Livonia Churchill softball shows resiliency in win vs. rival Franklin

Things change.

USA TODAY

Like all the time for the Livonia Churchill softball team, which was forced to face rivals Stevenson and Franklin on back-to-back nights on May 5 and 6 because of weather delays.

That’s a big deal because all three entered the week in contention to win not only the City championship but also the Kensington Lakes Activities Association-East title.

Belleville upset Stevenson (13-7, 7-1) early in the season, but the Spartans handed Franklin its first league loss during a 3-0 win on April 22. Then, Stevenson sophomore pitcher Allie Cramer struck out 13 and recorded her 100th strikeout of the season during a 9-2 win over Churchill on May 5.

Livonia Churchill's Emma Karbowski races to third base during a Kensington Lakes Activities Association-East softball game on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.

Entering May 6, all three teams had one league loss, making Churchill and Franklin’s matchup almost a do-or-die situation. A five-run second inning helped the Chargers (14-4, 5-1) beat the Patriots (20-2, 6-2) 7-3, though nothing is safe yet.

When the three teams face each other during this weekend’s City tournament, any one of them can walk away with rivalry bragging rights and a lead in the East standings. Stevenson and Churchill, though, hold the edge over Franklin with a one-game advantage.

More:Unproven roster? So what. Livonia Churchill softball should still win

“For them to come back today after losing here last night, where everyone is in the same boat, I thought they responded very well,” Chargers coach Abe Vinitski said. “It was a big win for us, and it puts us in a spot for Saturday where we control everything we need to control.”

Churchill might also have a big advantage.

Livonia Churchill's Aydan Soper hits during a Kensington Lakes Activities Association-East softball game on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.

Usually, Madonna University hosts the annual four-team round-robin tournament, which also includes Livonia Clarenceville from the Michigan Independent Athletic Conference. Except the college accidentally double-booked the facility.

So Churchill stepped up at the last minute and will host the six games on May 9.

While home-field advantage didn’t help against Stevenson, it certainly did against Franklin. The Chargers are hoping it helps again in three days.

“Coming in here today, I told them we can’t (lose to Franklin) and give up our position when we’re going to be at home this weekend,” Vinitski said. “That’s an advantage to us, and we can get them (Stevenson) backright here. The three of us have been going back and forth for the KLAA, but now we’re in a position that if we take care of business, we can walk out of here on Saturday with one loss, and everyone else has more than one loss. So we’re in a great spot. We’ve just got to go out there and execute.”

Livonia Churchill's Clare Carpen pitches during a Kensington Lakes Activities Association-East softball game on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.

The Chargers certainly executed against the Patriots, who scored first after Makenna Goldman ripped a triple to right field that brought home Kinlee Goldman from second base.

Churchill answered immediately in the second inning.

Jordyn Jackson floated a bloop single to left field that scored Lauren Lowry. Zoe Freeman then brought home Emma Karbowski, and Tayler Fisher narrowly smacked a line drive past Franklin's lockdown shortstop, Savana Mullen, to score Kara Kingery.

Two at-bats later, Aydan Soper, the team’s lone senior and a three-year captain, doubled home Freeman and Fisher for the eventual winning runs.

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More:Livonia Stevenson's Cipa hits 2 inside-the-park HRs in same inning

“Bouncing back like this, it’s really good for our confidence, especially going into City’s,” said Soper, who went 4-for-4 with three singles. “It’s not an ideal situation to play both rivals back-to-back, but I’m really proud of our team for powering through that challenge, never giving up and keeping going. The way we supported each other today after yesterday’s loss is going to be really good going into City’s this weekend.”

Soper said she took pride in how Churchill responded because it’s a young team with little experience. In most games, the Chargers start at least six underclassmen but sometimes seven. Vinitski jokes that the roster is “Aydan and the kids.”

Livonia Franklin's Savana Mullen looks to tag Livonia Churchill's Lauren Lowry at second base during a Kensington Lakes Activities Association-East softball game on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.

After graduating leaders Betty Adams (Michigan-Dearborn), Anna Battagin (Madonna) and six other seniors last year, Soper has taken her new leadership role seriously.

“I definitely feel some pressure, even if I think it’s more self-imposed,” she said. “I have so much to live up to from last year’s seniors that I want to make sure that I embody everything I want from this team, from toughness in the field to mental tougheness and picking yourself up after you make an error. I know I’m not perfect, but I’m happy I can at least let it go for that inning and keep going back to the next pitch, the next at-bat and power through because that’s what I want from my teammates. If I can do it, that’s me leading by example and making sure the other kids can do it as well.”

Soper backed that up against Franklin.

