23 minute read
Sports
HIGH SCHOOL HOLDING PATTERN
Fauquier, Liberty and Kettle Run high schools are not eligible to begin preseason sports workouts until the State Department of Education signs off on the submitted plan for safety. July 6 is a possibility. Culpeper and Eastern View were approved to start this week.
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Fauquier Times | July 1, 2020
15
SPORTS
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WHITE, MILLER ARE FAUQUIER TIMES 2020 LIBERTY ATHLETES OF THE YEAR
Big play Tre: White left legacy in football, hoops
By Peter Brewington Time Staff Writer
We live in an era of sports specialization where it is now inconceivable for a high school male athlete to master football in the fall, basketball in the winter and baseball in the spring.
For Liberty High’s Tre’Von White that superhuman feat of versatility was within his grasp this spring. A football-basketball phenom who never played high school baseball, the senior was set to start in center field, until the pandemic wiped out spring sports in early March. PHOTO BY JOHN HUGGINS/HUGSHOTS PHOTOGRAPHY
“He shocked us when he Liberty football star Tre’Von White was a went for baseball. We wanted first team all-state safety, team MVP and him to try lacrosse,” said his intercepted a school-record 13 passes. mother Shauna of another sport that would also have been a unique tribute to White’s athleticism. What’s not a shock is that White is the Fauquier Times 2020 Liberty High Boys Athlete of the Year. He cemented his legacy as a school legend with a Liberty record 13 career interceptions in football and excelled as a dunking machine in basketball. Baseball gave him a 1.000 batting average as a three-sport athlete. White, 18, made history as the school’s most rapacious defensive back with 13 interceptions. As a senior, White had 11 interceptions and 45 tackles and was a first team all-state, all-region and all-district. He also caught 45 passes for 712 yards and 10 TDs. He scored two TDs on interception returns, one on a blocked field goal and THE WHITE FILE Family: Father Jay works in pest control business. Mother Shauna is a cook at Liberty High. Brother Ja’Von, 19, is a former Liberty football and track star. Sister Jazzmin, 17, is a rising senior at Liberty an basketball starter. Favorite food: His mom’s seafood pasta salad. Crabs and shrimp. Favorite restaurant: Mexican food or Golden Corral. Superstitions: “Owls. They bring bad spirits. It means something bad is coming. My mom’s side is Native American, they told me that.” Family numbers: Sister Jazzmin wears No. 12 because it’s the opposite of Tre’s No. 21. fumble return, one on a punt return, one rushing, and threw a TD pass. White’s big plays seemed to flow like No. 1 hit songs from Madonna or Beyonce. “He had certain moments in every game, where if he had not done that, I don’t know if we would have pulled it out,” said football coach Travis Buzzo. “He became a highlight reel.” Beneath his slender 6-foot-3½, 150-something-pound frame lies a relaxed happy kid with a knack for mass-producing signature, game-changing football plays. “He’s a very smart football player, at times he messes with opponents,” said Buzzo. “He’s one of the smartest I’ve ever had.” Former LHS coach Sean Finnerty agreed.“Tre was one of the best competitors I have had the pleasure to coach. There was never a play he thought he couldn’t make,” Finnerty said. Earlier in the year, the Eagles struggled against King George, but TD catches in the 27-17 win. In a 40- 29 win against Kettle Run, White blocked a field goal attempt and returned it 85 yards for a TD and made five receptions for 98 yards.. In a 20-13 win at Sherando, White scored on a reverse from 27 yards out to make it 18-13 with 6:52 left as the Eagles improved to 6-0. In a 20-14 win at Millbrook, White caught a 63-yard TD bomb from Dylan Bailey to help the Eagles take sole possession of first place in the district at 8-0. Perhaps his biggest play was a 60-yard interception return for the go-ahead TD in a 21-14 win over Loudoun County in the Class 4 Region B quarterfinals. Liberty’s 11-1 season ended in a 53-22 loss to Tuscarora in Bealeton, with White doing his part with two TD receptions. White played on the freshman, JV White helped them through with two See WHITE, page 16
Miller’s field hockey memories will last forever
By Fred Hodge Special to the Time
Athletes have a different perspective on their particular sport than the average fan.
Fans usually witness only the actual head-to-head competition. Athletes focus on both the outcome and the behind-the-scenes bonding.
