Maine
Lobster Roll specialist shutters in Denver, Boulder — for now
Maine Shack, which first opened its doors in Denver in 2019, is closing its two free-standing locations in Colorado, according to the company’s social media pages.
The Boulder store, at 2010 16th St., closed on Sunday, Nov. 3, just a year after it opened.
“This was not an easy decision to make, but with the rising cost of labor and goods, along with current economic challenges facing small businesses, closing Boulder was best for the health of our company,” the message read.
The Denver, 1535 Central St., store will close on Sunday, Nov. 10. “With a rent increase and no security to get us through the summer, it was time to move on,” the message continued.
But the owners, Drew Ryan and partners Eric Pirritt and John Caprio, said they are looking for a “new and improved space to call home starting in spring/summer 2025,” at least for Denver.
Maine Shack is also opening another location in Florida.
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Maine
Cooper Flagg Excites CBB Fans in Duke Debut as Kon Knueppel, Blue Devils Beat Maine
Grant Halverson/Getty Images
Cooper Flagg and the No. 7 Duke Blue Devils men’s basketball team started the 2024-25 campaign with a win.
Duke defeated the Maine Black Bears 96-62 in Monday’s season-opening showdown at Cameron Indoor Stadium. All eyes were on the freshman, and he opened his highly anticipated season with 18 points, seven rebounds, five assists and three steals while helping lead his team to a straightforward victory.
He wasn’t the only one who played well, as Kon Knueppel spearheaded the scoring efforts with 22 points, four rebounds, two assists and one steal.
But it was Flagg who drew the most reaction on social media, especially after he threw down quite the dunk:
The game was a blowout as expected, but it was still the first chance for college basketball and NBA fans to see Flagg in action. The No. 1 overall recruit in the class of 2024, per 247Sports’ composite rankings, is one of the most-hyped freshmen in years and will be appointment viewing every time he takes the court.
Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Wasserman projected Flagg as the No. 1 overall pick in his latest mock draft, noting that the 17-year-old “has been considered one of the bigger prizes of the decade.”
His presence is a major reason expectations are once again so high for the powerhouse Blue Devils after they reached the Elite Eight last season, and Monday’s game was an opportunity to set the tone against an overmatched opponent.
Yet it was Knueppel who did just that by pouring in 15 points in the first half alone, four of which came on a four-point play when he was fouled beyond the arc. With Maine focusing plenty of defensive attention on Flagg, he was able to take advantage of open looks and anchor the offense for stretches.
Flagg certainly had his moments in the first half as well, including when he unleashed the monster tomahawk jam to fire up the crowd. He followed that with an assist on a Sion James three and a reverse layup to push the lead to 11 by intermission.
The game was never in doubt, and Duke wasted no time pulling away in the second half with Flagg doing a little bit of everything. Even when he wasn’t the team’s go-to scorer, he was facilitating, battling for boards and playing lockdown defense as the best two-way player on the floor.
It is a formula that should lead to plenty of wins in what figures to be his only collegiate season, especially if Knueppel proves to be the scoring threat he was Monday. Maine had no answers for the two freshmen, and it isn’t difficult to envision them leading the Blue Devils to plenty of success.
They will look to continue the early momentum Friday when they face Army.
Maine
‘Too many deaths’: Retiring Maine police chief says stress took its toll
Citing the impacts of his job on his mental health, the police chief for Baileyville has announced his pending retirement.
Bob Fitzsimmons, who grew up in Baileyville and has been the town’s police chief since 2013, said on the department’s Facebook page that he plans to step down at the end of the year. The rigors and challenges of the job have built up over the years and it is time for someone else to take on his responsibilities, he said.
“It has been a rough 5 years in Woodland for me,” Fitzsimmons said, referring to the town’s informal name. “Too many deaths, too much ugliness to deal with.”
While many police officers and other first responders struggle with mental health challenges associated with their jobs, it’s far less common for them to openly share those struggles on platforms such as Facebook.
Fitzsimmons said that in his time as Baileyville’s police chief, he has either found or been with 60 people when they died. He said he has received counseling and treatment, and has been diagnosed with anxiety and depression.
“There will always be another child, another person I have watched grow up, and another person that watched over me. Friends, or friends of friends. It’s never going to stop,” he said.
Fitzsimmons, 60, is known for his posts on the department’s Facebook page, where he would seek volunteers to help out residents or describe his interactions with local children. Often the posts reflected his wry sense of humor, but they also described the real struggles that local people were going through.
He said he has been granted “every courtesy” by the town manager and the council, and that he considers it a privilege to have served as the police chief, and before that with the law enforcement departments in Calais and Pleasant Point. But he said he plans to spend more time with his wife and to work on his mental health so he can enjoy retirement.
