The Register-Herald, Beckley, West Virginia

Today's Sports Front

March 5, 2013

Valley girls face Wheeling Central in opening round

The Valley High School girls will try to shake off about two decades of state tournament dust Wednesday.

And standing in the way as the girls state basketball tournament commences at the Charleston Civic Center Coliseum is perennial state tourney participant (and 2008 state champ) Wheeling Central.

The two squads square off at 1 p.m. today at the Civic Center in the tourney’s opening round. The winner advances to a 9:30 a.m. Class A semifinal on Friday against either St. Marys or Tygarts Valley. The single-A championship is at noon Saturday.

Valley is making its first girls state tournament appearance since coach Ray Londeree and players Chiquitta Walker and April Day led the Greyhounds to Charleston in the 1991-92 school year.

First-year Valley coach Richie Cantrell realizes his team will face a program that boasts a lot of state tournament experience.

Concerning Central’s decided edge in big game experience over the years, Cantrell said, “It was obvious that everyone in the room (at the weekend tournament meeting at the WVSSAC office) knew them. They’ve been multiple times, and there’s a reason it’s like that.”

“Wheeling Central is very well-coached and well-funded,” Cantrell added.

While his team has posted a better record this season and boasts a richer tournament pedigree, Wheeling Central coach Penn Kurtz feels the Greyhounds will provide a stiff challenge.

“I’d say it should be a pretty even game,” Kurtz said. “We might have a little edge with our guard play.”

The Maroon Knights (21-4), who lost in last year’s final to St. Joseph and fell in the semifinals to St. Marys in the previous year, arrive in Charleston as Class A’s No. 2 seed, while Valley (13-7) is No. 7 in the eight-team field.

Senior guard/forward Alexis Payne enters the tournament with a 25.2 points per game average, while pulling down 16.6 rebounds an outing, to spearhead the Valley attack. Sophomore guard Abby Buchan has also enjoyed a productive campaign, averaging 19.6 ppg and netting 30 3-point field goals.

Between them, the explosive duo has 10 30-plus-point games (Payne six and Buchan four). Payne has eclipsed the 30-point barrier in three of her last five games.

Kurtz is wary of Payne and Buchan, in particular. “They’re versatile,” Kurtz says.

“From what I’ve been able to read ... I know she (Payne) is pretty dynamic. We’ll have our hands full trying to defend her,” said Kurtz, who also acknowledged his team will have to contain Buchan.

Kelsey Bird, a junior, averages 7.3 points per outing for the Greyhounds, and Gracyn Grubb (3.4 ppg and 8.1 rpg) and Alaysha Taylor round out the starting lineup. Other contributors include Emily Smallman, Chelsea Lively, Lauren Pleva, Emily Beard and Tennel Green.

Cantrell says schools such as WVU and Marshall are “missing a big opportunity” if they don’t recruit Payne.

“We were kind of short-handed to start the year and had young players,” said Valley assistant coach Jeff Minter. “As the season progressed, our younger players have come together and picked it up and made us stronger.”

“We started working on fundamentals early in the season,” stressed Cantrell. After sailing through an 8-0 start, the schedule got a little tougher and Valley began losing some. The team faced some “adjustment issues” but has responded and wound up turning in a solid effort to beat Region 3, Section 1 winner Tug Valley 62-58 on its home floor Thursday to advance.

“We played some really good teams,” he said. “That showed us how to play against pressure.

“And we had to stress to the girls to keep an eye on the prize.”

“I’m excited, not real nervous, just excited,” Payne, Valley’s lone senior, said of finally being able to play in the state tournament.

Payne’s father, Alex, played for the Greyhounds in the Class AA boys state basketball tournament in the mid-1990s, and her mother, Tenea Newman, was a member of several productive VHS track teams that experienced statewide success. “We just have to go down there and play hard and play like (every game) is the last game.

“I think we can match up with them.”

“This season was actually better than I thought it would be,” she added. “Last year brought us together a lot.”

“A lot of people doubted us,” added Buchan. “I knew we could do it, and Alexis has been our leader.

“We worked really hard. Hopefully we can win and keep going.”

Wheeling Central is led by returning first-team all-stater Emily Bucon, a 5-foot-9 guard who has battled an injury but has averaged 14.6 points and 4.8 rebounds, and 5-10 senior Colleen McCormick (22.1 ppg, 14 rpg). “Colleen plays all over for us,” said Kurtz.

Other starters are junior point guard Maria Olson, senior guard Beth Stayduhar and junior forward Madison Basinger.

— E-mail: skeenan@register-herald.com

Text Only
Today's Sports Front
  • Miners doubleheader scheduled for tonight

    There’s a phrase that brings joy to the face of fans of America’s pastime, from sea to shining sea – “free baseball.”

    June 19, 2013

  • King’s Warriors ‘Road to Amazing’ under construction

    Scott Reitnour has high expectations for his squad; and why shouldn't he?

    June 19, 2013

  • Bubba.jpg Bubba coming to Greenbrier Classic

    Golf’s two most famous left-handers will both be in White Sulphur Springs next month.

    June 17, 2013 1 Photo

  • Miners return home to face Paints

    Joe Goddard’s days of making the decisions out of a baseball dugout were supposed to be finished.
    The longtime Independence High School coach retired at the end of the 2012 baseball season after an ultra-successful career.

    June 17, 2013

  • Huggins says WVU could be very good team

     Coach Bob Huggins admittedly feels much better about the West Virginia men’s basketball team as it prepares for the 2013-14 season.

    June 17, 2013

  • APTOPIX NBA Finals He_Work.jpg Manu Ginobili sparks Spurs to Game 5 win

    With the old Manu Ginobili back, the San Antonio Spurs looked like champs again.
    One more victory and their Big Three, not Miami's, will be the one that rules the NBA.
    Ginobili broke out of a slump in a big way with 24 points and 10 assists in his first start of the season, and the Spurs beat the Heat 114-104 on Sunday night to take a 3-2 lead.

    June 16, 2013 2 Photos

  • Promotions, giveaways on tap for Miners

    As with any summer baseball franchise, either on the Minor League Baseball system or, like the Miners, on the collegiate level, promotions are an integral part of the whole fan experience. But Pollard said there is also a special relationship created at Epling Stadium.

    Promotions are planned throughout the summer, with many nights themed toward specific groups. For instance, July 3 will be Military Night, with various military vehicles present. Boy and Girl Scouts Night is set for July 8, Emergency Response Night on Aug. 1 and Merchants Night on Aug. 2.

    June 15, 2013

  • Woodrow’s Johnson named North-South MVP

    There’s no doubt Andrew Johnson was a little steamed he was left off of the North-South Basketball roster. Unfortunately for the North Bears football team, Johnson took that aggression out on them.
    The Woodrow Wilson senior led the South Cardinals to a 43-14 victory in the North-South Football Classic in Charleston on Saturday night.

    June 15, 2013

  • South does it again

    Mike D’Antoni. Randy Moss. Tamar Slay. Jerry West. When hoops stars like that have come from your neck of the woods, you better be prepared to bring your A-game.
    That’s exactly what the South side did on Friday night, when the determined and gritty underdogs knocked off the North in the North-South Basketball Classic, 91-82 at the South Charleston Community Center.

    June 15, 2013

  • Greenbrier Classic adds players

    With just 15 days before the start of another Greenbrier Classic, golf fans around the state are itching for some news about which players will be hitting the fairways of The Old White TPC for the fourth-year PGA TOUR event in White Sulphur Springs.
    Tournament director Monte Ortel is just as anxious. One of his main job duties is player recruitment, and he can’t wait to show off the list he has assembled.

    June 15, 2013