PAGE2A10,2KEIZERTIMES,2MARCH217,22017 Keizer 3555 River Road N, Keizer (503) 463 - 4853 www.skylineforddirect.com LONGEST GAME OF FOLLOW THE LEADER. EVER. KEIZERTIMES.COM From KYBA to state champs Keizer2girls2lead2Blanchet2to2fi2rst2girls2basketball2title By DEREK WILEY Of the Keizertimes With a roster of mostly sophomores, Blanchet Catho- lic wasn’t supposed to win a state championship. But its road to a title didn’t begin two years ago. It started when fi ve future Lady Cavaliers—Ana Coro- nado, Bailey Hittner, Hailey Ostby, Lauren Elmore and Trinity Phipps—came to- gether as fi fth graders on the same tournament team in the Keizer Youth Basketball Asso- ciation. That squad, which won a state middle school champi- onship as sixth graders, was coached by Bailey’s father Ron Hittner, who was an as- sistant at Corban University and is now the head coach at Blanchet. “You could defi nitely tell the potential at an early age,” coach Hittner said. “They loved the game and you knew they were going to improve.” Kalea Salang joined the girls at KYBA in the eighth grade. “There seemed like there was no weak link to the team,” Salang said. “The whole team, we were all strong players and we went to the state tourna- ment that year and placed third. We already knew from there that we had a gift and we could go far places if we stuck together.” With all six girls on the varsity team as freshmen, Blanchet made the 3A state tournament last season for the fi rst time since 2012 but were eliminated in the fi rst round. With the goal of getting back to the playoffs and this time winning, the fi fth seed- ed Cavs easily defeated Am- ity 51-29 in the fi rst round to advance to the state quar- terfi nals at Marshfi eld High School in Coos Bay. They then edged No. 4 Portland Adventist 46-44 to play Pac- West Conference foe and No. 1 Salem Academy in the semifi nals. Blanchet had defeated the Crusaders by two points early in the season but had since lost twice by an average of 10.5 points. The Cavs evened the score in the semifi nals, winning 51-39 to advance to the state championship game for the FEEL GOOD STORY Saluting the people that make us proud of our community capitolauto.com fi rst time in school history. “The kids did a great job executing the game plan,” coach Hittner said. “We’re a strong defensive team and when we play de- fense, we can compete with anybody. We also shot the ball well. It was the most com- plete game we had on offense and defense.” Up next was two-time defending state champion Dayton, who Blanchet had narrowly lost to back in De- cember. “We knew us going to the championship game that was a big check but we weren’t settled for that,” Coronado said. “We thought we could push even more and win a championship and make even more history.” But the Cavs fell behind by 14 points early in the fourth quarter. Needing a miraculous comeback, the girls went to a defensive drill they’ve prac- ticed since the fi fth grade. The objective is to play defense for an entire minute without making a mistake. Blanchet did it for seven minutes, holding Dayton without a basket while scor- ing 16 straight points. Coronado capped off the run by stealing the ball from two-time 3A player of the year Shawnie Spink and mak- ing a layup on the other end to give the Cavs a lead with 30 seconds remaining. “I wasn’t expecting myself to steal the ball but it was out there so I took it,” said Coro- nado, who led Blanchet with 13 points, nine rebounds and four steals in the 36-34 state championship victory on Sat- urday, March 4. Blanchet, which prides itself on playing full court pressure defense, simply wore Dayton down. “We still had another gear in us, I guess,” Coronado said. “They got tired at the end and we kept going and kept pushing. We’ve always played that way, since fi fth grade. I can’t even explain how big defense is to us. It truly has been our key.” The Cavs also fed off the crowd. “The atmosphere was electric,” coach Hittner said. “Our fans were great and our kids really fed off their energy.” Once the fi nal buzzer sounded, the girls couldn’t hold back the tears. “We were all bawling our eyes out in the locker room,” Bailey Hittner said. “I re- member turning to Trinity and saying this is what ever since fi fth grade has led up to. It’s crazy to think that every practice, every game in the tournament has led to this moment right here. It was just so surreal.” Please2see2KYBA,2Page2A11 Submitted Top:2Ana2Coronado,2Bailey2Hittner,2Hailey2Ostby,2Kalea2Salang,2Lauren2Elmore2and2Trinity2Phipps,2 who2 came2 up2 through2 the2 KYBA,2 won2 the2 3A2 state2 championship2 for2 Blanchet2 Catholic2 on2 March24.2Bottom:2Ron2Hittner’s2sixth2grade2KYBA2team2won2a2state2title.2 McNary lacrosse home opener Friday By DEREK WILEY Of the Keizertimes Led by a strong junior class, McNary lacrosse coach Ryan Bowlby expects a solid season. The Celtics opened the 2017 campaign on Monday, March. 13 with a 12-8 win at Newberg. McNary’s fi rst home game is Friday, March. 17 versus Hermiston at 7 p.m. “We have lots of experi- ence on offense,” Bowlby said. “Our defense is extremely new but our goalie is a third- year starter. We’ve got a good mix-match.” Jonathan Williams, who scored three goals and added three assists against Newberg, will lead the offense. “Right now pretty much everything is ran through Jonathan Williams,” Bowlby said. “He’s a super athlete. He’s running track this year and doing lacrosse. “The other team ended up blacking him out, so iso- lating him and face guarding him and taking him out of the game entirely and he still scored two more goals and got an assist. He’s a supreme, su- preme lacrosse player.” Williams wasn’t happy with how he started his junior sea- son. “I started off terrible,” Wil- liams said. “I turned the ball over the fi rst two times down. I settled myself down and got the offense going and realized I didn’t have to get the goal, somebody else could get it. The pressure isn’t all on me. We have other guys who can score the ball just as easily as I can.” One of those players is an- other junior, Chad Pinney, who has played midfi eld the past two seasons but is tran- sitioning to attack and scored three goals at Newberg. Marcus McCoy returns at goalkeeper where he was an all-league honorable men- tion as a freshmen and Second Team selection as a sopho- more. As a junior, McCoy is ready to take on a more lead- ership role. “Since freshmen year, our coaches have always told us our freshmen class once we get up to junior and seniors, that’s when our true leader- ship was going to come up and that’s when we’re going to show our true power and that’s when we’re going to shine the most,” McCoy said. “This year, I think we got it. We’re coming out strong. We’re ready to win.” Please2see2CELTICS,2Page2A11 KEIZERTIMES/Derek2Wiley McNary2 junior2 Jonathan2 Williams,2 left,2 practicing2 against2 freshmen2 defender2 Cabe2 Nieth,2 will2 lead2the2Celtics2offense2in22017.2