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CBS News
03-05-2025
- Sport
- CBS News
Lacrosse captain from Massachusetts also introducing children to the water as a surf instructor
Old Rochester lacrosse captain at home on the field and on the water Old Rochester lacrosse captain at home on the field and on the water Old Rochester lacrosse captain at home on the field and on the water The captain of the Old Rochester Regional High School lacrosse team in Mattapoisett, Massachusetts is helping his teammates on the field and also teaches a completely different sport in the water. When senior David Lally is on the lacrosse field, he's in attack mode, averaging four goals a game for the Bulldogs. Captain of lacrosse team "He's really skilled, I think a lot of people take notes from him in practice and in games and try to add his type of things into their games," said senior lacrosse player Caleb Bousquet, who's known Lally since first grade. Growing up as the middle child, lacrosse was a common bond between Lally and his four brothers and sisters. "It all started in the backyard, just that competitiveness and all messing around," said Lally. The senior has taken his family tradition and run with it. This season, he's the captain for Old Rochester. "He's sort of a glue guy, he's very calm under pressure," said lacrosse head coach Erich Carroll. "He doesn't really get rattled, so he keeps things settled for us." "It's great to be able to help out with the younger guys, especially," said Lally. "That's kind of my favorite role as a captain, is making sure they always feel involved and just keeping it fun." Surf therapy instructor Lally's other passion is surfing, no matter the season. "Pretty much whenever it's good we try and go," said Lally. "Anything we can surf on around here, we take what we can get." For Lally, surfing isn't a solo sport. It's an experience he prefers to share as an instructor for Gnome Surf Therapy. "We surf with all athletes of all ages and abilities," said Lally. "Typically neurodivergent athletes, autism, Down syndrome and then a lot of athletes with spinal cord injuries." Lally gets to connect with kids who may not otherwise get to know the feeling of riding a wave in. He's helped students from the South Coast to Costa Rica. "It definitely takes a ton of patience, you can't push them to be in the water if they don't want to be," said Lally. "So it's definitely a mental game and you've got to form a connection with these kids before they can trust you. But it's a pretty special thing once you break that barrier and get them out on the waves." Building connections is what Lally hopes to continue this fall when he goes to the University of Denver to study sociology. "I like connecting with people, I love people," said Lally.


Boston Globe
15-03-2025
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Ronan Coffey delivers Norwell boys' basketball its first state championship with buzzer-beating 3 and heroic overtime
'Great players, they always seem to be in the right spot,' said Willis. 'Ronan was in the right spot. He never hesitated, he just let it go, and as soon as he released it, I knew it was going in.' Norwell's Ronan Coffey sends the game to overtime knotted at 54 with a buzzer-beating 3-pointer thanks to an offensive rebound by Charlie Williams. We are headed to OT! — Brendan Kurie (@BrendanKurie) Coffey scored 8 points in the overtime period, finishing with a game-high 30, lifting the second-seeded Clippers to the title with a 64-61 win over No. 20 Old Rochester at the Tsongas Center on Friday night. Advertisement With Old Rochester clinging onto a 54-51 lead, Norwell called timeout with 17.5 seconds remaining in regulation and drew up a play for senior guard Nick Adams to come off a screen and shoot a 3-pointer. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Adams missed, but sophomore forward Charlie Williams pulled down the rebound and found a wide-open Coffey, who swished a shot he'll never forget. 'We ran the play we wanted. We got a good shot,' Coffey said. 'That's why we make our plays four to five seconds, we get that rebound and we get another shot.' Norwell boys basketball is state champions for the first time! 64-61 over Old Rochester in the Division 3 title game — Brendan Kurie (@BrendanKurie) During its undefeated run through the regular season and state tournament, Norwell blew out most of the teams it faced, and never played as close a game as it did Friday night. But the team's seniors — Coffey, Adams, Will Bostrom, and Oliver Rice — have played together for 10 years. They leaned on their joined experience. 