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Spirit Halloween returns to Valley with horror-themed animatronic displays

Scary animatronics on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Cashier Alica Gonzalez adds up merchandise at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

McALLEN — Spooky season is officially back, and one telltale sign is the reemergence of Spirit Halloween stores.

Spirit Halloween, the popular Halloween costume store, has opened four locations in the Rio Grande Valley — McAllen, Weslaco, Harlingen and Brownsville.

The McAllen location is located in what used to be a Kmart at 1801 South 10th Street.

Walking inside the store, one is immediately greeted by a life-like animatronic Ghostface, the infamous villain from the “Scream” movie franchise.

Ghostface, with his blood-soaked mask, stands at the entrance of Spirit Halloween’s new animatronic display called “Welcome to the Carevil.” The display takes customers through a horror-themed amusement park with other animatronics that come to life when prompted.

Grace Alanis, the manager at the McAllen Spirit Halloween, said that the animatronics have been the biggest draw to her location since the store opened Aug. 24.

“​​We’ve been very busy,” Alanis said. “Our animatronics have been selling a lot, a lot. That’s the first thing that flies out the door.”

Alanis has worked for Spirit Halloween for 21 years. She said that the displays have always been a popular attraction to her stores, and this year’s carnival theme is proving to be no different.

The display features a number of popular characters including Art the Clown from “Terrifier” films inviting guests to participate in the carnival game “Down the Duck,” as well as Emily and Victor from “Corpse Bride,” and a few other cackling clowns.

“People always love our displays,” Alanis said. “You know, we always have different themes. Every year it’s a different thing. What’s different about this year is that we have a carnival theme.”

Beetlejuice merchandise for sale at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

While the animatronics continue to be the big attraction, it is the store’s large selection of Halloween decorations and costumes for customers of all ages that has helped make Spirit Halloween a one-stop shop for all things spooky.

“As movies come out, we get a lot of new costumes,” Alanis said. “That’s what really sells. The first thing that sells, actually.”

With “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice,” the long awaited sequel to the 1988 horror comedy, set to release in theaters this month, Alanis said that Beetlejuice-theme costumes are this year’s popular theme.

As customers purchase their costumes, masks, mugs and other horror-themed knick-knacks, they also have the opportunity to make a monetary donation to “Spirit of Children,” which benefits children departments at local hospitals throughout the country.

Donations made at the McAllen location will go to South Texas Health System Children’s. The store will be hosting a ribbon cutting ceremony next Thursday at 10 a.m. to kick off the campaign.

The stores are open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day. Customers will have until Nov. 3 to visit the stores.

“If you need anything, you can find it here or we’ll help you find it anyway,” Alanis said. “I’m excited about the season. That’s why I’ve been working for them this long.”


To see more, view staff photographer Joel Martinez’s full photo gallery here:

Photo Gallery: Spirit Halloween returns to Valley with horror-themed animatronic displays

Photo Gallery: Spirit Halloween returns to Valley with horror-themed animatronic displays

Scary animatronics on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

McALLEN — Spooky season is officially back, and one telltale sign is the reemergence of Spirit Halloween stores. Spirit Halloween, the popular Halloween costume store, has opened four locations in the Rio Grande Valley — McAllen, Weslaco, Harlingen and Brownsville.

Read the full story here.

Scary animatronics on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Cashier Alica Gonzalez adds up merchandise at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Scary animatronics on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Costumes on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Customer Ares De La Rosa looks over a fortune teller display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Scary animatronics on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Merchandise for sale at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Beetlejuice merchandise for sale at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Scary animatronics on display at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Halloween merchandise for sale at Spirit Halloween store on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

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Spirit Halloween returns to Valley with horror-themed animatronic displays

The Valley’s not a maternity desert, yet women’s health needs are ever-present

Registered nurse Mary Lou Pierce watches over a patient before her delivery in the maternity ward at DHR Health Women's Hospital on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Edinburg. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
Charge Nurse Jessica Cerda talks with other medical workers in the maternity ward at DHR Health Women’s Hospital on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Edinburg. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

As of December 2023, data shows that while there are more than 1,000 counties throughout the U.S. that are considered maternity deserts, a term coined by the March of Dimes nonprofit to identify areas where maternal health care is scarce, the Rio Grande Valley is not one of them despite having limited resources and being considered one of the poorest regions in the state.

