Seaside signal. (Seaside, Or.) 1905-current, September 20, 2019, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A10
FRIDAY
September 20, 2019
Fall Sports
SeasideSignal.com
Tristyn McFadden
Westin Carter
Athletes of the Week
Tristyn McFadden,
Volleyball
With her cousin play-
ing for the other side (War-
renton), Seaside’s Tristyn
McFadden set an early tone
in helping the Gulls to a win
over the Warriors Sept. 10
at Warrenton High School.
Seaside topped Warrenton in
three straight, 25-19, 25-21,
25-25-23, which came less
than hour after the Gulls
defeated Rainier in four sets,
25-18, 25-18, 25-27, 25-14.
McFadden, the cousin of
Warrenton’s Mia McFad-
den, had four straight ser-
vice aces in Game 1, which
ended, fittingly, with another
ace serve from Seaside’s
McFadden.
Warrenton rallied to
within 24-23 in Game 4, but
McFadden closed out the
match with the final serve
for the sweep.
Westin Carter, Soccer
In a 5-1 win over former
league rival Scappoose Sept.
10 at Broadway Field, Sea-
side’s Westin Carter had two
goal and two assists, help-
ing the Gulls improve to 3-0
overall.
Seaside was putting pres-
sure on Scappoose right from
the start, with several attacks
and shots.
It didn’t take long before
Carter found the back of the
net, midway through the first
half for a 1-0 lead. Carter sent
several passes to the wings
(Natanael Conrad, Dodger
Holmstedt and Diego Angu-
lo-Joli), who had several
looks, as did Stephen Snyder
and Carter inside the box.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Seaside downs
Scappoose, 5-1
In a battle between for-
mer Cowapa League rivals,
Seaside hammered Scap-
poose 5-1 in a nonleague
boys soccer game, Sept. 10
at Broadway Field.
The Gulls improved to
3-0, while the Class 5A
Indians drop to 0-2.
Westin Carter and Diego
Angulo-Joli had two goals
apiece for unbeaten Sea-
side, and Stephen Sny-
der added one. Carter and
Dodger Holmstedt had two
assists each, with another
from Leif Dewinter.
Seaside was putting
pressure on Scappoose right
from the start, with several
attacks and shots.
It didn’t take long before
Westin Carter found the
back of the net, midway
through the first half for a
1-0 lead.
Carter, along with Josue
Sanchez, sent several passes
to the wings (Natanael Con-
rad, Holmstedt and Angu-
lo-Joli), who had several
looks, as did Snyder and
Carter inside the box.
The second goal came
from one of those attacks,
as Angulo-Joli drilled the
net for a 2-0 lead.
The Seaside defense
had to readjust after cen-
ter defenseman Luke Ver-
ley had to leave the game
early, while Alex Campu-
zano-Luna and senior Ryan
Hague held a near perfect
wall to keep the Indians
scoreless.
Seaside continued to add
pressure in the second half,
and the Gulls made it 3-0
when Leif Dewinter sent a
great pass in from the wing,
resulting in a goal.
The lead reached 4-0
before Scappoose scored
on a misplayed ball by the
Gulls, and the shot went
over the top of the hands of
the Seaside goalkeeper into
the net to make it 4-1.
Snyder responded almost
immediately with Seaside’s
fifth and final goal.
Through three games,
Seaside had scored 10 goals
while keeper Patrick Chap-
man had given up just two.
Seaside, Estacada,
all tied up
Seaside scored two
goals in the first half, and
Estacada countered with
two in the second half for
a 2-2 tie in the nonleague
girls soccer game Sept. 12
at Estacada.
The Gulls opened the
scoring 11 minutes into the
game, when Ila Bowles sent
a corner kick in from the
left side, and Gihre Lopez
converted at the near post.
In the 24th minute,
Bowles cleared a ball on
the right side. Emma Arden
won the ball and broke
away up the right side and
finished with a strong shot
for a 2-0 lead.
Estacada regrouped at
halftime, and came out fast,
scoring less than four min-
utes into the second half on
a run up the right side and
cross into the center.
