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Friday, March 31, 2023

2023 Shore Sports Network Baseball Preview: Class B South - shoresportsnetwork.com

Over the last two seasons, the Class B South division has been as even as any in the Shore Conference at the top and last year, the division was, essentially, seven teams competing at a similar level with one (Lakewood) lagging behind. This year could see an inverse effect: one dominant team well above the rest of the field, followed by six evenly-matched teams that beat up on each other throughout the year.

That one superior team appears to be Donovan Catholic, which returns most of its roster from a two-time defending co-champion and 2022 Shore Conference semifinalist. Between Manchester winning a sectional title in 2021 and Donovan Catholic making going deep into the 2022 SCT, Class B South continues to experience success outside the division in recent years and the Griffins hold the key to another decorated postseason for the division.

The public schools, meanwhile, should remain even. Barnegat is a two-time defending co-champion, Jackson Liberty came up a win short of four consecutive titles, Lacey was one of the Shore’s best run-prevention outfits, Manchester is two years removed from the aforementioned sectional championship, Pinelands was the Shore’s most improved team a year ago and Point Pleasant Boro took some measured steps toward getting back to its state-championship-contender status of 2020.

Now that Lakewood is no longer in the division, there will be a real battle to stay out of the basement and it is not abundantly clear that there is a team in real danger of finishing last heading into the season. There is, however, a team that looks like a virtual lock to finish first.

In predicted order of finish

Donovan Catholic

Corey Hamman left Lacey for the Donovan Catholic head coaching job with visions of turning the Griffins into a Non-Public power to rival teams like Red Bank Catholic, Christian Brothers Academy and St. John Vianney within the Shore Conference, as well as statewide powers like Bishop Eustace, St. Augustine, Gloucester Catholic and the North Jersey versions of those programs. Last year, that vision started to come into focus, as Donovan Catholic made it to the Shore Conference Tournament semifinals with a roster of players that were mostly eligible and planning to return in 2023.

Donovan Catholic is much closer to that elite status than it is to the level the program was at when Hamman took over, but the Griffins are not quite there yet. They are still looking to win an outright Class B South championship after tying for the title in each of the past two seasons and this experienced group will start this season hoping to get over the disappointment of getting bounced by Union Catholic in the first round of the 2022 NJSIAA Tournament.

All but one starter from 2022 returns this spring for Donovan Catholic, including two graduates who opted to exercise their option of bridge year while attending classes at junior college. One of them is George Mason commit and left-handed ace Shaun O’Keefe, who has been Donovan Catholic’s top pitcher in each of the past two seasons and pitched the Griffins past Jackson Liberty and CBA in back-to-back rounds of last year’s Shore Conference Tournament. The other is left-hand-swinging Anthony Mursko, who will hit in the middle of a deep, dangerous lineup that was the most improved part of last year’s team.

Donovan Catholic senior Shaun O'Keefe. (Photo: Tom Smith | tspsportsimages.com)

Donovan Catholic senior Shaun O'Keefe. (Photo: Tom Smith | tspsportsimages.com)

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Donovan Catholic stepped up its run-scoring attack in 2022, led by All-Shore-First-Team Gavin Degnan – a four-year starter (including 2020) who is all about speed: in centerfield, on the bases and with his bat, which he showed can catch up to the best fastballs Donovan Catholic faced. Fellow seniors Rocco Scarpitti, Ryan Butchko and Matt Mason are all coming off strong showings at the plate in 2022, while juniors Joe Maier (shortstop) and Hunter Johnson (catcher) will reprise their roles at key positions for the third year in a row.

Sophomores Nick Lovacco and Joe Busco are the challengers for the lone open spot in the lineup, which is at second base, while junior Dave Yorke’s bat is likely to find its way into the lineup in some capacity – either at DH or first base.

Since Hamman took over, Donovan Catholic has leaned on deep pitching staffs that don’t rely too much on any one player for volume – evidenced by O’Keefe throwing a reasonable 42 1/3 innings last year despite being the clear No. 1 pitcher on the roster. O’Keefe is one of seven returning pitchers – six of whom threw at least 15 innings.

That group includes injured junior Hunter Lefkus, but even without him, Donovan Catholic still has a wealth of options, starting with junior Jake Marciano and Jason Basilicata. While Basilicata got off to a late start in 2022 due to injury, Marciano picked up the slack and emerged as the Griffins’ No. 2 starter. With both now ready to go, Donovan Catholic has two capable big-game options beyond its ace. Junior Kade Kulpinski also flashed promise in 15 innings of work, while seniors John Grano and Brian Padilla provide two more experienced arms for the staff.

With a starter back at almost every position and plenty of depth in the pitching rotation, Donovan Catholic enters 2023 the heavy favorite to win Class B South all for itself in 2023. That would be a big step for the program in its emergence this season, but with so much returning talent and a taste of the Shore Conference Tournament semifinals still fresh, that is not the only step the Griffins want to take this spring.

Donovan Catholic junior Gavin Degnan connects on his seventh home run of the season. (Photo: Tom Smith | tspsportsimages.com)

Donovan Catholic senior Gavin Degnan connects on his seventh home run of the 2022 season. (Photo: Tom Smith | tspsportsimages.com)

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Donovan Catholic at a Glance

Head Coach: Corey Hamman, fourth season
2022 Record: 16-12 (10-4, tied first in Class B South)
Key Losses: Andrew Bonick (2B)

Barnegat Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Hunter Johnson, Jr. (.242/.356/.364, 5 2B, 1 HR, 3 R, 12 RBI)

First Base: Rocco Scarpitti, Sr. (.303/.505/.424, 2 2B, 2 HR, 25 R, 16 RBI, 9 SB); David Yorke, Jr.

Second Base: Nick Lovacco, So. (0-for-5, 1 R); Joe Busco, So. (0-for-3)

Shortstop: Joe Maier, Jr. (.318/.423/.409, 4 2B, 2 3B, 22 R, 15 RBI, 20 SB)

Third Base: Anthony Mursko, Fifth-Year Sr. (.322/.427/.402, 4 2B, 1 HR, 25 R, 18 RBI, 5 SB)

Leftfield: Ryan Butchko, Sr. (.262/.510/.410, 3 2B, 2 HR, 16 R, 18 RBI)

Centerfield: Gavin Degnan, Sr. (.407/.495/.714, 7 2B, 7 HR, 31 R, 25 RBI, 20 SB)

Rightfield: Matt Mason, Sr. (.318/.434/.500, 3 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 7 R, 11 RBI, 3 SB); Rocco Scarpitti, Sr.

DH: David Yorke, Jr. (.235/.402/.324, 3 2B, 1 HR, 11 R, 15 RBI); Matt Mason, Sr.