Not only did she reach base all four times against pitcher Lily Ruhl, who struck out five, walked two and gave up 13 hits, but she also dove for a foul ball near third base, resulting in her dragging her chin across the turf near the fence.

More:With Newitt back, Livonia Franklin softball is already 10-0

“She has hit and played like this all year for us,” Vinitski said. “She’s seeing beach balls at the plate, plus she’s a leader and playing incredible defense. She has been top-notch, leading a very young group that can be super strong at one minute, and then the next minute, you see their eyes get big, like, ‘What’s going on today?’ Today, she helped them refocus.”

Livonia Franklin's Lily Ruhl pitches during a Kensington Lakes Activities Association-East softball game on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.

Soper’s encouragement worked, even when Franklin fought back.

The Patriots answered with Kinlee Goldman scoring Mullen on a sacrifice fly in the third and Sarah Schniers singling home McKenna Goldman in the fifth, but the Chargers added two insurance runs late. Ella Clenney lined a single to center field that scored Lowry in the fifth, and Kingery, who finished 3-for-3 with two stolen bases, scored on a wild pitch in the sixth.

Clare Carpen also pitched well, striking out seven, walking two and allowing seven hits.

“My message to the team was to make sure we’re focused on making those routine plays, making sure we’re being patient in the box and making sure we’re doing our best we can,” Soper said. “We just really wanted to play hard, play strong and believe in ourselves. We didn’t want to lose sight of each other because we can’t win a game without backing each other up, encouraging each other.”

Essentially, Soper wants her teammates to control what they can control.

They can’t control a postponement pushing the Stevenson game to one night before they faced Franklin, nor can they control Madonna bungling what should’ve been a great showcase atmosphere on a college campus.

But they can control how they respond to adversity. And at least for one night against Franklin, Soper had the Chargers looking resilient.

Brandon Folsom covers high school sports in metro Detroit for Hometown Life. Follow him on his new X.com account at@folsomwrites.

This article originally appeared on Hometownlife.com:Livonia Churchill softball beats Livonia Franklin, 7-3

Livonia Churchill softball shows resiliency in win vs. rival Franklin

Things change. Like all the time for the Livonia Churchill softball team, which was forced to face rivals Stevenson and Franklin o...
Matthew Modine Says He Took on the Peg Board Scene in “Vision Quest”, with 'No Stunt Doubles or Safety Measures'

Matthew Modine played Louden Swain, a high school wrestler, in 1985's Vision Quest

People Matthew Modine in 'Vision Quest'Credit: Warner Brothers/Courtesy Everett

NEED TO KNOW

  • The actor, 67, shared a fun fact about one of the film's fans' favorite moments, detailing the fun in taking on the physical challenge himself

  • Modine previously told PEOPLE a film like Vision Quest couldn't be made today

Matthew Modineput in some serious work while playing Louden Swain.

The actor, 67, looked back at his time as the high school wrestler at the center ofVision Questin a recent post on X.

"I’m often asked about the pegboard scene inVision Quest. That was all me," he wrote.

"No stunt doubles or safety measures. I trained for a long time and had to climb it several times to get all the angles. The 'trick' is not to over extend, so you’d be pulling up your entire body weight. You have to keep it compact. Arms and elbows tight."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Asked if there was ever an opportunity to revisit the film for a sequel, Modine told a fan, "There’s been talk over the years. At one point they were planning a remake with Taylor Lautner. I didn’t see the point."

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Another fan asked if Modine kept anything from the from the set, he admitted, "Nope. I didn’t think to. I was young. I do have posters, press kits, soundtracks, and DVDs."

Speaking with PEOPLE about the film in Feb. 2025 in celebration of its 40th anniversary, Modine said that it tells a story "you can’t remake."

“Louden Swain in a movie today who says and does the things that he does in the film — which are all really important lessons and part of coming of age, of saying inappropriate things, of doing inappropriate things people — young people do,” Modine shared with PEOPLE. “He realizes he made a mistake in something that he said, or something that he did. And it's Linda Fiorentino [who] puts him in his place.”

While attempting to pursue his goal, Louden finds himself falling for Fiorentino’s character Carla, a woman stranded in Louden’s town after her car breaks down on her drive to San Francisco. As Louden tries to capture Carla’s attention, he occasionally loses the motivation to beat Shute — but Carla’s redirection is part of what helps him come to the film’s resolution.

“Today, the person would be canceled — the person would be chastised on social media, on text messages, and things. So I don't think that you could remake this film. I think the world has gone topsy-turvy,” Modine continued at the time. “But the good news is that the movie exists in its '80s form, and you can go back and watch it and romanticize about what it was like to be in the eighties and with all that great music and these wonderfully weird and goofy people.”

