Tuesday, November 20, 2012

WNCC women remain unbeaten at 8-0 with 30-point win over Casper College

                 Gritt Ryder finished with a double-double and the Western Nebraska Community College women’s basketball team remained unbeaten with an impressive 30-point win over Casper College 72-42 on Tuesday night at Cougar Palace.
                Ryder finished with 20 points and 10 rebounds, while also adding eight steals and five assists in the win. More importantly, the Cougars showed plenty of offensive depth as three other Cougars finished with double-figure scoring. Jess Samorodova netted 16 points, while Mikayla Brower and Ashley Stevens each had 12 points.
                Ryder said the team played well from the get-go.
                “Coach [Dave Harnish] told us before the game that this was a big rivalry and that we wanted to do really well,” the sophomore guard from Denmark said. “I think we played really great defensively. We still have a lot to work on, but we did great in the small areas with rebounds and boxing out.”
                The Cougars’ defense was definitely on Tuesday night generating a number of turnovers and steals. The Cougars finished with 18 steals on the night, with Ryder benefiting with eight, Brower with three, and Laurin Rivera, Shalisa Moffit, and Jessica Aratani with two each. Samorodova also blocked three shots in the win.
                “I thought we did a great job on defense. The posts did a great job boxing out and us guards tried to get the rebounds as well. I thought we followed the game plan pretty well, recognized the shooters, and did what coach told us what to do.”
                WNCC didn’t take control of the contest until after the midway part of the first half. Casper held a 12-11 with 12 minutes to play. Brower changed the momentum of the game as she drained a 3-pointer to put WNCC up 17-14.
                The Cougars continued playing strong the rest of the half. Leading 20-16, the Cougars went on a 21-6 run to close out the half and a 40-22 halftime lead. The lead included eight points by Stevens and five points from Ryder on two steals. Moffit also chipped in a 3-pointer.
                WNCC’s defense continued playing strong in the second half as the Cougars went on a 13-4 run to go up 53-26 behind four points from Stevens and back-to-back 3-pointers by Ryder and Moffit. Casper came back to score seven straight points, but WNCC put on the afterburner once again with a 6-point run to stop any hope of a Casper comeback.
                The Cougars shot 45 percent from the field including connecting on 7 of 21 3-pointers. Ryder canned three treys, while Moffit had two. Brower and Aratani had the other 3-pointers.
                Ryder said the team is starting to get confidence amidst their 8-0 start to the season.
                “It helps to win games but we all know we want to win a regional championship so this is just one step in the road to that goal,” she said.
                The Cougars will be back in action Nov. 29-Dec. 1 when they compete in the Air Force Prep tournament. WNCC’s next home action will be Dec. 6-8 when they host the Lady Cougar Holiday Classic.

Casper (6-2)                       22 20 – 42
WNCC (8-0)                        40 32 – 72
CASPER
Kaylee Swope 2, Ashley Jones 5, Shelby Stewart 14, Whitney Lott 4, Fayne Tyson 4, Cheyanne Balster 4, Shelby Garske 1, Ragen Wilson 2, Agata Dobrowolska 6.
WNCC
Mikayla Brower 12, Gritt Ryder 20, Shalisa Moffit 7, Ashley Stevens 12, Jessica Aratani 5, Jess Samorodova 16.

