener was rushed because of Mother Nature. Last week, the Panthers had two scrimmages scheduled. The first one against Chapel Hill lasted all of eight minutes before a downpour ensued and everybody went home. Another scheduled scrimmage canceled for Thursday was washed away courtesy of Tropical Storm Debby.
“I think everybody was working out some kinks tonight,” said Orange coach Palmer Bowman. “That had to work through it.”
Yurem, a junior, scored two goals in 2023. He replaced Emmanuel Mil Cruz, who led the Panthers with five goals last season before graduating in June, at forward. It was set up when McAuley stepped into a passing lane and found Mendez cutting up the center of the field.
“We emphasized quick counters,” Bowman said. “Kace made a good read and intercepted it and it was a quick counter.”
Carrboro, coming off a second place finish in the Northern Lakes Conference in 2023, finished 13-6-3 last season. The Jaguars were looking for a scoring option after its top three goal scorers from 2023 graduated, including Kesar Lamb, who finished with 20 goals in 2023 en route to the state playoffs.
That’s where Orange’s backline came through. They patrolled the goal where Garrido, who had numerous starts as a freshman in men’s basketball last winter, made two saves to earn the shutout. Petrides helped engineer several clearances in the final ten minutes as the Panthers desperately cringed to a one-goal lead for the final 20 minutes of regulation.
“They limited Carrboro’s opportunities,” Bowman said. “Carrboro had way more possession, but we limited opportunities in our defensive third. They deserve a lot of credit.”
Orange finished 8-8-3 overall in 2023 with a fourth place finish in the Central Conference. For the first time since the formation of the Central Conference in 2022, the Panthers defeated Walter Williams in Burlington. Earlier in the year, the Bulldogs and the Panthers played to a scoreless tie in Hillsborough.
For the first time in the 44-year history of the program, Orange men’s soccer reached the state playoffs in consecutive years. After finishing the regular season with a 2-0 win over Eastern Alamance in Mebane, the Panthers fell to Lee County in Sanford in the state playoffs. In 2022, J.H. Rose knocked off Orange in Greenville.
With Southern Durham, the defending Northern Lakes champions, on tap for Wednesday night, Bowman isn’t letting his team get ahead of itself.
“We’re only one game in,” Bowman said. “I told the guys that the season is about responding to good and bad alike.”
Cedar Ridge football players discuss Midnight Madness practice
It was Midnight Madness for Cedar Ridge football last week. The Red Wolves practiced in pads for the first time this season under head coach Brent Bailey, attracting fans for a Midnight Madness event at the Cedar Ridge football field last Friday night. The entire Red Wolf volleyball team came out as the players practiced under cooler conditions. Among the players warming up was junior Thomas McDermott, who is slated to start at quarterback for the season opener against East Chapel Hill on August 22 at Red Wolves Stadium. Tight end Mason Hughes, who will be a junior this year, will be among the targets that McDermott will look for. Juniors Carlos Baldwin and Luis Donjuan will be among the offensive linemen, while Jayden Harvey will line up as a pass rusher. Throughout the summer, Coach Bailey has beefed up Cedar Ridge’s coaching staff. Among the new additions are defensive coordinator Ryan Johnston, previously the head coach at Jordan-Matthews. There’s also Phil Credle, previously the quarterbacks coach at Cleveland High School in Clayton. Coach Bailey has more players out for the team as the Red Wolves look to build stability in football. You can hear Cedar Ridge’s season opener against East Chapel Hill on Hillsboroughsports.com on August 22 live from Red Wolves Stadium. Kickoff will be at 7PM.
Cedar Ridge football players discuss Midnight Madness practice to kick off season
It was Midnight Madness for Cedar Ridge football last week. The Red Wolves practiced in pads for the first time this season under head coach Brent Bailey, attracting fans for a Midnight Madness event at the Cedar Ridge football field last Friday night.
After regional championship in 2023, Orange volleyball aims high in new season
As with any special season, it’s easy for a coach to reflect.
