Perhaps “Mr. Puma” is an apt description for Robin Waite.
A high school resumé worth posting on the refrigerator: Three-sport athlete. Yearbook editor. Part-time employee. Full-time student. 4.0 gpa.
Welcome to varsity, Ryan Skoubo.
The Central Kitsap girls tennis team improved to 5-0 in the Narrows League with a 3-2 victory against Gig Harbor at home Wednesday.
Perhaps “Mr. Puma” is an apt description for Robin Waite.
After yet another loss, it appears as though the woes are mounting, not subsiding, for the Bremerton baseball team.
The Bremerton girls tennis team improved to .500 with a 4-3 victory against Klahowya on the road Tuesday, sweeping all four doubles matches to overcome three setbacks in singles action.
Save for the blue jerseys and Knight logo, little about this Bremerton fastpitch team resembles the Lady Knights of the past.
Sometimes, a two-goal lead isn’t enough.
Next year, Nate Roberts will be a Redhawk.
Under sunshine and a sparkling powder blue sky, the Silverdale Pee Wee Adult Association gathered Saturday outside the Ross Field Clubhouse to honor perhaps its brightest member, Cornelius “Pete” Ross Jr.
Easter is Sunday, but for Bruce Pemberton it feels like Christmas.
Sometimes, a two-goal lead isn’t enough.
Buried under layers of wool, one grumbling spectator called Klahowya’s baseball field “The Frozen Tundra,” borrowing Wisconsin lingo to describe what felt like freezing temps during Tuesday’s game between the Eagles and visitor North Kitsap .
Perhaps the Olympic College baseball team found its stride at the perfect time.
Perched on a hand-crafted shelf above vaults and beams and bars, dozens of trophies, dating back nearly three decades, line a wall of the Olympic Gymnastics Center (OGC) in Silverdale.
Perhaps the Olympic College baseball team found its stride at the perfect time.
For Ken Plowman, spring break can’t end soon enough.
Baseball, fastpitch playing catch up on the schedule after early season rain.
The Kitsap Pumas’ proverbial roar reached fever pitch Tuesday in Bremerton.
