After the adrenaline boost from winning a state championship passed, May Cuyler had a chance to reflect. Standing in a hallway outside the gym, the senior attempted to put the gravity of the moment into words but choked up when she realized this was the end of her Brentsville District career.
Virginia
Brentsville’s May Cuyler rules again as Virginia girls’ wrestling keeps growing
“When I first met the team, I didn’t even talk to anyone. They brought me out of my shell and treated me better than anyone else in the world,” she said, wiping tears from her eyes. “I love them more than anything.”
Cuyler went out in style, claiming the 152-pound title at Saturday’s Virginia girls’ wrestling state championship meet at Gar-Field High in Woodbridge. Only 60 seconds elapsed from the opening whistle of her final match to her hand being raised by the referee following a pin, a grin showing as she looked to her supporters in the bleachers.
Winning has been a habit of Cuyler’s since she started wrestling for the Tigers as a sophomore. Ranked sixth in the nation at 145 pounds by FloWrestling, she will leave to compete for Presbyterian College as a three-time state champion.
“It feels amazing,” Cuyler said. “I worked so hard with my team, with my family, and I can’t believe they got me here.”
Lily Oh, a freshman at Riverside, pinned her opponent to claim the 120-pound title. Potomac’s Mahalia Adams won the 185-pound final by fall. Eleanor Dean of Freedom (South Riding) won at 138 pounds.
“To finally get my moment is the best feeling ever,” said Dean, a junior who finished second at the state meet the previous two years. “I was just so happy. I was waiting to just run to my coaches and give them a hug.”
Saturday’s meet was just the second girls’ wrestling championship sanctioned by the Virginia High School League — an unofficial tournament was held in 2022 — and the event’s growth has been remarkable. More than 400 wrestlers competed this year — well over 100 more than last year — with 143 schools represented, a year-over-year increase of 25.
Dean recalled having just seven others in her bracket at her first state tournament. Just two years later, her weight class had 52 participants. Cuyler has seen a similar trend.
“When I came in sophomore year, it was just me and one other girl. We’d have to work really hard to find tournaments,” she said. “But then we just got swept up into this whirlwind. … I’m super happy to see it’s growing, and I think it’s going to explode from here.”
Virginia
Virginia hires Richmond’s Aaron Roussell after Amaka Agugua-Hamilton’s firing, investigation
Virginia has its new women’s basketball coach, after a messy ending with its previous one.
The Cavaliers announced Tuesday they had hired Richmond head coach Aaron Roussell to replace the fired Amaka Agugua-Hamilton, who was reportedly the subject of an internal investigation over allegations of staff mistreatment. Roussell will be the seventh head coach in program history.
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Roussell had been the Spiders’ head coach for seven years, accruing a 148-72 record and leading them to three straight NCAA tournament appearances since 2024. They notched the first tourney win in their history against Georgia Tech in 2025.
Aaron Roussell has some work to do in Charlottesville.
(IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / REUTERS)
Roussell will not have to travel far for his new job, but he will enter a program facing surprising levels of instability after a Cinderella run in this year’s March Madness.
After entering their first NCAA tournament in eight years, the Cavaliers reeled off wins over Arizona State in the First Four, No. 7 Georgia and No. 2 Iowa to reach their first Sweet 16 since 2000. Then, days after the season ended, the program announced Agugua-Hamilton’s firing in a cryptic “Virginia Announces Leadership Change for Women’s Basketball” statement.
Per On3’s transfer portal tracker, six Virginia players have entered the portal, including last season’s leading scorer Kymora Johnson.
Virginia
Former Virginia Gov Glenn Youngkin hints at political future, says he’s ‘chomping at the bit’ after exit
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Former Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin signaled his political career may not be over, telling Sean Hannity he still has “more to give” just under three months after leaving office.
“I have more to give. I just do. The one year of campaigning and the four years of running, so five years, went by in five seconds. It was amazing,” Youngkin said on the “Hang Out with Sean Hannity” podcast.
In the full episode, debuting Tuesday, Youngkin sat down with the Fox News host to discuss his time in office, as well as what things have been like since his term expired in January.
NEW POLL REVEALS SPANBERGER’S POPULARITY IS PLUMMETING AMID BACKLASH OVER GERRYMANDERING
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin addresses the crowd during an early voting rally on Sept. 21, 2023, in Petersburg, Va. (Steve Helber/AP)
“Every morning [when I was governor], I woke up literally bounding out of bed, ready to roll, and that was the most purposeful I’ve ever felt in my whole life.“
Youngkin oversaw a range of conservative measures passed in the state, including a push to ensure age-appropriate curriculum in public schools.
SPANBERGER SIGNALS LEFT BENT AFTER CENTRIST CAMPAIGN; GOP LEADER WARNS OF ‘FAIRFAXING THE REST OF VA’
Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger responds to President Donald Trump’s unseen State of the Union address. (Steve Helber/Reuters)
He also pushed for tax cuts, including efforts to reduce the state’s grocery tax, rolled back COVID-19 restrictions early in his tenure and emphasized tougher public safety policies.
His time in office concluded earlier this year, when Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger’s administration succeeded his.
“I’ve been out of office for six weeks. I took [my wife] Suzanne on vacation, which she so deserved. She’s been amazing. I think she’s of the best first ladies in America,” he said.
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“But six weeks has felt like six years… You’re chomping at the bit.”
While Youngkin stopped short of outlining specific plans for the future, his comments suggest he is keeping the door open to a return to public office.
Fox News Digital’s Charles Creitz contributed to this report.
Virginia
Denver police arrest man suspected in fatal shooting on E. Virginia Avenue
Denver police have arrested the man they believe was responsible for a fatal shooting on E. Virginia Avenue on Thursday afternoon.
According to an arrest affidavit, the Denver Dispatch Center received a 911 call around 12:35 p.m. to report a shooting in the 10100 block of E. Virginia Ave. The caller told dispatch workers that a white SUV was fleeing the scene.
Responding officers found a man who was critically wounded. He was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced deceased.
Investigators reportedly discovered a handgun, the victim’s cellphone and money in the area where the shooting happened. They also located surveillance footage in the area, which appeared to show the victim exiting a white Chevrolet Tahoe as gunshots could be heard. He walked to the east, looking for help, before collapsing on the ground.
The affidavit says a conversation was discovered on the victim’s Instagram account in which he was speaking with another person who was selling a firearm.
Aurora police assisted investigators using the Flock License Plate Reader system, identifying the Tahoe at several locations. Police said the vehicle had unique characteristics on the passenger rear wheel. The affidavit says that, before the shooting, the vehicle had a rear license plate, but after the shooting, it was missing.
Investigators found the vehicle, executed a search warrant and found a fired cartridge case in the back seat. A person connected to the case reportedly told officers that he drove his friend, later identified as Daniel Puga Villegas, to meet a person to collect money from him. However, he says an argument took place, and Villegas shot the victim, then ripped off his temporary rear license plate and, while still holding the gun, told him to drive.
Villegas was arrested on Sunday with assistance from the APD and is facing charges of first-degree murder.
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