Cougar men win home opener by downing Western Wyoming 96-81


                Cody Johnson finished with a double-double and the Western Nebraska Community College men’s basketball team rolled to a 96-81 win over Western Wyoming Community College in the Cougars’ home debut Tuesday evening at Cougar Palace.
                “We came out with a lot more energy in the second half and we just wanted to win,” Johnson said. “We played really good team ball. We got rebounds and we went out there and did what we needed to do.”
                Johnson finished with 16 points and 11 rebounds for the game and the Cougar big man said that he was out there just doing his job.
                “I did what my team needed me to do,” the 6-foot-10 center from Salt Lake City said, “ and that was to rebound. My points just came by working hard on the boards.”
                Willie Mangum led all scorers with 30 points, including three 3-pointers. Quante Cooley also pitched in 12 points, while Youssoupha Kane had eight points.
                Johnson said this team has plenty of fire power.
                “We are a very deep team and we just need to get to a point where it doesn’t matter who scores and we are all happy with each other,” he said. “Some people are more offensive oriented than others, but we get equally as hyped when others score.”
                WNCC opened the contest with a blaze of glory, running to a 15-0 lead behind seven points from Mangum. Western Wyoming finally scored its first points on two free throws by Jonathon Mines. WNCC came back to go up 17-2 before the Mustangs went on a 17-2 run to knot the score at 19-19.
                Western Wyoming came back to take a 39-32 lead on a bucket by Eric Rippetoe. WNCC responded with seven straight points, including a 3-pointer by Trey Moore for a take a 39-37 lead. The Cougars went into the locker room ahead 41-40.
                Johnson said head coach Russ Beck told them keep playing hard.
                “He told us box out hard and come out with the energy that we started the game,” he said. “We did that and it ended in a 15 point win.”
                The Cougars opened up the second half as Mangum buried a 3-pointer to put the Cougars up 44-40. WNCC pushed the lead to 53-46 on a Mangum trey and a Johnson dunk for a 52-46 lead.
Western Wyoming sliced the lead to 54-60 on a Daveon Gibson 3-pointer and trailed 71-67 with eight minutes to play. That was when the Cougars opened up the contest with a 11-0 run that was highlighted by a Zach Clemens 3-pointer and buckets by Mangum, Tahir Little, and Rich Williams for an 82-67 lead and the Cougars never looked back after that.
A big key for the Cougars was free throw shooting where the team sizzled the nets for a 93.3 average (15 of 16). Johnson said they have been working on their free throws.
“As a team we have been focused on getting our free throw percentages up,” he said. “It is improving each and every game and we are really happy about that.”
                WNCC, 3-3, will be back in action Tuesday when they host Casper College at 7 p.m.

W. Wyoming                      40 41 – 81
WNCC (3-3)                        41 55 – 96
WESTERN WYOMING
Jonathon Mines 9, Pedro Faria 4, Cameron Bailey 8, Daveon Gibson 10, Mike Pelo 20, Lindsey Johnson 8, Amal Wilson 12, Eric Rippetoe 10.
WNCC
Tahir Little 6, Zach Clemens 5, Quante Cooley 12, Rich Williams 2, Willie Mangum 30, Trey Moore 5, Isaiah Castellaw 2, Charles Ward 8, Cody Johnson 16, Youssoupha Kane 8, Chad Calcaterra 2.

Cougar women's basketball team picks up two wins at Central Tournament, go to 7-0 on season

RIVERTON, Wyo. – The Western Nebraska Community College women’s basketball connected on
a combined 15 3-pointers in two wins over the weekend at the Central Wyoming tournament in
Riverton, Wyo.

The Cougars, 7-0, opened the tournament by bearing eight treys in an 80-48 win over Central
Wyoming College. Central Wyoming defeated the Cougars last season in the Region IX tournament first-
round.

WNCC followed Friday’s win with another impressive showing, burying seven 3-pointers in a win
over Miles Community College on Saturday.

WNCC will look to stay unbeaten when they host Casper College Tuesday night at 5 p.m. at
Cougar Palace. Casper enters the contest with a 3-1 record after sweeping three opponents over the
weekend against Snow College (58-38), College of Eastern Utah (53-42), and Northeastern Junior College
(70-46).

WNCC was quite impressive in the two wins over the weekend. Against Central Wyoming, WNCC
was 8 of 18 from the 3-point line and shot 50 percent overall from the field. Jess Samorodova and Gritt
Ryder paced the team with 19 and 17 points each. Samorodova had two treys with 19 points, while
Ryder, who committed to play at Colorado State University next year, had three 3-pointers, five
rebounds, four assists, and six rebounds.

Jessica Aratani and Katie Kerkhoff each pitched in nine points in the win, while Ashley Stevens
and Alyssa Yates each had six points.

