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  • Bay Area arts: 11 shows and concerts to catch this weekend

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    From classic movies with live music to new tunes from Vampire Weekend and a Grateful Dead Celtic band, there’s a lot to see and hear this weekend in the Bay Area.

    Here’s a partial rundown.

    Classical picks: Hitchcock + orchestra; New Century

    This week’s events light up the classical music scene with an iconic film score, a symphony at the opera, and a tribute to the seasons.

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    Randy McMullen

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  • High school football 2025: Friday’s Week 9 scores, Saturday’s schedule

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    Friday, Oct. 24

    Antioch 35, Heritage 14

    Archbishop Riordan 35, Bellarmine 13

    Benicia 28, Alhambra 8

    Bishop O’Dowd 28, Moreau Catholic 7

    Burlingame 14, Capuchino 6

    Castro Valley 42, Tennyson 35

    Clayton Valley Charter 21, Campolindo 16

    De La Salle 56, San Ramon Valley 7

    Liberty 63, Freedom 0

    McClymonds 50, Castlemont 0

    MacDonald 35, Monta Vista 0

    Menlo-Atherton 41, Palo Alto 14

    Monte Vista 34, California 13

    Mt. Eden 33, San Lorenzo 18

    Northgate 44, College Park 40

    Piedmont 39, Washington-Fremont 35

    Pittsburg 51, Deer Valley 0

    St. Francis 28, St. Ignatius 7

    St. Patrick-St. Vincent 51, Kennedy-Richmond 12

    San Leandro 20, James Logan 14

    Saratoga 42, Mills 14

    Serra 28, Archbishop Mitty 13

    Sobrato 33, Gunderson 14

    The King’s Academy 54, Mountain View 16

    Not yet reported

    American at Encinal, 7 p.m.

    Carlmont at San Mateo, 7 p.m.

    Concord at Ygnacio Valley, 7 p.m.

    Del Mar at Pioneer, 7:15 p.m.

    El Camino at Cupertino, 7 p.m.

    Evergreen Valley at Hill, 7:15 p.m.

    Foothill at Dublin, 7:15 p.m.

    Hercules at Bethel, 7:30 p.m.

    Homestead at Jefferson, 7 p.m.

    Irvington at Newark Memorial, 7 p.m.

    James Lick at Independence, 7:15 p.m.

    Las Lomas at Miramonte, 7 p.m.

    Oak Grove at Piedmont Hills, 7:15 p.m.

    Oakland at Fremont-Oakland, 7 p.m.

    Overfelt at Silver Creek, 7:15 p.m.

    Prospect at San Jose, 7:15 p.m.

    Richmond at Albany, 7 p.m.

    Santa Clara at Terra Nova, 7 p.m.

    Skyline at Oakland Tech, 7 p.m.

    South San Francisco at Gunn, 7 p.m.

    Vallejo at El Cerrito, 7 p.m.

    Yerba Buena at Mt. Pleasant, 7:15 p.m.

    Saturday, Oct. 25

    Alameda at Arroyo, 2 p.m.

    De Anza at Salesian, 1 p.m.

    Los Gatos at Menlo School, 2 p.m.

    Mt. Diablo at Berean Christian, noon

    Pinole Valley at St. Mary’s-Berkeley, 1:30 p.m.

    Valley Christian (3-4) vs. Sacred Heart Cathedral (3-4) at CCSF, 1:30 p.m.

    Wilcox at Sacred Heart Prep, 2 p.m.

    Woodside at Sequoia, 2 p.m.

    Thursday, Oct. 23

    Half Moon Bay 41, Aragon 20

    Hayward 47, Kennedy-Fremont 7

    Hillsdale 28, Milpitas 16

    Leland 27, Gilroy 12

    Lincoln-San Jose 35, Leigh 30

    Live Oak 52, Branham 46

    Los Altos 9, Fremont-Sunnyvale 0

    Santa Teresa 27, Christopher 16

    Willow Glen 41, Westmont 8

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    Darren Sabedra

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  • Letters: Trump succeeds in Mideast where diplomats have failed

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    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    Trump succeeds
    where diplomats failed

    Re: “Trump must be a disrupter in the Middle East” (Page A7, Oct. 16):

    The writer seems to think that Donald Trump isn’t up to the task of dealing with the problems in the Middle East because he went to business school, not the School of Foreign Service. Well, all of those people who went to the right schools don’t seem to have done very well in the Middle East.

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    Letters To The Editor

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  • Letters: Left-wing billionaires are pushing Proposition 50

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    Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor.

    Left-wing billionaires
    are funding Prop. 50

    Re: “Hedge fund billionaire Steyer gives $12M to back Proposition 50 redistricting vote” (Page B6, Oct. 12).

    If you are wondering how to vote on Proposition 50 gerrymandering, look no further than who is funding the “yes” campaign. Billionaires Tom Steyer and George Soros are pouring millions of dollars into it. These are far-left-wing elites.

    They are not interested in the people or what is good for the state of California. They are only interested in increasing their stranglehold over voters. They are the power-hungry force behind all the terrible policies that are destroying California.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom conjured up this gerrymandering scheme. He has created this costly special election, hoping that turnout will be low and that people won’t care.

    We do care. We need to say no. Vote no on Proposition 50.

    Jay Todesco
    Concord

    Citizens can flex
    their economic might

    Re: “Tech billionaire Marc Benioff says Trump should deploy National Guard to San Francisco” (Oct. 11).

    My first reaction to this news was, “Who the hell cares what this guy thinks?” Do only billionaires’ voices matter? If Donald Trump rigs future elections, is peaceful protesting the only power we have? Not by a long shot.

    Even as Trump tries to sabotage the power of the vote, we have the power of the purse. It worked on Disney during the Jimmy Kimmel fiasco. It will work on any company that sells to consumers. Www.goodsuniteus.com tracks corporate political donations. When, collectively, people stop shopping and subscribing to the brands that do not share their values, companies notice in a hurry. Trump may not listen to us, but he does listen to his billionaire buddies.

    It may be time to start keeping corporate leaders up at night, watching their market shares tank. It may be time to remind billionaires that the money that drives this country comes from us.

    Janice Bleyaert
    El Sobrante

    Cal must do more
    to support students

    UC Berkeley is regarded as the No. 1 public university. However, the students who make Berkeley great are facing hunger at an unacceptable rate. The 2022 UC Basic Needs Report shows that 47% of UC students have faced food insecurity.

