Lexington beats West Holmes 79-58 in Millersburg Feb. 10
Lexington beat West Holmes 79-58 in Millersburg; the loss deepens West Holmes' conference slide and highlights funding and participation issues for local youth sports.

Lexington routed West Holmes 79-58 in an Ohio Cardinal Conference varsity game played in Millersburg, a result that deepens the Knights' struggles and underscores broader questions about resources and support for local youth athletics.
Yourohionews reported, "Lexington defeated West Holmes 79-58 in an OCC battle Feb. 10." WKLM also posted a game recap with "WRAP UP" and "GAME AUDIO," noting the contest and offering broadcast files for listeners. Westholmes' school bulletin listed the same final score under "Yesterday's Happenings."
Lexington's attack was led by Nate Sprang, who scored 22 points. Keston McKinney added nine and Preston Troyer eight, with those three cited specifically in local coverage. West Holmes' varsity scoring is only partially reported by the school bulletin; Quincy Camacho had six points, Coi Beachy five, Cooper Maltarich four, Billy Patten three and Marshall Yoder one. The bulletin cautioned that its list is not a complete box score.
The West Holmes program also fell 43-38 at the junior varsity level to Lexington. Westholmes listed JV scorers as Cole Troyer 10, Kolton Taggart eight, Hudson Flanders seven, Jaden Baker six, Quincy Camacho three, Ryder Fox three and Marshall Yoder one. Yourohionews confirmed the top three JV scorers.
The loss leaves West Holmes deep in conference standings. A snapshot of the OCC table shows West Holmes at 1-10 in conference and 4-16 overall, while Lexington sits mid-pack at 4-6 in conference and 7-12 overall. That gap has implications beyond the win-loss column: sustained losing stretches can erode participation, fan engagement and the morale of student-athletes who depend on school sports for physical activity and social connection.

There are practical community implications tied to school athletics. The Westholmes bulletin reminds families that Pay to Play fees of $75 are due by March 20 and that physical packets and waiver forms are available in the high school office. Those costs, while modest on their face, can be barriers for some households; ensuring equitable access to sports often requires outreach, fee waivers or booster-club support so students are not edged out of activities that promote physical and mental health.
Outside basketball, West Holmes boys bowling finished 16th of 24 at the Division II St. Clair Lanes Sectional on Feb. 10. Cole Rusk paced the team with totals of 158-187-143 for 489, while Cameron Young totaled 452.
Looking ahead, West Holmes travels to Wooster for a varsity game Feb. 13 and returns home Feb. 20 to face Manchester. For families weighing participation, the high school office is the contact point for physicals, Pay to Play forms and information on spring sport start dates. As the season continues, the community will be watching not only for on-court turnarounds but for how local leaders and boosters address the practical and equity challenges that shape which Holmes County students can suit up.
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