Other Hitters

Tyler Levine, So., C

Ryder Simpson, So., C

Pitching Staff

Shaun O’Keefe, Fifth-Year Sr., LHP (42.1 IP, 6-2, 1.98 ERA, 37 H, 18 BB, 47 K)

Jake Marciano, Jr., LHP (35 IP, 3-1, 2.60 ERA, 35 H, 15 BB, 35 K)

Jason Basilicata, Sr., RHP (16.2 IP, 1-0, 4.20 ERA, 13 H, 6 BB, 22 K)

Brian Padilla, Sr., RHP (19.1 IP, 1-3, 9.41 ERA, 33 H, 13 BB, 16 K)

Kade Kulpinski, Jr., RHP (15.1 IP, 2-2, 2.74 ERA, 13 H, 6 BB, 16 K)

John Grano, Sr., RHP (6.1 IP, 0-1, 16.58 ERA, 5 H, 23 BB, 12 K)

Hunter Lefkus, Jr., RHP – Injured (25.2 IP, 1-3, 5.45 ERA, 28 H, 18 BB, 31 K)

College Commitments

Shaun O’Keefe – George Mason University

Hunter Lefkus – St. Peter’s University

Jason Basilicata – St. Thomas Aquinas University

Brian Padilla – Rutgers University-Newark

Matt Mason – Neumann University

Point Pleasant Boro

After the last out of the 2019 Group II championship game, the players on the Point Boro baseball team processed their disappointment, said goodbye to the handful of seniors who were graduating and resolved to get the Panthers back to the final and finish the job in 2020. They never got that chance, and since the 2020 season was canceled due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, Point Boro has been fighting just to get back to .500, let alone a state final.

With the graduation of a special group in 2020 came a youth movement and with the youth movement came anticipated, but still-difficult, growing pains. With two years to learn the ropes, this year’s team – now loaded with varsity experience – is ready to transition from scrappy young team still finding its way to an exciting, junior-heavy group ready for a good two-year run.

Although the junior class makes up the core of this year’s Panthers squad, there is a major senior presence in the lineup up the middle, led by shortstop Connor Cilento. As a freshman, Cilento was lined up to start for the state-championship-hopeful team, then played to mixed results as a sophomore in 2021. Last year, however, he put it all together, making a serious bid for an All-Shore spot by adding more power to his offensive game and still showing off the game-changing speed with the fourth-highest stolen base total in the conference.

Second baseman Tommy Laspina is the other half of Point Boro’s senior double-play combo and rightfielder Shane Ryan will be the third senior in the starting lineup. Ryan has not played baseball in the program since his freshman season, but is a standout athlete who just put together an All-Shore season for Point Boro’s basketball team. Junior Matt Oliphant is a similar case: a football standout who came back to baseball after a year away and could find himself a regular role upon his return.

For Point Boro to thrive this year and into 2024, it will be all about this group of juniors. Bryson Kirby broke out as one of the Shore’s top two-way talents a year ago after giving pretty clear indication such a season was coming during his freshman debut a year earlier. Kirby will play centerfield when he is not on the mound, with Ryan Aquisto and Wyatt DeWysockie following him in the rotation. Both Acquisto and DeWysockie are two of coach Dave Drew’s three options at catcher and with fellow junior Jayson Bennett also in the mix, Acquisto will play mostly first base this season.

John Ward and Bennett will handle the hot corner and fellow junior Brian Simoes rounds out the starting lineup as the returning starter in rightfield. Two more juniors – Calvin Kedves and Eric Greeley – will factor into the rotation pitching behind Kirby, Acquisto, DeWysockie and senior left-hander Eric Anilonis. Andrew Lockwood, meanwhile, is another senior who can impact the game with his speed, while left-hander Nick Kowaleski is a potential difference-maker as a sophomore.

Donovan Catholic enters the season with a decided edge on paper over the rest of the division, but if there is a public-school favorite and a potential challenger to the Griffins for the B South title, it looks likely to be a resurgent Point Boro squad.

Point Boro at a Glance

Head Coach: Dave Drew, 12th season
2022 Record: 9-17-1 (5-8-1, seventh in Class B South)
Key Losses: Trey Harpootlian (LHP/1B), Charlie Vitale (OF), Nick Sclefo (OF), Matt DeWitte (RHP/INF)

Point Boro Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Wyatt DeWysockie, Jr. (.200/.304/.250, 1 2B, 1 R, 4 RBI); Jayson Bennett, Jr.

First Base: Ryan Acquisto, Jr. (.375/.381/.475, 4 2B, 2 R, 9 RBI, 3 SB)

Second Base: Tommy Laspina, Sr. (.213/.292/.225, 1 2B, 11 R, 2 RBI, 5 SB)

Shortstop: Connor Cilento, Sr. (.382/.484/.553, 7 2B, 2 HR, 16 R, 9 RBI, 23 SB)

Third Base: John Ward, Jr. (.304/.304/.391, 1 3B, 4 R, 1 RBI); Jayson Bennett, Jr.

Leftfield: Shane Ryan, Sr.; Jayson Bennett, Jr.

Centerfield: Bryson Kirby, Jr. (.293/.372/.440, 2 2B, 3 HR, 16 R, 13 RBI, 5 SB)

Rightfield: Brian Simoes, Jr. (.250/.365/.288, 1 3B, 8 R, 5 RBI, 3 SB);

DH: Jayson Bennett, Jr. (.196/.317/.294, 3 2B, 1 3B, 4 R, 4 RBI); Bryson Kirby, Jr.

Other Hitters

Andrew Lockwood, Sr., OF

Matt Oliphant, Jr., OF

Jack Macaluso, Jr., OF

Nick Kowalewski, So., 1B

Thomas Turner, So., 1B/OF

Chris Metcalfe, So., UTIL

Hudson Griffin, So., SS

James Lockwood, So., 2B

Pitching Staff

Bryson Kirby, Jr., RHP (58 IP, 2-4, 2.78 ERA, 44 H, 22 BB, 76 K)

Ryan Acquisto, Jr., RHP (6.1 IP, 2-0, 1.10 ERA, 5 H, 1 BB, 6 K)

Wyatt DeWysockie, Jr., RHP (14.1 IP, 1-2, 6.84 ERA, 23 H, 14 BB, 15 K)

Eric Anilonis, Sr., LHP (23 IP, 1-4, 5.78 ERA, 23 H, 26 BB, 22 K)

Calvin Kedves, Jr., RHP (2.1 IP, 0 H, 1 ER, 7 BB, 4 K)

Connor Cilento, Sr., RHP

Nick Kowalewski, So., LHP

Eric Greeley, Jr., RHP (4.1 IP, 5 ER, 7 H, 6 BB, 5 K)

Declan Pratt, Sr., RHP

College Commitments

Connor Cilento – United States Coast Guard Academy

Jackson Liberty

Jackson Liberty took its challenge for a fourth straight Class B South championship to the final game of the divisional schedule and came up short, settling for a third place tie – the program’s lowest finish in the B South standings since 2016. With a mix of experienced senior and underclass talent back in the fold for 2023, the Lions will be a hungry team hoping to reclaim its perch at the top of the division.