    I’m grateful for the opportunities this university has presented to me. However, a reason I and many other students hesitated in committing to Berkeley is due to the city’s basic cost of living. Attending Berkeley for most will be their greatest investment, so it should be on the university to support students contributing to the legacy of such an institution.

    Currently, students can only visit Berkeley’s Basic Needs Center once a week, which is not enough for the students who rely on this resource the most. Working to expand on this resource could make a significant difference in the lives of thousands of the great minds we have at Berkeley.

    Kennedy Jones
    Berkeley

    Medical community must
    loudly denounce RFK Jr.

    After eight months of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. doing his best to unravel decades of advances in medicine and the development and use of tested and proven vaccines and medications that have saved millions of lives, saved millions of people from years of suffering, and prevented epidemics of many deadly and debilitating diseases — culminating in Donald Trump’s unhinged and unsubstantiated medical advice to America’s pregnant mothers not to take Tylenol because it causes autism in their children — I have one question: Where the hell has the medical community been?

    The medical community in this nation has to stand up loudly to condemn and stop this devastation of what has allowed us all to live longer and healthier lives.

    Michael Thomas
    Richmond

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  • Photos: Season’s first big rainstorm drenches the Bay Area

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    Flood advisories are in effect across the Bay Area as a storm system moves through the region this evening, according to the National Weather Service.

    The biggest storm to hit the Bay Area in roughly seven months began to douse much of California on Monday afternoon, slowing motorists, dropping snow in the Sierra Nevada, and providing a clear signal that the winter rainy season has begun.

    A cold front from the Gulf of Alaska was expected to bring half an inch to 1 inch of rain for most Bay Area cities, with up to 2 inches in the Santa Cruz Mountains and Big Sur by the time it was all over.

    The steady rain began around lunchtime Monday, hitting the North Bay first and working its way south. Forecasters said it was likely to continue overnight into early Tuesday, stopping around mid-morning as the system passes through to the east.

    The average monthly rainfall total for October in San Francisco is 0.94 inches, 0.88 in Oakland and 0.80 in San Jose, meaning this storm has the potential to bring a month’s rain in two days. While there have been huge storms occasionally in October, like in 1962 and 2021, it’s not normally a rainy month.

    Pedestrians are reflected in shop windows as they walk in the rain in downtown Palo Alto, as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 
    Cars make their way along a flooded High Street near Interstate 880 in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
    Cars make their way along a flooded High Street near Interstate 880 in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 
    A shopper at Broadway Plaza shields themself from the rain in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    A shopper at Broadway Plaza shields themself from the rain in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
    Police respond to an accident as traffic backs up near the Fruitvale Avenue exit in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
    Police respond to an accident as traffic backs up near the Fruitvale Avenue exit in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 
    People spend the morning enjoying themselves before the expected rain arrives later this afternoon while at Hidden Lakes Park in Martinez, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    People spend the morning enjoying themselves before the expected rain arrives later this afternoon while at Hidden Lakes Park in Martinez, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
    Pedestrians walk in the rain in downtown Palo Alto as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
    Pedestrians walk in the rain in downtown Palo Alto as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 
    Mount Diablo is surrounded by clouds as hawk flies in the horizon at Hidden Lakes Park in Martinez, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Mount Diablo is surrounded by clouds as hawk flies in the horizon at Hidden Lakes Park in Martinez, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 
    Michelle Lemos, of San Ramon, walks in the rain while holding her water lilies umbrella while shopping at Broadway Plaza in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
    Michelle Lemos, of San Ramon, walks in the rain while holding her water lilies umbrella while shopping at Broadway Plaza in Walnut Creek, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. A rainstorm is set to arrive in the Bay Area Monday afternoon and stay through Tuesday, bringing with it showers and a chance of thunderstorms. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) 

     

    A pedestrian walks in the rain in downtown Palo Alto as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
    A pedestrian walks in the rain in downtown Palo Alto as a storm arrives in the Bay Area on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

     

     

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    Jane Tyska, Jose Carlos Fajardo, Dai Sugano, Paul Rogers

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  • Shutdown closes Bay Area home of the ‘father of the national parks’

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    In fewer than 15 minutes, two separate carloads of people pulled up to the John Muir National Historic Site in Martinez last Saturday. But then they turned away because the 325-acre park, with its Victorian mansion, historic pear orchard and visitor’s center, had been closed to the public without notice.

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    Martha Ross

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  • Bay Area high school football roundup 2025: Best of Week 6 action

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    Welcome back to the Bay Area News Group’s high school football roundup.

    Here, you’ll find all the details from the weekend’s action in this news organization’s coverage area, which encompasses teams that play in leagues based primarily in Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties.

    Check back every Saturday during the season for scores, highlights and top performers, updated throughout the day.

    If you have not already, please subscribe here for complete digital access all season long. Your contributions keep us going.

    On to the roundup …

    Ranked teams

    No. 1 De La Salle 35, Cathedral Catholic 14

    Quarterback Brayden Knight rushed for 102 yards and two touchdowns as host De La Salle dominated San Diego powerhouse Cathedral Catholic. The Spartans ended the night with 250 rushing yards. Nathan Canilao was in Concord and has the story here.

    No. 3 Pittsburg 30, No. 5 Los Gatos 27

    Pittsburg made the long trip down to the South Bay and beat Los Gatos on Luis Rodriguez’s 43-yard field goal with less than 20 seconds to play. It was Rodriguez’s second clutch kick of the fourth quarter after he nailed a 37-yarder to tie the game. Christian Babcock has the recap from Los Gatos here.

