Sixty-eight straight victories. Four consecutive state championships. Both unprecedented in West Virginia Class AA girls basketball.
Hats off to Summers County High School, which won its eighth state title overall Saturday in Charleston with a 58-50 victory over Scott High School of Madison.
Winning one state championship is the sign of a strong team. Winning multiple titles is the sign of a strong program.
And that’s what coach Wayne Ryan and his staff, with support from the school and the community, have built — a program that demands a certain commitment from the players, who know that if they show up for work every day and focus on the task at hand they stand a good chance of achieving their goals.
Summers County has been a dominant force in girls high school basketball in West Virginia. Few can match that dominance. The records that have been broken over the years are too numerous to mention.
Don’t look for that string of success to end anytime soon. That’s the way strong programs work. Success extends down to the feeder programs. Playgrounds and gyms are filled in the summer months. Skills and work ethic are developed at an early age in these communities. Fifth- and sixth-graders want to be the next Jolysa Brown or Hallie Gunnoe.
So congratulations to coach Ryan and his 2009-10 team on another job well done.
And we also wish to compliment three other area teams that made the state tournament this year — Westside in Class AA and Meadow Bridge and Pocahontas County in Class A.
This coming week, the boys will take center stage in Charleston.
Two Fayette County teams, Midland Trail and Fayetteville, will represent the area in Class A.
In Class AA, Wyoming East and Oak Hill are back. Wyoming East is seeking its third state title in four years and its fourth overall, while Oak Hill is looking for its third overall and its first since 1989 when it won the state Class AAA championship.
These two schools have developed quite a rivalry. And if the seeding holds form, which is certainly no guarantee, get ready for Round 5 this year between No. 1 Wyoming East and No. 2 Oak Hill in next Saturday’s championship game.
That would be quite a way to end one season and complement another.
Editorials
Incredible run
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Drug screening
When it comes to coal mine safety issues, representatives of the United Mine Workers often are leading the way.
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This is why
Operation of Fayette schools
won’t return to local control
until there is some consensus -
MSU
Mountain State University is at a critical crossroads and southern West Virginians need to step up and show their support for the school and its hundreds of students and employees.
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MSU
Community needs to show its support for our university
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If you don’t think so, you’d better think again
EPA regulations turning the screw on coal industry
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Airport projects crucial
Tom Cochran and others at the Raleigh County Memorial Airport can breathe a little easier, or at least take a deep breath and exhale, after word came from Sen. Jay Rockefeller’s office last week that a deal has been struck between the two chambers in Congress to authorize long-term funding, into 2015, for the Federal Aviation Administration.
- Thumbs — Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012
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It’s not a choice
Whether a bill to eliminate tolls on the West Virginia Turnpike when the current bonds expire some eight years from now is passed by the Legislature and signed into law or not, one thing is absolutely certain — the state Transportation Department has the responsibility to maintain that 88-mile stretch of Interstate highway.
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On the shelf
A Senate bill (SB168) offered by 13 of the upper chamber’s members that would have given counties the option to boost the pay of county commissioners, sheriffs, county and circuit clerks, assessors and prosecuting attorneys by at least $10,000 each has apparently been shelved and will do nothing but draw dust this legislative session.
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The time is now
Drug abuse.
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