North Carolina
North Carolina (NCHSAA) High School Softball 2026 State Playoff Brackets, Matchups, Schedule – May 11
The 2026 North Carolina high school softball state playoff brackets are out, and High School On SI has all eight brackets with matchups and schedules for every team.
The first round begins on May 5, and the playoffs will culminate with the NCHSAA state championships being played May 27-30 at Duke University in Durham.
2026 North Carolina High School Baseball State Tournament Schedule
May 5: First Round
May 8: Second Round
May 12: Third Round
May 15: Fourth Round
May 19-23: Regionals
May 27-30: State Championships
North Carolina (NCHSAA) High School Softball 2026 State Playoff Brackets, Matchups, Schedule – May 11
CLASS 1A BRACKET (select to view full bracket details)
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 Bear Grass Charter vs. No. 5 Vance Charter
No. 3 East Columbus vs. No. 2 Northside – Pinetown
No. 1 Robbinsville vs. No. 5 Falls Lake Academy
No. 6 Bethany Community vs. No. 2 Oxford Preperatory
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 North Duplin vs. No. 8 Camden County
No. 5 Rosewood vs. No. 4 East Carteret
No. 3 Perquimans vs. No. 11 Pamlico County
No. 10 Franklin Academy vs. No. 2 Manteo
No. 1 South Stanly vs. No. 9 East Wilkes
No. 5 South Stokes vs. No. 4 Starmount
No. 3 Swain County vs. No. 6 Murphy
No. 7 Highland Tech vs. No. 2 Roxboro Community
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 Midway vs. No. 9 Providence
No. 12 Wallace-Rose Hill vs. No. 4 Heide Trask
No. 3 Farmville Central vs. No. 11 Ayden – Grifton
No. 10 Northwood vs. No. 2 McMichael
No. 1 West Lincoln vs. No. 8 Union Academy
No. 5 Draughn vs No. 4 Pine Lake Preperatory
No. 3 West Davidson vs. No. 11 East Surry
No. 7 Walkertown vs. No. 2 West Wilkes
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 Randleman vs. No. 9 Nash Central
No. 5 Bunn vs. No. 4 East Duplin
No. 3 Southwest Onslow vs. No. 6 Roanoke Rapids
No. 7 Ledford Senior vs. No. 2 Central Davidson
No. 1 West Stokes vs. No. 8 Forbush
No. 5 Pisgah vs. No. 4 West Stanly
No. 19 North Surry vs. No. 11 Foard
No. 10 Mount Pleasant vs. No, 2 Bunker Hill
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 Southeast Alamance vs. No. 8 C.B. Aycock
No. 5 Seaforth vs. No. 4 Rockingham County
No. 3 Eastern Alamance vs. No. 6 West Carteret
No. 7 South Brunswick vs. No. 2 Southern Nash
No. 1 Enka vs. No. 9 Oak Grove
No. 5 Crest vs. No. 13 West Rowan
No. 3 North Davidson vs. No. 6 Franklin
No. 10 East Rowan vs. No. 2 North Lincoln
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 Union Pines vs. No. 9 South Johnston
No. 5 South View vs. No. 4 Gray’s Creek
No. 3 J.H. Rose vs. No. 6 Harnett Central
No. 7 Triton vs. No. 2 West Brunswick
No. 1 Kings Mountain vs. No. 8 Charlotte Catholic
No. 5 Alexander vs. No. 13 T.C. Roberson
No. 3 Piedmont vs. No. 6 Central Cabarrus
No. 10 A.C. Reynolds vs. No. 2 South Caldwell
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 D.H. Conley vs. No. 8 Wake Forest
No. 5 Purnell Sweet vs. No. 4 Cleveland
No. 3 Heritage vs. No. 6 Topsail
No. 7 South Central vs. No. 2 New Bern
No. 1 Weddington vs. No. 8 Mooresville
No. 5 A.L. Brown vs. No. 4 Hickory Ridge
No. 3 East Forsyth vs. No. 11 Porter Ridge
No. 7 Ronald Reagan vs. No. 2 South Iredell
Third Round – May 12
No. 1 Willow Spring vs. No. 4 Hoggard
No. 3 E.A. Laney vs. No. 2 Cornith Holders
No. 1 Providence vs. No. 4 Hough
No. 3 West Forsyth vs. No. 2 Apex Friendship
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North Carolina
Wake County woman says housing authority failed to pay thousands in rent for over a year
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — A Wake County renter says she feared eviction after learning the Wake County Housing Authority (WCHA) had not paid its portion of her rent for more than a year, despite her paying her share every month.
