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Rams' 2024 Schedule: Instant Reaction

J.B. Long

It's my favorite day of the offseason, and we're coming in hot.

At long last, the schedule is real - and it's amazing. I'm absolutely thrilled with it and hope you are, too.

Let's check the basics, and we'll start by ripping the Band-Aid.

The bye lands in Week 6, and that's brutally early. Earliest since returning to Los Angeles, in fact. 2015 was the last time the Rams had an open da

Top Rams News: Reactions to 2024 schedule

The Rams released their 2024 schedule on Wednesday, complete with not only a video for the release itself, but also a trivia video featuring head coach Sean McVay.

Reactions to all of the above below:

Schedule

ESPN NFL Nation Rams reporter Sarah Barshop's biggest takeaway is the team getting the majority of their six playoff teams they'll face at home.

"Although the Rams play six playoff teams (

Royals set to celebrate glory years with A's in town
(Photo credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports) Time will tell if the Kansas City Royals are headed to the postseason this year, but they plan to party like it's 2014 this weekend. The current Royals will honor their 2014 American League championship team all weekend during a three-game series against the visiting Oakland Athletics. That 2014team eventually fell short in the World Series before the 2015 squad went the d
Yankees begin homestand against AL-worst White Sox
(Photo credit: Matt Pendleton-USA TODAY Sports) While the hitters are doing their part, the pitching staff is helping the New York Yankees get rolling again. After holding the Minnesota Twins to a total of one run in a three-game sweep, the Yankees will attempt to extend their winning streak to five games on Friday when they host the Chicago White Sox in the opener of a three-game series. Since scoring just six runs and

The Chronicle - Centralia

Trojans hurdle crew, Mossy girls highlight strong area day in 1B

Carter Phelps won’t be alone in hurdle practice for the next week as the Pe Ell boys will have all three of its top hurdlers heading to state with top-eight finishes at Thursday’s Class 1B District 1/2/3/4 meet at Franklin Pierce High School.

Calan McCarty and Eli Mason finished inside the top-eight in both hurdle events to secure a spot alongside Phelps at the state meet at Zaepfel Stadium in Yakima. Phelps cruised to victories in the two races, plus finished fourth in the long jump.

Phelps, McCarty and Mason joined forces with Jakob Hayes to place third in the 1,600-meter relay. Hayes took fifth in the triple jump.

Oakville sophomore Lewis Kosar uncorked a throw of 133 feet, 3 inches to win the discus. Eighth grader Cecil Gumaelius finished third in the 3,200 and sixth in the 1,600 while Michel Perron was sixth in the 100 for the Acorns.

Mossyrock’s Marshall Brockway was the runner-up in the shot put and secured fifth place in the javelin to be in two events next week. Its 400 and 1,600 relays placed third and eighth, respectively and Luis Contreras finished sixth in the 800.

The Vikings will be the lone area representative at state on the girls side. Miley Sanders triumphed in the javelin with a winning throw of 107-07 and Renzy Marshall was third with a toss of 105-03.

Mossyrock’s 400 and 800 relays each placed fourth while Reese Marshall (400) and Rose Seraphin (shot put) each placed sixth to qualify for state.

Schall paces Tenino contingent in district meet

Behind a hurdles sweep from Carson Schall, the Beavers finished top-five in the team race of Thursday’s Class 1A District 4 meet held at Seton Catholic High School.

Tenino qualified in five boys events and one girls race for next week’s state meet held at Zaepfel Stadium in Yakima. Schall clipped Stevenson’s Tucker Wyninger by the slimmest margin in the 110 hurdles (15.1-15.2) and won the 300 hurdles in 42.32 seconds, both times a new personal best.

Ashton Moore leaped 21 feet flat to claim the long jump and he took third in the 100-meter dash. Austin Johnson secured a runner-up finish in the 200 to head to state.

Tenino’s Paisley Garcia was its only state qualifier on the girls side, taking the third and final automatic spot in the 300 hurdles with a time of 52.82 seconds.

Prep softball: Bearcats complete revenge tour with state berth

From the opening jamboree at Recreation Park two months ago, the W.F. West High School softball team had the mentality to return to the Class 2A state tournament.

Even as head coach Kevin Zylstra echoed those sentiments, there was a moment where he wasn’t 100 percent sure.

“How are we going to do this?” Zylstra said. “District is so loaded. Got all these freshmen and how are they going to handle it?”

