The year that is ending came in with a bang as Berkshire County wrapped up three team state titles before 2024 was three months old.
As the year went on, state crowns were harder to come by, but there still were a number of Western Mass titles and individual accomplishments to thrill local high school sports fans.
Here is a look back at some of the stories that caught our eye in the year gone by:
1. County dynasty continues
The story of the year was the story of the century as the Hoosac Valley girls basketball program reached its eighth state title game since 2014.
And the Hurricanes won their third state championship in that run with a 71-53 win over West Boylston at Lowell's Tsongas Arena.
Taylor Garabedian scored 22 points, and Abby Scialabba scored 16 -- 11 in the third quarter, when the Hurricanes erased a one-point half-time deficit and built a 15-point lead going to the fourth.
“It’s awesome,” Garabedian said. “Not even just for the seniors but for the younger kids. We’ve been playing together since the third grade.”
Playing together and making trips to Western Mass and state tournament games to watch their older friends who laid the foundation for the most decorated program in any sport in Berkshire County.
2. Fastest feet in the west ... and everywhere else
Few people were able to stay close to the Mounties on the track all spring.
No one was able to hang with them on the scoreboard on Memorial Day Weekend.
Mount Greylock earned 97 points at the two-day Division 6 State Championship meet, leaving the runner-up with 57 points in the rear view mirror.
Maggie Nichols was the fastest girl in the state, breaking the tape in the 100 meters and 200 meters. And the Mounties' other stars provided medalist finishes in the jumps (Katherine Goss and Chase Hoey), throws (Lily Catelotti and Talia Kapiloff), hurdles (Goss and Lily McDermott and middle distances (Erin Keating).
Mount Greylock also medaled in all three relays, winning the 4-by-100 with the quartet of Maire Scanlon, McDermott, Rowan Apotosos and, of course, Nichols in the anchor position.
3. The other county dynasty
The Mount Greylock girls nordic ski team can make a strong argument that they are more successful than the Hoosac Valley cagers after winning their fifth straight title since 2016.
And with just one senior and one junior on 2024's state title squad, the Mounties could be poised to repeat the success it had during a four-year win streak at states from 2016-19.
That one senior, Annie Miller, capped her stellar high school career with a seventh-place finish at Woodford, Vt.'s, Propsect Mountain. But her sister, ninth-grader Lauren Miller, was the fastest Berkshire County finisher, placing fifth in the state.
"We knew we’ve been kind of coming into our own," Mount Greylock coach Hilary Greene said after the win. "We had these younger middle schoolers who are learning how to ski. So they’re figuring things out and learning how they can gain time and just learning how to tuck.
“We knew they were coming up, but we absolutely didn’t expect that they would crush it today.”
4. Bowled over in Chicopee
The Lee Wildcats crushed it at the State Championships in Chicopee, getting a clutch strike late from Emily Holian to secure a vicgtory over Worcester Tech in the A Division finals.
Lee was the top team in qualifying and No. 1 seed going into match play, edging Auburn, 2-1, in the semi-finals and sweeping Woo Tech, 2-0, in their best-of-three games final.
“Six years of high school bowling, it goes by in the blink of an eye,” Holian said. “But, really, it’s all worth it in the end. I couldn’t ask for a better team and a better coach. They’re all family to me, like I said before, and I’m grateful.”
The Berkshire County League had a lot to be thankful for at the state meet, where Taconic won the tournament's B Division.
On Sunday, Bella Kotek of Lee and Matt Dupuis of Pittsfield won individual state crowns to complete a Berkshire County sweep of the top prizes at the championships.
5. A Force to be reckoned with
The Berkshire Force 12-Year-Old All-Stars gave area sports fans an early summer treat when they hosted the Babe Ruth New England Regional in June at the Doyle Complex.
And the Force at that tournament showed the kind of talent that later in the summer propelled the program back to the World Series in Alabama.
There, the Pittsfield-based program won three of its four games, battling back from a 5-0 deficit in its final elimination game before succumbing, 12-6, to a team from North Carolina.
The excitement generated by this year's 12U squad can only help the Force as it continues to build the sport in Berkshire County.
"“We want more girls to get into softball," coach Mike Lodowski said at the regional. "We have a really big rec ball league. We need more girls to come out and play. I think now that the COVID thing is over, our 10U organization has got a ton of teams, and they’re starting to filter up. Whereas our 12s, 14s and 16s are still a little bit thin. Maybe that’s the COVID effect. … We’re going to be really good again like we were maybe six, seven years ago.”
6. Sweep on the slopes
It had been a while since a Berkshire County skier captured a state championship in alpine skiing.
Pittsfield junior Eliza Mullen did it twice in one day.
Mullen won the slalom and giant slalom at Wachusett in February, the first county skier to bring home a gold medal since 2017.
She helped Pittsfield place in the top half o the 20-team field and pulled off the first individual double in the girls state meet since 2005.
"I wasn't really focused on the results," Mullen said after the wins. "Because I just wanted to finish. When I focus on the results, I just get in my own head.
"And I just wanted to have fun with my friends because it's our last race together with the seniors."
7. Monumental win
While Berkshire County was shut out for team titles at this fall's Division 3 cross country state championship meet, the individual title hunt was a different matter.