The woman, who asked ABC11 not to identify her, contacted ABC11Troubleshooter Diane Wilson after receiving notices from her apartment complex showing more than $8,300 in unpaid rent. She said to Wilson, “I was like, what in the world is going on here? I know I’m paying my rent. What is the issue?”
According to documents the renter shared with ABC11, WCHA had not paid its portion of her Housing Choice Voucher rent since February 2025. The renter added, “I was losing my mind, actually, because I was like, oh my God, they’re sending me a notice. What’s next? Eviction.” The renter says she repeatedly called and emailed her WCHA caseworker but received no resolution. After receiving another notice from her apartment complex that she now owed more than $10,000 in unpaid rent, she reached out to ABC11. She said to Wilson, “I’ve seen the stories you did, and I thought maybe you can help me.”
This isn’t the first time Troubleshooter Diane Wilson has investigated rent payment issues involving the Wake County Housing Authority. Last summer, ABC11 heard from both landlords and renters who said WCHA had failed to make rent payments.
At the time, the agency acknowledged owing approximately $1.9 million in back rent to landlords. One landlord, Damon Evans, told Wilson, “I just want my money. I’m providing a safe, affordable house for a tenant that’s a wonderful tenant and I just want to be paid.”
Following ABC11’s reporting, several landlords received overdue payments, and WCHA said it had reduced the amount of unpaid rent by more than $1 million. At the time, WCHA blamed the problems on employee turnover, issues involving housing vouchers transferred from other housing authorities, and cases where required HUD documentation and annual recertifications had not been submitted.
Regarding the most recent case Wilson heard about, after Wilson contacted WCHA’s executive director, the renter said she was able to schedule an in-person meeting with the agency. The renter said to Wilson, “If you hadn’t stepped in, they were going to continue to ignore me.”
She says WCHA employees apologized during the meeting.
“They were saying that this is unfortunate, and they’re here to help me,” she added.
WCHA told Wilson the payment issue stemmed from the housing authority where the renter’s voucher originally originated, saying that the agency had not made payments since September 2024. However, when Wilson contacted that agecy, officials gave a different explanation.
They said they did not reimburse WCHA because they did not receive the billing until nearly a year later. The executive director there said HUD rules require billing to be submitted within 90 days of the expiration of the initial voucher. When asked about the delay, WCHA said the tenant would remain housed, and her landlord would be paid. Although it took longer than initially promised, WCHA says it has now paid its portion of the renter’s back rent in full.
Wilson asked WCHA how much total back rent the agency still owes. The executive director did not answer that question.
Board chair responds
Instead, the Chair of the Board of Commissioners for the Housing Authority of the County of Wake, Yolanda Taylor, provided the following statement:
“As Chair of the Board of Commissioners for the Housing Authority of the County of Wake, I want people to know that we understand how serious this situation is. Behind every delayed housing assistance payment is a landlord waiting to be paid and, more importantly, a tenant or family worried about whether they will remain stably housed through no fault of their own.
I also think it is important for the public to understand that the current Board of Commissioners is a fairly new board. Most of us have served less than a year, and I myself only recently reached my one-year mark a few months ago. These issues did not begin with this board, nor did they begin this year or last year. Many of the financial challenges facing this agency date back years, even prior to 2020. Most of it is due to lack of adequate staffing and some technology issues.
What I do believe is that the Wake County Board of Commissioners intentionally appointed a strong and talented board to help stabilize this agency and strengthen oversight. Our board includes individuals with housing authority operational experience, compliance backgrounds, financial and banking expertise, asset management experience, community organizing leadership through OneWake, and fair housing experience, including service on Raleigh’s Fair Housing Hearing Board. As for me, before private practice, I worked at Legal Aid of North Carolina for 13 years and managed one of its offices for nearly eight years, so I understand both the legal and human side of housing instability.
