Maryland
Maryland members make 20-mile trek possible for wheelchair bound teen
Many people have a good time Pioneer Day with a parade, a celebration, and maybe fireworks.
In the meantime, 16-year-old Johne Goodrich of Laurel, Maryland, just lately honored the event by collaborating in a 20-mile stake youth trek.
In a wheelchair.
Goodrich, a local of Guam, has been a pioneer his complete life. Born at simply 24 weeks, he’s confronted a string of well being challenges led by spastic diplegia, a type of cerebral palsy. However no bodily limitation would cease him when missionaries knocked on his household’s door in 2014. His coronary heart and soul knew what they wished, and it wasn’t lengthy earlier than the common-or-garden boy was carried into the Pacific Ocean to be baptized. These in attendance nonetheless keep in mind the sacred scene.
Tyson and Laura Goodrich have been amongst these grateful witnesses. Serving within the Navy and stationed in Guam, the couple befriended the younger pioneer with a difficult residence life. What started as rides to church rapidly turned to weekend adventures. Beforehand on a ready checklist to foster a youthful little one, the Goodrichs amended their software and requested then 9-year-old Johne if he’d wish to reside with them.
“Sure,” stated the perpetually unwell and malnourished younger man, and his pioneer journey started a brand new day.
After two years of adjusting to life with such luxuries as a mattress, eyeglasses and unconditional love, it was time for Johne to determine if he wished to be legally adopted and transfer again to the USA together with his household. “It wasn’t a simple choice,” Laura Goodrich stated. “We advised him he seemingly would by no means be again in Guam. And as powerful as his life had been, he beloved these folks.”
Johne first selected to stay on the island, however when movers started packing up his household for his or her transfer, he reversed course and requested if he would possibly nonetheless develop into a Goodrich. It took 18 lengthy months, however in February of 2019, a form social employee from Guam flew Johne all over the world to signal paperwork and be reunited with the Goodrich household.
He didn’t comprehend it but, however his trek had simply begun.
This spring in Laurel, Maryland, Johne and his household, members of the Savage Mill Ward, had one other choice to make. Would Johne register for the Columbia Maryland Stake youth trek? Would a easy wheelchair survive a 20-mile journey by way of the hills and creeks of Camp Liahona close to Fayetteville, Pennsylvania? Would Church leaders and different youths be overburdened by his participation?
The solutions got here in a candy sequence of miracles.
“We started discussing with the coordinators the way it may work,” Johne’s mom stated. “Would he must experience in a wagon? A handcart? The assist truck? However that’s not what Johne actually wished and his leaders have been simply extremely sort and supportive.”
The Goodrichs started researching alternate wheelchairs, one thing that might enable him to totally take part, and found a design with mountain bike wheels and a novel body. The worth tag, particularly for a three-day occasion, was a hurdle. However earlier than the household may even decide about subsequent steps, a good friend and Church member stepped up.
Native member {and professional} caterer Karyn Wilcox steered a web based fundraiser with good perks — baked items.
In simply three weeks, pals and Church members in Maryland and past purchased and offered treats to at least one one other and raised practically $4,000. Earlier than they might even start to thank Wilcox and the angelic military that made the miracle occur, the wheelchair was ordered, arrived and rigged for trek.
“It was a really nice expertise!” Johne stated in an interview from his residence the day after trek concluded. “The primary day was the toughest, we went 12 miles. However I bought sorted into a tremendous trek household.”
With infinite enthusiasm, he described every day and the exhausting terrain. “I had some helpers on the uphill climbs. These have been exhausting. However the downhills have been enjoyable!”
At one level on day two, Johne thought-about whether or not the path was too powerful to press on. “To be trustworthy, I didn’t give it some thought lengthy. I wished to be there for my trek siblings. We simply saved encouraging one another. We couldn’t let one another down.”
On day three as the corporate arrived on the finish of their journey, the path boss gathered all of them in a circle and requested them to raise Johne within the air. “I used to be so hyped and emotional. Folks have been cheering, and I had tears of pleasure in my eyes. It felt like all of the burdens have been lifted away, all these doubts. I felt braveness!”
