logo
Defending flag football champion Orange Lutheran aims to achieve even more this season

Defending flag football champion Orange Lutheran aims to achieve even more this season

Last year's theme for the Orange Lutheran flag football team was 'Set the Standard.'
The Lancers did just that, finishing 23-2 and defeating Newport Harbor 20-18 to win the inaugural Southern Section Division 1 title and secure the No. 1 ranking in California.
Coach Kristen Sherman revealed this season's theme is 'Raise the Bar' and, having graduated only one starter, it looks like her team could be even better than a year ago. It may have to be if it wants to defend its crown as the talent throughout the Southland is deeper than ever.
'We're hoping to reach a higher level this year,' said Sherman, whose husband, Rod, is head coach of Orange Lutheran's football squad. 'These new rules change a lot. I may have preferred the old rules, but the girls like punting and returning, so I think it'll be more fun for them.'
Since defensive players will now be able to line up six yards closer to the ball, an elite quarterback will be essential, and the Lancers have the best in Makena Cook, the reigning CIF player of the year. On Aug. 6, the two-sport athlete committed to Georgia for soccer, but her focus right now is on a repeat.
'We're definitely better ... but it's a clean slate,' Cook said after tossing six touchdown passes against host Long Beach Poly in a scrimmage Thursday — her first competitive game since November.
As a sophomore last season, Cook passed for 6,611 yards and 97 touchdowns, 20 of them caught by All-CIF receiver Julia Oberholtzer (now a senior) who also led the defense with 114 flag pulls and eight interceptions.
The Lancers open the season Wednesday at Woodbridge. Sherman once again filled the schedule with quality opponents, including a Sept. 4 clash with Irvine Northwood, which took the Division 2 title last fall thanks to Natalie Keith, who earned division player of the year honors after throwing for five touchdowns in the final against Trabuco Hills.
Sherman predicted Trinity League competition will be a 'smack in the face.'
JSerra's roster features three incoming freshmen who are members of the 15U junior national team — quarterback Katherine Meier and wide receiver/defensive backs Tessa Russell and Ava Irwin.
Kendra Hansen will be a scoring threat every time she touches the ball for Mater Dei, and running the offense at Santa Margarita will be All-CIF senior Madi Lam, who quarterbacked her Conquer Chargers club team at the NFL Flag Championships in Canton, Ohio, in July.
Division 1 finalist Newport Harbor graduated All-CIF quarterback Maia Helmar, but sophomore Scarlett Guyser will take over the position. Cooper Dick (a Texas Tech soccer commit) and Maddy Michel are set to be her primary targets. Skylie Cid led the team in touchdowns as a freshman. The Sailors beat Orange Lutheran in triple overtime in a tournament at Beckman over the summer, but Cook did not play.
Huntington Beach has all the offensive firepower it needs to challenge Newport Harbor for Sunset League supremacy with the return of Roxie Shaia, who threw for 7,465 yards and 99 touchdowns in 2024, and receiver/safety Taylor Savage, who racked up 1,491 receiving yards.
Last fall, Ventura lost a shootout to Huntington Beach in the Division 1 quarterfinals, but the Cougars could ride the arm of senior Ava Ortman to a deeper playoff run in 2025. Statistically, she was one of the best in the section with 6,974 yards, 110 touchdowns and a 141.2 rating. In its opener Thursday, Ventura takes on Camarillo, which has one of the top two-way players in Ventura County in Stella Alessi (41 touchdowns and 14 interceptions last season).
Long Beach Poly will seek to three-peat in the Moore League, but it will be a taller task without All-CIF quarterback Kenzie Paimany, who tore her anterior cruciate ligament playing soccer. She threw for 60 touchdowns last year. The most versatile player for the Jackrabbits is senior receiver/linebacker Ki'ele Ho-Ching, who has committed to Oklahoma for softball.
'We're hoping she can come back towards the end of the season,' Poly coach Rob Shock said about Paimany. 'We take every game as a tough game. Nothing's given, everything's earned.'
Lakewood St. Joseph suffered only one defeat in 22 games last year, however, the Jesters are poised to go further with junior signal-caller Lexi Loya (5,377 yards and 73 touchdowns last fall) throwing to sophomore receiver Jaclyn Brennan (76 catches for 985 yards and 16 touchdowns).
The City Section is up to 93 teams, and the one to beat appears to be Narbonne, led by its All-City two-wayers Faith Ugoje, Shayla Rivera and Luna Orozco.
The Gauchos beat King/Drew 7-0 for the Division I title last year and twice defeated the 2024 Open Division winner Banning in the summer. Ugoje was chosen Division I player of the year after rushing for 1,660 yards, catching 60 passes for 828 yards and scoring 23 touchdowns as a freshman under City coach of the year Sherrelle Holmes.
Also contending for the Marine League crown will be is two-time Open finalist San Pedro.
Teams to watch: Orange Lutheran, JSerra, Santa Margarita, Newport Harbor, Mater Dei, Huntington Beach, Northwood, Eastvale Roosevelt, Ventura, Narbonne, Lakewood St. Joseph, Aliso Niguel, Trabuco Hills, Anaheim Canyon.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bills sign former Georgia RB James Cook to massive four-year deal
Bills sign former Georgia RB James Cook to massive four-year deal

