Virginia
Recap: Stanford MBB vanquishes Virginia on The Farm
On Saturday, Stanford men’s basketball defeated Virginia at home by a final score of 88-65. Stanford center Maxime Raynaud led the way for the Cardinal with 24 points & 10 rebounds while guards Oziyah Sellers (15 points) and Jaylen Blakes (10 points) finished in double figures. Virginia guard Isaac McKneely was the top performer for the Cavaliers with 22 points. Stanford improves to 11-5 overall and 3-2 in the ACC while Virginia falls to 8-8 overall and 1-4 in the ACC.
VIDEO: Stanford MBB Postgame Press Conference: Virginia
VIDEO: Virginia MBB Postgame Press Conference: Stanford
BOX SCORE: Virginia at Stanford-Saturday, January 11th
“Yeah, I felt like that was probably our best game wire to wire,” Stanford head coach Kyle Smith said after the game. “Obviously, we had a little trouble guarding them early in the game. We usually run people off the three and their five for six to start, but we just played with such purpose on the offensive end, really good with the ball, played unselfishly, didn’t take many bad shots and we were good on the rebound, really good on the glass.
“And then that last ten minutes, kinda tighten up the D and it was good for kind of extent pushed the lead out when Jaylen and Max were on the bench, which was really positive growth for our confidence of our team and our bench was really, Donavin started and did well, but then Chisom came in and did well, Aidan did really well, Benny did really well, so it was nice just to have our bench kind of step up and play really well.”
With 15:28 to go in the first half, it was tied 8-8 as Donavin Young and Oziyah Sellers each had three points for the Cardinal while Ryan Agarwal had two points. Young was making the first start of his career, bringing good energy. After getting down 8-2, Virginia was on a 6-0 run over the last minute.
“He just gives us a dynamic forward that we don’t have necessarily as far as just a, like I said, I told Stanford people he reminds me of Josh Huestis,” Smith said of Young. “You know, that can defend, he can switch one through five, he’s got grit on the court, and is just a plus athlete. So, it’s kind of what we needed and he’s been hurt and hasn’t been able to compete as much and doesn’t know necessarily everything we’re doing out there to be honest, but it just seems like that’s kind of what the doctor ordered for this team.”
Virginia would lead 19-16 with 12:00 to go in the half. Ishan Sharma and Isaac McKneely each had six points for the Cavaliers while Donavin Young had five points for the Cardinal. Virginia had made seven of their last eight field goal attempts while Stanford had made four of their last five.
Stanford would soon take the lead 23-22 with 7:53 to go in the half. Sellers was up to eight points for the Cardinal on 3-5 shooting from the field. Stanford was doing a nice job on the glass with a +3 rebounding advantage.
“So, we have this thing called ‘The Card Zone’,” Raynaud said of their rebounding. “It’s a little section our coach does during the game review. And yeah, he mentioned that he wanted us to be plus five on the offensive boards…He just wanted us to be up a lot on the offensive rebounds and also boxing out because we knew outside of their five men not a lot of people were gonna crash and they were just gonna go back on defense.
“So yeah, it’s a very physical game, they have a ton of pride, they’re a really good team, so I’ll just say boxing out and crashing the boards is something that helps us. So yeah, I think it’s an emphasis every time. Today we did a really good job at it and hopefully we can keep that up for next week.”
Stanford would continue to extend the lead as they were up 27-22 with 6:32 to go in the half after Chisom Okpara had a nice pass to Maxime Raynaud for a vicious two-handed jam. Raynaud was hanging on the rim afterwards like he was Spider-Man.
Stanford would lead 35-30 with 1:21 to go in the half after a huge 3-pointer by Agarwal. He was up to seven points and three rebounds on 3-6 shooting from the field.
Stanford would lead 40-30 at halftime after Jaylen Blakes had a steal and 3-pointer to beat the buzzer. That gave the Cardinal a lot of momentum as they headed into the locker room. Raynaud was up to 10 points and five rebounds for the Cardinal while McKneely had nine points for the Cavaliers.
