Washington
From ‘laughingstock of IPS’ to sectional champs. Washington adds chapter to rich history.
Adrian Floyd walked down the hallway at Washington High School last week, pulled the trophy out of the glass case, then walked it back down to the gym and displayed it at midcourt.
To Floyd, the 1995 sectional championship trophy signifies more than a moment in time. At the time, he was a junior for the Continentals, who won the City tournament and were attempting to win the program’s first sectional championship in 13 years.
“I remember George (McGinnis) and Steven Downing and John Sherman Williams coming and talking to us,” Floyd said of the tournament run 29 years ago. “They were coming and checking on us and wanting to know how we felt. It was a big deal because it hadn’t been done in so long.”
Floyd, an assistant coach at Washington, represents a tangible link to past basketball glory at Washington, where banners of McGinnis, Downing, Williams, Floyd’s former teammate, Jack Owens, and many others hang on the wall above the court. The Continentals awakened the echoes of those glory years Saturday night with the program’s first sectional championship since that 1995 season with a victory Saturday over Christel House in Class 3A Sectional 28 at Beech Grove.
Floyd’s former Washington teammate, Robert Williams, texted him a photo of himself pointing at the scoreboard after the Continentals defeated host Southport for the 1995 sectional championship. The score: 67-48. The score of Saturday’s win over Christel House: 67-48.
The players on this year’s Washington team joked with Floyd he can put that 1995 trophy back in the trophy case.
“Every day he was talking about it,” Washington senior Dave Leye said with a laugh. “That’s why we had to go get our own.”
Washington (14-12) will attempt to go one step further than that 1995 team when the Continentals play last year’s state runner-up, Guerin Catholic (20-7), in a Class 3A regional at Greenfield-Central on Saturday. But even by extending the season one week further, the Continentals have already inspired memories of an era when Washington was one of the state’s most feared and historic programs.
“Truth be told,” said Washington 6-11 senior Clem Butler, “the last couple of years we were like the laughingstock of IPS. It does show what you can do when you improve as players and improve as a team.”
Back to the future
Floyd remembers the sea of purple and white. He remembers the Hinkle Fieldhouse floor shaking. “Like an earthquake,” he said.
Scott Hicks, now the athletic director at Washington, had one of the prime seats in the building as assistant athletic director at Butler, sitting at the scorer’s table. Hicks had grown up on the westside and would have gone to Washington if his parents had not sent him to Cathedral.
Washington coach Aaron Hogg was also inside Hinkle Fieldhouse that day, though his seat was much farther away from the court. Hogg was 14 years old and had recently moved from football-crazy Texas. His cousin wanted to show him what Indiana basketball was all about.
“That was the first basketball game I ever went to in Indiana,” Hogg said. “That’s when I found out basketball was a religion here like football was in Texas.”
The scene on March 11, 1995, is one treasured by the 11,000-plus standing room only crowd, players, coaches and anyone else lucky enough to see it in person. Sixth-ranked Washington, after winning the sectional championship, was matched up against westside rival and No. 1 Ben Davis. The teams had just two losses between them — Washington in double-overtime at Terre Haute North and Ben Davis to Kevin Ault and Warsaw in the championship of the Hall of Fame Classic in New Castle.
Adding to the emotion of the game was it was slated to be the final year for Washington after IPS voted in December of 1994 to close Washington and Howe to save an estimated $2.2 million. But on the basketball court, there was little that could stop the Continentals. Senior guards Owens and Williams combined for 35 points a game and the frontcourt of 6-4 junior Marcus Reedy and the 6-7 Floyd were also capable scorers. Chris Sutton, a 6-8 senior, was a strong rebounder and defender for coach Joe Pearson.
But Steve Witty’s Ben Davis’ team, a state finalist the previous year, was the considered the best team in the state. In addition to Damon Frierson, who would go on to win IndyStar Mr. Basketball after the season, the Giants featured a frontcourt of 6-6 James Patterson and 6-7 Courtney James.
“We had all been playing basketball together since junior high,” Floyd said. “The year before (in 1994), we lost in the City championship to Cathedral and in the sectional to Howe. So, when we came back the next year, it was payback time. That was our goal — win City, win the sectional. And our goal was to win state. Of course, we met Ben Davis and that last-second shot happened.”
The teams battled back and forth with the sunlight shining through the Hinkle windows. Owens made two free throws with 7 seconds remaining to give Washington a one-point lead. With Frierson covered, Ahmed Bellamy raced up the left side of the floor and let it fly from the left wing.