USA Today

time7 hours ago

  • USA Today

Bills sign former Georgia RB James Cook to massive four-year deal

The contract dispute between the Buffalo Bills and star running back James Cook is now over. Both parties can shift their focus to try to win a Super Bowl. Cook and the Bills have agreed to a four-year, $48 million contract, with $30 million guaranteed. This new deal follows a tense offseason where Cook publicly expressed his desire for a new contract and sat out of training camp. However, he returned to practice on Tuesday before the deal was finalized. Cook wanted $15 million per season, but he did not end up getting quite that much. Still, it is a nice pay day for the former Georgia Bulldogs running back. "This is the place that drafted me," Cook said upon signing his contract extension. "The fans are good, the community is good, and just the team we got, man, we play as one. We are brothers and we have a good bond. It all shows they got my back." Cook is coming off two highly productive seasons, having rushed for over 1,000 yards in both. He also set a career high with 16 touchdowns in 2024. This new contract ensures that the Bills will keep their star running back for the foreseeable future. Cook is the latest running backs get paid. He joins Kyren Williams, who received a three-year, $33 million deal with $23 million guaranteed. The Bills open their regular season against the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday, Sept. 14 at 8:20 p.m. ET.

Bills' James Cook Becomes Player To Watch In Sunday's Preseason Game
Bills' James Cook Becomes Player To Watch In Sunday's Preseason Game

Newsweek

time14 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Bills' James Cook Becomes Player To Watch In Sunday's Preseason Game

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. It's time for James Cook to put his newly earned money where his mouth has been for all of training camp with the Buffalo Bills. The two-time Pro Bowl running back has been very vocal for most of training camp about wanting a new contract and holding in until he gets he wants. He now has a four-year contract worth $48 million. Now, he needs to go out there and perform, starting with Sunday's preseason game against the Chicago Bears. KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JANUARY 26: James Cook #4 of the Buffalo Bills dives for a touchdown during the third quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC Championship Game at GEHA Field at... KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JANUARY 26: James Cook #4 of the Buffalo Bills dives for a touchdown during the third quarter against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC Championship Game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on January 26, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. MoreWith teams only having three preseason games now (unless they get the Hall of Fame Game), preseason game No. 2 is the one where starters see a considerable amount of reps. Cook obviously didn't play in the preseason opener, but he needs to showcase some solid runs in however many carries he gets on Sunday. Preseason games obviously don't count, but that doesn't mean Cook can get away with seven carries for 19 yards on Sunday. It won't sit well with the organization either if he goes out there and doesn't have much to show for himself. Cook has something to prove this season as well for the Bills as he just eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark last season. Getting on track to put up more yards starts in the preseason. Will things be rusty at first with Cook? Of course, and nobody is saying otherwise. However, he may not get many reps (if any) in the final preseason game, so Sunday's contest may be his only game action before the wins and losses count. Cook certainly needs to make the most of it. More NFL: Jets Predicted to Cut Former Michigan Running Back Donovan Edwards

Hard Knocks checks box on James Cook hold-in
Hard Knocks checks box on James Cook hold-in

NBC Sports

time18 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Hard Knocks checks box on James Cook hold-in

The first episode of Hard Knocks featuring the Buffalo Bills ignored the contract battle with running back James Cook. In episode two, it was unavoidable. Still, the 55-minute installment kept the issue to a minimum, checking the box and moving on. 'The business side can be rough,' narrator Liev Schreiber says within the first ten minutes of the episode. 'G.M. Brandon Beane is dealing with his first hold-in in nine seasons. Star running back James Cook is in the final year of the contract he signed as a rookie. Cook wants his next one to be a bit bigger.' That's accurate, but it glosses over the fact that the contract Cook signed was non-negotiable. It was driven by his draft slot, and he had no power over the money he has been paid through three seasons, or the money he would have been paid in 2025. 'Contract disputes can be awkward,' Schreiber adds. 'No one likes them. But at least they've evolved. Cook is with his teammates every day, present like a pro.' 'The old-school way of holding out is the player wasn't around,' G.M. Brandon Beane says in the next shot. 'They were working out at some other facility, they're not in meetings. The hold-in that's kind of going on these days is, the player is in meetings participating in most everything except actual practice itself.' Again, that's accurate. But it's a direct product of changes to the Collective Bargaining Agreement that make it much harder for players who are under contract to withhold services by staying away. So some of them show up and choose not to practice, citing business considerations or an injury — real, embellished, or imagined. 'Our philosophy is to draft, develop, and re-sign our own,' Beane says. 'And it starts with ownership, them giving us the resources to do that. The perfect world is James back on the practice field and, at some point, you know, we're able to keep him here in Buffalo. It doesn't have to happen now. I'm hopeful a year from now that James Cook is wearing the Buffalo Bills' red, white, and blue. I love James so much, you feel like he's a guy you drafted and developed. And a lot of times, these guys feel your sons or your younger brothers, however you look at it. I also have to manage the whole team and the cap and the cash and all those things, and so the whole puzzle has to work together.' And that was it. No further mention was made of the situation, even though it was the biggest news coming from the preseason opener, on which the latter phases of the episode focused. Bills coach Sean McDermott wanted Cook to play in the game, and Cook declined. Think about that one. The most newsworthy aspect of the Bills' first preseason game was swept completely under the rug by Hard Knocks. It's no surprise. The Bills didn't want to do Hard Knocks, and the Bills undoubtedly exercised their ability to leave anything they wanted on the cutting-room floor. They surely would have preferred to ignore Cook altogether. That would have been pretty ridiculous. Then again, not mentioning his refusal to honor the head coach's request to play in the preseason opener was kind of ridiculous, too.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store