“It’s surreal,” Raynaud said of Blakes’ buzzer beater. “It’s really surreal. I think you all saw it, was just like, running straight to the tunnel. That’s the kind of thing that is just like give you so much energy. We always talk about finishing the last four minutes of the first half and starting the first three minutes of the second half really strong and I think that was the best thing that could happen, right? Like, he got a steal, kind of got out on a fast break, got that three, and yeah, just like galvanized us a lot and yeah, that was tough as hell.”
“I think the way we ended the first half kind of spilled over into the second half,” Virginia head coach Ron Sanchez said. “We had the ball, last possession, ended up having a potential for a layup. It was a turnover and they hit a three-point shot to end the half to go up I think seven instead of being up four or five. Whatever, I can’t remember exactly. I think that spilled over into the second half.”
Stanford got off to a good start in the second half, leading 52-41 with 15:29 to go. Donavin Young was up to eight points after a nasty throw down, doing a nice job in his first career start. Raynaud was leading the way with 14 points and seven rebounds. The Cardinal continued to have the momentum.
Stanford continued to gain separation from Virginia as they led 62-45 with 11:37 to go. Sellers was up to 13 points on 5-9 shooting from the field and 3-4 shooting from 3-point range. He was in a nice groove for the Cardinal. Stanford was a perfect 10-10 at the foul line up to this point while Virginia hadn’t made a field goal in the last 3:34.
With 7:49 to go, Stanford led 72-55. Raynaud was nearing a double- double with 16 points and nine rebounds. Both teams were trading baskets, which for Stanford was totally fine.
Virginia would then go on a 7-0 run to make it 72-62 with 6:11 to go. Stanford called for time, hoping to regroup. The timeout worked for Stanford as they did indeed regroup, leading 78-63 with 3:37 to go. Right when Virginia looked like they might make the game interesting, Raynaud took over as he was now up to 22 points and 10 rebounds. He had a nice hook shot and reverse layup inside.
From there, Stanford would win by a final score of 88-65 as a throw down by Jaylen Thompson at the very end was the exclamation mark. Stanford proved to be the better team and did a nice job of finishing the game out the right way.
“It was over two people,” Raynaud said of Thompson’s dunk. “It was over two people, like do we realize that?”
One thing that was cool was Cole Kastner getting a chance to get a couple of minutes against his alma mater where he excelled as a lacrosse player. Kastner had a great career at Virginia and won a national title. Before that he played high school basketball at Menlo School, so he had a nice little section of fans cheering him on when he entered the game.
“His attitude is phenomenal,” Smith said of Kastner. “Obviously he was a captain on a national championship program at Virginia as lacrosse and I don’t care what sport you’re playing, that’s significant and I think there’s 50 guys on that team and he’d separate himself as that kind of leader and that’s so healthy for this program. What we need is like he just knows how to behave what winning behaviors. I can’t think of one instant where I’ve ever had to correct him on anything. Other than technique or something, but as far as attitude and he’s just a winner. It was neat to get him in there and I don’t know how you feel, he might have been, that’s his alma mater. I don’t know if he wanted to get a bucket or not, but it was I’m sure it was nice. He likes winning. He’s been an awesome asset.”
“What you need to know about Cole is that he’s the boy,” Raynaud added. “He is, I think the kind of guy anyone would want on his team. We need to understand that this guy is like a three-time All-American, national champion in lacrosse, probably Hall of Famer at Virginia, which is a crazy program for lacrosse. He comes in every day, does his job on scout team, comes in with insane energy, is the best team player you can ever think of, never complains. Like, that level of humility is off the charts. So I think as a person off the court this guy is like the funniest person ever.
“So, it’s so awesome to have him with us and on top of that his high school basketball coaches and the team were there, too. So I’m super super happy for him that he got to go into the game and I’m super happy for the people in Maples to realize that he’s a big part of our organization and it’s not just about the five guys that are on the court, it’s about everybody on the bench…I was really really happy for him and it seemed like he had a blast.”