Read the original article onPeople

Matthew Modine Says He Took on the Peg Board Scene in “Vision Quest”, with 'No Stunt Doubles or Safety Measures'

Matthew Modine played Louden Swain, a high school wrestler, in 1985's Vision Quest NEED TO KNOW The actor, 67,...
Cavs use third-quarter surge to best Raptors in Game 7

Jarrett Allen scored 14 of his career playoff-high-tying 22 points in the third quarter and grabbed 19 rebounds, powering the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 114-102 win over the visiting Toronto Raptors on Sunday night in Game 7 of their Eastern Conference first-round series.

Field Level Media

Fourth-seeded Cleveland, which trailed by double digits in the first and second quarters, will play the top-seeded Detroit Pistons in the East semifinals, beginning Tuesday in Detroit. The home team won every game in the Cavaliers-Pistons series.

Donovan Mitchell also had 22 points and James Harden posted 18 points and six rebounds for the Cavaliers, who built a 94-72 lead early in the fourth. Allen had 10 rebounds -- five offensive -- in the third when Cleveland outscored the Raptors 38-19.

"Emotions were high and the crowd was into it," Allen said, before laughing, "Dr. J-A. I just had to let 'em know. I was just playing hard, trying to get us ahead."

Mitchell agreed about Allen's impact on both the game and the crowd.

"The crowd brought the same energy as Jarrett Allen," Mitchell said. "That dude took over. He was doing everything, getting steals, rebounds, scoring points."

Scottie Barnes collected 24 points, nine rebounds and six assists for fifth-seeded Toronto. RJ Barrett had 23 points on 9-of-25 field-goal attempts and Jamal Shead added 14 points and seven assists.

"For the stage of his career, (Barnes) gave it all," Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic said. "I don't want to sound like a broken record, but this is not the best version of Scottie we're going to see. He's going to be even better next season."

Despite his coach's praise, Barnes found plenty to blame for his team's loss.

"They worked harder than us in this game," he said. "They had 20 offensive rebounds. They had four guys crashing every play, even 5-10, 5-11 guys crashing the glass."

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Cleveland is 5-0 all-time at home in Game 7 and has beaten the Raptors all 11 times in the playoffs in its arena. The Cavaliers also have won all four of their postseason series against Toronto.

Evan Mobley, who had 13 points, scored the first basket of the second half to give Cleveland its initial lead at 51-49. It turned into a 20-2 run spanning the second and third quarters when Mitchell made a hoop with 9:28 remaining in the third to make it 58-49.

"Jarrett (Allen) really took us over the top with that third-quarter performance," Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson said. "That's the best I've ever seen him. He was just absolutely incredible tonight."

Cleveland used an 11-2 run to close the opening half, tying the score for the first time at 49-all on a Jaylon Tyson 3-pointer. Shead and Barnes led all players at the half with 14 points apiece, while Harden had 10 points and Sam Merrill added eight off the bench.

"It felt like we had them," Barrett said. "That's what's going to hurt. We definitely could have won this game and won this series."

The Cavaliers committed 13 turnovers in the first half, which Toronto turned into 14 points. Cleveland had six miscues in the first quarter and seven in the second.

Barnes netted the first five points of the evening after Allen missed a dunk on Cleveland's opening possession. Shead made a runner to give the Raptors a 22-12 advantage, but Merrill had five points in the final three minutes to cut it to 26-24.

Shead scored seven points in the period and Barnes had five points and four assists, helping Toronto shoot 55% (11 of 20) from the floor.

The Raptors were without two starters, small forward Brandon Ingram (right heel soreness) and point guard Immanuel Quickley (right hamstring strain).

"We gave it all, everything we had today," Rajakovic said. "Our guys were awesome. We made it hard on (the Cavaliers)."

--Field Level Media

Cavs use third-quarter surge to best Raptors in Game 7

Jarrett Allen scored 14 of his career playoff-high-tying 22 points in the third quarter and grabbed 19 rebounds, powering the Cleveland...
Astros lose catcher Yainer Diaz 'for a while' because of a left oblique strain

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston catcher Yainer Diaz wasplaced on the 10-day injured listwith a left oblique strain Tuesday.

Associated Press

Diaz was injured in batting practice Monday and manager Joe Espada didn’t provide a specific timeline for his injury but said he’d be out for "a while.”

TheAstrosselected the contract of catcher César Salazar from Triple-A Sugar Land on Monday after Diaz was injured. He’ll serve as the team’s backup until Diaz is healthy with veteran Christian Vázquez stepping in as the starter.

The 27-year-old Diaz is hitting .248 with two home runs and 14 RBIs in 26 games this season.

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In other moves on Tuesday, the Astros recalled right-hander Jason Alexander and outfielder Zach Dezenzo from Sugar Land. Infielder Nick Allen was reinstated from the 10-day injured list and right-hander Ryan Weiss was optioned to Sugar Land.

