Red Devils prepare for Silver Creek tonight

by Austin Bainbridge

The Jeff boys’ basketball team faces one of the top-ranked schools in Indiana, Silver Creek, for their home opener in a big benchmark game tonight in Johnson Arena.

“This is an important game; even though it’s not a rivalry like Floyd or New Albany there is a very good team and a win would be huge,” said sophomore guard Cornelius Weobong.

Silver Creek is looking like one of the best teams in Indiana and is searching for a statement win against Jeff.

“They’re really good at sharing the basketball. They’ve got six guys that could score 20 on any given night. So they do a really good job of moving the ball,” said head coach Sherron Wilkerson.

Graphic by Magdalene Conrad.

Jeff isn’t looking as potent as last year’s state championship team but still sees this as a competitive game.

“Our biggest keys are — Number one, we’ve got to guard for basketball. Number two, we’ve got to rebound. Number three, we have to take care of it, we cannot turn the ball over,” said Wilkerson.

The fans are also looking forward to a competitive game like this early in the season.

“I’m excited to see our guys play at home. I hope that we can come away with a win against a team as good as Silver Creek — that would be a big momentum boost,” said English teacher David Kummer.

To come away with a victory Jeff is going to have to capitalize on opportunities and not give Silver Creek very many.

“We have a lot of time where you get a good cut, get the ball, and then we miss, we give them free possession again… and then on defense we have got to know where we were at and we’ve got to sprint to our spot. We can’t give them easy points,” said Weobong.

Silver Creek is good as a team, but they also have players who shine above the rest.

“Brandon Hunter — he just recently had a game where he had 13 rebounds at the point guard position. When you have a point guard putting up 13 rebounds, that means that he is worthy of being able to get you a triple double, which probably makes him the most dangerous player on the floor,” said Wilkerson.

The Red Devils are looking to overcome some of early year struggles.

“Our mental toughness and our physical toughness is probably our biggest hurdle right now. And I think that once we’re able to correct those two issues, I think then you will start to see us jell into a unit,” said Wilkerson.

This game has been on Jeffs’ calendar for some time and they’ve been preparing.

“We’ve been preparing for Silver Creek since the buzzer went off at Seymour; we’ve been gameplanning and preparing pretty intensely,” said Weobong.

This young Jeff team could put itself on the map with a Silver Creek win, and they’re ready for tonight’s challenge.

“A win would be huge for us because this particular group as a unit has not been through the fire yet. So it would be nice to be able to go through the fire and come out successful. These guys are ready to be recognized,” said Wilkerson.

In addition to tonight’s battle with the Dragons, Jeff players and coaches will be honored with the presentation of their state championship rings from last season.

Fast Feature: Red Devil swim season begins

by Liam Turk-Gagel and William Hudgins

The 2025-2026 swim season is something to look forward to this school year, with newcomers like freshmen Christian Miller and Dash Leonard, along with returning faces like seniors Jaga Pagva and Addi Bingham. 

The season for girls began Oct. 27 and ends Feb. 7. The season for boys begins Nov. 10 and ends on Feb. 21. 

Senior Jaga Pagva swims freestyle in the pool at a swim practice. Photo by Parker McCloskey.

Who is a boys swimmer that fans should look out for? 

“Jaga (Pagva) was really good last year, and his international experience in Mongolia is going to help him excel.” – Coach Michael Pepa

Who is a girls swimmer that fans should look out for? 

 “I’d say either Macyn (Jackson) or Litzy (Rubio). They’ve had a lot of improvement over the years, and I think they’ll definitely be ones to look out for.” – Coach Michael Pepa 

Senior Litzy Rubio read the set at a practice. Photo by Parker McCloskey.

Many swimmers believe that compared to last year to this upcoming season, the team is going to be much better. 

How do you think the team will do in sectionals compared to last year?

“I think we’ll get better. I think we can get second or even first at sectional; sky’s the limit.” – Junior Isaac Ramirez

“I think we’ll do even better than last year; our freshman class will fill those gaps from last year’s seniors, alongside our talented drivers. It will definitely be the season to look out for the boys’ team.” – Senior Jaga Pagva

What is some advice that you’d give to the upcoming freshmen on the team?

“What you put into it, you get out of it.” -Junior Stella Siewert

 “It’s a lot of hard work and dedication, but it comes with a lot of rewards.” – Coach Michael Pepa

Tennis team heads into sectional play next week

by Mikail Cetiner

The boys’ tennis season is coming to an end, and that only means one thing — sectional is close.

The Jeff tennis team is really excited and nervous because for most of them, this is their first time playing in a sectional.

Senior William Burnette serves for Red Devil tennis. Photo by Magdalene Conrad.

According to singles 1 senior William Brunette, “It is very exciting, but also very stressful to play sectionals.”

The tennis team works hard and takes the practice really seriously. “We work on a lot of basic strategies to prepare for sectionals; the main focus is playing with energy and focus and staying present during matches that can often be very intense,” head coach Jerid Inman said.

Even though the practice is hard and intense, many tennis players decide to stay after practice, and one of them is junior Alex Nef.

“I stay after practice to work on my weak points so I can be ready for Sectionals.”  

“We have a lot of new varsity players this year,” coach Inman said, “so we need to practice more intensely so the varsity players can learn how to play under a lot of pressure.”

Sectionals also have a side effect for the J.V players, “Sectionals affect J.V really much because we won’t have any matches since sectionals only is for varsity,” junior J.V player Ian Hoyer said.

According to senior J.V player Micah Cabell, “J.V should be taken more seriously because most of them are the future of the varsity team.”

“Even though we have no matches we will still practice and play against each other for next year,” J.V coach Clint Fackler said.

Sectional begins Tuesday, Sept. 30.

Boys’ tennis heads into sectional next week. Photo by Jackson Anderson.