Then came the 8-0 victory over Tumwater on April 22 at home. It was a win that kept the Bearcats in line for a top finish in the Evergreen Conference and they were able to score multiple runs off ace Ella Ferguson.

That proved to be the moment where Zylstra started to get back to his original line of thinking.

“I saw the fire,” he said.

The motto was “unfinished business.” W.F. West can now claim its business is taken care of.

Ignited by a complete game gem from freshman Taylor Tobin and early offense, the Bearcats triumphed over EvCo rival Rochester 6-1 in a Class 2A District 4 semifinal on Thursday night at Rec Park to clinch a state berth.

Once the final out was made, W.F. West’s dugout spilled out for a celebration that was a 362-day build up. It will be the 20th trip to Carlon Park in Saleh over the last 21 years.

It will face Aberdeen, a team it split with in the regular season, in the district title game on Friday night.

“I am so unbelievably proud of us,” shortstop Avalon Myers said. “We doubled down on practice and it has paid off. It’s awesome. We all knew we were going to work extra hard to make it back to state.”

The only loss the Bearcats (16-5) have suffered was the second league contest against Aberdeen. They have controlled their last eight wins from start to finish, just one that was a less than a five-run final.

It has resulted in a different postseason atmosphere. They had to win a pigtail just to get into the quarterfinals, then lost in the semifinals and the elimination game.

“We all wanted it so much more,” Tobin stated.

Tobin worked around seven hits in the win. The right-hander stranded at least two Warriors runners on base in the second, third and seventh innings.

Six strikeouts and defensive plays behind her kept Rochester (12-13) off the scoreboard for the majority of the contest.

“Once I got in the game, I was locked in,” Tobin said. “My teammates had my back and I didn’t need to be nervous about anything. We all wanted to win this so bad.”

Coaches and teammates sung her praise afterwards.

“She has gotten so confident in herself,” Myers said.

“Once she found her rise ball, it totally changed the game,” Zylstra added. “We were no longer two-dimensional, we were now three-dimensional calling pitches.”

The other Tobin sister – Tanner – delivered the final blow in a four-run top of the first with a two-run double. Staysha Fluetsch and Ella Young registered RBIs in the frame.

An RBI groundout and another run scoring on an error in the sixth gave W.F. West needed insurance.

“It was important,” Myers said. “Once you get that momentum starting, it keeps going.”

Myers roped two doubles in the Bearcats 12-4 quarterfinal win over Columbia River. Of their 13 hits, six went for extra bases. Addie Froscahuer knocked in four runs, Young registered three hits and Myers plus Lena Fragner recorded two hits.

After Monroe Dalrymple stranded the bases loaded in the top of the first, W.F. West answered with two in the bottom half. It added two more in the second and broke the game open with a five-spot in the third.

Dalrymple ended with 15 strikeouts in the circle, tossing all seven innings.

“Gave up three dingers, but I didn’t care,” Zylstra said. “They can hit it into the streets. (Monroe) set the tone.”

Rochester had chances against the Bearcats, but couldn’t muster the timely hit. They were dealt in by four errors and the lone run came in the final frame on an RBI single by Macey Fleutsch.

It proved to be a case of too little, too late. It left nine runners on base.

“When you have those two things together, it is almost impossible to win,” Warriors head coach Joni Lancaster said. “This setting, it comes down to nerves. We’ve got a lot of girls that haven’t been close to this stage.”

The quarterfinal outcome sung a much different tune. Ace Layna Demers fired 15 strikeouts to aid Rochester to a 6-3 verdict over the regular season GSHL champions Mark Morris.

The right-hander gave up five hits plus two walks and even as the Monarchs mounted a rally in the seventh, Demers shut the door with a game-ending strikeout.

“She was lights out,” Lancaster said. “She’s faced a lot tougher lineups this year. Loss of words with that performance.”

Cheyenne Justice turned a 2-0 lead into 5-0 with a bases-clearing triple as part of a four-run top of the sixth. Mckenna Vassar kicked off the scoring with an RBI triple in the third. Those two combined for five of the Warriors’ eight hits.

Vassar had three hits versus W.F. West and Fluetsch notched two.

Rochester, already with two season-extending games under its belt, will play one more on Friday against Ridgfield in a winner to state contest.

“They’re hungry and they know what is on the line,” Lancaster said. “We’ll figure out a way to be where we want to be. We just gotta grab it.”