The Cougars were in control of the contest from the beginning, running to a 9-0 lead before
taking a 38-27 lead into the locker room. The Cougars dished out 22 assists and had 27 steals,

WNCC continued its hot shooting against Miles Community College, blitzing the nets for 53
percent shooting. The Cougars were 7 of 14 from the 3-point line. Samorodova, the 6-foot-3 center from
Russia, buried two treys for her 12 points.

Ryder led all scorers with 21 points on 9 of 12 shooting. Ryder also had five rebounds, five
assists, and six steals. Mikayla Brower also poured in nine points with three steals, followed by Laurin
Rivera with eight points.

Also Shalisa Moffit also finished with double-figure scoring with 10 points. Samorodova, Rivera
and Stevens all pulled down five rebounds in the win.

Friday’s Game
WNCC (6-0)
38 42 – 80
Central Wyoming
27 21 – 48
WNCC
Gritt Ryder 17, Shalisa Moffit 5, Idil Ozbayrak 2, Jessica Aratani 9, Jess Samorodova 19, Mikayla Brower
5, Laurin Rivera 2, Katie Kerkhoff 9, Alyssa Yates 6, Ashley Stevens 6.

Saturday’s Game
WNCC (7-0)
34 34 – 68
Miles CC
20 23 – 43
WNCC
Mikayla Brower 9, Gritt Ryder 21, Shalisa Moffit 10, Jessica Aratani 2, Jess Samorodova 12, Laurin Rivera
8, Katie Kerkhoff 2, Maurissa Ortega 4, Ashley Stevens 2.

Cougar men set for home opener on Tuesday, Nov. 20

    The last time Rich Williams, Zach Clemens, and Isaiah Castellaw played a game in Cougar Palace, the Scottsbluff Bearcats won a district championship.
                Now, as part of the Western Nebraska Community College men’s basketball team, the three players will be back on their championship court when the Cougars have their home opener on Tuesday against Western Wyoming Community College. Tip-off is slated at 7 p.m. after the Cougar women take on Casper College at 5 p.m..
                Williams said it feels good to play at home after a rigorous road slate that saw the team face three of the last four national champions.
                “Playing at home should be exciting. We drove all the way to Texas, Casper and Gillette [to play quality opponents], so it should be fun to have our first home game,” Williams said. “I am very excited for the outcome for the season.”
                Not only is the Cougars coming into the home opener playing well, for the three Scottsbluff High graduates, Williams said that having won a district title on this court and then being a part of the Cougar team this year is special.
                “It was fun when I played the district championship game on the court and now I am in college playing for the Cougars,” he said. “It should be fun.”
                The WNCC men have been a team that has showed plenty of scoring as of late. The Cougars are averaging 80 points a game, but more importantly, they have played a tough first five games. The Cougars split contests in the season opening tournament in Gillette, Wyo., beating Gillette College before falling 107-104 in overtime to Gillette.
                WNCC then fell to defending national champions South Plains College 102-49 on the road. After that loss on Nov. 6, the Cougars have turned around the season at the Region 18/9 Showcase last weekend, where they fell in a heartbreaker to the College of Southern Idaho 68-67 after holding a 35-34 halftime lead. The Cougars rebounded with a 82-76 win over Salt Lake Community College on Saturday.
                Against Salt Lake, the Cougars trailed 37-30 at halftime before erupting for 52 second half points to sting the Bruins.
                The Salt Lake contest saw the Cougars bury 10 3-pointers. Willie Mangum paced the Cougars with 32 points, including six 3-pointers, while Charles Ward pitched in 23 points and three treys. Trey Moore had the other 3-pointer.
                Williams said they are starting to click as a team.
                “We played great both games,” he said. “The chemistry has come a long ways since South Plains,” he said. “We are playing more as a team now. That Salt Lake win was huge for us in the way we moved the ball around more and more, and not being as selfish. We played like a team like we should have at the beginning of the year.”
                Williams said anyone on the team can score, even though the big scorers on the season have been Mangum and Ward. That offensive threat will pay dividends in the long run for the team.
                “We have some really good scorers with Charles and Willie,” he said. “They should inspire the crowd.”
                What is making this team special, however, is that since that loss to South Plains, the team has really stepped up. The 10 days of practice between games turned the team around for the better, according to Williams.
                “The beginning of the season was rough, but once we got to the Southern Idaho game that is when everything starting clicking,” he said. “We started slowing down and running our plays, making the extra passes so another player can score, and right know our chemistry is really good.”
                After Tuesday’s home opener, the Cougars will be off through the Thanksgiving break before hosting Casper College on Nov. 27 at 7 p.m.Top of Form

