Connect with us

Sports

Virginia teen track runner who bashed opponent's head with baton charged with assault and battery

Published

on

Virginia teen track runner who bashed opponent's head with baton charged with assault and battery

The Virginia high school track and field athlete who was seen bashing an opponent’s head with a baton during a race has been charged with assault and battery, Lynchburg Commonwealth’s Attorney Office confirmed to Fox News Digital. 

I.C. Norcom High School student athlete Alaila Everett was seen smashing her baton on the head of Brookville High School junior Kaelen Tucker during a championship meet last week. Footage of the incident went viral in the following days, prompting national controversy and backlash against Everett. 

Tucker was later diagnosed with a concussion and possible skull fracture.

Tucker and her family members did not definitively say whether they would press charges against Everett after the incident in an interview with WSET ABC 13. However, charges have now officially been pressed, as Everett faces one misdemeanor count assault and battery.

Advertisement

Everett has since said the hits were accidental, in interviews with WAVY and “Good Morning America.” 

Prior to the charges being announced on Everett, the Portsmouth NAACP released a statement defending the embattled teen on Wednesday. 

“Alaila is NOT AN ATTACKER and media headlines that allude towards that in any way is shameful. We understand the sensitivity of the circumstances for both athletes and their families involved but this narrative must not go unaddressed,” the statement read.  

“Alaila is an honor student and a star athlete at the historic I.C. Norcom High School. From all accounts, she is an exceptional young leader and scholar whose athletic talent has been well documented and recognized across our state. She has carried herself with integrity both on and off the field and any narrative that adjudicates her guilty of any criminal activity is a violation of her due process rights.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to Everett’s family via the Portsmouth Public School District for comment. 

Advertisement

Tucker recounted the incident in an interview with WSET ABC 13 last Friday, and said the entire section gasped when they saw the repeated baton bashing. 

“The whole section just gasped,” Tucker told the station about those around her in the bleachers. “We had family come from out of town. Her godparents were here from Myrtle Beach. Everybody just gasped. When I saw her go down, all I could do is run out of the bleachers. I just knew I had to get to her.

WOMEN ATHLETES DON’T COMPETE VS. TRANSGENDER IN TEAM USA TRACK EVENT, GIVING DEFAULT VICTORY TO TRANS ATHLETE

The Virginia high school track and field athlete who was seen bashing an opponent’s head with a baton during a race has been charged with assault and battery. (Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports)

“She was kind of hysterical because she just couldn’t believe that’s what had happened.”

Advertisement

Everett claims the hits occurred because she lost her balance and her baton got “stuck” behind her opponent’s back.

“After a couple times of hitting her, my baton got stuck behind her back like this, and it rolled up her back. I lost my balance when I pumped my arms again. She got hit,” Everett said in an interview with WAVY. “I know my intentions and I would never hit someone on purpose.”

Everett also said that while she caused physical pain for Tucker, there is not enough empathy for Everett’s own “mental” impact. 

“Everybody has feelings, so you’re physically hurt, but you’re not thinking of my mental,” Everett said. “They are assuming my character, calling me ghetto and racial slurs, death threats… all of this off of a nine-second video.”

During an interview with Good Morning America on Wednesday, Everett and her family showed a different angle of the footage, and re-enacted the incident to try and prove it was an accident. 

Advertisement

Baton and starting block on track

I.C. Norcom High School student athlete Alaila Everett was seen smashing her baton on the head of Brookville High School junior Kaelen Tucker during a championship meet last week. (Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports)

“Her arm was literally hitting the baton like this until she got a little ahead and my arm got stuck like this,” Everett said while using a family member to represent Tucker during the incident in the clip. 

The Virginia High School League (VHSL) previously issued a statement to Fox News Digital on the matter. 

“The VHSL does not comment on individuals or disciplinary actions due to FERPA,” the league’s statement read. “The actions taken by the meet director to disqualify the runner were appropriate and correct. We thoroughly review every instance like this that involves player safety with the participating schools. The VHSL membership has always made it a priority to provide student-athletes with a safe environment for competition.”

