Sports

The three-game winning streak for the Yorktown Patriots came to an end Friday night (Oct. 10) in high-school football action.

Host Yorktown (4-3) fell to the West Springfield Spartans, 31-7, the squad’s third consecutive loss to the Patriot District team.

In this year’s setback, Yorktown broke from its winning formula against Liberty District rivals in its three previous three games that gave the Patriots a 3-0 record in the league. Yorktown did not turn the ball over during that span, capitalized on opponents’ mistakes and would bend but not break on defense.

That wasn’t the case against West Springfield, which gained 370 total yards — 284 of them on the ground — and 18 first downs.

West Springfield runningback Dillan Wickham ran for 204 of those yards and three touchdowns. The Spartans (5-2, 4-0) had four rushing TDs in addition to a field goal.

“We had trouble stopping their running game, and they exploited us and capitalized,” Yorktown coach Alec Hick told ARLnow.

West Springfield led 17-0 at halftime and was in front 31-0 before Yorktown scored a late-game TD.

The Patriots’ touchdown came on a 38-yard pass from Samson Schneider to Sammy Keiser, who had six catches for 91 yards. Schneider was 15 of 29 passing for 197 yards, and was intercepted once.

Alex Hans caught four passes for 60 yards and Brady Owens four for 42. The Patriots had just nine yards rushing.

Nate Randles, front, begins his pass route for Yorktown (staff photo by Dave Facinoli)

West Springfield took control early. After receiving the opening kickoff, the Spartans put together a 79-yard multi-play touchdown drive to take a 7-0 first-quarter lead.

Yorktown responded with a march of its own, which ended at the West Springfield 15-yard line with a lost fumble. The Patriots struggled to mount any other drives until scoring their TD with just 3:34 left in the game.

“We were driving right back, but the wind went out of our sails with that lost fumble,” Hicks said. “We had not made errors like that in our past few games.”

Yorktown’s defense came up with just one turnover when Collin Damato recovered a second-half fumble. Players with tackles for losses or no gains for Yorktown were Bobby Shea, Henry Midberry, Teddy Sennott, Andrew Cole, Landon Foose, George Cocker and Sevan Raine, who made a strong tackle on the game’s opening kickoff.

“That was a big hit, the way we wanted to start the game,” Hicks said.

Yorktown plays the host Wakefield Warriors (3-3, 0-2) in a district all-Arlington showdown in its next game at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17. Yorktown and the Washington-Liberty Generals (6-1) are tied for first in the district with 3-0 records.

“We will work in practice to get better, like we did after our first two losses,” Hicks said.


Around Town

Good Friday evening, Arlington. Let’s take a look back at today’s stories and a look forward to tomorrow’s event calendar.

🕗 News recap

The following articles were published earlier today — Oct 10, 2025.

Since it’s Friday, we’ve also compiled a list of the most-read articles of the week, below.

  1. Two Arlington restaurants featured in Washington Post’s ’40 Best Restaurants’ list (28064 views)
  2. Goodwill on Glebe Road will close this month for affordable housing redevelopment (23682 views)
  3. Two killed after car strikes overpass on GW Parkway (15310 views)
  4. ACPD: Cocaine, ‘large sum of cash’ recovered in South Arlington drug arrest (13676 views)
  5. Cyclist seriously hurt in crash along part of Wilson Blvd which saw recent safety improvements (12366 views)
  6. Pirouette Cafe & Wine Shop is closing after months of struggling to increase business in Ballston (8616 views)
  7. ACPD seeks suspects after two stabbings Tuesday (6646 views)
  8. JUST IN: Trump administration threatens no back pay for federal workers in shutdown (6575 views)
  9. Another big wave of ‘No Kings’ protests planned next week in Arlington (6185 views)
  10. Ballston office-to-residential conversion awaits County Board action (4897 views)
  11. Missing Middle plaintiffs appeal lawsuit to Virginia Supreme Court (4595 views)
  12. Gardener group urges property owners to ‘leave the leaves’ to boost ecosystem (4398 views)

📅 Upcoming events

Here is what’s going on Saturday in Arlington, from our event calendar.

Here are the events planned for Sunday:

🌦️ Saturday’s forecast

Showers are possible before 11am and after 2pm, with mostly cloudy conditions and a high near 69°F. There’s a 30% chance of precipitation and an east wind at 5-8 mph. On Saturday night, showers are likely after 2am, accompanied by a cloudy sky and a low around 60°F. There’s a 70% chance of precipitation, with new amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, and a northeast wind at 8-13 mph with gusts up to 21 mph. See more from Weather.gov.