Mossyrock races past Naselle for district title

The Mossyrock softball team won its second-straight District 4 Championship on Thursday, as the Vikings topped Naselle 18-3 in five innings in Montesano.

The Vikings (10-6) started scoring early, scoring three runs in the first to take a 3-0 lead.

After Naselle tied the game with three unearned runs in the top of the second, Erin Cournyer helped herself in the circle by blasting a three-run home run to give Mossyrock the lead right back.

The Vikings never looked back, adding two more in the second and one in the third before blowing the game open with nine in the fourth.

“We started crushing the ball,” Mossyrock coach Keith Coleman said. “It’s kind of like a light turned on.”

Lois Stone went 3 for 4 with an inside-the-park home run and she drove in five, while Chesney Schultz collected two hits, drove in four, and scored three times. Taylor Schwartz collected two hits, including a double, and she drove in two and and scored three runs of her own

“If they hit like they did today, we should go pretty far,” Coleman said.

Mossyrock will now await its seeding and first-round matchup for the 1B State Tournament, which will take place in Yakima on May 24 and 25.

“Just excited to get over there and have fun,” Coleman said. “It’s a reward for the season. Hopefully everything goes well and we bring home some hardware. I’m looking forward to it.”

Tumwater splits two games at district tournament

Every sport can often make a claim to be a “game of inches.”

That cliché rang true for Tumwater on Thursday, as the T-Birds ended up on the wrong end of two critically close plays in a 5-4 loss to Aberdeen in the 2A District 4 semifinals.

The first crucial play came in the bottom of the third, when Tumwater (17-5) was leading 1-0. Ella Ferguson was one strike away from working out of a bases-loaded jam, and her 0-2 pitch to Alyssa Yakovich missed just high of the zone.

Yakovich sent the next pitch into the gap, good enough for a bases-clearing three-run double that gave Aberdeen a 3-1 lead.

Aberdeen added on with one in the fourth, but the T-Birds began to rally back in the sixth.

After an error and two singles loaded the bases, Jamie Haase drilled a single to left to cut the deficit to two. Two batters later, Marissa La Praim lined a two-run single down the right-field line to tie the game at four. It was two pitches after another liner from La Praim landed just foul.

“What a clutch at-bat,” Lupinski said. “That’s what I’ve asked from the girls, ‘someone give us consistency,’ and that’s Marissa. Whether it’s at third base or the plate, she’s done such a good job.”

The game wasn’t tied for long, though.

Aberdeen’s Zoe Vessey hit a chopper to short, and she just beat the throw to first for a one-out infield single. After advancing to second on a ground ball, Laynie Yakovich hit a sharp line drive to third.

The ball went in-and-out of La Praim’s glove and dribbled up the left-field line, allowing Vessey to come home for what stood as the game-winning run.

Ferguson ended up on the hook for the loss despite giving up just three earned runs, but she earned the win in Tumwater’s quarter final win, a 14-4 victory, earlier in the day over Woodland.

Between the two games, Ferguson went 12 innings on the mound, allowing six earned runs and striking out 19.

“I thought she did a great job,” Lupinski said. “To ask a pitcher to throw two games against two really good teams is really tough to do. I was really proud of Ella.”

In addition to her pair of RBIs in the semifinal, La Praim went 2 for 5 with an RBI against Woodland.

Megan Barrett went 2 for 3 with two RBIs, Haase went 2 for 4 with a home run and also drove in two, and Sarah Stevens collected three hits in five trips to the plate.

“We hit our pitch,” Lupinski said. “We knew what we were hunting and we hit that.”

They brought the same approach against Aberdeen’s Annika Hollingsworth, but the Cal Baptist commit did enough to limit the Thunderbirds offense.

“We got hits,” Tumwater coach Ashley Lupinski said. “It just didn’t go our way today.”

The T-Birds will still have the chance to play their way into the state tournament, as they’ll face Mark Morris, the GHSL regular-season champion, on Friday in a winner-to-state elimination game.

“We’re still alive, and that’s exciting,” Lupinski said. “We’re excited to compete one more time together to try to get to state. That’s what you play for.”

Columbian Newspaper

Lainey Wilson wins big at the 2024 Academy of Country Music Awards, including the top honor
Author: MARIA SHERMAN, Associated Press

It was Lainey Wilson’s night, in many ways. She took home female artist of the year and the top prize of entertainer of the year at the 2024 Academy of Country Music Awards, held at the Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas, just north of Dallas.

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