Sea Kings saddled up on Schulte’s back
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Chris Yemma
When you’re 5-foot-7 and 115 pounds, you usually aren’t the most
physically dominating force on the basketball court.
So you adapt.
And that’s what Corona del Mar High girls basketball junior Katie
Schulte has done.
“It’s definitely hard,” Schulte said. “We had a tall girl (6-0
Danielle Briggs) against University (Tuesday) and it was a challenge.
They’re big but usually they’re not fast, so I can try and dodge
them.”
Schulte is the Sea Kings’ No. 1 option, and has adapted nicely to
her size. She’s by no means the smallest player on the court, but
there’s usually a taller girl on the opposing side during any given
matchup.
So, she usually matches up against the tall one, using her
quickness, speed and outside shooting game to get the upper hand.
Of course, she’s also left-handed, creating an advantage a lot of
teams don’t pick up on.
“It’s an advantage, but most players are good with both hands,”
she said. “Most teams don’t really realize it until halftime, and
then they make an adjustment.”
Schulte, a guard, also leads the Sea Kings (8-10, 0-2 in the Sea
View League) in scoring, averaging nearly 14 points a game. During
the last four games, though, she has averaged 22.3 points and led the
team to a crucial Back Bay win over Newport Harbor.
She drained two clutch free throws in the final seconds Saturday
against the Sailors to give CdM a comfortable lead, while also
pitching in 20 points.
“The last two games, against Tesoro and Harbor, has solidified her
as the main option,” Corona del Mar Coach Scott Kahawai said. “She’s
the leader, the person that whenever we need a tough shot, she’s
always the one that will give it to us.”
After starting the season 1-5, the Sea Kings have climbed within
two wins of evening their record, all with Schulte driving the bus.
In Tuesday’s loss to University, she had a game-high 24 points and
nailed four three-pointers, the most in either category she’s had all
season.
But sometimes, scoring isn’t everything.
“Without the rest of the team we would be nothing,” Schulte said.
“My 20 points a game doesn’t mean anything if we lose. It’s a total
team effort.”
It’s not just her straight athletic ability that gets opponents,
though. Her leadership presence and the emotional energy she provides
gets the team fired up and ready to go.
When the season began, she was unanimously elected the team
captain by her teammates, on a team that also consists of three
seniors. And with one season still left as a Sea King, Schulte has
time improve even more.
Most of her improvement comes through her understanding of the
game.
“Her best aspect is her basketball I.Q.,” Kahawai said. “She can
see the certain matchups and take advantage of them. She can beat you
in any way.”
Until next year comes, Schulte and the rest of the Sea Kings are
looking to finish this season strong. With an 0-2 league record right
now, it could be tough to come back and win the top spot.
But with Schulte at the helm, anything’s possible.
“I would say the sky’s the limit,” Kahawai said. “She’s the type
of person that will leave everything out on the court until she
doesn’t have anything left.”
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