Hope Heverly’s first season as Orange volleyball coach resulted in the second regional championship in team history. They faced Kings Mountain for the 3A State Championship inside Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh and were three points away from taking it all, dropping the fifth set 15-12.
It was a season beyond anyone’s expectations. Before last year, Orange hadn’t won a conference title since 2005. Along the way, the Lady Panthers defeated defending Eastern Regional champion J.H. Rose, then triumphed over Carrboro for the regional championship in a classic match on Halloween night in front of a raucous crowd at Orange Gymnasium that ended with the students rushing the floor after match point.
But Heverly wouldn’t be a competitor if she didn’t look back at Orange’s state title match with curiosity.
“I’ve thought about what if we changed this or that,” Heverly said with a chuckle. “But I’ve been really excited about this year.
Orange’s run to the state championship match brought the community together. Heverly wondered if that would be reflected with increased interest when tryouts started last week.
She got her answer when nearly 40 players showed up, including a large freshman class.
As Orange’s players ventured to their travel teams last winter, Heverly kept track of them.
“I’m really excited about where this program is moving forward,” Heverly said. “To be at the level where we want this program to be, it takes more effort than what we show from August-to-October. It’s takes work in the offseason and they’ve put in that work.”
Heverly’s second Orange team will have a Big 12 recruit in its ranks. Junior middle blocker Ava Wilkerson committed to UCF last week. Wilkerson, a 6-foot-4 junior, led the team with 79 blocks for an Orange team that went undefeated to the Central Conference regular season championship in 2023. Wilkerson has played varsity each of her first two seasons and was third on the team with 293 kills last year.
“She’s really grown in many ways,” Heverly said. “Not only has she grown in terms of skill level, but also her maturity level. Her leadership abilities have really sprouted. I’m excited to see how she will lead this team.”
Orange lost outside hitter Ella Wimsatt and libero Sadye Porter to graduation. Wimsatt led the team with 456 kills in 2023 and was the Central Conference Player of the Year. Porter was a defensive wonder, pacing the squad with 521 digs after missing her junior season.
“Ella was a one of a kind athlete,” Heverly said. “She brought an attitude where she would go all out. She didn’t have to tell the team that. She would show that on the court and the team would follow.”
However, Orange brings back most of its firepower. 6-foot-1 outside hitter Aubrey Jordan is back for her junior season after racking up 385 kills in 2023. Setter Katie Silcott, another rising junior, returns after setting the single-season school record with 1,037 assists. Sophomore Sawyer White, who was inserted into the starting lineup late last season, alternated with Silcott as setter for much of the postseason. White finished with 236 assists and 22 kills.
Regular rotation players Mariah Poole (middle blocker), Karleigh Johnson and Abby Silinski (who finished with 62 aces) also return from a squad that finished 27-5 overall. Junior Addison Guentensberger is expected to get time as libero to replace Porter.
It’s a team that has high expectations and Heverly has put together a schedule that reflects that. Following the season-opener against Roxboro Community School next Tuesday in Hillsborough, Orange will host perennial power D.H. Conley from Greenville on Wednesday.
“Last year, the team worked hard and earned a lot of things,” Heverly said. “They caught a lot of schools’ attention. We will come and we will be prepared as much as we can after a week-and-a-half of practice. I’m not shying from any tough competition. You only get better by playing the best.”
Heverly will schedule tough opponents and will gladly tell you how optimistic she is about her second Orange team. Just don’t expect her to make any predictions about a potential return to Raleigh for another state championship appearance this fall.
“We’re not comparing anything to last year,” Heverly said. “We’ve got to make this team our own team for the 2024 season. We know we had a great year last year. Now we’re going forward.”
With Bailey in charge, Cedar Ridge football looks to take a step forward in 2024
Photo by Braeden Wilbourn
Technically, summer doesn’t end until September 22.
Yet around Orange and Cedar Ridge High Schools, the term “summer” is already being spoken in past tense.