This, however, does not necessarily mean that more help isn’t needed, because while Hidalgo and Cameron counties actually exceed expectations, neighboring Willacy County is considered a desert and Starr County only just cuts the mustard.

In fact, the need for maternity health care is such that while staff and resources are available it’s possible they can be overwhelmed, according to one doctor.

Dr. Efraim Vela, chief medical officer at DHR Health Women’s Hospital, said the Edinburg facility delivers about 6,700 to 7,500 babies a year — or as he put it, roughly the equivalent of an elementary school a month.

“We’re lucky. As poor as we are here in South Texas and all the limitations — you know, the culture, the language barriers, the other issues that come with living in South Texas — we actually have full access to maternity health care in Hidalgo and in Cameron County,” Vela said.

Although the March of Dimes’ data may not consider three of the four Valley counties as maternity deserts, Vela believes the “opposite is true” due to the number of patients local hospitals care for.

“It’s multifactorial, it’s not just the fact that there’s no doctors in the area, we have plenty of doctors, we have midwives, we have parteros in the area that are not physicians but were trained to deliver babies at home and or in clinics,” Vela said.

In order to have adequate maternity care, a county must include availability to more than one birthing center or hospital, maternity care providers and a low percentage of uninsured women.

A medical worker walks through a hallway in the maternity ward at DHR Health Women’s Hospital on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Edinburg. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

According to March of Dimes, though, the Valley has a large percentage of women between the ages of 15 and 44 who are uninsured with about 43% of women in Hidalgo County being uninsured, 39.4% in Cameron County, 39.6% in Starr County and 27.7% in Willacy County.

Because most Valley counties have more facilities and physicians, however, it does not classify as a maternity desert.

The March of Dimes lists Hidalgo and Cameron County as having five or more hospitals, Starr County with a single hospital or birthing center while Willacy has none, which the nonprofit considers a county that’s a maternity desert due to its low healthcare access.

But Vela explained that along with treating Valley residents, the women’s hospital often sees patients from the northern states of Mexico, including Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon. This makes the Valley’s needs unique as it’s not just serving its own population.

“We are their healthcare access,” Vela said.

Women have also come in with conditions including diabetes, blood pressure, morbid obesity, depression and even drug abuse.

“We are the only level 4 hospital … between Laredo and Corpus and south of San Antonio, so we cover a big area and our numbers are large as far as deliveries. But what has grown is what we call acuity,” Vela added.

He further noted that the conditions of the mother determine the conditions of the pregnancy.

Registered Nurse Mary Lou Pierce enters a patient’s room in the maternity ward at DHR Health Women’s Hospital on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Edinburg. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

“They don’t realize what they’re doing to their children, their unborn children,” Vela said.

For Vela, access to health care is not the only contributing factor but rather the lack of education and knowledge on maternal health that leads to future complications.

He explained that oftentimes women are unaware of the steps needed to take during a pregnancy including prenatal care.

“It is important, and March of Dimes — this is what they want to emphasize, is the educational component of healthy pregnancies and healthy babies,” Vela said.

The nutritional component is also a vital factor in healthy pregnancies, which Vela believes is not talked about enough.

In fact, he explained that in some cases a woman can become diabetic during pregnancy, something that has slowly become more common.

“… We had the highest incidents of diabetes in the United States,” Vela said. “We continue to have a high carb-rich diet and pregnancy sometimes is the only time these moms are diabetic.

“The stress of the pregnancy flips them over to become gestational diabetics and the pregnancies become complicated.”

Vela explained that about 50% of pregnant women go on to become full on diabetics by the time they’re 50 years old.

The hallways at DHR Health Women’s Hospital on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Edinburg. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

The results of maternal health in the Valley are not only affected by the lack of resources in two of four counties, but rather the aftermath of abortions being banned in the state of Texas, Vela said.

“Unfortunately we are seeing the results of (ending) Roe v. Wade, the choice for termination of pregnancy is gone, right or wrong, it’s gone,” he added. “We’re seeing a lot of moms that are coming in with pregnancies that are back to back.”