Two of Jackson Liberty’s top four pitchers from last year are back, led by all-division senior left-hander Ethan Bloomfield. Sophomore Mike Kisseberth will follow Bloomfield in the rotation after he posted a sub-3.00 ERA in 18 innings as a freshman, while sophomores Josh Rebelo and Nick Nanni return with experience from their freshman seasons as well.

Kisseberth will also be a staple in the lineup as the starting shortstop after hitting comfortably over .400 a year ago. Junior catcher Brett Benecke heads into his third season as a starter behind the plate and classmate Jack Kanis returns as a starter in leftfield. Centerfielder Christian Garced is the lone returning senior starter, but classmates Connor Yurgel (first base) and Gavin Degregorio (second base) were both part-time players who will move into the lineup this season.

With Kisseberth already entrenched, a wave of impact underclassmen is likely to join him as key players on the Lions team. Freshman Carney O’Donnell will start in the infield and contribute on the mound, with the rookie projected to start at third base on most days and at shortstop when Kisseberth pitches. Sophomore Colin Menafra, meanwhile, is slated to start in the outfield Nannini and Rebelo could have offensive roles as well to go with their spots on the pitching staff. Junior Matt O’Brien, meanwhile, will be an important player filling in around the diamond when the pitching plans open up spots in the field.

With Jackson Liberty’s division title streak coming to an end last season, this year’s group is intent on starting a new run and even if Donovan Catholic indeed runs away with the outright regular-season title, the Lions will still be in play for the public division championship.

Jackson Liberty seior Ethan Bloomfield. (Photo: Tom Smith | tspsportsimages.com)

Jackson Liberty seior Ethan Bloomfield. (Photo: Tom Smith | tspsportsimages.com)

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Jackson Liberty at a Glance

Head Coach: Dave Murawski, second season
2022 Record: 12-10 (9-5, tied third in Class B South)
Key Losses: Chris Sasso (LHP/1B), Garrett Drew (UTIL/RHP), Nick Conti (2B), R.J. Vashey (3B), Anthony Nannini (Sr., LHP; transferred to Red Bank Catholic)

Jackson Liberty Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Brett Benecke, Jr. (.241/.379/.426, 4 2B, 2 HR, 6 R, 11 RBI)

First Base: Connor Yurgel, Sr. (.160/.192/.280, 1 HR, 2 R, 5 RBI); Matt O’Brien, Jr.

Second Base: Gavin Degregorio, Sr. (.273/.433/.273, 6 R, 5 RBI)

Shortstop: Mike Kisseberth, So. (.422/.506/.484, 4 2B, 16 R, 8 RBI, 4 SB); Carney O’Donnell, Fr.; Anthony Woods, Fr.

Third Base: Carney O’Donnell, Fr.; Jack Kanis, Jr.

Leftfield: Jack Kanis, Jr. (.224/.243/.358, 6 2B, 1 HR, 11 R, 11 RBI); Connor Yurgel, Sr.; Matt O’Brien, Jr.

Centerfield: Christian Garced, Sr. (.304/.381/.339, 2 2B, 7 R, 9 RBI, 3 SB)

Rightfield: Colin Menafra, So. (.160/.323/.200, 1 2B, 2 R, 3 RBI)

DH: Nick Nannini, So., OF (1-for-3, 1 3B, 1 R, 2 SB)

Other Hitters

Vincent Grande, Jr., 2B

Josh Rebelo, So., 2B (0-for-1)

Ethan Bloomfield, Sr., OF

Christian Walton, Sr., OF

Pitching Staff

Ethan Bloomfield, Sr., LHP (32 IP, 3-4, 2.62 ERA, 19 H, 22 BB, 51 K)

Michael Kisseberth, So., RHP (18 IP, 1-2, 2.72 ERA, 15 H, 12 BB, 13 K)

Josh Rebelo, So., RHP (5 IP, 1-0, 0 ER, 2 H, 0 BB, 11 K)

Gavin Degregorio, Sr., RHP

Carney O’Donnell, Fr., RHP

Anthony Woods, Fr., RHP

Vincent Grande, Jr., RHP

Jack Kanis, Jr., RHP

Nick Nannini, So., RHP (5 IP, 3 ER, 5 H, 4 BB, 2 K)

Lacey

If the road to a championship is paved with good pitching, then Lacey has a direct route to a successful 2023 season. The Lions return two of their three top performers on the mound from a year ago, with senior right-hander Noah Quinn leading the way and classmate Jack Sramaty following as the team’s No. 2 starter.

By the numbers, Quinn can make a case that he is the best pitcher returning in B South after he posted an ERA a half-a-run better than O’Keefe at Donovan Catholic and almost a run-and-a-half better than what Kirby turned in at Point Boro. With 47 innings as a junior under his belt, he has also proved to be a workhorse. Sramaty, meanwhile, specializes in throwing strikes, which he showed by walking just eight batters in 30 1/3 innings for an average of 1.85 per seven innings.

Seniors Zack Mohr and Rylan Messina are two more seasoned varsity veterans who will round out the top of the Lacey pitching staff while helping Quinn and Sramaty handle the bulk of the innings workload for the season. Mohr and Messina will both play keys spots on the infield as well, with Mohr occupying shortstop and Messina manning the hot corner at third base. Quinn will also figure more prominently into the offense this season as the team’s starting rightfielder on days when he does not pitch.

Mohr and Messina are two of four returning starters out in the field for Lacey, which also includes all-division selection and senior catcher Carson Gudzak. His offense is still coming along, but Gudzak is a standout defender and his return to the lineup coupled with the experience on the mound should make Lacey even tougher to score upon than it was in 2022, when the Lions allowed an impressive 3.6 runs per game.

Junior Anthony Eckerson is the other returning starter and will play first base, with junior Ethan Anderson set to complete the right side of the infield as the new starting second baseman. Junior David Golini will move into the starting centerfield role, while sophomores Dylan Zech and Landon Raabe vie for rightfield at-bats. Freshman Brayden Messina and junior Shane Trangone are also competing for at-bats, which could come at the DH spot in the order.

Lacey’s offense struggled at times last season and this year’s lack of experience at the plate could lead to more low-scoring games, but the Lions showed last year they could pitch to anyone in Ocean County and with all of their experience, they can do it again in 2023.

Lacey at a Glance

Head Coach: Adam Taha, fourth season
2022 Record: Lacey 12-12 (9-5, tied third in Class B South)
Key Losses: Mike Todaro (RHP/2B), Matt McClung (CF), Andrew Tobia (OF), Colin Space (1B/RHP), Ryan Preston (RHP), Zack Barrett (RHP)

Lacey Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Carson Gudzak, Sr. (.271/.307/.286, 1 2B, 3 R, 8 RBI)

First Base: Anthony Eckerson, Jr. (.254/.324/.270, 1 2B, 5 R, 4 RBI)

Second Base: Ethan Anderson, Jr.

