Sports
USFL’s Shea Patterson honors Dwayne Haskins during debut
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Shea Patterson competed in opposition to Dwayne Haskins earlier than the 2 have been beginning on Michigan and Ohio State respectively, and on Sunday the previous Wolverines quarterback honored him.
Patterson, who performs for the Michigan Panthers of the US Soccer League, wore tape round his wrist with Haskins’ nickname Simba on it. Patterson and Haskins knew one another since eighth grade and later dedicated to the rival Large Ten Convention faculties.
Sadly for Patterson, the Panthers got here up brief of their comeback try in opposition to the Houston Gamblers and misplaced 17-12.
Haskins was killed earlier this month when he was struck by a dump truck whereas strolling throughout a South Florida freeway, officers stated. Florida Freeway Patrol spokeswoman Lt. Indiana Miranda stated Haskins was pronounced useless on the scene.
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“He was making an attempt to cross the westbound lanes of Interstate 595 when there was oncoming site visitors,” Miranda stated in a press release.
Miranda stated the incident is “an open site visitors murder investigation.”
It wasn’t instantly identified why Haskins was touring on the freeway on the time. He seemed to be in South Florida over the course of the week training with Steelers teammates Mitchell Trubisky, working again Najee Harris and tight finish Pat Freiermuth.
Sports
Which CFP team has the best starting QB? Ranking all 12 from Dillon Gabriel to … who knows?
Joe Burrow circa 2019 is not walking through the door of this College Football Playoff. There is no Deshaun Watson nor Trevor Lawrence to be found.
It’s not that there aren’t a bunch of really good quarterbacks in the first 12-team College Football Playoff field. The teams wouldn’t have gotten this far if that were the case. But the lack of a dominant QB or two is a big part of why the Playoff itself seems fairly wide open. Volatility and uncertainty at the most important position on the field inevitably creates unpredictability.
This year’s set of CFP starting quarterbacks includes the most experienced signal caller in the history of college football (Oregon’s Dillon Gabriel); six players who have transferred (Gabriel, Texas’ Quinn Ewers, Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt, Notre Dame’s Riley Leonard, Ohio State’s Will Howard, Indiana’s Kurtis Rourke); four former five-star recruits (Ewers, Penn State’s Drew Allar, Tennessee’s Nico Iamaleava, Clemson’s Cade Klubnik); three first-year starters (Iamaleava, SMU’s Kevin Jennings, Boise State’s Maddux Madsen) and one who is expected to make his first career start (Georgia’s Gunner Stockton).
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In trying to rank them (a truly thankless task), we — and by we I mean me — focused solely on the now and which players are most capable of leading a team to a national championship over the next month. What does that mean? Two qualities come to mind: the ability to make an uncanny play, throw or run, at high-leverage moments; and the ability to avoid game-changing mistakes.
Fact is, there is a pretty clear No. 1, and then feel free to line up 2-12 in any order you like.
Here’s mine.
1. Dillon Gabriel, Oregon
Easy choice.
Gabriel’s height (5 foot 11) makes him a less-than-ideal NFL prospect, which has led him to a six-year, three-school college career. But he is not without next-level skills.
“What I appreciate most is his quick trigger,” The Athletic’s Dane Brugler wrote last week, adding he would not be surprised if Gabriel becomes a mid-round pick or better. “Gabriel has a great feel for route timing in relation to coverage, which allows him to eliminate things quickly and fire passes without overthinking.”
The Ducks’ quarterfinal at the Rose Bowl against the Tennessee-Ohio State winner will be Gabriel’s record 63rd college game. He is 795 yards away from breaking the FBS career passing record held by Case Keenum (19,217). Gabriel’s confidence, experience and poise shine through in big games – he’s totaled 867 yards, eight touchdown passes and zero interceptions in three victories against CFP teams this season – and there is no surer thing among the quarterbacks in this Playoff.
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2. Drew Allar, Penn State
Here we go. Let the arguments begin.