'We knew we had each other,' said Bostrom. 'We know we can always fall on each other.' The Clippers (25-0) led for most of the game, but could never open up a double-digit advantage against resilient Old Rochester, which was the lowest-seeded team to make a basketball state final since the inception of the statewide tournament. Related : When Norwell took an early 15-8 edge, the Bulldogs (15-10) responded with a 9-0 run to take the lead. When the Clippers rattled off another run to take a 30-22 lead early in the third quarter, Old Rochester scored 9 straight to take a 31-30 lead. Advertisement That pattern continued into the fourth quarter, and the Bulldogs jumped into pole position when Gavin Martin scored 6 straight points late in the fourth quarter. Then it was time Coffey's heroics. Related : Old Rochester had a final look to send the game to double-overtime, but the shot rattled off as the buzzer sounded. Immediately, the Clippers sprinted across the court to their student section, which flung hats and beads into the air. Senior guard Gavin Martin led the Bulldogs with 27 points, including 12 points in the fourth quarter and overtime. 'I think we played our hardest,' Martin said. 'Some things, just a tip away, a rebound away. It's just tough. I'm not disappointed. I'm happy.' Old Rochester's Gavin Martin drives between Norwell's Oliver Rice (3) and Nick Adams (5). Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Ronan Coffey celebrates with the championship trophy after scoring a game-high 30 points, including 11 of Norwell's final 13. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Ronan Coffey launches a 3-pointer over ORR's Gavin Martin. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell celebrates with its championship banner at Tsongas Center in Lowell. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Nick Adams scores 2 of his 12 points on a reverse layup over ORR's Grady Oliveira in overtime. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Ronan Coffey drives for a layup against Old Rochester's Hunter Horsey. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Ronan Coffey encourages his teammates during a nip-and-tuck game. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Ronan Coffey lines up a 3-pointer against ORR's Noah Thorell. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff Norwell's Ronan Coffey dishes in between Old Rochester's Hunter Horsey (30) and Noah Thorell. Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff


Boston Globe
12-03-2025
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Division 3 roundup: Old Rochester boys' basketball continues stunning run by taking out No. 1 St. Mary's in semifinals
With nothing to lose as the 20th seed, the Bulldogs roared out of intermission and stamped out the Spartans with a 38-15 run, resulting in a 70-63 semifinal victory at Taunton High that sends Old Rochester (15-9) to a second straight state title game, this time against No. 2 Norwell (24-0) at Tsongas Center in Lowell (TBD). 'This is an awesome feeling. I can't believe it,' said ORR senior Gavin Martin after finishing with a team-high 19 points, 16 of which came in the second half. 'Since the start we knew we could do it. We have a special group. We didn't care what other people thought.' Advertisement 20th seeded Old Rochester is headed to Lowell for the Division 3 state championship vs Norwell after defeating No. 1 St. Mary's 70-63 — Brendan Kurie (@BrendanKurie) The Bulldogs, who fell to St. Mary's in the 2023 D3 semifinals, are among the most improbable repeat finalists. Not only are they the lowest seed to reach a basketball championship game since the inception of the statewide tournament, they were 9-9 after getting stomped by 32 points at home by Somerset Berkley on Feb. 4 and needed a win in their final two games just to qualify for the postseason. But over the past five weeks, ORR has ripped off six straight victories, including four in the playoffs. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'Our confidence comes from all the doubters, everyone saying we can't do it,' Martin said. 'We can do it. It all comes from us and coach [Steve] Carvalho. He's a great coach.' Old Rochester's Grady Oliveira celebrates with fans after scoring 16 points in the Division 3 semifinal. MARK STOCKWELL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE This marks Carvalho's third trip to the title game in 10 years, following a state championship in 2015 and a 61-40 loss to Charlestown last year. 