Cougar men uphend Salt Lake on Nov. 17

CASPER, Wyo. – The Western Nebraska Community College men’s basketball team picked up a big road win over Salt Lake Community College 82-76 in the Reigon 18/9 Showcase on Saturday night at Casper College.
                The Cougars trailed 37-30 at halftime, but came out and exploded for 52 second half points while holding Salt Lake to 39 points for the win.
                WNCC was paced by Willie Mangum with 32 points including six 3-pointers, while Charles Ward pitched in 23 points and three treys. The Cougars connected on 10 3-pointers all together. Trey Moore had the other 3-pointer.
                Cody Johnson finished with a double-double for the Cougars with 12 points and 10 rebounds. Tahir Little led the team with nine assists.
                WNCC, 2-3, will be back in action Tuesday when they host Western Wyoming at 7 p.m. The Cougar women will host Casper College at 5 p.m. on Tuesday.

WNCC                   30 52 – 82
Salt Lake CC        37 39 – 76
WNCC
Tahir Little 2, Willie Mangum 32, Trey Moore 3, Doudou Gueye 3, Charles Ward 23, Cody Johnson 12, Youssoupha Kane 6, Chad Calcalterra 2.

WNCC volleyball team finishes runner-up at nationals

                WEST PLAINS, Mo. – The Western Nebraska Community College volleyball team had hopes of bringing home another national title, but it wasn’t in the cards as the Cougars had to settle for a –runner-up finish at the NJCAA national tournament on Saturday in West Plains, Mo.
                College of Southern Idaho played an almost flawless contest in earning the national championship with a sweep over the Cougars 25-20, 25-21, 25-20. The Golden Eagles finished the season with a 33-1 record with their only loss coming to the Cougars back on Aug. 31.
                “Obviously we fought as hard as we could, but it didn’t seem to be our night,” fifth year WNCC coach Giovana Melo said. “But I am happy with the team. We have come a long ways and the players learned so many other things besides on the volleyball court and that is what I am so much proud of. The people they have become, the family we have created is more important to me than winning a national title.”
                The WNCC players need not be upset with a runner-up finish with the season they had. The Cougars finished with s another 40-win season and they have the longest streak of attending the national tournament at 14 straight.
                Luiza Martins and Danika Youngblood each put in stellar performances to be placed on the all-tournament team. In the championship match, Martins finished with 27 set assists and eight digs, while Youngblood 11 kills and six digs.
Youngblood, who already committed to play at Cal State-Bakersfield and will join former Cougars Debora Araujo and Fernanda Goncalves, cherished being a part of the all-tournament team.
                “That honor feels good because I was working on it all season and I wanted to be a part of that just because I saw Debora and Fernanda get it last year," she said. "And as a player, I wanted to work for that also.”
                WNCC also had plenty of outstanding performances during the tournament. Saturday night in the championship match, the Cougars just couldn’t buy a break as Southern Idaho was on the top of its game.
                Youngblood said they had a good season and they just couldn’t get that final win.
                “We just didn’t have tonight what we had all tournament. I mean that is a good team {CSI) but I still think we were strong enough that we could have had it," she said. "The loss is frustrating and it is hard. But our team is a family and we are there for each other and we played like we are three for each other. We at least can leave saying that we left together as a family.”
                WNCC did start the match out strong, jumping to a 7-4 lead on a Youngblood kill and two service points. WNCC then pushed the lead to 14-10 on a Priscila Mendes kill and two service points and later led 17-13. It was after that the wheels started to fall off and it started as Marie Fujie served three points to tie the match at 17-17.
                Martins stopped the run momentarily, but the Golden Eagles came back to take their second lead of the night on two service points by Eseta Makia before finishing off the set to win 25-20.
                Makia started the Golden Eagles off with a four=point service run only to watch WNCC come back to tie the the second set at 5-5. The two teams would be tied at 17-17 after two Tasha Meyer points.
                Southern Idaho jumped back in front 21-17 only to watch WNCC came back to tie the set at 21-21 on a Taylor VanderWerff kill and three Youngblood points. But Fujie served the final three points for the win.
                WNCC came out in the third set and played well to start, holding an 8-6 lead. Southern Idaho came back as Kaylee Holmstead served three points for a 10-8 lead. Fujie then had a four-point service run for a 15-9 lead.
Rivera finished with 17 digs while Mendes had 10 digs and Tasha Meyer had 13 digs. Agson pounded home nine kills while Tovar had six kills followed by VanderWerff with three kills, and Lauren Knox with two kills.
                The tournament MVP went to Southern Idaho’s Keani Passi while the coach of the tournament went to CSI’s Heidi Cartisser. All-tournament team selections included Marie Pierre-Bakima and Oni Lattin of San Jacinto, Vanessa Benke of Central Florida, Martins and Youngblood of Western Nebraska, Helena Peric of MSU-West Plains, Jaqueline Santos of Tyler, Andrea Tauai of Hillsborough, Yulia Voronko of Iowa Western, and Yang Yang of North Idaho.
                Youngblood said the team has nothing to hang their heads about with the season they had.
“It was a good run and we had a good season and we stayed strong,” she said.