Before you even say it, let’s acknowledge this: Allar has not played well in the biggest games he has played during his two seasons as a starter for the Nittany Lions.
The supporting cast, especially at wide receiver, and the play calling have not made life easier on Allar, but you are what your record says you are, and he is 0-5 while completing under 50 percent of his passes against Ohio State (twice), Michigan, Ole Miss and Oregon.
The Big Ten Championship Game earlier this month fairly well sums up Allar. There were plenty of plays where he was a difference maker with his arm, mobility and athleticism. He also completed only 51 percent of his passes and threw two picks.
“He has an elite ability to handle things like a professional at the age of 20 or 21. It’s really pretty uncommon,” offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki said.
I’m getting lured in by the ceiling.
3. Kurtis Rourke, Indiana
The Ohio transfer might have been No. 2 on this list if he were a little more mobile. If you could guarantee Rourke sound protection, nobody, not even Gabriel, is more likely to slice up a defense with his combination of accuracy and quick decision making.
ESPN analyst and former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy is all-in on Rourke and sees him as a guy who could go on to have a Kirk Cousins-like NFL career. Even when Rourke faces pressure, “It’s NFL-level accuracy,” McElroy said.
Ohio State blew up the Hoosiers’ protection in Indiana’s lone loss, and if that happens again against Notre Dame, there will only be so much Rourke can do. But you’re not going to rattle the sixth-year player.
4. Quinn Ewers, Texas
Four seasons into his college career, everything about Ewers is still distorted by the hype that followed him to college football as the five-est of five-star recruits.
When he’s good, he is the best. When he isn’t, where is Arch Manning?
Here is why this ranking is too low: Ewers has played well in some big games, including last season’s CFP semifinal loss against Washington (318 yards passing) and the 2023 victory at Alabama in which he passed for 349 yards and three touchdowns.
Here is why it’s too high: He’s probably the most likely playoff QB to be benched for his backup.
He has dealt with injuries and hasn’t flashed as much of that this season, but we’ve seen it before.
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5. Will Howard, Ohio State
Everything changed about the Buckeyes when they lost to Michigan, including the assessment of Howard. The fifth-year transfer from Kansas State was a fringe Heisman Trophy candidate before that stunning upset. After throwing two back-breaking interceptions against the Wolverines, he didn’t even crack the top 10 of Heisman voting, and it felt as if coach Ryan Day lost faith in Howard during The Game.
“There’s plays he’ll want back in that game, but one thing about Will is he has a positive mindset and he’s very resilient,” Day said.
Bottom line: Howard is a big, athletic guy who is more than capable of making the most of the Buckeyes’ slew of big-time receivers. He finished the regular season third in the country in passer rating (172.08) and seventh in ESPN’s QBR (83.0), third among playoff quarterbacks behind Gabriel and Rourke.
Howard has been oddly quiet as a runner this season, with only 223 yards on 60 carries, not including sacks. With Ohio State’s offensive line injuries, offensive coordinator Chip Kelly might need to get that part of his game cranked up.
6. Kevin Jennings, SMU
The ultimate wild card.
It took a few games for SMU coach Rhett Lashlee to fully commit to Jennings as his quarterback, but the Mustangs took off when he did.
“When he plays, you can feel that edge he has,” Lashlee said.
A wispy 185 pounds, Jennings is a dangerous runner (he went for 113 yards on the ground at Louisville) and can really sling it. He can also be a little all over the place.
“He’s a gamer,” McElroy said. “I mean, he just makes plays, and that’s really the only way to describe him. The mechanics are far from flawless.”
The Clemson game was a good example of what a ride Jennings can be. He passed for 102 yards with an interception in the first half before leading the Mustangs back from a 24-7 deficit with 202 yards and three TDs in the second half.
Jennings can be the breakout star of the Playoff or a one-and-done in Happy Valley.
7. Riley Leonard, Notre Dame
Leonard started the season slowly and maybe not quite fully healthy. It is fair to say he has improved, but he still doesn’t push the ball downfield much. Notre Dame (once again) doesn’t really have a difference maker on the outside at receiver to support Leonard, but the Irish feel good about his decision making.
