Orange High School

Alumni Update: McMullin leads Flyers to four straight wins

Joey McMullin: The Sandhills Flyers Community College men’s basketball team ended 2022 with four consecutive wins. The Flyers defeated Lenoir Community College 107-80 in Kinston. McMullin scored nine points in 15 minutes off 4-of-11 shooting from the field. On December 10, the Flyers routed Thomas Nelson Community College 73-47 in Pinehurst. McMullin scored eight points over 21 minutes. He also grabbed three rebounds and dished out two assists. On December 13, Sandhills defeated Shooting 4 Greatness 101-76 in Pinehurst. McMullin scored 18 points on 7-of-8 shooting from the field. He also had two rebounds and two assists. On December 15, the Flyers nipped Pitt Community College 89-87 in Greenville. McMullin scored eleven points on 4-of-10 shooting from the field. Sandhills led by as many as 17 points before holding on to win. Through 14 games, McMullin leads the team averaging 14.1 points per game. He had a season-high of 22 points in another win over Pitt Community College on November 16. The Flyers will have several games streamed on ESPN+ in 2023. The Flyers are 12-2 overall, 1-0 in Region X of the National Junior College Athletic Association.

Connor Crabtree: Crabtree has started his senior season with the Richmond men’s basketball team. After missing the opening six games, Crabtree made his debut in a 90-67 loss to Toledo at John Savage Arena in Ohio on November 30. Crabtree played one minute. Crabtree scored three points in four minutes in Richmond’s 82-52 win over Drake at the Robins Center on December 10. In a 77-48 win over Fairleigh Dickinson on December 13, Crabtree had three rebounds over nine minutes. He also had an assist. In a 85-67 loss to Clemson in Greenville, S.C. last Saturday, Crabtree scored two points in eight minutes off 1-of-3 shooting from the field. Richmond is 5-6 and will play its Atlantic 10 opener on December 31 at George Mason.

Joshua Jackson: During the summer, Jackson joined the Division III Brevard men’s basketball program. He has not played in an official game as of yet. The Tornadoes are 3-6 overall and will start play in the USA South Athletic Conference against Mary Baldwin College on January 4 in Staunton, VA.

Aaliyah Harris: The Division III Randolph-Macon women’s basketball team earned several victories as the calendar turned to December. The Yellow Jackets have On December 7, Randolph defeated Randolph-Macon 50-43 at Giles Gymnasium in Lynchburg, VA. Harris, a freshman, played 14 minutes and had three points and three rebounds. Randolph-Macon has won three in a row, including a victory in the opening round of the Daytona Beach Shootout over Wisconsin-Oshkosh. The Yellow Jackets will face St. Robert in the semifinals on Wednesday.

Braden Homsey: The Division III Ferrum College wrestling team competed in several dual matches as the autumn wound to a close. On November 30, the Panthers defeated Greensboro College 35-11 at Royce Reynolds Family Student Life Center Gym in Greensboro. It was Ferrum’s first-ever match as a member of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference. Homsey didn’t compete against the Pride. On December 7, William & Lee defeated Ferrum 27-7 at Duchossois Athletic and Recreation Center in Lexington, VA. Competing at 197 pounds, John Ryan Sedovy defeated Homsey 6-4 in the first sudden victory round. Homsey, now a senior, is 4-3 on the season. The Panthers will compete in the Citrus Invitational at the Broward County Convention Center in Ft. Lauderdale, FL starting December 29.

Kate Burgess: During the fall, Burgess was named a co-Captain for the North Carolina rowing team. Burgess, who was a basketball center and cross country runner for Orange, is a senior with the Tar Heels. As a junior, Burgess competed in nine races for UNC. She finished first agains UCF and second against Tennessee in the First Varsity 4+ boat at the UVA Invitational. Burgess notched a second place finish against Boston College last April in the First Varsity 4+ boat. UNC will start its next rowing season in the spring.