    No. 6 San Ramon Valley 49, Granada 13

    Owen Power’s 30-yard pick-six set the tone as SRV routed visiting Granada. Quarterback Cole Dawes had five touchdown passes to five receivers. Power also added a 10-yard rushing score. “Overall it was a great team win in all three phases of the game,” SRV coach Aaron Becker said. SRV (4-2) will begin East Bay Athletic League Mountain Division play next week at Amador Valley. Granada dropped to 3-3. – Nathan Canilao

    No. 8 California 40, Livermore 22

    Luke Taylor remains on a roll for California as the Grizzlies’ all-purpose player scored three touchdowns against previously unbeaten Livermore. Taylor caught two TD passes and ran one in for Cal, which is 6-0. Arjun Banerjee ran in a TD and tossed two scores. Jordan Lee had a rushing TD, and Henry Dupin snatched a pick-six. Livermore fell to 5-1. — Christian Babcock

    No. 10 Archbishop Mitty 32, No. 12 Valley Christian 7

    Mitty stretched its winning streak to four games as Joseph Engin passed for two touchdowns and ran for one to lead the Monarchs over Valley Christian in a WCAL game at Foothill College. Engin threw an 11-yard TD pass to Marquis Marshall and a 7-yard scoring pass to Kai Sniffen. Lazaro Faraj-Washington’s 6-yard run capped the scoring for Mitty, which also had field goals by Chase Graff from 53 and 32 yards out. Graff also contributed eight tackles, including a sack. Faraj-Washington accounted for 122 yards, and Engin passed for 163. Rome Leota-Pritchard’s 66-yard TD pass to Riley McElvane gave Valley an early 7-0 lead. Mitty improved to 4-1, 2-0 heading into a league game next Friday at St. Francis. Valley fell to 2-3, 0-2. – Darren Sabedra

    No. 11 Campolindo 35, Alhambra 6

    Campolindo scored the first 28 points, rolling to a nonleague victory at home over Alhambra to improve to 5-0. Everett Zellmer (12-yard reception), Jacob Gocobachi (5-yard dive), Rai Marchetti (21-yard fade) and Ryan Erickson (5-yard out) scored first-half touchdowns for Campo. Colton Nakano’s TD reception in the third quarter cut the margin to 28-6 for Alhambra, which also got strong defensive play from free safety Calvin Spellman. Erickson’s 62-yard jet sweep completed the scoring. Alhambra fell to 2-3. – Darren Sabedra

    No. 20 Salesian 51, Ygnacio Valley 8

    Sophomore quarterback Izeah Buchanan threw two long touchdown passes, one apiece to Carlton Perrilliat and Joseph Tarin in the first quarter to set the tone for Salesian’s rout. Four running backs scored touchdowns for The Pride as longtime coach Chad Nightengale subbed in his JV and deep varsity reserves by the middle of the second quarter. Salesian led 37-0 at halftime. Roberto Mora made a 43-yard field goal for the Richmond school, while Micheal Johnson connected with Isaiah Moala-Robson for Ygnacio Valley’s only  touchdown. Salesian (5-0) travels to Vallejo to start TCAL Rock play on Friday, while Ygnacio Valley (0-5) will take on Berean Christian in DAL Mountain play. — Joseph Dycus

    No. 22 Wilcox 49, Capuchino 0

    Wilcox finished its nonleague slate by routing Capuchino at home in Santa Clara. The Chargers (3-2) got three touchdowns from Santino Barragon, two on the ground and one on a fumble return. Jeremiah Arevalos added another defensive score, returning an interception for a TD. Freshman Myles Cheney caught three passes and scored on one. QB Kai Imahara ran in a TD and threw another to Cheney. Wilcox begins Peninsula Athletic League Bay Division play at home against Palo Alto next week. Capuchino (1-4) will start league action next Friday at Carlmont. — Christian Babcock

    East Bay

    Amador Valley 17, Dublin 14

    Oliver De La Torre kicked a 47-yard field goal with under a minute left to lift Amador Valley over Dublin at home. The Dons held a 14-3 lead at halftime, but Dublin stormed back with three points in the third quarter and eight in the fourth. Andre Armendariz 1-yard rushing touchdown and a two-point conversion tied the score with eight minutes left. With a minute left, Amador Valley marched down the field to give De La Torre a chance to win it. The senior delivered. Amador Valley’s Vincent Maiorana had a rushing score and quarterback Nicco Kovacs threw a touchdown pass to Anthony Harrington. Dublin’s Isaiah Kelley threw a touchdown score to Tiras Campbell. – Nathan Canilao 

    Bishop O’Dowd 54, Castro Valley 42

    Lamar Ellis rushed for five touchdowns to lead O’Dowd to a comeback victory over Castro Valley in a battle of WACC Foothill Division teams. The Dragons entered the fourth quarter down eight, but exploded for 34 points in the final period to escape a Castro Valley upset. Isaiah Latu was a standout on defense, intercepting two passes. O’Dowd (3-3, 2-0) will host Berkeley on Friday. Castro Valley (0-6, 0-2) will travel to Moreau Catholic for its next game. – Nathan Canilao

    Concord 42, Encinal 14

    Juan Gonzalez passed for four touchdowns and ran for one as Concord rolled to a nonleague win over Encinal in Alameda. Erik Madayag caught two of Gonzalez’s TD passes. The others went to Max Dashner and Andrew Lopez. Jacari Gibson added a 65-yard touchdown run. Aiden Cunningham, Isaiah Singleton and Emmanuel Owens stood out on defense for the visitors. Concord improved to 4-2. Encinal dropped to 1-4. – Darren Sabedra

    Miramonte 38, College Park 14

    Used as only a kicker last season, Miramonte senior James Rogers told his coaches he could do more for the team this year. Friday, he intercepted three passes, was on the receiving end of two touchdowns and kicked a 43-yard field goal that was partially blocked to lead Miramonte to a nonleague victory at College Park. David Roman and George Gilbert each added an interception and a touchdown reception. Carson Blair threw for about 220 yards and Jonah Imberg and Charlie Hwang combined to run for about 100 yards, including a TD by Hwang. Wyatt Strand had a sack and Harrison Feusier contributed six tackles as Miramonte improved to 4-2. Jayden Auld and Demorian McCray caught TD passes from Ethan Havens for College Park (1-5). – Darren Sabedra

    Oakland 54, Dougherty Valley 3

    Oakland routed Dougherty Valley in its final nonleague game of the regular season behind a monster game from Colorado State commit Yasser Jackson. Jackson caught five passes for 122 yards and two touchdowns and rushed for 27 yards and a score. Jackson was also a force on defense, racking up nine tackles – three of which were behind the line of scrimmage. Quarterback Lenox Colvin completed 9-of-11 passes for 187 yards and three touchdowns. Running back DK Hicks had 189 yards and four touchdowns on 11 carries. – Nathan Canilao

