Boulder City senior Troy Connell pitched 6 innings of no-hit ball Thursday against Pahrump Valley, but Trojans senior Jake Riding matched him zero for zero on the scoreboard.
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The offense is coming together for the Pahrump Valley High School softball team, if the bullets coming off of the Trojans’ bats Tuesday against Moapa Valley are any indication.
It was the kind of situation young kids imagine when they first pick up a bat: final inning, team trailing, runners on base, two outs and a full count.
Mary Neese, Tom Dragna and Dale Bystedt were the top money winners Saturday at the Pahrump Valley Tournament Bowling Club’s Certified Snakebite Singles Tournament at the Pahrump Nugget.
Even more than most high school sports, track and field is all about the postseason. There are no dual meets to win, no league titles to play for and — aside from the constant goal of trying to improve — nothing other than qualifying for the postseason truly matters.
Any similarity between the Pahrump Valley High School softball team’s first and second games against Bishop Gorman is purely coincidental.
After a rough outing in the opening game of baseball season against Faith Lutheran, Pahrump Valley senior Jalen Denton was ready to get back on track.
Those who believe there is no such thing as an ugly win are advised to look at the scorebook from Wednesday’s softball game at Floyd Field.
Five Saturday nights of racing. Five heat victories. Five main event victories.
Let’s get this out of the way right up front: The opening weekend of baseball and softball season for Pahrump Valley High School was ugly. Awful. Brutal. Horrific. Gut-wrenching. And … damn, I dropped my thesaurus.
The Spring &Fall Fling Horseshoe Pitching Series visited Sandy Valley on Sunday, with Mike Dedeic and Dan Dunn teaming up to win the tournament at the Idle Spur Tavern.
Sophomores Nathan Schaaf and Daniel Edghill recorded victories as the Pahrump Valley High School track and field team opened its season at a meet Friday at Basic Academy in Henderson.
Horseshoe pitchers had a busy start to April, with sanctioned tournaments on back-to-back Saturdays, a doubles tournament sponsored by the Southern Nevada Horseshoe Pitching Association and the first tournament in the new Spring and Fall Fling series in which bars around Southern Nevada host tournaments.
After a year of no in-person meets because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Arianna Plant of Pahrump didn’t need much time to get back into a groove.
It didn’t look like a region championship meet. It certainly didn’t feel like a region championship meet. And the attendance fell far short of a region championship meet.