Dodgers will wear patch honoring Fernando Valenzuela in World Series
- October 24, 2024
LOS ANGELES – The Dodgers will wear a patch on their uniforms honoring Fernando Valenzuela during the World Series.
Valenzuela died this week at age 63. The patch will feature his uniform number 34 and his first name and will appear on the left jersey sleeve.
MLB has said it will also honor Valenzuela during the World Series. Memorials to Valenzuela are evident at the entrance to Dodger Stadium as well as multiple locations throughout the stadium.
The Dodgers broke from protocol by retiring Valenzuela’s uniform number in August 2023. Previously, they had only retired the numbers of players or managers who were inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame (with the exception of Jim Gilliam).
Valenzuela pitched 11 seasons for the Dodgers, starting in 1980, and ranks ninth on the franchise’s all-time win list. His rookie season in 1981 sparked the ‘Fernandomania’ phenomenon as he went 8-0 with five shutouts to start the season. He became the first pitcher to win both the Rookie of the Year and Cy Young awards in the same season.
Valenzuela was an All-Star every year from 1981 through 1986 and was a member of World Series championship teams with the Dodgers in 1981 and 1988. He was released by the Dodgers in 1990 and pitched six more seasons with five more teams before retiring.
He joined the Dodgers’ Spanish-language broadcast team in 2003. He stepped away from the broadcast booth in September due to health problems.
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Orange County Register
Read MoreNo coyote DNA found on Irvine boy, authorities say
- October 24, 2024
The 10-year-old boy who reportedly was bitten by a coyote on the way to school in Irvine on Tuesday, Oct. 22 tested negative for coyote DNA, California Department of Fish and Wildlife said on Thursday.
“Coyote DNA was not found on the clothing,” Tim Daly, a Fish and Wildlife spokesman, said. “Dog DNA was detected.”
The boy was riding his bike to Portola Springs Elementary School and was near Pathway when he stopped to remove his jacket, Irvine police Sgt. Karie Davies said. He felt something on his lower leg and realized he’d been bitten.
Once he arrived at school, the boy reported the injury and was treated by his doctor for a minor skin break.
“We have the child’s statement and the minor injury, coupled with him seeing the coyote run away from his direction,” Davies said.
Daly said Fish and Wildlife trappers did not locate a coyote in the area after trying for a couple of days.
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Orange County Register
Read MoreNew on vaccine checklist: Pneumonia shot for ages 50 and up
- October 24, 2024
NEW YORK — U.S. health officials on Wednesday recommended that people 50 and older get a shot against bacteria that can cause pneumonia and other dangerous illnesses.
The recommendation was made by a scientific advisory panel and then accepted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The decision lowered from 65 the minimum recommended age for adults to get the shot.
TODAY: Second dose of COVID vaccine recommended for ages 65 and older
The advisory committee voted 14-1 to make the change during a meeting in Atlanta. The guidance is widely heeded by doctors and prompts health insurers to pay for recommended shots.
Pneumococcal shot recommendations are sometimes called the most complicated vaccination guidance that the government issues. The CDC currently recommends shots for children younger than 5 and adults 65 or older, as long as they have never been vaccinated against pneumococcal disease. Officials also recommend the shots for children and adults at increased risk for pneumococcal disease, such as those with diabetes, chronic liver disease or a weakened immune system.
There are more than 100 known types of pneumococci bacteria, which can cause serious infections in the lungs and other parts of the body. Each year, the U.S. sees roughly 30,000 cases of invasive pneumococcal disease, which includes blood infections, brain and spine inflammation, and other illnesses. About 30% of cases are among 50- to 64-year-olds.
An adult will usually need only one pneumococcal vaccination, though some protocols advise two shots about a year apart.
The first pneumococcal vaccine was licensed in the U.S. in 1977, and since then pharmaceutical companies have been coming up with newer versions that target a dozen or more types in a single shot. Different vaccines have fallen in and out of favor, including Pfizer’s Prevnar 13, which was once a top-seller but is no longer available.
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There are four vaccines now in use. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration this year approved the newest — Merck’s Capvaxive, which can cost around $300 a dose and protects against 21 types, including eight not included in other pneumococcal vaccines. A Merck spokesperson said it was specifically designed to help protect against the bacteria types that cause the majority of severe disease in adults aged 50 and older.
