If a girl’s basketball team ever reached the Class 3A state tournament exclusively on aggressiveness, heart and true grit, it was last season’s Enumclaw High’s ladies, who battled their way through loser-out affairs to the hoop extravaganza and ended the season with an overall mark of 18-10.
When fans last saw the Enumclaw High boys basketball squad, the Hornets were playing Renton on the final day of the Class 3A state basketball tournament.
Dec. 2 North Thurston 7 PM
John Hofstrand took over the coaching reins of Bonney Lake High boys basketball program and is having the time of his life.
The Bonney Lake Panther girls have been hitting the hardwood this fall and the team is ready for the start of the South Puget Sound League 3A season.
There’s good news for the rest of the 140-pound wrestlers in the newly reconfigured South Puget Sound League 3A – in his senior campaign, Bonney Lake’s Addison Tracy has at last elected to move up a weight or two.
The gymnasts at Bonney Lake High are back and the tumbling turns are looking very good for these girls.
If experience counts for anything, the White River High girls should be just fine during the coming basketball season.
The buzz in high school wrestling circles involves whether perennial power Enumclaw High will repeat as Class 3A state champions.
A handful of local athletes recently signed national letters-of-intent with colleges throughout the land.
Sports pundits say that in the fast moving game of volleyball, timing, a solid mental approach and momentum are three of the most important facets of the game.
This year’s edition of the Class 3A state volleyball tournament at Kennewick’s Toyota Center brought together a Sweet 16 squads, four of which were from the talent-rich, nine-team South Puget Sound League 3A.
One of those four was Enumclaw High, which made the big dance for the fourth consecutive season – certainly no stranger to the blazing intensity that is the state tourney.