One issue that has contributed to the backlog becoming systemic is the tremendous growth happening in Wake County and across North Carolina. Just as people with means are moving here from across the country, so are low-wealth families with housing vouchers. Our staff reported that we have been averaging approximately 100 incoming portability families per month. Keeping pace with that volume while dealing with staffing shortages, technology issues, delayed billing, and compliance challenges has been extremely difficult. That is not an excuse. It is still our responsibility to properly administer the program. But it does help explain how the backlog grew over time.
Another major strain involves the federal Housing Choice Voucher portability system. My understanding is that if a receiving housing authority does not timely bill the initial housing authority within the federal time frame – commonly referred to as the 120-day window – the receiving agency can effectively end up absorbing that voucher without reimbursement. For an agency already managing significant operational and financial pressures, that creates a very serious challenge.
One thing our new Executive Director Felts Lewis recognized early on was that we had to stop the leak in the ship before taking on more water. As a result, HUD granted the Housing Authority of Wake County a 90-day moratorium on incoming portabilities, so the agency can focus on stabilizing operations, addressing the backlog, improving billing practices, and serving the families and landlords already in our system. While the agency was able to identify a solution in this particular case to help prevent displacement, we recognize that the broader portability and reimbursement challenges facing the agency require long-term operational and financial solutions.
This Board is actively trying to move the agency from being reactionary to being proactive. Quite frankly, when issues hit the news, individual cases can receive more urgency and attention. But that is not how a housing authority should operate. Tenants should not have to go to the media to get action on serious housing issues.
We have been having hard and honest discussions with leadership. We have rolled up our sleeves and become a working board because the tenants who rely on this program deserve stability, and the landlords who trusted this program deserve to be paid. We understand that landlords also have mortgages, taxes, payroll, maintenance costs, and financial obligations of their own.
The Board has strengthened oversight, created committee structures focused on accountability and recovery, and is working closely with county leadership to help move this agency toward stability, compliance, and restored public trust.
The public deserves transparency. Tenants deserve stability. Landlords deserve timely payments. And this Board is committed to doing the work necessary to help this agency get where it needs to be.”
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North Carolina
North Carolina Football Top 30 Players Countdown: No. 22
The North Carolina Tar Heels are entering a monumental 2026 season after being one of the biggest disappointments in 2025, posting a 4-8 record, and finishing 13th in the ACC.
Hiring Bill Belichick as head coach always carried a moderate risk, but the administration could not foresee what would transpire in the coming months. Earlier this offseason, the 74-year-old head coach provided some insight into what led to the team’s struggles last season.
Belichick’s Thoughts
Belichick began by praising this year’s group of players, explaining the goals and how this team will go about business heading into offseason workouts and carrying that momentum into the start of the regular season.
- “Well, what I expect is for us and them to get better every day, you know, to get stronger, to get faster, to be more explosive, to be better fundamentally, to be, you know, better technique football players,” Belichick said.
- “That’s what I expect from them. We have a good group of kids, they work hard, they are, you know, they’re pretty smart. I mean, they, you know, go to class, they do well academically, they, you know, they try to do what we ask them to do.”
The longtime NFL head coach then reflected on the team’s struggles last season and how the disconnect between the coaching staff and the players contributed to the poor product on the field.
- “And the group last year, I mean, I wouldn’t say they were, like, disrespectful, that’s not the right word, but it was just different,” Belichick said. “It was like they were recruited by somebody else; they came here for somebody else.”
- “I was new, they were leaving, you know. It wasn’t a bad relationship, but it wasn’t a great one. There wasn’t the same kind of adhesion that there is to guys that you bring in, that come there because of you, because they want to be with you. And then you grow together.”
Why North Carolina Could Bounce Back
As Belichick mentioned, most of the players on last season’s roster were not personally recruited by the polarizing head coach. Belichick inherited the majority of the players from the previous regime, which added another layer of challenge for the newly hired head coach, as he was already making the transition from the NFL to college.
With that being said, North Carolina’s brass, including general manager Michael Lombardi, did a tremendous job of identifying the top weaknesses and acknowledging that major changes were needed before the start of next season.
Yes, the quarterback position leaves much to be desired, and I would argue that the Tar Heels settled on the options they brought in. However, North Carolina improved the other most important position groupings on the field, bolstering both the offensive and defensive lines, which will elevate the entire operation.
Last offseason, Lombardi discussed how the front office would navigate the transfer portal, and those sentiments were fairly reflected in the program’s activity over the last several months.