Shortstop: Zack Mohr, Sr. (.189/.312/.245, 1 2B, 1 3B, 11 R, 8 RBI, 3 SB)

Third Base: Rylan Messina, Sr. (.286/.338/.317, 2 2B, 10 R, 4 RBI, 4 SB)

Leftfield: Noah Quinn, Sr. (2-for-12, 1 2B, 1 R, 2 RBI)

Centerfield: David Golini, Jr.

Rightfield: Dylan Zech, So.; Landon Raabe, So.

DH: Brayden Messina, Fr.; Shane Trangone, Jr.

Pitching Staff

Noah Quinn, Sr., RHP (47 IP, 5-4, 1.49 ERA, 31 H, 29 BB, 66 K)

Jack Sramaty, Sr., RHP (30.1 IP, 3-1, 2.31 ERA, 29 H, 8 BB, 29 K)

Zack Mohr, Sr., RHP

Rylan Messina, Sr., RHP

Barnegat

Fresh off collecting its second straight Class B South co-championship, Barnegat will be in more of a rebuild mode than the other public-school programs that have been battling it out with the Bengals for the top spot in the division over the past decade. Junior left-hander Tyler Carll and his seven innings pitched represent the lone returning contributions from 2022 on the mound and while the experience in the field and at the plate is better, it is not a whole lot more extensive.

Carll will also start in centerfield after taking over that job last season, while senior Bryce Davenport is back as the shortstop and junior Dylan DeGrazio too as the third basemen. None of those three players posted a batting average better than .235 nor a slugging percentage north of .275, so while all three players have been through the battles, they have not been centerpieces in the lineup – something coach Dan McCoy will be looking for from somebody on this year’s roster.

The heavier contributions are going to have to come from the newcomers and McCoy is optimistic that group will find its footing by the latter part of the season to make Barnegat a dangerous matchup in the postseason and an up-and-coming team in 2024. Jack Haviland, Nick Bruno, Patrick Mackie and Liam Cooper are likely contributors as freshmen and Dylan Appice and Jaihan Dominguez will both be two-way sophomores, but there are also some upper-classmen on the radar for the Bengals.

Senior Matt Hwang is in line for first-base at-bats, classmate Griffen Soccadatto at DH, and juniors Carmine Albrozzese (catcher), Quentin Torres (second base) and Anthony Costello (rightfield) will all play key positions for Barnegat. The pitching staff is the greatest mystery for Barnegat with so little experience coming back, but pitching has been Barnegat’s specialty under Dan McCoy and when good arms pass through the program, they usually excel and there is sure to be a gem or two in this year’s group.

Barnegat was the rare sub-.500 division champion a year ago, when it finished 12-14 overall while going 10-4 inside the division. That is the result of challenging scheduling and those battles with quality competition should prepare the Bengals for what is ahead during the 2023 season.

Barnegat at a Glance

Head Coach: Dan McCoy, 11th season
2022 Record: 12-14 (10-4, tied first in Class B South)
Key Losses: P.J. Craig (RHP/1B), Ryan Kulpa (RHP/1B/2B), Jared Schworn (1B/OF/LHP), Patrick Quinn (2B/OF/RHP), Rafael Dominguez (2B/3B), Anthony Molfino (C), Joe Fiorentino (CF), Justin Bye (OF)

Barnegat Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Carmine Albrozzese, Jr.; Jack Haviland, Fr.

First Base: Matt Hwang, Sr. (.185/.421/.185, 6 R, 1 RBI)

Second Base: Quentin Torres, Jr.; Jordan Cook, Jr.

Shortstop: Bryce Davenport, Sr. (.195/.298/.220, 1 2B, 5 R, 4 RBI); Nick Bruno, Fr.

Third Base: Dylan DeGrazio, Jr. (.235/.391/.275, 2 2B, 7 R, 4 RBI)

Leftfield: Dylan Appice, So.

Centerfield: Tyler Carll, Jr. (.200/.333/.200, 4 R, 3 RBI); Julian Marfino, Jr.

Rightfield: Anthony Costello, Jr.; Patrick Mackie, Fr.

DH: Griffen Soccadatto, Sr.

Other Hitters

Liam Cooper, Fr., 3B

Jaihan Dominguez, So., 1B

Pitching Staff

Tyler Carll, Jr., LHP (7 IP, 8.00 ERA, 10 H, 14 BB, 7 K)

Bryce Davenport, Sr., RHP

Dylan Appice, So., RHP

Anthony Costello, Jr., RHP

Quentin Torres, Jr., RHP

Jaihan Dominguez, So., LHP

Pinelands

Pinelands was the best turnaround story in the Shore Conference in 2022, going from 1-18 in 2021 to 10-13 a year ago with a Shore Conference Tournament berth, as well as a first-round win over Toms River North in the Ocean County Tournament. A significant amount of that success can be traced back to two standout graduates in All-Shore two-way standout Stephen DeMilio and four-year starter and shortstop Rian O’Rourke.

With those two now in college, Pinelands will try to advance the program with its next wave of leaders, one of which could very well be its sophomore catcher. Nathan Sofield enters his sophomore season already committed to play at George Mason and after a solid showing during his freshman year, he and the rest of the Wildcats are hoping he really takes off.

Sofield is one of only three starters back from 2022, leaving the Wildcats to replace much more than just DeMilio and O’Rourke. Juniors Logan Russo and Kaden Inman will both play on the right side of the infield while also comprising the top of the pitching rotation. Inman is the starting second baseman, with Russo starting at first and both are coming off respectable seasons on the mound – both in performance and innings.

Junior shortstop Dan Maher and senior leftfielder Hunter Theuret each played part-time roles last year, with Maher contributing a double and six RBI and Theuret adding three doubles and six RBI. Senior Jacob Fowler will play third base in his first season getting varsity at-bats, junior Frank Gargione will start in rightfield and seniors Mike Howlett and Cole Corliss are versatile players who could nab DH at-bats and, along with sophomore T.J. Nugent, fill in around the diamond depending on the vacancies that starting pitching responsibilities create.

Freshman Tyler Dean will be one of the Shore’s rookies to watch -- a fitting last name for a freshman at Pinelands after Boston Red Sox draft pick Noah Dean starred at Pinelands for four years, although there is no relation*. With juniors and sophomores all over the roster and another exciting freshman joining the mix right away, Pinelands has a lot to look forward to over the next several years and could even sneak up on the rest of B South this season.

*Edit: This post originally claimed Tyler Dean was the younger brother of Noah Dean, but there is no relation and the post has been corrected.

Pinelands at a Glance

Head Coach: Dan Mulligan, third season
2022 Record: 10-13 (6-8, sixth in Class B South)
Key Losses: Stephen DeMilio (RHP/2B/OF), Rian O’Rourke (SS), Chris Mitchell (RHP), Casey Baglivo (OF), T.J. Ross (OF), Ethan Edwards (1B)

Pinelands Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Nathan Sofield, So. (.214/.304/.286, 5 2B, 12 R, 7 RBI, 3 SB)

First Base: Logan Russo, Jr. (.271/.397/.271, 8 R, 7 RBI, 3 SB)

Second Base: Kaden Inman, Jr. (.271/.397/.271, 1 2B, 9 R, 4 RBI, 3 SB); T.J. Nugent, So.