Practice for fall sports got underway on Thursday and there was something in the air late on Friday night at Cedar Ridge’s football practice field that hasn’t been felt in years.
Stability.
Every year since 2018, Cedar Ridge has had to deal either with the loss of a head coach (on two separate occasions, the departures came during the first week of August practice) or word that there would be no varsity team due to a lack of players (which happened in 2018 and 2021).
Not only will the Friday Night Lights shine brightly at Red Wolves Stadium this fall, but the practice field lights were on for the first Friday in August.
Head coach Brent Bailey went back to his Clayton roots and held a practice with his newest team at 10PM on Friday night. The Midnight Madness event continued at 12:30, with humidity at 93%, though the temperature will still comfortable and players expressed interest in doing it again next year.
It was actually an offshoot of a concept that the original Cedar Ridge football coach, Lou Geary, did in the mid-2000s.
“It gets the kids excited and it allows the parents to come out and watch,” Bailey said. “It gets the community excited so that’s what I’m trying to build.”
The entire Cedar Ridge volleyball team, along with various fans, carried along lawn chairs to watch the workouts and enjoyed pizza and other refreshments when it all ended. So did several former players, including former running back Tyler Fields, who graduated in June.
This could have been another summer of uncertainty for Cedar Ridge football. Bailey still lives in Clayton and endures a 75-90 daily drive to Hillsborough. The job at Corinth-Holders in Wendell opened last spring and he could have easily applied for it. To the surprise of many locally, Person head coach Carl Smith opted to depart Roxboro to become the next leader of the Pirates.
“That’s how much I love being here,” Bailey said. “I think we’re going to see a much improved season this year. We had a good year in the weight room. Before I got here, we weren’t in the weight room at all. That’s going to help us in our conditioning.”
Rather than leaving, Bailey bolstered his staff. He added Ryan Johnson, a former head coach at Jordan-Matthews High and defensive coordinator at East Chapel Hill and Burlington Cummings. He will be the new defensive coordinator. The new quarterbacks coach, Phil Credle, previously was an assistant at Cleveland High in Clayton.
There’s also Verdis Brown, a native of Chicago who was an interior lineman at the University of Illinois before transferring to Campbell University. He’s played for head coaches Lovie Smith, Bret Bielema and Mike Minter.
The new secondary coach, Rahim Mateen, played college football at Division III Averett University before he transferred to Tiffin University.
“Our coaching staff, I would put them against any staff in the state of North Carolina,” Bailey said. “I tell them all the time that I’m the placeholder. I tell them to just coach because they’re not going to get micromanaged by me. They’re all really good and I’m blessed to have those guys with us.”
The best news of all is that Bailey expects 44 players to be in uniform once everyone returns from various summer commitments. It’s the best turnout for Cedar Ridge since Scott Loosemoore was the head coach from 2016-2018.
“Last year, when we started in the summer, we were only at about 20,” Bailey said. “We’re nearly double that starting out this year. We have a lot of young talent. Our junior class is loaded right now. It makes up about 18 of us. We have some seniors coming back from last year that have some experience.”
Bailey understood the obstacles he was facing when he accepted the Cedar Ridge job in 2023. The Red Wolves went 0-10 last season with just 42 points scored against the Bermuda Triangle that is Alamance County football, which comprises two-thirds of the Central Conference. His top two quarterbacks from 2023, Mason Cates and Tom Crawford, both graduated. Junior Thomas McDermott, who also had playing time behind center last year, is penciled in as the starter for this year.
“He’s been looking really sharp in practice,” Bailey said. “He’s taking ownership of being the leader in the huddle. Right now, it’s his spot to lose.”
Center Aaron Oliveras will move to Averett University later this month.
“You can’t replace a Mason Cates,” Bailey said. “He give everything for Cedar Ridge football. So it’s hard to replace him. We’re asking multiple people to come out and give the type of effort he gave and provide the impact he had in the locker room. I think we have some seniors who have picked up that slack.”