“It looked like an airball when he let it go,” Hicks said this week. “Then it just kind of curved at the last moment.”
Swish. Ben Davis 79, Washington 77. The Giants staved off Cathedral that night in double overtime to win the regional, then went on to win the program’s first state championship.
The Continentals, with realistic dreams of matching the 1965 and ’69 state champions with one of their own, were heartbroken.
“The biggest thing is we knew the school was closing,” Floyd said. “That made it hurt even more. Me and Reedy were juniors, but we didn’t have a chance to come back. That was it.”
Reedy and Floyd enrolled at Lawrence Central at seniors and led the Bears to a 21-3 record and No. 4 state ranking but again lost a heartbreaker, this time in an overtime upset to North Central in the sectional semifinal. With only one year, though, it was not quite the same.
“We were a family at Washington,” Floyd said. “Just some kids from the inner city who wanted to do something special.”
A little like this team.
Continentals return to relevance
The 6-6 Hogg, who played at Warren Central and Wichita State, is in his fourth year at Washington. He led the Continentals to an 18-win season two years ago, but last year’s team dropped to 6-18 and lost to Cardinal Ritter by 22 points in the sectional semifinal.
“When I first came here, I told them I didn’t want to come here and recruit a bunch of seniors and juniors, win a few games and move on,” Hogg said. “We wanted to start in the sixth grade and start building the youth programs. That’s what we’ve been building over time but also, we have kids who have come in and showed the kids what it means to work hard and do the right things. They have started this program.”
One of those players is the 6-2 Leye, perhaps an unlikely leading scorer. Leye was cut from the middle school teams at Chapel Hill and as a freshman at Ben Davis. He never gave up on his basketball dreams, though. Leye set up cones for outdoor drills, working on dribbling and shooting by himself. He transferred to Washington for his junior year to give it another shot.
“It was heartbreaking because when you love something and somebody says you can’t do it, that hurts,” Leye said. “But something about me, even though I don’t show it all the time, is that I don’t like to be told ‘no.’ When somebody tells me I can’t do something, I really want to show them I can do it. When I heard that ‘no’ something rang in my head that I can’t stop now.”
Floyd and Hogg both point to Leye’s spirit and work ethic as a major reason for Washington’s turnaround. He is averaging 11.7 points and 2.6 rebounds, but his impact goes beyond the numbers. The same goes for Butler, who was at one time cast aside as a project. Floyd got him to come out for the cross-country team as a sophomore and he lost 40 pounds. Butler now averages 9.1 points and 7.9 rebounds and is coming off a sectional championship game that saw him finish with 23 points, 23 rebounds and five blocked shots.
“When you have kids with that type of mindset,” Hogg said, “it’s a blessing. Top-level talent doesn’t matter as much if they have that A-plus mindset. Then it’s contagious and spreads through the rest of the team. That’s why we are where we are. It honestly eliminated some of the people who should be on this team and are not. They couldn’t walk that tight line. It’s hard to walk in somewhere late when you have guys in there sweating already and ready to go.”
Other key players for the Continentals are sophomore Roosevelt Franklin (11.4 ppg, 4.3 rebounds) and seniors Malique Starks (9.8 ppg, 6.0 rebounds) and Jordan Stratton (9.7 ppg, 2.8 rebounds). Washington trailed by 16 points in the first quarter of the sectional semifinal against Purdue Poly before rallying for a 63-50 win.
“We got a spark from Roosevelt and that ignited through everybody,” Leye said. “Once we were on, we really didn’t step off the pedal.”
‘It means a lot to put on that Washington jersey’
The most famous of the Continentals, McGinnis, died in December at 73. McGinnis, Mr. Basketball in 1969, led Washington to the state championship as a senior before going on to a professional career that would put him in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
The night after McGinnis died, Washington upset Tech, 59-57.
“We showed up and beat them,” Leye said. “It means a lot to put on that Washington jersey. That’s what we want to show. Instead of us being underdogs, we want people to look at us like, ‘Oh, Washington is that good.’”
Washington, seeded 11th in the City tournament, served notice again by knocking off sixth-seeded Purdue Poly by two points and taking out third-seeded Tech again in overtime in the quarterfinals. In early February, Washington lost to Saturday’s opponent, Guerin Catholic, by 21 points. But it was a three-point game at halftime. Butler fouled out and scored four points.
“My flip switched about 10:30 p.m. Saturday night,” Hogg said. “We were already watching film, getting ready for Guerin and game planning.”
Leye joked that his “flip didn’t switch quite as fast.”
