Virginia
Cal Women Beat Virginia for 22nd Win
Cal picked up its 22nd victory of the season with a 76-70 win over Virginia on Thursday night in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Cal (22-6, 10-5 ACC) has the most victories in a Golden Bears season since they went 24-10 in 2016-17. The victory also assured Cal of a first-round bye in the ACC tournament with three regular-season games remaining.
This is the first time Cal picked up a win in its first game of a two-game trip to the East Coast, as the travel has taken a toll on teams traveling from the West Coast in both men’s and women’s ACC basketball. And the Cal team’s travel to Virginia was not without problems, and it arrived behind schedule.
“I’m just really proud of the team,” Cal coach Charmin Smih said. “You know it’s kind of ironic, because this was our worst travel trip here getting in at 3 a.m. and not getting quality sleep, but
still showing up and being able to perform. I thought Virginia played really well. Kymora [Johnson] gave us some fits, but we adjusted, we responded, we fought through and I’m really proud of the team.”
Cal has just three games remaining before the ACC tournament, and the Bears continue to jockey for seeding position. Cal entered Thursday’s play tied with Georgia Tech for seventh place in the ACC standings. (See Notes below for why it’s important for the Golden Bears to earn a No. 7 seed rather than a No. 8 seed in the conference tournament.)
Ioanna Krimili and Michelle Onyiah led Cal with 18 points apiece on Thursday, and they provided the pivotal scoring for Cal in the fourth quarter.
Virginia (13-14, 5-10 ACC) led by a point early in the fourth quarter but Cal delivered the big plays down the stretch. Krimili nailed three-pointers on consecutive possessions to put the Bears ahead to stay 64-59 with 6:07 left in the game. Onyiah, who also contributed 11 rebounds, then scored Cal’s next seven points to keep the Bears ahead.
“That feels really good as a coach,” Smith said of the team’s poise in the fourth quarter. “They’re a special group, and they listen and they communicate with one another they trust each other. They trust us as a staff. And we were really good at executing when we needed to.”
Lulu Twidale clinched the win with a three-pointer with 12 seconds left, putting the Bears ahead by six. Twidale was 3-for-7 from three-point range and scored 15 points, while Krimili was 6-for-13 from long distance, increasing her Cal single-season record for three-pointers made to 82, 18 more than the previous record set by Jennifer Self in 1992. However, Twidale is just four three-pointers behind Krimili with 78 for the season.
Johnson score 24 points for Virginia, which is just 1-7 in ACC home games this season, but made things difficult for Cal on Thursday.
Cal shot just 39.4% for the game, but the Bears made 13 three-pointers. Cal shot better on three-point shots (43.3%) than it did on two-point attempts (12-of-33, 36.3%).
An odd third quarter ended with Cal holding a one-point lead at 56-55.
Cal trailed by five points at halftime, but scored the first 17 points of the third quarter to take a 12-point lead. But a few minutes later, Virginia reeled off 12 straight points to tie the game, and the Cavaliers took a 54-52 lead when Edessa Noyan made a three-pointer with 58 seconds left in the quarter.
After an Onyiah free throw closed the gap to a point, Cal took a 56-55 lead when Twidale scored with six seconds remaining.
Cal has just three games remaining before the ACC tournament, and the Bears continue to jockey for seeding position. Cal entered Thursday’s play tied with Georgia Tech for seventh place in the ACC standings. (See Notes below for why it’s important for the Golden Bears to earn a No. 7 seed rather than a No. 8 seed in the conference tournament.)
Virginia took a 35-30 lead at halftime, thanks to a bucket by Breona Hurd with one second left in the second quarter.
The Cavaliers committed just three first-half turnovers compared with seven by Cal, and that countered the Bears’ 24-16 advantage in rebounding.
Virginia’s Kymora Johnson led all scorers in the first half with 12 points..
Both teams started the game hot from long range. Cal started 4-for-5 on three-pointers, but Virginia was even better, going 4-for-4 from long distance before missing one. Virginia’s hot shooting helped the Cavaliers take a two-point lead after one quarter.
Both teams cooled off after that. Cal was 1-for-9 from distance after its fast start, and Viriginia was alspo 1-for-9 on three-pointers after its 4-for-4 start.
NOTES: Cal entered play on Thursday tied for seventh place in the ACC standings. The top 15 teams in the ACC’s 18-team women’s basketball standings qualify for the ACC tournament in Greensboro, North Carolina, so Cal is in no danger of not making the field.
But it would be important for Cal to be the No. 7 seed rather than the No. 8 seed in the conference tournament. If Cal would win its opening game of the conference tournament as the No. 8 seed it would face Notre Dame in its second game. Nobody wants to face the Irish, who are ranked No. 1 in the country. If Cal wins its opening game as the No. 7 seed, its next game would be against the No. 2 seed, which could be any one of five teams, all of whom would be favored against Cal but not an overwhelming favorite like Notre Dame would be.
The women’s ACC tournament begins March 5, although Cal’s first game will be March 6..