Fox News Digital’s Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

Advertisement

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sports

Bengals make Ja’Marr Chase highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history with new contract extension

Published

on

Bengals make Ja’Marr Chase highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history with new contract extension

The Cincinnati Bengals have secured Joe Burrow’s top two targets for the next four years after agreeing to contract extensions with receivers Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, according to reports on Monday.

For Chase, his deal makes him the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history.

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase, #1, quarterback Joe Burrow, #9, and wide receiver Tee Higgins, #5, take the field as captains for the coin toss before the first quarter of the NFL Week 18 game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Cincinnati Bengals at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh on Saturday, Jan. 4, 2025. (IMAGN)

The lucrative deals put an end to the uncertainty surrounding the two receivers, whom Burrow has long advocated for, and put both players at the top of the pay scale for their respective positions. 

Advertisement

FOX Sports first reported the news of the deals. 

A source told The Associated Press that Chase inked a four-year contract extension worth $161 million, including $112 million guaranteed, putting him above Myles Garrett’s previous mark of $40 million a year. 

The deal comes as no surprise after director of player personnel Duke Tobin said at the NFL Scouting Combine last month that the goal was to give Chase a deal that would set the standard for NFL wideouts. 

Ja'Marr Chase and Tee Higgins

Ja’Marr Chasem, #1, and Tee Higgins, #5, celebrate a touchdown. (IMAGN)

WHO ARE THE NFL’S HIGHEST-PAID PLAYERS AT EACH POSITION?

“He is going to end up being the No. 1 paid non-quarterback in the league,” Tobin said at the time. “We’re there. Let’s get it done. The earlier we can do some of this stuff, the freer it gives us to build the rest of the team. We have other needs that we want to build, and so we want to get these kinds of things done early enough to where we can really focus on building out the rest of the football team, but they’re all priorities to us but the ones that aren’t signed, are the ones that are on the table first.”

Advertisement

Despite missing the playoffs for a second-straight season, Chase had a stellar performance on the field. He became just the sixth receiver in the Super Bowl era to lead the league in receptions, yards receiving, and touchdown catches in a single season. 

Tee Higgins and Ja'Marr Chase

Cincinnati Bengals wide receivers Tee Higgins, #5, and Ja’Marr Chase, #1, celebrate a touchdown during a game on Nov. 17, 2024. (IMAGN)

Higgins also reportedly signed a four-year contract extension worth $115 million, making him the highest-paid No. 2 receiver ever, FOX Sports reported. 

Drafted in the second round alongside Burrow, Higgins has proven himself a reliable No. 2. 

He had 73 receptions for 911 yards and tied for sixth this past season with 10 touchdown catches. 

Advertisement

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Continue Reading

Sports

Expect fights at the 2028 L.A. Olympics — and boxing fans can thank Uzbekistan

Published

on

Expect fights at the 2028 L.A. Olympics — and boxing fans can thank Uzbekistan

Boxing fans can thank Uzbekistan.

After a long period of uncertainty, boxing is on track to be included in the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics. Thomas Bach, president of the International Olympic Committee, said Monday the executive board he chairs approved including the sport in the 2028 program.

The full IOC Session of about 100 members must vote on the decision later this week at a meeting in Costa Navarino, Greece, but that is typically a formality. The session, which ends Friday, also will include the election of a successor to Bach, whose 12-year tenure comes to an end in June.

Ensuring boxing remains an Olympics sport was the topic Monday, however.

The IOC had set a deadline of this IOC Session to replace the Russian-led International Boxing Assn., which was banished from the Olympic movement in June 2023 over financial and integrity concerns. The IOC ran boxing at the last two Olympics in Paris and Tokyo but did not want to continue to do so.

Advertisement

Enter World Boxing, a Switzerland-based body founded in 2023 by an international collection of boxing officials that included many former IBA members.

