The 5-foot-6 defensive specialist from Princeton High School has officially signed to play volleyball at the University of Mount Olive, a nationally respected NCAA Division II program just a half-hour from her hometown.
The 5-foot-6 defensive specialist from Princeton High School has officially signed to play volleyball at the University of Mount Olive, a nationally respected NCAA Division II program just a half-hour from her hometown.
In their first state title appearance since 2005, North Lenoir fell to West Wilkes in the 2A State Championship series at UNCG Softball Stadium. But their season was anything but a disappointment. The Hawks, seeded No. 15 in the East bracket, carved out one of the most unlikely playoff runs North Carolina high school softball has seen in decades — and in the process, reignited a standard for the program.
In a season built on culture, toughness, and belief, the Blue Devils reached uncharted territory, playing for the NCHSAA 2A Baseball State Championship for the first time in program history. Though they fell in the final series to East Rutherford—a hard-fought 4-3 loss in Game One followed by an 11-0 setback in Game Two—the real story lives in what it took to get there.
Top-seeded West Wilkes (25-3) enters the 2A State Championship on a 19-game winning streak and a mission to finish what last year’s 21-1 campaign couldn’t. Meanwhile, North Lenoir, the 15-seed out of the East, made history—becoming the first double-digit seed in over two decades to reach the 2A finals. One team is chasing legacy. The other is rewriting it.Top-seeded West Wilkes (25-3) enters the 2A State Championship on a 19-game winning streak and a mission to finish what last year’s 21-1 campaign couldn’t. Meanwhile, North Lenoir, the 15-seed out of the East, made history—becoming the first double-digit seed in over two decades to reach the 2A finals. One team is chasing legacy. The other is rewriting it.
This is everything you want in a championship series. The #6 seed South Lenoir Blue Devils (23-4) are riding a wave of postseason momentum into their first-ever state finals appearance. Waiting for them is the immovable object: the #1 seed East Rutherford Cavaliers (28-1), a six-time champion with a resume built for Cooperstown.
Christopher Johnson, a proud South Lenoir alum and lifelong supporter, submitted this piece ahead of the Blue Devils’ first-ever appearance in the NCHSAA 2A Baseball State Championship. He writes from the heart, as a friend of head coach Paul Novicki and as a father raising the next generation of Blue Devils.
Arendell Parrott Academy’s Claire Mixon isn’t just heading to one of the top high school softball showcases in the country—she’s arriving as a symbol of resilience, heart, and rising-star talent.
For the first time ever, South Lenoir is heading to the NCHSAA 2A State Championship Series, clinching the East with a dramatic 5-4 victory over Midway on Saturday in Game 3 of the Regional Finals.
The Hawks (20-3) will square off with West Wilkes (25-3) in the 2025 NCHSAA 2A Softball State Championship Series at UNC Greensboro’s Baseball Stadium. Game 1 is scheduled for Friday, May 30 at 5 p.m., followed by Game 2 on Saturday, May 31 at 11 a.m. If necessary, a decisive Game 3 will be played Saturday at 5 p.m.
Backed by a fiery crowd and refusing to fold, the Blue Devils willed to a dramatic 9-8 extra-inning win at Midway to force a do-or-die Game 3 in the 2A East Finals.
With a state title in sight and a fired-up crowd behind them, the North Lenoir Hawks delivered a commanding 13–4 win over South Granville on Wednesday night to clinch a trip to the NCHSAA 2A State Championship.
This postseason, North Lenoir hasn’t just been beating teams — they’ve been breaking brackets.
For the fourth straight playoff game, the No. 15-seeded Hawks went on the road and took down a higher seed — this time overwhelming No. 4 South Granville with a 9-1 win in Game 1 of the 2A Eastern Regional Finals. One more win, and North Lenoir will be headed to the state championship series for the first time since 2005.
In the first Eastern Regional Final appearance in school history, the No. 6-seeded Blue Devils couldn’t get the bats rolling Tuesday night, falling 8-1 to No. 13 Midway at home in Game one of the three game series.
South Granville and Midway bring elite pitching and postseason pedigree into the 5th round, but North Lenoir and South Lenoir aim to crash the Eastern Regional Finals with discipline, grit, and timely execution.
Arendell Parrott Academy is set to host an intensive, high-level Elite Girls Soccer Camp for rising 8th–12th grade girls on June 23–24, 2025. Running from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. each day at the academy’s campus at 1901 Dobbs Farm Road in Kinston, N.C., this specialized camp is designed for skilled, competitive female athletes who aspire to take their soccer abilities to the next level—particularly those with collegiate ambitions
Curtis Hines, CEO of Hines Workoutz and a former standout at Shaw University, is returning to his hometown to host The Come Ready to Work Fundamental Skills Clinic, a high-intensity basketball training event for student-athletes in grades 1 through 11.
The Greene County Middle School softball team capped off a strong 2024 season by winning the conference championship, defeating No. 1 seed C.M. Eppes 14-6 in the title game.
On a humid Friday night in Martin County, the 14-seed North Lenoir Hawks continued their improbable march through the 2A state softball playoffs, knocking off the No. 3 seed Gators, 4-2, to punch their ticket to the East Regional Finals.
In a third-round showdown that delivered every ounce of postseason drama, No. 15 seed North Lenoir rallied from a 2-0 deficit to defeat No. 7 Camden County, 5-4, and advance to the fourth round of the NCHSAA 2A State Playoffs for the first time since their 2005 state championship run.
Lenoir Community College Baseball standout Danny Staley has been named the 2024-2025 recipient of the Gilmer Minor III Memorial Scholarship, an honor established by Baseball Hall of Famer George Whitfield through the LCC Foundation.