For recent Liberty graduate Emma Miller the memories of the Eagles’ record-setting field hockey season will bring smiles long into the future. Miller was a fixture on that amazing team and was set to COURTESY PHOTO shine in lacrosse this spring, Emma Miller was part of the greatest field leading to her selection as hockey team in Liberty history at 18-2. Fauquier Times 2020 Liberty Girls Athlete of the Year. THE MILLER FILE “It’s not really about the sport. It’s about the connection we had. On Family: “I’m lucky enough to be blessed with two sets of parents. and off the field we were best friends My mom, Meredyth Miller is a as well as being teammates,” Miller pre-school teacher, and my dad, said about LHS field hockey’s 18-2 Scott Agans, is a sales engineer season and first trip to the state tourat Genetec. My stepdad, Daniel nament since 2005. Farrar, works for Dominion Power,
“We went to states just because and my stepmom, Bridget McGee, we transferred our love and our conis a marketing coordinator for the nection as friends to being teamAmerican Society for Microbiology. mates. We communicate and are My half-brothers Tyler, Oliver and honest with each other.” Max are going into third grade,
Liberty won 18 in a row, includKindergarten and pre-school. ing the Northwestern District’s Favorite food: “I love classic chicken regular-season and tournament tenders and French fries. I could also crowns before placing second in eat chick-fil-a or chipotle every day of the regional playoffs. The sterling the week and never get tired of it. campaign ended with a loss in the Favorite movie: Sing. “I can quote state Group 4A quarterfinals to the whole movie and I know all the Chancellor. songs on the soundtrack.”
Prior to the opening game, Miller Favorite music: Any top charts. and several teammates bought temModern, pop, rap, country. porary tattoos, which became a ritual after their 1-0 start. “We became very superstitious and would try to keep ...every little detail the same, even down to our hair style or socks we wore,” Miller said. Another quirky tradition also arose after the girls took a pair of battered, unwanted football cleats left on the field to the hockey locker room. “Every time we won, we put a little tally. We kept adding more and more. For the first 18 games we had 18 tally marks,” Miller said. Family obligations prevented her from playing on youth teams growing up, making field hockey and lacrosse her first ventures into team sports. “I decided to try something new. I’ve always been active,” she said.”That turned out a lot better than I expected.” season conditioning, Liberty field hockey coach Katie Norman wondered what was up when Miller texted Norman that she was going to volleyball camp. “I responded, ‘You know field hockey and volleyball are in the same season?’ Her response describes Emma perfectly. She said something along the lines of ‘Yes, I just want to learn everything I can and be really well rounded in sports.’ And to no one’s surprise, that is exactly what she did.” Miller became a captain for her junior and senior seasons. A center midfielder, she was first-team all-Northwestern District and second-team all-Region D honors as a senior.
Impressed with her talent in preSee MILLER, page 16
White was human highlight reel
WHITE, from page 15 and varsity teams in 2016 as a freshman, making his varsity debut in the second-to-last game against Brentsville, then played against Fauquier. He recalls being small at 5-7 and not being involved in many plays.
As a sophomore in 2017 he enjoyed his first season as a starter as he played with his brother Ja’Von, a senior. Tre was the full-time starting safety and made honorable mention all-Northwestern District. He credited Ja’Von, who played cornerback and wide receiver, for helping him succeed. “He made a playbook for me on defense, he told me what coverages. It was the best all-around team,” Tre said.
The Eagles went 8-2 in the regular season, beat Kettle Run 28-14 in the first round, then lost to Sherando 33-21 to close out a 9-3 year.
White’s junior year in 2018 was marred by a broken collarbone in the fifth game at Sherando. White got hurt making a first-half tackle, then got buried in the bottom of a pile. “The way I landed, it snapped it. I knew it was broken when I hit the ground,” he said.
White had a difficult recovery.
Following the year, he had a bout with vertigo. “I got sick and did not eat for three months. Every time I’d eat, I’d throw up. I was dizzy sitting still,” said White of a period from November to January. “I got pale. I’m good now. It scared me so bad.”
Mom Shauna said the experience set the stage for his monster senior year. “A setback is a setup for a comeback,” she said. “He felt like he had a point to prove, and he proved it. I’m proud of him.”
Taller by some 2 inches as a senior, White hadn’t gained weight, but his vast varsity experience and uncanny big play abilities were on full display. “It’s not how strong you get or how powerful you are, but also how explosive and fast you are. If you’re not strong, you better be faster and explosive in movement. It’s a weight and balance system. Tre was slender, but Tre was very explosive and had enough speed to get by people and cover ground,” Buzzo said.
As a senior in basketball, White averaged 6.5 points, 2.5 assists 5.5 rebounds and 3.5 steals. He led the team in assists and steals and was second in rebounds. He was also a team catalyst with his frequent dunks, which he achieved after a seemingly easy liftoff.
“In the 16 years I have been there, he is the best game dunker I have ever had, and it isn’t even close,” said coach Pat Frazer. He said White averaged more than one dunk per game in both seasons. White counted his dunks at 35 as a junior, including breaking a rim at Handley.
“On defense, his best attribute was his anticipation. He has such great instincts. He knows what is going to happen before it does. We saw the same things on the football field. Based on our plus-minus chart, Tre was the team’s most effective player for the second year in a row,” Frazer said.
He was also popular, with an aura about him. He always seemed to leave the postgame locker room accompanied by teammates. “He’s friends with everybody on the team. He’s a jokester in life. He’s always enjoying himself,” said Buzzo. “I don’t think he’s ever had a boring time in his life. He finds a way to make everything fun.”
Said his mother: “A lot of kids listen to him. A couple people have said if he is not on the field, you can tell the difference (in how the team looks and plays). People tell him how great he is and he’s like, ‘Thank you.’ He’s shy about it.”
White’s spring choice of baseball, a difficult sport requiring year-round training, was an eye-opener.
“I used to play when I was little. I stopped. Senior year I was like, ‘I might as well play again,’’’ he said.
Although he made the team, the season was scrapped before the first game. No one knows how it would have turned out, but coach Tom Determan was trying strategies to get White on base. “I was bunting. He made me bunt to get on base. I started to get better. I knew where to put the ball at. I wish we could have finished the season,” White said.
White originally planned to play football at Louisburg (N.C.) Junior College, but has changed his mind. “I de-committed. School was not for me,” he said. “It’s not sad, it has to come to an end someday,” he said about football.
He is considering pursuing a trade in heavy machinery and taking classes at Lord Fairfax Community College.
Miller was Eagles’ midfield maestro
MILLER, from page 15
“Emma was someone her teammates truly looked up to and could count on in any situation,” Norman said.
Liberty girls lacrosse coach Amy Lacey was the junior varsity mentor when Miller was a freshman. Miller played four games then was elevated to the varsity, and emerged as a center midfielder.
As a junior, Miller was a team captain, started every game and was a major contributor to the transition game. She had 26 draw controls, 17 goals, three assists and gathered 36 loose balls.
“I loved playing midfield because I could attack and score,” said Miller, who relished playing the entire field. “I’m able to communicate with everyone around me. I set the movement.”
“I’m so sad to not have been able to see her and her teammates’ accomplishments this season,” Lacey lamented of the 2020 spring season cancellation. “But I am so proud that she is receiving this award.”
Emma will attend James Madison University, hoping to major in early elementary education. She is working this summer with kindergarten and first-grade children at the Warrenton Baptist Church Tiny Tots program.
She might play club hockey or lacrosse at JMU.
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Fauquier Times | July 1, 2020 WWW.FAUQUIER.COM
MASKS AND HIGH DRAMA AT 95TH GOLD CUP
Two-time champ Doc Cebu prevails in mistake-laden feature
By Betsy Burke Parker
Special to the Time
Two-time champion Doc Cebu took command late in Saturday’s $40,000 Virginia Gold Cup and drew away with authority in the signature timber stake at Great Meadow in The Plains.
Ridden by 2019’s co-champion jockey Michael Mitchell, Doc Cebu jumped strongly throughout the Cup’s four miles and delivered a dominant victory in what has to be considered the oddest race at the most unusual race meet in the weirdest year since the inaugural running in 1922.
It was a strange day: the voice of Virginia steeplechasing, Will O’Keefe, provided his standard stride-by-stride commentary over the PA system – to an almost empty house. Ten oversubscribed races plumped the star-studded program at the vast - but empty - sun-soaked field events center.
Between O’Keefe’s calls, it was strangely silent. Due to pandemic limitations still curtailing public events, just a few hundred active participants witnessed the first spectator-free Gold Cup.
“It was weird to be here with just a skeleton crew. It’s so quiet,” said Virginia Gold Cup Association executive director Diane Jones before the title event.
The day was about to get weirder.
In the eponymous feature, two of the circuit’s most experienced professionals took the wrong course, eliminating pre-race favorite and 2019 winner Andi’amu from the race and leaving Doc Cebu alone at the wire to deliver the powerful performance.
Gold Cup shaped up as a grudge match between last year’s Gold Cup winner, and timber champ, Andi’amu and 2017 and ’18 champion Doc Cebu. Winner of two International Gold Cups at Great Meadow, Doc Cebu had finished second at the June 13 Middleburg Hunt Cup behind Ballybristol Farm’s Andi’amu. Mitchell said he’d “expected (Doc Cebu) would improve off of that run” at Glenwood Park two weeks ago, plus, he added, “four miles is ‘his’ distance. He needs a piece of ground” to express speed and stamina in equal measures.
