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App State rally falls short in slugfest vs. Gardner-Webb

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By Matt Present. BOONE, N.C. — App State scored six runs in the bottom of the seventh inning and brought the winning run to the plate in the ninth, but the Mountaineers were unable to take the lead in the late stages, falling 16-14 to Gardner-Webb on Saturday at Smith Stadium.

The contest featured almost everything you could imagine – 30 runs (each team scored six runs in the seventh inning), an immaculate inning from App State’s Caleb Marks and a four-homer, 12-RBI effort from Gardner-Webb’s Dale Francis Jr.

After falling behind 2-0 in the top of the first inning, App State (5-5) chased Gardner-Webb (6-6) starter, Jace Presley, before he had recorded an out in the bottom of the frame. App State grabbed the lead, pushing across runs on a John Kramer hit by pitch with the bases loaded (that ended Presley’s outing), followed by a walk to Kameron Miller to push in a second run. Miller walked four times in the contest after not drawing a single walk his freshman season.

Later in the inning, Braxton Church lifted a sac fly to put the Mountaineers ahead, 3-2. App State expanded its advantage to 7-3 at the end of four innings of play, highlighted by a Dillon Moquin RBI double in the third and a Church RBI double in the fourth.

After Marks gave up three runs over his first two innings, he bounced back to put up a pair of zeros in the third and fourth. The right-hander retired seven straight and one point and finished his outing with a season-high eight strikeouts. The outing was highlighted by an immaculate inning in the fourth, where he picked up two swinging strikeouts and a looking strikeout on four foul balls, three called strikes and two swinging strikes.

Gardner-Webb then broke through with 12 runs between the fifth and seventh innings, with Francis homering in all three frames (he also homered in the first). The redshirt-senior hit a two-run homer in the fifth, a three-run dinger in the sixth and a grand slam in a six-run seventh inning to push the Runnin’ Bulldogs lead to 15-8. He becomes the first player in Division I baseball this season to hit four home runs in a contest.

App State battled back with a six-spot of their own in the home seventh. The Black and Gold sent 12 men to the plate in the inning and worked four walks and got hit by three pitches, while Tyler Lichtenberger accounted for both hits in the inning including a two-run single to pull the Mountaineers to within a run.

Cody Little gave the Mountaineers some stability out of the bullpen, tossing the final 2.2 innings and escaping a bases loaded jam in the eighth inning with back-to-back strikeouts, after the Mountaineers intentionally walked Francis to force in a run.

In the bottom of the ninth, App State mounted a two-out rally. Tyler Figueroa walked, and Joseph Zamora singled to right, but Juan Correa grounded out to end the threat.

Church led the App State offense with three hits, while Kramer and Lichtenberger each drove in three runs in the contest. As a team, App State drew 13 walks and was hit by five pitches in the contest.

App State will face Gardner-Webb in the rubber game of the three-game series on Sunday at 1 p.m. at L.P. Frans Stadium in Hickory, N.C.

Watauga rallies late for OT win vs. Mount Tabor, 80-77

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Down by as many as 13 points in the second half, the No. 7 seeded Watauga Pioneers flipped the script down the stretch and roared back to tie the game at 73-73 by the end of regulation, then prevailed in overtime to defeat the No. 10 seeded Mount Tabor Spartans, 80-77.

Watauga’s Cade Keller drives the lane vs. Mount Tabor on Feb. 28. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

For the Pioneer faithful, it was as thrilling a game as a high school basketball contest in the second round of the NCHSAA 4A playoffs can get. Watauga had to overcome a 40-point performance by Virginia Tech football (wide receiver) commit Shamarius Peterkin, a 6-3 point guard who is rumored to also be going to the Hokies to play basketball.

“Really proud of the guys,” said a smiling Watauga head coach Bryson Payne afterward. “They stuck in and played hard all game. There were times when the momentum was going the other way, but we continued to fight. Then we went on a run late.”

A loud and enthusiastic Watauga student section had a ‘Hawaii’ theme on Feb. 28 for the basketball team’s Round 2 matchup with Mount Tabor. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Payne admitted to having few answers for the Spartans’ Peterkin — and being thankful when he fouled out late in the fourth quarter.