Shortstop: Dan Maher, Jr. (.135/.319/.162, 1 2B, 6 R, 6 RBI, 2 SB)

Third Base: Jacob Fowler, Sr.

Leftfield: Hunter Theuret, Sr. (.167/.306/.267, 3 2B, 4 R, 6 RBI, 3 SB)

Centerfield: Tyler Dean, Fr.

Rightfield: Frank Gargione, Jr.

DH: Mike Howlett, Sr. (UTIL), Cole Corliss, Sr. (INF)

Pitching Staff

Kaden Inman, Jr., RHP (19.2 IP, 2-1, 3.91 ERA, 12 H, 22 BB, 17 K)

Logan Russo, Jr., RHP (26.2 IP, 1-3, 4.20 ERA, 23 H, 23 BB, 28 K)

Dan Maher, Jr., RHP (3.2 IP, 0-1, 9 ER, 9 H, 4 BB, 3 K)

Hunter Theuret, Sr., RHP (5.1 IP, 2 ER, 6 H, 4 BB, 4 K)

Jacob Fowler, Sr., RHP

T.J. Nugent, So., RHP

Tyler Dean, Fr., RHP

College Commitment

Nathan Sofield – George Mason University

Manchester

In the 2021 postseason, Manchester transformed from a struggling team during the Class B South season into a world-beater. The Hawks upset Freehold Township in the Shore Conference Tournament, which was a harbinger for a run to the South Jersey Group II championship – Manchester’s first sectional title in 18 years. The sudden turnaround at the end of 2021, plus the return of so many of the players from that team had the Hawks hoping for another late-season surge in 2022, but it never materialized.

With that accomplished class of 2022 now out of the program, Manchester coach Dave Beauchemin will rely on a few holdovers from its championship squad while trying to prime the new group of varsity contributors for success in a B South division that should remain competitive. Seniors Joe Sclama and Frank Kern were pitching heroes for Manchester during their 2021 championship run, but couldn’t quite follow up those performances last year. Bounceback years from those two, plus another solid season from classmate and right-hander Joe Inkrote would give Manchester a rotation foundation that might actually improve its standing in the division.

At the plate, the lost production figures to be more of an issue. Mike Damato was a two-time All-Shore selection as Manchester’s top pitcher and hitter, while Sean McAllister was a clutch hitter throughout 2021 and 2023. All-Shore outfielder Logan Duffy missed most of 2022, which gave other players a chance to play, but the Hawks still come back with only three positions occupied by returning starters – none of whom hit better than .233. Joe Bentivenga should stabilize shortstop, A.J. Ramirez will make it a solid double-play defense at second base and Sclama will play first when he is not pitching.

Sophomore catcher Colton Sitarik got a taste of varsity action as a freshman and is a candidate to break out for the Hawks offense, while classmates Brenden Spaziano and Anthony Carino could do the same at third base and leftfield, respectively. Seniors Luke Walters, Matt Maccanico and Inkrote are in the outfield and DH mix, with Walters starting in centerfield and Inkrote likely to get first-base action when Sclama pitches. Juniors Patrick McKay and Evan Palmer will also play at the corner outfield spots.

Although the majority of Manchester’s championship core has graduated, there are a pair of links back to the 2021 title run still on the roster and with inspired seasons for both Sclama and Kern, Manchester will have the pitching to stay competitive with the other public schools in Class B South.

Manchester at a Glance

Head Coach: Dave Beauchemin, seventh season
2022 Record: 10-15-1 (6-7-1, fifth in Class B South)
Key Losses: Mike Damato (RHP/1B), Logan Duffy (OF), Sean McAllister (2B), Nick Johnson (C/DH), Brandon Sogness (CF), Justin Renzi (3B), Blake Warren (SS)

Manchester Around the Diamond (With 2022 Stats)

Returning Starters in Bold

Catcher: Colton Sitarik, So. (2-for-17, 1 2B, 4 R, 3 RBI)

First Base: Joe Sclama, Sr. (.179/.450/.256, 3 2B, 8 R, 7 RBI); Joe Inkrote, Sr.

Second Base: A.J. Ramirez, Sr. (.167/.297/.185, 1 2B, 11 R, 2 RBI, 3 SB)

Shortstop: Joe Bentivenga, Jr. (.233/.382/.279, 2 2B, 5 R, 4 RBI, 4 SB)

Third Base: Brenden Spaziano, So.; Joe Inkrote, Sr.

Leftfield: Patrick McKay, Jr.; Anthony Carino, So.

Centerfield: Luke Walters, Sr.

Rightfield: Evan Palmer, Jr.; Matt Maccanico, Sr.

DH: Joe Inkrote, Sr.

Pitching Staff

Joe Sclama, Sr., LHP (31.2 IP, 3-4, 6.19 ERA, 32 H, 31 BB, 24 K)

Joe Inkrote, Sr., RHP (18.2 IP, 1-0, 3.37 ERA, 19 H, 9 BB, 22 K)

Frank Kern, Sr., RHP (35.1 IP, 1-6, 5.55 ERA, 46 H, 13 BB, 26 K)

Anthony Carino, So., RHP

Chris Censoplano, Sr., RHP

Sean Reardon, Jr., RHP

Riley Wescott, Jr., LHP

College Commitments

Joe Sclama – Stockton University

Frank Kern – Muhlenberg College

A.J. Ramirez – Elmira College

Class B South Lineup

Brett Benecke, Jr., Catcher, Jackson Liberty

Rocco Scarpitti, Sr., First Base, Donovan Catholic

Connor Cilento, Sr., Shortstop, Point Boro

Joe Maier, Jr., Shortstop, Donovan Catholic

Mike Kisseberth, So., Shortstop, Jackson Liberty

Anthony Mursko, Fifth-Year Sr., Third Base, Donovan Catholic

Gavin Degnan, Sr., Centerfield, Donovan Catholic

Matt Mason, Sr., Rightfield, Donovan Catholic

Ryan Acquisto, Jr., First Base/UTIL, Point Boro

Class B South Rotation

Shaun O’Keefe, Fifth-Year Sr., LHP, Donovan Catholic

Noah Quinn, Sr., RHP, Lacey

Bryson Kirby, Jr., RHP, Point Boro

Ethan Bloomfield, Sr., LHP, Jackson Liberty

Jack Sramaty, Sr., RHP, Lacey

Class B South Breakouts to Watch

Nathan Sofield, So., Catcher, Pinelands

Jake Marciano, Jr., LHP, Donovan Catholic

Joe Bentivenga, Sr., Shortstop, Manchester

Christian Garced, Sr., Centerfield, Jackson Liberty

Carney O’Donnell, Fr., Catcher/Third Base/RHP, Jackson Liberty

Wyatt DeWysockie, Jr., Catcher/RHP, Point Boro

Rylan Messina, Sr., Third Base, Lacey

Kaden Inman, Jr., Shortstop/RHP, Pinelands

Joe Inkrote, Sr., First Base/RHP, Manchester

Tyler Carll, Jr., Outfield/LHP, Barnegat

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Ex-Patriot Willie McGinest out at NFL Network amid assault charges: report - Fox News

The NFL Network is reportedly parting ways with Willie McGinest as he faces up to eight years in prison.