“(Saturday night) felt like a lifetime moment,” he said. “Words can’t even explain it. We wanted that trophy in our hands so bad. That’s why we had so much energy after the game even though we were dead tired.”
There was no way to know 29 years ago that winning another sectional title was even possible. When the school closed at the end of the 1994-95 school year no one knew it would reopen. McGinnis watched that game in 1995 from inside Hinkle Fieldhouse.
“The memory of this game will last forever,” McGinnis told then-IndyStar columnist Bill Benner in 1995. “And that’s what the people of Washington will take with them.”
Almost 30 years later, the Continentals have another memory. And another trophy for the trophy case.
Call Star reporter Kyle Neddenriep at (317) 444-6649.
Washington
19-Year-Old Transgender University of Washington Student Fatally Stabbed
Sign up for The Agenda, Them’s news and politics newsletter, delivered Thursdays.
This story contains descriptions of fatal violence against a transgender person.
The Seattle Police Department are searching for a suspect after a 19-year-old University of Washington student was stabbed to death in an off-campus student apartment complex on May 10.
Seattle Police Department Detective Eric Muñoz told NBC News that the victim is “believed to be a 19-year-old transgender female” who was enrolled at the university. The victim has not yet been publicly identified by name. She was found in the housing complex laundry room shortly after 10 p.m. on Sunday night.
The housing complex, Nordheim Court, is privately managed but affiliated with the university, located near an upscale shopping center in Seattle’s U-Village neighborhood. According to NBC News, residents received an official alert from UW to stay inside their homes and lock all windows and doors — an alert that was lifted around 1 a.m. with the acknowledgment that “a death investigation remains ongoing.”
According to SPD detective Eric Muñoz, police and the fire department attempted lifesaving measures but ultimately “pronounced the victim deceased at the scene.”
“Officers are actively searching for the suspect, believed to be a black male with a beard, 5’6-8” tall, wearing a vest with button up shirt, and blue jeans,” Muñoz wrote in a blotter report.
Muñoz noted that the victim would be identified by the medical examiner’s office in “the coming days.” The SPD did not immediately respond to Them’s request for comment.
This is the seventh known trans person to be violently killed in 2026. In mid-April, 39-year-old transmasculine farmer Luca RedBeard was fatally shot in rural New Mexico. Last week, police in Marion County, Florida opened a homicide investigation into the shooting death of a 29-year-old who went by multiple names and referred to “transitioning” on social media. In Kentucky, an investigation into the disappearance of 22-year-old trans college student Murry Foust remains ongoing.
Police are asking anyone with information about the University of Washington case to call the Violent Crimes Tip Line at 206-233-5000, emphasizing that anonymous tips are accepted.
This is a developing story.
Get the best of what’s queer. Sign up for Them’s weekly newsletter here.
Washington
How the Sea Mar Museum Is Preserving Latino History in Washington
On a quiet stretch of Des Moines Memorial Drive in South Seattle, the Sea Mar Museum of Chicano/a/Latino/a Culture rises like a long‑overdue acknowledgment. Its brick exterior doesn’t shout; it invites. Inside, the rooms hum with the stories of families who crossed borders, harvested fields, organized classrooms, and built communities across Washington state—often without seeing their histories reflected anywhere on a museum wall.
For Rogelio Riojas, founder and CEO of Sea Mar Community Health Centers, the museum is a promise kept. “We wanted to make sure the contributions of Latinos in Washington state are recognized and preserved for future generations,” he told The Seattle Times when the museum opened in 2019. It was a simple statement, but one that captured decades of work—both visible and invisible—by the region’s Latino communities.
Walking through the galleries feels like stepping into a living archive. One of the most arresting sights is a pair of original farmworker cabins, transported from Eastern Washington. Their narrow wooden frames and sparse interiors speak volumes about the migrant families who once slept inside after long days in the fields. The cabins are not replicas or artistic interpretations; they are the real thing, weathered by sun, dust, and time. They anchor the museum’s narrative in the physical realities of labor that shaped the state’s agricultural economy.
Sea Mar describes the museum as “dedicated to sharing the history, struggles, and successes of the Latino community in Washington state,” a mission that plays out in photographs, letters, student newspapers, and oral histories contributed by community members themselves. These aren’t artifacts chosen from afar—they’re family treasures, personal archives, and memories entrusted to the museum so they can live beyond the kitchen tables and shoeboxes where they were once kept.