- “I think every time you can acquire more talent is an important window,” Lombardi said. “I think we obviously have more time to prepare for it, because we wouldn’t have just gotten thrown right into it. So, I think a lot of scouting is preparation. We won’t know the names of those who are in the portal, but we’ll have a better idea about what it takes to be in the portal and who could possibly enter, and then have an ability to evaluate them.”
- “And really to get things the way you want to run a program isn’t to be reactive,” Lombardi continued. “Al Davis used to say this all the time to me, ‘the secret to all organizations and the secret to any great organization lies in the ability to anticipate problems, not react.’ I think when we got in here, we were reacting to the portal. Now we can anticipate the portal, which certainly will help us.”
Throughout the offseason, I have been highly skeptical of my confidence level in the direction of the program under Belichick and this coaching staff, but in terms of roster construction, I think North Carolina has had a solid offseason.
Over the last two weeks, we have counted down the top 30 players on the Tar Heels’ roster heading into this upcoming season. Today, we reveal who ranks No. 22 on North Carolina and what this player means for the program in 2026. Without further ado, here is a deep-dive analysis of a pivotal asset for Belichick and the Tar Heels on a revamped roster.
North Carolina Top 30 Players: No. 22 LT Jordan Hall
The 6-foot-8, 310-pound offensive tackle only appeared in five games for the Tar Heels last season after transferring from UAB last April. While that could be a discouraging sign for Hall, he still has two years of eligibility left, and in a limited snapshot, he demonstrated he can play offensive tackle.
Entering this season, Hall is projected to be North Carolina’s starting left tackle on a much-improved offensive line. Being given that responsibility would show the coaching staff’s confidence in Hall holding up as the blindside blocker for whichever quarterback establishes himself as the starter in Week 1.
Hall’s Importance
As we have said on multiple occasions, North Carolina’s offense will be a work in progress, especially with major question marks at quarterback. The offensive line will be a major factor in the team’s success next season, and with several moving parts on that unit, cohesion must be established quickly.
In 2025, the Tar Heels’ offensive line was one of the several glaring holes on the roster. This season, that should not be the case, as the front office invested heavily in the offensive line, ensuring a clean pocket for the quarterback and supplying the running backs with open rushing lanes. As the left tackle, Hall will be the most important piece on the offensive line, acting as the blindside blocker for any of the three between Travis Burgess, Billy Edwards Jr., and Miles O’Neill.
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Western NC activists push for statewide ban on new data center construction
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — The Party for Socialism and Liberation has organized a petition calling on legislators to pass a statewide ban on new data center construction.
“We see that they pollute these communities, they use a lot of water, and ultimately the cost of these data centers are passed on to working-class consumers,” said Cody Cogdell with the Party for Socialism and Liberation Western North Carolina.
According to the Environmental and Energy Study Institute, a large data center can use up to 5 million gallons of water per day. That’s equivalent to the use of a town of 10,000 to 50,000 people.
ASHEVILLE CITY COUNCIL APPROVES 1-YEAR PAUSE ON NEW DATA CENTER DEVELOPMENT
“I don’t support them at all. I think it’s terrible for the environment,” said Asheville resident Madeline Boltinghouse.
She says a statewide ban would be nice.
But Ken Brame, with the environmental organization Sierra Club, says the ban is unlikely to happen.
JULY 1, 2026 – A flyer protesting data centers in Asheville, N.C. (Photo credit: WLOS Staff)
“Banning them all is probably a stretch and I’m just not sure I see our North Carolina legislature going that far,” said Brame.
The petition also calls on the state to repeal the state’s tax incentives for data centers.
“There should be no debate about that. We should not be subsidizing something that hurts our environment,” said Brame.
WEAVERVILLE COUNCIL VOTES TO BLOCK DATA CENTERS IN TOWN, CITING LIMITED RESOURCES
It’s also calling on the legislature to stop Duke Energy from raising rates to pay for more data centers.
Duke Energy sent News 13 a statement saying in part:
Duke Energy does not develop or select data center projects, but we do have an obligation to serve customers in our territory while protecting reliability and keeping costs as low as possible. That’s why we require large-load customers to make significant financial commitments and pay the costs associated with serving them, while their additional revenue helps support grid investments and reduce pressure on future customer bills.
Meanwhile, state lawmakers are working to pass a bill that would require data centers to pay for their own expansion and regulate how much water data centers can use.
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