Centennial senior point guard Pam Wilmore made an oral commitment to New Mexico State, continuing the Aggies’ pipeline into one of the state’s top girls basketball programs.
- Home
- >> Nevada Preps
- >> Basketball
Girls Basketball
Bishop Gorman hired boys assistant coach Kevin Nixon to lead the girls team, the school announced Thursday.
A list of every player that was selected to one of the Review-Journal’s 2015-16 winter all-state teams and is expected to return this upcoming season.
Here is a recap of every team that won a state title during the 2015-16 winter sports season and will be looking to defend this upcoming season.
Bishop Gorman’s football team was approved by the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association on Wednesday to play an 11-game regular-season schedule.
Longtime Bishop Gorman girls basketball coach Sheryl Krmpotich is resigning from her position, the school announced Tuesday.
Karen Weitz, in her 17th year as head coach, led Centennial to a 31-1 record and an eighth state title. Weitz was the Review-Journal’s Coach of the Year.
A look at the Athletes of the Year from the winter season.
Centennial rising senior Jamaal Evans became the second area QB to make an oral commitment for 2017 when he recently pledged to UNR.
Tony Fields, a 6-foot-2-inch, 205-pound linebacker, has been one of the area’s most heavily recruited players this spring. He has 19 scholarship offers — Northwestern was the most recent on April 30 — and his family has racked up plenty of hotel points over the past month and a half making unofficial visits on the weekends.
Faith Lutheran’s Kyle Poser occupies a rare position in high school baseball as his team’s closer.
The spring signing period for NCAA Division I and II schools starts Wednesday, and, unlike most years, it is expected to be quiet locally.
The NIAA Board of Control on Thursday changed the mercy rules in football and boys and girls basketball, lowering the point differential threshold and allowing running clocks to startearlier in games.
The Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association”s Board of Control repealed its previously approved alignment for next school year and shifted course Wednesday, approving any Division I-A school that reaches 150 points in the Nevada Rubric to move to Class 4A next year.
Aamondae Coleman held the phone to his ear and listened attentively as the recruiter on the other end explained the school’s scholarship situation.