Just three minutes later,
an Estacada player turned
and launched the ball from
40 yards out which squeezed
under the cross bar.
“Another story of two
halves,” said Seaside coach
Dave Rouse. “First half
we scored two and missed
several great opportuni-
ties. After that it was a tight
game, with Estacada pro-
viding a lot of pressure. We
had our chances, too.”
SCOREBOARD
FOOTBALL
Marist 35, Seaside 3
Marist
0
7
14
14—35
Seaside
0
3
0
0—3
Second Quarter
MAR: Lucas Tuski 1 run (Ty DePaoli
kick)
SEA: Kaleb Bartel 33 FG
Third Quarter
MAR: Tuski 1 run (DePaoli kick)
MAR: Tuski 9 run (DePaoli kick)
Fourth Quarter
MAR: Hagan Stephenson 28 pass
from Max Campbell (DePaoli kick)
MAR: Tuski 71 run (DePaoli kick)
Marist Statistics
Rushing: Tuski 25-175, Patterson 6-51,
Campbell 1-0. Passing: Campbell
13-20-154-1. Receiving: Stephenson
5-67, Patterson 4-60, Lee 4-27.
Seaside Statistics
Rushing: Black 10-41, Br.Johnson
6-17, Teubner 4-16, Cook 5-14, Starr
2-5, Pugh 3-(-18). Passing: Pugh 4-11-
58-2. Receiving: Card 3-27, Br.John-
son 1-31.
Jeff Ter Har/Seaside Signal
Emma Brown (13) puts a big block on North Marion’s Megan Netter (2).
SEASIDE WINS AT WARRENTON
Seaside Signal
North Marion snapped a 1-1 tie
with Seaside after two games, by
winning the next two sets to leave
the Gulls’ Nest with a four-set win,
27-25, 25-27, 25-14, 25-10, Sept.
12 at Seaside.
The No. 15-ranked Gulls fell
to 7-4 overall, while the fourth-
ranked Huskies improved to 5-1
with their second win of the year
against Seaside, which played
North Marion in the Cascade
Tournament.
Gulls win Warrenton three-
way match
WARRENTON — The sched-
ule for the “mini-tournament”
Sept. 10 at Warrenton High School
turned out just about right.
The winners of the first two
matches met in Match No. 3, as
the host Warriors faced Seaside in
a showcase volleyball showdown
between a pair of teams with a few
interesting connections.
In the end, the team that entered
the tournament with three wins in
their last four matches, improved
to 5-1 in their previous six, as Sea-
side topped Warrenton in three
straight, 25-19, 25-21, 25-25-23.
The Warriors were able to
sweep league rival Rainier in the
day’s first contest to end a three-
match losing skid, but two hours
later, 3A Warrenton fell short
against the Class 4A Seagulls.
Seaside’s win ended a busy few
hours for the Gulls, who had just
finished a four-set win over the
Columbians (25-18, 25-18, 25-27,
25-14) before facing Warrenton.
“I’ve been trying to make con-
ditioning a part of every practice,
so we can go those long matches/
days,” said Seaside coach Demi
Lund, whose team improved to 7-3
overall.
The Warriors got two points
closer in every set vs. Seaside, but
too many serving errors, hitting
errors and passing errors proved
too costly for Warrenton.
Meanwhile, Seaside set the tone
in Game 1, jumping out to leads of
7-0 and 13-2.
Seaside’s Tristyn McFadden
— who had a cousin on the other
side of the court (Warrenton’s Mia
McFadden) — had four straight
service aces in helping the Gulls
post their big lead.
Ace serves by Warrenton’s
Avyree Miethe and Leah Schiewe
helped the Warriors rally to within
21-17, but as they would in every
game, the Gulls made the clutch
hits, serves, passes and blocks to
close out each set.
Tristyn McFadden ended Game
1 with, fittingly, another ace serve.
The hot server in Game 2 was
Warrenton’s Schiewe, who served
up three straight aces, helping the
Warriors turn an 8-8 tie into a 15-9
lead, their largest of the match.