The CDC advisory panel in June recommended the vaccine as an option for adults at higher risk. At the time, the committee also talked about the possibility of lowering the age recommendation for older adults. They noted that illness-causing infections peak at age 55 to 59 in Black Americans — a lower age than what’s seen in white people. But the committee put off that decision until this week’s meeting.
The one committee member voting against the proposal was Dr. Jamie Loehr, who cited the changing guidance. “Pneumococcal has been a very confusing recommendation for many, many years, and it’s hard to have a new recommendation every two or three years,” he said.
The CDC website has a vaccine assessment tool that advises which shots to get, based on a number of factors. It has not yet been updated for the new recommendation.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Orange County Register
Read MoreHoping to avoid closure of Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall, LA County adds another layer of bureaucracy
- October 24, 2024
A week after learning that Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall must close, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors has voted to hire a “compliance officer” to independently ensure the Probation Department is properly following state laws and court-ordered mandates from the California Department of Justice.
The motion by Supervisors Janice Hahn and Lindsey Horvath describes the position as a supporting role, similar to ones created to oversee the Sheriff’s Department’s compliance with federal consent decrees involving the county’s jails. The new compliance officer, expected to be hired within 30 days, would answer directly to the county’s chief executive officer, rather than to the chief probation officer, according to the board’s motion.
“We need to do everything we can to ensure that our Probation Department comes into compliance with state standards at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall,” Hahn said in a statement. “We are on the clock now and it is necessary to have a dedicated compliance officer from outside the department who can oversee their work and has the ability to convene multiple departments who can help.”
The Board of State and Community Corrections, the regulatory body overseeing California’s jails and juvenile halls, declared Los Padrinos “unsuitable” for the confinement of youth on Oct. 14 and ordered the county to come back into compliance, or to empty the facility, by Dec. 12.
It’s the second time in a year that Los Padrinos has been declared unsuitable due to a persistent staffing shortage. The Probation Department narrowly managed to avoid closure in April by redeploying more than 100 officers from the field to stabilize the juvenile hall. That proved to be short lived and, by July, dozens of officers failed to show up daily and nearly 20% of the shifts at Los Padrinos were unable to meet staffing minimums.
Corrective plan late
This time, the department failed to request technical assistance from the BSCC prior to submitting a corrective action plan, which details how it would address the staffing crisis, according to Hahn and Horvath. The plan was turned in at the last minute. The BSCC rejected it the same day because it did not “adequately outline how the Department plans to correct” the issues, nor did it provide “reasonable timeframes for resolution of the staffing defiencies.”
Probation Department officials tried to submit a revised version two days later, but it was rejected outright because the deadline had passed.
The department, in an Oct. 15 statement expressing its disappointment, stated it has increased staffing levels at Los Padrinos by “actively recruiting new personnel, conducting training academies, reallocating officers from field assignments and utilizing overtime.”
“We are committed to transforming our juvenile institution into a safe and nurturing environment for the youth entrusted in our care while we endeavor to demonstrate unequivocally to the BSCC that we are meeting all statutory requirements,” the statement reads.
Under the new structure, the Probation Department would be required to submit “all current and future corrective action plan drafts and any related documents” to the compliance officer no later than 20 days before the due date. The new watchdog also would have the authority to coordinate with other departments to ensure probation is receiving all the help it can get.
“Appointing a compliance officer to support the Probation Department will align all County departments in the important work of getting and keeping facilities in compliance with state standards,” Horvath said. “With the many issues the department faces, this additional support will help ensure plans result in action at all levels of the County. Accountability is critical, especially when the well being of our young people is at stake. This is a critical step necessary for lasting change.”
Critics skeptical
Critics, however, are skeptical of the new layer of bureaucracy. The Probation Department already is monitored by the Probation Oversight Commission, the county Office of Inspector General, the BSCC and the state Department of Justice. The issues in the department are well-documented at this point, said Aditi Sherikar, a senior policy associate with the Children’s Defense Fund California.
“The facilities have been in and out of compliance for two years now,” she said. “All this does is give them another scapegoat that is not Probation for the issues that will inevitably come up.”
