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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 2021 Page 17 Pictured from left to right: father Steven, brother Alesandre, Elianni Monge, and mother Elaine Monge. Monge will play softball at Salem State University and major in criminology. Pictured from left to right: Grandfather Patrick Keefe, uncle Joseph Keefe, father Patrick, Adrianna Keefe, cousin Gianna Herbert, aunt Stephanie Herbert, and mother Jennifer. Keefe will play softball at UMass Boston this fall, majoring in mathematics and minoring in middle school education. Pictured from left to right: Sister Natasha, father Frank, Alexis Iacoviello, and mother Sandra. Iacoviello will attend North Shore Community College in the fall, majoring in health science. Front row from left to right: cousins Marchella and Lilianna Gravalese. Back row from left to right: grandfather Ralph Marano, grandmother Annabella Marano, aunt Ninetta Caggiano, aunt Lucia Gravallese, mother Gina, senior Julianna Raff a, brother Dante, grandmother Grace, grandfather Sabino, father Ovi, and aunt Elena Raff a. Raff a will attend Wentworth to major in engineering. Patriots score comeback win over Bulldogs By Greg Phipps L ast Friday’s home game against the Lynn English Bulldogs may go down as a turning point contest for the Revere High School baseball team. Trailing by three runs in the later stages of the game, the Patriots pulled off a memorable comeback. The Bulldogs owned a 6-3 lead entering the fi fth inning. That’s when Revere turned the tide with a five-run explosion in its half of the frame. The rally held up as the Patriots came away with an 8-6 triumph. The big blow of the fi fth-inning surge was a grand slam by Mike Popp that helped catapult the Patriots into the lead. On the day, Popp fi nished with two hits to go along with four RBI via his bases-loaded dinger. Other players to contribute with the bat were Casey Cummings and Calvin Boudreau, who combined for three hits and each drove in a run. Cummings was also the winning pitcher. He left the contest with two outs in the top of the sixth and ended up with nine strikeouts. He allowed fi ve hits. Brother Kyle Cummings earned the save. Revere tied the game 2-2 in the bottom of the fi rst inning when Casey Cummings singled home the fi rst Patriot run and EJ Leone brought in the second tally on a groundout. Revere scored its third run in the fourth on Boudreau’s sacrifi ce fl y. After a victory over Chelsea on Wednesday, the Patriots stood at 4-2 overall and 3-2 in Greater Boston League play. They host Malden on Friday and travel to take on Mystic Valley Regional on Tuesday. Softball improves to 7-1 The Revere High School softball team defeated Chelsea at home on Wednesday in its Senior Night game to up its season record to 7-1. The Patriots squeaked out a 9-8 victory over Medford last Saturday after pounding Lynn English by a 20-2 count the day before. Backup pitcher Erica Anderson was the victor in the Lynn English contest. It was her fi rst-ever varsity start. She allowed seven hits and fanned six batters. Pictured from left to right: Mother Michelle, Giana Losanno, sister Sophia, and father Anthony. Losanno will attend North Shore Community College for political science and minor in foreign policy. GRANTS | FROM Page 12 • Autism Sprinter • Black Ministerial Alliance of Greater Boston • Black Springfi eld COVID-19 Coalition • Brockton Workers Alliance • Building Audacity • Catholic Social Services of Fall River • Chelsea Black Community • Disability Policy Consortium & Boston Center for Independent Living • Greater Framingham Community Church • Immigrants Assistance Center • JAHAN Women and Youth Intercultural, Inc. • Justice 4 Housing • Lawrence Community Works • Massachusetts Council of Churches • Pioneer Valley Project • Randolph Community Partnership • Sociedad Latina • Southeast Asian Coalition of Central Massachusetts • Spanish American Center • YWCA Southeastern Massachusetts Announced by the BakerPolito Administration in February, the Vaccine Equity Initiative focuses on 20 cities and towns with the greatest COVID-19 case burden, taking into account social determinants of health and the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on Black, Indigenous, People of Color. These communities are Boston, Brockton, Chelsea, Everett, Fall River, Fitchburg, Framingham, Haverhill, Holyoke, Lawrence, Leominster, Lowell, Lynn, Malden, Methuen, New Bedford, Randolph, Revere, Springfi eld and Worcester.

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