Luis Donjuan is expected to be the new center.
As the midnight hour came and went early Saturday morning, Bailey and his players started to pick up the equipment. Players were excited, as they usually are at the start of practice. Whether that paves the way for wins remains to be seen, starting with the August 23 season opener against East Chapel Hill at Red Wolves Stadium.
Though it’s a young Cedar Ridge team in a tough league, there was an area of something that has been missing around Red Wolves football for a long time.
Optimism.
Shambley announces commitment to play softball at Western Carolina
From the time she was born, Kimber Shambley has been raised to be an athlete.
And to play in the mountains.
Her father, Kevin, was the centerfielder for the Orange baseball team in 1992, which won Dean Dease’s first PAC-6 Conference championship. In the 2nd round of the 4A State Playoffs against Anson County, Kevin trotted down the 3rd base line with his right arm in the air as he scored the game-winning run off a walkoff single by Jonathan Hoffman in the eighth inning of a dramatic 8-7 win. Shambley led off the inning by reaching on a drag bunt. It was the deepest playoff run (aside from another team in 1995) that Orange would ever make at the 4A level under Dease.
Absorbing the intense atmosphere in the stands that late May evening (the Panthers home dugout was on the third base line in those days) was Orange cheerleader Missy Osgood, Kevin’s girlfriend who logged plenty of innings in the bleachers in the early 1990s. In addition to Orange games, she was right there during his junior Babe Ruth games in the summer when the games would stretch on well into the night.
Years later, Kevin and Missy’s daughter has made a name for herself in a related sport on the western end of Hillsborough.
Kimber Shambley, the starting first baseman for the Cedar Ridge softball team, has committed to play at Western Carolina. She is the latest Division I recruit from a program that sent Takia Nichols to North Carolina Central, Tori Dalehite to UNC Greensboro and Rivers Andrews to UNC Wilmington.
“I’ve wanted to go there since I was in seventh grade,” Shambley said. “My first visit there was very nice. It was my number one choice. I love it in Cullowhee. I love the family aspect of this team. They’re very family oriented and very close together. Their players are very welcoming and so is their coaching staff.”
Shambley has gone to camps in Cullowhee since she was in eighth grade and makes Haywood’s Smokehouse restaurant in Dillsboro appointment dining on each visit.
In 2024, Shambley led Cedar Ridge in four offensive categories, including eight home runs and 34 RBIs. She delivered her biggest blast in the most dramatic moment of the season for the Red Wolves against defending 3A Eastern Regional champion Western Alamance in Hillsborough in April. After the Warriors erased a 6-0 deficit with six runs in the top of the seventh, Shambley hit the first walk-off home run of her career to deliver a victory on Senior night.
Against Orange on April 4, Shambley blasted a solo home run off Caden Robinson that sailed over the centerfield fence down to the Panthers’ football/lacrosse practice field.
Kimber started her career playing tee ball in the Hillsborough Youth Athletic Association, one of only two girls in the entire league playing against boys. A year later, she started travel baseball with the Hillsbrough Hawks, then switched to softball with the Royals out of Burlington.
Barry Lowry, a longtime Cedar Ridge assistant coach whose daughters Ava and Charlotte played with the Red Wolves and advanced to the college level, started a softball team in Burlington. Shambley joined the Carolina Extreme in its first year and remained with them under its rebranded moniker of Starz Gold. Her current team is the Nationals under head coach Greg Kennedy.
“He (Kennedy) has been a huge help in the recruiting process.” Shambley said.
Since she was 12, Shambley has taken hitting lessons at Southern Baseball Academy with Robert Hege, an assistant with the Cedar Ridge baseball team.
Her coach at Cedar Ridge, Allen Byrd, was front and center in helping Shambley develop, as well.
“He helped me get a lot of extra reps,” Shambley said. “He helped me become the player I am today.”