💡 Quote of the Day

“To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

🌅 Tonight’s sunset

The MonumentCam screenshot above is used with permission of the Trust for the National Mall and courtesy of EarthCam.

We hope you have a great weekend, Arlington! If you have something to say about an issue of local note not covered today, feel free to post it as a letter to the editor on our new forum. 👋


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Please note: While Arlington Realty, Inc. provides this information for the community, it may not be the listing company of these homes.

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6223 Langston Boulevard

Please note that this is solely a selection of Just Reduced properties available in Arlington County. For a complete list of properties within your target budget and specifications, contact Arlington Realty, Inc.


Around Town

A tight-knit construction crew’s months of labor and progress in Ballston are the subject of an online photo album by a neighborhood photographer.

Since the spring, David Moss has captured dozens of scenes conveying the teamwork and physical feats of construction workers at the UrbA phase II redevelopment site next to Harris Teeter, where a 197-unit apartment building is getting built at 600 N. Glebe Road.

Moss first noticed the crew from Hyde Park Condominiums’ courtyard in April. The construction site’s unique figures, textures and lighting all appealed to the longtime photographer. But it was the team of about 15 workers who captivated him most.

“Being somebody looking from the outside, seeing what, at first, looked like controlled chaos, I then realized that everybody knows where to go … the teamwork is amazing,” Moss said. “Spying on them from afar, there’s a camaraderie, a real teamwork.”

Construction workers at the UrbA II site in August (courtesy of David Moss)

His photos capture the hard work and heavy metal of a construction site as workers haul wood planks and scaffolding, operate the gritty landscape’s heavy machinery, and don matching hard hats and reflective vests to work as a coordinated team.

“It’s very skilled, dangerous, hot and sweaty work, but they just do what has to be done,” he said. “These are almost all Latino immigrants, who some people would like locked up and expelled. But apparently we don’t mind them doing our dirty work.”

Especially during a time of surging immigration enforcement across the country and in Arlington, Moss hopes his work helps others see the humanity in migrant communities, as he has with the crew.

“We’re all just people trying to get through life, and just because you came from another place doesn’t mean you don’t have a right to exist or to thrive,” Moss said. “We shouldn’t be demonizing people, and we shouldn’t be treating people cruelly.”

Over time, the photographer said his frequent visits fostered a real “human connection” between him and the crew.

Nowadays when he arrives, the workers meet him with waves, thumbs-ups or poses — some of which are captured in his portfolio.

“I chatted with one guy and I showed him on the phone, I said, here,” Moss said. “He’s like, ‘Oh, that’s my uncle,’ and ‘oh, that’s my brother,’ so I think they were pleased.”

One day, the photographer plans to take some of the workers to lunch. Until then, he’ll continue to show up to the site with his Canon DSLR.

Phase II of the UrbA project is slated to wrap up in May 2027.


Announcement

Art House 7’s winter session is almost here, starting next week, Jan. 14. Cultivate your creativity heading into the new year! We have a range of fantastic winter classes for ages preschool on up. Among the highlights: award-winning artist Mark Giaimo will be teaching portrait painting for adults on Tuesday evenings (his portrait of a boy is above). Also in this session: Mommy and Me classes, drawing, crochet, clay sculpture, ceramics, watercolor painting, oil painting, Japanese Suminagashi, sewing, printmaking and more.

We also offer workshops, BYOB art nights, and open studios.


Around Town

Langston Blvd has been without its McDonald’s for about seven months, but that’s about to change.

The company is in the final stages of constructing a “modernized” restaurant on the grounds of its former red-roofed joint at 4834 Langston Blvd. The new build, which replaces the old-school look with the franchise’s updated, neutral color palette, is expected to open next month.

“The location is getting closer to completion,” construction manager Michele Miller told ARLnow. “We are still planning to open this year sometime in November.”

McDonald’s shut its former Langston Blvd restaurant down in April, demolished it in June and initially eyed plans to reopen this month.

The new restaurant will not have a PlayPlace, but it will have self-ordering kiosks and an outdoor patio. Also in the works is a side-by-side drive-thru, which will have two ordering lanes that merge at pickup to “improve efficiency,” Miller previously said.

It’s an upgrade from the former single-lane drive-thru at the spot, which often contributed to traffic along Langston Blvd.


Announcement

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