COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL JANUARY 30, 2019 Marist overpowers Cottage Grove Cottage Grove’s Jaden Doolittle gets fouled going to the rim on Friday. Marist head coach Bart Pollard. Spartans lean on 1991, as a CGHS student, depth for wire to wire In Pollard helped guide the school victory over Lions to its only state title and he also By Zach Silva later coached the team. In his zsilva@cgsentinel.com coaching tenure he coached With a balanced scoring current CGHS head coach Seth attack and a fast start, it was Hutchison. The Lions started the game Marist defeating Cottage Grove with big men Creed Lufkin, 62-49 on Friday night in Eu- Jasper Nichols-Ferguson and, gene. for the first time this season, It was a first quarter to for- 6-foot-8 sophomore Shambay get for the Lions (4-15, 2-3 Gabriel Trapp as the back line Sky-Em) as they struggled to of the team’s 2-3 defense. convert on offense and gave up “They’re a good shooting open looks on defense allowing team but when we went with the Spartans (11-6, 4-0) to take 2-3 to start the game they shot a 22-8 advantage. In the open- us out of it, ” said Seth Hutchi- ing quarter five different Marist players scored and the 11th son. “We got really good ranked team in 4A hit three looks… but that’s sometimes the game of basketball, they three-pointers. “As teams have to come out just didn’t fall.” With renewed energy in the to contest (our three point second quarter, Cottage Grove shots), it gives us even more began to stop the bleeding as space and negates their height they found shots on offense and advantage to where we were Marist began to miss. Outscor- able to finish at the rim,” said ing Marist 13-9 in the quarter, the Lions cut their deficit to 10 points heading into halftime. “I’m proud of the way the kids fought, they competed. Multiple times it could have been a blowout game and (Marist) could have pushed it to 25 at times. [They went] up 17, we got it back to 10 and then they’d push it back to 15, and then cut it back to 10," said Hutchison. "It was just kind of a back and forth. These kids couldn’t just push over the hump there.” The second half mirrored the first as the Spartans pushed their lead to as many as 16 be- fore a 9-2 Cottage Grove in the fourth quarter run had them trailing by single digits before another Marist offensive surge. Cottage Grove was led in scoring by Creed Lufkin who had 24 points on the day. “I really believe [we] are a good team. They have the piec- es to be a really good team, I just wish we had more time together. I mean, they com- peted, they played hard, they could have easily gave up but they just didn’t give up and I’m proud of that,” said Hutchison. It wasn’t all positive for Hutchison who was displeased with his team for picking up a pair of technical fouls for talking back to the referees. “They can’t do that. That’s my big philosophy as a coach, I don’t talk to the refs disrespect- fully, they can’t do that. It’s frus- trating that it was coming from upper classmen. That’s one of the things that’s bigger things that I’m upset with, coming from a senior and a junior,” said Hutchison. “And that just can’t happen. I’m asking these upper classmen to lay a foun- dation for these younger kids and that’s not the foundation we want to lay right there. We want to just be respectful.” With a 2-3 record in league play, the Lions will start the second half of the Sky-Em sea- son on Friday at home against Siuslaw at 7:15 p.m. SWITCH TO THE Aut o CONVENIENCE OF AUTO PAY! Pay SAVE TIME & SAVE MONEY Use your Credit or Debit Card account to renew your subscription to the Cottage Grove Sentinel (includes online edition) by using AUTO PAY. Complete the credit card information on the enclosed billing notice and make your payment the easy way with Auto Pay. Bring in or send this ad back with your payment and save $5 OFF Yes, Sign me up for Auto Pay*! ✓ ❏ 10 Weeks = $6, (Reg $11) ❏ Digital Only $30 (Reg$35) BEST OFFER ❏ 1 Year = $36 ( Reg $41) Address: _____________________________________________ City:__________________________State:_____Zip: _________ Telephone Number: ____________________________________ Credit or Debit Card Exp. Date: __________________________ Security Number ______________________________________ Card Number: ________________________________________ Name on Card: _______________________________________ Signature of Card holder: _______________________________ S entinel C ottage G rove 116 N. 6th Street, PO Box 35 Cottage Grove, OR 97424 541-942-3325 • cgsentinel.com *Auto Pay Subscriptions renew automatically unless cancelled. Future renewals will be at the current subscription rate. 3B SUCCESS from B1 chorage basketball team. There was no guarantee on what White would become on the basketball court. But he was a committed athlete and was ready to put in the work. In Cot- tage Grove, Finley was hoping for that same buy-in from an athletic duo. And he got it. “Austin White showed up ev- ery morning, every afternoon – I couldn’t give him enough bas- ketball,” said Finley. “And Creed and Jasper are the same way. They are programmed the same way and if they had more time, they definitely could have been special players for sure.” For Nichols-Ferguson and Lufkin, both had previously dabbled in basketball through- out their lives to various levels of success. “Well, I was pretty bad,” said Nichols-Ferguson at a recent CGHS varsity practice. “And the whole team was pretty bad. I think I played on the C team in middle school. It was just a weird experience.” For Lufkin, he had played more recently and had also struggled. “I wasn’t fast