
Lawrence valedictorian and athlete credits the Boys and Girls Club for his success
This week's BZ MVP of the Week is the brother of an MVP from last year and like him, he credits the Boys and Girls Club in Lawrence, Massachusetts for his success.
Argenis Luciano has always followed in the footsteps of his brother, Obbie. When he was 7 years old, he followed him to the Lawrence Boys and Girls Club.
Class of 2025's valedictorian
"He was my inspiration. I've always seen him doing his thing on the basketball court," said Luciano. "And that led me to try basketball and then to go on to be in the Homework Room a lot and that's where I met Jonathan Glesmann."
Luciano said the Homework Room is what made him who he is.
"The constant focus on homework and education is in this room," said Glesmann, a volunteer at the Boys and Girls Club. "Us volunteers, we stress that too. We hold education on a very high level. And it'll solve a lot of problems, not only personally, but in the world."
Luciano's education path led him to become valedictorian of Lawrence High School's Class of 2025.
"It was a lot of hardship and a lot of sacrifice that I had to make. But with my great support system, I was able to go through with it," said Luciano. When he was asked what made him get better with academics, he said, "Failing. I learned that failure is a step to grow."
Luciano said his inspiration is his family, brothers Obbie and Delvis Roman and his sister Clairis. His father Nairobert owns a barbershop and his mother Rosa works two jobs.
"Seeing my mom struggle with bills, you know, there's just financial pressures that are overwhelming on her," said Luciano. "So I try to help out as much as I can. They mean everything to me. I mean, that's my family. I love them. So everything I do is in honor of them."
Heading to Brown on track and field scholarship
Luciano is on the track and field team, where he throws discus. Last week, he captured the Division I State Championship at Tufts University. Quite a feat considering he didn't pick up a discus until his freshman year, at the urging of his health teacher.
"It's about discipline, it's about repetition, it's about being coachable," said Lawrence High School teacher and throwing coach Angel Pabon. "And he's very coachable and he listens very well." When asked how far he thinks Luciano can go in life, Pabon said, "I don't think there's a limit for him."
"His leadership ability is second to none. He's been incredible in bringing along our younger athletes," said Lawrence High School track and field head coach Jonathan Manuel Speing. "And just, as a competitor, I've never met anybody more competitive than him."
Luciano has also been named the Lawrence Boys and Girls Club's Youth of the Year. After watching his brother Obbie earn a scholarship to Yale University last year, he will be heading to Brown University in the fall on a track and field scholarship.
"They are such great role models for the rest of the kids here at the club, right?" said Markus Fischer, the executive director of the Lawrence Boys and Girls Club. "It shows them that this can be done. If you're applying yourself, you're working hard, staying focused. You can accomplish things."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
6 minutes ago
- New York Times
Fever balance scoring, rout Sky 79-52 without Caitlin Clark, coach Stephanie White
CHICAGO — Austin Kelly first met Stephanie White over a decade ago, when Kelly's future wife, Karima Christmas-Kelly, began playing for the Indiana Fever in 2012. Kelly would hang around the team and sometimes sit in on Fever practices. Occasionally, he would even take part in them as a practice player. Advertisement A lot has changed with the Fever since. And yet, for all that's different around the franchise — especially in the last two seasons as Indiana has evolved into the WNBA's most popular team — plenty has stayed the same. On Saturday night against the Chicago Sky, Kelly, an Indiana assistant coach, slid into the lead chair, serving as the Fever's acting head coach with White absent due to personal reasons. Christmas-Kelly, a fellow assistant on the Fever, was a few seats down on the bench. So too was another key member of Indiana's 2012 title-winning roster, Briann January, who, like Kelly, is also in her first season as a Fever assistant. 'We all got history,' Kelly said. Even without White, the trio has helped the Fever climb back to .500, as Indiana defeated Chicago, 79-52, in the first WNBA game played at the United Center. White was not Indiana's only notable absence, however. The Fever are now 2-2 in games without star guard Caitlin Clark, who could return as soon as Tuesday as she continues rehabbing her left quad strain. Aari McDonald pokes it free and cashes in with her third 3-pointer 🔥 — Indiana Fever (@IndianaFever) June 8, 2025 Despite the absences of Clark and White, Indiana's offense was efficient as the ball pinballed from player to player with the Fever recording 14 assists on its first 20 made field goals. They finished with 19 assists on 27 baskets, shooting 45.8 percent from the field and 40.7 percent from 3-point range. Four players finished in double figures for Indiana as its balanced cast of role players stepped up in the absence of its coach and star guard. Kelsey Mitchell led the Fever with 17 points, Natasha Howard scored 13 and grabbed five rebounds, while Aari McDonald and Aliyah Boston scored 12 and 11 points, respectively. Advertisement 'It's special,' Kelly said after the win. 'It's something I'll never forget. They did a hell of a job for 40 minutes of executing the game plan. And I thought when we had lulls, the communication out there was really good, they picked each other up when it was needed.' Chicago's production paled in comparison. The Sky had only six assists on 11 made field goals at halftime, as they trailed 41-28 at the break. Indiana's lead grew to 17 midway through the third quarter as Mitchell darted to the rim for another layup and two of her team-high 17 points. It ballooned to 29 after three quarters, and 30 early in the fourth quarter before Chicago chipped away. Saturday night was supposed to be a celebration inside United Center, as the Sky were playing in the home of the NBA's Chicago Bulls for the first time in franchise history in front of what was expected to be a Sky record crowd. But the tenor of the night, and perhaps Chicago's season, changed abruptly as veteran Sky guard Courtney Vandersloot suffered a knee injury at the 5:29 minute mark of the first quarter on a drive to the basket. Vandersloot, the franchise's all-time leading scorer who returned to Chicago this past offseason after two seasons with the New York Liberty, was carried off the floor, unable to put any weight on her right leg and did not return. The Sky's offense appeared to not recover either. "The sky is falling in Chicago!" DeWanna Bonner knocks down the three to put us up 24 in the third. — Indiana Fever (@IndianaFever) June 8, 2025 Kelly and White have worked together for a few seasons, first from 2019-2021, when Kelly was White's director of recruiting when she was the head coach at Vanderbilt. He was later on White's coaching staff during White's two seasons with the Connecticut Sun. 'We're prepared for this moment. I've worked for Steph a handful of years, and she wants to prepare all of her assistants to be head coaches,' Kelly said. 'And so she puts a lot on our plate, and she allows us to grow and be our own head coach in our areas.' Advertisement Kelly plays a critical role in Indiana's offensive success. Heading into Saturday's matchup, Indiana was No. 4 in offensive rating, even with its star guard missing the last four games. He has learned plenty from White and former Fever coach/general manager Lin Dunn. 'Keep it simple,' he said. 'Keeping it simple so your players are on the same page,' Everyone was aligned for the Fever on Saturday night. And now, as Indiana prepares for the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday, with Clark and White's statuses both uncertain, the task will remain the same. (Photo of Natasha Howard: Daniel Bartel / Getty Images)

Associated Press
11 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Caleb Durbin hits a walk-off homer to give the Brewers 4-3 victory over the Padres
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Caleb Durbin hit a walk-off homer leading off the ninth inning as the Milwaukee Brewers rebounded after squandering a late lead to beat the San Diego Padres 4-3 on Saturday night. After a two-run, two-out double by Luis Arraez tied it in the top of the ninth, Durbin ended it by sending the first pitch from David Morgan (0-1) over the wall in left-center field. It was the rookie third baseman's second career homer — and first since April 21. Milwaukee's Trevor Megill (1-2) picked up the victory after blowing a save opportunity in the ninth. Elias Díaz hit a one-out single, Xander Bogaerts drew a two-out walk and both runners advanced on a double steal. Arraez tied it by connecting on a 3-2 pitch and hitting a double into the left-field corner. Milwaukee had taken the lead with two runs in the eighth. Rhys Hoskins' bases-loaded sacrifice fly brought home Christian Yelich, then Isaac Collins singled home William Contreras. The Brewers tied it at 1 in the seventh when Jake Bauers' sacrifice fly brought home Collins with an unearned run. San Diego opened the scoring in the fourth inning. Jackson Merrill hit a leadoff single, advanced to second on a Jose Iglesias walk and came home on a two-out single to left from Elias Díaz. Padres starter Stephen Kolek pitched 5 2/3 shutout innings. Milwaukee's José Quintana allowed one run in five innings. Key moment After Arraez tied it with his two-out double in the ninth, he stole third as the Padres threatened to take the lead. Megill regrouped and got out of the inning by retiring Manny Machado on a grounder to shortstop Andruw Monasterio. Key stat After going scoreless in the first 15 innings of this series, the Brewers scored four runs over the last three innings Saturday. Up next Ryan Bergert (1-0, 2.00 ERA) was set to start for San Diego on Sunday against Freddy Peralta (5-4, 2.92) in the series finale. ___ AP MLB:

Associated Press
11 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Trump attends UFC championship fight in New Jersey, taking a break from politics, Musk feud
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — President Donald Trump walked out to a thunderous standing ovation just ahead of the start of the UFC pay-per-view card at the Prudential Center on Saturday night, putting his public feud with tech billionaire Elon Musk on hold to instead watch the fierce battles inside the cage. Trump was accompanied by UFC President Dana White and the pair headed to their cageside seats to Kid Rock's 'American Bad Ass.' Trump and White did the same for UFC's card last November at Madison Square Garden, only then they were joined by Musk. Trump shook hands with fans and supporters — a heavyweight lineup that included retired boxing champion Mike Tyson — on his way to the cage. Trump was joined by his daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, along with son Eric Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Trump shook hands with the UFC broadcast team that included Joe Rogan. Rogan hosted Trump on his podcast for hours in the final stages of the campaign last year. UFC fans went wild for Trump and held mobile devices in their outstretched arms to snap pictures of him. Trump arrived in time for the start of a card set to include two championship fights. Julianna Peña and Merab Dvalishvili were scheduled to each defend their 135-pound championships. UFC fighter Kevin Holland won the first fight with Trump in the building, scaled the cage and briefly chatted with the President before his post-fight interview. ___ AP sports: