Between late July and early August, Arlington powerboat racer John Peeters, 27, picked up hardware at separate national championships.
The Mighty Marlin Swim Club wrapped up its season and had four swimmers qualify for the 2009 Short Course National Championships (SC World Championship Trials), which will be held at the King County Aquatic Center in Federal Way beginning Dec. 3.
Sign up now for fall sports at Arlington Boys and Girls Club The Arlington Boys and Girls Club is holding…
While summer is traditionally a time of softball tournaments and pick-up basketball games in the driveway, local studios and organizations offer a variety of martial arts that can be practiced year round to build strength and fitness at any age.
“Watch out, they’re good,” cautioned Old Bats and Odd Balls players about the team on the other bench.
Nearly 30 kids turned out to participate in a soccer clinic memorializing a fellow Eagle Creek Elementary student who passed away in February.
Once again, Arlington basketball has shown the strength of its young talent.
Local athletes held their own against statewide and several out-of-state challengers in a state bodybuilding and fitness competition at the Byrnes Performing Arts Center.
It has been just two months since Lakewood alum Jake Rife was drafted by the Los Angeles Angels, but everything since has been a blur of baseball.
Drafted in the 48th round, Rife may have slipped a little in the standings after his senior year with the Washington Huskies baseball team, but mainly because he didn’t have the option of going back to college ball, surmised Jeff Levering, radio broadcaster for the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes, the A+ team for which Rife now plays.
From a field of an estimated 6,000 runners, Lakewood cross country coach Jon Murray proved to be the fastest, winning the Seattle Seafair 8k on July 25.
I just got off of the phone with Highland Christian football coach Pete Miller, and he confirmed that rumors of the program’s demise are greatly exaggerated
With a roster heavy on juniors and seniors, last year’s Arlington football team included only four sophomores and a freshman.
As football moms and dads can probably affirm, football takes a toll on the field.