    Redwood Christian 27, Kennedy-Richmond 0

    Elijah Simmons scored on touchdown runs of 5, 33 and 7 yards to lead undefeated Redwood Christian to a nonleague victory on the road over Kennedy. The second-year program from San Lorenzo improved to 6-0 while dropping Kennedy to 0-3-1. Landon Devoe-Krowicki’s 9-yard touchdown run opened the scoring for Redwood Christian, which led 20-0 at halftime. – Darren Sabedra

    South Bay/Peninsula

    Leland 15, Oak Grove 14

    Leland, down 14-0 in the fourth quarter, mounted a stirring comeback to steal this one on the road. Sam McFarland cut into the initial deficit with a 5-yard TD run, then Ian Qi scored the two-point conversion to make it 14-8. With four minutes to play, Cole Markos caught a TD pass on a deep ball from Phil Arsintescu. David Ahlgren converted the game-winning PAT for the Chargers. Leland picked up its first win and is now 1-4. Oak Grove dropped to 0-5.  — Christian Babcock  

    MacDonald 44, Cupertino 7

    MacDonald remained perfect in its second season of varsity football, getting started from the get-go as Pablo Guzman returned the opening kickoff 70 yards for a TD in a PAL Lake rout of Cupertino. Wideout Ethan Bugarin had three catches for 100 yards and two TDs. Nate Pullickial had a 75-yard pick-six and a rush TD. Kush Patel had five touchbacks, went 5-5 on PATs and kicked a 39-yard field goal. MacDonald is 5-0, 2-0, Cupertino is 0-5, 0-2.  — Christian Babcock

    Silver Creek 17, Gilroy 7

    Senior Jordan Thompson rushed for 133 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Raiders to a win on the road over Gilroy on Thursday. Silver Creek rushed for 260 yards as a team, with seven runners touching the ball. Senior Tyler Nguyen led Silver Creek’s defense with seven tackles while junior Marvin Saldivar had two hurries and a pass deflection. Silver Creek (3-2) will open league play at Pioneer on Friday. Gilroy dropped to 1-4. – Nathan Canilao

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    Darren Sabedra, Nathan Canilao, Christian Babcock

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  • Is it better to rent or own in California? That depends.

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    The debate over renting vs. owning has long posed a challenge for households in California. Arguments have morphed in recent years as home prices and mortgage rates soared beyond the increasing rents. To illustrate the complexities, we’ve created a hypothetical rent vs. buy scenario to track housing finances over a 30-year period. However, the math doesn’t account for the intangibles: the flexibility of renting compared to the stability of owning.

    HOW MONTHLY COSTS COMPARE

    Key in any housing calculation is monthly cost. Our example estimates California house rent today at $4,000 a month vs. buying a $900,000 house with a 10% down mortgage at 6.5% plus property taxes, insurance, association fees, and repairs. The scenario assumes costs grow with historical inflation and the mortgage rate is lowered twice by a half-point through refinancing.

     

    RUNNING THE TAB

    Homeowners need to repay their mortgage plus cover a range of additional costs. So renting’s total costs run cheaper for nearly two decades. But owning ends up costing slightly less over time. Here’s cumulative costs by year, in thousands of dollars.

    THE BOUNTY: Ownership’s edge

    Owning’s true financial benefit arises from the increasing value of the home. Assuming historical gains of 5% per year, the owners gets a $3.8 million asset after 30 years. The renter, who hypothetically invested the $90,000 down payment in the stock market, would accumulate $929,000. Here’s investment value by year, in thousands of dollars.

    WHERE IT GOES

    Look at the slices of 30 years of housing expenditures, rent vs. own. The renter just pays the landlord. Owner costs go to principal and interest on the mortgage, property taxes, home insurance, association fees, and repair and maintenance costs. Note: Interest payments and property taxes can be tax deductible.

    A HISTORY LESSON

    Look at the past 30 years of historical returns for three key factors in this rent vs. buy calculation, using 10-year moving averages for rent (California Consumer Price Indexes); home values (federal California index) and stocks (Standard & Poor’s 500).

    Unfathomable, unaffordable

    California’s long-running and steep affordability crunch makes the rent vs. buy debate a moot argument for many people. Housing costs throttle numerous California family budgets. The state’s flock of high- paying jobs pushes up housing costs well past what more typical paychecks can easily afford. That’s true for households considering renting or buying.

    Stagnant ownership

    Stubbornly high ownership costs have kept California’s share of people living in homes they own relatively stable, except for a temporary surge in the early 2000s when mortgages were too easily obtained. Those risky loans played a key role in the Great Recession, as borrowers defaulted in huge numbers.

    Housing afforability index

    It’s tough to be a California homebuyer. The estimated number of Californians earning the statewide median income who could comfortably purchase a single-family home is falling sharply, according to a California Association of Realtors index. The Golden State share of qualified buyers is significantly below the national norm.

    Housing-cost stresses

    The 2024 edition of Census housing data details how California’s cost of shelter varies between renters and homeowners — with or without mortgages on the property.

    But because renters typically earn less than owners, it’s more likely that their housing costs exceed 50% of their household incomes, an extreme level of financial stress.

    Big housing worries

    A statewide survey last year asked “How often do you worry about the cost of housing for you and your family?” Those who said “every day” or “almost every day” …

     

     

     

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    Jeff Goertzen1, Jonathan Lansner

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  • Map: Starbucks in the Bay Area that are on the closure list

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    After Starbucks announced it would be shutting hundreds of stores, its website is listing dozens in the Bay Area as being closed as of Sunday, Sept. 28.

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    Bay Area News Group

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  • San Ramon Valley sends ‘a message’ with win over Clayton Valley Charter

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    San Ramon Valley had to slow down Clayton Valley senior Jhadis Luckey, who had 455 yards rushing in his first two games this season

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    Curtis Pashelka

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  • Vote now: Bay Area News Group girls athlete of the week

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    Editor’s note: We prohibit the use of bots and any other artificial methods of voting. Suspicious activity could lead to the disqualification of candidates and a permanent suspension of the Athlete of the Week poll. No voting by email: Votes by email and after 5 p.m. Wednesday are not counted.


    Welcome to the Bay Area News Group (Mercury News & East Bay Times) girls Athlete of the Week poll.

    For the entire academic year, we will provide a list of candidates who stood out over the previous week and allow you, the reader, to vote for the winner.

    This week, we consider performances from Sept. 1-6.

