Latest news with #TysonDavis


Daily Mail
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Bachelor star announces she's suffered a tragic miscarriage just hours after celebrating her first pregnancy scan
Former Bachelor star Cassandra 'Cassie' Wood has taken to social media to share a family tragedy. The 30-year-old former reality star and mother of one revealed in the post on Sunday that she has miscarried, only hours after submitting to her first pregnancy scan. And in a cruel twist, Cassie explained that the loss came on the eve of her own birthday and celebratory plans to share the news of her second child with friends. Posting to her Instagram, Cassie included a photo in which she can be seen beaming broadly and posing in a glamorous frock for a night out with husband Tyson Davis. She also shared a selfie with her rugby player on what appeared to be a date night. 'Behind the smile is heartbreak,' she announced in the caption. She continued, 'Friday started off as an exciting day as Tyson and I went in for our first pregnancy scan for our second baby. 'We left with some concerns but stayed hopeful. By Friday night, I had miscarried. 'We then had a weekend of plans to celebrate my birthday and share our exciting news with our friends, which obviously didn't go to plan. 'I'm sharing this as I don't want to pretend everything is okay when it isn't.' Cassie ended her post with a message to all families who have gone through their own loss. 'My heart breaks for anyone who has experienced this or has ever struggled to fall pregnant. You are not alone,' she said. Cassie also shared a selfie taken while she was getting her scan. Tyson can be seen in the video feeding their six-month-old a bottle. The terrible news for Cassie and Tyson comes after they welcomed their first baby, Theodore 'Teddy', in February. Sharing the news with her followers, Cassie said that the child was delivered after an emergency C-section. 'Feeling so grateful and in the biggest love bubble with our little family. 'And extremely grateful for my amazing and supportive husband who I am sure is also a little traumatised,' she posted. Cassie and Tyson announced their engagement in December 2022, after the blonde beauty had found fame at age 23 on Nick 'Honey Badger' Cummins' season of The Bachelor in 2018. The happy couple announced their news via Instagram on Christmas Eve, uploading a photo of Tyson on one knee at the beach. '24.12.2022 [love heart emojis]. Here's to forever with you,' the blonde gushed. Cass and Tyson briefly dated in 2017 but broke up shortly before Cass appeared on Bachelor In Paradise. While on the show she fell for ex-Bachelor Richie Strahan, but their romance was short-lived. Cass and Tyson reconnected in 2019 after she returned from filming in Fiji. The reality star previously revealed she was the happiest she has ever been after welcoming Tyson back into her life. 'It may seem like Bachelor in Paradise was a little like déjà vu for me, but the intensity of both those experiences and any pain,' she wrote on Instagram in 2019. 'I felt is all worth it since having this guy walk back in to my life at the most perfect time. And yes I say "back" into my life, as we met back in 2017. 'I can gladly say I'm the happiest I've ever been.'


CBS News
09-08-2025
- Sport
- CBS News
Growth of women's hockey gives girls in Colorado more opportunities to get in the game
By Holly Santman More young girls are lacing up their skates -- their hockey skates, that is. "They'll get on the ice and somehow just come alive," said Tyson Davis, head coach of the 16U AA Hyland Hills Jaguars. With the expansion of the Professional Women's Hockey League and other women's leagues, girls like Surrey Schumacher are seeing more opportunities to get on the ice. Schumacher grew up playing hockey. "I started in boys-only hockey when I was six," she said. "I was around nine or 10 when the first girls' team at Hyland came back." Hyland Hills' hockey program had a girls' team in the past, but it was disbanded due to low numbers. Now, it's back, and Davis believes the team is here to stay. "We had 124 girls play last year and the year before, and there are more coming in. You used to always see figure skaters, and now a lot of these girls are on hockey skates," he said. If asked, both Davis and Schumacher will say the team is not just for learning about faceoffs or defensive skills. "It's helped me grow to be organized and timely and make sure everyone is always included," Schumacher said. It's about life skills and learning how to face adversity, because the game of hockey is not easy. "Statistically, there's about 160 mistakes per team, per game," Davis said. In addition to those skills, they say it's about building a community. "I love the community and the family," Schumacher said, "I walk through here, I know so many familiar faces, even when I'm not here, I'll be in a different state and be like, 'Oh my goodness, another Hyland person." As both women's hockey and the Hyland family grow, so do the possibilities for young girls looking to get into the sport. "When they can see that other girls play the same sport, boy, do they come to life," Davis said. "We've watched the girls play Canada versus the U.S., and we'll take them to that game, and it's fun. They all of a sudden have role models and they're inspired, and they go, 'Wow, I can do this when I'm older?' Yeah, you can." Members of the Colorado Amateur Hockey Association will be attending Girls in the Game on Aug. 16 on the DU campus.