“We’ve got to know where the ball is going. We’ve got to get it out of our hand, and we’ve got to be confident in doing that. If we do that, we’re going to be in pretty good shape,” offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock said.
As a runner, Leonard is a weapon. He leads all Playoff quarterbacks with 721 yards and 14 touchdowns on the ground. He is also difficult to sack. Despite his limited production as a passer, Leonard is 13th in QBR at 79.0, three spots ahead of Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders.
The Irish are going to win with their running game. The question is whether they can rely on Leonard to convert a few third-and-longs with throws in key spots. Notre Dame ranks 88th in the country in third-down conversion rate (38.3 percent).
8. Sam Leavitt, Arizona State
Leavitt is the QB spirit animal of teammate Cam Skattebo. The Michigan State transfer has thrown 24 touchdown passes and only five interceptions, and he’s not going to shy away from contact.
The former four-star recruit is an intense competitor who comes into the Playoff fresh off his two most efficient games of the season. Against Arizona and in the Big 12 title game against Iowa State, he went a combined 29 for 39 for 500 yards with six touchdown passes and no picks.
“He’s just one of the most conscientious young guys I’ve ever been around, and we’ve been around some pretty smart ones,” said Arizona State offensive coordinator Marcus Arroyo, who coached Justin Herbert at Oregon. “Very conscientious in that regard and trying to find, always, ways to get a little bit better.”
Leavitt might actually be the wild-card potential one-man show that I think Jennings is.
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9. Cade Klubnik, Clemson
Klubink took a definitive step forward in his second season as a starter for the Tigers. Last season: 6.3 yards per attempt, 19 touchdowns, nine interceptions. This season: 7.5, 33 touchdowns, five picks.
“One, he’s got better situational awareness, so that’s helpful,” McElroy said. “Two, I think he’s stronger. A big part of his problems last year, he fumbled it every time he got hit.”
It also should be noted — recurring theme here — Clemson seems to have finally hit on a few receivers this season after an extended slump at that position.
Still, Klubnik runs hot and cold, which means Clemson’s offense does the same. Again, see the ACC Championship Game, when the Tigers averaged 3.9 yards per play in the second half and scored just one touchdown.
Klubnik has become a good player, but it doesn’t seem as though there is another gear here. At least not one that’s going to emerge over the next month.
10. Nico Iamaleava, Tennessee
If you said that Iamaleava would be the first overall pick in the 2026 or ‘27 NFL Draft, I’d believe you. He has all the tools to become that type of player. He just hasn’t been that player often this season. Nor has Tennessee asked him to be, leaning on the SEC’s leading rusher Dylan Sampson.
Still, for Josh Heupel’s offense to operate at a high level, it needs to take deep shots and hit a few of them. That facet of the offense has been inconsistent, but Iamaleava did end the regular season with a four-touchdown game against Vanderbilt.
The potential is high, but asking him to reach it multiple times at the end of his redshirt freshman season seems like a lot. And you can’t win four Playoff games working around your young quarterback.
11. Maddux Madsen, Boise State
Ashton Jeanty is the engine for Boise State, but Madsen has been a nice complement to the nation’s leading rusher and Heisman runner-up. He is a tough and willing runner himself (five touchdowns on the ground this year) and has only thrown three interceptions. Accuracy is an issue, though: He’s had six games in which he completed below 57 percent of his passes.
Teams are going to load up to stop Jeanty and put pressure on Madsen to make some plays. But that’s been the case all season, and Boise State went 12-1. Being able to do it three times against high-quality competition, however, seems like a lot to ask.
12. Gunner Stockton, Georgia
Who really knows?
This ranking is not fair to Stockton, who was a top-10 recruit at his position in the same 2022 recruiting class that had Allar and Klubnik at the top. You’re not on scholarship at Georgia if you can’t play. No doubt, he’d be starting at dozens of other schools, including maybe a few in the Playoff.