Saturday’s Results
9th Place – MSU-West Plains over Temple, 20-25, 25-11, 25-14, 25-18
7th Place – Hillsborough CC over North Idaho, 25-23, 25-20, 29-27
5th Place – Tyler JC over Central Florida, 25-14, 25-21, 25-18
3rd Place – San Jacinto over Iowa Western, 23-25, 28-26, 25-13, 25-22
Championship – Southern Idaho over Western Nebraska, 25-20, 25-20, 25-21

WNCC men come up short against CSI on Nov. 16.

BY DAVE BRUNZ, Star-Herald Sports Reporter


CASPER, Wyo. — The Western Nebraska Community College men’s basketball team received a triple-double performance of 10 points, 10 rebounds and 10 blocked shots from freshman Youssoupha Kane,  and a solid performance from Cody Johnson with eight points and nine rebounds; but couldn’t hold off the 12th ranked College of Southern Idaho as the Cougars fell 68-67 at the Region 9/18 Challenge Tournament on Friday night in Casper.

“We’ve come a long ways from last week from our last game against South Plains (Tex.),” WNCC coach Russ Beck said. “Defensively we played a whole heck of a lot better than we have the three previous games, which is encouraging. Offensively, we turned the ball over a little bit more than I would like.”

Beck, who came to WNCC after being an assistant CSI, was instrumental in setting up the Challenge which features two teams from Region IX (WNCC, Casper) and two teams from Region 18 (CSI, Salt Lake Community College).

WNCC (1-3) led the contest early after holding on to a slight 35-34 edge at half. However, CSI kept pace and played stayed stride for stride with the Cougars in the seesaw battle, taking the lead for the first time late in the game.

“CSI didn’t take their first lead until they scored a bucket with 12 seconds left in the game,” Beck said. “We felt like we got fouled on the last two possessions, but the whistle didn’t go our way and obviously they didn’t see anything there.”

Despite coming up short on the final score, Beck praised the progress his team has made over the last four games and believes the tough early schedule will pay off down the stretch. The Cougars have now faced the 2011 NJCAA national champion in CSI, and last week they fell to the 2012 champions, South Plains College in Levelland, Tex. WNCC will face 2009 champion Salt Lake Community College (4-0) today to finish out the tournament.  