Orange Panther of the Week: Coleman Cloer

This week’s Orange Panther of the Week is freshman men’s basketball forward Coleman Cloer. Through eleven games, Cloer is the leading scorer for the Orange men’s basketball team as the Panthers are 6-3, its best start in four years. On November 29, Cloer sank two free throws with :7.2 seconds remaining to give the Panthers a 67-66 win over Franklinton. It is still the only loss the Rams have suffered this year. On Friday night, Cloer scored a career-high 26 points in the Panthers 66-59 win against Walter Williams. On Tuesday, Cloer had 15 points as the Panthers won its Central Carolina Conference opener over Western Alamance. Orange has already won five road games this season, two more than they had all of last year. Cloer is one of three freshman who start for Orange, along with Kai Wade and Mason Robinson. The younger brother of former Orange High quarterback Garrett Cloer, who went on to play tight end at Cornell. Coleman Cloer will continue his freshman season on Wednesday night when Orange faces Southern Alamance in Hillsborough. The Panthers will start play in the South Granville Holiday Tournament next Wednesday. They will face East Wake in the opening round.

Orange Panther of the Week: Coleman Cloer

This week’s Orange Panther of the Week is freshman men’s basketball forward Coleman Cloer. Through eleven games, Cloer is the leading scorer for the Orange men’s basketball team as the Panthers are 6-3, its best start in four years. On November 29, Cloer sank two free throws with :7.2 seconds remaining to give the Panthers a 67-66 win over Franklinton.

Heffernan, Isley, Crawford, Acosta win as Orange wrestling takes Eagles Invitational

Though there are some things different with the Orange wrestling team this year, the winning continues.

Orange will go into Christmas with a 9-0 record in dual matches. The Panthers, who have won 18 of its last 19 conference championships, is 4-0 in the Central Carolina Conference with dual matches against Person, Eastern Alamance and Northwood coming up in 2023.

On Saturday, the Panthers claimed its first team championship in an individual tournament this season. For the second year in a row, Orange won the Eagle Invitational at Eastern Alamance High School in Mebane.

Four Panthers won their individual weight classes. Dillon Heffernan, who reached the Eagle Invitational championship match at 120 pounds in 2021, rolled to the title at 145 pounds. Heffernan, who finished second at the Jim King/Orange Invitational on December 3, defeated Jace Rich of Southern Alamance 9-4 in the final. Heffernan, 14-1 on the year, pinned Cameron Stokes of Bartlett Yancey in 1:15 in the opening round. In the semifinals, Heffernan defeated Darius Evans of Northern Guilford 6-3.

Acoya Isley, who lost in the championship match last year in Mebane by one point via sudden victory, won the 195-championship by winning three matches, none of which went beyond the first period. Isley defeated Jeremiah Lumpkins of Walter Williams in :56 seconds to take the title. In the semifinals, Isley pinned Chase Crews of Northern Guilford in 1:15. In the opening round, Isley defeated Jesus Ponce of Graham in 23 seconds. Isley, who finished 3rd in the Mideast Regionals last February, is 13-1 with 12 pins this season.

Orange’s Elijah Acosta captured the 220-pound championship. In the final, Acosta pinned Cameron Pettigrew of Western Alamance in 3:22 to improve to 14-2 on the season. In Friday’s opening round, Acosta pinned Wesley Reece of Cummings in 59 seconds. In the semifinals, Acosta defeated Wade Cash of Northern Guilford 9-5.

Acosta, who won the 220-pound championship of the JKO in 2021, captured the Eagle Invitational for the second straight year. In 2021, Acosta won all three of his matches via pinfall en route to the title.

Braden Crawford, the second-seed, captured the 126-pound championship. In the final, Crawford scored a technical fall over Alex Porter of Grimsley 17-1. Crawford battled back to reach the final. In a dramatic semifinal, Owen Adkins of Northern Guilford led Crawford 7-4 with time running out in the final period before Crawford scored a pin at 5:52 to advance to the championship match. In the opening round, Crawford pinned Riley Neil of Southern Alamance in 26 seconds.