“The PD is in great hands now, I just hope I left Woodland just a bit better than it was,” he wrote.
Fitzsimmons encouraged anyone who has been struggling with their mental health to be open about it and to get help.
“Mental health needs to be treated like any other illness or injury,” he wrote. “It’s ok to talk about it, it’s ok to seek treatment without shame, it’s all gonna be ok.”
Maine
OU football offense offers glimmer of hope, even if it was against Maine
NORMAN — Walking out of the stadium after his team’s 59-14 win over Maine on Saturday afternoon, OU coach Brent Venables crossed paths with one of his staff.
“Storm’s coming,” Venables said with a big grin.
Venables, of course, was talking about the clouds and expected rain that were rolling through the state, causing the game against the Black Bears to be moved up two-and-a-half hours.
But he could just as well have been referencing what his team will face over the final three games of the regular season.
Missouri.
Alabama.
LSU.
The Sooners need at least one victory in that trio — all ranked — to extend their bowl streak to 26 seasons.
It won’t be easy or even expected, but Saturday’s blowout win has the potential to pay dividends for OU’s offense that goes far beyond the gaudy numbers posted against a middling FCS opponent.
“I think it’s a sign of progress for us — the way we prepare, the way we went into the game mentally,” Sooners quarterback Jackson Arnold said. “I think it speaks volumes about the coaches and how they prepared us for the week and the game play they put together.”
Jovantae Barnes, who had been one of the few bright spots for the OU offense in recent weeks, exploded.
He had a career-high 203 yards and three touchdowns and added a 19-yard reception.
The Sooners came into the day with one of the worst rushing offenses in FBS but rushed for 381 yards — their most since the 2020 Cotton Bowl win over Florida.
Arnold played efficiently, going 14 of 21 for 224 yards and two touchdowns while running for 45 yards and a score.
But he was also explosive, hitting J.J. Hester for a 90-yard touchdown pass — the longest in Gaylord Family — Oklahoma Memorial Stadium history and the longest catch by a Sooner in any game since 1995.
The offensive line started its eighth different combination in nine games but opened up consistent holes for not only Barnes but Taylor Tatum, Sam Franklin and Xavier Robinson as well. And it kept Arnold clean.
The Sooners allowed no sacks after South Carolina and Ole Miss had nine each in wins over OU. Ole Miss was originally credited with 10 sacks but one was changed after review as Arnold was attempting to run.
OU had 402 yards of offense in the first half — more than they’d had in any complete game this season. They finished with 665 yards, their most since posting 672 yards against Texas Tech in 2022.
Again, it was against Maine but the Sooners said there was tangible progress that could pay off down the stretch.
“Today was a testament to what we can do on offense,” tight end Kaden Helms said. “I’m honestly really proud of the guys. We haven’t flinched. Things haven’t gone our way the whole season but every single day we come to practice ready — ready to work ready to do our job and ready to just fight for each other.”
The Sooners had 14 big plays — rushing plays of 10 or more yards or passing plays of 15 or more yards.
They hadn’t had more than 10 such plays in any game this season.
Two of those plays Saturday went for touchdowns. Seven more gave the Sooners the ball inside the red zone.
“You put pressure on the other team when you have an explosive touchdown,” Venables said. “Next thing you know, they have to play everything differently.”
Then there’s the offensive line, which was missing starters Michael Tarquin, Jacob Sexton and Jake Taylor.
The Sooners started redshirt freshmen Heath Ozaeta and Logan Howland there. True freshmen Eddy Pierre-Louis, Isaiah Autry-Dent and Daniel Akinkunmi saw significant action as well.
Venables said the difference was palpable even considering the opponent.
“Just targeting people, finishing blocks, playing through the whistle, playing physical, playing sure of themselves, not catching but attacking,” Venables said. “… It doesn’t have anything to do with them. It’s us. And doing the things that you’re coached to do and doing that at a high level and doing it with the physicality and an effort standpoint that you … look back and you’re like, ‘OK, that’s what it looks like,’ so you can build off that.”
And then there’s the confidence aspect with a largely young group.
“With what’s going on this season, it hasn’t always been the best, but today was great, a good confidence builder,” center Troy Everett said. “We were able to run the ball efficiently, get a lot of young guys in there.”
Two sets of Tigers and the Crimson Tide will pose much more of a threat than the Black Bears, but Saturday at least provided some hope that the Sooners still might be able to salvage something out of what has felt in recent weeks like a lost season.
“It’s good to get back on the winning train,” Arnold said, “and hopefully these last couple of games, this last stretch we just stay on that winning train.”
OU at Missouri
KICKOFF: 6:45 p.m. Saturday at Faurot Field in Columbia, Mo. (SEC Network)
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