A5 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, MARCH 4, 2019 Naselle fi nishes with loss to Oakesdale By PATRICK WEBB For The Daily Astorian SPOKANE, Wash. — It was March sadness for the Naselle boys basket- ball team. At the state basket- ball tournament, the Com- ets bounced back from a second-round loss to play Oakesdale for a chance to compete for a trophy on the fi nal day. But WIAA’s smallest 1B division, dominated year-round by Eastern Washington teams, stayed true to form. After a promising start by Naselle, Oakesdale found its groove, never giving up its lead through the fi nal three quarters, and won 68-52. “It was a tough day for us,” said head coach Brian Macy. “We couldn’t get that couple of bounces.” He had predicted his players would regroup after the second-round loss to Almira-Cou- lee-Hartline, and was pleased to be proved right. “We knew that they would come out with grit and resolve — the effort was there.” However, poor rebounding, which had been a pitfall all tourna- ment, meant the Comets too often allowed Oakes- dale players to try again when their shots hit the rim. “You can’t give good teams second and third opportunities,” the coach said. The game began in a promising manner. After Oakesdale opened the scoring, Ethan Lindstrom and Cole Dorman both hit 3-pointers. Jacob Eaton scored from close in after some effi cient passes from Kolby Glenn and Anto- nio Nolan, then added another. Nolan used a clever fake to gain space for his shot and bring the score to 13-8 just as a pickup truck advertisement saying “game changer” scrolled across the stadium’s reader boards. Oakes- dale shifted the momen- tum to restrict Naselle’s lead to 15-13 as the quar- ter buzzer sounded. The Nighthawks came back out with new vigor, tied the score to a roar from their bench, added another basket to take the lead — a lead they would never relinquish — and then another. At 6-4, Oakesdale senior Kieron Ander- son was the tallest player Naselle faced all week. He used height and speed to rack up his game-high 22 points. Three other Night- hawks scored in double fi gures; only Nolan (12) and Eaton (11) matched them. The loss came on the third day. Naselle had started the tournament well with a 54-51 win over Garfi eld-Palouse which began with a shaky fi rst quarter, a steady lead, and then a nail-biting fi nale. Next came a familiar buzz-saw, Almira-Cou- lee-Hartline, which had beaten Naselle with con- viction at football late last fall. The Comets began well in this game, but just like Oakesdale, once the Warriors got ahead they held onto the lead and won 54-37. The coach consoled and congratulated his team Friday. For seniors Nolan, Dorman, Eaton, Ian Font- anilla and Vince Fauver it was their last for NHS. “It was a great season. I would like to thank our seniors — they brought our program a long way,” Macy said. “They have put in the hard work and set the standard. I told the younger guys that they have got some big shoes to fi ll.” Big fi nish for Marist ends Astoria’s season By GARY HENLEY The Daily Astorian The Marist girls bas- ketball did something Sat- urday night that very few teams are able to do — the Spartans left the Brick House with a win, 48-39, in a fi rst-round game of the 4A state playoffs. Not even the No. 2-ranked Banks Braves could defeat the Astoria Lady Fishermen on their home fl oor this year, where Astoria had won seven straight. And whenever some- one challenged the Fisher- men, they always seemed to come up with a last-sec- ond miracle shot or a fan- tastic fourth quarter. There were no miracle shots Saturday, and the only fantastic fi nish belonged to the Spartans. But wasn’t easy. With Marist leading 29-21 midway through the third quarter, the Fishermen reeled off seven straight points, then fi nally took the lead early in the fourth on back-to-back 3-pointers from Halle Helmersen and Hailey O’Brien. It was an intense, phys- Gary Henley/The Daily Astorian Astoria’s Hailey O’Brien drives past Maggie Stephenson of Marist on her way to the basket. ical, high-scoring battle from there. Marist answered with a 3-pointer from six-foot sophomore Ruby Vla- hov, Julia Norris scored to give Astoria a two-point lead, and a free throw from O’Brien put the Fish up, 37-34. Scores by Maggie Ste- phenson and Vlahov put Marist back in front, but only briefl y, as a short jumper by Kajsa Jackson gave Astoria its last lead at 39-38 with 2:55 left. That’s where it all fell apart for the Fishermen, on missed shots and turnovers, and points for the Spartans off turnovers. Vlahov led all scorers with 16 points, seven in the fi nal three minutes of the game. Her layup off a steal with two minutes remain- ing sparked a 10-0 run to close the game for Marist, which was also 6-for-7 at the free throw line in the fi nal 1:32. She had another score off a turnover for a fi ve-point lead with 1:11 left. “Too many turnovers at crucial times,” said Asto- ria coach Mike Jacob- son. “We got the lead and three straight turnovers that turned into six points for them. That killed the momentum we had built.” Helmersen scored 11 points and O’Brien added 10 for Astoria, which had seven of its 18 turnovers in the fourth quarter. Jack- son had eight points off the bench. The Lady Fishermen could be a Final Four par- ticipant next season — and defi nitely the Cow- apa League favorites — as they return fi ve all-league starters. “The girls had a great season,” Jacobson said. “First league championship since 2001, and fi rst state tournament appearance in the round of 16 since 2007. They have a lot to be proud of. I told them to hold their heads high and be proud.” Knappa boys take home fi fth place trophy The Daily Astorian It was a memorable, but forgettable two days for the Knappa Loggers, as they fi nished up the Class 2A boys basketball state tourna- ment in Pendleton. After a fi rst-round win over Oakland Thursday, the Loggers lost two in a row by a combined 67 points, capped by a 67-40 loss Sat- urday afternoon to Toledo at the Pendleton Convention Center. The Toledo Boomers could have been the Toledo “Bombers” in their win, as they were 14-for-36 from the 3-point line. Jaydn Span- gler and Mason McAlpine were a combined 9-for- 21, while the Loggers were 5-of-25 from the arc. Knappa was also miss- ing junior Eli Takalo, who had been ejected from the loss to Columbia Chris- tian the day before and was forced to miss Saturday’s game. Timber Engblom led the Loggers in scoring with 13 points. Ty Vanderburg scored 11 points with seven rebounds. Knights top Knappa A nightmare third quarter for Knappa ended the Log- gers’ bid for a state title Fri- day afternoon, as Columbia Christian topped Knappa 81-41 in a Final Four game of the 2A boys basketball state tournament. Knappa’s return to the Pendleton Convention Cen- ter was not a fun one. The Knights led 18-5 after one quarter, and it only got worse from there in the fourth meeting of the year between the two Northwest League powers. Knappa was still within striking distance at halftime, trailing 36-23, but Logger comeback hopes fell apart in the third period. Eli Takalo scored the fi rst points of the second half, but Columbia Christian reeled off a 21-4 run over the next few minutes for a commanding 57-29 lead. And that wasn’t the worst of it for the Loggers, who lost Takalo to an ejection and Joe Ramvick to his fi fth foul in the third period. Ty Vanderburg fouled out in the fourth quarter. Ben Gregg scored 27 points for the Knights, whose biggest lead was 43 points. Timber Engblom was Knappa’s Moda Player of the Game, with 15 points and three steals. . . . s n e p p a h Life ! e r e h e r ’ e w y h That’s w Keith Klatt, MD Sally Baker, PA-C Mark Tabor, PA-C Our friendly and dedicated Physicians and Physician Assistants are available for all of your routine healthcare needs, not just for emergency situations! 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