“The kid played just tough as nails,” Kirby Smart said after Stockton played hero in the Bulldogs’ dramatic SEC title game victory. “The Florida State (bowl) game is probably the most he’s played. But can’t say enough about his toughness, character, whatever you want to say. The guy is a phenomenal leader.”
Stockton’s mobility gave the Bulldogs a spark against Texas. He was also 12 for 16 passing for 4.4 yards per attempt. It was pretty clear Georgia was playing cautious offense once Carson Beck left with an injury.
That attack might look very different after a couple of weeks of preparation. There is also a possibility that a passing game that was glitchy with Beck at the controls doesn’t get better with the backup quarterback.
Plus, now Georgia’s opponents will have time to prepare for Stockton.
Fact is, Stockton could lead Georgia to a national title with a Cardale Jones-like run, or his inexperience could be a big reason the Bulldogs go one-and-done.
(Top illustration photos: Johnnie Izquierdo, Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)
Sports
Women's prayer group alleges harassment from pro-trans activists during 'Save Girls Sports' protests
A contentious school board meeting in Riverside, California, drew large opposing protests outside the district office Thursday night. One side argued to “Save Girls Sports,” wearing T-shirts with that message, while the other side came equipped with transgender pride flags and signs.
Members of a women’s prayer group that attended the protests on the “Save Girls Sports” side has alleged the pro-transgender side harassed them during the event and interrupted their attempts at public speaking and filming content.
The prayer group, Young Women for America (YWA)’s Inland Empire chapter in California, alleged pro-transgender activists showered them with insults Thursday in a statement provided to Fox News Digital.
“Members of the pro-LGBTQ groups started heckling and harassing the people in line who were speaking in opposition of their values. Some of these adult protesters were even coming up to the young girls that were going to be speaking and were yelling at them close to their face,” YWA Inland Empire Chapter President Tori Hitchcock alleged.
Hitchcock claims the harassment forced them to move their prayer circle away from the offices.
“Seeing how quick these protesters were wanting to make a scene, we decided that we needed to wait and move our prayer rally away from the main lot for safety reasons. We were able to find a spot that was removed but overlooking the event, which allowed us to really visualize what we were praying for. We spent time also praying over the young female athletes who were there to speak. Many of them were the students who were ostracized by their school,” Hitchcock said.
Hitchcock did not name an specific individuals in her harassment allegations.
Other witnesses present Thursday have provided their accounts of the events to Fox News Digital.
Julianne Fleischer, an attorney for the religious liberties legal firm Advocates for Faith & Freedom, was at the protests Thursday to conduct a pre-meeting press conference that included a parent whose family had been affected by a transgender athlete competing on a girls sports team.
“It was initially peaceful, but the LGBTQ activists became increasingly more vocal and were trying to stir up agitation by heckling people,” Fleischer said.
Fleischer also claims the pro-trans activists were using megaphones to drown out the sound of normal conversation.
“The LGBTQ activists were screaming and blowing their megaphones so as to prevent SGS supporters from participating in media interviews. We moved media away from the LGBTQ activists to a more secluded area so the activists couldn’t interfere with SGS supporters’ ability to talk to the media,” Fleischer added.
California Family Council Vice President Greg Burt told Fox News Digital he also witnessed the pro-trans activists actively interrupting the pro-girls protests and interviews.
“They had bullhorns, and every time someone used a camera to do a video, they would jump behind and make noise,” Burt said.
ENRAGED PARENTS SCREAM AT SCHOOL BOARD FOR ALLOWING TRANS ATHLETE IN GIRLS’ SPORTS: ‘TEACH THEM SELF CONTROL!’
One anonymous parent told Fox News Digital about witnessing a child being bombarded with vulgar insults by pro-trans protesters after the meeting.
“My 16-year old son and a few others were standing outside after speaking when a group of the LGBTQ community intentionally walked by them pointing at each one of them saying, ‘FU FU FU,’” the anonymous parent said.