“By the time the day ends [Saturday], we will have played three out of the last four national champions in the first three weeks of the season,” he said.  “I think it’ll pay off in the end as long as we stay dedicated and focused, and try to have a little bit of perspective that we don’t want to be playing our best basketball right now. We want to learn and grow and practice hard. Sometimes that’s hard to do when you play teams that aren’t at your level, but these teams are at our level and in some cases they’re a little bit above us and I think that’s going to put us in a position late – in February or March.”

The Cougars were 14 of 22 from the free throw line for 63 percent compared to CSI, who went 17 of 21 from the stripe. Additoinally, WNCC won the battle on the boards, out-rebounding the Golden Eagles 42-37 in the contest.  

Despite the loss, though, Beck believes this team has the potential to do well going forward and said that they just have to iron out a few things offensively before things start really falling into place for the young squad.

“The difference between winning and losing sometimes is just a very, very slight margin,” he said. “I told the guys, ‘I feel like we’re about ready to win a whole bunch of games in a row, we just have a few more things offensively to iron out.’ We’re getting there.”


WNCC (1-3)                35 32 — 67
CSI (5-1)                34 34 — 68

Friday, November 16, 2012

WNCC volleyball moves into title match after downing Iowa Western



                 WEST PLAINS, Mo. – The Western Nebraska Community College volleyball team captured their 40th win of the season, but more importantly, the Cougars are headed to the championship match of the NJCAA national tournament in West Plains, Mo., after a four-set win over Iowa Western Community College Friday night.
                The Cougars, 40-2, had three players finished with 20 or more digs and Danika Youngblood had a 21-kill performance in registering a heart-stopping, emotion 34-32, 20-25, 25-19, 25-18 to earn a spot in Saturday’s championship against No. 1 seed College of Southern Idaho.
                Southern Idaho, 32-1, earned a spot in the title game by dropping San Jacinto College in four games 25-23, 27-25, 14-25, 25-20 at 5:30 p.m. The match will be available on the Internet at www.njcaavbd1.com.
                WNCC will be looking for its third national title in six years. The Cougars won the title in 2007 and 2010. And, for the Cougar players they are fighting with emotion to get the title and there plenty of tears of joy as Danika Youngblood sent the final point blazing to the floor in moving the Cougars one win away from another title.
                “I do not even know what to say, there are no words to describe this feeling,” freshman Allora Tanner said. “We are there. We are in the championship. We are going all the way as a team and we will fight hard and fight here right now. It is coming together. We just came out tonight and fought with all our heart. We just played our game and we went forever strong together as a team.”
                Tanner and Taylor VanderWerff each came in off the bench to provide a spark in the later sets. It was their two kills each that help ignite the team even more. VanderWerff cannot believe how much energy there was on the court.
                “We played phenomenal,” VanderWerff, the sophomore from Louisiana said. “We were able to come back [many times] and the energy that we had was so amazing. This feeling is indescribable right now. There was so much energy from everybody and it was so electrifying.”
                There certainly was plenty of energy in the building from both squads. The last time these two squads played was back in the opening weekend of the season in August and the Reivers swept the Cougars pretty easy. The semifinal match on Friday was a battle between two talented teams as either team could have won. The difference was not only the energy level of the Cougars, but how the Cougars have come together from the opening two weekends of the season when they lost two games.
                VanderWerff and Tanner said this team has grown leaps and bounds.
                “This is so unbelievable of how we have come together from the beginning of the year,” VanderWerff said. “Our chemistry works well together then it did in the beginning. We are a team and a family now and that is what makes this feeling of going to the championship so much better than what we were feeling in the beginning.”
                The Cougars’ first set victory was the different in the contest. WNCC jumped out to a 5-0 lead and led by as much as 17-12. WNCC was even close to closing out the set at 24-21 before watching Iowa Western come back for a 25-24 lead. From there both squads had a number of important kills to stop match points from both teams.
                In the extra play, Youngblood came up big with four big kills including the game winner to give the Cougars the set 34-32. Youngblood finished with nine kills in the set, but they also got clutch kills from Kat Agson, and some key blocks from Yoro Tovar.
                The Cougars then stumbled in game two, falling 25-20. It was the third and fourth set that the Cougars defense stepped up as the defenders were digging up balls left and right. Alex Rivera, Tasha Meyer and Priscila Mendes finished with at least 20 digs in the match. Rivera had 23 digs to lead the team while Mendes and Meyer each had 20 digs.
                Tanner said the defense was key.
                “Alex and Tasha, along with all of were stepping up in playing our game,” she said. “We had everything to lose so we just had to go out there and give it our all. We just had to go out on the court and play.”
                In the third set, Luiza Martins opened up a tight set with three straight service points for a 20-15 lead. WNCC then just kept strong for the 25-19 win.
                The fourth set was tied at 7-7 before Mendes served four points behind two kills each from Youngblood and Agson for a 12-7 lead. Iowa Western sliced the lead to four points a couple times, but never could get any closer as Youngblood hammered home the match-winning kill.
                Youngblood, Mendes, and Martins each had double-doubles. Youngblood finished with 21 kills, 10 digs, three blocks and five points; while Mendes had 10 points, 20 digs, and five kills; and Martins had 46 set assists, 18 digs, and five points.
                Also for the Cougars, Alex Rivera had 23 digs and four points; Yoro Tovar had nine kills, eight points, and six blocks; Meyer had 20 digs and eight points; Tanner had five kills, and VanderWerff had two kills.
                WNCC will now take on Southern Idaho for the title. The two squads met back on Aug. 31 when the Cougars handed the Golden Eagles their only loss of the year. But, for Tanner, competing for a championship means the world to her.
                “I have not played for a championship before and there is a lot of emotion because of that,” she said. “I have come so close yet I have not gotten there so there is a lot emotion because I have come so close and yet I never gotten there. This is a huge step with this team. I love my team. It is my family and to come out and do it with these gals would mean a lot.”