The race unfolded as expected at first, the Jack Fisher-trained novice Storm Team (Sean McDermott up) taking command at the break, Andi’amu settled in second with Tom Garner, Mitchell tucking Doc Cebu behind the leaders. “Switching him off,” as Mitchell put it, was
PHOTO BY DOUGLAS LEES Maryland-based Doc Cebu (above), ridden by Michael Mitchell, powered to victory in what horsemen are calling the strangest Virginia Gold Cup meet since the first running in 1922.
the strategy in the early stages of the marathon. “He (established) a good rhythm.” Mitchell said his position, fourth – of six – in the early running set up what he hoped would be a strategically planned late run in the final circuit of the course.
Coming out of the North Rail turn, between the sixth and seventh jumps, Mitchell’s strategy changed.
Briefly confused by what he called an “inviting route” off the dowling poles marking the north end of the course, McDermott incorrectly guided leader Storm Team to the 19th fence up the outside of the racecourse, rather than to the eighth fence up the inner. Garner followed him aboard Andi’amu. Both pros realized their mistake as they cleared the wrong obstacle, glancing left at the others racing 50 feet to their left.
Mitchell said he’s lucky he didn’t follow them.
“For a split-second, and I mean, like, one step, I questioned which way to go,” Mitchell admitted later. He could have easily tugged the right rein to follow Storm Team, or the left rein to stick behind Codrington College (Darren Nagle up.)
“You do question yourself,” said the veteran pro, a native of Rugby, England at 29 with two jockey titles – the U.S. crown last year, the New Zealand championship in 2015. “At the speed that you’re going there’s not a lot of time to hesitate … that you’re making the wrong decision.
PHOTO BY BETSY BURKE PARKER Ballybristol Farm’s Mercoeur, the gray horse with yellow silks, won the crosscountry Steeplethon with rider Tom Garner.
“What went through my mind is there’s a huge long run from the sixth fence (on the backstretch) to the seventh (a third of a mile away, in the middle of the homestretch.) I knew I was correct.”
Storm Team and Andi’amu pulled up – off-course horses are not allowed to continue, and riders are fined if they stay in the race.
Doc Cebu jumped strongly off new leader Codrington College’s lead, Mitchell said, moving to challenge at the second-last and extending to 12 lengths at the wire. Codrington College was second, Super Saturday (Gerard Galligan) the only other finisher in third. Lemony Bay pulled up on the backstretch.
Ten-year-old Doc Cebu powered home, running the four miles in 8:15 2/5 on turf rated as good.
Mitchell won three other races on the extended card, prevailing with maiden hurdlers Fast Car, Lonely Weekend and Shark de Berlais.
Semmes hurdle feature winner Snap Decision, like stablemate Doc Cebu is trained in Maryland by reigning trainer champion Fisher and sired by Hard Spun. Sean McDermott timed his stretch run to perfection, Snap Decision surging late to win the $35,000 stake by 4 1/2 lengths.
Complete results are at nationalsteeplechase.com. Find more photos on the Temple Gwathmey Steeplechase Foundation Facebook page.
18
REAL ESTATE
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Fauquier Times | July 1, 2020
Upgraded beauty in Remington
This home, located on a cul-desac, is well cared for and beautifully upgraded with almost 5,000 square feet of living area.
Walk into a beautiful foyer and find gleaming hardwood floors in most rooms, including the formal dining room, living room and a den. Stroll into the open family room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace and note the sunroom to one side and gourmet kitchen on the other, with a tile backsplash, granite countertops and a breakfast area.
The breakfast area walks out to the deck, which overlooks a large, fully-fenced yard and shed. Upstairs,
you’ll find hardwood floors in the hallway, a generously sized laundry room, three nicely sized bedrooms and a large master suite with multiple closets and a luxurious master bath.
Looking for more room? The fully finished, walkup basement has a recreation room with bar, a den (currently used as a bedroom) and additional rooms for whatever you wish.
You don’t want to miss this beauty at 12225 Remland Court in Remington, Virginia, 22734.
Diane Quigley 703-732-5952 Diane.quigley@c21nm.com
We are pledged to the letter and spirit of Virginia’s policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity throughout the Commonwealth. We encourage and support advertising and marketing programs in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, familial status, or national origin.