Monument Mountain's Everett Pacheco, who was dominant all season in county competition, cruised to a 10-second win over the runner-up from Parker Charter at Fort Devens.
Pacheco battled his closest rival for two laps before making a late move.
"There's a big hill in the woods around Mile 2, and then there's a big downhill," Pacheco said. "So coming off that downhill and a little bit on this hill here, I zoomed past him."
8. Near misses
While no Berkshire County boys team won a state championship in 2024, two came darned close.
The Hoosac Valley boys basketball team joined its girls at Tsongas Arena on state final day. And for 31 minutes, it went toe-to-toe with Boston's New Mission. But the Titans used a 6-0 run in the last 46 seconds to take an eight-point win in the Division 5 final.
"This is inner city Boston, right?” Hoosac Valley coach Bill Robinson said of the Titans. “I just told our guys, we’re a bunch of country bumpkins. There’s a cow farm right in back of our school. These guys [from New Mission] have never seen a cow. Our guys have never seen glass skyscrapers.
“But I think we did OK for a bunch of cowboys."
In the spring, Pittsfield's baseball team roared into the state title game having won 15 of its last 16 games, including a 1-0 nail-biter over East Bridgewater in the state semi-finals.
But the Generals could not solve Seekonk's Javi Borges, who struck out 14 in leading his team to a shutout win at Polar Park in the Division 4 Championship.
"We started off rough,” Pittsfield senior Roshan Warriar said of a team that opened with a 5-5 record. “Some people wouldn’t picture us being there, but we had the belief the whole way that we’d get here. Unfortunately, we couldn’t get it done, though.
“It was an honor to play here in my last game as a senior. It was a great run for the program. A lot of people are looking at Taconic across town. But I think this year really proves our turnaround, and I think we’ll be back here in the future.”
9. Super Saturday
Arguably the busiest day in Berkshire County high school sports is the last Saturday in February, when the Western Massachusetts titles in hockey and basketball are decided.
In 2024, it was one of the most successful, as Hoosac Valley's boys and girls each won on the hardwood, Pittsfield's boys won a rematch with Monument Mountain in their regional final and the Taconic hockey team edged Ludlow, 3-2, when Brayden Bishop scored in overtime at the Olympia Ice Center.
"It's surreal," Taconic coach Matt Risley said. "There are no words, really. I feel very grateful and glad for these young men who put in a lot of work this year.
"We did not start the year off very well. But we're ending it on a high note. Hopefully, we can keep it rolling."
10. Williams grads show their mettle
One of the highlights of the summer was following a couple of athletes with ties to the county compete on an international stage.
In Paris, 2016 Williams College graduate Kristi Kirshe helped Team USA win its first Olympic medal in rugby since 1924 when the Americans beat Australia in the bronze medal game.
A few weeks later, Purple was Silver at the 2024 Paralympic Games as 2023 Williams grad Ben Washburne helped his four-plus-cox boat to a second place finish.
Other highlights included ...
The Mount Greylock girls and boys soccer teams won matching Western Mass titles in thrilling back-to-back victories at Springfield Central -- each by one goal, the boys in double overtime.
The Lenox girls tennis team repeated as Western Mass champion.
The Pittsfield softball team held off Hampshire to win the Western Mass crown.
Wahconah's Payton Shippee won the state javelin title and placed second in the discus.
Mount Greylock and Wahconah each pick up regional championships in volleyball, the latter knocking off one of the top programs in the state to do so.
Monument Mountain's Khalil Carlson named the boys basketball player of the year in Western Massachusetts.
The Mount Greylock boys and girls track and field teams each repeated as Western Mass champs.
Wahconah's Tim Kaley wins a Western Mass championship in golf after leading his team to a perfect dual match record in the fall -- a record matched by the golfers at McCann Tech.
Mount Everett's Connor Lupiani places second in the state at the Division 3 Wrestling Championships.
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Lanesborough OKs Open Space Plan, Short-Term Rental Forms
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday set fees for short-term rentals and adopted an Open Space and Recreation Plan.
Town Administrator Gina Dario discussed the draft for STR registration and certificate of inspection since the new bylaws were passed at the annual town meeting.
The draft shows the process to file for inspection through Permit Eyes, the town's online permitting system that includes the state building code and safety requirements. Dario said members of the Planning Board and Zoning Board of Appeals and the building commissioner looked at other town models to come up with the best process for registration.
Inspections will be annually for non-owner occupied units and five years for owner-occupied. The inspection fee is a flat $50. The last suggestion discussed was the posting requirements for key information.
Dario said they looked at about four other communities on how they used non-sensitive information on owner contacts. Chair Deborah Maynard motioned to have the information posted both inside and out to help with law enforcement if needed.
"I'm going to make a motion that we put that relevant information not only on the inside of the short-term rental but on the outside, so if the police need to respond, ambulance needs to respond, fire especially needs to respond, all that information is there, nobody has to go searching for it," she said. "If push comes to shove, and it's a matter of minutes, that's going to make a big, a big difference in the outcome of the incident."
The board then heard a presentation from Berkshire Regional Planning Commission's community planner Andrew McKeever and Open Space and Recreation Committee Vice Chair Mark Hawthorne.
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