A9 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2019 SEASIDE SEAGULLS SPRING 2019 | TRACK • BOYS GOLF • GIRLS GOLF Golfers seek third state title in six years man, and the rest of the state soon will. “Hopefully it doesn’t put too much pressure on him, because he is just a freshman,” Poetsch said. “He’s played some golf, but he’s only 15. He’s pretty level-headed though.” By GARY HENLEY The Daily Astorian T he Seaside Gulls may have come up short in their bid for state championships in football and basketball, but the school year ain’t over yet. Seaside has won one state title in a boys sport in each of the last fi ve school years, and the Gulls don’t intend on breaking that tradition. Their best chance this spring will be in boys golf, where the Gulls head into the year ranked No. 1 in a preseason coaches poll. We all know preseason polls aren’t worth much, but this one appears to be fairly accurate. Seaside opened its season March 20 by posting a 313 team score, its best round of golf since the 2015 state championship season. Head coach Jim Poetsch led the Gull golfers to state titles in 2014 and 2015. In his other job as an assistant coach in boys basketball, Poetsch has four championship rings over the last fi ve years. He’s hoping to add one for the thumb this spring. Seaside recently added a big victory in their annual trip to The Dalles, where the Gulls defended their tournament title from last sea- son and posted their best team score (335) at The Dalles since 2006, and better than scores posted by their state championship teams. There will be challengers (Marist, maybe Cascade), but the Gulls are once again defi nite con- tenders for a state title. “Potentially this could be one of THE STATE Gary Henley/The Daily Astorian Two of the state’s best golfers of the present are also the future of the Seaside boys golf team — Carson Kawasoe, left, and Curtis Kunde. our top three teams,” Poetsch said. “This team is probably better than our fi rst state championship team.” Score-wise, Seaside’s best year was 2006. This year’s team may not match the team scores posted in ‘06, “because I scheduled some tough courses,” Poetsch said. “(Emerald) Valley’s a tough course and that’s where state is. We’d rather get them ready for that, than go out and shoot a bunch of low scores on easy courses.” THE GOLFERS The Gulls lost their top golfer from last season — Jackson Kunde — to graduation. Out goes Kunde, in comes freshman Carson Kawasoe. And Seaside’s best golfer at The Dalles was sophomore Curtis Kunde. This team is already great, the golfers are young, and the season has barely started. “We lost Jackson and replaced him with Carson,” Poetsch said. “We didn’t lose a step, and the Seaside young, but ready to score points By GARY HENLEY The Daily Astorian The Seaside track team undoubtedly owns the top girls’ thrower in the state at the 4A level. In addition to winning the Cowapa League title in the discus and shot put last year, senior Gretchen Hoekstre is also the defend- ing state champion in the shot, second in the discus. But Jeff Kilday’s team has much more than that. The Gulls are in a slight rebuilding phase, with seven freshmen on their 20-athlete roster for the boys. There’s another six freshmen on the girls’ roster. For the boys, Seaside’s tradition of strong 800- meter runners should con- tinue this year with junior Levi Card, who took third in last year’s league meet, won by the Gulls’ Rafi Sibony. Sibony — fourth in the state meet last year — has graduated, after carrying on the tradition started by Brett Willyard, state cham- pion in the 800 in 2013. The Gulls had two top- eight fi nishers in 2014, and Jackson Januik won three straight championships in the 800 from 2015-17. In the sprints, Seaside showed it will have one of the Cowapa’s fastest run- ners in sophomore Henry Garvin, who recently took sixth in the Cotton Invita- tional behind several big- school runners. The Gulls, however, will likely get most of their points in the throws. Senior Parker Conrad David Ball/Seaside Signal Senior Gretchen Hoekstre is the defending state champion in the shot put. and juniors Derrick Ben- nett and Luke Nelson will be capable of placing at or near the top in every meet. First place will be a reg- ular occurrence for throw- ers on the girls’ side. Already signed to com- pete at Brigham Young University at the colle- giate level, Hoekstre will likely add to her collection of fi rst-place medals this year. Meanwhile, Lilli Tay- lor will be a great addition for the Seaside throwers, in addition to any other events the talented freshman may try. kids worked hard all summer, so I think we’re in pretty good shape. We’re going to be right in there.” Rounding out the Seaside’s top fi ve, he said, are “Samson Sibony and Connor Merrell, Mason Sha- mion and Curtis from last year, and Carson. Any of them can beat the others on any day.” Kawasoe, son of Astoria golf pro John Kawasoe, is the golfer who will make Seaside con- tenders for the next three years. Locals certainly know the fresh- “Statewide, Marist (now Class 4A) won the 5A state title last year, and they have three good golfers back,” Poetsch said. “Stayton and Cascade have a lot of good kids back. Woodburn was in the 5A tournament last year and they’ve dropped (to 4A), and they have all fi ve kids back. And Mazama has four of its fi ve back. The Cowapa League is not going to go 1-2-5 at state like last year.” Valley Catholic won the 2018 state title, ahead of second-place Scappoose, and Seaside was fi fth. The good teams will usually step to the front of the pack by midseason. Until then, “You just have to start reading papers from around the state, and hope that they put their scores in,” Poetsch said. “Usually by the halfway point of the season, we’ve had enough tournaments to fi gure it out, but right now it’s guesswork.” For now, “I know we’re good and I know Marist is good. And unless some other teams got good over the summer, I think those are the two teams to beat right now. There’s always one or two teams that come out of nowhere.” More golfers should equal more success for Lady Gulls By GARY HENLEY The Daily Astorian Rarely does a team nearly triple its number of athletes from one year to the next, but that’s what Mike Verhulst and the Seaside girls golf program has done. The Lady Gulls fi n- ished the 2018 season with just three golfers in the dis- trict tournament — not even enough to score in the team standings. Seaside and three other schools fi nished with incomplete team scores. Through three weeks of the 2019 spring season, Ver- hulst had eight golfers on his roster. For smaller schools such as Seaside, fi elding a com- plete team in golf is some- times half the battle. And now that the Gulls have plenty to score as a team, anything is possible. The three returners are all back. Sophomore Tristyn McFadden — who entered the 2018 season as Seaside’s No. 1 golfer as just a fresh- men — is back, and scoring well. In last year’s Cowapa League tournament, McFad- den fi red a 107 for Seaside’s top score. A week later in the district tournament, she shot a 108 on the fi rst day and 102 on the second — the Gulls’ best score by 27 strokes. The fi rst time out in 2019, McFadden shot a 96 in a tournament at Tillamook, where she parred two of the fi rst fi ve holes and fi nished the front nine with a 47. Individually, she fi nished third, and more importantly, the Gulls were just two strokes behind Astoria for third in the team standings. In the same tourna- ment, junior Caitlin Hillman Gary Henley/The Daily Astorian Tristyn McFadden is hoping to be on target for the Seaside girls golf team this season. had a 114 — also topping her scores from the district tournament. Junior Sydney Rapp is Seaside’s third varsity returner. Rounding out the 2019 Seaside roster will be senior Ella Eronen, junior Frida Ruff, and freshmen Emma Arden, Paris Johnson, Anna Knoch and Elise Seppa. Need rock? 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