Key to World Boxing gaining the trust of the IOC was the inclusion of Uzbekistan, the land-locked Central Asian country of 36 million people whose boxers won five of the 13 gold medals at the Paris Olympics. Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Guatemala and Laos joined World Boxing in November, increasing the body’s membership to 55.

In a statement at the time, World Boxing said, “The addition of Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, which are two of the world’s leading boxing nations, is a major coup for World Boxing.”

World Boxing President Boris van der Vorst told the Associated Press that the countries “recognize it is the only way to keep the Olympic dreams of their boxers alive.”

Only seven months earlier, the IOC had issued a warning that boxing was in jeopardy of being dropped.

Advertisement

“Because of the universality and high social inclusivity of boxing, the IOC wants it to continue to feature on the program of the Olympic Games,” the IOC said in April. “Unfortunately, this is far from certain for the Olympic Games L.A. 2028 because, for governance reasons, the IOC is not in a position to organize another Olympic boxing tournament.

“To keep boxing on the Olympic program, the IOC needs a recognized and reliable International Federation as a partner, as with all the other Olympic sports.”

That federation will officially become World Boxing, contingent on the imminent vote of the full IOC Session.

Bach, meanwhile, is winding down a tumultuous yet ultimately successful tenure as IOC president. Seven candidates are competing to replace him, including Olympic gold medalists Sebastian Coe of Great Britain — viewed by many as the most qualified candidate — and Zimbabwean swimmer and politician Kirsty Coventry.

Others seeking to become president are Juan Antonio Samaranch Salisachs (the son of former IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch), Prince Feisal al Hussein of Jordan, and the presidents of several Olympic sports bodies: Johan Eliasch from skiing, David Lappartient from cycling and Morinari Watanabe from gymnastics.

Advertisement

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

Sports

Remembering Greg Gumbel: Viewers relied on him from Selection Sunday to ‘One Shining Moment’

Published

on

Remembering Greg Gumbel: Viewers relied on him from Selection Sunday to ‘One Shining Moment’

The Athletic has live coverage of the 2025 Men’s March Madness Selection Show

Ever the gentleman, Greg Gumbel reached out to offer a welcoming handshake. Ernie Johnson responded with … a fist bump?

The awkward exchange — one Johnson still describes, a decade later, as “so embarrassing” — lasted maybe two seconds. To Johnson, a TV veteran, it felt like an eternity. And yet if it had to happen, for two seconds or 20, it’s agreed that no one other than Gumbel could have handled it so smoothly.

For more than a quarter of a century, Gumbel provided calm in the most chaotic stretch of the sports calendar, gently and seamlessly guiding NCAA Tournament viewers from one thrilling upset to another marquee matchup. He kicked off March Madness each year with the Sunday selection show and ended it by tossing to “One Shining Moment.”

“With certain shows, it’s all about, ‘let’s add a bunch of bells and whistles,’” Johnson told The Athletic. “But on Selection Sunday, all you needed was Greg Gumbel and a bracket. So much goes into running that show but honestly, you could have made it a single camera shoot: Here’s Greg, here’s the bracket, go.”

Advertisement

The tournament is here again, the first since the legendary sportscaster died on Dec. 28 at the age of 78 of cancer. Though he missed last March for the first time since he started in 1998 for undisclosed reasons — which people now know were related to his illness — many hoped he’d be back in studio this spring.

The descriptions of Gumbel from those who knew him best and worked with him longest are flattering and varied: Kind, classy, soothing, charismatic, surprisingly funny. Above all else, unflappable.

Unless, of course, Charles Barkley was in the studio.

“When you can get Greg Gumbel to laugh,” Barkley told The Athletic, “that’s when you know you’re having a good day.”

CBS and Turner merged in 2011, bringing TNT’s “Inside the NBA” crew into NCAA Tournament coverage, letting Barkley loose on college basketball fans, and Gumbel.