For Stanford, this is a nice win. While they were favored to win, they won even more convincingly than expected. Raynaud was fantastic as usual and then just in general, they played really sound, winning basketball. This was probably the best Stanford has looked all season long if you just look at how well they played for the full 40 minutes. A lot of different guys stepped up, including Aidan Cammann, whose nine points and three rebounds off the bench were really crucial to ensuring a comfortable victory.
“Yeah, in a key section, he was really good on the pick and roll,” Smith said of Cammann. “We run a lot of stuff for him, through him, because he’s got a really good brain, too. Those two both have really good feel and he was tough. We ran a little out of bounds play for him, he got a bucket there, and then I think he got two rolls, an and-1 and just a smart player doing smart things.”
Up next for Stanford is a road trip to Wake Forest and North Carolina. Up first will be Wake Forest on Wednesday, January 15th. Tipoff is set for 3:30 PM PT on ESPNews.
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Virginia
Vandals smash windows of nearly 3 dozen cars in Arlington Mill
Residents of an Arlington community are banding together to help each other in the wake of a string of vandalism. The neighborhood of Arlington Mill in southwest Arlington has been targeted for the last week, and nearly three dozen cars have had their windows smashed out, county police said.
Residents say they’re frustrated, frightened and aggravated that no one has been caught.
Evidence of the damage is everywhere in the neighborhood, with glass all over the road and in the grass. So many cars have been damaged that workers from a local auto glass repair shop came through the neighborhood and stuck their business cards under windshield wipers.
“It’s just frustrating,” Jose Santos said.
He parks his car in a lot where multiple cars have had their windows smashed out.
“They put up signs inside all the buildings, right now, trying to tell people, ‘Hey, leave your belongings at home,’” Santos said.
Police say the first calls came in last week, reporting multiple windows smashed in Arlington Mill, up and down the intersection of 7th Road S. and S. Florida Street.
Then even more cars were damaged late Sunday into Monday.
One witness saw three males and guessed they were between 18 and 24 years old.
Arlington County police say they’ve increased patrols in the neighborhood.
“We’ve had three incidents in the Arlington Mill neighborhood over about the last week, in which suspects broke the windows to about 35 vehicles parked in the neighborhood,” Ashley Savage of the Arlington County Police Department said.
Police say it doesn’t appear anything valuable has been stolen from the cars, but the peace of mind that’s been taken from Arlington Mill is invaluable, and nearly three dozen people have car windows to replace.
Virginia
Virginia Cannabis: Will Retail Finally Start In 2027?
Gov. Abigail Spanberger speaks at a press conference announcing there is a deal to authorize cannabis sales and put the legislation in the upcoming budget, Tuesday, June 16, 2026, in Richmond, Va. (Mike Kropf/Richmond Times-Dispatch via Getty Images)
Richmond Times-Dispatch via Getty Images
For the last five years, Virginia cannabis has existed in a strange policy gap.
Adults could legally possess it. They could grow it at home. They could gift it. They could consume it. But if they wanted to walk into a licensed adult-use dispensary and buy a tested, labeled product from a regulated business, Virginia still had no legal retail market.
That contradiction has defined the Commonwealth’s cannabis story since 2021, when Virginia became the first state in the South to legalize adult-use possession. The original promise was bigger than decriminalization. It was supposed to be the beginning of a regulated commercial market—one that would move consumers away from the illicit market, create room for small businesses and farmers, and finally give the state an enforceable framework for products already being sold and consumed.
Instead, Virginia legalized the front end of adult use without opening the front door of the industry.
Since then, the state has been caught in political limbo. Retail implementation stalled after the 2021 elections. Republican control of the House slowed the process. Former Gov. Glenn Youngkin later vetoed adult-use retail bills. Operators, investors and would-be applicants watched session after session with the same question: when would Virginia finally stop treating cannabis like something adults could legally have, but not legally buy?