It is unlikely a compliance officer could be selected, brought on board and make any meaningful difference before the Dec. 12 deadline, she said.
The supervisors should order Probation Chief Guillermo Viera Rosa to explain publicly how he plans to address staffing in such a short time and what he will do if Los Padrinos is closed, she said. There are parents who do not know what is going to happen to their children after the December deadline, she added.
Earlier this year, the Probation Department announced it had no plan for possibility of a closure in April, even as the possibility loomed. If Los Padrinos does close, youth inside the facility would likely need to be transferred to other counties, but such arrangements would take time.
“If they don’t come up with a plan, it is the young people who will suffer, as they always do,” Sherikar said.
Root cause of problems persist
Probation Oversight Commission Chair Eduardo Mundo isn’t convinced another set of eyes will make any difference either. The POC has flagged areas of noncompliance to the department in the past, but those same problems remained unfixed when the BSCC showed up to inspect weeks or months later. The commission also has offered to review corrective action plans in advance, much in the same way that a compliance officer would, but probation officials haven’t accepted.
Regardless, no amount of eyes on the problem will matter until the department can stabilize its staffing, Mundo said. The staffing crisis is behind nearly every issue at Los Padrinos and, until that is fixed, the facility will continue to fail inspections, he said.
“They’re trying on a daily basis to get staff to come to work,” he said. “What technical support can you get for that? This is such a unique problem.”
Mundo compared the problem to the “chicken and the egg.” Officers call out sick, or take medical leaves, because they fear for their safety in the juvenile hall or because they don’t want to be held over for excessively long shifts. Those call-outs then make the juvenile hall less safe, causing more people to call out. Meanwhile, officers redeployed from the field have had their lives disrupted to fill in for the missing detention officers and it has created animosity, Mundo said.
“Until you get the staff back, nothing is going to go forward, because we’re going to keep falling out of compliance,” he said.
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Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall declared ‘unsuitable,’ must shut down in 60 days due to low staffing
Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall declared ‘unsuitable,’ must shut down in 60 days due to low staffing
LA County’s troubled juvenile halls allowed to remain open
Nearly 20% of shifts at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall did not meet staffing minimums in July
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Reduce juvenile hall population?
Mundo and others have pushed for the department to reduce the population at Los Padrinos to “right-size” it to the available staff. The hope is that through the use of home detentions and community alternatives, the department can limit Los Padrinos to holding only those who could not be safely assigned elsewhere.
The department’s most recently rejected corrective action plan described similar efforts, but the work didn’t start until Oct. 1, less than two weeks before the BSCC’s deadline, and the plan did not include any timeline for its implementation, which BSCC noted in its rejection letter.
The BSCC launched a “comprehensive inspection” at Los Padrinos on the same day that it rejected the most recent corrective action plan. That inspection will be even more thorough than others in the last year.
The Probation Department is expected to present its plans for addressing the potential closure of Los Padrinos at the Oversight Commission’s Nov. 14 meeting.
Orange County Register
Read MoreFive Dodgers relievers bring home Game 1 victory
- October 6, 2024
LOS ANGELES — Everyone knew that starting pitching might be the Dodgers weakness this October, but they expected to be able to overcome any starter issues with a deep bullpen.
So far, so good.
After starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto got knocked around to the tune of five runs in three innings, five Dodgers relievers shut down the Padres over the next six innings in their 7-5 victory in Game 1 of the Division Series on Saturday night.
The relievers gave up just two hits to a lineup that had five hits in the first three innings against Yamamoto.
“The whole bullpen pitched really well,” catcher Will Smith said. “That’s why we won the game.”
This was a formula the Dodgers figured they might need to use, based on the way the regular season went. The Dodgers ranked fourth in the majors with a 3.53 bullpen ERA, which helped them manage the best record in the majors despite their rotation having a 4.23 ERA, which ranked 19th.
The Dodgers trailed, 5-3, when Yamamoto threw his final pitch of the night in the third inning. Then the bullpen door began to swing open. Only one reliever was ineffective, and his brief hiccup wasn’t costly because the subsequent reliever bailed him out.