When requested what he’d say to the youths who lifted him up bodily and spiritually, and to the adults who supported him alongside the way in which, and to his dad and mom and sisters, and to those that donated to buy his distinctive set of wheels, Johne didn’t hesitate. “I’m stuffed with love for them. With out them none of this could be doable. Keep in mind whenever you suppose you may’t make it, place confidence in the folks round you. You’ll get there.”
Maryland
Reporter reacts to Jets ‘head scratching’ move of interviewing Maryland HC Mike Locksley
The New York Jets made one of the more surprising moves when they announced they had completed an interview with Maryland head coach Mike Locksley. The offensive-minded coach just ended the 2024 season going 4-8 and Locksley has a 33-41 record while coaching the Terps.
The Jets aren’t leaving any stone unturned when it comes to finding their next head coach. But The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman and Zach Rosenblatt can’t come to terms as to why New York would interview Locksley. With far more college coaches who have had more success than Locksley, why the under-.500 coach?
“Yet, this one feels like a head-scratcher — if the Jets were going to interview a college candidate, my reporting had indicated there might be some mutual interest in Iowa State coach Matt Campbell, who rejected an interview request from the Jets in 2019 before they hired Adam Gase. That has yet to happen, though it’s still possible it could — especially since Campbell is already expected to interview for the Bears opening.
“It feels like a long shot that the Jets would seriously consider Locksley to be their next coach, considering he has no NFL coaching experience and Maryland has been inconsistent under his watch. But perhaps there’s an outside chance he’d be interested in joining the Jets as an offensive coordinator when they eventually hire a head coach.”
It’s quite unlikely that the Jets hire Locksley away from Mayland. But if anything, it shows that teams are impressed with how the former Alabama offensive coordinator has run his program at Maryland. Playing in the Big Ten with powerhouses like Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State, and now Oregon, is no easy feat for a program like Maryland that can’t quite recruit at the same level.
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Maryland
Takeaways from Maryland men’s basketball’s 79-61 win over No. 22 UCLA
Searching for its first ranked win of the 2024-25 campaign, Maryland men’s basketball had the opportunity to erase its demons from a dismal 87-60 loss against UCLA at home in 2022.
The Terps did just that, cranking up the intensity in the second half against the No. 22 Bruins to prevail at Xfinity Center, 79-61.
Here are three takeaways from the game.
Ja’Kobi Gillespie’s first-half effort was spectacular
The reason Maryland led UCLA at the half — let alone was in the game — was because Ja’Kobi Gillespie took it upon himself to propel the Terps’ offense.
Gillespie had an overall pedestrian West Coast road trip, scoring a season-low one point against Washington before notching 16 against No. 9 Oregon. But the ever-aggressive guard matched his scoring output against the Ducks at home versus UCLA — in just 20 minutes of play.
Gillespie was once again Maryland’s primary ball handler, and assumed much of the shot-making duties in the opening half. He had 10 attempts from the field, double that of the next closest player, Derik Queen. While the Terps were keen on trying to find their bigs for buckets inside early — they had 20 paint points in the first half compared to the Bruins’ 14 — eventually, the visitors put an emphasis on their interior defense.
Gillespie was the main benefactor, becoming increasingly ball-dominant and continuously running pick-and-rolls at the top of the 3-point line. When UCLA rolled out its drop coverage in an attempt to stifle Maryland’s inside attack, Gillespie let it fly from deep. He went 4-of-8 from downtown on the evening.
His defensive impact was also evident. Gillespie accumulated four steals on the night, including two in the second half to help Maryland pull away with quick fast-break points.
The 6-foot-1 junior had an overall quieter second half, but grabbed a huge offensive rebound and drilled a 3-pointer in succession with four minutes remaining, effectively throwing the knockout punch. He finished with a game-high 27 points to go with two rebounds and four assists.
Maryland’s defense turned it up in the second half
Maryland’s offense was by no means on fire in the second half. It picked up its scoring effort in the latter minutes, but it scored just 20 points in the first 15 minutes of the frame. It was the Terps’ defense that helped shut down any hope of a UCLA victory.
In the middle portion of the frame, the Bruins went more than four minutes without scoring a field goal, missing seven consecutive field goals. That wasn’t a product of poor offense, but rather the Terps’ airtight coverage.