McGinest was hit with one count of assault with a deadly weapon and one count of assault by means of force likely to cause great bodily injury stemming from an attack at a restaurant in West Hollywood.

The former defensive lineman turned himself into police on Dec. 19 in connection with the assault that occurred 10 days prior. The video seems to show McGinest punching a man in the face and later attacking him with a bottle.

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New England Patriots linebacker Willie McGinest on the sideline during a game against the Buffalo Bills at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Orchard Park, New York on December 11, 2005. New England won the game 35-7. 

New England Patriots linebacker Willie McGinest on the sideline during a game against the Buffalo Bills at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Orchard Park, New York on December 11, 2005. New England won the game 35-7.  (Mark Konezny/NFLPhotoLibrary)

McGinest spent the majority of his 15-year career in New England, earning two Pro Bowl nods and three Super Bowl championships.

The 51-year-old apologized for the incident shortly after in a lengthy Instagram post.

"First and foremost, I want to offer my deepest apology for my lapse in judgment and behavior on December 9 at a restaurant in West Hollywood," McGinest wrote on Instagram later that month. "To my family, community, friends, and youth I mentor, please know I feel horrible for my actions and take full responsibility.

New England Patriots Willie McGinest during the first quarter of Super Bowl XXXIX between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New England Patriots at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida on February 6, 2005. 

New England Patriots Willie McGinest during the first quarter of Super Bowl XXXIX between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New England Patriots at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida on February 6, 2005.  (Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images)

ROBERT KRAFT SAYS RAPPER MEEK MILL TEXTED OWNER THAT LAMAR JACKSON WANTS TO BE ON PATRIOTS

"To my colleagues at the NFL Network and those that I work closely with as an advisor to professional and community-based organizations, please know I am embarrassed and regret what occurred.

"Most of all, I am disappointed in myself, as I know this is an isolated incident and is not reflective of my faith, role as a father, life’s body of work, or the role model I’ve worked hard to become. It is personally devastating that decades of community service, youth engagement, mentoring, and professional development would become an afterthought in a single moment that should never have happened.

Willie McGinest #55 of the New England Patriots looks on before a NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins on October 10, 2004, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.  

Willie McGinest #55 of the New England Patriots looks on before a NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins on October 10, 2004, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.   (Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)

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"This incident has prompted me to deep self-reflection — mind, soul, and spirit. I know that violence is never the answer to such situations, no matter how intense the provocation. Rest assured, I will take whatever steps necessary to restore the public trust, mend damaged relationships, and ensure this never happens again."

McGinest was suspended from his role as an analyst at NFL Network pending an investigation.

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A method for designing neural networks optimally suited for certain tasks - MIT News

Neural networks, a type of machine-learning model, are being used to help humans complete a wide variety of tasks, from predicting if someone’s credit score is high enough to qualify for a loan to diagnosing whether a patient has a certain disease. But researchers still have only a limited understanding of how these models work. Whether a given model is optimal for certain task remains an open question.

MIT researchers have found some answers. They conducted an analysis of neural networks and proved that they can be designed so they are “optimal,” meaning they minimize the probability of misclassifying borrowers or patients into the wrong category when the networks are given a lot of labeled training data. To achieve optimality, these networks must be built with a specific architecture.

The researchers discovered that, in certain situations, the building blocks that enable a neural network to be optimal are not the ones developers use in practice. These optimal building blocks, derived through the new analysis, are unconventional and haven’t been considered before, the researchers say.

In a paper published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they describe these optimal building blocks, called activation functions, and show how they can be used to design neural networks that achieve better performance on any dataset. The results hold even as the neural networks grow very large. This work could help developers select the correct activation function, enabling them to build neural networks that classify data more accurately in a wide range of application areas, explains senior author Caroline Uhler, a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS).

“While these are new activation functions that have never been used before, they are simple functions that someone could actually implement for a particular problem. This work really shows the importance of having theoretical proofs. If you go after a principled understanding of these models, that can actually lead you to new activation functions that you would otherwise never have thought of,” says Uhler, who is also co-director of the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and a researcher at MIT’s Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems (LIDS) and its Institute for Data, Systems and Society (IDSS).

Joining Uhler on the paper are lead author Adityanarayanan Radhakrishnan, an EECS graduate student and an Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center Fellow, and Mikhail Belkin, a professor in the Halicioğlu Data Science Institute at the University of California at San Diego.

Activation investigation

A neural network is a type of machine-learning model that is loosely based on the human brain. Many layers of interconnected nodes, or neurons, process data. Researchers train a network to complete a task by showing it millions of examples from a dataset.

For instance, a network that has been trained to classify images into categories, say dogs and cats, is given an image that has been encoded as numbers. The network performs a series of complex multiplication operations, layer by layer, until the result is just one number. If that number is positive, the network classifies the image a dog, and if it is negative, a cat.

Activation functions help the network learn complex patterns in the input data. They do this by applying a transformation to the output of one layer before data are sent to the next layer. When researchers build a neural network, they select one activation function to use. They also choose the width of the network (how many neurons are in each layer) and the depth (how many layers are in the network.)

“It turns out that, if you take the standard activation functions that people use in practice, and keep increasing the depth of the network, it gives you really terrible performance. We show that if you design with different activation functions, as you get more data, your network will get better and better,” says Radhakrishnan.

He and his collaborators studied a situation in which a neural network is infinitely deep and wide — which means the network is built by continually adding more layers and more nodes — and is trained to perform classification tasks. In classification, the network learns to place data inputs into separate categories.

“A clean picture”

After conducting a detailed analysis, the researchers determined that there are only three ways this kind of network can learn to classify inputs. One method classifies an input based on the majority of inputs in the training data; if there are more dogs than cats, it will decide every new input is a dog. Another method classifies by choosing the label (dog or cat) of the training data point that most resembles the new input.

The third method classifies a new input based on a weighted average of all the training data points that are similar to it. Their analysis shows that this is the only method of the three that leads to optimal performance. They identified a set of activation functions that always use this optimal classification method.

“That was one of the most surprising things — no matter what you choose for an activation function, it is just going to be one of these three classifiers. We have formulas that will tell you explicitly which of these three it is going to be. It is a very clean picture,” he says.

They tested this theory on a several classification benchmarking tasks and found that it led to improved performance in many cases. Neural network builders could use their formulas to select an activation function that yields improved classification performance, Radhakrishnan says.

In the future, the researchers want to use what they’ve learned to analyze situations where they have a limited amount of data and for networks that are not infinitely wide or deep. They also want to apply this analysis to situations where data do not have labels.