    Polls close at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

    Vote as many times as you’d like until then without using bots or any other artificial methods of voting.

    Votes by email and after 5 p.m. Wednesday are not counted.

    Scroll to the bottom for the poll.

    Winners are announced each Friday online and in the print edition of the Mercury News and East Bay Times sports sections.

    Candidates for future Athlete of the Week polls can be nominated at highschools@bayareanewsgroup.com.

    We accept nominations until 11 a.m. each Monday.

    We also review stats submitted to MaxPreps by coaches/team statisticians.

    On to the nominees:

    (Look for the poll here)

    Leilah Abrams, Sacred Heart Prep volleyball: The sophomore had 17 kills in a win over Archbishop Riordan, 21 in a win over Palo Alto and 11 in a win over Burlingame as SHP finished the week 3-0 against a trio of quality Bay Area teams.

    Ania Aleshi, Hillsdale flag football: The junior completed 29 of 37 passes for 306 yards and three touchdowns as Hillsdale beat Santa Clara 21-6. She added 13 yards rushing on three carries. She also went 17 of 21 for 116 yards in a loss to San Mateo.

    Dora Amirkhany, Menlo School tennis: The freshman went 5-0 at the ninth annual Golden State Classic tennis tournament held at multiple Bay Area high schools, helping Menlo finish fourth of 32 teams competing.

    Hannah Gardner, Miramonte water polo: The sophomore scored four goals and added an assist and a steal in a 15-13 win over Archie Williams, then added two steals and a steal in a 13-8 loss to Sacred Heart Prep. She also contributed a steal in an 8-1 win over Campolindo.

    Gabriella Gonzalez, Santa Clara flag football: The senior quarterback completed 13 of 20 passes and threw for 130 yards with three touchdowns in a 49-0 win over MacDonald. She added 14 completions for 157 yards and a TD in a loss to Hillsdale.

    Natalie Miyamoto, Hercules flag football: The senior had 12 tackles, four passes defended and a 45-yard punt return for a touchdown in a 13-6 win over Mt. Eden. She added eight tackles, a sack, four passes defended and two interception returns for touchdowns in a 25-0 win over Vallejo.

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    Christian Babcock

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  • Letters: Battle over Prop. 50 is a fight that’s worth having

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    Prop. 50 is a fight
    that’s worth having

    Re: “Passing redistricting plan will be uphill battle for governor” (Page A16, Aug. 31).

    This opinion piece lists the difficulty of getting voters to the polls for an off-year election, but this is one very special election. For one thing, voting for redistricting is almost as critical as voting for a president. It impacts the entire nation, not just Californians.

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  • High school football rankings Week 1, 2025: Bay Area News Group Top 25

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    After Week 1, the top three teams in the Bay Area News Group rankings solidified their spots. 

    De La Salle came away with a gritty win over Florida powerhouse Lakeland, Archbishop Riordan cruised past Oakland heavyweight McClymonds and Pittsburg lit up the scoreboard and then held off Granite Bay, a respected program from the Sac-Joaquin Section. 

    San Ramon Valley found its way into the Top 5 after beating El Cerrito in a close game. 

    Though Serra lost to Folsom in a 56-42 thriller, the San Mateo school proved HSRatings’ computer dead wrong. The computer had Serra losing 40-0. For that, the Padres moved up two spots, to No. 5. 

    Liberty defeated last year’s Division 3-AA state champion Frontier-Bakersfield and rose to the 10th spot in the rankings. 

    Sacred Heart Cathedral moved into the rankings following an impressive win over Sacred Heart Prep. The West Catholic Athletic League has six teams in the Top 25, the most of any league in the Bay Area News Group’s coverage area. 

    Now, on to the rankings: 

    Bay Area News Group Top 25

    (Mercury News & East Bay Times)

    No. 1 DE LA SALLE (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 1

    Last week: Beat Lakeland-Florida 10-6

    Up next: Saturday at Serra, 2 p.m.

    No. 2 ARCHBISHOP RIORDAN (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 2

    Last week: Beat McClymonds 41-18

    Up next: Friday at Monte Vista, 7 p.m.

    No. 3 PITTSBURG (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 3

    Last week: Beat Granite Bay 42-36

    Up next: Saturday at Bishop Manogue-Reno, 4 p.m.

    No. 4 SAN RAMON VALLEY (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 6

    Last week: Beat El Cerrito 20-14

    Up next: Friday at Soquel, 7 p.m.

    No. 5 SERRA (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 7

    Last week: Lost to Folsom 56-42

    Up next: Saturday vs. De La Salle, 2 p.m.

    No. 6 ST. FRANCIS (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 4

    Last week: Lost to Cathedral Catholic 35-7

    Up next: Friday at McClymonds, 7 p.m.

    No. 7 VALLEY CHRISTIAN (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 8

    Last week: Beat Wilcox 41-10

    Up next: Friday at Salinas, 7 p.m.

    No. 8 LOS GATOS (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 5

    Last week: Lost to Soquel 42-40

    Up next: Friday at Liberty, 7 p.m.

    No. 9 WILCOX (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 9

    Last week: Lost to Valley Christian 41-10

    Up next: Friday at Archbishop Mitty, 7 p.m.

    No. 10 LIBERTY (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 13

    Last week: Beat Frontier-Bakersfield 14-0

    Up next: Friday vs. Los Gatos, 7 p.m.

    No. 11 CLAYTON VALLEY CHARTER (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 11

    Last week: Lost to Spanish Springs-Nevada 42-13

    Up next: Friday vs. College Park, 7 p.m.

    No. 12 MCCLYMONDS (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 10

    Last week: Lost to Riordan 41-18

    Up next: Friday vs. St. Francis, 7 p.m.

    No. 13 AMADOR VALLEY (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 12

    Last week: Lost to Vanden 21-14

    Up next: Friday at Monterey Trail, 7:15 p.m.

    No. 14 ACALANES (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 16

    Last week: Beat Archbishop Mitty 33-12

    Up next: Friday vs. Menlo-Atherton 7 p.m.

    No. 15 CAMPOLINDO (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 17

    Last week: Beat Granada 42-7

    Up next: Friday at Northgate, 7 p.m.

    No. 16 ST. IGNATIUS (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 14

    Last week: Lost to San Marin 27-24

    Up next: Saturday at Tamalpais, 2 p.m.