Footage reviewed by Fox News Digital showed a sizable pro-LGBTQ presence at the event. The limited footage reviewed showed the protesters standing calmly. Multiple accounts have suggested the pro-LGBTQ protesters outnumbered the “Save Girls Sports” protesters.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the Riverside Unified School District (RUSD) for verification but has not received a response.
Thursday’s RUSD board meeting was anticipated nationally amid an ongoing controversy at Martin Luther King High School, which has since spread to other schools in the district. A transgender athlete on the girls cross-country team prompted students to wear the shirts that said “Save Girls Sports” in protest. But those students were punished by administrators, some with detention. A lawsuit filed by two girls cross-country runners alleges the school compared the T-shirts to swastikas.
But the student body responded in support of their biologically female classmates by wearing the shirts in droves of hundreds at a time. Many of the students posted photos on social media of them wearing the shirts together, and some were sitting in detention.
Eventually, the school stopped disciplining students after more than 400 Martin Luther King High School students showed up wearing the shirts Dec. 11.
Sources have told Fox News Digital students at Arlington High School, Riverside Polytechnical High School and Romona High School have also been seen wearing the shirts at their respective schools.
Ryan Starling, the father of a girl at the school who is involved in a lawsuit against the school, spoke at the press conference outside the district office Thursday. The lawsuit alleges Starling’s daughter, Taylor, lost her varsity spot to a transgender athlete and that her T-shirt to express opposition to the athlete competing was compared to a swastika.
“It’s just heartbreaking to see what my daughter has gone through this season,” Starling said.
“This is unfair. This is completely unfair. It breaks my heart as a father to see my daughter go through this and have it stripped away from her, have her come up to me and just hug me. And I can’t do anything about it. So, it’s just heartbreaking.”
The father of the other girl involved in the lawsuit, Dan Slavin, previously told Fox News Digital he “couldn’t even digest” hearing that his daughter’s shirt was compared to a swastika.
“I didn’t even know how to digest that right away,” Slavin said. “There were no words. I still can’t even digest it to this day. It’s unfathomable. It’s strange. It’s weird. I’m sure there were better illustrations they could use instead of that one.”
In a statement previously provided to Fox News Digital, RUSD said it has allowed the transgender athlete to compete on the team because it must comply with California state law.
“It is important to remember that RUSD is bound to follow California law, which requires that students be ‘permitted to participate in sex-segregated school programs and activities, including athletic teams and competitions consistent with his or her gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the pupil’s records,’” the statement said.
“As these matters play out in our courts and the media, opposition and protests should be directed at those in a position to affect those laws and policies, including officials in Washington, D.C., and Sacramento.”
California has had laws in effect to protect transgender athletes in women’s sports since 2014. That year, AB 1266 took effect, giving California students at scholastic and collegiate levels the right to “participate in sex-segregated school programs and activities, including athletic teams and competitions, and use facilities consistent with his or her gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the pupil’s records.”