The answer appeared close in 2026. With Gov. Abigail Spanberger in office and Democrats controlling the General Assembly, cannabis advocates expected the retail framework to finally move. Lawmakers sent the governor a bill that would have launched adult-use sales in 2027. Spanberger returned it with amendments, including a later sales date, a lower possession limit than lawmakers proposed, a higher future tax rate and tougher enforcement provisions. The legislature rejected those changes.
Then came the veto.
For many in the industry, Spanberger’s May veto landed as political whiplash. After years of delay, the state had once again stopped short of launching a legal adult-use marketplace. Worse, the veto came from a governor many advocates and operators expected to be more receptive than her predecessor.
For Brett Puffenbarger, CEO of Old Dominion Cannabis, the moment carried personal weight. Puffenbarger has spent nearly a decade in the cannabis industry and saw Virginia’s 2021 legalization as a chance to bring that experience back home.
“I have been in cannabis for almost a decade, and when Virginia first legalized adult use, it looked like an opportunity to build on that career in my home state,” Puffenbarger said via email. “I had been in Florida for years, but I was born and raised in Virginia. We moved back five years ago because we believed the Commonwealth would eventually open a regulated market. Now Old Dominion Cannabis is preparing to compete for cultivation and manufacturing licenses.”
That kind of long-range planning is common in cannabis. It is also risky. Markets can take years to open. Rules can change overnight. A state can legalize possession and still leave businesses waiting for a real path to licensure.
Virginia became a case study in that uncertainty.
The veto seemed to push the market another year down the road. But within weeks, the same framework came back in a different vehicle: the state budget. Spanberger, Sen. Lashrecse Aird and Del. Paul Krizek announced a compromise that would create a regulated adult-use retail market through budget language, with sales beginning July 1, 2027.
That turnabout changed the mood almost immediately.
“When the veto came down, we thought, ‘Here we go again—another year gone,’” said Jody Roun, COO of Old Dominion Cannabis, via email. “To see the conversation turn around this quickly through the budget process was surprising and exciting. For operators who have been planning around a moving target, it finally feels like there is a path.”
The compromise is not the same bill lawmakers originally passed. It reflects concessions to the governor, especially on timing, taxes, possession limits and enforcement. But it also preserves several priorities from legislators and advocates, including a larger retail cap, statewide access and a framework designed to give small businesses, farmers and microbusinesses a chance to participate.
Here are 10 key pieces of the framework Virginia is now poised to put into law:
1. Adult-use retail sales would begin July 1, 2027. The Virginia Cannabis Control Authority would begin accepting license applications on February 1, 2027, giving regulators time to write rules, establish testing standards and build the oversight structure before stores open.
2. Adults 21 and older would have a legal retail channel. Virginia already legalized adult possession and limited home cultivation, but this framework would finally allow consumers to purchase regulated cannabis from licensed retailers.
3. The adult possession limit would increase from one ounce to two ounces. That is less than the 2.5-ounce limit lawmakers originally sought, but higher than the current possession limit.
4. The state would allow up to 350 retail cannabis establishment licenses. Regulators would not be required to issue them all at once, but the cap is designed to create enough access to compete with the illicit market.
5. Localities would not be able to opt out of the market. That matters because local bans in other states have often left consumers with limited legal access and preserved demand for unregulated sellers.
6. Delivery services are expected to be allowed as part of the regulated market. Combined with the retail cap and no local opt-outs, delivery could become an important tool for statewide access, especially in rural areas.
7. The tax structure would start relatively low. Adult-use cannabis would carry a 6% state excise tax at launch, increasing to 8% beginning July 1, 2029. Local governments could add another 1% to 3.5%, in addition to existing retail sales taxes.
8. The Cannabis Control Authority would gain expanded oversight over intoxicating hemp products. The compromise is designed to close Virginia’s 25:1 hemp loophole and move intoxicating hemp regulation away from the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and under the cannabis regulator.
