Maine
How did Jovantae Barnes break out with career day in OU football win vs Maine?
NORMAN — Jovantae Barnes was patient when he received a handoff from Jackson Arnold.
In the middle of the first quarter, OU football trailed Maine by a touchdown and needed a spark offensively. On the first play, Barnes waited for his blockers to get in position before making two Black Bear defenders miss with jukes. He was then free for what he thought was 75 yards to the end zone.
The play was initially called a touchdown but Barnes was ruled short at the 1-yard line.
“I still think it was a touchdown,” said Barnes, who two plays later punched in a 2-yard score. “They might say different. But it felt good to break one and just celebrate with my guys. … I was mad because I was like, ‘Just give me the touchdown.’ But to just go in there again and get it. It felt good.”
Barnes’ performance in the Sooners’ 59-14 win over Maine on Saturday felt extra special after a rollercoaster 2023 season when he dealt with a foot injury, starting just one game and rushing for one touchdown. Barnes put those past frustrations aside this season and has not only cemented himself as OU’s leading running back but also he’s found his voice as one of the Sooners’ unquestioned leaders on offense.
Barnes’ 203 rushing yards and three rushing touchdowns were each career highs. He averaged 11.3 yards on his 18 carries.
“It’s been awesome to see,” OU quarterback Jackson Arnold said. “Obviously I wasn’t here his freshman year when he played really well. And I came in last year, I was waiting to see Jovantae because everyone kept talking about how hard he ran and this and that and he just had injuries last year and I wasn’t able to see it. And to finally see it this year come to fruition this year has been really awesome. I’m super proud of him.”
As a freshman in 2022, Barnes played in 11 games and scored five touchdowns. When the season ended, Barnes was atop many people’s lists of potential Sooners transfers but said he never once thought about leaving.
OU running backs coach DeMarco Murray have developed a close relationship. Both are from Las Vegas. It was Murray who phoned Barnes following the Sooners’ loss to Arizona in last season’s Alamo Bowl to make sure he was keeping his head up and that he knew if he stayed his time was coming. They took a moment to celebrate how far Barnes has come with an emotional embrace and a picture together postgame Saturday.
“I’m really proud of him,” OU coach Brent Venables said. “He continued to come back and work hard and was on a mission, if you will, and it’s a great example for the other players, everybody learns from that. All that matters is what you do moving forward and things are going to happen, and you have to overcome some things. And certainly he did that with being frustrated with being injured and not being able to get into a rhythm a year ago.”
After running hard the past few weeks and being one of the few bright spots on the Sooners’ offense, it has felt like a breakout game was coming for Barnes. He felt it too and told wide receiver J.J. Hester pregame that he was going to perform well.
Barnes’ 158 first-half rushing yards was the most by an OU running back since Samaje Perine’s FBS single-game record performance against Kansas in 2014. Barnes’ 74-yard rush was the Sooners’ longest rushing play since Rhamondre Stevenson’s 75-yarder against South Dakota in 2019.
Although it was against an FCS opponent, offensive coordinator Joe Jon Finley said Barnes’ performance can elevate the entire offense’s play throughout the rest of the season.
“It always starts with the run,” Finley said. “As you saw today, whenever you can do that, some different things open up for you. I’m extremely proud of Jovantae because he’s finally healthy and able to show what he can do. … You just see the steps. Hopefully you continue to take those little steps, one week at a time, one day at a time, one rep at a time.”
Barnes’ performance also meant more to tight end Kaden Helms, who also dealt with injuries and scored his first career touchdown on Saturday. Barnes and Helms, who signed with OU in the same recruiting class, pushed each other last season and made it a competition every day in the training room to get healthier and improve.
“That’s my guy,” Helms said. “It was great to see the run game going, great to see Vontae doing what everyone including himself knows he can do.”
During a meeting in preseason camp, Venables encouraged Barnes to speak to the entire team about his experiences a season ago. The Sooners used Barnes’ speech as inspiration to fight through mental obstacles.