Right-hander Ryan Brasier picked up the first five outs, working around a double. Left-hander Alex Vesia then retired all three hitters he faced. Right-hander Evan Phillips retired four straight.
The only weak link in the chain was right-hander Michael Kopech, who has been practically unhittable for most of the time since the Dodgers got him in a deadline deal from the Chicago White Sox. Kopech entered in the eighth with a two-run lead and walked two of the three batters he faced, Manny Machado and Jackson Merrill.
Right-hander Blake Treinen rescued him.
Treinen entered, with the potential tying run on base, and he got Xander Bogaerts on a popup into shallow left — with shortstop Miguel Rojas making a nice over the shoulder catch — and then he struck out Jake Cronenworth.
Treinen remained in the game to work the ninth, pitching around a single and a walk. He struck out Machado to end it.
Treinen had just one save in 50 games during the regular season, and he never recorded more than four outs. His use in the ninth on Saturday was a demonstration of the Dodgers’ bullpen versatility as they’ve used different relievers to finish games since Phillips struggled earlier this season.
“Super proud,” Phillips said. “I think we take a lot of pride in being available for our team like that. We’ve had situations throughout this season and in previous seasons where we’ve been asked to take on a big workload. And I think we take a lot of pride in preparing our bodies and taking a plan out there to get guys out. We just pass it on, one to another. That tells the story the most about how the ‘pen is. We don’t care what inning it is. Up, down however many runs, just pass the torch to the next guy, and just continue to try to stack up those outs and give our offense, which is fantastic, a chance to bounce back and then keep us in the game.”
The bullpen was particularly good at handling more “up-downs” than usual. Typically, relievers start with a clean inning and pitch only that inning, but four of the five relievers the Dodgers used were asked to finish one inning, sit down, and then come back to work a part of the next inning.
“We haven’t done a lot of that this year,” Treinen said. “Sometimes we have for matchups, but the way it was shaping up, it was just going to kind of be, get your guy, get a couple other guys. The next guy comes in and gets the last out, rolls to the next inning. It is what it is. I don’t really put too much thought into it, man.”
Phillips said the relievers typically have an idea going into the game which pocket of hitters they are likely to face, so it’s not as much of a jumble as it may seem.
“A lot of it’s match-up based for what stretch of hitters we’re going to be facing that night,” Phillips said. “When’s the last time we faced those guys, and how tuned in are those hitters to us. Things like that all go into it. That’s really well communicated here. We’re given plenty of notice before the game, before the series, whatever it may be, to basically be ready for whatever situation we’re called upon.”
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Treinen said that’s all helped them work together efficiently as a group, not merely a collection of individuals.
“Once the phone rings, we just lock it in, and we just pay attention to what we’re supposed to do,” Treinen said. “And I think that’s a beautiful thing. There’s no egos. There’s no, Why am I here? Why am I not there? When our name is called, we get our lanes, we go execute. We’re a tight knit group that’s very fortunate to have a lot of guys that are pulling on the same rope. I don’t think every team is that way. I’m sure there’s a lot of teams that are still that way, but this organization does a good job putting good pieces together.”
Orange County Register
Read MoreUFC 307: Alex Pereira beats Khalil Rountree Jr. to retain light heavyweight crown
- October 6, 2024
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Alex Pereira retained the UFC light heavyweight crown by beating Khalil Rountree Jr. by TKO with 28 seconds left in the fourth round at UFC 307 on Saturday night.
It was the fourth straight title bout for Pereira (12-2) and his third consecutive successful title defense.
“You knew it was going to be a badass fight,” UFC CEO Dana White said.
Rountree (14-6) showcased his speed early and delivered several hard strikes. At one point, in the second round, he ducked under a roundhouse kick and countered with a strong hook to the face. But Pereira showed more accuracy and consistency in landing blows during the early rounds.
Stamina favored Pereira in the fourth round. He found his range and timing and put Rountree on his heels. Pereira forced him to repeatedly cover his face to block strikes and eventually backed him against the fence. He rained blows on Rountree and dropped him to his knees, leading the referee to stop the fight.
“When (Pereira) started calf kicking him, he was destroying that leg,” White said. “He was having trouble putting pressure on it and he was having trouble with his punching power, his movement, everything. He systematically just started picking him apart.”
