Lightning looking for improvement in all the right spots
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Patrick Laverty
Last season, Sage Hill School’s girls basketball team improved its
record from 5-13 in 2001-02, its inaugural year, to 16-6, reaching
the second round of the CIF Division IV-A playoffs.
But third-year Coach Shanna Renkin isn’t necessarily looking to
improve on that record again this season. She would much rather see
the Lightning take their lumps during a more difficult nonleague
schedule with the hope that it will help them improve upon last
year’s third-place tie with Brethren Christian in the Academy League.
“I’d rather have a successful league season than a successful
preseason,” Renkin said.
Last year, Sage Hill had just one loss prior to beginning Academy
League play, but lost its first two league games. An improvement on
the latter is expected with four returning starters and the kind of
height that coaches at the Newport-Mesa public schools would die for.
Leading in both categories is 6-foot-1 sophomore Haywood Wright, a
second-team All-CIF Southern Section Division IV-A selection, and 6-2
junior Katie Puishys, a second-team All-Academy League player.
With 5-4 sophomore point guard Debbie Yoder-Lee and 5-6 junior
guard Vicky Gutierrez also returning as starters, visions of a jump
to the top of the Academy League standings are realistic.
“Definitely,” Renkin said. “This year, [a league championship] is
definitely realistic for us. It’s not just building anymore. We’ve
got our whole man-to-man defense down. Now we can start pressing. We
can start changing our defenses. We haven’t been able to do that.”
For the past two seasons, Renkin has been trying to build a
program. It grew with the birth of a junior varsity squad last
season. Now that junior varsity team is beginning to assemble its own
talent that can flourish for Sage Hill in future years.
Renkin also added an assistant coach, Richard Bowen, a former
assistant with the Sage Hill boys program, which will allow for more
individual development.
That individual development is key, particularly at the guard
position.
“We’re definitely stronger,” Renkin said. “Guard-wise, we had
Carrie Clark and that’s it [last season]. This year we have five to
six guards that can start.”
Clark graduated, but her leadership role is expected to be picked
up by Puishys and Gutierrez. The improved guard play is expected to
help Puishys and Wright inside.
“Last year everybody played us in a zone,” Renkin said. “No one
played us man-to-man. They can’t do that this season.”
With Sage Hill’s size, some teams will still undoubtedly try,
beginning with Calvary Chapel of Downey on Tuesday. The Grizzlies
knocked the Lightning out of the playoffs last season and begin a
tough nonleague schedule that also includes a nonleague game against
Ocean View and a first-round matchup against Calvary Chapel of Santa
Ana in the Fairmont tournament, which Sage Hill enters as the
defending champion.
Aiding in the attempt to become champions of the Academy League
will be two other returners from last season, 5-8 sophomore guard
Allison Gonzalez and 5-9 forward Natasha Kaliski, the only senior on
the team.
There are also three newcomers expected to contribute including
North Carolina transfer Rebecca Hembarsky, a 5-10 forward, and 5-8
freshman Kaitlin Tyres. Those two are expected to battle for a
starting spot. Laura Schaefer, a 5-4 sophomore guard who played on
the junior varsity team a year ago, rounds out the roster.
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