Sport briefs

Brinnon man gets hole-in-one; Storm King soccer wins again; night golf comes to The Cedars; park closes Kalaloch's razor clam harvest

Nunamacher gets first ace

Tom Nunamacher of Brinnon sank his first hole-in-one on Sept. 22 at The Cedars at Dungeness in Sequim.

Nunamacher used a 6-iron to drive the 150-yard hole No. 17.

Will Rowe of Sequim witnessed the feat.

Night golf comes to The Cedars

The Cedars at Dungeness is home to a “night golf” tournament on Saturday Oct. 18.

The tourney starts at 6:30 p.m. with an awards party and dinner to follow at 9 p.m.

Cost is $60 ($45 for club members and employees) and includes nine holes of golf, awards and dinner. Awards go to closest-to-pin, longest drive and most outrageous outfit.

Call 683-6344 for more information.

Lightning strikes versus Crossfire

The Storm King Lightning boys’ U-11 soccer team improved to 5-0 on the season by knocking off Crossfire 6-3 in Redmond on Saturday.

It was truly a team effort, coach Erik Gonzalez said, as six different players assisted on all six goals — including an assist by goalkeeper Tyler Lawson.

Scoring goals for the Lightning were Israel Gonzalez with three and Harrison Bell, Ethan Knight and Kristian Mingoy with one each. Collecting assists were Trenton Indelicato, Matthew Mangano, Brandon Wagner, Knight and Mingoy.

The Lightning play at noon on Saturday, Oct. 11, at Sequim’s Albert Haller Fields.

Park closes Kalaloch’s razor clam harvest

Based on continued low population estimates and a downward trend in the Kalaloch razor clam population over the past five years, Olympic National Park will not hold a recreational razor clam harvest this year.

Biologists from Olympic National Park, Quinault Indian Nation, Hoh Indian Tribe and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife conduct razor clam stock assessments each summer. This year’s results showed the Kalaloch razor clam population to contain about half the number of clams found in 2013. Adult clams continue to be small, with an average size of 3.8 inches.

Kalaloch has been closed to harvest for the last three years due to the razor clams’ low population status.