Weiss has struggled this season, going 0-3 with a 7.62 ERA in nine games with two starts. He allowed eight hits and seven runs — six earned — in 4 1/3 innings of an 8-3 loss to the Dodgers on Monday night.

The Astros also designated outfielder Dustin Harris for assignment Tuesday. Harris hit .226 with four RBIs in 11 games after being selected off waivers from the Chicago White Sox on April 18.

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/MLB

Astros lose catcher Yainer Diaz 'for a while' because of a left oblique strain

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston catcher Yainer Diaz wasplaced on the 10-day injured listwith a left oblique strain Tuesday. Diaz was injur...
Merritt Island beach volleyball claims regional title

Merritt Island beach volleyball faced a familiar foe on Tuesday, May 5, in the Class 2A, Region 2 final in New Smyrna Beach, the reigning state runner-up.

USA TODAY

Tuesday was the second meeting of the season with No. 2 seed New Smyrna Beach winning the regular season meeting 4-1 on March 11.

In front of its home fans, No. 1 seed Merritt Island flipped the result with a 3-2 victory to claim the regional title and punch its ticket to Tallahassee for the state semifinals.

“Super proud of them. They worked really hard,” Merritt Island head coach Angie Patrick said. “Just win their last game at home is just pretty sweet.”

The Barracudas won the first match of the duel 21-11, 21-18. On center court, senior Delaney Petit and junior Reece Loggins evened things up with a 3-set win.

Merritt Island carried that momentum, winning the next two matches to secure the regional title. Mustangs junior Sadie McClellan and sophomore Gena Walters won in straight sets 21-19, 21-15.

On center court, juniors Bella Becker and Amber Ives clinched the win with a 21-19, 21-13 sweep.

“The first 10 minutes or so, I was a little concerned because we seemed hesitant and nervous. I think we started to find our groove and then I felt better because they got this now,” Patrick said. “They were feeling more confident and moving better. I think just them turning that dial, flipping that switch and realizing what was on the line. Just seeing them go out and compete was a great thing.”

Merritt Island players celebrate after defeating New Smyrna Beach 3-2 in the regional finals of the Class 2A beach volleyball tournament May 5, 2026. Craig Bailey, FLORIDA TODAY via USA TODAY NETWORK

Petit/Loggins battled back to earn Merritt Island’s first win of the match. The No. 2 pair dropped the first set 16-21 before rallying to win 21-17, 15-13.

“I think just to get through each pass and talk to each other about hitting shots, where to go really helped us,” Petit said.

Merritt Island dropped three of its first seven matches of the season. Since then, the Mustangs have rattled off 13 consecutive wins to advance to the state semifinals.

They’ve achieved that with Petit as the lone senior on the squad.

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“Since the beginning, we always came out here with 110 percent effort and always pushed to be successful,” Petit said.

Merritt Island last played in Tallahassee in 2024 when it was among the final 16 teams in the state. For the first time since the sport expanded to three classes, it’s among the last four teams standing in Class 2A.

“We went to state a couple years ago and lost in a region semifinal last year, which was very tough,” Petit said. “Coming out, being very strong and compete very hard against a team we lost earlier in the season to was very exciting. Everyone cheering and being excited for our team helped us a lot.”

The Mustangs compete in the Class 2A state semifinals on Friday, May 8, at Florida State University. A victory would propel them to the championship match on Saturday, May 9.

“Same thing that happened (Tuesday),” Patrick said. “We all got to come out ready and strong and not nervous, back on our heels and just have confidence. More than anything, I just want to enjoy this ride with them. I want them to enjoy it and know this is going to be a blast.”

New Smyrna Beach(15-6) 2

Merritt Island(17-3) 3

No. 1:Bella Becker/Amber Ivesdef. Teagan Lux/Bailey Jones (21-19, 21-13)

No. 2:Delaney Petit/Reece Logginsdef. Unity Baker/Savannah Toler (16-21, 21-17, 15-13)

No. 3: Mollie Hale/Paige Taylor def.Whitney Wisniewski/Peyton Riordan(15-21, 21-11, 15-9)

No. 4: Jasmine Mahoney/Laila Parnell def.Khloe Horton/Lydia Scott(11-21, 18-21)

No. 5:Sadie McClellan/Gena Waltersdef. Della McLaughlin/Kate Collins (21-19, 21-15)

This article originally appeared on Florida Today:Merritt Island beach volleyball advances to state

Merritt Island beach volleyball claims regional title

Merritt Island beach volleyball faced a familiar foe on Tuesday, May 5, in the Class 2A, Region 2 final in New Smyrna Beach, the reigni...

 

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