Tennis talent: Vote for The Gardner News Girls Tennis Player of the Year
Gardner-area spring athletes displayed great talent this season, from top scorers on the lacrosse field to the best defenders on the baseball diamond. These individuals stood apart from the rest and it's time to give them the recognition they deserve.
Advertisement
Readers can vote in the poll and results will be combined with staff votes to determine the Girls Lacrosse Player of the Year. Check out the nominees below.
Jadalise Bonaparte, Monty Tech
Bonaparte contributed as both a singles and doubles player for Monty Tech, winning 50% of her matches this season.
Maeve Hanson, Monty Tech
Hanson was a versatile player for the Bulldogs. She mainly played doubles alongside Jadalise Bonaparte but also switched into singles when needed. She won 46% of her matches.
Elizabeth Matheson, Quabbin
Matheson was the other half of Quabbin's first doubles pair. The duo went undefeated up until playoffs together, developing a strong bond and unity in the position.
Advertisement
Madelyn Stauder, Quabbin
Stauder played in first doubles alongside Elizabeth Matheson. The pair was undefeated in regular season together and worked hard to define her role as a doubles player.
Ella Swanson, Monty Tech
The senior captain was a key leader for Monty Tech in its first year as a solo program after co-oping with Gardner. She won 82% of her matches this season and was a go-to for helping and skill-building with newer players.
Farrah Wojcik, Quabbin
Wojcik shined as Quabbin's first singles player, ending the season with a record of 12-3. Panthers' coach Garth Weiderman described her style of play as "a superpower to slowly break down her opponent without them even realizing what is happening."
This article originally appeared on Gardner News: Which of these six tennis stars is TGN Player of the Year?
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Connecticut Sun to propose new options to WNBA after league resisted sale that would relocate team to Boston: Report
After the WNBA pushed back on what would have been a record-breaking $325 million sale of the Connecticut Sun to a group led by Boston Celtics minority owner Steve Pagliuca, the organization is expected to counter with multiple proposals to the league, according to a Tuesday report from ESPN's Alexa Philippou and Ramona Shelburne. Pagliuca reportedly intended to buy the Sun and, as early as 2027, relocate the team to Boston, where it has already sold out TD Garden for select games two years in a row. But the W took issue with the potential transaction. The league office stated that the WNBA's board of governors makes relocation decisions, not individual teams. Also, since Boston didn't submit an expansion bid over the past three years, it doesn't have priority over interested cities that have already gone through the expansion process, according to the league, ESPN reported. Per ESPN's report, this frustrated the Mohegan tribe, which has owned the Sun since it purchased the Orlando Miracle after the 2002 season, rebranded the team and moved it to Uncasville, Connecticut. The tribe, according to ESPN sources, believes the W is trying to control how much the team is sold for and where it will be moved, whereas the tribe wants to maximize the franchise's value, just as it would in the sale to Pagliuca's group. After all, a professional women's team has never sold for as much as $325 million before. Prior to that bid being reported on Aug. 2, though, the WNBA offered to purchase the Sun for $250 million and not charge the new buyer an additional relocation fee, per ESPN, which explained that such an arrangement would allow the league to essentially hand the team off to one of its preferred expansion cities. The tribe, the W's first non-NBA owner, would like to keep the Sun in New England. Meanwhile, the WNBA would eventually consider a Boston team in a later round of expansion, per the ESPN report — which includes that the league prefers new Celtics owner Bill Chisholm owning the city's WNBA franchise, too — but Boston has to first submit an expansion bid in that seemingly separate timeline. In the meantime, the Mohegan tribe is proposing sale options to the league that reportedly include a full sale to Pagliuca's group; a sale to a group spearheaded by former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry, who would move the Sun to Hartford, Connecticut, per ESPN; a sale of only minority stake in the franchise; or a sale to the league but for the record-breaking $325 million.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Connecticut Sun to propose new options to WNBA after league resisted $325 million, Boston-based sale: Report
After the WNBA pushed back on what would have been a record-breaking $325 million sale of the Connecticut Sun to a group led by Boston Celtics minority owner Steve Pagliuca, the organization is expected to counter with multiple proposals to the league, according to a Tuesday report from ESPN's Alexa Philippou and Ramona Shelburne. Pagliuca reportedly intended to buy the Sun and, as early as 2027, relocate the team to Boston, where it has already sold out TD Garden for select games two years in a row. But the W took issue with the potential transaction. The league office stated that the WNBA's board of governors makes relocation decisions, not individual teams. Also, since Boston didn't submit an expansion bid over the past three years, it doesn't have priority over interested cities that have already gone through the expansion process, according to the league, ESPN reported. Per ESPN's report, this frustrated the Mohegan tribe, which has owned the Sun since it purchased the Orlando Miracle after the 2002 season, rebranded the team and moved it to Uncasville, Connecticut. The tribe, according to ESPN sources, believes the W is trying to control how much the team is sold for and where it will be moved, whereas the tribe wants to maximize the franchise's value, just as it would in the sale to Pagliuca's group. After all, a professional women's team has never sold for as much as $325 million before. Prior to that bid being reported on Aug. 2, though, the WNBA offered to purchase the Sun for $250 million and not charge the new buyer an additional relocation fee, per ESPN, which explained that such an arrangement would allow the league to essentially hand the team off to one of its preferred expansion cities. The tribe, the W's first non-NBA owner, would like to keep the Sun in New England. Meanwhile, the WNBA would eventually consider a Boston team in a later round of expansion, per the ESPN report — which includes that the league prefers new Celtics owner Bill Chisholm owning the city's WNBA franchise, too — but Boston has to first submit an expansion bid in that seemingly separate timeline. In the meantime, the Mohegan tribe is proposing sale options to the league that reportedly include a full sale to Pagliuca's group; a sale to a group spearheaded by former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry, who would move the Sun to Hartford, Connecticut, per ESPN; a sale of only minority stake in the franchise; or a sale to the league but for the record-breaking $325 million.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Padres' Luis Arraez is like the Warriors' Steph Curry of MLB in this amazing stat
Padres' Luis Arraez is like the Warriors' Steph Curry of MLB in this amazing stat originally appeared on The Sporting News No one in baseball makes contact like Luis Arraez. No one in basketball makes free throws like Stephen Curry. And that's what the San Diego Padres' lefty hitter and the Golden State Warriors' legendary sharpshooter have in common. On Tuesday, baseball stats expert Ryan Spaeder shared the following post on X: Arraez swings and misses at a lower rate than Curry misses free throws at, and Curry is the greatest free throw shooter by percentage in NBA history. For those keeping score at home: Baseballs are coming toward Arraez at insane speeds with incredible movement. The basket isn't moving anywhere for Curry. This is not to say Arraez is a future Hall of Fame lock like Curry. These are different skills, only one part of these magnificent games. MORE: Juan Soto, Josh Naylor and Cal Raleigh are making stolen bases cool again The thing Curry has that Arraez doesn't is the home run swing. Curry's shooting prowess extends beyond the 3-point arc, where he has made more trifectas than any player in the history of the planet. Arraez, in 3,109 career at bats, has hit 34 home runs. It's one of the lowest home run rates of any player to overlap with Arraez's career. That doesn't lessen how cool Arraez is. He's a throwback player. In an era of swinging for the fences, Arraez simply swings to hit the ball, and he does it excellently. He has three career batting titles. No, he's not Curry. But to watch someone perform a task at such prodigious rates is cool, even if it's just shooting free throws or the simple act of getting the bat to the baseball. When sports can crossover, it makes these games we love even that much more fun to follow. MORE: BYU's new starting QB is a true freshman named Bear who wears number 47