Pereira’s victory headlined five main card fights on Saturday night.
Julianna Peña defeated Raquel Pennington via split decision (48-47, 47-48, 48-47) to reclaim the women’s bantamweight crown in a bout billed as the co-main event. Peña originally held the crown after defeating Amanda Nunes at UFC 269 in 2021 and then lost it to Nunes in a rematch at UFC 277 in 2022.
Peña (13-5) fought her first UFC bout in two years. She was originally scheduled to challenge Nunes for the title again at UFC 289 but pulled out a month before the fight after suffering broken ribs during training. The loss snapped a five-fight winning streak for Pennington (16-10) extending back to 2020.
“I am the true Ultimate Fighter,” said Peña, referencing how both fighters competed on Season 18 of The Ultimate Fighter TV show earlier in their careers. “I am the last woman standing.”
Peña dominated the early rounds. She dragged Pennington to the canvas in the second and scored a repeat takedown after sweeping her leg in the third. Both times, Pennington struggled to free herself from her grasp.
Pennington briefly shifted momentum with a fourth-round knockdown off a vicious right hook. She was the better striker through five rounds, but it wasn’t enough to prevail.
“I know that I am tough,” Peña said. “I know that I am durable, and I know that I’m never out of the fight. I’m never going to give up on myself, so you’re literally going to have to kill me in there to get me to stop.”
Kayla Harrison defeated Ketlen Vieira by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28) in the other women’s bantamweight bout. Harrison (18-1) made a big statement while outlasting Vieira (14-4), who entered the bout as the No. 2 ranked bantamweight fighter. She bulldozed Vieira to the canvas in the first round and again in the third and kept her shoulders pinned to the floor in the third round until the final horn.
The win opens a door for Harrison, ranked No. 3 before the bout, to challenge Peña for the title. She has made a steady climb since becoming an MMA fighter after winning a pair of Olympic gold medals in judo for Team USA in 2012 and 2016.
Roman Dolidze (14-3) beat Kevin Holland by TKO in the middleweight bout, his sixth victory in eight bouts. Holland (26-12) bowed out before the start of the second round after suffering a rib injury and walked away with a loss for the third time in his last four bouts.
Mario Bautista (15-2) prevailed over Jose Aldo by split decision (28-29, 29-28, 29-28) in the men’s bantamweight bout to earn his seventh straight victory. Bautista pressured Aldo (32-9) with relentless attacks over three rounds. But he also pinned the former UFC featherweight champ against the cage for long stretches and the split decision favoring Bautista earned boos from the Delta Center crowd.
White heavily criticized the judging in multiple bouts.
“I thought the judging tonight was atrocious,” White said. “It was like I was in a boxing match in Ireland tonight.”
Carla Esparza lost a unanimous decision to Tecia Pennington, 29-28, 29-28 and 30-27 and announced her retirement after the match, while expressing that she didn’t agree with the judges.
UFC reported a live gate of $5 million, second highest grossing event at the Delta Center trailing only UFC 291 in 2023. The event drew 17,487 fans.
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Orange County Register
Read MoreSwanson: There’s real upside for the Dodgers at the bottom of order
- October 6, 2024
LOS ANGELES – Buttom’s up, Dodger fans.
You have something to celebrate! A playoff win.
Saturday’s 7-5 victory over the San Diego Padres in Game 1 of the National League Division Series snapped a six-game playoff losing streak and put the Dodgers back in the postseason win column for the first time since Oct. 11, 2022.
For that, you can thank Shohei Ohtani. And Will Smith, Gavin Lux, Tommy Edman and Miguel Rojas.
Together, those guys at the bottom of the Dodgers’ order ran the club’s most effective play: Put runners on base for Ohtani, L.A.’s leadoff man.
“Everybody really contributed today,” said Ohtani, the Dodgers’ $700 million 50/50 man, who went 2 for 5, scored twice and drove in three runs on a second-inning screamer into the right-field pavilion.
The runners he drove in: No. 6 hitter Smith (who’d walked) and No. 7 Lux (who’d singled).
“The entire team,” Ohtani stressed, “including the bullpen, especially.”
