Newsletter April 18, 2025

Fairmont grad Maddy Westbeld celebrates WNBA draft in Kettering on April 14, 2025.

Credit: Marcus Hartman

Credit: Marcus Hartman

Fairmont grad Maddy Westbeld celebrates WNBA draft in Kettering on April 14, 2025.

Good morning and welcome to another Friday edition of the Dayton Daily News Sports update!

While the Reds put together a winning streak, April is draft season in more ways than one this month.

Here’s a closer look at what’s been going on this week:

WNBA draft showcased local talent

Fairmont grad Maddy Westbeld reacts to WNBA Draft at a party in Kettering on April 14, 2025.

Credit: Marcus Hartman

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Credit: Marcus Hartman

Three players from one high school conference being drafted seems good. Is that good?

I think so — especially considering just how few players actually get drafted from across the world each year by WNBA teams.

That was one of the talking points at Maddy Westbeld’s draft party Monday night at the Buffalo Wild Wings in Kettering.

The league has 12 teams — 13 this season with the creation of the Golden State Valkyries — so both draft slots and roster spots are at a premium compared to the NBA, which has 30 teams.

Nobody knows that better than the Westbelds.

Maddy’s older sister, Kathryn, was like her a standout player at Fairmont and Notre Dame. But she was unable to secure a roster spot after going to preseason camp with the L.A. Sparks in 2018, so she has been playing overseas ever since.

In an ironic twist, Kathryn will get another shot at the WNBA this spring thanks to a training camp invitation from the Phoenix Mercury, news that provided a cherry on top of her younger sister’s draft night.

That gives Dayton-area girls basketball fans four teams to keep an eye on this preseason as Wayne grad Bree Hall will be trying to earn a spot with the Indiana Fever, and Springboro’s Jordan Hobbs is headed to Seattle with the Storm.

READ MORE: ’Something in the air in Dayton’ fuels girls basketball success

Next up is the NFL draft

FILE - Cincinnati Bengals director of player personnel Duke Tobin speaks during a press conference at the NFL football scouting combine in Indianapolis, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, file)

Credit: AP

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Credit: AP

The Cincinnati Bengals have a lot of needs and not many picks, so they are under the microscope perhaps more than usual going into next week’s NFL Draft in Green Bay.

Specifically they could really use another starter (or two) on the offensive line, and every level of the defense could use significant reinforcements.

Picking at No. 17 overall in the first round, they will have to choose whether to fill their biggest need or potentially go with the best player available.

If they go the latter route, there’s likely still opportunities to find value in a deep defensive line class in the second or third round.

Trading down also would seem to have some appeal, but that is not something the team has done frequently in the past.

Dayton basketball is still rebuilding its roster

Dayton's Anthony Grant questions a call against Saint Joseph’s on Friday, March 14, 2025, in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. David Jablonski/Staff

Credit: David Jablonski

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Credit: David Jablonski

Jordan Derkack, a 6-foot-5 guard who played last season at Rutgers after two seasons at Merrimack, committed to the Dayton Flyers on Tuesday.

Derkack made his decision two days after Georgia transfer De’Shayne Montgomery, another 6-5 guard, picked Dayton. They join incoming freshmen Damon Friery and Jaron McKie on the list of newcomers on Dayton’s 2025-26 roster.

Derkack was a role player on a disappointing Rutgers team while Montgomery averaged 15.5 minutes for a Georgia team that made the NCAA Tournament but didn’t hang around too long.

Anthony Grant still has seven more spots he can fill if he chooses, though most seem to not want to carry too many players nowadays because keeping them all happy can be a major chore.

READ MORE: De’Shayne Montgomery: What to know about Dayton’s newest recruit

Reds get reinforcements

Cincinnati Reds Austin Hays, left, and Elly De La Cruz, right, celebrate Hays' two-run homer in the dugout in the first inning of a baseball game against the Seattle Mariners, Thursday, April 17, 2025, in Cincinnati. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Credit: AP

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Credit: AP

The Mariners might have snapped their four-game winning streak Wednesday night, but the Reds have reason to think they can sustain some of that success with the lineup bolstered by the return of Matt McClain and season debut of Austin Hays.

With Hunter Greene showing why he was such a highly regarded prospect when he arrived in Dayton in 2018, they already have one of the league’s best starting rotations despite having to waste a turn on Nick Martinez every five days.

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