Virginia
Wachapreague Historic District named to Virginia Landmarks Register – Shore Daily News
Pictured: Wachapreague General Store. Photo credit- James Bell, 2021 Wachapreague General Store. Photo credit- James Bell, 2021
Virginia has added eight new sites to the Virginia Landmarks Register, recognizing places across the Commonwealth for their historic, architectural, and cultural significance, including a historic district on the Eastern Shore.
The Commonwealth’s Board of Historic Resources approved the designations during its quarterly public meeting on December 11 in Richmond. The Virginia Landmarks Register is the state’s official list of properties deemed important to Virginia’s history and heritage.
Among the newly designated sites is the Wachapreague Historic District. Encompassing 96 acres, the district includes the waterfront town of Wachapreague, which developed from the late 19th through the early 20th centuries as a destination for hunting and fishing and as a commercial hub with access to the Wachapreague Channel and the Atlantic Ocean.
The district features a concentration of residential and commercial buildings constructed in vernacular, Folk Victorian, and other architectural styles common to the Eastern Shore during the town’s period of growth. While Wachapreague’s population declined beginning in the 1960s, the town continues to attract visitors from across Virginia and beyond.
Other sites approved for listing include properties in Arlington, Bath, Frederick, Loudoun, and Pittsylvania counties; the city of Petersburg; and the town of Mount Jackson in Shenandoah County. Collectively, the new landmarks highlight a diverse range of resources, from a 20th-century airfield built for early commercial air travelers to a mill dam and mill pond complex that once served as a recreational and social center in Southwest Virginia.
The Virginia Department of Historic Resources will forward documentation for the newly listed sites to the National Park Service for consideration for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places.
State and national register listings are honorary and do not place restrictions on private property owners. Instead, the designations are intended to encourage public understanding of Virginia’s historic places and provide property owners with the opportunity to pursue historic rehabilitation tax credits. Any tax credit projects must comply with the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation.
Virginia
Gov. Youngkin unveils final budget plan, touts Virginia’s economic strength
RICHMOND, Va. (WSET) — Governor Glenn Youngkin laid out his final budget plan on Wednesday, making his case for where Virginia stands financially and where he said it should go next.
Speaking before the General Assembly, Youngkin said Virginia is strong both financially and economically, arguing his budget keeps that momentum going as his term comes to an end.
Addressing lawmakers, Youngkin presented what he described as a turnaround for the commonwealth. “It’s a story of transformation, a story of promises made and promises kept,” Youngkin said.
The governor credited his administration with record business investment, job growth, and strong revenue. He said Virginia is in a better position now than it was four years ago.
“The pace has been fast, and the progress has been significant,” Youngkin said.
SEE ALSO: Lynchburg City Schools gifted plaque to commemorate 160 years of education
In his budget proposal, Youngkin calls for cutting taxes, not raising them, urging lawmakers and the next administration to stay the course.
“Revenue growth that is driven by record economic development, record job growth, strong consumer, and giving me great confidence in the future of Virginia,” he said.
Youngkin said his plan funds key priorities, including education, public safety, health care, tax relief, and child care, while keeping Virginia competitive for business.
“The net of it is a budget that is structurally sound. A budget that can take Virginia into the future and keep her soaring,” Youngkin said.
Youngkin is now asking lawmakers to adopt his budget framework as negotiations begin, with debate shifting to the General Assembly and the incoming governor’s administration.
“I think that leaves considerable upside for the next administration, and we’ve used that strong underpinning to provide for everything that the commonwealth needs to do,” Youngkin said.
Virginia
Youngkin rolls out $50 million roadmap to reform Virginia’s child welfare system
RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — A $50 million statewide initiative is looking to reform Virginia’s child welfare system.
In a release shared by the governor’s office on Tuesday, Dec. 16, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced the Safe Kids, Strong Families roadmap, which aims to strengthen child safety, expand permanency and support the Commonwealth’s child welfare workforce. The initiative is a collaboration between the governor’s office and a coalition of state, local and community partners.
The proposed $50 million investment from the governor’s budget would go toward several key objectives in the plan. The roadmap builds on several initiatives to strengthen child safety and permanency that were launched since 2022.
Per the release, $10 million would go toward increasing the minimum salary for local family services specialists to $55,000 to address high vacancy and turnover rates.
An allocation of $424,000 would go toward priority response within 24 hours for children ages 3 and younger. With 81% of last year’s child fatalities involving children under 3 years old, the age group is at the highest risk of maltreatment, per the release.
The initiative also calls for a $32.7 million investment and 132 positions to create a centralized intake system. The 24/7 hotline would handle reports of child abuse and neglect and connect them to local departments.
Youngkin said the initiative reflects years of efforts from the state to strengthen child welfare.
“This roadmap builds on the progress we’ve made and sets a clear direction for a system designed to protect children and support families for generations,” Youngkin said. “It reflects the Commonwealth’s enduring commitment to every child’s well-being and future.”
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