A8 FRIDAY May 27, 2022 Spring Sports SeasideSignal.com BOYS GOLF TRACK Kawasoe third at state Warrenton boys fourth, Astoria girls fifth at state The Astorian By GARY HENLEY The Astorian Seaside’s Carson Kawasoe nearly pulled off a big rally on Day 2 of the state golf tourna- ment at Quail Valley Golf Course in Banks, where the senior Gull golfer eventually finished third out of 58 golfers on the 4A individual leaderboard. Kawasoe shot a five-over par 77 in the first round on May 16, and was in sixth place individually. “As always at this level, it came down to putts inside 8 feet,” said Kawasoe’s coach at Seaside, Jim Poetsch, after the first round. “If he had made them all, he’d be sitting on a two-stroke lead right now. But he’s still in the hunt so hopefully he has a great day and all those putts fall.” Through nine holes of the sec- ond round on May 17, Kawasoe was two-under par. He had bird- ies on four of the first five holes and moved into second place, one stroke behind Woodburn’s Ty Beyer. Two holes later, there was a four-way tie for first between Kawasoe, Tillamook’s Elliot Lee, Beyer and Aaron Brown of Banks. After chipping in for birdie on the 10th hole — Kawasoe’s second chip-in for birdie of the day — he sat alone atop the leaderboard. But Kawasoe double-bogeyed the 12th as Lee (who began the sec- ond round on the back nine) bird- ied the third hole to give Lee a lead that he would never relinquish. Kawasoe finished with a 74, the best score of the day, one stroke ahead of three other golfers. Jim Poetsch From left, Seaside’s Carson Kawasoe, Tillamook’s Elliot Lee, Valley Catholic’s Ryoma Lane and Aaron Brown of Banks. The Cowapa League foursome finished third, first, eighth and fourth in the boys state golf tournament. Lee carded a 75 on May 17, good enough for a two-round total 148 and medalist honors. Beyer had scores of 73 and 77 for a 150 total for second, followed by Kawasoe with a 151 (77-74). Freshman Isaiah Jones of Baker/ Powder Valley and Brown each posted a 152 to tie for fourth. In his only two full spring sea- sons at Seaside, Kawasoe was a freshman in 2019 and led the Gulls to a second-place finish. As a senior, he qualified for state as an individual and finished third. In a swan song for the Cowapa League, Banks won the 2022 state title by three strokes, while Valley Catholic and Baker tied for second. Lee will return next season for Tillamook, but Kawasoe gradu- ates, while Banks and Valley Cath- olic drop to the 3A level. “This was the closest state tour- nament, on both the individual and team sides, that I’ve seen,” Poetsch said. “Carson made a great run at the title. I couldn’t be more proud of him. With two holes left I thought he had a great chance to win it. But Elliot is also a great player and he did what he needed to do to win it. We will miss hav- ing Carson but I look forward to watching what he can do at Santa Clara (University) next year.” The return to Hayward Field brought a return to the recent glory years of Astoria girls and Warrenton boys track. With some individual state championships mixed in, the 3A Warriors brought home a fourth-place team trophy, while Astoria finished fifth in the 4A girls’ scoring. For the Astoria boys, senior Colton McMaster made the best of his two complete seasons in track with two more state titles, in the discus (177-0) and shot put (55-0¾). McMaster almost certainly would have won four more titles if there had been official state meets in 2020 and 2021. Most Clatsop County ath- letes competing posted per- sonal best marks — no surprise in the 70-plus degree weather over the weekend in Eugene. Beginning with the small school portion of the meet, Warrenton’s Zander Moha scored a state title on both days. The senior won the 3A 3,000-meter race last Thurs- day, then took first in the 1,500 meters the next day, in 4:13.37. Moha adds his name to a short list of athletes with mul- tiple state titles for the War- renton boys. Andy Wintersteen won three individual champi- onships (400 meters in 2000, and 200 and 400-meter titles in 2001), and ran a leg on the win- ning short relay in 2000. Luke Ray won back-to-back pole vault titles in 1994 and ‘95. Over halfway through the meet — and with several ath- letes still to compete — War- renton was first in the team scoring with 33 points. At the same time, Cat- lin Gabel was in fourth with 28. The Eagles made their big move on Day 2, exploding with 56 points in the final seven events to finish with 84 points and the team championship. Santiam Christian (70) was second, followed by La Pine (57) and Warrenton (47.5). The best finish at state for the Warrenton boys is still sec- ond place in 1992, under coach Bob Filori. Josh Jannusch led Warrenton to fourth in 2007. Adding points for the War- riors were: Hunter Xochipilte- catl (second in the javelin, 151- 0); Erik Cooley (fourth, 300 hurdles, 43.32); Phoenix Mar- tin (fifth in the 400 meters); the Warrenton relays (seventh in the 400, fifth in the 1,600); Jorge Lopez-Cruz (eighth in the javelin); Collin Klebe (sev- enth in the high jump) and Niles Gramson (seventh in the pole vault). Foreign exchange student Julie Dornblueth scored most of the points for the Warrenton girls, taking fourth in the tri- ple jump and sixth in the pole vault. Payten Buckelew was eighth in the 1,500. NeighbORly [ INSPIRING KINDNESS ACROSS OREGON ] Check in on a friend. Share your lunch. Offer to carry that. Grow a garden and give it away. Ask the tough questions. Then listen. Stand up for someone. Give someone a chance. Give yourself a break. Give to the arts. Start a movement. Start a scholarship. Welcome the new neighbors. Be patient. Walk a mile in their shoes. Donate shoes. Drop off dinner. Leave the last donut. Leave no trace. Take responsibility. Hold the door and your mind open. Endeavor to understand. RSVP. Smile. Hope for nothing more than kindness in return. L E A R N | CO N N EC T | D O N AT E | G E T I N S P I R E D O R E G O N C F.O R G /N E I G H B O R LY