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University of the Southwest

I want to give a BIG shout out to Steve Appel and the Mustangs. He won 30 games and finished the season winning 2 out of 3 from Coach Jones at Texarkana to finish the season. He also won national honors for field of the year after the countless hours of personal time doing construction on his yard. This is a HUGE accomplishment. He starts 6-7 NM kids almost every game and those kids are all underclassmen. They all pay 5 digits to go to school there a year (no lottery, no scholarship stacking, less scholarship money, and no recruiting budget). This has become a viable place to go play baseball if your not a D1 kid in our state, and we as HS coaches are fortunate to have a guy that is working so hard for our kids.

Great job coach!

Graduation Rates Released

There were some eye opening results in the latest graduation rates amongst school districts with over 5,000 students. Five of the top six schools districts were southern with only the well healed district of Rio Rancho Schools (85.4%) from the north placing third. Most shocking were the results of Albuquerque (69.6%), Carlsbad (69.5%) and Roswell (68.5%) which placed around 20 percent of graduating students less than the number one district of Hobbs at 88.9%. Hobbs has remained number one for a number of years now. Only the Central Consolidated Schools perform more poorly than Albuquerque, Carlsbad and Roswell. Carlsbad's very poor performance of graduation rate is a head scratcher. They are most similar to Hobbs in minority status, income rates and a booming energy related economy. Yet perform terribly by comparison. Roswell's terrible performance being next to last is typical and expected as usual. Hobbs' most significant improvement has been graduating minority students. Their African-American students have improved from 63.3% graduation in 2010 to 89.6% in 2018. Proudly, that is higher than the student body average. Equally impressive are the Hispanic-American students that improved from 64.8% in 2010 and achieved a 88.7% graduation rate. It should also be noted that Hobbs High is the largest high school in the state. Other results are: Las Cruces Schools at an impressive 86.2%, Clovis Schools 83.0%, Gadsden Schools 81.8%, Alamogordo Schools 80.5%, Farmington Schools 74.7%, Los Lunas 73.9%, Gallup-McKinley Schools 73.1%, Santa Fe Schools 73.0% and Deming Schools 71.2%. As far as Albuquerque Schools (69.6%) are concerned that is an average of many high schools. Obviously some did far better than 69.6% but some therefore had to do far worse than that.
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Pojoaque Summer Tournament June 27-29

This summer we will be hosting our very first summer baseball tournament on our new turf field. We are looking for 7 other teams who want to play June 27-June 29. 3 game guarantee. We are a no metal spikes or sunflower seeds turf facility. Please call or text me if you're interested. $500 entry fee (We will provide all game balls) We also have lights, so daylight is not an issue.


Robert Riggins
575-693-0810

New NCAA targeting rules

https://www.ncaa.com/news/football/article/2019-04-23/targeting-protocols-approved-football

The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel during a conference call Monday approved two adjustments to targeting rules in an effort to strengthen one of football’s most important calls.

The panel also approved instituting a progressive penalty for targeting. Players who commit three targeting fouls in the same season are subject to a one-game suspension.

Blind-side blocks

The panel approved a new rule relevant to blind-side blocking techniques. Players will not be allowed to deliver a blind-side block by attacking an opponent with forcible contact. It will be a personal foul with a 15-yard penalty. If the block also includes the elements of targeting, it will be a blind-side block with targeting.

Kickoffs

The panel approved a rules change to eliminate the two-man wedge formation on all kickoffs.

Overtime

Panel members approved a tweak to the overtime rules. If a game reaches a fifth overtime, teams will run alternating two-point plays, instead of starting another drive at the opponent’s 25-yard line. This rules change was made to limit the number of plays from scrimmage and to bring the game to a conclusion.

Additionally, there will be a two-minute rest period after the second and fourth overtimes. The rules for the first four overtimes remain unchanged.
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