The Florida Times-Union

FHSAA just talking about playoff shakeup

- Clayton Freeman

Open division talk is back again in Florida, and this time, there’s more than just football on the menu.

The Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n board of directors is scheduled to discuss an open division — a separate championsh­ip division for the highestran­ked teams — in Monday’s meeting in Gainesvill­e.

The open division plan would pull out the top eight teams following district tournament­s in all major team sports for a special, double-eliminatio­n tournament with an unusual and complex format. The Nos. 1, 4, 5 and 8 teams would occupy one group, with Nos. 2, 3, 6 and 7 in the other.

The plan, if implemente­d in the future, would particular­ly shake up girls soccer in Northeast Florida. If applied to girls soccer this year, four of the eight Open Division teams would have come from the area: Bartram Trail, St. Johns Country Day and eventual state champions Creekside (Class 7A) and Ponte Vedra (Class 6A).

Boys basketball would have had two local teams selected in this formula (Jackson and Providence), with no locals in volleyball and girls basketball open divisions. Teams currently in top-eight positions of the FHSAA formula in still-active spring sports are Trinity Christian baseball, Episcopal softball and Middleburg softball.

While the double-eliminatio­n open division isn’t ready to take effect at this time — it’s a topic for discussion but not yet for voting at Monday’s meeting — a host of other big and not-so-big ideas are on the agenda, from continued pressure toward implementi­ng the shot clock in basketball to a new division in cheerleadi­ng.

The agenda includes a dizzying array of items for both action and discussion, some of them minor (clerical adjustment­s to the bylaws) and some more substantia­l, like a revision to FHSAA policies that would permit transfers to compete in spring football games. A few action items of note:

The FHSAA will vote on a policy revision to require schools to report final scores within 24 hours for team sports other than football.

For cheerleadi­ng, the associatio­n may add a Small Gameday division for teams of 12 or fewer cheerleade­rs, with limited stunts and back handspring­s as the only eligible tumbling moves.

In soccer, the sport advisory committee and the athletic directors advisory committee both recommende­d the adoption of the traditiona­l diagonal officiatin­g system, with a center referee and two linesmen.

Also in the plans is a workshop for board members on Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) regulation­s. That workshop is listed on the associatio­n’s agenda between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. Sunday, although the FHSAA provided no further details.

While the FHSAA weighs the use of the words “escaping discipline” in its bylaws (yes, it’s an entire item on the agenda), several more traditiona­l matters that remain up in the air. The FHSAA has yet to confirm classifica­tions for winter sports for 2024-25, which would begin in slightly more than six months, and the associatio­n has yet to formally clarify what system will determine qualificat­ion for next fall’s football playoffs following the demise of the Metro-Suburban system.

Eagles soar on tennis court

Maybe, Episcopal’s road to tennis perfection in 2024 began… on the lacrosse field.

“We got to run this field around a bunch of times,” said senior

looking northward from the school’s Clements Tennis Complex.

A cross country-style training routine around a lacrosse field has helped build Episcopal boys tennis into a machine entering this week’s District 3-1A tournament, chasing a rare feat for the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n postseason.

Episcopal entered the week at 16-0, having defeated nearly every power program in Northeast Florida in the regular season under third-year head coach

Solik.

McRae’s

Aidan Stefanides,

Ford Rachels

Pitchers’ duel of the year?

Carl

“He’s really developed us into a lot better players with all the conditioni­ng that we have to do,” senior said. “And that just makes us all better.”

While Bartram Trail (2018) and Ponte Vedra (2022) have captured FHSAA boys team championsh­ips in recent times, the wait for a team within Jacksonvil­le’s city limits goes back nearly two decades to Bolles in 2006.

And while Episcopal’s boys program has gradually grown in strength during the current decade, the school is still seeking its first championsh­ip or even state final at team level.

That might be changing this year, in part thanks to a focus on conditioni­ng and solid team leadership. On a roster with three freshmen and two sophomores, seniors Rachels and Stefanides have led the way from the No. 1 and No. 2 singles lines respective­ly.

“With us playing each other all the time and having these tough practices against each other, when we go and play these (district) matches, it makes it easier,” Rachels said.

The future is bright, too: who stands 6-2 in height while still in seventh grade, has grown into a still-undefeated force on the court this season.

“I knew this team was going to be special,” Rachels said, “but it’s kind of exceeded my expectatio­ns.”

Owen Neal,

Year in, year out, Clay always seems to play one game that’s in the running for baseball game of the year.

Now, 2024 is no exception.

The Blue Devils gutted out a 14-inning epic on Wednesday against First Coast, one that wasn’t settled until

game-winning squeeze bunt

Peyton

Parker Lowrance

scored with the gamewinner in the 1-0 pitchers’ duel.

The game was a masterpiec­e of pitching for the Blue Devils. threw five shutout innings, yielding two hits and striking out 11. He then gave way to Lowrance, who threw a completega­me distance (seven innings) with four walks and a dozen more K’s. Freshman

got the win, throwing hitless baseball for the 13th and 14th frames.

Total: six hits, three walks, 26 strikeouts and no runs allowed for the Blue Devils in 14 innings.

Not to be ignored was the effort of the First Coast staff. pitched seven shutout innings with four hits allowed and nine strikeouts, and

worked the next seven with four hits allowed, nine strikeouts and no runs until McRae’s game-winner.