The story extends beyond the museum walls. Just steps away is the Sea Mar Community Center, a sweeping, light‑filled gathering space designed for celebrations, performances, workshops, and community events. With room for nearly 500 people, a full stage, a movie‑theater‑sized screen, and a catering kitchen, the center was built with one purpose: to give the community a place to see itself, gather, and grow. Sea Mar describes it as “a welcoming space for families, organizations, and community groups to gather, celebrate, and learn,” and on any given weekend, it lives up to that promise.
Together, the museum and community center form a cultural campus—part historical archive, part living room for the region’s Latino communities. Students come to learn about the Chicano activists who reshaped the University of Washington in the late 1960s. Families come to see their own histories reflected in the exhibits. Visitors come to understand a story that has long been present in Washington, even if it wasn’t always visible.
The Sea Mar Museum is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., offering free admission to anyone who walks through its doors. For many, it’s more than a museum—it’s a recognition, a gathering place, and a testament to the people who helped shape the Pacific Northwest.
Preserving Latino History and Community Life in Washington was first published on Washington Latino News (WALN) and republished with permission.
Washington
Mother’s Day Bunch at Lady Madison | Washington DC
Celebrate Mothers Day with à la carte brunch at Lady Madison featuring seafood, entrées, desserts, and premium beverage options.
Celebrate Mothers Day in sophisticated style at Lady Madison, located inside Le Méridien Washington, DC, The Madison. Join us on Sunday, May 10, 2026, from 12:003:00 PM for an elevated à la carte brunch experience in downtown Washington, DC.
Enjoy a refined selection of chef-driven brunch classics, fresh seafood, seasonal salads, and elegant entrées. Highlights include a Build Your Own Omelette, Crab Benedict with lime hollandaise, Chilled Seafood Trio, and signature mains such as Roasted Rack of Lamb, Cedar Plank Sea Bass, and Marinated New York Strip Loin.
End on a sweet note with classic desserts including Crème Brûlée Cheesecake, Fruit Tart, Strawberry Shortcake, and Passion Fruit Cake.
Enhance your experience with beverage offerings, including bottomless Mimosas and Bloody Marys for $30 with house selections. Piper-Heidsieck Champagne is also available by the glass for $16 or by the bottle for $49.
Reserve on OpenTable:
https://www.opentable.com/booking/experiences-availability?rid=1426987&restref=1426987&experienceId=695240&utm_source=external&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=shared
À La Carte Menu
Les ufs & Brunch
Egg White Frittata $24
spinach, tomato, mushrooms, green onion
Served with pommes de terre rissolées or seasonal fruit
Build Your Own Omelette $24
ham, smoked salmon, vegetables, cheeses (choose up to 3)
Served with pommes de terre rissolées or seasonal fruit
Crab Benedict $24
lime hollandaise, salsa cruda
Served with pommes de terre rissolées or seasonal fruit
Brioche French Toast $17
berry compote, whipped butter, maple syrup
Les Froids & Salades
Chilled Seafood Trio $28
Jonah crab claws, shrimp, cocktail sauce
Spring Berry Salad $17
brie, berries, champagne vinaigrette
Golden & Crimson Beet Salad $18
red wine vinaigrette
Add protein: shrimp, salmon, skirt steak +18 | chicken +16
Les Plats Principaux
Roasted Rack of Lamb $42
mint sauce, huckleberry reduction, sweet potato purée, asparagus
Cedar Plank Sea Bass $49
saffron rice, spring vegetables
New York Strip Loin $42
mushroom sauce, truffle croquette potatoes, haricots verts
Les Desserts $14
Crème Brûlée Cheesecake
Fruit Tart
Strawberry Shortcake
Passion Fruit Cake
-
Minnesota15 seconds agoMinnesota gas prices surge: Twin Cities hits $4.18, costs climb $1.28 from 2025
-
Mississippi6 minutes ago
Vote Clarion Ledger Mississippi girls high school athlete of the week May 4-9
-
Missouri12 minutes agoJudge denies Missouri AG’s bid to immediately halt 7-OH kratom sales by American Shaman
-
Montana18 minutes agoHalf a million absentee ballots sent to Montana voters for primary election • Daily Montanan
-
Nebraska24 minutes agoInside America’s Only Federal Quarantine Unit for Hantavirus Cruise Passengers
-
Nevada30 minutes agoWhat hikers should do if they spot a rattlesnake in Nevada
-
New Hampshire36 minutes ago
Newly naturalized US citizens pledge allegiance in Exeter, N.H., where revolutionaries made history – The Boston Globe
-
New Jersey42 minutes agoRock legend Steven Van Zandt celebrates New Jersey launch of Malvado Maple Mezcal at Hard Rock Atlantic City