“The scorebook will tell you. He (Peterkin) was lighting it up,” said Payne. “And a lot them were tough shots. We tried to make it hard on him to get to the rim, but he just kept getting those threes. He is a phenomenal player. Getting him in foul trouble and off the floor eventually was huge for us because they were going to him every possession. With him off the floor, they were looking for somebody else to help (score) and they really didn’t get it.”

Jackson Love lays it up and in on Feb. 28 vs. Mount Tabor, in Round 2 of the state playoffs. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Meanwhile, Watauga stayed within shouting distance of the lead with 20 combined points from senior guard/forward Josiah Railey and junior combo guard Cade Keller in the third quarter. Complemented by additional scoring inside from junior forward Jace Blocker, Railey and Keller’s third quarter production helped Watauga establish some semblance of momentum, closing the gap to 58-63 to open the final stanza.

In the fourth quarter, Watauga chipped away at the lead, forcing Mount Tabor turnovers and errant shots on defense and limiting the Spartans to just 10 points while Keller, Jackson Love, and Railey combined for 15 points in the period, allowing the Pioneers to knot things up at 73-73 with 2:01 to play.

Watauga forward Jace Blocker (21) muscles up a shot vs. Mount Tabor’s Dorian Moore (5) on Feb. 28. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

When Peterkin fouled out with 36 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter and the game went into overtime, the advantage clearly shifted to the Pioneers.

With the win, Watauga advances to the third round where they will travel to challenge No. 2 seeded West Forsyth (26-3, 14-1), which edged out Mount Tabor to claim the 4A Central Piedmont Conference championship in the regular season.

The Pioneers’ Cade Keller makes an acrobatic move to the basket on Feb. 28, in Watauga’s Round 2 win over Mount Tabor, in overtime, 80-77. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

SCORING SUMMARY

  • MTB – Shamarius Peterkin (40 points)
  • WAT – Josiah Railey (27)
  • WAT – Cade Keller (25)
  • WAT – Jackson Love (16)
  • MTB – Will Koonin (15)
  • WAT – Maddox Greene (9)
  • MTB – Dorian Moore (9)
  • MTB – Jayden Smith-Muhfooth (7)
  • MTB – Aidan O’Gara (6)
  • WAT – Jace Blocker (3)

OTHER ROUND 2 MEN’S GAMES OF LOCAL INTEREST

  • 4A WEST – No. 2 West Forsyth 54, No. 18 South Caldwell 47
  • 4A WEST – No. 13 Chambers 65, No. 4 McDowell 58
  • 3A WEST – No. 11 Ben L. Smith 79, No. 6 A.C. Reynolds 61

 

 

Watauga holds off Hough in Round 2, 66-56

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Visiting Hough High School women’s basketball came roaring back from a big first quarter deficit to tie the game before halftime, but host Watauga built on a 2-point, buzzer-beater lead at intermission — and held on in the second half to take a 66-56 win in front of a standing room only crowd in Lentz Eggers Gym on Feb. 28.

With a Hawaiian theme for their attire on Feb. 28, Watauga’s student section gave boistrous, enthusiastic support for the Pioneers. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

With the win, the No. 3-seeded Pioneers advance to the third round of the state 4A playoffs and will host No. 6 Northern Guilford on Tuesday, March 4. Watauga defeated the Nighthawks, 61-41, in a non-conference contest on the road, in Greensboro, but Northern Guilford grew into the season and finished No. 1 in the highly competitive, 4A Metro Conference and into the state playoffs with a 20-7 overall record, 12-4 in conference play.

Against Hough, Pioneer senior Kate Sears scored 12 of her game-high 33 points in just the first quarter, helping Watauga get off to a fast start, complimented by dramatic 3-pointers off the hands of sophomore Blair Haines and senior Julie Matheson. The Pioneers took a 20-13 advantage into the second quarter.

Kate Sears battles to the basket on Feb. 28 vs. Hough in Round 2 of the 4A state playoffs. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Hough recovered from the slow start, however, and tied the game at 24-24 with a little more than four minutes remaining in the first half, propelled by a deadly outside shooting performance from senior point guard Chloe Galombeck and the strong inside play of junior guard Kate Breault and sophomore guard Ka’Leiya Jones, the trio combining for 14 of the Huskies’ 19 total points in the second quarter, briefly taking the lead before Watauga’s Matheson buried a 3-pointer from the left corner, the half-ending buzzer going off as the ball arched through the air. The timely shot brought a roar from the crowd, giving the Pioneers a tenuous, 34-32 lead and their fans something to think about during the break.