“In deep learning, we want to build theoretically grounded models so we can reliably deploy them in some mission-critical setting. This is a promising approach at getting toward something like that — building architectures in a theoretically grounded way that translates into better results in practice,” he says.

This work was supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research, the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab, the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center at the Broad Institute, and a Simons Investigator Award.

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Ex-Patriot Willie McGinest out at NFL Network amid assault charges: report - Fox News

The NFL Network is reportedly parting ways with Willie McGinest as he faces up to eight years in prison.

McGinest was hit with one count of assault with a deadly weapon and one count of assault by means of force likely to cause great bodily injury stemming from an attack at a restaurant in West Hollywood.

The former defensive lineman turned himself into police on Dec. 19 in connection with the assault that occurred 10 days prior. The video seems to show McGinest punching a man in the face and later attacking him with a bottle.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

New England Patriots linebacker Willie McGinest on the sideline during a game against the Buffalo Bills at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Orchard Park, New York on December 11, 2005. New England won the game 35-7. 

New England Patriots linebacker Willie McGinest on the sideline during a game against the Buffalo Bills at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Orchard Park, New York on December 11, 2005. New England won the game 35-7.  (Mark Konezny/NFLPhotoLibrary)

McGinest spent the majority of his 15-year career in New England, earning two Pro Bowl nods and three Super Bowl championships.

The 51-year-old apologized for the incident shortly after in a lengthy Instagram post.

"First and foremost, I want to offer my deepest apology for my lapse in judgment and behavior on December 9 at a restaurant in West Hollywood," McGinest wrote on Instagram later that month. "To my family, community, friends, and youth I mentor, please know I feel horrible for my actions and take full responsibility.

New England Patriots Willie McGinest during the first quarter of Super Bowl XXXIX between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New England Patriots at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida on February 6, 2005. 

New England Patriots Willie McGinest during the first quarter of Super Bowl XXXIX between the Philadelphia Eagles and the New England Patriots at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida on February 6, 2005.  (Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images)

ROBERT KRAFT SAYS RAPPER MEEK MILL TEXTED OWNER THAT LAMAR JACKSON WANTS TO BE ON PATRIOTS

"To my colleagues at the NFL Network and those that I work closely with as an advisor to professional and community-based organizations, please know I am embarrassed and regret what occurred.

"Most of all, I am disappointed in myself, as I know this is an isolated incident and is not reflective of my faith, role as a father, life’s body of work, or the role model I’ve worked hard to become. It is personally devastating that decades of community service, youth engagement, mentoring, and professional development would become an afterthought in a single moment that should never have happened.

Willie McGinest #55 of the New England Patriots looks on before a NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins on October 10, 2004, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.  

Willie McGinest #55 of the New England Patriots looks on before a NFL football game against the Miami Dolphins on October 10, 2004, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.   (Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

"This incident has prompted me to deep self-reflection — mind, soul, and spirit. I know that violence is never the answer to such situations, no matter how intense the provocation. Rest assured, I will take whatever steps necessary to restore the public trust, mend damaged relationships, and ensure this never happens again."

McGinest was suspended from his role as an analyst at NFL Network pending an investigation.

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Willie McGinest Is Out At NFL Network - Front Office Sports

The NFL Network is parting ways with analyst Willie McGinest, sources tell Front Office Sports.

McGinest, a three-time Super Bowl winner with the New England Patriots, is being sued for allegedly attacking a restaurant patron in West Hollywood on Dec. 9. 

McGinest voluntarily surrendered to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department on Dec. 19. He’s facing two felony charges and possibly eight years in prison.

The NFL Network suspended McGinest and removed him from the air pending investigation of the charges, according to ProFootballTalk.

The 51-year University of Southern California alum later issued a statement offering his deepest apologies for his conduct to his family, friends, community and colleagues, and the youths he mentors.

“I feel horrible for my actions and take full responsibility,” McGinest wrote on Dec. 23. “To my colleagues at the NFL Network and those I work closely with as an advisor to professional and community-based organizations, please know I am embarrassed and regret what occurred.”

McGinest is the latest big name to head for the exits at the league’s 24/7 network following the departures of columnist Jim Trotter, anchor/host Rachel Bonnetta and reporter Mike Giardi.

Meanwhile, ESPN is also bracing for sweeping layoffs to comply with Walt Disney Co. chief executive Bob Iger’s order to slash 7,000 jobs and $5.5 billion in costs. 

McGinest could not be reached. NFL Network declined to comment.

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Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Amazon opens Sidewalk mesh network to outside developers - Light Reading

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Amazon opens Sidewalk mesh network to outside developers  Light Reading

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Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Rachel Bonnetta out at NFL Network as staff-trimming continues - New York Post

Up-and-coming NFL Network funny woman Rachel Bonnetta is out as the league-owned platform continues to trim staff, The Post has learned.

Bonnetta, 31, has been on the rise at the network.

She had been under strong consideration to be on “Good Morning Football” after co-host Kay Adams left the network.

Jamie Erdahl ended up replacing Adams.

Bonnetta did not want to relocate from Los Angeles to work on the show in New York, according to sources.

NFL Network and Bonnetta agreed to a buyout on the final year of her deal.

NFL Network declined comment.

Bonnetta declined to confirm the news when reached.

On Monday, reporter Jim Trotter announced that his contract had not been renewed by the network.

Rachel Bonnetta is out at NFL Network.
Rachel Bonnetta is out at NFL Network.
Getty Images

Earlier this month, The Post’s Ryan Glasspiegel reported that NFL Network was bracing for layoffs.

This season, the NFL will begin new TV deals with ESPN, Fox, NBC, CBS and Amazon Prime Video that extend more than a decade and are worth around $110 billion.

The league looks at NFL Network as a separate entity from those deals.

Rachel Bonnetta interviewing "Ted Lasso" actor Cristo Fernandez on NFL Network in October.
Rachel Bonnetta interviewing “Ted Lasso” actor Cristo Fernandez on NFL Network in October.
NFL Network

Bonnetta had been an increasingly bigger part of the network, taking a large role on its Super Bowl coverage and making noise with clips that appeared on social media.

She joined NFL Network two years ago after working at FS1 for five years on a variety of shows, including its betting programs.

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Newton Public Schools cancels classes following network security incident - KAKE

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Newton Public Schools cancels classes following network security incident  KAKE

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Amazon opens its low-bandwidth, long-range Sidewalk network to developers - TechCrunch

Back in 2019, Amazon announced Sidewalk, its low-bandwidth, long-range wireless network that uses the 900 MHz spectrum to connect Internet of Things (IoT) devices. It does this by creating a mesh network between Amazon’s own Echo and Ring devices and sharing a small part of their owner’s bandwidth. Ideally, this means Sidewalk will be able to connect devices that sit beyond the reach of a Bluetooth or Wi-Fi signal. Until now, though, only a select number of developers were able to build applications for the network. But that’s changing today. The company is now shipping software and hardware development kits, as well as an easy-to-use test kit to test the available Sidewalk connectivity in your neighborhood.