    No. 17 MENLO-ATHERTON (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 15

    Last week: Lost to Destiny Christian Academy 41-7

    Up next: Friday at Acalanes, 7 p.m.

    No. 18 MENLO SCHOOL (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 18

    Last week: Beat Hozho Academy-New Mexico 60-0 

    Up next: Saturday vs. San Mateo, 2 p.m.

    No. 19 SALESIAN (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 19

    Last week: Beat Piedmont 41-17

    Up next: Saturday vs. Moreau Catholic, 1 p.m.

    No. 20 EL CERRITO (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 20

    Last week: Lost to San Ramon Valley 20-14

    Up next: Friday vs. Lowell, 7:30 p.m.

    No. 21 CALIFORNIA (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 24

    Last week: Beat Patterson 14-11

    Up next: Friday at James Logan, 7 p.m.

    No. 22 BISHOP O’DOWD (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 23

    Last week: Beat Armijo 37-19

    Up next: Friday vs. Mater Dei Catholic, 7 p.m.

    No. 23 SANTA TERESA (1-0)

    Previous ranking: 22

    Last week: Beat Fremont-Sunnyvale 42-0

    Up next: Friday vs. Milpitas, 7:15 p.m.

    No. 24 SACRED HEART CATHEDRAL (1-0)

    Previous ranking: Not ranked

    Last week: Beat Sacred Heart Prep 35-10

    Up next: Friday at Berkeley, 7 p.m.

    No. 25 SACRED HEART PREP (0-1)

    Previous ranking: 21

    Last week: Lost to Sacred Heart Cathedral 35-10

    Up next: Friday at El Capitan, 7 p.m.


    Editor’s note: Teams eligible for the Bay Area News Group rankings come from leagues based predominantly in Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties. The news organization’s high school staff chooses the teams.

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    Nathan Canilao

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  • Monday Morning Lights: Why Serra, Folsom schedule heavyweights in September

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    Welcome back to Monday Morning Lights, our weekly feature that sheds more light on the high school football weekend and peeks ahead to the new week. If you haven’t already, please subscribe. Your contributions keep us going.


    No matter what happens, Serra and Folsom know that most seasons, they will be in position to compete for section championships at the end of the year.

    Which is why both teams go out of their way to schedule exceptionally tough nonleague opponents in September.

    This year, Sacramento area power Folsom visited another top team from its area (Grant), bussed to San Mateo to play Serra on Saturday and will fly to Southern California this week to face Mission Viejo.

    Serra opened with Folsom and will also take on De La Salle in San Mateo this Saturday. The Padres will finish their nonleague schedule with a trip to face Southern Section powerhouse St. John Bosco.

    After beating Serra 56-42, Folsom coach Paul Doherty admitted that earning Northern California’s berth in the CIF Open Division state championship game is the Bulldogs’ goal this season.

    Testing themselves – and winning – against the best teams in the state is an important part of making that a reality.

    “Every time you go through it, you’re like, ‘This is a bad idea,’” Doherty said. “Tough schedule, that’s the only way to do it. We’ve won four section (championships) in a row. We were in four NorCals in a row. We’ve won two of them, and we lost two by a total of four points. If we’re going to get better, we have to schedule and we have to plan. That’s the DNA or the blueprint of what we’re trying to do.”

    Doherty noted that the programs in SoCal especially are “better than ours,” and playing them gives Folsom something to aspire to moving forward.

    Serra, meanwhile, is trying to recapture the form that powered the Padres to a 25-0 record against NorCal foes in 2022 and 2023. That stretch came during a run in which the San Mateo school represented Northern California in the Open state title game three consecutive seasons.

    Serra’s strong showing against Folsom on Saturday could be the first sign that the Padres are on their way back to being a top NorCal contender.

    “There’s a Nelson Mandela quote that says, ‘I either win or I learn,’” Walsh said. “I want to know what we got and what we don’t have. I’m not trying to stack up wins around here. What we’re trying to do is be WCAL champions and CCS champions. And my philosophy has always been to schedule the best, be a part of the best. Challenge yourself against the best coaches and players, and then you know exactly where you are.”

    — Christian Babcock

    RIORDAN: FAMILY BUSINESS

    Early in the first quarter, Riordan quarterback Mike Mitchell Jr. scanned the field for openings in McClymonds’ defense. After going through his reads, Mitchell locked in on a target he is very familiar with. 

    Younger brother Maxwell, a sophomore receiver, found the soft spot in the defense on a crossing route, pulled in the pass, and ran in for a 27-yard touchdown. 

    It was a play that the two had informally rehearsed in the backyard for years, and drilled on the practice field all summer. 

    “It was unreal,” Max Mitchell told the Bay Area News Group. “We did that every day in the summer, so the work definitely paid off.”

    – Joseph Dycus

    ACALANES: NEW POSITION … SORT OF 

    After Grant Ricker grabbed three interceptions in Acalanes’ emotional 33-12 victory, he noted that it was his first start ever at defensive back. He had started at receiver last season for Acalanes’ North Coast Section Division III championship team. 

    “I have to thank my coaches for teaching me on the fly,” Ricker said. 

    According to teammate Deonte Littlejohn, that isn’t quite true. 

    “Actually, Ricker played DB freshman year … and he wasn’t the best,” Littlejohn said. “He had a complete turnaround, and now he’s a dog out there. Playing receiver just helps him track that ball down.”

    – Joseph Dycus

    DE LA SALLE: JEFFERSON CAN SCOOT

    Jaden Jefferson is a fast runner.

    De La Salle’s two-way speedster reset the state record in the 100-meter dash last spring, clocking a time of 10.01 seconds at the CIF state meet in Clovis.

    But his time caused some controversy.

    It was widely speculated by those including Arcadia Invitational meet director Rich Gonzalez that the record-breaking time resulted in part because, he suspected, the starter fired the gun too far from the electronic timing sensor, causing a clock delay.

    But CIF stood by its time, and so is Jefferson.

    “CIF, they confirmed it, they said they had two clocks running,” Jefferson said. “So I’m not really arguing with the people who don’t believe it. I know what I ran, and I came back a second day to run another time. They said they had two clocks running, and they approved it. So I’m not sure what the other people are talking about.”

    De La Salle football coach Justin Alumbaugh isn’t too concerned, either. He knows what Jefferson’s wheels do for his team.

