B Section B S PORTS Wednesday, February 25, 2015 South Lane County Sports and Recreation Contact Sports, 942-3325 or e-mail sports@cgsentinel.com Al's World: Where everyone has a chance to pursue excellence Kennedy has fostered Cottage Grove basketball's competitive spirit for 50 years, and is now preparing to step away from Lincoln M.S. BY MATT HOLLANDER The Cottage Grove Sentinel M embers of the Cottage Grove basketball com- munity can’t help but chuckle and roll their eyes at the sugges- tion of retirement for Al Kenne- dy, but that is exactly what the long-time coach intends to do after his Lincoln Middle School eighth graders play their fi nal game of the season this after- noon at Creswell. This skepticism, however, is not founded in Kennedy’s con- viction so much as the under- standing of what it has meant for him to teach this game to Cottage Grove’s youth over the past 50 years. “He’s been talking about it for a few years, so I’ll believe it when I see it,” said boys varsity assistant Scott Shepherd. “Al has done so much that I don’t know I can do justice for what he means to Cottage Grove basketball, and in such a vari- ety of capacities: his time and coaching; fi nancially support- ing younger teams and kids that may not have had the opportu- nity to play in big tournaments; and he has had relationships with the local coaches for so long that everybody knows him. I think he truly has a heart for the kids and enjoys seeing them be successful.” That sentiment was ever-pres- ent during the high school’s fi nal home games last Tuesday, when no fewer than 10 individuals, spanning multiple generations, came over to catch up with their old coach. It was a particularly special evening for Kennedy, who got to see girls that he coached as seventh graders go out as win- ners on Senior Night. “I chose to coach middle school so they could be my heroes on nights like this,” he said. Kennedy was the varsity girls’ head coach from 1989 to Please see Kennedy , Page 3 B photo by Matt Hollander Al Kennedy sits with members of his eighth grade Lincoln team, (from left) Konnor Owens, Clayton Schoenleber and Allen Cohen at the varsity girls' game on Feb. 17. Raades go faster at state meet Jarett and Tori Raade rep- resented Cottage Grove High School at the OSAA Swim- ming Championships, held this past weekend at Mount Hood Community College. Although neither advanced to the fi nals, both Jarett and Tori saw signifi - cant improvements from their performances at last year’s state meet. Jarett placed ninth and 12th in the prelims of the 500 free and 200 free, respectively. His time of 2:04.03 in the 200 was .28 faster than his qualifying time, and his time of 5:33.75 in the 500 was nearly nine seconds faster than what he swam in last year’s meet. Tori held onto her 11th place standing from 2014, but her time of 5:49.34 was an improvement by almost eight seconds. Both Raade's fi nished fourth in their respective events at the district meet the weekend be- fore and had to wait to see if they qualifi ed based on time. "I knew from the year that our district is very fast in the free- style events, and that I had a chance to get an at-large spot. But I was still nervous and very relieved when I found out that I had made it," Jarett said. Jarett, a senior, said that this state meet had a much different feel from last year's, when the boys won the team champion- ship, but it was still exciting to be at a meet with 300-400 people. Tori, a sophomore, qualifi ed for her second state meet, and she said her goal for next year is to make the fi nals or place in the top-three at districts. photo by Matt Hollander Cottage Grove's Blake Sentman drives past Sweet Home's Junter Jutte (21) and Ryan Adams(1) for a layup midway through the fourth quarter of the Lions victory. Winless no more! Lions down Huskies for fi rst league victory BY MATT HOLLANDER The Cottage Grove Sentinel Entering the fi nal week of the sea- son, the Lions were determined to snap an 11-game losing streak and avoid a shutout in the Sky-Em League. They delivered an emphatic victory at home against Sweet Home on Tuesday. Four Lions scored in double fi gures and Cottage Grove held off a late-game surge by the Huskies to win 62-55. “We attacked pretty well tonight, and fi nally shot how we’re capable of from the outside,” said Cottage Grove coach Donn Pollard. “It was a step in the right direction and hopefully a sign of things to come.” The Lions (5-18, 1-8 Sky-Em) came out guns-a-blazing against the Hus- kies (6-13, 2-7 Sky-Em). Blake Sent- man jolted himself out of a midseason slump by scoring seven fi rst-quarter points — including a three-point play in the opening seconds — as Cottage Grove built a 19-12 lead. “We were sick of losing and walking around school hearing people say how bad we are,” he said. After multiple +20-point games against nonconference opponents, Sentman’s production trailed off in league play. He said that over the past few weeks he has kept his head up and trusted that his scoring touch would return. “He penetrated well, was more pa- tient with his shots and got us going right off the bat,” Pollard said of Sent- man, who fi nished with 18 points on 7-of-11 shooting. Kory Parent kept the Lion offense rolling by scoring nine straight points to open the second quarter. However, Sweet Home’s Ryan Adams countered with eight straight points of his own to pull the Huskies back within nine. At that point, it seemed as though Sweet Home had found an offensive rhythm reminiscent of its previous game against Cottage Grove Please see Boys Basketball , Page 2 B Hard luck hits at state BY MATT HOLLANDER The Cottage Grove Sentinel C photo by Gary Ordway Sports Action Photogrpahy Tori Raade ottage Grove entered this past week- end’s state bowling tournament in Salem hoping to come away with a pair of trophies. But both teams encountered just enough bad luck to keep them off of the podium, as Bend and Roseburg won the boys’ and girls’ state championships, re- spectively. The girls qualifi ed for Sunday’s fi nals in fi rst place but were eliminated by Spring- fi eld in the fourth round. However, Gracie Stewart was named MVP of the tourna- ment. The senior closed 89 percent of her frames on Saturday, and 85 percent on Sun- day. “I knew I was doing good, but I didn’t know I was bowling that good,” she said. “I knew that if I looked at my numbers I would psych myself out.” Despite her outstanding start, Stewart only stood in seventh place after day one. She topped the fi eld with a higher-percent- age of strikes on Sunday. “It meant a lot to go out on top because in the past I’ve always looked up to the MVP. Please see Bowling, Page 2B Athlete of the Week: Gracie Stewart VOLUNTEERS NEEDED SOUTH LANE COUNTY JOIN TODAY NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY FIRE & RESCUE 541-942-4493 ZZZVRXWKODQHÀUHRUJ TRAINING PROVIDED