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Sports
High school basketball: Friday's scores for boys' and girls' games
HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
FRIDAY’S RESULTS
BOYS
Academy for Academic Excellence 58, University Prep 54
Adelanto 57, Pahrump Valley (NV) 18
Alta (UT) 75, Crossroads 60
Anaheim 74, Samueli Academy 63
Anaheim Canyon 91, Costa Mesa 41
Bellflower 54, El Rancho 47
Berkmar (GA) 55, LA Jordan 44
Beverly Hills 70, Lawndale 42
Big Bear 86, Cobalt Institute of Math & Science 28
Bishop Amat 65, Covina 54
Blair 87, Muir 66
Burbank 84, Lancaster Baptist
California 75, Ocean View 63
California Military Institute 47, Nuview Bridge 39
Camarillo 74, Royal 33
Cantwell-Sacred Heart 70, Western Christian 61
Canyon Country Canyon 66, Granada Hills 62
Capistrano Valley Christian 69, Farrington (HI) 18
Chaffey 79, Colton 66
Chaparral 58, Corona 35
Chatsworth 66, West Albany (NY) 56
Cleveland 95, Sun Valley Magnet 12
Corona Santiago 61, Vanden 55
Crespi 76, St. Anthony 56
Culver City 78, Compton Centennial 24
De La Salle 76, La Salle 26
Democracy Prep Agassi Campus (NV) 59, Crean Lutheran 57
Desert Pines 56, Rancho Verde 53
Desert Vista 67, Artesia 42
Durango 61, Aquinas 45
Eastvale Roosevelt 78, Redondo Union 74
Edison 64, Huntington Beach 38
El Segundo 54, Los Amigos 49
Elsinore 80, Lakeside 63
Etiwanda 69, Vista Murrieta 57
Foothill Tech 65, Coastal Christian 43
Fountain Valley 65, Newport Harbor 55
Garden Grove 58, Saddleback 47
Golden Valley 60, Gardena 45
Grant 68, Viewpoint 67
Harvard-Westlake 74, Fairfax 33
Hawthorne 61, Animo Leadership 28
Heritage Christian 81, Valencia 40
Hillcrest 58, Patriot 39
Hoover 64, St. Monica Academy 38
Jurupa Hills 52, Redlands 46
Katella 61, Loara 40
Kuna (ID) 60, Birmingham 48
La Canada 55, Flintridge Prep 46
La Habra 70, Sonora 45
LA Wilson 55, San Gabriel 50
Lancaster 69, Newbury Park 58
Legacy Christian Academy 68, Crescenta Valley 61
Leuzinger 46, Cathedral Prep 45
Liberty 46, Palm Springs 44
Milken 55, Munday (TX) 29
Mira Monte 49, Antelope Valley 44
Modesto Christian 62, Pasadena 44
Montclair 40, Northview 28
Murrieta Valley 72, Linfield Christian 45
Nordhoff 60, Hueneme 48
Norte Vista 76, Riverside King 54
North Torrance 62, Konawaena (HI) 30
Oak Hills 69, Palm Desert 54
Oak Park 71, Moorpark 44
Oakwood 61, Hillcrest Christian 56
Orcutt Academy 58, San Luis Obispo Classical 43
Palisades 55, El Camino Real 54
Pasadena Poly 68, Carpinteria 49
Pioneer 84, Southlands Christian 20
Price 56, Bartlett (AK) 46
Rialto 64, Serrano 47
Riverside Notre Dame 65, Rim of the World 40
Riverside Prep 66, Hesperia Christian 47
Rolling Hills Prep 84, Wildwood 34
San Jacinto Valley Academy 54, St. Jeanne de Lestonnac 50
San Marcos 57, Maranatha 45
Santa Fe Christian 64, Murrieta Mesa 49
Saugus 73, Agoura 58
Segerstrom 46, Godinez 38
Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 73, Layton Christian Academy (UT) 60
Sierra Vista 73, Downey Calvary Chapel 30
South Torrance 65, Palos Verdes 56
Spanish Fork (UT) 71, Chino 68
St. Brendan (FL) 78, Washington 40
St. Paul 81, Foothill (NV) 44
Summit Leadership 38, Victor Valley Christian 37
Sunny Hills 56, Troy 43
Taft 66, Gardena Serra 57
Temecula Valley 96, Palmetto 82
Thousand Oaks 56, Burbank Burroughs 45
Torrance 76, Monrovia 69
