Boston, MA
Saturday’s high school football scores and highlights
Quentyn Dulin ran for 212 yards and two scores, while Preston Callender-Jones added 105 rushing yards and two scores as Brighton defeated David Prouty, 38-22. Dulin also returned an interception 80 yards for a score.
AJ Pinet’s 6-yard TD run with six minutes gave Dedham a 20-13 victory over Wellesley.
Daniel Cordeiro hauled in eight passes for 142 yards and a pair of scores as Haverhill defeated Beverly, 27-14. … Alex Wilson ran for 123 yards and two scores as Westford Academy shut out Lowell, 22-0. … Tyren Hoeun rushed for two scores and Brian Vaughan Jr. had the eventual game-winner in overtime as Lynn Classical edged Central (RI), 28-26.
Tyler Lennox ran for two scores and threw for a third as Carver handled Nantucket, 40-6.
Cameron Widtfeldt completed all four passes he threw for 103 yards and three touchdowns, while Jaylen Severino ran for 107 yards and a touchdown, while adding a TD reception as Gloucester defeated Somerville, 42-8.
Ray Gramlich ran for 141 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries as Dartmouth blanked Bishop Stang, 40-0.
Zach Milner’s 18-yard TD run with 31 seconds left gave Littleton a 7-0 win over Ayer-Shirley.
THURSDAY’S RESULTS
Catholic Memorial 41, Mansfield 14
Franklin 36, Wachusett 14
Greater Lowell 26, Groton-Dunstable 6
Hanover 28, Duxbury 18
Medford 19, Brookline 7
North Middlesex 42, Fitchburg 7
FRIDAY’S GAMES
Abington 20, Cohasset 7
Acton-Boxboro 28, Lexington 27
Ashland 34, Dover-Sherborn 19
Attleboro 20, Old Rochester 13
Barnstable 49, Brockton 14
Billerica 34, Masconomet 14
Bishop Fenwick 14, Marblehead 10
BC High 28, LaSalle (RI) 21
Boston Latin 35, East Boston 14
Braintree 20, Hingham 16
Burlington 13, Westborough 12
Canton 28, Dighton-Rehoboth 0
Cardinal Spellman 21, Sandwich 7
Case 25, Diman 7
Cumberland (RI) 26, Somerset Berkley 14
Dartmouth 40, Bishop Stang 0
Dennis-Yarmouth 40, Mashpee 38
Fairhaven 38, Durfee 13
Foxboro 18, Holliston 15
Framingham 35, East Longmeadow 7
Gloucester 42, Somerville 8
GNB Voke 21, Southeastern 6
Holbrook/Avon 44, St. John Paul 28
Hopkinton 20, Wayland 19
King Philip 31, Walpole 0
Lawrence 27, Lynn English 0
Lynnfield 41, Triton 17
Manchester-Essex 40, Ipswich 26
Medfield 27, Medway 0
Melrose 21, Reading 20
Middleboro 46, Apponequet 12
Milford 40, Bridgewater-Raynham 7
Milton 42, Scituate 14
Monomoy 22, Wareham 14
Nashoba Tech 28, Blue Hills 22
Needham 14, Natick 6
Newburyport 39, Essex Tech 14
Newton North 39, Waltham 21
North Attleboro 29, Bishop Feehan 19
North Quincy 35, Oliver Ames 6
Norton 30, Randolph 15
Norwell 40, Nauset 15
Norwood 14, Stoughton 7
Old Colony 36, Bristol-Plymouth 7
Peabody 35, Revere 0
Pentucket/Georgetown 20, Hamilton-Wenham 14
Plymouth North 22, Falmouth 0
Plymouth South 42, Silver Lake 12
Quincy 34, Archbishop Williams 13
Rockland 41, Seekonk 14
St. John’s Prep 41, Marshfield 20
St. Mary’s 22, KIPP 20
Salem 51, Arlington 26
Saugus 40, Chelsea 6
Sharon 33, Weston 0
Shawsheen 21, Bedford 7
Smith 43, Minuteman 0
South Shore Voke 33, Hull 12
Swampscott 15, Auburn 15
Taunton 41, New Bedford 0
Tech Boston 18, English/New Mission 12
Tewksbury 14, Danvers 7
Tri-County 12, Millis 0
Wakefield 17, Greater Lawrence 7
West Boylston 51, Northbridge 13
West Bridgewater 44, East Bridgewater 41
Weymouth 27, Westwood 20
Whitman-Hanson 28, Pembroke 26
Wilmington 36, Arlington Catholic 15
Winchester 31, Newton South 0
Winthrop 13, Stoneham 7
Woburn 28, Longmeadow 8
Xaverian 32, Everett 21
Latin Academy at Georgetown, ccd.
North Andover at Dracut, ccd.
SATURDAY’S GAMES
Amesbury 40, North Reading 38 (ot)
Belmont 40, Cambridge 13
Blackstone-Millville 16, Bellingham 14
Bourne 21, Upper Cape 0
Brighton 38, David Prouty 22
Carver 40, Nantucket 6
Concord-Carlisle 41, Shepherd Hill 8
Dedham 20, Wellesley 13
Doherty 34, Algonquin 0
Haverhill 27, Beverly 14
Lincoln-Sudbury 24, Methuen 14
Littleton 7, Ayer Shirley 0
Londonderry (NH) 41, Chelmsford 0
Lynn Classical 28, Central (RI) 26 (ot)
Marlboro 28, Tantasqua 21
Martha’s Vineyard 40, Sutton 20
Northeast/Mystic Valley 62, Lowell Catholic 35
St. John’s (Shrewsbury) 30, Leominster 18
Watertown 32, Manchester West (NH) 0
Westford Academy 22, Lowell 0
Whittier 36, Roxbury Prep 8
Windham (NH) 20, Malden Catholic 19
Malden at Lynn Tech, late
SUNDAY’S GAMES
Atlantis Charter at Keefe Tech, 11
Central Catholic at Springfield Central, 11
Shrewsbury at Andover, 3
AMESBURY 40, NORTH READING 38
Amesbury (1-0) 8 8 8 8 8 – 40
N Reading (0-1) 6 14 0 12 6 – 38
AM – Max Sanchez 58 run (Michael Sanchez rush)
NR – 6 run (2 pt conv failed)
NR – 48 pass (rush failed)
AM – Michael Sanchez 6 run (Nico Cox rush)
NR – 26 pass (rush good)
AM – DJ DiCarlo 5 run (Justin Dube rush)
NR – 1 run (rush failed)
AM – Max Sanchez 1 run (Max Sanchez rush)
NR – 5 run (rush failed)
AM – Max Sanchez 2 run (Max Sanchez rush)
DENNIS-YARMOUTH 40, MASHPEE 38
D-Yarmouth (1-0) 13 7 14 6 – 40
Mashpee (0-1) 16 8 0 14 – 38
DY – Shemar Dillon 64 pass from Jayden Barber (Zach Quintiliani kick)
MA – Dominic Matteodo 1 run (Matteodo run)
MA – Brian Neves 29 fumble return (Matteodo run)
DY – Matt Paquin 4 run (pass failed)
DY – Jake Bohlin 91 pass from Barber (Quintiliani kick)
MA – Ben Squarcia 8 run (Ryan Triveri pass from Matteodo)
DY – Dillon 23 pass from Barber (Quintiliani kick)
DY – Walter Mayo 8 pass from Barber (Quintiliani kick)
MA – Logan Wills 56 run (Charlie Lyons pass from Matteodo)
DY – Mayo 6 pass from Barber (kick failed)
MA – Wills 2 run (pass failed)
HAVERHILL 27, BEVERLY 14
Haverhill (1-0) 13 14 0 0 – 27
Beverly (0-11) 0 7 7 0 – 14
HA – Devin Carreiro 5 pass from James Farrell (Sebastien Guillaume kick)
HA – Jhonathan Wallis 12 run (kick failed)
HA – Wallis 2 run (Guillaume kick)
BE – Danny Conant 53 pass from Blake Kessel (Danny Pierce kick)
HA – Carreiro 42 pass from Farrell (Guillame kick)
BE – Conant 25 pass from Kessel (Pierce kick)
LINCOLN-SUDBURY 24, METHUEN 14
Methuen (0-1) 0 0 7 7 – 14
Lincoln-Sudbury (1-0) 0 14 3 7 – 24
LS – Darius Braithwaite 3 run (Marcus Cassel kick)
LS – Logan Umach 10 pass from Cooper Taratino (Cassel kick)
LS – Cassel 43 field goal
ME – Shane Eason 65 pass from Drew Eason (Omar Aboutoui kick)
LS – Jake Haarde 26 pass from Taratino (Cassel kick)
ME – S. Eason 5 run (Aboutoui kick)
NORTHEAST 62, LOWELL CATHOLIC 35
Lowell Catholic (0-1) 8 12 8 7 – 35
Northeast (1-0) 16 14 8 24 – 62
NE – Chris Zullo 5 run (Devin Nieves rush)
NE – Sam LaCombe 1 run (LaCombe rush)
LC – Aidan Virella 14 pass from Dylan Eld (Virella pass from Eld)
NE – Zullo 35 run (Zullo rush)
LC – Shawn Nherisson 34 pass from Eld (pass failed)
NE – Nieves 39 run (rush failed)