Advertisement

“I’ll never forget at the beginning, I’m not in studio anymore, I was back calling games, so I’m watching from the gym and I’m like, ‘Oh, my gosh what is happening?!’” basketball analyst Clark Kellogg, another mainstay in the CBS studio during the NCAA Tournament, recalled while laughing. “When it became a little bit of a circus, the look on Greg’s face, you could tell he was flummoxed — but only if you’d worked with him and knew him. He was so adaptable, he handled it so well.”

Led by Gumbel — and including Johnson and Clark after he moved back to the studio in 2014 — the new group quickly found a rhythm that worked, even if it continued to involve Barkley being Barkley. One particularly memorable on-air moment: Gumbel laughing uncontrollably in response to Barkley’s bizarre story about showering in his uniform.

According to Gumbel’s daughter, Michelle, her dad loved the chaotic pace of March Madness, and the fact that no script could ever keep up with the “non-stop action.” His widow, Marcy, pointed to her husband appreciating basketball’s unpredictability and that every spring, no matter what teams were ranked, if he called their names during Selection Sunday, they would have “a chance to chase their dream.”

But Gumbel was much more than one of college hoops’ most trusted and reassuring voices. Barkley considered him the king of dad jokes. He loved the Rolling Stones with an unmatched passion, attending more than 50 of their concerts. He despised golf. “It’s a stupid game,” he’d tell anyone who would listen. “You walk around and chase a ball — that’s not a sport!” He had a “huge, special laugh,” as CBS Sports president and CEO David Berson liked to describe it, as recognizable to viewers as much as his on-camera authenticity and warmth.

He was a trailblazer and a rare talent. He was also a husband, dad and grandpa.

Advertisement

Suzanne Smith, CBS Sports’ first female director who worked with Gumbel on football broadcasts starting in the early 1990s, put it this way: “Greg was always the coolest guy in the room — and he never knew it.”


Gumbel’s career accomplishments included being the first Black play-by-play announcer to call a major sporting event when he did so at Super Bowl XXXV in 2001. He won three Emmys, anchored three Olympic Games across two networks and led broadcast coverage of everything from the NFL to the NBA. Not that he ever wanted to brag about it.

“He is an iconic pioneer in the space, but he was so uninterested in talking about it that you’d tend to forget it,” Kellogg said. “It was a revelation even for me, especially as a fellow Black man. I had forgotten some of the trailblazing things he’d done. And believe me, he wasn’t going to tell you.”

At CBS, Harold Bryant became the first Black executive producer to oversee sports at any of the major broadcast networks. Bryant studied how Gumbel handled being “the first” himself.

“He didn’t want to be known as the groundbreaker,” Bryant said. “He wanted to let his presence speak for itself, and I took a lot from that.

Advertisement

“He would just say, ‘I want to be known as the best at my craft.’ By always being the best, he showed that anybody can do this job, it’s not limited to one particular type of person. He didn’t talk about wanting to break the mold.”

Barkley said Gumbel’s talent was always clear.

“For as long as he was in the business — and to go from sport to sport, which can’t be easy — you don’t have that type of career until you’re really, really good,” he said.

Despite sitting in the No. 1 chair, Gumbel never wanted the focus on him.

Years ago after calling a Colts game, Smith, Gumbel and the CBS crew wound up at St. Elmo, the Indianapolis steak house famous for its shrimp cocktail. After the group was told the wait was two, maybe three hours, a few people nudged Gumbel and suggested he drop his name. After all, his photo hung on the celebrity wall.

Advertisement

“He wanted no part of it,” Smith said. Afterward, when the crew insisted he take a photo standing by the photo wall, he was mostly mortified, asking his colleagues, “What are we doing? No one cares who I am!”


Throughout sports media there are “certain broadcasters who have that big-time voice,” Smith said. “Greg Gumbel was one of them. If he was calling it, you knew it was an important, special event.”

Despite that acknowledgment from nearly everyone in sports television, Gumbel constantly deferred to his teammates.

“He did love paving the way for others,” said Berson, the CBS Sports president. “That’s a big part of why he was such a good studio host because he was always looking to tee up his colleagues and make them look good.”