9. The framework includes stronger child-safety and advertising rules. It would require child-resistant packaging, ban cartoon advertising and prohibit products shaped like animals, fruits, vehicles or humans.
10. The state would add stronger compliance and enforcement tools. Retailers could face escalating penalties for failing to check IDs, including possible license revocation for repeated underage sales. Stores would also have to be at least 1,000 feet from schools, hospitals, playgrounds and drug treatment facilities, while the CCA could maintain a public licensee registry, create a tip line and audit ownership and financial relationships.
“The cannabis license application cycle goes through peaks and valleys,” said Justin Singer, a partner at Feuerstein Kulick LLP and chair of the firm’s Regulatory Compliance and Licensing practice via phone interview. “We have been in an extended valley for sought-after licenses for some time, and as a result we have seen a tremendous amount of interest in this upcoming application process.”
Put together, the framework signals that Virginia is trying to do more than open stores. It is trying to correct the imbalance created in 2021: legal adults, legal possession, legal home cultivation—but no legal commercial channel for most consumers.
The challenge now is execution.
Cannabis regulators across the country have learned that legal markets do not automatically beat illicit ones. Taxes that are too high, licensing that is too slow, limited access, lack of capital and burdensome rules can all keep consumers in the unregulated market. Virginia’s relatively modest starting excise tax may help. So could the 350-store cap, if the state issues licenses in a way that creates real geographic coverage.
But questions remain. How quickly will cultivation and manufacturing licenses be processed? How much room will there be for independent operators? Will microbusinesses and impact applicants have meaningful access to banking and capital? Will existing medical operators have a first-mover advantage? And can the state build a market that is regulated enough to protect consumers without being so expensive and slow that it recreates the same illicit-market incentives legalization was supposed to solve?
For companies like Old Dominion Cannabis, the answer will determine whether Virginia becomes a real opportunity or simply another tightly controlled market dominated by the best-capitalized players.
Still, after five years of waiting, the significance of this moment is hard to ignore. Virginia is no longer debating whether adults should be allowed to possess cannabis. That question was answered in 2021. The question now is whether the Commonwealth can build a functioning legal industry around that decision.
The budget compromise does not end the work. It starts it.
For operators, the next several months will be about applications, compliance, capital and partnerships. For regulators, it will be about writing rules that can survive contact with the market. For consumers, it could mean finally having a legal way to purchase tested cannabis products in the first Southern state to legalize adult use.
Virginia took the symbolic step five years ago. Now it may finally be taking the commercial one.
Virginia
Virginia man uses art to heal after years in prison, mental health battle
RICHMOND, Va. — Jerrod Buford first picked up a paintbrush as a kid, never imagining that same creative outlet would carry him through his darkest days in prison.
Buford, who grew up in Williamsburg, was convicted and arrested as a young man and spent almost a decade behind bars. During that time, he struggled deeply.
“Turning to drugs and alcohol to kind of shadow over emotions,” Buford said. “Looking for acceptance, approval. Not just from my parents, but from friends, from, you name it. I mean, I tried to commit suicide, I don’t even know how many times,” Buford said.
WTVR
It was inside prison walls that art became more than a hobby.
“Throughout my prison time, I learned, the freedom that I desired, I’ve always had it. I got, I found it, in a box,” Buford said.
More than three years after his release, Buford continues to advocate for art as a tool for healing. He describes his work as a gift he feels called to share.
“I received a blessing from God that just allowed me to display what he’s given me,” Buford said.
For Buford, creating art is also a way of processing his past.
“That’s what art has done for me. It’s given me the ability to look at parts of my life, all parts of my life, and find the good and the negative, learn from the negative,” Buford said.
He shares his story and artwork with a wide audience through social media, including live sessions on TikTok, and holds art classes with new communities.
The Story Cafe
Buford said his mission is to help others find their own path toward healing — whatever form that takes.
“What I strive to do is guide this person to just create, man. Don’t care what people think about your creation, you just need to get it out,” Buford said. “Whether it’s with art, addressing your mental health, getting your life right — just do it.”
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