Using the new test kit, developers will be able to check their local signal strength on a map to get a better sense of whether their devices will be able to connect to the network before they start working on a product.

Amazon sent me one of these Ring-branded devices to try. Getting started with it involves little more than powering it up (it does have a battery for mobile usage) and logging into Amazon’s web-based Sidewalk coverage service. From there, you can quickly see all of the raw data from the GPS-enabled test kit and get access to Amazon’s U.S.-wide coverage map.

To ensure user privacy, the coverage maps only show coverage within a 900m-by-900m square area. You will be able to see the exact location of your own device, but not other devices that report into the coverage map.

“We’ve rapidly built out a long-range, low-bandwidth network that now covers more than 90% of the U.S. population, and this is an open invitation for developers to put it to the test,” said Dave Limp, senior vice president of Amazon Devices & Services. “Many types of connected devices have been limited by the range of Wi-Fi and the cost of cellular technology, which has hindered the ability to connect devices like environmental sensors, leak detectors and smart locks. Sidewalk is designed to provide a secure, low-cost way to invent and connect a whole new range of devices, and we can’t wait to see what developers build.”

Sidewalk coverage map. Image Credits: Amazon

For the software development kits, Amazon partnered with Nordic Semiconductor, Silicon Labs, Texas Instruments and module vendor Quectel. These companies will also offer hardware development kits, with Quectel launching a Sidewalk connectivity module that will allow developers to quickly take Sidewalk-enabled devices into production. Amazon is also launching mobile SDKs for iOS and Android to help developers build Sidewalk into their mobile apps. The company is also launching an app that will help developers debug and troubleshoot their devices in the field.

It’s worth noting that Sidewalk is also natively integrated with AWS’ IoT Core service, which allows businesses to connect and manage their fleets of IoT devices. “The integration of AWS IoT Core and Amazon Sidewalk marks a significant milestone for developers, manufacturers and customers, streamlining the design, connection and deployment of Amazon Sidewalk based IoT solutions,” said Yasser Alsaied, vice president of IoT at Amazon Web Services. “Now, with AWS IoT Core for Amazon Sidewalk, developers can access 200+ AWS services to build scalable solutions on top of a highly reliable, secure and free-to-connect wireless network.”

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A robust quantum memory that stores information in a trapped-ion quantum network - Phys.org

A robust quantum memory that stores information in a trapped-ion quantum network
Quantum network node "Alice" at the University of Oxford. An objective lens collects single photons that are entangled with a strontium ion trapped inside the vacuum chamber. Credits: David Nadlinger

Researchers at University of Oxford have recently created a quantum memory within a trapped-ion quantum network node. Their unique memory design, introduced in a paper in Physical Review Letters, has been found to be extremely robust, meaning that it could store information for long periods of time despite ongoing network activity.

"We are building a network of quantum computers, which use trapped ions to store and process quantum information," Peter Drmota, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told Phys.org. "To connect quantum processing devices, we use emitted from a single atomic ion and utilize between this ion and the photons."

Trapped ions, charged atomic particles that are confined in space using , are a commonly used platform for realizing quantum computations. Photons (i.e., the particles of light), on the other hand, are generally used to transmit quantum information between distant nodes. Drmota and his colleagues have been exploring the possibility of combining trapped ions with photons, to create more powerful quantum technologies.

"Until now, we have implemented a reliable way of interfacing strontium ions and photons, and used this to generate high-quality remote entanglement between two distant network nodes," Drmota said. "On the other hand, high-fidelity quantum logic and long-lasting memories have been developed for . In this experiment, we combine these capabilities for the first time, and show that it is possible to create high-quality entanglement between a strontium ion and a and thereafter store this entanglement in a nearby calcium ion."

Integrating a quantum memory into a network node is a challenging task, as the criteria that need to be fulfilled for such a system to work are higher than those required for the creation of a standalone quantum processor. Most notably, the developed memory would need to be robust against concurrent network activity.

"This means that the quantum information stored in the memory must not degrade while a network link is established," Drmota explained. "This requires extreme isolation between the memory and the network, but at the same time, there also needs to be a fast and reliable mechanism that couples the memory to the network when needed."

A robust quantum memory that stores information in a trapped-ion quantum network
View inside the vacuum chamber, where we trap strontium and calcium ions using electric fields and lasers. Credits: David Nadlinger.

To create their quantum memory, Drmota and his colleagues used two different atomic species, namely strontium and calcium, as this allowed them to minimize crosstalk while establishing a network link. The limited crosstalk in this mixed-species architecture also allowed them to detect errors in real-time and to utilize what is known as in-sequence cooling. Mixed-species entangling gates provided the missing connection between the network and the memory.

"One of the technical error sources that we face with trapped-ion qubits is dephasing due to noise," Drmota said. "Nevertheless, calcium-43 features transitions that are insensitive to magnetic fields, eliminating this error, hence boosting their coherence time. While strontium-88 is perfectly suited for generating photons for networking, it is sensitive to magnetic field noise."

Although strontium-88 is known to be sensitive to magnetic field noise, the researchers were able to preserve entanglement between their memory ion and a photon for a longer time, by transferring quantum information from the strontium to calcium in the system. Specifically, they could preserve this entanglement for over 10s, which is at least 1000 times longer than they observed between a bare strontium ion and a photon.

"Furthermore, the strontium ion can be reused to generate further entangled photons, and we show that this process does not affect the fidelity of entanglement between the memory and the previous photon, hence achieving robustness to network activity," Drmota said. "Notably, we managed to integrate the complexity associated with multiple challenging techniques, which have been developed in isolation in different setups over many years, in a single experiment."

In initial tests, the quantum memory created by Drmota and his colleagues achieved very promising results, as it was found to be highly robust, preserving entanglement between a trapped ion and photon for at least 10s. The team's demonstration of this quantum memory could be an important milestone on the ongoing quest to realize distributed quantum information processing.

Using their design, individual quantum computational nodes can be loaded with a given number of processing qubits (i.e., calcium), while the network qubit (i.e., strontium) can then be used to create quantum links between distant modules. Ultimately, this promising quantum memory could pave the way towards the creation of scalable quantum computing systems, as using small modules that can process and interconnecting them with other modules circumvents the need for large and complex ion traps.

"The robust could be used in quantum repeaters, for private (blind) quantum computation, and is key for new developments in quantum communications, metrology and time keeping," Drmota added. "For example, for the nascent field of entangled atomic clocks, the long storage durations achieved in our experiments will lead to an order-of-magnitude improvement in the precision of frequency comparison between distant clocks."

More information: P. Drmota et al, Robust Quantum Memory in a Trapped-Ion Quantum Network Node, Physical Review Letters (2023). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.090803.

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Citation: A robust quantum memory that stores information in a trapped-ion quantum network (2023, March 27) retrieved 28 March 2023 from https://ift.tt/wO7qSlR

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