“Hough is a really good team,” said Watauga head coach Bill Torgerson after the game. “The score (in Hough’s schedule) that really got our attention was they lost to Mallard Creek, 64-60… To have played Mallard Creek that tough alerted us that Hough would have a really good team. They have a bunch of shooters and they do a really nice job of driving and getting it to them. We were in a little bit of trouble, at least in the first half.”

Ultimately, said Torgerson, his team hung in there, executed and was able to pull away.

Early on, during the Huskies’ comeback rally, Torgerson admitted that Hough was taking advantage of the Pioneers’ defensive scheme.

“We had to make some changes, which helped, and then we started getting some good shots, including Julie Matheson’s buzzer beater 3-pointer at halftime,” said the Pioneers’ second year head coach. “They were doing a good job of cutting on the back side… but our vision got better as the game went along.”

Blair Haines attracts a crowd during Watauga’s 66-56 win over Hough in Round 2 of the state playoffs. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Torgerson credited the chemistry between Sears and Kaitlyn Darner at the top of the key and some smart defensive stops by forward Chloe Wilson coming off the bench as major contributors to Watauga’s ability to extend the lead in the second half.

In Round 3, Watauga will meet a Northern Guilford team that romped past Rocky River in the first round, 48-31, then held off Charlotte Catholic, 65-57, in the second round.

SCORING SUMMARY

  • WAT – Kate Sears (33 points)
  • WAT – Julie Matheson (12)
  • WAT – Blair Haines (12)
  • WAT – Izzy Torgerson (6)
  • WAT – Chloe Wilson (2)
  • WAT – Kaitlyn Darner (1)
  • HGH – Sophia Zoerb (17)
  • HGH – Chloe Galombeck (15)
  • HGH – Kate Breault (10)
  • HGH – Jacquelyn Jakubecy (6)
  • HGH – Ka’Leiya Jones (6)

Watauga outlasts East Meck in Round 1, 56-42

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — It may have been seen as a minor play in the overall result, but when Watauga forward Landon Smith received a pass in the left corner and raced down the baseline to deliver a resounding slam dunk with only a couple of minutes left in the game, it put an exclamation point on the Pioneers’ 56-42 win over East Mecklenburg in Round 1 of the 4A state playoffs.

Watauga’s Josiah Railey, Cade Keller and Maddox Greene were playing “keep away” just inside the half-court line, with the desperate Eagles pressing, trying to get the ball back. Suddenly, the ball was passed to an open Smith and the senior punctuated the opportunity made possible by Watauga’s team strategy.


The Sequence

Photographic images by Jared Everett for High Country Sports

Landon Smith slams home a dunk in the final minutes of Watauga’s Round 1 win over East Meck in the 4A state playoffs. All photographic images in the sequence by Jared Everett for High Country Sports

Whenever high school teams from urban areas who placed down in their league standings meet even the top teams from some of the more rural conferences in the state playoffs, seeding upsets may occur. That may have been the fear of No. 7-seeded Watauga fans on Feb. 25, but the Pioneers held off the No. 26-seeded Eagles of East Mecklenburg to advance to Round 2 of the NCHSAA 4A West bracket. On Feb. 28, Watauga will host No. 10 Mount Tabor, a 69-55 victor vs. No. 23 Grimsley.

East Meck finished No. 4 in a very strong Charlotte area conference, the 4A Southwestern Conference, behind Independence, Charlotte Catholic and Butler, but finished 15-11 overall and 7-5 in conference.

“East Meck finished well with some of their players out with injuries,” said Watauga head coach Bryson Payne after the game. “So we really didn’t know what team we were going to be facing.”

Watauga senior Maddox Greene directs the Pioneer offense on Feb. 25, in Round 1 of the state playoffs vs. East Meck. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

What Payne and the Pioneers did know is that like a lot of Charlotte area teams they like to run up-tempo, pushing the ball in transition. While Watauga also likes to run, part of the strategy against the Eagles, Payne explained, was to slow things down a bit.

Combined with a strong defensive effort, Watauga hit East Meck from both the inside and outside. Junior forward Jace Blocker and junior guard Cade Keller shared game-high scoring honors with 17 points each. Keller managed it with a lot of Eagles seemingly glued to his every move. As the Pioneers’ leading scorer, it was obvious East Meck came into the game seeking to blanket Keller.