That highlight was the second in 24 hours for McRae: The freshman second baseman had also delivered a walk-off hit the previous night to score

defeating Yulee 2-1. And in Clay’s previous game, they had erased a tworun sixth-inning deficit when back-toback doubles by and

beat Fleming Island 7-6.

Braden Phenneger

Shurling

McMahan

James Collins,

Rylan McMahan

Braeden McNamee

Cole Carnell

Jackson hoops hires PV assistant Shemwell

Byron Shemwell

Ben Wilson,

Tarence Guinyard.

Cason

Merrick Rapoza,

Easton

The Gateway Conference’s most successful boys basketball program of the last decade now has its new coach.

Jackson hired former Ponte Vedra assistant as the new head coach at the Northside school, which qualified for the FHSAA Class 4A final in March in Lakeland.

He replaces longtime Tigers coach

who stepped down last month after 15 seasons, 298 wins, 13 trips to the FHSAA regional playoffs and five visits to the final four.

Shemwell, a standout guard at Columbia during the mid-2000s, played college basketball at Edward Waters University. Working under he helped Ponte Vedra extend its own final-four streak earlier this season in Class 6A.

Former Generals guard Guinyard named All-American

Add All-American honors to the hoops resume of

The Florida State College at Jacksonvil­le sophomore, who also starred in high school at Lee (now Riverside), won firstteam All-American honors in National Junior College Athletic Associatio­n men’s basketball.

Guinyard surpassed 1,300 points and 200 assists in his two seasons with the Blue Wave, helping them to last month’s NJCAA national tournament in Illinois.

He’s planning to continue his basketball career beyond FSCJ, committing last week to transfer to Tennessee-Martin for his junior year.

Oakleaf races to Tocoi titles

High school track’s regular season is motoring toward the finish, but not without another nice night for Knights.

Oakleaf took first place in the boys and girls team standings at the Tocoi Creek Toro Showdown, a meet that included a personal-best 36 feet, 11 1/4 inches in the girls triple jump for and a 49.14 in the boys 400 for

Stimphil.

Jaylin Lewis Kyla Skinner

Jackson’s

Alyson Johnson.

Around the area

Episcopal’s

Ladarius Jackson

Michael Larsen

Justin Squire

Gavin Carlson

Harris Brooke Linscomb

Josber

The meet’s sprints belonged to Mandarin, with 100-200 sweeps for the Mustangs’ (10.73 and 21.36) and

(12.23 and 24.72). Georgia’s Richmond Hill came in first at the Beachside Battery Invitation­al, where local highlights included

196 feet, 1 1/2 inches for Ponte Vedra in the boys javelin,

47.12 for Bishop Kenny in the boys 400 and 56.58 for Nease in the girls 400.

The Bolles Mile Showcase also returned with another Nease win: ran 4:16.20 to edge Ponte Vedra’s

in the boys race, while of Foundation Christian Academy ran 4:53.55 to win the girls final ahead of Creekside’s

Esther Nelson‘s Ryan

Tanner Andrade-Brinsko

Madeleine Gear

Carson Magyar

Owen Sheetz

Emma Griner

Vincent

Jaden Ransom‘s

Danzell Simpkins Christian Wells

Matt

Wednesday’s Ridgeview High School Invitation­al and Bartram Trail’s Thursday Night Spikes meet are among the last events on the calendar before postseason begins April 24.

and signed with Methodist football. … Fleming Island defensive end

committed to Mount Union football. … Mandarin long snapper

committed to Hiram football. … Mandarin outside linebacker

committed to Florida A&M football. … Stanton diver signed with Florida Gulf Coast women’s diving. … Episcopal baseball and football athlete signed with Hampden-Sydney. … Eagle’s View guard

committed to Carolina University basketball. … Eagle’s View defensive back committed to Webber Internatio­nal football. … Tocoi Creek junior setter committed to Stetson volleyball. … Stanton midfielder committed to Rollins women’s soccer . ... Former St. Johns Country Day pitcher

committed to North Dakota State baseball out of Northern Oklahoma College… Tocoi Creek guard committed to Southern Crescent Technical College men’s basketball. … Trinity Christian sophomore pitcher

earned a selection to the all-tournament team at the National High School Invitation­al for baseball in North Carolina . ... Bartram Trail’s surpassed 100 hits for her Bears softball career. … Brunswick’s

Rylie Darkatsh

Vanessa Shevchenko

Luke Shannahan

Malik Lovett

Brayden

Kiera Strub

Nigel Gardner, Antonio Clark, Ja’Marious Towns Waseem Murray

and set a school record 41.97 in the boys 4x100-meter relay. … Englewood has reschedule­d its celebratio­n for the 25-year anniversar­y of the 1999 FHSAA championsh­ip baseball team for 6:30 p.m. on April 24.

 ?? CLAYTON FREEMAN/FLORIDA TIMES-UNION ?? Owen Neal of Episcopal hits a shot against Mason Vogt of St. Johns Country Day during an FHSAA District 3-1A high school boys tennis match on Monday.
CLAYTON FREEMAN/FLORIDA TIMES-UNION Owen Neal of Episcopal hits a shot against Mason Vogt of St. Johns Country Day during an FHSAA District 3-1A high school boys tennis match on Monday.

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