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Orange softball’s Emma Puckett and Lauren Jackson discuss win over Northwood

The Orange softball team is tied for first place in the Big 8 Conference after a thrilling 6-5 win over Northwood in eight innings. Freshman catcher Lauren Jackson lined an infield single to score Maddie Bartlett for the game-winning run. In the 7th inning, designated hitter Emma Puckett doubled to left field to score Olivia Ruff for the game-tying run. Orange was down to its last out before Puckett’s hit. Jackson finished 4-for-4. Orange is now 5-1 in Big 8 Conference play, even with Cedar Ridge. The Lady Panthers are scheduled to face Northwood on Wednesday in Pittsboro, then take on Chapel Hill in a doubleheader on Thursday. 

Orange sophomore Jason Franklin talks scoring 15 points in win over Cedar Ridge

Orange sophomore guard Jason Franklin scored 15 points in the Panthers 83-39 victory over Cedar Ridge in a crosstown battle at Red Wolves Gymnasium on Tuesday night. Franklin was 3-of-5 from 3-point range and shot 5-of-9 from the field. Franklin’s career-high came on November 30 when he scored 18 points at Granville Central. After Orange earned its first conference win of the season against the Red Wolves, they now focus their attention on Chapel Hill, who come calling to Panther Gymnasium on Wednesday night. That game can be heard live on Hillsboroughsports.com starting at 6 with the women’s game.

Orange sophomore Jason Franklin discusses win over Cedar Ridge, preparing for Chapel Hill

Orange sophomore guard Jason Franklin scored 15 points in the Panthers 83-39 victory over Cedar Ridge in a crosstown battle at Red Wolves Gymnasium on Tuesday night. Franklin was 3-of-5 from 3-point range and shot 5-of-9 from the field. Franklin’s career-high came on November 30 when he scored 18 points at Granville Central.

Controversial technical costs Orange in loss to Southern Lee 50-47

If the standards for a technical foul that applied to Orange in the waning seconds of a tie game apply to the rest of high school basketball in North Carolina, head coaches may want to consider seat belts for their assistants immediately.

After leading 47-39 with 1:36 remaining, the Southern Lee Cavaliers finished the game with a 13-0 run to defeat the Panthers 50-47 inside Cavalier Gymnasium in Sanford on Wednesday night.

In its final nonconference game of the season, it appeared Orange was set to pull off its biggest win under Derryl Britt’s young tenure. They lead 50-45 with 1:00 remaining against a Southern Lee squad with a 10-3 record.

After Octavious Flack scored on a stickback basket with :50.1 remaining, controversy took over. Machai Holt missed the front end of a one-and-one. After Stewart Judd grabbed the rebound for Southern Octavious Flack was fouled on a three-point attempt by Joey McMullin, who contended Flack flopped. It McMullin’s fifth foul. Flank knocked down all three free throws to even the game at 47.

On the subsequent inbounds, Holt tried to dribble through a double team and fell to the floor. There was no whistle, leading to an immediate Orange protest from the bench. In the heat of the moment, a referee called a technical foul with ten seconds remaining in the game on an Orange assistant because he left his seat.

Southern Lee’s Khalil Ridges scored the game-winning point on a back-end of the technical free-throw. Se’Vion Clay sank two free throws with 6.5 seconds remaining, and Joey Franklin’s three-point attempt to tie the game fell short at the buzzer.

Flack led Southern Lee with 17 points, while Clay finished with 15. Mekai Collins had 17 to lead the Panthers, while McMullin had 12. Holt, coming off a career-high 33 points against Western Guilford on Saturday, finished with ten.

The final two minute ruined a solid quarter for the Panthers, where they took their first lead of the second half and held the Cavaliers to only two points in the opening 5:02. McMullin hit back-to-back field goals to vault the Panthers into a 41-37 lead.

It appeared Orange would cruise from there. Collins scored off a lay-in from a gorgeous dribble drive to put Orange ahead 43-37, which was followed by Clay being called for traveling. Holt scored off a field goal with 2:03 remaining. Collins’ free throw extended Orange’s lead to 47-39 with 1:36 left, but it would be Orange’s final points.

Orange, coming off a 5th place finish in the Eastern Guilford Holiday Hoops Tournament, struggled out of the gates. They didn’t score in the opening 4:05. Clay and Flack each scored eight points in the first half to put Southern Lee ahead 27-22 at halftime.

Midway through the third quarter, Collins had only five points, but scored Orange’s final nine points of the third quarter to narrow the Cavaliers’ lead to 37-33.

Wednesday’s game was the start of a stretch of five games in nine days for Orange. Their final 14 games will be Big 8 Conference contests, starting with a road trip to East Chapel Hill on Friday night. Hillsboroughsports.com will carry the Orange women’s game starting at 6, followed by the men’s game at 7:30.

Orange women’s basketball guard Icez Barnett discusses start of senior season

(Editor’s note: This interview was shot before Orange’s season-opening win over Union Pines on Tuesday night) Icez Barnett was a sophomore when Orange won the Big 8 Conference Championship two years ago. It was the best season in Orange women’s basketball history. Led by Kaylen Campbell and Mia Davidson, the Lady Panthers opened the season winning 21 consecutive games, the Eastern Alamance Holiday Hoops Championship in Mebane and both the Big 8 regular season and tournament championship. Now, Icez is a senior and is ready to end her career on a high note. Orange started its season with a 48-39 win over Union Pines in Cameron on Wednesday night.