University Prep 77, Eagle Point (OR) 68
Valley Christian 54, Maricopa 32
Vaughn 61, Desert Christian 53
Warren 69, Spring Valley 64
West Linn (OR) 85, Inglewood 65
West Torrance 84, SEED LA 34
West Valley 69, Redlands East Valley 63
Xavier Prep 68, Coachella Valley 66
Yucaipa 72, Victor Valley 52
YULA 56, Hart 39
GIRLS
Archbishop Mitty 59, Santa Ana Mater Dei 42
Beckman 47, Glendora 31
Bingham (UT) 47, Rialto 45
Bravo 31, South East 29
Buena 78, Palisades 48
Calabasas 55, Chatsworth 49
Canyon Country Canyon 50, Mesa (AZ) 43
Carson 55, Venice 44
Caruthers 70, St. Anthony 61
Chaffey 26, Charter Oak 24
Compton 62, University Pathways 30
Colton 55, Arroyo Valley 19
Culver City 80, Compton Centennial 29
Dana Hills 38, Godinez 36
Dominguez 56, San Pedro 32
Dos Pueblos 81, Oaks Christian 50
Downey 47, Cerritos 46
El Dorado 68 Los Altos 18
El Segundo 50, Wilmington Banning 25
Fontana 43, Colony 35
Gardena 37, Bernstein 24
Garey 29, Montclair 26
Gilbert (AZ) 48, JSerra 36
Glendale 49, Foothill Tech 37
Hawthorne 46, Animo Leadership 6
Heritage 76, Yucaipa 57
Heritage Christian 52, Providence 35
Holy Martyrs 48, Pasadena 43
Hoover 38, Chadwick 32
Indian Springs 48, Norte Vista 16
Irvine University 46, Woodbridge 35
Lakeview Charter 22, Fremont 11
Lakewood St. Joseph 60, Dobson (AZ) 26
La Palma Kennedy 32, Mary Star of the Sea 26
La Salle 75, Schurr 45
La Serna 35, La Habra 27
Lawndale 85, Beverly Hills 43
Lone Peak 43, Orange Lutheran 30
Los Osos 52, King/Drew 36
Lynwood 53, O’Connor (AZ) 45
Magnolia 52, Workman 35
Marquez 41, Math & Science College Prep 25
Maywood Academy 40, Rise Kohyang 24
Mira Costa 63, West Torrance 55
Mission College Prep 45, San Marcos 28
Muir 57, Blair 11
Murrieta Valley 64, Mohave Accelerated (AZ) 31
Northview 37, Bishop Amat 24
Nuview Bridge 43, California Military Institute 27
Oak Park 72, Moorpark 14
Ontario Christian 73, Bullis (MD) 65
Palm Springs 42, Desert Hot Springs 36
Paramount 78, El Rancho 22
Perris 39, Western Christian 35
Placentia Valencia 52, Westminster 29
Princeton (OH) 60, Sage Hill 46
Quartz Hill 53, Serrano 32
Ramona 52, Valley Christian 46
Rancho Christian 76, Corona Santiago 52
Rancho Cucamonga 63, Hart 33
Redlands 26, Jurupa Hills 21
RFK Community 39, Angelou 15
Ridgeline (UT) 53, Moreno Valley 52
Rio Hondo Prep 61, Westridge 14
Riverside King 58, Vista Murrieta 26
Rosary Academy 55, Rolling Hills Prep 45
San Clemente 56, Anaheim Canyon 32
San Juan Hills 63, Portola 49
San Luis Obispo 64, Santa Barbara 32
Santa Maria St. Joseph 85, Valencia 84
Santa Paula 54, Fillmore 13
Segerstrom 71, Mission Viejo 50
Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 51, Notre Dame Academy 48
Simi Valley 48, Agoura 35
Sonora 57, California 34
South Hills 45, Rosemead 27
St. Monica 62, Juneau-Douglas (AK) 48
Summit 63, Silverado 18
Sunny Hills 56, Hacienda Heights Wilson 31
Temecula Prep 43, San Jacinto Leadership Academy 29
Thousand Oaks 56, St. Bonaventure 38
Trabuco Hills 49, Laguna Beach 43
Tustin 44, Irvine 43
University Prep 47, Academy for Academic Excellence 17
Valley View 58, Huntington Beach 43
Vanden 60, Birmingham 58
Villa Park 46, Pinnacle (AZ) 35
West (UT) 58, Brentwood 54
West Ranch 62, Vaughn 7
Whitney 59, Gardena Serra 44
Xavier Prep 50, Coachella Valley 41
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