Gumbel understood how to deftly transition from one topic and analyst to another, smoothly taking viewers through an entire rundown. Perhaps best of all for everyone working with him, he never appeared rattled; what viewers experienced in their living rooms is the same thing producers experienced in the production truck and on set.

Advertisement

This was the case no matter the situation — a highlight not working, a promo not being read correctly or Barkley needing to be corralled.

“When we go off the rails, Ernie’s used to it,” Barkley said. “We do it probably 20 times a year with him on TNT. But Greg would only see us once a year and he had to react in real time. There’s a talent to that. He never seemed flustered.”

Numerous people who worked with Gumbel spoke about his ability to crack tension on set, though it never came at someone else’s expense.

Kellogg called him “a closet comedian.” Barkley recalled Gumbel told “10 dad jokes a day, and they were just awful. You never knew if you were laughing because it was funny or because they were so nerdy.”

For as much as Gumbel’s work revolved around sports, the stories imprinted on the minds of colleagues, friends and family are about life and conversations beyond the court or field.

Advertisement

Greg Gumbel was a private man, but his love of the Rolling Stones and his granddaughter, Riley, were no secret. (Courtesy of the Gumbel family)

Michael Gluc worked as Gumbel’s spotter during NFL games for more than two decades. They traded family stories and holiday cards and checked in with each other throughout the offseason. Gluc still catches himself waiting for Gumbel’s regular Friday email sharing dinner plans for the next day in whatever NFL city they were headed to.

“He loved the Stones, everyone knew that, he saw them in concert multiple times. And for 24 years, I couldn’t tell him I liked the Beatles more,” Gluc confessed, laughing. “I didn’t want to disappoint him.”

At the 1992 Winter Olympics, Gumbel’s first as CBS host, he de-boarded the plane in Albertville, France, and noticed Smith struggling. On crutches after breaking her foot, she couldn’t juggle her luggage. Gumbel, who’d yet to meet Smith, rushed to help.

“There were probably 200 people getting off that plane, and this guy is a superstar at CBS, running over to help someone he doesn’t know,” Smith said.

At the 2011 Final Four in Houston, Berson shared a car with Gumbel to Reliant Stadium. Gumbel asked Berson about his interests outside of sports. They spent the entire ride trading book recommendations after discovering they preferred the same suspense authors like Vince Flynn, Harlan Coben and Sue Grafton (Gumbel also recommended John Sandford and Lee Child).

Advertisement

And yet there is no question that the true highlight of Gumbel’s life came in 2012 when his granddaughter Riley was born. Though Gumbel was an intensely private person — numerous people at CBS did not know he’d been diagnosed with cancer until shortly before his death — one topic he never shied from was Riley.

“The pictures and videos,” Kellogg said, “were unceasing.”

Riley’s favorite memories with her grandpa include dance-offs in the kitchen, telling knock-knock jokes and his insistence that she also get familiar with the Rolling Stones.

“He would always send me his favorite songs that he’d think I’d like, and I ended up loving each one,” Riley wrote in an email to The Athletic. “Whenever I hear one of those songs on the radio, such as ‘Brown Sugar,’ I always think of him and how he is communicating with me from above.”

A few years ago, when Riley was in the fifth grade, her school put together a morning show. When it was Riley’s turn to anchor, her parents recorded it and sent it to Grandpa for feedback.

Advertisement

Her next time in front of the camera, she shined.

“I remembered all the things he had taught me,” she said. “Talk slower, pronounce words with diction and always smile.”

As March Madness tips this week, Gumbel’s absence will be felt. Michelle attended her first and only Final Four with her dad in Houston in 2011, proudly “watching him do what he’s always done best.”

“I feel fortunate to have had the opportunity to grow up watching my dad all these years,” Michelle said via email. “I will greatly miss his send-offs after calling the game or hosting, saying goodnight with a heartfelt, ‘Goodbye and so long.’”

(Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; Photos: Kyle Terada / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Advertisement

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending