2 Football Players Killed On Way To Practice, 'Horrific'
Two football players were tragically killed on the way to practice this week.
A pair of high school football players in Mississippi were killed on the way to practice earlier this week. They were reportedly involved in a devastating two-car crash, involving a police officer. Both of the high school football players were pronounced dead.
The crash happened just before 7 a.m. Tuesday on Yale Street in Cleveland, Mississippi. Brionna Brown, a 29-year-old Bolivar County deputy, collided with another truck, driven by a high school football player.
Two high school football players were pronounced dead in the accident.
"We ask that you pray for all the families involved in today's tragic events, as well as our BA Family. We are all hurting at the loss of two of our own. We also ask that you pray for those at the Bolivar County Sheriff's Office and the families involved," their school, Bayou Academy, shared.
From the report:
That crash happened just before 7 a.m. Tuesday on Yale Street in Cleveland, Mississippi, according to the Mississippi Highway Patrol (MHP).
The highway patrol said 29-year-old Brionna Brown, a Bolivar County deputy, was headed west down Yale Street when her truck collided with another truck that was being driven by a teenager from Cleveland headed in the opposite direction.
Two Bayou Academy students inside that vehicle, on their way to football practice, died at the scene, according to The Delta News. MHP said the crash also left Brown with serious injuries, but the deputy is expected to recover.
Our thoughts are with the friends and family members of everyone involved in the tragic accident.
May the two football players who were killed on their way to practice rest in peace.
2 Football Players Killed On Way To Practice, 'Horrific' first appeared on The Spun on Jul 13, 2025
This story was originally reported by The Spun on Jul 13, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

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

Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tupelo man charged with stalking in Oxford
OXFORD – A Tupelo man was rearrested Monday and charged with stalking, after he continued to harass a victim, even with a protection order and being arrested Friday for the same thing. An Oxford police parking and code enforcement officer witnessed a verbal altercation on North Lamar Boulevard Friday July 11 around 4:15 p.m. The suspect, later identified as Mitchell Wren, 23, of Tupelo, tried to flee the area as the officer approached. He was located shortly by responding patrol officers while trying to leave Oxford. After the initial investigation determined that Wren had been cyberstalking and harassing the victim, he was arrested, transported to the Lafayette County Detention Center, and given a bond. After posting bond July 14, Wren violated a domestic abuse protection order by continuing to text and call the victim. Oxford police obtained a new arrest warrant and Wren was later taken into custody by the Monroe County Sheriff's Office and booked into the Monroe County Jail at 1:40 p.m., where he will remain incarcerated until he can be released into the custody of the Oxford Police Department. This case remains under investigation.
Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
5 charged in assault that left a transgender girl with a broken jaw in D.C. juvenile detention center
A transgender girl housed in a male unit at Washington, D.C.'s Youth Services Center was hospitalized with a broken jaw after a fight last week that also injured another teen, D.C.'s NBC affiliate WRC reports. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. The two separate fights broke out on July 7 at the Northeast D.C. juvenile detention facility, which was overcapacity by 17 people that day and remains so as of Monday, according to government data. Five teens have been charged in connection with the assault involving the transgender girl, the station reports. Related: Trump will ban trans women from women's prisons by removing trans inmates from rape protections The Youth Services Center is the District's secure detention facility for male and female youth held by court order from the D.C. Superior Court's Family Court Division. The 88-bed facility provides 24-hour care, custody, and supervision, housing youth awaiting court proceedings, those adjudicated, and those pending further court action, as well as youth charged as adults, according to the Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services. It remains unclear whether DYRS has a policy for housing transgender youth in juvenile detention. The Advocate has contacted DYRS, the office of D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, and the office of Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Lindsey Appiah for comment. This story is developing. This article originally appeared on Advocate: 5 charged in assault that left a transgender girl with a broken jaw in D.C. juvenile detention center Trump will ban trans women from women's prisons by removing trans inmates from rape protections
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Former MLB player convicted of murder in California home invasion
A former Major League Baseball pitcher has been found guilty of murdering his father-in-law in what prosecutors called a financially motivated attack. Daniel Serafini, 51, was convicted Monday of first-degree murder in the 2021 shooting death of Robert Gary Spohr, 70. The jury also found him guilty of attempted murder of Spohr's wife, Wendy Wood, and first-degree burglary. According to evidence presented at trial, Serafini entered the Spohrs' home on June 5, 2021, where security footage captured a hooded figure arriving three hours before anyone called 911. Prosecutors said Serafini secretly waited inside the house with a .22 caliber gun for three hours before attacking. Two young children, ages 3 years and 8 months, were in the home during the shooting. Wood survived the initial attack but later died by suicide in 2023, with her family saying the shooting's trauma led to her death. MORE: Hard drives with Beyoncé's unreleased music stolen in Atlanta The case centered on a $1.3 million dispute over a ranch renovation project. Text messages revealed Serafini had written "I'm gonna kill them one day" in a message mentioning $21,000, according to ABC News' Sacramento affiliate KXTV. The victims had given $90,000 to Serafini's wife the day of the shootings. Serafini's baseball career included playing for six different teams after being drafted in the first round by the Minnesota Twins in 1992. His career ended in 2007. That same year, he was suspended for 50 games for using performance-enhancing drugs. A second defendant, Samantha Scott, 33, who was described as both a close friend of Serafini's wife and his lover, pleaded guilty to being an accessory in February 2025. "This was a heinous and calculated crime," Adrienne Spohr, one of the victim's daughters, told KXTV, noting that her parents had been "incredibly generous" to Serafini and his wife. Serafini will remain in custody without bail until his sentencing, scheduled for Aug. 18. He could face life in prison.