LC – Nherisson 65 pass from Eld (rush failed)
LC – Eld 1 run (Virella pass from Eld)
NE – Zullo 88 run (Isaiah Bueno rush)
NE – Zullo 18 run (Trevor Burt rush)
LC – Shawn Hines 21 run (kick good)
NE – Bueno 10 run (Bueno rush)
WHITTIER 36, ROXBURY PREP 8
Roxbury Prep (0-1) 0 0 0 8 – 8
Whittier (1-0) 14 15 7 0 – 36
WH – Georgio Gioldasis 1 run (rush good)
WH – Anderson Pineda 8 run (rush failed)
WH – Nick Alamanzar 50 run (rush good)
WH – Alamanzar 8 run (kick good)
WH – Pineda 15 run (kick good)
RP – Sonny McColgan 5 run (rush good)
Boston, MA
Below freezing temperatures again today
The winds are still going Wednesday, but the air temperatures remain at respectable levels. Highs will manage to weasel up to 30 in most spots. It’s too bad we’re not going to feel them at face value. Instead, we’re dressing for temps in the teens all day today.
Thursday and Friday are the picks of the week.
There will be a lot less wind, reasonable winter temperatures in the 30s and a decent amount of sun. We’ll be quiet into the weekend, as our next weather system approaches.
With mild air expected to come north on southerly winds, highs will bounce back to the low and mid-40s both days of the weekend.
Showers will be delayed until late day/evening on Saturday and into the night. There may be a few early on Sunday too, but the focus on that day will be to bring in the cold.
Highs will briefly sneak into the 40s, then fall late day.
We’ll also watch a batch of snow late Sunday night as it moves up the Eastern Seaboard.
Right now, there is a potential for some accumulation as it moves overhead Sunday night and early Monday morning.
It appears to be a weak, speedy system, so we’re not expecting it to pull any punches.
Enjoy the quieter spell of weather!
Boston, MA
Boston City Councilor will introduce
BOSTON – It could cost you more to get a soda soon. The Boston City Council is proposing a tax on sugary drinks, saying the money on unhealthy beverages can be put to good use.
A benefit for public health?
“I’ve heard from a lot of residents in my district who are supportive of a tax on sugary beverages, but they want to make sure that these funds are used for public health,” said City Councilor Sharon Durkan, who is introducing the “Sugar Tax,” modeled on Philadelphia and Seattle. She said it’s a great way to introduce and fund health initiatives and slowly improve public health.
A study from Boston University found that cities that implemented a tax on sugary drinks saw a 33% decrease in sales.
“What it does is it creates an environment where we are discouraging the use of something that we know, over time, causes cancer, causes diet-related diseases, causes obesity and other diet-related illnesses,” she said.
Soda drinkers say no to “Sugar Tax”
Soda drinkers don’t see the benefit.
Delaney Doidge stopped by the store to get a mid-day pick-me-up on Tuesday.
“I wasn’t planning on getting anything, but we needed toilet paper, and I wanted a Diet Coke, so I got a Diet Coke,” she said, adding that a tax on sugary drinks is an overreach, forcing her to ask: What’s next?