Thursday, November 15, 2012

WNCC volleyball moves into Final Four for ninth straight year



                WEST PLAINS, MO. – The Western Nebraska Community College volleyball team is off to the Final Four for a ninth straight year after fighting to win two matches Thursday at the NJCAA national volleyball tournament in West Plains, Mo.
                The Cougars, 39-2, opened the tournament with a 25-19, 25-19, 25-11 win over Wallace State-Hanceville behind 22 assist blocks.
                WNCC then fought for their lives against North Idaho College, who defeated the Cougars back on Sept. 1. Thursday night in the quarterfinals, the Cougars received 18 kills from Danika Youngblood and 15 kills from Kat Agson to drop the Cardinals 26-24, 23-25, 25-16, 25-21 to move into the Final Four against Iowa Western Community College. WNCC and IWCC will battle Friday night at 5:30 p.m. MST.
                The North Idaho contest, however, was the match of the tournament as the Cougars were getting stung by momentum-breaking calls especially in the third set where the Cougars received two yellow cards.
                Agson, who had a number of thundering kills in both matches, said her team survived and stayed forever strong to move closer to a national title.
                “This is unbelievable. We played our hearts out,” the sophomore hitter from Houston said. “We had to lay everything on the floor. We just had to put everything to the side and play our game and play harder than we have ever played before.
                “It was the biggest fight that we had to have tonight. We couldn’t let up at all. All we had to do was play our game and keep fighting. Even when we had just four points to go, we had to keep fighting. We could not let up at all.”
                Agson said this team has been fighting all year to get wins and today showed just how much this team wants a national title with the emotion that the starters and the bench showcased against North Idaho.
                “It was more emotional out there than any other game we have played this season,” Agson said. “There were a couple calls that we thought we were getting cheated and of course you have to take it to heart. If you feel like you are backed into a corner, you come out fighting and that is what we had to do; we fought.”
                A big key in the win against North Idaho was the team’s potent hitting attack. The Cougars finished with 51 kills as Agson and Youngblood combined for 33 kills. Agson, however, said that everyone got big kills throughout the match, including seven from Yoro Tovar, five from Priscila Mendes, four from Megan Johnson, and two from Allora Tanner.
                “It is a huge thing for us to have big hitters. We usually rely on our defense and our serve and pass when we play our region teams. But when it comes down to the nationals, you have to come with the big guns. I think all three of us and Allora coming in, everyone did what they had to do in putting balls away. I also think Megan did a lot this game.”
                The Cougars also received a triple-double from Luiza Martins, who finished with 38 set assists, 10 points, and 17 digs. Youngblood had a double-double, collecting 12 digs and six points to go along with her 18 kills.
                Alex Rivera finished the game with six points and 22 kills, while Mendes had nine digs and nine points; Tasha Meyer had six points and 12 digs; Tovar had six digs and 10 points.