'This gym has been good to us,' Carvalho said. 'We were fortunate enough to get there last year, but this team is different. I'm not going to call them the Cardiac Kids, but what they have done in this tournament after an up-and-down year and dealing with adversity? I'm proud of all my teams, but this is really a special group.' Old Rochester's Gavin Martin (left) celebrates his team's win over St. Mary's. MARK STOCKWELL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE St. Mary's (24-2) appeared to be pulling away with a 15-5 run in the second quarter spurred by 3-pointers from Jake Fortier, Devell Pamplin, and Marlon Estrella, sending the Spartans into halftime up 36-25. Fortier, a freshman, had 14 points in the first half to lead the charge. Advertisement But the Bulldogs countered in the third quarter with 3-pointers from Finn Kavanagh, Henry Berry, and Martin, who scored the final 5 points of the quarter, putting ORR ahead, 47-46, for the first time since it was 12-11. Related : The Bulldogs defense held Fortier scoreless in the second half and Donel Kabongo Mutombo, who had 7 points in the game's opening four minutes, had just 1 point over the next 28. JJ Martinez did yeoman's work to keep the Spartans in it, finishing with a game-high 22, but even a brief surge that closed the score to 64-60 on a Vasquez 3-pointer with 36 seconds left sputtered out as Martin and Grady Oliveira (16 points) hit their free throws down the stretch. 'The whole year we've been getting better and better and better and now we're clicking at the most perfect time,' Martin said. 'There is no doubt in us.' Old Rochester's Gavin Martin, left, and June Vasquez of St. Mary's chase after a loose ball. MARK STOCKWELL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE Norwell 65, Taconic 46 — Nick Fein raced up the court, collected a pass from Ronan Coffey, and snuck in a layup just before the halftime buzzer. It was part of back-to-back-to-back transition baskets by Norwell, following a layup from Coffey and a 3 from Keegan O'Hare to open a 37-25 lead at the half, and the No. 2 Clippers (24-0) kept No. 6 Taconic (19-5) at arm's length the rest of the way for a semifinal victory at North High in Worcester. It's the first time in program history Norwell is a boys' basketball finalist. 'It's incredible,' said 31-year coach John Willis. 'It's something you dream about. It's an unbelievable feeling, but we still have one more game to play.' Advertisement 65-46 is the final and — AJ (@aj_traub) Coffey (18 points) delivered seven free throws in the fourth quarter, also collecting three steals at the end of the first, which added 4 points. The senior didn't know almost no time was left in the half when he passed ahead to Fein (7 points), but brought the Clippers bench to its feet. 'You have to keep going all 32 minutes,' he said. 'When it gets to those end of quarters, you tend to get a little lackadaisical, but you have to play until the whistle because that's where the big moments are.' Senior Nick Adams scored 9 points, and sophomores Charlie Williams (11 points) and Jack Luccarelli (8) combined for 16 first-half points. 'It felt great,' said Williams, who sank three triples in the first half. 'I think it gave us all a little bit of confidence, knowing we can compete with them, especially because we lost to them [in the Round of 16] last year.' Related : Taconic senior Ceasar Santos scored 11 of his 15 points in the second half, trying to rally the Thunder, but the Clippers were there on the boards, pressing for steals, and keeping the gap double-digits. 'This is a really special group of kids,' Willis said. 'It's been a three-year journey. 'These kids just play hard and they've met every challenge along the way.' AJ Traub reported from Worcester State. Brendan Kurie can be reached at


Boston Globe
08-03-2025
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Four high school takeaways as the boys' and girls' basketball fields are whittled down