Orange senior guard Icez Barnett discusses start of senior season

(Editor’s note: This interview was shot before Orange’s season-opening win over Union Pines on Tuesday night) Icez Barnett was a sophomore when Orange won the Big 8 Conference Championship two years ago. It was the best season in Orange women’s basketball history.

Orange Running Back Hunter Pettiford Discusses Friday’s Game Against Rolesville

Orange running back Hunter Pettiford hopes the month of September will bring new life to the Panthers’ season. Orange is 0-2 after starting the season with losses to Northern Nash and Wilmington Hoggard. Pettiford plays running back and linebacker for the Panthers. Against Nash, Pettiford recovered a fumble. This Friday night at Auman Stadium, Orange will host Rolesville in just the 2nd-ever meeting between the two teams. Last season, Orange defeated the Rams 28-21. Pettiford made 14 tackles for the Panthers in last year’s win over Rolesville.

Orange Running Back Hunter Pettiford Discusses Friday’s Hame Against Rolesville

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Column: No Winners in Cedar Ridge Football Decision

A long conversation with a longtime local coach was winding to a close recently when he exposed a theory that made my blood run cold.

“I can see a day in 20 years when there are no high school sports.”

No high school sports? Some people would rather go without oxygen.

The coach’s thesis is there will come a time when high school sports would no longer become financially sustainable. Athletes would focus on one sport only, whether its baseball, softball, basketball, wrestling, lacrosse or anything else where they could attain that elusive college scholarship. The days of two-or-three sports atheltes would steadily wither away, as would the purpose of the athlete serving the school.

Instead, the athlete could simply develop their skills with travel teams in the spring, summer and fall. To a lesser extinct, it’s already happpened with Showcase Baseball, which is one-stop shopping for college coaches where top-tier high school talent spend their summers traveling to colleges across the region to play in front of college recruiting coordinators. It’s also happened in boys and girls basketball for decades at the AAU level.

Shifting uncomfortably as I envisioned this plausible scenario, I asked this coach “How would the schools lose money?”

“Because of the loss of football,” he said.

And he we are.

Cedar Ridge was once so gung-ho about football under former coach Lou Geary, it became a tradition to hold Midnight Madness workouts on August 1st, the very second it became legal under NCHSAA bylaws to practice.

Now, the Red Wolves won’t have enough players to field a varsity team this fall. The official announcement came from the school system on Tuesday afternoon, catching even some of the people closest to the program by surprise.

What happened? There are many answers, ranging from the top of the sport to its most basic levels.

Acccording to the Aspen Institute, participation in youth football has declined 19 percent from 2011 to 2016 for kids aged 6 to 17. For the NFL, those numbers are a long-term problem. For high school, it’s a crisis right now.

”There has been a decline in our area,” said Chris Casey, a former Cedar Ridge Head Coach. “Since the NFL came out with its concussion report, it killed the Pop Warner programs and the Orange County Youth Football program. In turn, the numbers at middle school have dropped off and now you are seeing it at the high schools.”

The future of football has been increasingly in question for years now. The truth is, no one knows where the game will be in 30 years at the professional, college or high school level.

As far as Cedar Ridge’s situation is concerned, there are some things we do know.

The first one is there are no winners in this situation.

The players lose, namely the seniors, because they miss out on playing the sport they love. Last season, when East Chapel Hill didn’t field a varsity team, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools allowed Wildcat players to play at neighboring Chapel Hill High while remaining students at East. Whether Orange County Schools will allow Cedar Ridge players the same luxury at Orange remains to be seen. (Cedar Ridge will field a JV team this season, but seniors aren’t allowed on that squad).

The opponents of football, some of whom build their names and incomes off of the game while also desiring its demise, may learn about this situation and think the players are benefitting because they’re “staying safe” by not playing. If that’s true, then the seniors are just surviving life, not living it.

Cedar Ridge students lose because they miss out on the classic atmosphere of a Friday night home game. Granted, Cedar Ridge has struggled since reaching the 2-AA Eastern Regional Championship game in 2010. But where else in Hilllsborough do thousands of people, regardless of color, creed or political affiliation, gather to cheer together? To sing together? To celebrate together? To console together?

Most of all, the coaches lose. The circumstances that head coach Scott Loosemore has dealt with in his career have been nothing short of incredible. He joined the staff in 2015 as an offensive coordinator under former Burlington Cummings head coach Steve Johnson—who never even led one practice.

Johnson suffered a thoracic aortic aneurysm the week before training camp was ready to start. Loosemore stepped in as interim coach while Johnson spent the season recovering.

Loosemore was named the permanent coach in 2016 as crosstown rival Orange rose to prominence under Pat Moser. But adverse situations were nothing new for Loosemore, who led Eastern Guilford for eight seasons, including the 2006 campaign where the school literally burned to the ground.

Knowing Orange would have a numbers advantage because they have an entire side of the county to itself, Loosemore has worked tirelessly at middle schools across Hillsborough to attract students to Cedar Ridge football. He’s held private workouts on Saturdays when he could have sat home and watched the SEC. He’s held signing ceremonies for rising freshman that brought into his sincere message. He’s stayed late after school to attend lacrosse, baseball and basketball games in hopes of selling football to players.

In short, Loosemore has done a lot of work for free, all while being a newlywed and as his father was dying. He did all that not just to win football games, but to simply have the chance.

Unfortunately, the decision to quit was taken out of his hands and made by someone else. And, ultimately, everyone loses.