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It's Only A Game ~ From the desk of Sports Editor Dennis Mathes.

Archive for the 'Girls' Basketball' Category

The Varsity All-Stars

March 8th, 2008, 8:27 pm by itsonlyagame

You might remember me mentioning our Varsity All-Stars. These are the coaches who help us with the Varsity Web site.

Varsity was set up by our people in California so it would be easy to use. Not just for us, but for you, too.

It’s true: The program is very easy to use. However, it takes a lot of time to enter stats. If we had to enter stats for every single game every night, we’d never get done. We just don’t have the staff to do it.

We depend on coaches to help us. Many do. But these are no ordinary coaches. They’re coaches who are so enthusiastic about their sport, or their team, or who are so proud of their players, or who are so appreciative of their team’s fans, or who are just so happy to have the opportunity to coach and touch the lives of our young people that they’re willing to take the time to enter their stats online.

Those are our All-Stars.

It’s a simple stat program, and it’s kind of neat the way they put it together. If you enter stats for each game, the Web site will do the rest, adding together stats for each player game by game. You can compare stats in any number of ways. For basketball, for instance, you can click on points, and the site will rank the players by points. Click on steals, and it will rank the players by steals. But you probably already knew that.

As I said, there are some coaches who think this endeavor is worthwhile enough to help us. Routt football was among the best this year. Coaches entered stats for their games THE NIGHT OF the game. Triopia did, too. West Central always had their stats entered before the weekend was out. Pittsfield, too. And Pleasant Hill.

We had some great ones in basketball as well. Coach Todd Bradshaw made sure Griggsville-Perry’s stats were updated. Calhoun, Waverly, Brown County, Pleasant Hill, A-C Central, Rushville-Industry and even Westfair — they all helped. Others, like Jacksonville, at least furnished all their stats — steals, rebounds, assists and the other things that don’t show up in the nightly box scores.

Girls’ basketball teams helped, too. Waverly girls’ basketball coach Scott Hendricks was a Varsity All-Star. Pleasant Hill. Routt coach Joe Eilering, whose team went further in the playoffs than any other team in the area, filled in all of his team’s stats. Calhoun entered stats and uploaded mug shots of all their players. Absolutely outstanding. Carrollton. Greenfield. Triopia. Brown County. They all helped. Volleyball — Carrie Jo Donnan at A-C Central was a Varsity All-Star. Routt coach Pat Gibson entered his team’s stats. Triopia helped. I’m hoping I haven’t left anyone out. But if you’re a regular visitor to the site, you know which schools helped, and which did not.

So to our All-Stars, we say thank you. You should thank them, too, if you’re a fan who enjoyed seeing updated stats of your favorite players.

If your team’s stats weren’t online, or they weren’t complete, ask your coach why. Or better yet, volunteer to enter them for your team.

In a small way, you can touch the lives of our young people, too.

A word about the Player of the Year

March 6th, 2008, 8:35 pm by itsonlyagame

Player of the Year is never an easy choice.

Many players had outstanding years this season. We felt one stood above the rest.

We’re always faced with the question: Should Player of the Year go to the highest scorer? The best rebounder? Should it go to the best player on the best team, or simply the best player?

Our staff has tended to make the Basketball Player of the Year (both boys’ and girls’) a postseason type of award. I think that makes sense. In few other sports do the state playoffs seem as important as they do in basketball. We don’t discount the regular season. Not at all. But everything in the playoffs — every decision, every shot — is magnified because if you don’t win, your season is over. The postseason is when you find out if a player has the right stuff.

Routt’s Melissa Nichols had a great season, but she had a truly memorable postseason, leading her team to the Final Four for the second straight year.

There’s something to be said for a player who helps guide her team through hard times. No team had more ups and downs this year than Routt, but somehow the team came together just in time for a strong postseason run. Melissa Nichols was a big part of that.

Nichols is really everything you’d ever want in a point guard. She is one of the most athletically gifted athletes in the area. She doesn’t like to talk about scoring, even after she’s had a big night. She sees her role as a distributor, and she’s a great one. Nichols led the area with an average of 5.5 assists per game. That means her passes led directly to an average of 11 points for her team every night she stepped on the court. That number would have been higher if Routt hadn’t gone through a horrific midseason shooting slump.

Melissa Nichols is an extraordinary ballhandler, and she’s a terrific defensive player — for some reason, that often seems to get overlooked in these discussions. Most importantly, she has great basketball smartness. She knew what had to be done and how to go about getting it done (even if things didn’t always work out).

All the elements of her game came together at the Virginia Sectional against Greenfield. If you must know, I fall into the “it wasn’t a lucky shot” camp. If “THE SHOT” had bounced off a referee’s head before swishing through the basket, it would have been a fluke shot, but it still wouldn’t have been a lucky shot. There is no such thing as luck. In basketball, you either make the shot or you don’t, and when it mattered most, Melissa Nichols made the shot.

It takes skill, guts, heart, dedication and years of practice to be able to summon up everything it takes to make a 27-foot jump shot to win a game the way she won that game. But there was so much more to “THE SHOT” than just the shot. Jessica Bowman had just hit a short jumper to put Greenfield ahead. Routt had no timeouts left — no time to talk to the players to help them regroup, no time to tell them that they still had a chance, no time to set up a play. This was on the players’ shoulders. It was on Melissa Nichols’ shoulders.

First Nichols had to get the ball downcourt. No problem. Then she saw teammate Morgan Eilering setting up a screen (it’s still a team game, you know). Then Nichols had to make a split-second decision. Does she try to dump the ball inside, or does she use the screen and shoot the ball herself?

She shot it. That was the right decision.

In fact, she made what turned out to be the right decision every step of the way on that play, which sent Routt to the next round of the playoffs and eventually to the state finals in Normal — an entire career summed up in 10 glorious seconds.

Nichols went on to have a great game against Brimfield in the super-sectionals. And although Routt didn’t win a game in Normal, the Lady Rockets played well in a field of four evenly matched teams.

I’m just glad I got to see most of it.

Congratulations to Melissa Nichols, our Girls’ Basketball Player of the Year.

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