He explained that the hospital is seeing children being born under what he referred to as “short interval pregnancies” that are very taxing on the body, making them high-risk pregnancies.

“We never knew how many people terminate pregnancies until we see this rise of, not necessarily unwanted pregnancies but unplanned,” Vela said.

Although the end of Roe v. Wade caused this uptick, Vela said that some aid has been improved for women.

“One of the things that has helped us, however, is that we expanded Medicaid from the three months after delivery to a full year,” Vela said, adding that this allows the mother to receive the necessary care after delivery, including mental health care.

DHR Women’s Health Hospital is located at 5502 S. McColl Road in Edinburg and can be reached at (956) 362-2229.

Edinburg man indicted for fatal hit-and-run crash in 2023

Pedro Garcia Cano
Pedro Garcia Cano

A 54-year-old Edinburg man has been indicted following a hit-and-run crash that left one man dead in early 2023.

Pedro Garcia Cano was indicted earlier this month on an accident involving death charge after fleeing a crash that resulted in the death of 21-year-old George Anselmo Jr. in January 2023, according to the indictment.

Cano was arrested on June 16, 2023 and released from jail the following day on a $80,000 bond.

At approximately 8:13 p.m. on Jan. 8, Cano was driving a 2007 Chevrolet Silverado when the crash happened, according to a probable cause affidavit.

The affidavit doesn’t indicate where the crash happened, but states three vehicles were involved which include a white 2005 Toyota Tacoma pick-up and a 2016 Ford Transit Van towing a single axle 1999 Wells Cargo trailer.

According to the affidavit, witnesses and video surveillance showed Cano flee the scene following the crash. He escaped through the passenger side door as the driver’s side door was jammed shut.

A search conducted on the vehicle revealed a receipt for El Grano de Oro, an abandoned telephone, a Houston Astros baseball cap, a pair of prescription glasses “and multiple alcohol containers still cool in temperature.”

Investigators managed to identify the Houston Astros baseball cap in one of Cano’s Facebook photos, the affidavit said.

On Jan. 11, investigators learned that Anselmo died from his injuries. He had been the driver of the transit van.

Investigators then obtained more surveillance footage that shows Cano driving the Silverado minutes before the crash.

Cano has been previously charged with driving while intoxicated three times before, jail records show.

He’s set to be arraigned in early September.

Brownsville tops upward mobility in Census Bureau-Harvard study

The new “Welcome to Brownsville” downtown mural is seen. (Courtesy: City of Brownsville)

Brownsville leads the United States in upward mobility, according to the results of a new study published recently by The Economist.

The analysis, conducted by the Census Bureau and Opportunity Insights, a Harvard University research group, uses the term “intergenerational mobility.” The study analyzed household income data from 50 of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas. In 38 of those metro areas, researchers found, Americans born to low-income families in 1992 were actually doing worse economically at age 27 than 27-year-olds born in 1978.

Not only was Brownsville an exception, it showed the biggest increase across generations. The study found that Brownsville residents born in 1992 made $33,500 at age 27 on average compared to $31,400 for those born 1978 — a 6.7% increase, adjusted to 2023 dollars.

“Intergenerational mobility — the idea that you’ll do better than your parents, your children will do better than you, and so on — is core to the American dream, but is far from a guarantee,” the study’s authors wrote.

Austin was just behind Brownsville in terms of positive mobility between generations, with a 6.4% increase. San Antonio was eighth on the list, its residents born in 1992 making on average 2.7% more at age 27 than those the same age born in 1978.

Among the 10 cities with the biggest decreases in intergenerational mobility, Philadelphia had the absolute worst showing, with a 12.7% reduction in average household income between the two groups studied.

The study noted that “the geography of mobility has shifted dramatically, especially when breaking down the data by race.”

“By 1992, upward mobility for low-income white children in the coasts and in the Southwest fell markedly to rates on par with those observed in Appalachia and other areas that historically offered the lowest chances of upward mobility,” the authors wrote. “Conversely, for Black children, upward mobility increased the most in the Southeast and the Midwest — areas where outcomes had historically been poorest for Black Americans.”

A key takeaway, according to the study, is that changes impacting one generation also rapidly impact the following generation, which causes “rapid chances in economic mobility.”