A large and robust student section helped along the Pioneers in their Round 1 win over East Meck. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

The attention drawn by Keller on the perimeter, though, created some of the opportunities exploited by Blocker in the paint as well as by seniors Josiah Railey (9 points) and Maddox Greene (6).

Watauga only trailed in this game early in the first period, finishing the opening stanza with a tenuous, 13-11 advantage. They built on their lead to 30-24 at intermission, then to 44-33 to begin the final period. But against a talented and athletic East Meck team, no lead seemed “safe” until the final minutes, even seconds.

The Eagles’ offense was centered around guard Ahmari Hicks (16 points) and Jordan Buzzard (8).

Watauga forward Jace Blocker floats one to the basket on Feb. 25, vs. East Meck in the first round of the state playoffs. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

SCORING SUMMARY

  • WAT – Cade Keller (17 points)
  • WAT – Jace Blocker (17)
  • WAT – Josiah Railey (9)
  • WAT – Maddox Greene (6)
  • WAT – Landon Smith (5)
  • WAT – Brady Lindenmuth (2)
  • EM – Ahmari Hicks (16)
  • EM – Jordan Buzzard (8)
  • EM – Nixon Wright (6)
  • EM – James McIver (6)
  • EM – Braylan Caldwell (5)
  • EM – Vance Johnson (1)

Round 1, 4A West Bracket Results

BOLD – Seeding Upsets

  • No. 1 Lake Norman 89, No. 32 Cuthbertson 74
  • No. 17 Hopewell 53, No. 16 Charlotte Catholic 52
  • No. 25 Reagan 69, No. 8 Northern Guilford 57
  • No. 9 Myers Park 74, No. 24 Butler 65
  • No. 5 Independence 54, No. 28 Palisades 34
  • No. 12 Mooresville 61, No. 21 Ardrey Kell 50
  • No. 13 Chambers 73, No. 20 Hickory Ridge 72
  • No. 4 McDowell 64, No. 29 Hough 59
  • No. 3 North Mecklenburg 68, No. 30 Mallard Creek 51
  • No. 14 Davie 69, No. 19 South Mecklenburg 66
  • No. 6 Weddington 68, No. 27 Cox Mill 55
  • No. 11 East Forsyth 86, No. 22 Olympic 60
  • No. 7 Watauga 56, No. 26 East Mecklenburg 42
  • No. 10 Mount Tabor 69, No. 23 Grimsley 55
  • No. 18 South Caldwell 77, No. 15 Southwest Guilford 75
  • No. 2 West Forsyth 77, No. 31 Marvin Ridge 70

In a romp, Watauga cruises by T.C. Roberson, 74-37 to advance

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Visiting T.C. Roberson’s women’s basketball team could have been forgiven had they broken out umbrellas in Lentz Eggers Gym on Feb. 25. Early and often, it started raining Watauga “threes” in the first round of the NCHSAA 4A Basketball Playoffs. Behind a dozen 3-pointers from six different Pioneer players and disruptive defense, No. 3-seeded Watauga waltzed to a dominating, 74-37 win over the Rams.

With the victory, Watauga advances to the second round on Friday, Feb. 28, hosting No. 19 Hough (Cornelius, N.C.), which got past No. 14-seeded Weddington, 48-43.

Hough (20-7 overall, 10-4 in the 3A/4A Queen City Conference), placed third in a strong Charlotte area conference behind North Mecklenburg (24-3, 13-1) and Mallard Creek (25-3, 13-1).

Watauga’s big lead over TC Roberson in the first round of the state playoffs allowed elevated JV players like Presli Wood (11) to get valuable court time and contribute. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

By any measure, Watauga’s performance vs. T.C. Roberson was a rout from the get-go. With senior guard Kate Sears ripping the nets for 22 points in the first quarter alone, the Pioneers jumped out to a 32-11 lead after just the opening period. Sears, per usual, tallied a game-high 32 points (15 points from behind the arc) but did not play large chunks of the second half. By intermission, with the lead extended to 51-19, many among the packed crowd of onlookers started hoping for a 40-point lead so the “mercy rule” would be triggered.

