Press photo/Tom Pantaleo Abby Carpenter shields off a Hendersonville player reaching for the ball during Friday’s tournament game.
May 23, 2026
Press photo/Tom Pantaleo Abby Carpenter shields off a Hendersonville player reaching for the ball during Friday’s tournament game.
Press photo/Tom Pantaleo Franklin’s Devyn Blackburn gets some serious elevation while a Brevard player tries taking a charge. Fortunately, neither player got injured on the collision.
Press photos/Tom Pantaleo - Chad Wilson drives to the hoop while Pisgah’s Max Wait tries to cut him off during action Friday. Franklin avenged a 53-30 loss to the Black Bears by winning another low-scoring battle, 46-43.
Press photo/Andy Scheidler - Alison Knop had the third-most kills in the Mountain Six Conference this past season, slamming 322. She earned all-conference honors and helped Franklin go 19-7.
Press photo/Andy Scheidler - Large areas of the Franklin High School track have been repaired where bubbles formed because of poor drainage. However, repairs are no longer adequate to where FHS can host other teams to compete.
Press photo/Andy Scheidler - Taylor Carlton (20) and Kyndell Burns trap a Hendersonville player during Friday’s home game. The Panthers allowed only 31 points in the win.
Press photo/Andy Scheidler - From left: Kyler Cochran, Hunter Cabe, Isaiah Stockton, Jacob Cabe, Michael Frazier (holding plaque), Caden Tyler, Joseph Vernelson, Blake Cassada, Luke Borgmann, Clayton Guynn. Not pictured: Traveler Shaw, Landon Shaw.
Press photo/Andy Scheidler - Braden Berger jumps into the arms of assistant coach Bill Barrington, while head coach Kyle Barrington also celebrates with the junior. Berger beat Smoky Mountain’s Will Frady for the first time in eight matches.
Press photo/Andy Scheidler Franklin’s Griffin Green gets called for a foul on this play. The sophomore made far more positive plays, however, including sinking six 3-pointers in the Panthers’ win Friday against Brevard. It was a career-high for the first-year varsity player.
Andy Scheidler sports@thefranklinpress.com Doug Plemmons feels good about where Franklin’s boys basketball team sits heading into conference play. That might not come as a huge surprise, however, based on the Panthers’ 10-1 record and what they’ve achieved so far this season. “I know our conference will bring a lot of challenges,” said Plemmons, who’s in his 19th year coaching the Panthers. “We started off young. We had to learn how to play together. We had a lot of first-time varsity players. We’re basic