Seaside answered with a long
run of its own, as Emma Meyer
took over at the service line and
was instrumental in helping the
Gulls reel off an 11-1 run.
Seaside’s
Emma
Brown
and Warrenton’s Melia Kapua
exchanged ace serves, while War-
renton rallied to tie the game at
21-21.
But the next four points
belonged to Seaside. Highlighted
by a kill by Ellisa Blodgett (who
played for the Warriors two years
ago) off a set from Meyer, the
Gulls closed strong to take a two
games-to-none advantage.
In Game 3, Seaside took another
quick 7-2 lead, before long serving
runs by Warrenton’s Nora Ayo and
Schiewe, bringing the Warriors to
within 11-10.
The Gulls maintained a two- to
three-point lead, before Warrenton
finally caught Seaside at 17-17.
From there, the Warriors had
three consecutive serving errors,
while the Gulls had a kill from
Blodgett (to break Schiewe’s
serve), and a block for a 24-21
lead.
Warrenton’s Annie Heyen had a
block on Brown to bring the War-
riors to within 24-23, but Seaside’s
McFadden closed out the match
with the final serve for the sweep.
Blodgett and Brown led the
Gulls in kills, while “Emma Meyer
is now running a 5-1 as our setter,
playing all the way around and she
has really stepped up for the team
role,” said Seaside coach Demi
Lund. “The girls are
continuing to grow and imple-
ment what we are learning in prac-
tice into their games.”
Marist runs wild at Broadway
GARY HENLEY
Seaside Signal
Marist vs. Seaside II cer-
tainly didn’t live up to the
hype and excitement of last
year’s matchup.
Somewhere along the
line, the rematch just never
found the right track.
Maybe it was the eight
all-league players the Gulls
lost to graduation. Or it
could have been the full
moon on Friday the 13th.
Or maybe it was just Marist
running back Lucas Tuski.
More than likely it was a
little of all three, but mostly
the third choice.
Tuski — Marist’s 6-foot,
235-pound sophomore run-
ning back — was tough to
stop in the first quarter and
even tougher by the fourth,
as he ran for four touch-
downs in the Spartans’ 35-3
victory over the Gulls Sept.
13 at Broadway Field.
Marist certainly had a
little payback for Seaside,
which won 33-22 last season
on the Spartans’ home field.
Jeff Ter Har
The running of No. 3, Brayden Johnson, provided a bright
spot for the Gulls.
Ranked No. 3 in the state
in the latest 4A coaches poll,
Marist held all the cards in
the rematch. And the ace
was Tuski.
The big sophomore fin-
ished with 25 carries for 175
yards and four scores, the
last being a 71-yard run late
in the fourth quarter.
The Spartans didn’t need
much else — although quar-
terback Max Campbell com-
pleted 13-of-20 passes for
154 yards and a touchdown.
Seaside was playing just
six days following a Week
1 loss to the Henley Hor-
nets, while the Spartans
were coming off a 55-13
win over Sweet Home, in
which Campbell threw for
338 yards and six touch-
downs, and Tuski rushed for
182 yards.
The numbers were a little
less impressive Friday night
at Broadway Field, but still
got the job done.
Meanwhile, the Gulls
couldn’t kickstart their
offense, which managed just
three points, a 33-yard field
goal by Kaleb Bartel in the
second quarter.
Other than that, Sea-
side’s best play was the
kickoff return, and even
that couldn’t get past the
penalties.
The Gulls were penalized
seven times for 75 yards,
with the flags wiping out
more than a few big Seaside
plays.
Jake Black was Seaside’s
leading ball carrier (10 car-
ries, 41 yards), while Levi
Card caught three passes
from Ledger Pugh for 27
yards. Gavin Rich added
an interception for the Sea-
side defense, which limited
Marist to just seven points in
the first half.
The difference came in
the second half, when the
Spartans collected a total of
12 first downs, to Seaside’s
three.
The Gulls take to the
road for four of their next
five games, including back-
to-back games at Gladstone
and Astoria the next two
weeks.