Sophomore guard Blair Haines sizes up a 3-pointer in the first round of the state playoffs vs. TC Roberson. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

They got their wish only a couple of minutes past halftime. With a running clock, Pioneer head coach Bill Torgerson started deploying a number of non-starters in different combinations with individual or duos of regular rotation players, including Sears. A total of nine Watauga athletes got on the scoreboard, including valuable minutes for elevated junior varsity athletes, Steph Mendez, Presli Wood and Charlie Mattox. Equally important, senior first-year basketball player and forward Chloe Wilson — who continues to steadily improve as she becomes more familiar with her role on the court and the team strategies — played extended minutes before fouling out late in the fourth quarter.

T.C. Roberson got reasonably good offensive production from freshman forward Ryleigh Owen (9 points) and senior guard Kylie Carrington (15), but little else from the rest of the Rams.

SCORING SUMMARY

  • WAT – Kate Sears (32 points)
  • WAT – Julie Matheson (17)
  • WAT – Kaitlyn Darner (6)
  • WAT – Steph Mendez (5)
  • WAT – Blair Haines (5)
  • WAT – Izzy Torgerson (3)
  • WAT – Presli Wood (3)
  • WAT – Charlie Mattox (2)
  • WAT – Chloe Wilson (1)
  • ROB – Kylie Carrington (15)
  • ROB – Ryleigh Owen (9)
  • ROB – Ellie Morgan (5)
  • ROB – Skylar Gribben (4)
  • ROB – Addison Tissot (3)
  • ROB – Olivia DeMoss (1)

FIRST ROUND SCORES, NCHSAA 4A WEST BRACKET

BOLD – Seeding Upsets

  • No. 1 McDowell 57, No. 32 Mount Tabor 30
  • No. 16 Alexander Central 63, No. 17 Porter Ridge 56
  • No. 8 South Mecklenburg 78, No. 25 Reagan 50
  • No. 9 Davie 81, No. 24 Asheville 39
  • No. 5 Marvin Ridge 58, No. 28 Southwest Guilford 46
  • No. 12 Grimsley 55, No. 21 Ardrey Kell 41
  • No. 13 Hickory 85, No. 20 Ragsdale 51
  • No. 4 Mallard Creek 64, No. 29 Page 21
  • No. 3 Watauga 74, No. 30 TC Roberson 37
  • No. 19 Hough 48, No. 14 Weddington 43
  • No. 6 Northern Guilford 48, No. 27 Rocky River 31
  • No. 22 Charlotte Catholic 77, No. 11 South Caldwell 57
  • No. 7 Butler 52, No. 26 Myers Park 39
  • No. 10 North Mecklenburg 71, No. 23 Southeast Guilford 32
  • No. 18 Northwest Guilford 41, East Forsyth 31
  • No. 2 Lake Norman 85, No. 31 Cox Mill 40

Watauga WSOC: Photos from St. Stephens, JV and Varsity

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By David Rogers. HICKORY, N.C. — With hardly any time on the practice field, the Watauga women’s soccer teams made a road trip to Hickory on Feb. 24, to take on St. Stephens in non-conference action. While the varsity lost a tight one, 1-0, in the nightcap, the shorthanded JVs rallied from a 2-0 deficit in the first half to “rain goals” in the second, winning 6-3.

Since these were as much non-conference exhibitions as anything, we will dispense with the play by play and go straight to some photos, from both games. Rosters have not yet been added to MaxPreps, so we will go without player IDs on this go-round. All photographic images by David Rogers for High Country Sports.

JUNIOR VARSITY

VARSITY

Brackets set for 2025 NCHSAA Men’s & Women’s Basketball Playoffs

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — It will be another first round doubleheader for Watauga’s men’s and women’s basketball teams on Tuesday, Feb. 25. Coming off their championship performance in the Northwestern Conference tournament on Feb. 21, the Pioneer women were awarded the No. 3 seed in the NCHSAA 4A West Bracket and will face No. 30 seeded T C Roberson, of Asheville.

The Watauga men’s team, which finished as the NWC conference tourney runner-up in losing to Freedom, received the No. 7 seed in the 4A West Bracket and will host East Mecklenburg.