The Panthers had several grapplers finish in second place. Senior heavyweight Hugo Vasquez scored pins in each of his first two matches. Vasquez defeated Chatham Central’s Adin Holton in 58 seconds in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, Vasquez defeated Justin Booker of Southern Alamance in 3:26. In Saturday’s title match, Noah Lumpkin of Northern Guilford held off Vasquez 4-2. Vasquez, who won the heavyweight championship of the 2021 JKO, is 9-4 with five pins so far this season.

At 113 pounds, Orange’s Aidan Sierra had his best finish of his young career. Sierra opened by pinning Toriana Murphy of Williams in 1:09. In the semifinals, Sierra pinned Southern Alamance’s Aiden Cameron in 1:50. Grant McCord of Greensboro Grimsley defeated Sierra in the championship match by technical fall.

Orange’s Sam Crawford reached the championship match at 152-pounds. Crawford pinned Jeremiah Baptiste of Western Alamance in 33 seconds of the opening round. He pinned Zyneal White of Burlington Cummings in 3:06 in the semifinals. Cohen Beane, the fifth-seed, of Northern Guilford defeated Crawford via pinfall in the title match.

Anyone who even casually attends Orange wrestling matches won’t have to look hard to find something different this year. There isn’t a Shriner sitting along the mats.

Bobby Shriner, the longtime head coach at Orange who amassed over 500 wins and five state championships, retired in 2017. His son Nick served as an assistant for four seasons, but left to become the head coach of the Orange Middle School Chargers this year.

Orange Middle feeds directly into Orange High School.

It marks the first time there hasn’t been a Shriner matside for Orange wrestling since 1988.

“He’s still going to be helping out with us whenever he gets a chance,” said Orange coach Spenser Poteat, who wrestled and coached alongside Bobby Shriner. “Hopefully, he can get our feeder program get back to where it was.”

Orange will compete in the Tiger Holiday Invitational at Chapel Hill High School starting on Friday.

Orange’s Freddy Sneed & Mason Robinson discuss win at Walter Williams

Orange brought its block party to venerable Bulldogs Gymnasium in Burlington on Friday night and came away with a win in its final conference game of 2022. The Panthers defeated Williams 66-59. Orange held the Bulldogs to only three field goals in the fourth quarter mainly because of stellar defensive work by sophomore Freddy Sneed and freshman Mason Robinson. With Orange trailing 47-44 going into the fourth quarter, Xandrell Pennix drained a 3-pointer to open the final frame. Orange coach Derryl Britt played three freshmen most of the fourth quarter. Coleman Cloer led all scorers with 27 points, while Kai Wade added 23. Robinson, another freshman, and Sneed both came up with huge blocks throughout the second half to offset the Bulldogs big bodies inside. It was Orange’s fifth road win of the season, more than the previous two seasons combined. Orange will have one more game before Christmas. They will face Southern Alamance on Wednesday night in Hillsborough. Then the Panthers will start play in the South Granville Holiday Tournament on December 28 when they open with East Wake in the opening round.

Orange’s Freddy Sneed & Mason Robinson discuss win at Walter Williams

Orange brought its block party to venerable Bulldogs Gymnasium in Burlington on Friday night and came away with a win in its final conference game of 2022. The Panthers defeated Williams 66-59. Orange held the Bulldogs to only three field goals in the fourth quarter mainly because of stellar defensive work by sophomore Freddy Sneed and freshman Mason Robinson.

Still on top: Northwood’s Leighton scores 17 to power Chargers past Orange 72-47

For the past three years, the measuring stick of men’s basketball across Orange, Chatham and Alamance Counties has been the Northwood Chargers.

They’ve won two of the last three Big 8/Central Carolina Conference championships, 22 consecutive conference games and played for the 3A State Championship in 2021.

