There’s an old adage in football that says if you have two quarterbacks you really don’t have one quarterback. But there is no similar saying that applies to running backs, for good reason.
mc-sports
Senior night for the Pahrump Valley High School girls volleyball team brought out the emotions, mostly in coach Jill Harris.
The Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association’s alignment of every Class 3A Southern Region football team didn’t even make it a year.
Scoring goals has been a problem for the Pahrump Valley High School boys soccer team throughout this pandemic-shortened season, and senior night did nothing to help.
■ Who: Pahrump Valley (0-2) vs. SLAM Nevada (1-2).
The news that Round Mountain and Beatty high schools would not be playing tackle football during the shortened “fall” season fell on many players like, well, a deflated football.
Juanita Martinez bowls for fun, and her 113 average doesn’t often have her near the top of the standings in local tournaments.
On the surface, Pahrump Valley’s 14-6 loss to Virgin Valley appears to be a continuation of both the Trojans’ opening loss and their series history with the Bulldogs.
Each year, the Pahrump Valley High School football team hosts a spaghetti dinner and dessert auction that raises thousands of dollars. The school’s booster club holds fundraisers to help athletic teams, and, of course, ticket sales and concessions bring in more money.
The Pahrump Valley High School football team ended a long scoring drought Friday night, but that was not enough to stop Virgin Valley from beating the Trojans for the 25th consecutive time in a 14-6 victory at Trojan Field.
For the third consecutive year, it seems necessary to make an announcement: Pahrump Valley High School has a tennis team.
Jared Ward and Mark Daub each won for the third consecutive race to highlight the March 13 racing at Pahrump Valley Speedway.
The gusty wind that dominated Tuesday’s girls soccer game between Moapa Valley and Pahrump Valley at Trojan Field should have meant the Trojans’ string of consecutive shutout games would end.
It might not have been the hero’s welcome he received when he came home from the hospital after being shot in the line of duty last year, but Bryan Cooper received a pretty cool honor Saturday from the Pahrump Valley Little League.