1. Bulldogs still dancing Between Thursday and Friday, 31 basketball teams advanced into the final four of their division, and 30 of those teams were seeded seventh or higher. The only exception? The 20th-seeded Old Rochester boys, who took down fifth-seeded Greater Lawrence in the Division 3 quarterfinals behind 22 points from senior Gavin Martin , who was Related : Old Rochester (14-9) is coming off a state finals appearance last year, when it fell, 61-40, to Charlestown. The Bulldogs' Noah Fernandes — who later played at Wichita State, UMass, and Rutgers — and coach Steve Carvalho led them past Hoosac Valley. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up We'll have at least one more double-digit seed in the boys' semifinals, with No. 19 Rockport and No. 11 Westport meeting in a Saturday quarterfinal (1 p.m.). Advertisement Making history were Masconomet and Norwell, whose boys' basketball teams both became the first in program history to reach the state semifinals, while the Oliver Ames boys have advanced further than they have in 60 years, since claiming the 1965 Class C crown. Related : So far, the only division to go to chalk is Division 1 girls, which has No. 1 Wachusett, No. 2 Bishop Feehan, No. 3 Springfield Central, and No. 4 Braintree still competing. With two more teams to play on Saturday (St. Mary's boys, Hopedale girls), no No. 1 seed has lost through the first three rounds, although our first three No. 2 seeds Attleboro (D1 boys), Mansfield (D2 boys), Dartmouth (D2 girls) were bounced Friday. 3. Three stars There were plenty to choose from, but we whittled it down to these three: Bourne's Mike Dankert , the 6-foot-5-inch senior kept the second-seeded Canalmen cruising through the Division 4 bracket with 29 points and 16 rebounds in a 74-48 win over No. 23 O'Bryant. Bourne has now won its three playoff games by a combined score of 225-131, with none being decided by fewer than 26 points. Newton North's Teagan Swint , the only MIAA boys' player to be McDonald's All-American nominee proved why with 25 points and five blocks, including 12 points in the fourth quarter as Somerset Berkley's starters, who with the exception of Max Finlaw all put up impressive numbers in an 88-60 Division 2 quarterfinal win over Pope Francis. Junior Colten Pacheco (29 points, 7 rebounds), senior Finn Bjork (21 points, 12 rebounds), senior Brendan McDonald (20 points, 8 assists), and junior Dom Taylor (12 points, 10 rebounds, 4 assists) all stuffed the stat sheet. Also of note, Dartmouth senior Kat Cheesebro , who 3. Nightly scoring leaderboard Colten Pacheco , Somerset Berkley, 29 Tyler Vincent , Hanover, 29 Advertisement Mike Dankert , Bourne, 29 Ian Piper , Holland, 26 Teagan Swint , Newton North, 25 Mamadou Camara , Malden Catholic, 25 Kat Cheesebro , Dartmouth, 24 Gavin Martin , Old Rochester, 22 Maddie Oliver , Norwell, 22 Cole Craffey , Oliver Ames, 21 Finn Bjork , Somerset Berkley, 21 Brendan McDonald , Somerset Berkley, 20 Abby Broderick , Medfield, 20 Kailey Sullivan , Foxborough, 20 4. Grappling with greatness Saturday marks the start of the New England wrestling championships in Providence — Shawsheen senior Sid Tildsley is looking to break the state's all-time win record — and AJ Traub has you covered: Brendan Kurie can be reached at
Yahoo
18-02-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
VOTE: Enterprise Brockton-area High School Female Athlete of the Week?
West Bridgewater girls basketball's Alyssa Calderia is the Enterprise Brockton-area High School Female Athlete of the Week. Calderia, a freshman, filled up the stat sheet in a 47-35 win against Dighton-Rehoboth. She scored 17 points and had 8 rebounds, 3 assists, and 6 steals. She received 5,704 votes, making up 49.44% of the poll, just beating out Southeastern girls hoops' Mia Ortega (4,665 votes, 40.44%). Now, let's look at the candidates for the past week of action. McKay had a 20-point, 10-rebound double-double in a 54-34 win over Canton. Woodbury had 14 points, 13 rebounds, 8 assists and 4 steals in a 57-44 win over Old Rochester. She also had 13 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists and 3 steals in a 51-42 loss to Whitman-Hanson. Henley scored two goals in a 4-3 loss to Duxbury, and added another in a 2-1 loss to Newton North/South. Abrams scored 20 points in a 58-47 win over Sandwich. Kerstein scored 27 points in a 67-57 loss to Westwood, and had 14 in a 57-25 win over Rockland. Gamble scored 29 points in a 68-55 win over Stoughton. Cadet reached 1,000 career points with 21 points in a loss to Norfolk Aggie, adding 6 rebounds and 3 blocks. Votes are unlimited. Voting closes on Monday, Feb. 24 at noon. Emailed votes will not be counted. Send future nominations to rvermette@ Our player of the week stories are meant as a way to highlight local high school athletes in the area. Making the list is an achievement in itself. Congratulations to all our athletes. This article originally appeared on The Enterprise: Vote for the Brockton-area High School Female Athlete of the Week