For a team averaging just around 11 turnovers per game, Friday was a complete nightmare for the Bruins, who committed 21 — 10 of which came in the second half. The Terps turned those 10 turnovers into 12 points of their own.
Maryland also had six second-half steals and four blocks, while UCLA had no second-half rejections. One of the Terps’ blocks was an emphatic Julian Reese swat on Bruins star Tyler Bilodeau, sending the crowd into a frenzy and injecting the team with life.
One of the reasons for Maryland’s increased defensive presence was head coach Kevin Willard’s insertion of interior size. Tafara Gapare played an impressive 14 minutes, blocking two shots of his own and helping force UCLA into perimeter shots. The Bruins went 7-of-19 from downtown on the night.
A much-needed ranked victory
Heading into the match, Maryland was No. 24 in the KenPom net rankings. It has been teetering on the precipice of being ranked for the past few weeks. But it has also been missing something important in its resume: a signature ranked win.
It came close against then-No. 15 Marquette, then-No. 8 Purdue and then-No. 9 Oregon, but late miscues and missed chances plagued the Terps in each contest.
It didn’t take a close finish to decide Maryland’s fate Friday. The home Terps had the game in hand during most of the latter portion of the second half.
It wasn’t just Maryland’s defense that propelled it to a sizable lead. It was partially due to UCLA head coach Mick Cronin being ejected from the game, granting the Terps four free throws and igniting the crowd.
Reese also helped Maryland pull away, scoring 10 second half points on 5-of-6 shooting. As of recent, he has put on far more prolific performances than he had been early in the season.
Friday night was Maryland’s first ranked win since Jan. 14, 2024, when it beat No. 14 Illinois. The Terps will have another opportunity to defeat a ranked Fighting Illini team — currently No. 13 — on Jan. 23.
Maryland
UCLA can't keep pace in second half during loss at Maryland
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Three days after calling his players “soft” and “delusional” in their estimation of their abilities, Mick Cronin wasn’t around to offer a final assessment Friday night.
The UCLA coach was in the locker room, having been ejected with five minutes and 14 seconds left after receiving two rapid-fire technical fouls with his unraveling team down by nine points.
It wasn’t the final indignity for his team. Far from it.
UCLA couldn’t get out of its own way inside the Xfinity Center, the No. 22 Bruins stumbling to a 79-61 loss to Maryland that represented a season-worst third consecutive defeat.
Being soft wasn’t the primary problem on this night. Holding on to the ball or throwing a pass without it being stolen were the big challenges confronting the Bruins.
UCLA committed 21 turnovers, tying its worst showing of the season, while getting outmuscled by another team. If this was a crossroads, then the Bruins (11-5 overall, 2-3 Big Ten) certainly took the wrong turn.
Forward Tyler Bilodeau scored 18 points and guard Trent Perry added 10 off the bench, becoming the only Bruins to reach double figures on a night the team shot 41.5% to Maryland’s 54%. Ja’Kobi Gillespie led the Terrapins (12-4, 2-3) with 27 points.
In need of a confidence boost, UCLA’s Dylan Andrews followed a pull-up jumper with a tough turnaround baseline jumper to pull his team within 53-47 with 12:36 left.
But a flurry of turnovers followed and an irate Cronin was quickly tossed after apparently voicing his displeasure with the referees.
It was only a little more than two years ago that UCLA came here and bludgeoned the Terrapins, leading by as many as 30 points in the first half of a runaway victory. That sort of showing felt like a distant memory Friday.
There were some coming-of-age moments in the first half for Perry, who played with increasing confidence the longer he was in the game.
Among his highlights were a backdoor reverse layup off a pass from Skyy Clark, a steal of a cross-court pass and an offensive rebound that he followed with a driving layup. Perry’s seven points by halftime were more than twice as many as the three points he had collected in the previous four Big Ten games while looking shaky during his brief stints on the court.
UCLA’s 40-36 halftime deficit could have been considered something of a victory for the Bruins considering they committed 11 turnovers — several while having the ball stripped — and allowed Maryland to shoot 51.7%.
There was nothing worthwhile left to come for the Bruins.
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