    “I think he could have broken 10,” Alumbaugh said. “He slowed up at the end. What I know is he was moving. And football-wise, he passes the eye test for speed. You’ll see him out there. He can scoot. No matter what the exact time is, that dude can run. You get under a 10.3, you’re scooting pretty well.”

    — Christian Babcock

    NORCAL COMMIT FROM FLORIDA ENJOYS TIME IN GOLDEN STATE

    Lakeland-Florida running back and Sacramento State commit Ja’darious Dobie got a little taste of the Cali life when the Dreadnaughts played De La Salle on Friday.

    Though Lakeland didn’t get the results it wanted, Dobie said he enjoyed his time in NorCal.

    “It was beautiful weather out here and it’s just beautiful scenery,” Dobie said. “I wish we could have come out here and dominated better, but at least we lost in Cali. So it feels good to be home.”

    Dobie picked Sacramento State over FBS schools Wake Forest, UNLV, Pittsburgh and Georgia Tech. New Sacramento State coach Brennan Marion is a former Bay Area resident, coaching at St. Patrick-St. Vincent in Vallejo, and playing at Foothill and De Anza colleges in the South Bay.

    – Nathan Canilao

    MENLO SCHOOL: OPENER SHARED CULTURAL EXPERIENCE

    It’s not every year you see a California high school team play a season opener against a squad from New Mexico.

    Menlo School welcomed Hózhó Academy, a charter school from Gallup, N.M., on Saturday in Atherton. The unusual matchup brought together two small schools with a number of differences but similar values.

    Hózhó Academy is located on the edge of the Navajo Nation in New Mexico, a Native American reservation home to the Diné people. Most of the Hózhó Academy players had not traveled off the reservation before coming to the Bay Area this weekend.

    “Coach (Todd) Smith and I really clicked when we talked about our coaching philosophies and the bigger picture of helping shape good, young men,” Hózhó Academy coach Cyle Balok said in a release. “We thought this game could be a special opportunity for both of our teams to meet and use the game as a bridge between two vastly different parts of the country.”

    Hózhó Academy traveled to Atherton by bus and made the trip thanks to fundraising from local businesses near Gallup. The two teams shared a pregame dinner Friday, and Menlo hopes the connections they make through the game last beyond Week 1.

    “We come from very different parts of the country,” said Smith, Menlo’s head coach. “But we started this friendship and knew this could be much more than a regular game.”

    — Christian Babcock

    PEEK AHEAD TO WEEK 2

    Friday

    Campolindo (1-0) at Northgate (1-0), 7 p.m.: Campo was in midseason form last week at Granada. 

    Los Gatos (0-1) at Liberty (1-0), 7 p.m.: Los Gatos will try to tighten its defense before the long trip to Brentwood. 

    Menlo-Atherton (0-1) at Acalanes (1-0), 7 p.m.: Acalanes aiming to beat CCS school for second week in a row.

    St. Francis (0-1) at McClymonds (0-1), 7 p.m.:  Tough trip for St. Francis as Lancers try to bounce back from loss to Cathedral Catholic.

    San Jose (1-0) vs. Lincoln-San Jose (1-0) at San Jose City College, 7 p.m.: Will Lincoln’s dominance continue in Big Bone game? 

    Windsor (1-0) at Hayward (1-0), 7 p.m.: Both teams had impressive season-opening wins.

    Saturday

    De La Salle (1-0) at Serra (0-1), 2 p.m.: DLS remembers its last visit to Serra, a 28-0 loss two seasons ago.

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    Christian Babcock, Nathan Canilao, Joseph Dycus

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  • Duece Jones-Drew carries shorthanded De La Salle past Florida powerhouse Lakeland

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    Jones-Drew plays every snap, scores go-ahead touchdown in gritty season-opening win for top-ranked De La Salle.

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  • North Coast Section’s leading rusher from 2024 talks transfer to DAL powerhouse, goals for senior year

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    Clayton Valley Charter transfer running back Jhadis Luckey, a Fresno State commit, discusses his plans for a follow-up to his breakout junior year at California High.

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  • High school football 2025 preview: EBAL Valley Division

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    As part of our high school football content to get you ready for the 2025 season, we are rolling out previews of all leagues in our coverage area.

    Today’s focus:

    EAST BAY ATHLETIC LEAGUE VALLEY DIVISION

    (Predicted order of finish)

    No. 1 GRANADA

    Coach: Brandon Black

    2024 record: 7-5

    What to expect: In his first season as coach, Brandon Black led Granada to a league championship and the North Coast Section Division IV semifinals. The Livermore school will be the favorite to repeat as league champion as many of its top performers return along with an infusion of key transfers. Senior Jack Badger earned all-league first-team honors last season at quarterback and will be a multi-tool player this season, playing wide receiver and defensive back. Three-star, 6-foot-5 wide receiver/tight end Damien Miles is aiming to build on a stellar junior season in which he had 40 catches for 673 yards. Wide receivers Ethan Mitchell and Skyler Stuart are fast, physical players who will also contribute as defensive backs. Leading the offense will be quarterback Caiden Van Leer, a transfer from and California whom Black said “is going to be a big surprise for Valley opponents.” The defense lost key starters from last season, but will have Cody Phillips as a returner at linebacker. 

    Season opener: Aug. 30 vs. Campolindo, 7:15 p.m.

    No. 2 LIVERMORE

    Coach: John Wade

    2024 record: 6-5

    What to expect: Since John Wade took over as coach in 2019, the Cowboys have not had a losing season. Expect that streak to continue this year. While Livermore graduated star running back Kamarri Robinson, the Cowboys will have a lethal air attack led by senior all-league first-team quarterback Mateo Lortie, who threw for 1,838 yards and 23 touchdowns last season. All-league receivers Chad Harper and A.J. Carey, along with shifty slot receiver Luke Mederos and senior Benancio Rivera, form a dynamic quartet in the passing game. Livermore’s defense will also be a strength with hard-hitting safety Griffin Lee and run-stopping linebacker Jackson Perotti leading the way. Livermore will be looking for its first league title in at least 30 years. 

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Castro Valley, 7 p.m.