And sure, Shohei, the Dodgers’ relay team of relievers deserve praise for keeping the Padres’ potent offense off the board from the fourth inning on.
Everyone would be having a much different conversation – like, “Can you believe the Dodgers are paying Yoshinobu Yamamoto $325 million to give up five earned runs in three innings in his first playoff start? In this economy?!’ – if the Dodgers pitchers behind him hadn’t penned such a successful response.
And also if the bottom of the order hadn’t come through at the plate like they did, combining to score four of the Dodgers’ runs and reaching base in 6 of their 16 plate appearances.
It felt like a game that was, in recent NBA parlance, akin to “The Lonnie Walker Game,” or the Lakers’ Game 4 win against the Golden State Warriors a couple years ago, when a reserve guard exploded for 15 incredibly meaningful fourth-quarter points to help the Lakers take a 3-1 lead in their second-round Western Conference playoff series.
Great teams don’t waste those sorts of efforts, those clutch and necessary performances from unlikely heroes. Those big games that take some pressure off of the superstars who carry so much of the burden at the top of the order.
To beat San Diego on Saturday, the Dodgers didn’t need fireworks from Mookie Betts, who went 0-2 but was gifted a pair of intentional walks, including a curious free pass with the count 2-and-2.
They didn’t need Freddie Freeman to strain his sprained ankle any more than he already was in a willful 2-for-5 outing.
Because it was Smith, Lux, Edman and Rojas applying the pressure.
They worked Padres starter Dylan Cease for 22 pitches before Ohtani came up in the second inning. And Edman caught the Padres unaware with a bunt single in the fourth, when he’d scored on a wild pitch. And Lux did it in the field too, snagging Luis Arráez’s liner at second base to help the Dodgers preserve a two-run lead in the top of the ninth.
“When you see a guy like (starting pitcher Dylan) Cease, who has really big stuff, to be able to grind at-bats, that’s the hard part,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “To be able to take walks, we did that all night. Got the pitch count up, got him out of the game, got looks at some guys – that’s a credit to our guys.”
And maybe we ought to give those guys deep in the order more credit?
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In the Dodgers’ last two regular-season victories over the Padres, the batters hitting in the final four spots combined to collect eight hits, three walks and to score eight runs.
If those guys at the bottom of the order can keep feeding, can keep feasting, well … all the Dodgers’ starting pitching problems wouldn’t seem quite so stark. And all their stressing and pressing star hitters won’t have to set the tone, but just join in on the fun.
Talk about upside.
Orange County Register
Read MoreHigh school football: Orange County’s Week 6 stat leaders and top performers
- October 6, 2024
Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now
The top performances from the Orange County high school football games in Week 6.
Click here for details about sending your team’s scores and stats to OCVarsity.
WEEK 6 LEADERS
Passing yards
Alex Lundsberg, Canyon 491
Tommy Acosta, Capistrano Valley 390
Tank Britton, Bolsa Grande 275
Jack McKelvy, El Toro 267
Cash O’Byrne, Tesoro 261
Jake Meer, Newport Harbor 239
Cullen Doyle, Brea Olinda 231
Noah Nam, Beckman 229
Jackson Kollock, Laguna Beach 226