“Then we’d have to tax everything else that brings people enjoyment,” Doidge said. “If somebody wants a sweet treat, they deserve it, no tax.”
Store owners said they’re worried about how an additional tax would impact their businesses.
Durkan plans to bring the tax idea before the City Council on Wednesday to start the conversation about what rates would look like.
Massachusetts considered a similar tax in 2017.
Boston, MA
Patience over panic: Kristaps Porzingis and the Celtics struggles
The Celtics aren’t playing great basketball. Coincidence or not, this stretch has coincided with the return and reintegration of Kristaps Porzingis. In 23 games without the big man, Boston has a record of 19-4—with him in the lineup, that falls to a much less flattering 9-7 record.
This has put his value on trial, and opened the door to discussions about whether a move to the bench could be helpful for everyone involved. It’s not a crazy idea by any means, but it’s shortsighted and an oversimplification of why the team has struggled of late.
While Kristaps attempts to slide back into his role, there’s an adjustment period that the team naturally has to go through. That’s roughly 13 shots per game being taken from the collective and handed to one individual. It’s a shift that can impact that entire rotation, but it’s also not unfamiliar to the team—by now, they’re used to the cycle of Porzingis’ absence and return.
KP hasn’t been the same game-breaking player that we’ve come to know, but he’s not that far off. He isn’t hunting shots outside of the flow of the offense, and the coaching staff isn’t force-feeding him either.
This table shows a comparison in the volume and efficiency of Kristaps’ most used play types from the past two seasons. Across the board, the possessions per game have remained very similar, while the efficiency has taken a step back.
He’s shooting below the standard he established for himself during the championship run, but the accuracy should come around as he gets more comfortable and confident in his movements post-injury. Porzingis opened up about this after a win over the Nuggets, sharing his progress.
“80-85%. I still have a little bit to go.” Porzingis said. “I know that moment is coming when everything will start clicking, and I’ll play really high-level basketball.”
In theory, sending KP to the bench would allow him to face easier matchups and build his conditioning back up. On a similar note, he and the starters have a troubling -8.9 net rating. With that said, abandoning this unit so quickly is an overreaction and works against the purpose of the regular season.
It may require patience, but we’re talking about a starting lineup that had a +17.3 net rating over seven playoff games together. Long term, it’s more valuable to let them figure it out, rather than opt for a temporary fix.
It can’t be ignored that the Celtics are also getting hit by a wrecking ball of poor shooting luck in his minutes. Opponents are hitting 33.78% of their three-pointers with him on the bench, compared to a ridiculously efficient 41.78% when he’s on the court. To make matters worse, Boston is converting 37.21% of their own 3’s without KP, and just 32.95% with him.
Overall, there’s a -8.83% differential between team and opponent 3PT efficiency with Porzingis in the game. This is simply unsustainable, and it’s due for positive regression eventually.
Despite his individual offensive struggles, Porzingis has been elite as a rim protector. Among 255 players who have defended at least 75 shots within 6 feet of the basket, he has the best defensive field goal percentage in the NBA at 41.2%. Players are shooting 20.9% worse than expected when facing Kristaps at the rim.
Boston is intentional about which shooters they’re willing to leave open and when to funnel drives toward Porzingis. Teams are often avoiding these drives, and accepting open looks from mediocre shooters—recently, with great success. Both of these factors play into the stark difference in opponent 3PT%.
The numbers paint a disappointing picture, but from a glass-half-full perspective, there’s plenty of room for positive regression. Last season, the starting lineup shot 39.31% from beyond the arc and limited opponents to 36.75%. This year, they’ve struggled, shooting just 27.61% themselves, while opponents are converting at an absurd 46.55%.
Ultimately, the Celtics’ struggles seem more like a temporary blip, fueled by frustrating shooting luck and a slow return to form for Kristaps, rather than a reason to panic. The core of this team has already proven their ability to perform together at a high level, and sticking with the current configuration gives them the best chance to break out of the slump.
Allowing Porzingis to round into shape and cranking up the defensive intensity should help offset some of the shooting woes. As Porzingis eloquently put it, “with this kind of talent in this locker room, it’s impossible that we don’t start playing better basketball.” When water finds its level, the game will start to look easy again.
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