All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Virginia and federal fair housing laws, which make it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, or elderliness, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
For more information or to file a housing complaint, call the Virginia Fair Housing office at 804-367-8530 or toll-free at 888-551-3247. For the hearing impaired, call 804-367- 9753. EMAIL: fairhousing@dpor.virginia.gov WEBSITE:dpor.virginia.gov/fairhousing
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These property transfers, filed May 21-27, 2020 were provided by Clerk of the Court of Fauquier County. (Please note that to conserve space, only the first person named as the grantor or grantee is listed. The kind of instrument is a deed unless stated otherwise.) Top Dollar Deal $925,000 in Marshall District
Cedar Run District
Mark A. Smith to James Brownlow, 1.3232 acres at 7398 Little Court nr. Warrenton. $250,000 Y R. Shortt to B. F. Stephens Inc., 1 acre on Wince Lane, Warrenton.
$131,000
Ethel M. Jackson HRS by Spl. Comr. to Green Matters Construction Inc., 0.99 acre on Midland Road and 0.99 acre at 4516 Midland Road nr. Elk Run. $90,000 The Drew Corp. to Potomac District Council of the Assemblies of God Ins., 24.11 acres on James Madison Hwy., L/E portions to the Town of Warrenton taxed as 8.0820 acres.
$66,600
Jeffrey W. Yates to William W. Miller Jr., 6.5637 acres at 13293 Deep Run Mill Road, Goldvein. $436,000 Joseph Furtado to Jonna Gillette, 37.7547 acres on James Madison Hwy. & Shumate’s Mill Lane nr. Warrenton. $325,000 William Reynolds to Patrick Frank Hosey, 1.4759 acres at 8092 Zellas Road nr. Warrenton. $365,000 Brandon M. Ashwood to Calvin Moh, 7597 Pahlson Court, Warrenton.
$415,000
Ray K. Crawford to Russell R. Vane III Tr., 3.1693 acres at 12710 Foxtrot Road, Bealeton. $200,000
Lee District
Red Maple Properties LLC to Pelham Village LC, Lots 161, 162, 163, 164 and 165, Southcoate Village nr. Bealeton. $250,000 Argent Development LLC to Andrew Reed Hales, 1.2612 acres at 7167 O’Keefe Road, Bealeton. $264,900 William S. Prince to Kyle Johnson, 7018 Helm Drive, Remington.
$289,000
Michael L. Straight to Dixie G. Collins, 0.2410 acre at 12238 Davis Road, Remington. $249,900 Barbara D. Phillips to Lewis A. Golladay, 4.1532 acres at 4423 Dyes Lane nr. Bealeton. $339,900 Lawrence J. Shillingburg to Carol Page, 1.100 acres at 10059 Kimberly Court nr. Warrenton. $387,000
Center District
Raul Montalvo to James L. Graham III, 7318 Wythe Court, Warrenton.
$435,000 Scott District
Michael A. Crockett to Joshua Lee O’Rourke, 6.2190 acres at 5052 Fairview Lane, Broad Run. $549,000 Lakeside Homes LLC to Scott A. Martin, 4706 Gates Road nr. Warrenton. $858,936 Donald L. Ethier to Mark F. Sanderson, 10.001 acres at 5023 Hummingbird Lane, Warrenton.
$670,000
Aline S. Brannan to Kelley P. Dever, 7420 Stuart Circle nr. Warrenton.
$469,000
Kevin Cahill to Nicholas Gilbert Edwin Page, 1.0183 acres at 5218 Hillside Drive nr. Warrenton.
$410,000
Phyllis Snipes to Aran Capital Partners LLC, 1.2500 acres at 5676 O’Bannon Road, The Plains.
$252,000
Michele Gross to Julia Carol Alsup, 8.1596 acres at 6492 Airlie Road nr. Warrenton. $639,000
Marshall District
Dylan Morgan Cooper to Kelcey Eugene VanZandt, 2.018 acres at 5030 Timber Knoll Lane nr. Warrenton. $390,000 Danny M. Smedley to Gregory Meredith Scott, 6.6302 acres at 10361 Dominion Court, Marshall/Orlean.
$925,000
Christian Duback to Joshua Steven Cotton, 12 acres at 9597 Foxville Road nr. Warrenton. $610,000 Carol Ward Dickson Tr. to Kim A. Ray, 31.2649 acres off Ada Road nr. Marshall. $320,000 Seth Thomas Jester to Heidi Aboutaj, 1.0100 acres at 4680 Bluff Turn, Marshall. $384,000 James Freely to Sarah T. Jester, 10.245 acres at 9424 Mountjoy Road, Marshall. $548,500