Orange is off to its best start in four years, despite often starting four players who have never played at the varsity level before this season. Off to a 6-2 start and coming off a road win at Western Alamance on Tuesday night, the Panthers saw Wednesday’s game against Northwood as a litmus test to see how far a young but skillful team was from challenging a state championship contender.

The answer is there’s still plenty of work to do.

The Chargers reeled off 13 straight points in the first quarter and shot 8-of-11 from 3-point range in the first half to beat the Panthers 72-47 at Panther Gymnasium on Wednesday night. The Chargers (7-1, 2-0 in the Central Carolina Conference) have beaten Orange nine straight times. The Panthers last win over the Chargers came on February 1, 2017.

Jake Leighton led Northwood with 17 points. Drake Powell, who committed to play at UNC over the summer, added ten points and nine rebounds as the Chargers won for the second time in two nights.

Sophomore Xandrell Pennix paced Orange (6-3, 1-1) with eleven points. Ryan Honeycutt, a junior center in his first season on the varsity, added ten points.

“I come away from this game feeling doggone good about my ball club,” said Orange coach Derryl Britt. “We led these guys get away on a run in the second quarter where they knocked down several 3-pointers. They knocked down quality shots. We contested them, so kudos to them. We knew they were a good team coming in.”

Orange actually started with six straight points to open the game, including stickback buckets in the paint from Honeycutt and senior Isaiah Seymour despite the massive presence of Northwood’s 6-11 center Kenan Parrish and 6-foot-9 forward Max Frazier.

That’s when the Chargers’ downtown machine got going. Powell canned the first of eleven 3-pointers with 4:56 remaining in the first quarter, then drained another to give the Chargers an 8-6 lead. Leighton added a field goal off an assist from Frazier, followed by Parrish showing off a soft touch from outside with a 3-pointer from straightaway.

The Chargers shot 10-of-12 from the field in the second quarter to push its lead to 47-24 at halftime, outscoring the Panthers 27-14 to keep their advantage in double-digits the rest of the way.

Britt remained positive afterwards despite the loss. The Panthers have a short turnaround before a Friday game against Walter Williams in Burlington, where Orange has lost its last three trips.

“We never get too high off of wins and we never get too low off losses,” Britt said. “We take them for what they are. We have another tough game on Friday. Our intent is to make Williams executive as well as Northwood executed tonight.”

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: NORTHWOOD 60, ORANGE 27 

Northwood, the defending 3A State Champions, rolled past Orange for its fourth straight win in the opening game of the doubleheader on Wednesday night.

Freshman Alyia Roberts and senior Gianna McManaman teamed up for a three-point attack that sent Orange reeling early. Roberts had a career-high 18 points off the bench. McManaman added 16 points as the Chargers (4-3, 2-0) won its 37th consecutive conference game. The Chargers, who have won three consecutive conference championships, defeated the Lady Panthers for the eighth straight time.

The Lady Panthers (4-5, 0-2) were led by sophomore Evelyn George, who had seven points. McManaman drained a three-pointer at the end of the first quarter to put the Chargers ahead 15-8 and Northwood wasn’t challenged again.

Alumni Update: Campbell’s Thompson nominated for Robinson Award

Kenan Thompson: As his football career at Campbell has officially ended, former Orange High linebacker Kenan Thompson has been nominated for a series of end-of-year honors. Thompson is a finalist for the Doris Robinson Award, presented to an athlete in the Football Championship Subdivision who excels on the football field, in the classroom and in the community. It is named in honor of the wife of legendary Grambling football coach Eddie Robinson. Thompson was also named to the Big South Conference All-Academic Team and the 2022 Academic All-District by College Sports Communicators. Currently, Thompson is pursuing his MBA. He is currently a graduate student at Campbell. In his final game with the Camels, Thompson had a tackle as Campbell defeated Delaware State 34-7 at Alumni Stadium in Dover, DL. Thompson ended the season with 25 tackles. He played in all eleven games for Campbell.