“While this carries hope for how opportunity can improve, it also comes with some caution, as communities can experience declining opportunity in a similar timeframe,” the authors wrote.

Brownsville Mayor John Cowen said he believes the study confirms what’s happening with the city.

John Cowen Jr.

“It’s showing what I think everyone’s feeling, is that there’s a lot of opportunity happening in Brownsville,” he said. “Incomes are rising — and relative to prices too. I think that’s an important point that that study (makes), is they take into account all the inflation that’s happened as well.”

Cowen called it positive news for the city and subsequent generations, and evidence of a trend.

“Those opportunities will continue to be there and wages will continue to rise, which is helping break the cycle of poverty in our community,” he said.

Cowen said it takes a “nuanced, comprehensive study” like this one to accurately tell the story of what’s happening in communities such as Brownsville, adding that it’s another feather in the city’s cap, especially in light of the situation in other parts of the country.

“It shows that this is a place for people to have a decent job and have that upward mobility to be able to potentially afford a home and live in a high-quality-of-life area,” he said.

For a deeper dive into the study, go to opportunityatlas.org.

Los Fresnos superintendent named finalist for state award

Gonzalo Salazar (File Photo)
Gonzalo Salazar (Courtesy: Los Fresnos CISD)

The Texas Association of School Boards has named Los Fresnos CISD Superintendent Gonzalo Salazar one of five finalists for TASB Superintendent of the Year.

Salazar has served as the LFCISD superintendent since 2006. The district encompasses 487 square miles and serves more than 10,350 students in Cameron County. In selecting Salazar as a finalist, TASB noted his commitment to public education, excellent student outcomes, and strong fiscal management.

Salazar’s selection coincides with the 40th anniversary of the award program, which was established in 1984 to recognize exemplary school leaders, TASB said in a news release.

The five finalists were selected by a TASB committee of school board members who interviewed 18 regional nominees put forward by education service centers across the state. The candidates were evaluated based on their work in improving student outcomes, developing a strong team-of-eight relationship, fiscal management, advocacy, and their ongoing commitment to education innovation, improvement, and leadership.

“The Superintendent of the Year program was specifically designed to showcase the outstanding work happening in school districts from across the state to highlight the power of excellent and transformative leadership in public education,” TASB Executive Director Dan Troxell said. “We’re especially excited to celebrate this year’s state finalists in conjunction with this milestone anniversary for the program. I fully expect the Superintendent of the Year Award will continue to be the premier honor for district leaders for decades to come.”

The five finalists will advance to the next stage of the Superintendent of the Year competition, which takes place in September at txEDCON24 in San Antonio. The winner will be announced Sept. 28, and will receive an award underwritten by program sponsor Balfour.

Salazar was presented with the 2024 Region One Superintendent of the Year Award during the July 15 LFCISD Board of Trustees meeting by Daniel King, executive director of the Region One Educational Service Center in Edinburg.

“Dr. Salazar has served the district for 18 years and under his leadership, student achievement and performance has excelled,” King said during the meeting.

The award underscores Salazar’s outstanding contributions to academic excellence and community enrichment in Los Fresnos. He has served Los Fresnos CISD for 24 years, with 18 of those as superintendent.

Upon receiving the award, Salazar expressed his gratitude and emphasized the collaborative efforts of the entire school community.

“I love being a Falcon. I realize that this recognition has less to do with me and everything to do with the results produced by the hard work and dedication of so many passionate staff members who understand what is at stake and give of themselves every day for the good of those we serve. It is a privilege to serve in Los Fresnos,” Salazar said, adding, “We are called to this work and I thank God who makes it all possible. All honor and glory are his.”

Heavy rain anticipated in Valley throughout Labor Day weekend

(Metro Photo)

If you’ve got festivities or barbeques planned for Labor Day weekend, you may need to keep an eye out for the weather that may rain on your parade.

Forecasters with the National Weather Service Brownsville/Rio Grande Valley station are anticipating heavy rain throughout the weekend and into early next week.

“Low pressure in the middle layers of the atmosphere, combined with daytime heating and deep tropical moisture, will produce scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms the next several days,” the NWS said in an update Thursday afternoon. “Heavy rain is possible daily, especially with slower-moving showers and thunderstorms.”

