A8 FRIDAY June 24, 2022 Summer Sports SeasideSignal.com BASKETBALL SOFTBALL Seaside School District Ila Bowles, Tara Lair and Abby Nofi eld earned Cowapa League fi rst-team honors. Emma Arden and Erin Owsley received honorable mention. Jeff TerHar Ever Siboney makes a drive against Woodburn. Gulls pick up Cowapa all-League awards The Astorian 2022 COWAPA ALL-LEAGUE SOFTBALL TEAM Locals take part in all-star series The Astorian The West All-Stars topped the North All- Stars 90-71 in the cham- pionship game of the boys’ 4A/3A/2A basket- ball series, the 49th annual summer all-star event hosted by the Oregon Ath- letic Coaches Association. The three-game all- star series showcases the top senior class talent in the state from the 2021- 22 season. The North ros- ter included three players from Clatsop County. In Friday’s opener at the Morse Center in Eugene, the North snapped a 47-47 halftime tie by outscoring the South 61-27 in the sec- ond half, for a 108-74 win. Five players scored in double fi gures for the North. Mathias Billings of De La Salle led with 19 points, followed by Sea- side’s Ever Sibony with 18. Seaside teammate Cash Corder and Knap- pa’s Logan Morrill scored 15 points apiece, while Morrill (7-for-11 from the fi eld) had a game-high 15 rebounds to go with three blocks. Corder had three steals, two blocks, two assists and eight boards, and Sibony had 10 rebounds, four steals and three assists. The North out-rebounded the South 78 to 47. In Saturday’s champi- onship game at Wilson- ville High School, the West All-Stars had 10 steals and blocked seven shots in the win, while both teams launched a combined 71 3-pointers, missing 53. Austen Sladek (West- ern Christian) had 16 points to lead the West, with 14 points from Colby Evans (Junction City) and 11 by Riley Cantu (Kennedy). Billings led the North with 17 points. Sibony had eight points, while Morrill and Corder were held to six and fi ve points, respectively. Numerous players picked up awards this season, on the annual Cowapa all- league softball team, as voted on by the league’s coaches. Among the the fi rst team are Seaside’s Ila Bowles, a senior, Tara Lair, a senior, and Abby Nofi eld, a junior. Earning honorable mention were seniors Emma Arden and Erin Owsley. The Player of the Year honor went to Astoria freshman Maddie Wilkin; the Designated Players of the Year were Emilie Eddy of Valley Catholic and Til- lamook’s Ashlyn Mattson; and Wilkin was also the Pitcher of the Year. Astoria’s Junior Israel and his staff of Korie Blacker, Libby Di Bartolomeo and Lou Marconeri were named Coaches of the Year. In addition to Wilkin, Astoria had seven other players earn all-league hon- ors. Seaside landed fi ve players on the all-league squad. With three freshmen on the fi rst team and two sophomore honorable men- tions, the Lady Fish could be the domi- Player of the Year: Maddie Wilkin, Astoria Pitcher of the Year: Maddie Wilkin, Astoria Designated Players of the Year: Emilie Eddy, Valley Catholic; Ashlyn Mattson, Tillamook Coach of the Year: Junior Israel, Astoria First Team Maddie Wilkin, Fr., Astoria Chloe Bauer, Jr., Valley Catholic Gaby Bauer, Fr., Valley Catholic Ila Bowles, Sr., Seaside Shelby Bruney, Fr., Astoria Mary Crosby, Fr., Valley Catholic Kassandra Douglas, Sr., Banks Gabi Garcia, Jr., Tillamook Malia Groshong, So., Valley Catholic Nayomi Holmstedt, Fr., Astoria Tara Lair, Sr., Seaside nant team in the Cowapa League for the next several years, after advancing to the 2022 state quarterfi nals. Astoria won the league title with a 12-0 league record, well ahead of Val- ley Catholic (8-4) and Banks (5-7), both of which drop to the 3A level next season. Astoria defeated Corbett 7-0 in a fi rst round game, before dropping a 3-0 decision to Stayton in the quarterfi nals, the program’s fi rst appearance in the fi nal eight since 1983. Playing a schedule of big school opponents, the Lady Fishermen of 1983 defeated Sheridan 4-2 in a fi rst round game, before an 8-2 loss to La Salle in the quarterfi nals. Gearhart playground ready for installation Seaside Signal Equipment has arrived and a land survey completed as the city prepares to install a new playground at Centen- nial Park between between Pacifi c Way and A Street, next to the Trail’s End Art Center. The process began after the closing of Gearhart Ele- mentary School when stu- dent Berkley Sturgell wrote the city proposing the new playground. Sturgell helped organize a “quarter-mile challenge,” with the goal to collect enough quar- Field: Could training facility be moved? Continued from Page A1 ters to stretch the length of one-quarter mile. The proj- ect raised more than $33,000 overall, with $12,000 of that raised by Sturgell, 11. The 4,400-square-foot area on the southwest cor- ner of the 3/4-acre park would feature playground equipment and other fea- tures required to adjust said use with land and uses in the neighborhood. The play- ground will include a play tower with slide and banister bars, a double swing combi- nation with two swings and a “bird’s nest,” and training bars with ropes, knots and nets. DINING on the NORTH COAST Great Restaurants in: GEARHART • SEASIDE CANNON BEACH R.J. Marx Herche Family Training Facility in Broadway Park. of last year, they resurfaced and said to the district, ‘Do you want to resolve this?’ We said, ‘Of course we do. We want to work together to build a great softball fi eld for our athletes.’ So we then entered into a resolution agreement and are required to complete those agree- ments and the softball fi eld next June.” To meet the compliance deadline, the school dis- trict investigated three sites: Broadway Field, fi elds on Wahanna Road, and a prop- erty north of the former high school known as the “North 40.” The Wahanna Road site was eliminated after studies revealed wetlands and poor quality soil. Land at the former Sea- side High School on U.S. Highway 101 and North Holladay off ers a central- ized location and has been viewed favorably by the city’s parks advisory com- mittee. But the site would require utilities, power and earthwork — which Broad- way Field already has. In April, the school dis- trict board voted to revisit Broadway Field as their pre- ferred site. Consultant Zach Stokes of ZCS Engineering, on behalf of the school district, determined that an upgraded softball fi eld and baseball fi eld wouldn’t fi t on the property as laid out now. “Even if we use a min- imum-size softball fi eld, it wouldn’t fi t on this site with all the other parameters that we had to work through,” Stokes told the council. “It turns out that moving the training facility is actually a pretty reasonable idea, and accomplishes a handful of goals. From an engineering standpoint and a practicality standpoint, the Broadway fi eld modifi cation appears to be a really good option for the district and for the city.” The city’s public works director Dale McDow- ell agreed. “The Broadway proposition is actually the best overall and if you think it’s diffi cult to move a build- ing like that, it’s actually pretty simple,” he said. “It’s not that big a deal.” Mayor Jay Barber called Broadway Field the best of the three options in terms of expense and usability. Corder, who is a member of the school board, urged greater thought and design planning before council action. “We need to think ahead and plan and make a good design so that we can sat- isfy our community mem- bers and our kids and people for generations to come,” he said. “I wish we could put it on roller skates and scoot it around. But that’s kind of an afterthought and that’s kind of that’s a big part of my point: It’s an afterthought.” While councilors and Mayor Jay Barber said the Broadway Field location was the best of the three pro- posed locations for a new softball fi eld, they asked for additional input. The plan should go to a public hearing, Councilor Randy Frank said. “We need input from a lot of people,” he said. “Hopefully when we bring this forward to the public, open it up we’ll have a lot of time for discussion and see how people feel.” Cannon Beach Chocolate Cafe MILK SHAKE HAPPY HOUR EVERYDAY 3-5PM $1 OFF SHAKES 232 N. Spruce • Cannon Beach, Oregon Open 10 am-5 pm Daily! • 503.436.4331 WANT TO KNOW WHERE THE LOCALS GO? • Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Junior Menu RESTAURANT & LOUNGE • Lighter appetite menu E RIL Y’ S But in order to meet those requirements, the Her- che Family Training Facil- ity, designed and developed with donations and contribu- tions from the community, may complicate matters. According to an agree- ment signed in March 2020 between the park district, the city and Seaside Kids, Inc., any proposed change to usage or policies governing usage of the batting facility other than scheduling will require approval by the city, the park district and Seaside Kids. The facility — built at a cost of $244,000 — would have to be moved. “I hope there’s some thought in planning more so than what has gone into this operation so far,” the bat- ting facility’s project man- ager Chris Corder said. “You cannot pick up a pole barn and move it. I’ll repeat that: You cannot pick up a pole barn and move it. There are 90 yards of concrete in the fl oor. It just doesn’t work that easily.” The school district’s request to develop a soft- ball fi eld comes in response to a complaint fi led against the district by the Offi ce of Civil Rights alleging dis- crimination against female athletes on the basis of sex and equality in the athletics programs at the high school. “The Seaside School Dis- trict received a complaint from the Offi ce of Civil Rights alleging discrimi- nation that that our softball fi eld was not comparable to our baseball fi eld,” Pen- rod said Monday. “In July Mary Lou Lux, Sr., Valley Catholic Tenley Matteucci, Sr., Astoria Abby Nofi eld, Jr., Seaside Hannah Obrist, Fr., Tillamook Hayden Rockwell, Sr., Banks Alex Saunders, Jr., Banks Mercedes Walter, Jr., Astoria Honorable Mention Emma Arden, Sr., Seaside Avery Biederman, So., Astoria Megan Davis, Sr., Astoria Fionna Duryea, So., Astoria Taylor Haltiner, Sr., Tillamook Jordyn Maller, Fr., Banks Erin Owsley, Sr., Seaside Tori Pesterfi eld, Jr., Tillamook Caitlin Queen, So., Valley Catholic Morgan Rockwell, Jr., Banks BEST BREAKFAST IN TOWN! 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