In other first round notes:

  • 4A West, WOMEN – McDowell (Marion) received the No. 1 seed and will host No. 32 Mt. Tabor.
  • 4A West, WOMEN – Alexander Central is the No. 16 seed an will host No. 17 Porter Ridge
  • 4A West, WOMEN – Like Watauga, South Caldwell is in the lower half of the bracket and seeded, No. 11, to host No. 22 Charlotte Catholic.
  • 4A West, WOMEN – The No. 2 seed is Lake Norman, hosting No. 31, Cox Mill.
  • 4A West. MEN – Seeded No. 18, South Caldwell is the only other Northwestern Conference team to make the playoffs on the men’s side. They will travel to No. 15 Southwest Guilford.
  • 3A West, MEN – Freedom received the No. 7 seed and will host No. 26 Northwest Cabarrus.
  • 3A West, WOMEN – Ashe County received the No. 29 seed and will travel to No. 4 A C Reynolds.
  • 3A West, WOMEN – No. 21 Hibriten will play a first round game, traveling to No. 12, East Lincoln.
  • 1A West, MEN – No. 23 Avery County travels to No. 10 South Stanly
  • 1A West, WOMEN – No. 13 Avery County will host No. 20 Andrews

The tipoff times have not been announced.

The full 4A Women’s Bracket can be reached by clicking HERE.

The full 4A Men’s Bracket can be reached by clicking HERE.

Freedom upsets Watauga, 79-75, to capture conference tournament title

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By David Rogers. WEST JEFFERSON, N.C. — It is hard to beat a good basketball team three times in a row at any level, especially when the first two contests were nailbiters. Freedom proved just that on Feb. 21, rallying from a 10-point deficit in the first half to defeat regular season nemesis Watauga, 79-75, to capture the Northwestern Conference Men’s Basketball Championship Tournament title.

Watauga did a good job of filling out its student section on Feb. 21, for the Northwestern Conference tournament championship games. It was ‘Jersey Night’ for the Pioneer faithful. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

The allure of two big games had the host Ashe County Huskies gymnasium packed to the rafters on this night. What amounted to a Watauga doubleheader featured the Pioneers’ women against South Caldwell, the only Northwestern Conference rival to put a blemish on their league record in 2025, a 93-91 double-overtime defeat on Jan. 31. Watauga proved their point with a 75-48 shellacking of the Hudson quintet and the gym was still abuzz with the Pioneers’ dominance.

For the nightcap final, it was the Watauga men vs. Freedom. At home on Jan. 22, the Pioneers leveraged strong inside performances by forward Jace Blocker and the versatile Josiah Railey to hold off Freedom, 77-70. Then on Feb. 12, Watauga survived a fourth quarter Freedom rally to win in Morganton, 72-69.

Josiah Railey (13) drives to the basket against Freedom in the men’s tournament championship game on Feb. 21. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

At the outset of the tournament championship game, Watauga appeared to take command, finishing the first quarter with a 9-point, 24-15 lead. But with the Patriots’ star forward Amore Connelly scoring 14 of his 17 game points in the second quarter, Freedom shrugged off the early deficit to close within a point at intermission, 39-38.

Momentum shifted in favor of the Patriots in the second half as the Pioneers cooled off in the shooting department. By the end of the third period, Freedom led, 60-55, and foul trouble was having an impact. Stalwart forward Blocker fouled out in the second half while guards Maddox Greene and Eli Bishop finished the contest with four fouls apiece. Watauga nonetheless battled back to a one-point deficit, 65-66, at the 4:11 mark, but the Patriots continually frustrated the Pioneers’ efforts to complete the comeback.

Watauga guard Cade Keller swoops in for a bucket on Feb. 21 vs. Freedom in the championship game of the Northwestern Conference tournament. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

With the regular season Northwestern Conference title under its collective belt, Watauga should still end up with a favorable seed in the upcoming NCHSAA 4A Basketball Championship playoffs, with the first round scheduled for Feb. 25. The seedings and first round pairings are slated to be announced on Sunday, Feb. 23. Freedom will get the top 3A nod from the Northwestern Conference and its seeding prospects will be bolstered by the tourney championship game victory over its 4A rival Watauga.