enough, I wasn’t quick enough and I wasn’t very skilled,” said Lufkin, remem- bering trying out and getting cut from the basketball team during his freshmen year of high school. For both boys, both talented athletes in other sports, they had moved on from bas- ketball. Nichols-Ferguson has been a key part of the CGHS soccer team while Lufkin was an integral part of the football team. But Finley was just getting started. “He [was persistent] and he kept coming and bugging me and bugging me,” said Lufkin. But Finley remembered those interactions differently. “I just kept encouraging him, kept encouraging him, kept encouraging him and then he shows up for our meeting and things like that and he ends up playing and being a big part of our team,” said Finley. Lufkin made a deal that if the CGHS football team won the state championship, he would come out for the team. Sure enough, the team secured the school’s first-ever title and Lufkin made his way to the hardwood. He played JV where, at 275 pounds, he worked him- self into basketball shape. Con- stantly running and focusing on post work, the game slowly but surely started to click. “I just started getting com- fortable and then started learn- ing offenses and how to play good defense. Because I used to be like Shaq, I’d just hit everyone and just probably foul out just about every game,” said Lufkin. By the end of the season, he was suiting up on varsity and was joined on the end of the bench by Nichols-Ferguson. Still debating if he wanted to join the team or not when the season began, Nichols-Fergu- son joined the team midway through the season. “[Jasper] just said his heart wasn’t in it and he wanted to fo- cus on school and I was 100 per- cent behind him,” said Finley. “I said, 'Ok, maybe next year. May- be next year,' you know. And so we went on and then I think he came to me like three weeks into the season and he saw what his friends were doing and he missed it.” Never playing more than a few minutes on varsity at a time, Lufkin and Nichols-Ferguson both went into the offseason motivated for their senior year when they knew they would be Top: Lufkin looks to set up the offense against Elmira earlier this season. Bottom: Nichols-Ferguson records an emphatic block against Siuslaw. called into action. They both are packed and there are away played spring ball and summer crowds that actually jeer and ball to get ready. During the off- say mean stuff sometimes and season, Lufkin started his days it’s just weird… I do like it. It’s a at 5:15 a.m., when Finley would different energy.” pick him up for morning prac- With inexperienced varsity tice. players scattered across the team “I knew going into my junior and first year head coach Seth year that I wasn’t going to get Hutchison at the helm, the Li- much time on varsity, if any at ons struggled at the start of the all. So it was pretty much just year, losing their first 10 games gearing me for my senior year to of the season. The team picked become a senior leader and fill up a couple wins including three in those big shoes ahead of me,” wins in a four game stretch in said Lufkin. early January. One pair of shoes he was While the team has looked looking to fill was the role of big to find its footing, Lufkin and man Jordan Hagewood. Hage- Nichols-Ferguson have made wood graduated from CGHS their impact in games through- last year and helped Lufkin and out the year. Defensively they Nichols-Ferguson along with create problems for any team their basketball journey. He is looking to drive the lane as they again helping them this year but challenge each shot and regular- not as a teammate but as an as- ly rack up blocks. On offense, sistant coach for the team. Lufkin has consistently been the “Before, they would kind of team’s highest scorer in games throw the ball at the hoop and as he has developed a post-game not really shoot it,” said Hage- and if he misses, it seems that wood reflecting on the growth Nichols-Ferguson is usually the pair has made in one season. there for the offensive rebound “Now they’ve got a little bit of and put back. touch on it.” “Just seeing them when they Growing in confidence and started in November to what skill alike – and for Lufkin, now they’re at now, it’s day and down to 203 pounds – the real night,” Hutchison said last week. test came once the pair of se- “Kind of just the basketball ex- niors were named starters on perience part, the IQ of being the varsity team. on the floor. You can see their “It was kind of a whether they minds start to slow down a little are ready or not, kind of had bit. And that’s the exciting part to step into the role that they when they have that, ‘Aha!’ that, play,” said Hagewood. “Instead ‘Oh, I get it now’ moment.” of backing down from that, they While neither player will be kind of stepped up and accepted named Oregon’s Gatorade Play- the challenge.” er of the Year or lead the team While both had played in big to a state basketball title, their games in soccer and football re- coaches extolled these players spectively, varsity basketball was for who they are off the court in its own beast. addition to their work ethic. “It’s like a lot of pressure. Be- “I think that will carry over cause with soccer you go out into their lives. They’re going to there and there weren’t many do some amazing things after people in the stands,” said Nich- they graduate because they are ols-Ferguson. “For these games, men of their word,” said Fin- these varsity games are usual- ley. “They’ll do what they say ly packed. And then you go to and they’ll follow through and other away games and those they’ll work hard.”