The NWS said the confidence is “medium to high” that the heavy rain will occur.

The forecast on Friday says there’s a 30% to 50% chance of heavy rain, with those odds increasing to 40% to 60% for Saturday and Sunday. The odds are even higher for Monday and Tuesday, which has a forecast of 50% to 70% chance of heavy rain.

If driving during the weather event, the NWS warns that it’ll be difficult in downpours with near zero visibility at times. They encourage motorists to check tire tread wear, pressure and repair or replace as well as checking brake pads/shoes for wear, in addition to inspecting windshield wipers for dry rot.

Judge rejects Ken Paxton’s bid to question leader of Brownsville migrant aid organization

Volunteers with Team Brownsville serve food to people gathered at a migrant campsite by the Gateway International Bridge in Matamoros Wednesday evening, March 24, 2021. Several times a week Team Brownsville volunteers cross the Gateway International Bridge to provide food and supplies to people gathered in a migrant campsite by the bridge in Matamoros, Mexico.( (Denise Cathey | The Brownsville Herald)

EAGLE PASS — A Travis County judge on Thursday denied an effort from Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office to question the leader of a Brownsville organization that provides migrants with humanitarian aid, delivering the state’s top civil lawyer another courtroom defeat in a series of actions targeting groups that work with migrants and immigrants.

Judge Maya Guerra Gamble of the 459th Civil District Court denied a request from Paxton’s office to take the deposition of a Team Brownsville representative. Team Brownsville provides water, shelter and other basic necessities to asylum-seeking migrants.

In court filings, the state argued that it had “a reasonable basis” to believe that Team Brownsville was among non-governmental organizations at the Texas-Mexico border helping immigrants enter the country.

Gov. Greg Abbott directed Paxton’s office in 2022 to investigate the role of such groups “in planning and facilitating the illegal transportation of illegal immigrants across our borders.”

Paxton’s office said in the filings that “former board members and volunteers” had accused Team Brownsville of poor financial accountability for money it receives from the government and donors as well as potential improper use of funds but did not further detail any alleged wrongdoing.

Paxton’s office did not immediately respond Thursday to a request for comment.

Aron Thorn, a lawyer with the Beyond Borders Program at the Texas Civil Rights Project, said the group was “proud” to represent Team Brownsville.

“We are thrilled with the judge’s ruling denying this baseless petition,” Thorn said in a statement. “Organizations like Team Brownsville provide essential services to people seeking safety at the border. They fill a critical need in Texas border communities that are unable to care for immigrants. Any effort to end their services is an attack on that very care.”

The ruling against Paxton’s office is at least the fourth time a state judge has rejected his probing of groups that work with migrants or immigrants.

Last week, a Houston judge denied an effort from Paxton’s office to shut down an immigrants’ rights organization, FIEL, that his office accused of violating nonprofit rules by making political statements criticizing former President Donald Trump, Abbott and Texas policy.

In El Paso, a judge last month ruled that Paxton could not shut down a migrant shelter network his office accused of violating laws prohibiting human smuggling and operating a stash house.

Meanwhile, a judge in Hidalgo County denied Paxton’s effort to depose the executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley, one of the largest migrant aid groups in the state that Paxton’s office was investigating for illegally harboring migrants or illegally encouraging them to enter or remain in the country.

Notorious former leader of Gulf Cartel, creator of Los Zetas, released from prison

Osiel Cardenas-Guillen, the accused Mexican drug kingpin extradited to the United States last month, leaves the federal courthouse in Houston after pleading not guilty Friday, Feb. 9, 2007, to charges connected to running a cartel that at its height smuggled four to six tons of cocaine per month into the country. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan)

The notorious former head of the Gulf Cartel in Matamoros and founder of its armed wing, Los Zetas, which later split and caused a rift resulting in years of bloody fighting in Tamaulipas, has been released from federal prison.

The Bureau of Prisons confirmed to MyRGV.com that Osiel Cardenas-Guillen was released from the Terre Haute penitentiary in Indiana.

“For privacy reasons, the FBOP does not provide additional information on individuals who are no longer in our custody,” the BOP said.