Barnes showed off his immense talent on that long run in the first quarter. But it’s been his perspective and leadership throughout OU’s disappointing 5-4 start to the season that has impressed those around him.
“Last year doesn’t have to have anything to do with this year,” Venables said. “He just put his head down and created an opportunity for himself, made the most of the opportunity when he’s gotten in and he’s just really excelled and has really taken off.”
OU at Missouri
KICKOFF: 6 of 6:45 p.m. Saturday at Faurot Field in Columbia, Mo. (ESPN or SEC Network)
Maine
“I’m Ashamed of My Country”: Biddeford, Maine Locals Grieve Neighbor Killed by ICE
A poster of Joan Sebastián Durán Guerrero, the man killed by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, is displayed at a memorial in Biddeford, Maine.Robert F. Bukaty/AP
The day after hundreds of locals poured into the streets of Biddeford, Maine in protest of ICE’s killing of 26-year-old Joan Sebastián Durán Guerrero on Monday, I drove through the former mill town. It seemed eerily still, as if in shock. When the horrors of Minneapolis and Houston come to your small corner of New England, what can you do?
In Mechanics Park in Biddeford, a small but diligent group presented one answer: you keep showing up.
“When I woke up this morning, I knew that this was the place I should go right to,” said Wayne Miller, 71, a retired pilot of 35 years and resident of Beverly, Massachusetts. “This is my backyard. This is my neighborhood.”
He paused, then started to cry. “I’m ashamed of my country. I love the country. I’m ashamed.”
Miller was standing with a sign that read “Dissent while you still can” at the corner of Mechanics Park in Biddeford, where the protest and vigil for Guerrero had been held the day before. A nearby chain-link fence served as a memorial, lined with flowers, signs, and letters of grief and apology for Guerrero and his family. One read, “3-year-olds should be watching Bluey, not their fathers being executed.” Above a “No Trespassing” sign, someone had placed another: “Biddeford was built by immigrants.”
I spoke with Miller and others who had come out on Tuesday to continue expressing their grief for their neighbor, the second person killed by federal agents in less than a week.
“It’s one thing to see a news story from a distance,” said Tessa, 28, a waitress and resident of Biddeford. “But watching it happen close to home, it really recontextualizes the safety that you feel walking around in your neighborhood.”
For Linda Henry, 27, a retired firefighter and Gloucester, Massachusetts resident, it was only a matter of time. “I know that it doesn’t matter where you live. It’s going to happen, you know. ICE is going to come.”
“I’m ashamed of my country. I love the country. I’m ashamed.”
Guerrero was a Colombian citizen who lived in Biddeford, Maine with his partner and 3-year-old daughter. He is one of at least nine people killed by federal immigration agents since the start of Donald Trump’s second term. Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin claims Guerrero “weaponized” his vehicle during a traffic stop. But similar claims by DHS have quickly fallen apart after video footage of shootings has come to light.
Reports say that not only was Guerrero authorized to legally work in the US, but he wasn’t the target of ICE’s operations that day.
Katie, a 48-year-old educator from New Hampshire, shared her anger. “A gun is not a license to kill. These agents have no business drawing their guns,” she said. “They aren’t judge, jury, and executioner, and they don’t have the right to be killing people the way that they are.”
“We were taught from the time we were little, ‘liberty and justice for all.’ We were taught that the United States was a place for everyone, and the current regime has changed that,” Katie continued.

Most of the protesters were standing with signs on the sidewalk along the adjacent intersection, shouting “ICE OUT” while passing cars honked. Near the memorial, a man on a bike caught my eye. He was off to the side, alone, quietly reading the letters addressed to Guerrero.
He introduced himself as Diego, 30, a restaurant worker and Biddeford resident. “I knew the guy. He was always around,” he said. “I was working and I was about to cry, to be honest. Because it’s injustice, you know? I’m an immigrant, and this country was built for immigrants.”