Payton Wilson: Wilson will play his final game for the #25 N.C. State Wolfpack in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl on December 30 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte. The Wolfpack will face Maryland. It will be the first matchup between the Wolfpack and the Terrapins since Maryland left the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2014. Wilson made his final regular season game with N.C. State one to remember. On November 25, the Wolfpack stunned North Carolina 30-27 in double overtime at Kenan Stadium in Chapel Hill. Wilson led N.C. State with eleven tackles and one tackle for loss. Wilson also had two quarterback hits. Despite being down to its fourth-string quarterback at season’s end, N.C. State finished the regular season 8-4.

Trenton Gill: Gill continues his rookie season with the Chicago Bears of the NFL. On December 4, the Green Bay Packers held off the Bears 28-19 at Solider Field in Chicago. Gill had only one punt for 39 yards. On November 27, the New York Jets defeated Chicago 31-10 at MetLift Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ. Gill had five punts for an average of 48.8 yards. His longest punt was 61 yards. On November 20, the Atlanta Falcons defeated the Bears 27-24 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Gill had four punts for an average of 40 yards per punt. One of them was downed inside the 20-yard line. His longest was 44 yards. Chicago is 3-10 and have lost six in a row.

Lottie Scully: Scully was named the American East Setter of the Week for the Binghamton volleyball team for the week of November 15. Scully, a freshman, had 33 assists, nine digs and two blocks in the Bearcats win over Bryant University. The win sewed up the Bearcats’ first-ever American East regular season championship. New Hampshire defeated Binghamton 3-0 in the American East Tournament championship game on scores of 30-28, 25-23 and 25-16. Scully missed that game, as well as the contest against St. John’s in the National Invitational Volleyball Championship. Scully was named second-team All-American East Conference. Scully had 788 assists, a team-high. She also had 187 digs.

Emerson Talley: The season of the Division II Lenoir-Rhyne women’s soccer team ended in the second round of the NCAA Tournament against #3 Columbus State. The Cougars defeated the Bears 1-0 at Walden Soccer Complex in Columbus, GA. Talley came off the bench to play 29 minutes, but the Bears couldn’t repeat its 2021 success, when they reached the Final Four for the first time in school history. This season, Talley played in 14 games. She didn’t score in 332 minutes of action. The Bears ended the year 12-4-3, 9-0-2 in the South Atlantic Conference.

 

 

 

Orange Panther of the Week: Xandrell Pennix

This week’s Orange Panther of the Week is sophomore men’s basketball guard Xandrell Pennix. This season, Pennix is the second-leading scorer for an Orange team that has started 7-2, its best start under head coach Derryl Britt. On November 18, Pennix scored 14 points in a victory over East Chapel Hill. On November 29, Pennix scored a career-high 19 points in a 67-66 victory at Franklinton. In his freshman season, Pennix was called up to the varsity after Orange’s stint in the South Granville Holiday Tournament. He made a strong first impression by scoring 13 points against Walter Williams This season, Pennix has scored in double figures in seven of Orange’s nine games. That includes 14 points in Orange’s win at Riverside on December 2 in Durham, the Panthers first win over the Pirates since 2014. Pennix has been a regular starting guard for an Orange team that is looking to make the state playoffs for the first time in six years. Though he’s a sophomore, Pennix actually provides a veteran presence since his fellow starters are spending their first season at the varsity level. That includes Pennix’s cousin, freshman point guard Kai Wade.

Orange Panther of the Week: Xandrell Pennix

This week’s Orange Panther of the Week is sophomore men’s basketball guard Xandrell Pennix. This season, Pennix is the second-leading scorer for an Orange team that has started 7-2, its best start under head coach Derryl Britt. On November 18, Pennix scored 14 points in a victory over East Chapel Hill.