After the Cougars lost the second set 25-23 and losing a 19-16 lead, the Cougars fought with all their heart to capture the third set. The Cougars went up 17-12 after Mendes served five points, including an ace serve and an Agson kill.
                The Cougars didn’t falter like they did in set two and kept fighting in avoiding North Idaho come back, going up 25-15 on a Johnson kill. After a side out, Johnson came back with another kill and then Youngblood served the final three points for the win.
                The fourth set, the Cougars went up 6-2 and then later 10-5 on three Tovar points. North Idaho came back to cut the lead to 15-12, but Martins served five poimts with an Agson block and kill for a 21-12 lead.
                North Idaho tried a comeback, cutting the lead to 23-18. Agson stopped the rally with a thundering kill and then Youngblood finished off the match with two kills to put the Cougars in to the Final Four.
                The tourney opener against Wallace State wasn’t as emotional as the North Idaho contest. Still the Cougars showed a different side of them as the team blocked with precision with 22 assist blocks and three players with double-double kills. Youngblood had a double-double with 10 kills and 13 digs, while Agson pounded home 12 kills and Tovar had 11.
                The Cougars didn’t open up the contest until midway through the second set. WNCC took the first set 25-19 and were actually down 6-2 and later 13-7 in the second set. That was when the momentum shifted with a bang. Luiza Martins went on a six-point service run that was aided by three big kills from Kat Agson and some timely blocking for a 14-13 lead.
                The Lions tied the match at 15-15 and that was when the Cougar block party went into high gear as they shut down the Wallace State hitters for the second set. Late in the second set, Danika Youngblood, Megan Johnson and Priscila Mendes each had huge kills.
                The third set was all WNCC as the Cougars jumped out to a 7 -1 lead on a Agson and Yoro Tovar block. The Cougars pushed the lead to 17-3 lead as Tasha Meyer served eight points behind fine-tuned blocking and hitting. Allora Tanner then finished off the set with a block and then served the final point for the win.
                Tovar also had six assisted blocks and a solo block. Martins finished with 13 points, five assisted blocks, seven digs, and 31 set assists.
                Also for the Cougars, Agson had four assisted blocks; Meyer had 13 points, an ace, and eight digs; Alex Rivera had 10 digs; Megan Johnson had two kills and four assisted blocks; and Priscila Mendes had three kills, a solo block, and seven digs.
                The Cougars will face North Idaho College at 5:30 CST Thursday for a berth in the Final Four. North Idaho defeated Hutchinson Community College

First Round Results
Iowa Western CC over Temple College – 25-18, 25-18, 25-18
College of Central Florida over Western Texas College – 25-12, 25-21, 25-14
North Idaho College over Hutchinson C.C. – 25-20, 25-15, 25-16
Western Nebraska CC over Wallace State-Hanceville – 25-19, 25-19, 25-11
College of Southern Idaho over Faulkner Stat3 – 21-25, 25-22, 25-16, 25-19
Hillsborough C.C. over Missouri State-West Plains – 25-15, 18-25, 29-31, 25-17, 15-8.
Tyler Junior College over Redlands CC – 25-15, 25-8, 21-25, 30-28
San Jacinto over Casper College – 25-13, 25-13, 25-19
Iowa Western over Central Florida – 31-29, 26-24, 25-23
Western Nebraska C.C. over North Idaho – 26-24, 23-25,25-16, 25-21
Southern Idaho over Hillsborough – 25-16, 25-21, 25-20
San Jacinto over Tyler J.C. – 25-17. 25-18, 25-23