In 2010, Cardenas-Guillen was sentenced to 25 years in prison for drug trafficking, for threatening federal officials and their family members and for money laundering.

The former capo created Los Zetas as the Gulf Cartel’s armed wing.

But Los Zetas later split, prompting years of fighting between the factions that came to a head in 2012 when that group’s leader — Heriberto Lazcano — was killed.

In the years between Cardenas-Guillen’s arrests and Lazcano’s death, there were numerous cases of fighting in broad daylight in Matamoros and Reynosa and in between.

The state of Tamaulipas also said thousands of people disappeared, and there were massacres of migrants and public displays of the bodies of people killed by cartel factions.

There were also numerous instances of other cartel leaders crossing into the U.S. to escape their rivals, choosing to face prosecution and lengthy prison terms here rather than death in Mexico.

It’s not immediately clear where Cardenas-Guillen is. He is not a U.S. citizen and will likely face deportation proceedings.

Hawks withstand late push to win season opener

Harlingen South defender James Navarrette (4) attempts to stop the run of McAllen Rowe wide receiver Mateo Castillo (6) in a season opener at McAllen Veterans Memorial Stadium on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024, in McAllen. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])
BY MARIO AGUIRRE
SPECIAL TO RGVSports.com
What appeared like an inevitable victory for Harlingen South on Thursday turned into a nailbiter, thanks to McAllen Rowe’s late push in both teams’ season opener.

 

After two Hawks touchdowns and a safety went unanswered through two-and-a-half quarters, the Warriors responded with two scores of their own, including a two-point conversion, inside of the final 5 minutes of play. The Warriors fell flat on their second two-point attempt with 20 seconds remaining, and the Hawks held on for a 16-14 victory at McAllen Veterans Memorial Stadium.

“You’ve got to play four quarters of football,” South coach Israel Gonzalez said. “Sometimes you’ve got to be ready to go to overtime. Kudos to Nikki Rowe for pushing us to the brink. It was a learning experience for us.”

Despite leaving 24 additional points on the table — by way of two touchdowns being called back, along with a special teams kickoff return for a score and a chip-shot field goal — due to what Gonzalez described as “a lack of execution,” the Hawks looked every bit the part of their No. 9 ranking in the RGVSports.com 5A-6A Poll.

Their rushing attack was responsible for 199 of their 259 total yards of offense. They built a 14-0 halftime lead off a 1-yard run from Alvin Edwards and 9-yard quarterback keeper by Austen Shroyer. Along with Dylan Anaya, the Hawks are expected to have two players under center. 

On Thursday, Anaya and Shroyer combined for 60 passing yards on 7 of 18 completions.

Much is expected of the Hawks (8-4 overall, 6-1 in district in 2023), who beat McAllen Memorial in the bi-district playoffs before bowing out in the area round at the hands of Victoria West. They return 29 lettermen, including 12 starters, seven of those on offense. 

Chief among the defensive returners is Marcus Garza, who blocked Rowe’s sixth punt of the game on their first drive of the second half. It resulted in a safety for the Hawks and a 16-0 cushion with 5:42 remaining in the third quarter.

After struggling during the opening half, Rowe quarterback Adrian Botello connected on 10 of 13 passes during the second half for 138 yards, including a 64-yard TD to Draven Niaves with 4:14 left to end the Warriors’ drought. Botello followed with a two-point run.

And with 20 seconds remaining, Botello again delivered, finding Mateo Castillo on a 14-yard pass. Botello’s heroics ended there, when he fell short of completing a second two-point run that would have tied the game.

The loss comes on the heels of a heavy couple of weeks for the Warriors, who learned last Wednesday that linebacker Adan De La Cruz had died after slipping off a roof trying to jump into a pool days earlier. The three-year letterman was one of the team’s top returning seniors.

Now, Rowe looks ahead to its second of three non-district games, traveling to Los Fresnos in Week 2 before playing host to Mercedes in Week 3.

Harlingen South returns to Boggus Stadium next week when it will take on Harlingen High in the Bird Bowl.

“We’re excited about getting the first win,” Gonzalez said. “Rowe came out and played tremendously well. I thought they were playing for something bigger than themselves tonight.”