“We work, we pay taxes. We also need rights, as everybody does,” he said. “It’s not about left or right. It’s not about a political party. It’s about human rights.”
He told me that while he’s never felt disrespected by his neighbors and the people of Biddeford are good, the government is not the same. He said he feels unsafe and his community of immigrants feels like it’s hiding.
“How many need to die for us to understand?” Diego said. “He’d got a kid, a little daughter. And that’s the most devastating. Because, you know, if I do something wrong, I can say ‘I’m sorry, I apologize.’ But he’s dead. There’s no apology that can bring him back, you know? He’s dead. I can’t even believe it, I can’t even believe this is happening.”
When I asked Diego why he had stopped on his bike, he said out of solidarity—for Guerrero, for his partner and daughter. And when I asked what he would say to his community, he said, “Thank you for all the solidarity of people. Thank you for all the understanding. And I hope we can stop the violence.”
Maine
How a tragedy changed the timeline — and the politics — of Maine’s Senate race – The Boston Globe
And while this is the role that many Democratic leaders would be expected to play in this situation, this crop of candidates has an added challenge.
Because this also means there are no meaningful distinctions among the candidates to help guide the eventual 601 delegates who will decide who should run in one of the most closely watched Senate contests in the country.
Indeed, the practical political impact of the tragic situation in Biddeford on the Maine Senate contest is this: What was expected to be an intense two-week primary campaign has effectively been reduced to one week. And the week currently being overtaken by the shock and anger is likely the most crucial.
That’s because 5 p.m. Wednesday is the deadline for supporters to sign up to become delegate candidates for the July 25 statewide convention in Bangor.
Those delegate candidates will then be elected at caucuses held in each of the state’s 16 counties over this coming weekend. From that process will come the 601 delegates who will decide which Democrat will challenge five-term Republican incumbent Susan Collins this fall.
In fact, the best organized campaigns will likely know by Sunday who has already won the contest because they can simply add up how many of their own supporters became delegates.
In other words, the contest could be effectively over before most Mainers even begin to really pay attention.
Further, unlike some major news developments that provide a moment of political clarity, this tragic situation in Biddeford resolves nothing. Instead, it raises the stakes for Democrats to make the right choice.
What that means in the context of choosing between a more progressive populist candidate in the mold of Platner or a more traditional Democrat in the mold of this year’s Democratic nominee for governor, Hannah Pingree, remains an open question.
There is simply less time now to discuss it.
Now, none of the above is meant to take away from the discussion about a husband and father who was killed by the government and whatever circumstances led to that tragedy.
To be sure, the moment a Democratic nominee is selected, the role of ICE will immediately become the first real dividing-line issue in the Senate race. After all, Collins oversees ICE’s budget as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and has been actively involved in conversations with the administration about enforcement in Maine.
But as to who should face her, the clarity and contrasts that campaigns tend to reveal are not currently there among Democrats at a time when they would be most helpful. As it stands, all of the candidates oppose the Trump administration’s overall agenda, oppose the Iran war, promote some version of an affordability message, and, above all, oppose Collins.
Nor is there an obvious choice if Maine Democratic delegates decide electability should be their highest priority.
Campaigns rarely unfold on the timetable candidates expect. Outside events intervene, reshaping what voters hear, what campaigns can talk about, and, ultimately, what party insiders have to evaluate.
In this case, Democrats face the unusual challenge of selecting a Senate nominee while the issue dominating the public conversation is one on which nearly all of the candidates already agree. That may produce unity after a bruising week, but it also leaves delegates with fewer opportunities to distinguish between the people asking for their votes before making one of the biggest political decisions in Maine this year.
James Pindell is a Globe political reporter who reports and analyzes American politics, especially in New England.
Maine
Communities in Maine demand justice after ICE officer shoots, kills 25-year-old
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