Xzavior Guess, El Modena 224
D. D’epifanio, Crean Lutheran 206
Carter Vestermark, Aliso Niguel 203
TJ Lateef, Orange Lutheran 202
Rudy Alcala, Troy 188
Nate Richie, Capo Valley Christian 188
Brady Edmunds, Huntington Bch 174
Timmy Herr, San Juan Hills 167
Vanden Dugger, Dana Hills 163
Hopkins, JSerra 162
Tristan Zale, Trabuco Hills 156
Annett, Corona del Mar 138
Aiden Gomez, Loara 134
Beierly, Mater Dei 130
Fahey, Mission Viejo 118
John Gazzaniga, Santa Margarita 110
Trudeau, Mission Viejo 106
Andrew Waiss, Costa Mesa 97
Landon Pompey, Trabuco Hills 86
Nash Luper, Portola 86
James Gonzalez, Santiago 79
K. Edmundson, Cypress 70
Rushing yards
Makya Chee, El Toro 383
Quaid Carr, Servite 184
Jeff Brown, Estancia 180
Ethan Mundt, Troy 173
Noah Tagaloa, Segerstrom 172
Taurian Nash, Crean Lutheran 170
Lilomaiava, Mission Viejo 170
Davison, Mater Dei 155
Elijah Ayala, San Juan Hills 145
Chavez, Orange Lutheran 128
Nathan Aeves, Brea Olinda 124
Mario Carbajal, Santiago 120
Carter Vestermark, Aliso Niguel 115
Nic Brubaker, Tesoro 112
Curtis, Mission Viejo 109
Xzavior Guess, El Modena 108
Joseph Torres, Saddleback 100
Redley Geiss, Dana Hills 95
Gouvion, Foothill 92
Diego Reyna, Portola 85
M. Czaykowski, Beckman 81
Brodie Hitchens, El Modena 76
Andrew Waiss, Costa Mesa 75
James Gonzalez, Santiago 73
TJ Lateef, Orange Lutheran 69
Gavin Gutierrez, Servite 67
Cade Miller, Brea Olinda 65
Logan Rosales, Segerstrom 64
Aidan Tran, Beckman 63
Fahey, Mission Viejo 60
Receiving yards
Alex Kiernan, Trabuco Hills 173
Luke Doyle, El Toro 173
Marc Navarro, Bolsa Grande 155
Max Krosky, Capo Valley Christian 135
Hudson Campbell, Capistrano Valley 128
Troy Foster, Huntington Beach 127
K. Rommelfanger, Canyon 126
Noah Czaykowski, Beckman 125
Hayden Salyards, Canyon 122
Drew Deese, Crean Lutheran 120
Vander Ploog, Troy 108
C. Schamel, Tesoro 103
Talon Spencer, Capistrano Valley 102
Steel Kurtz, Huntington Beach 98
Cade Fegel, Newport Harbor 98
Dane Malloy, Aliso Niguel 96
Sammy Stremick, Newport Harbor 91
Garrett, Corona del Mar 90
Samuel Jackett, El Modena 89
Kaden Hunter, Capistrano Valley 86
Luke Jolley, Laguna Beach 85
Ia, Orange Lutheran 83
Larry Bravo, Santiago 78
Bell, Mission Viejo 73
Sean Embree Jr., Santa Margarita 72
Tanner Silber, Tesoro 71
Deron Taylor, El Modena 70
Noah McClary, Canyon 70
Nicholas Cervantes, Segerstrom 69
Flores, Orange Lutheran 69
Dylan Prochnow, Canyon 68
Connor Smith, El Modena 62
Brady Stringham, Laguna Beach 62
M. Schuerger, Canyon 61
Mekaih Felix, Cypress 60
Tackles
J. Castner Cortinas, Estancia 13
Thompson Foulger, Dana Hills 13
Davis Post, Newport Harbor 13
Carlos Vasquez, Estancia 12
M. Baya, Bolsa Grande 12
Tony Glynn, Newport Harbor 11
Glenn Baranoski, Newport Harbor 11
Onassis Lim, Yorba Linda 10
Julian Muro, Estancia 10
Weston Port, San Juan Hills 10
Caleb Quiroz, Troy 10
Anthony Jones, Crean Lutheran 10
Devon Costic, El Toro 10
Andrew Medina, Loara 9
Greg Blomdahl, San Juan Hills 9
Maxwell Mapstone, Portola 9
Kaden Orosz, Portola 9
Isaiah Leilua, Servite 9
Tomas Cernius, Servite 9
M. McCullough, Crean Lutheran 9
Akillies Segura, El Toro 9
A. Maldonado, Yorba Linda 8
Raddux Moscoso, Trabuco Hills 8
S. Montes De Oca, Bolsa Grande 8
F. Angeles, Bolsa Grande 8
J. Hernandez, Bolsa Grande 8
C. Cortez, Saddleback 8
Aaron Nicasio, Crean Lutheran 8
Jaden Williams, Mission Viejo 8
Jaxon Smith, Newport Harbor 8
Luke Anderson, Santa Margarita 8
Arlo De La Best, El Toro 8
Orange County Register
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