Last season, Shambley helped Cedar Ridge reach the state playoffs for the third straight year. In her sophomore season, she hit .346 with 16 RBIs.
“I try to keep myself humble,” Shambley said. “I try to work to get to a better position. I’ve always worked to be a better player but I never thought in my head that I was a college player. I worked to get to that level.”
Alumni Update: Former Cedar Ridge soccer player Garner wins USL W League Championship
Ivy Garner: The North Carolina Courage’s U-23 team won the USL W League championship at the WRAL Soccer Complex in Cary last month. Garner, who played soccer and tennis at Cedar Ridge her freshman year in 2018-2019 before she transferred to Eno River Academy, assisted on the game-winning goal in the championship game against the Colorado Storm on July 20. Garner sent a crossing pass to Macey Bader in the 66th minute. Garner, who is entering her junior year at Liberty University, scored seven goals in 15 games with the Courage this season. North Carolina went undefeated in 12 matches, finishing with an 11-0-1 record to win the Southeast Division championship The Courage U-23 squad reached the USL W League championship game in 2023, as well, falling to Indy XI in the final. Garner will return to action when Liberty travels to High Point on August 15.
Mia Davidson: A summer that started in Japan, continued to Italy will end in Rosemont, Illinois for Davidson. Davidson earned the silver medal for the United States softball team in the World Baseball Softball Coalition Women’s Softball World Cup in Castions di Strada Italy. The American romped through group play, winning its first six games by a combined margin of 32-4. In the Gold Medal game, Japan defeated the U.S. 6-1, scoring six unanswered runs. Earlier in the tournament, the Americans blanked Japan 2-0. Davidson played in two games during the World Cup. Last weekend, Davidson started her third season with Athletes Unlimited. She suited up for Team Alexander for three games at Parkway Bank Sports Complex in Rosemont, IL. For the week, Davidson finished with 28 points in Athletes Unlimited unique system where players earned individual points based on their performance. Team Alexander dropped all three of its games. Davidson went 2-for-8 and set a new league record for career hit by pitches. This weekend, Davidson will play for Team Skylar Wallace after being selected in the eighth round of this week’s draft.
Bryse Wilson: Going into Friday, the Milwaukee Brewers lead the St. Louis Cardinals by five-and-a-half games in the National League Central. Wilson continues to work middle relief. On Tuesday, Wilson threw two innings and allowed four hits with one walk and three strikeouts in a 5-1 loss to the Atlanta Braves at American Family Field. Wilson didn’t allow any runs. On Monday, Wilson threw the ninth inning in a 8-3 win over Atlanta. He allowed one solo home run from Sean Murphy.
Ryan Hench: The Burlington Sock Puppets of the Appalachian League ended its season in the Eastern Division Championship game on Thursday night. The Danville Otterbots defeated the Sock Puppets with a walkoff double to win 3-2 at American Legion Field. Hench, who redshirted for North Carolina as a freshman last spring, went 2-3 with a 5.71 ERA for Burlington this summer. In eight games, Hench struck out 41 and walked 21. In his final appearance of the regular season, Hench struck out eight over four innings in a start against the Johnson City Doughboys. He allowed four runs off seven hits in a no-decision. Burlington reached the Appalachian League playoffs for the second straight year after finishing 26-22, good enough for second place in the Eastern Division, five games behind Danville.
Payton Wilson: After being selected in the third round of April’s NFL Draft, Wilson will make his unofficial debut with the Pittsburgh Steelers against the Houston Texans next Friday at Acrisure Stadium. It will be Pittsburgh’s preseason opener.
Trenton Gill: After being released by the Chicago Bears last spring, Gill will make his debut for the Denver Broncos on August 11 against the Indianapolis Colts at Lucas Oil Stadium. Gill will try to win the starting job from veteran Riley Dixon, who was signed by the Broncos in 2023 after a season with the Los Angeles Rams. Gill is the first Cedar Ridge Red Wolf to play in the NFL.