    No. 3 DUBLIN

    Coach: Napoleon Kaufman

    2024 record: 3-8

    What to expect: Last year was a struggle for Napoleon Kaufman in his first season coaching the Gaels. But Dublin still qualified for the NCS playoffs despite a losing record, and the postseason experience could help moving forward. Andre Armendariz, the team’s leading rusher from last season, is set to return after receiving all-league first-team honors last year. He is a team captain. Armendariz will form a dynamic backfield tandem with junior Rome Raymore, who earned all-league second-team honors in 2024. Senior wide receiver Jake Torok was also named a captain and will provide a solid option in the passing game. All-league defensive back Cayden Bennett and senior Tiras Campbell will lead Dublin’s defense. The Gaels’ non-league games includes games against Berkeley, Vanden, Heritage and Windsor. 

    Season opener: Aug. 29 vs. Berkeley, 7 p.m.

    No. 4 FOOTHILL

    Coach: Greg Haubner

    2024 record: 4-6

    What to expect: Foothill was competitive last season, even in its losses. It’ll be an uphill battle for the Falcons this season as they graduated five of their six all-league players. Returning all-league second-team honoree Christian Morales will anchor Foothill’s young offensive line. Wide receiver Jacob Weinstein is set to return for his senior year along with physical pass catcher Liam Shedd. Quarterback Gavin Brown, a junior, is returning from a knee injury. Foothill will be on the road for five of its first six games this season.

      

    Season opener: Aug. 29 at Monte Vista, 7 p.m.

    No. 5 DOUGHERTY VALLEY

    Coach: Gwangee Pittman

    2024 record: 2-8

    What to expect: Dougherty Valley will look to get back on track in Gwangee Pittman’s first year after back-to-back 2-8 seasons. The Wildcats lost four of their five all-league players to graduation, but return second-team lineman Nathan Li to anchor the offensive and defensive lines. Junior Ayden Parker was a standout at receiver and defensive back last season. The Wildcats will have two quarterbacks who could be difference makers – Junior Jimenez and Vincente Estrada. Senior Parsa Mahyari will seek to make an impact at running back and linebacker. The Wildcats have just five seniors on their 24-player roster. 

    Season opener: Aug. 29 at College Park, 7 p.m.

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  • Preseason all-Bay Area News Group high school football 2025: Kickers/punters

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    As part of our high school football coverage to get you ready for the 2025 season, we are rolling out all-Bay Area News Group preseason recognition.

    Today’s position:

    KICKERS/PUNTERS

    Nathan Bearrows, Pioneer, 6-1, 170, senior

    Three-sport athlete also plays soccer and lacrosse. Holds multiple offers from smaller schools. Rated a four-star punter and 3.5-star kicker by ProKicker.com. Averaged 32 yards per punt with a long of 64, landing two inside the 20-yard line. Went 3 for 6 on field goals with a long of 30 yards.

    Zach Brien, Bishop O’Dowd, 6-2, 175, junior

    Five-star prospect finished first at the Chris Sailer Kicking NorCal training camp. Was 5 of 8 on field-goal attempts and 31 of 36 on PAT tries last season for O’Dowd.

    Braden Clark, Branham, 5-9, 135, senior

    Kicks, punts and also took a handoff for Branham last season. Has consistent 40-yard punt range with three-plus-second hangtime and 45-plus-yard field-goal range.

    Brady Emry, Clayton Valley, 5-9, 170, senior

    Four-star punter/kicker hybrid is committed to Minot State, a Division II school in North Dakota. Returning all-Diablo Athletic League honorable mention punter. Punted 27 times last season, averaging 33.8 yards per punt, landing seven punts inside the 20-yard line and hitting a long punt of 52 yards. 

    Nathan Fox, Sacred Heart Prep, 6-0, 155, senior

    Plays soccer and football at SHP. PAL special teams player of the year and all-BANG honorable mention as a sophomore. Made 34 of 36 PAT and 5 of 9 field-goal attempts last season. Also contributes at defensive back.

    Chase Graff, Archbishop Mitty, 5-11, 200, senior

    Versatile player who was named all-WCAL honorable mention at both kicker and offensive line. Also plays defensive end. Has 60-yard range on field goals. 

    Aidan James, Heritage, 5-5, 135, senior

    Returning all-BANG honorable mention. Hit two field goals in a narrow loss to Antioch last season. Converted 37 of 37 PAT and 5 of 5 on field-goal tries last season. Also plays soccer for Heritage.

    Ben Kerrigan, Monte Vista, 5-11, 155, junior

    A 4.5-star kicker and punter has 50-plus-yard field goal range and 40-plus-yard punt range as well as 70-yard kickoff range. Finished top four at The Punt Factory last man standing competition this August. 

    Saul Marks, Serra, 6-0, 160, senior

    Five-star kicker and punter is the No. 1 prospect in California and No. 10 in the United States, according to Kohl’s Kicking. Holds offers from Idaho and Idaho State. Has 70-plus-yard range on kickoffs and 60-yard range on field goals.

    Sebastian Miles, San Ramon Valley, 5-10, 180, senior

    Five-star punter by Chris Sailer Kicking is committed to Northern Arizona. Has 60-plus yard range. Attended Chris Sailer Top 12 camp.

    Ricky Miramontes, Milpitas, 6-3, 220, senior

    Strong-legged specialist averaged 57.4 yards per kickoff last season. Converted a 46-field goal last year and has range up to 60 yards this year. Also punts for Milpitas.

    Anthony Perez, Menlo-Atherton, 6-0, 230, senior

    Returning all-BANG honorable mention. Named first-team all-PAL Bay as a punter last season.

     

    Saxton Sinatra, Silver Creek, 5-9, 166, sophomore

    Three-star kicker and four-star punter is a developing prospect who was named to the 2024 Sports Illustrated all-freshman team. Has 50-plus-yard range on placekicks. 

    Zach Tabibian, Campolindo, 5-10, 180, senior

    A 4.5-star kicker and punter who has 60-plus-yard field-goal range and 70-plus kickoff range. Converted a 61-yard field goal at an MIT camp this summer and also knocked a 74-yard kickoff through the uprights during a practice session. 

    Justin Uribarri, De La Salle, 5-9, 180, senior

    A 4.5-star kicker and punter by Chris Sailer Kicking. Has 50-plus-yard range on placekicks, 40-plus on punts and 70-plus on kickoffs. 

    WHO IS ELIGIBLE

    Those eligible for all-BANG honors come from leagues based predominantly in Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties. The news organization’s high school sports staff chooses the players.

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    Christian Babcock

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