Selected Team Stats

  • FG% – WAT 42.9% (27-63), FRE 49.2$ (30-61)
  • 3FG% – WAT 31.8% (7-22), FRE 26.1% (6-23)
  • FT% – WAT 58.3% (14-24), FRE 59.1% (13-22)
  • Points in Paint – WAT 38, FRE 42
  • Points off Turnovers – WAT 10, FRE 9
  • Second Chance Points – WAT 8, FRE 9
  • Fast Break Points – WAT 12, FRE 14
  • Bench Points – WAT 9, FRE 12

Key Performers

  • WAT – Cade Keller: 24 points, 4 assists, 2 rebounds
  • WAT – Josiah Railey: 18 points, 13 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 steals, 1 block
  • WAT – Maddox Greene: 10 points, 7 assists, 1 block, 1 steal, 3 rebounds
  • WAT – Jace Blocker: 9 rebounds, 6 points, 2 assists
  • FRE – Kobe Johnson: 18 points, 4 assists, 4 rebounds, 3 steals
  • FRE – Amore Connelly: 17 points, 6 assists, 11 rebounds, 2 blocks, 2 steals
  • FRE – King Johnson: 14 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists
  • FRE – Braxton King: 12 points

BONUS PHOTOS

Watauga sweeps past S. Caldwell to claim tournament title, too

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By David Rogers. WEST JEFFERSON, N.C. — Clamp-down defense and hot-hot-hot shooting are a good recipe for winning basketball games. That’s exactly what Watauga cooked up for South Caldwell in the finals of the Northwestern Conference Women’s Basketball Championships hosted by Ashe County on Feb. 21, running away from the Spartans, 72-48 to claim both the regular season and conference tournament titles in 2025.

BONUS PHOTOS at bottom of article

With a packed-to-the-rafters gym buzzing with anticipation because of what happened the last time these two teams met — a 93-91, double overtime upset win by the Spartans on Watauga’s home court on Jan. 31 — a number of questions were left to be answered about how good this Pioneers team really is. One answer is certain: pretty darn good.

January’s state ‘Player of the Month’ in North Carolina, Kate Sears, got nary a point from beyond the 3-point arc but was a force in the paint. She notched a game-high 31 points against South Caldwell in the Northwestern Conference tournament final. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Besides generating offensive production — putting points on the board — the Pioneers had to find a way to put the brakes on South Caldwell’s dynamic freshman tandem of Ava Anderson and Maggie Wilks, who each tallied 30+ in the Jan. 31 double overtime affair. Head coach Bill Torgerson acknowledged that after the game.

“We chose to match up Anderson with Kate Sears, hoping to frustrate her a bit,” said Torgerson.

Watauga’s Kaitlyn Darner (30) played her final Northwestern Conference tournament game with a highlight reel performance, including 10 points and, defensively, helping limit South Caldwell’s dynamic duo of freshman guards. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

The strategy worked, with the Spartans’ freshman point guard netting only 19 points on the night, well below her season average of close to 25 points per game. South Caldwell was able to shift some of its attack inside, where senior forward Kristin Barber recorded a team-high 20 points, but where Watauga arguably won the night was in defusing Wilks, who posted zero points, no assists, no steals and only two rebounds.

Meanwhile, Watauga was edging ahead even though also seeming to battle the game officials, too. There were controversial calls aplenty, against both sides, but when one of the teams (Watauga) consistently drives the lane or baseline and attacks the basket, fouls by the other side often occur. In this contest, the imbalance in personal fouls went the other way. Watauga was flagged 18 times, South Caldwell picked up only nine fouls.

Blair Haines (21) played a critical role in Watauga’s 72-48 win over South Caldwell on Feb. 21, to claim the tournament title for 2025. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Two Pioneers, seniors Julie Matheson and Chloe Wilson, got into early foul trouble, finishing with four fouls each. Sears racked up three fouls. At one point, the second time a controversial call went against January’s “North Carolina Player of the Month,” one bystander said, “If they are not careful, they are going to make Kate mad and she will take over and score 50!”

By game’s end, Sears was more than halfway there, pouring in a game-high 31 points to go with 10 assists and six rebounds. Almost all of her points came from driving the lane or in-close shooting since she drew blanks from beyond the 3-point arc (0-for-6) and 5-of-6 from the free throw line.

Blair Haines, Watauga’s sophomore guard, might want to send flowers to the left corner of the court, behind the arc. The spot was in love with Haines, allowing her to hit four critical 3-pointers that all but vanquished any Spartan hopes of a comeback.

Kate Sears was all smiles after her Watauga Pioneers won the Northwestern Conference Championship Tournament final, 72-48, vs. South Caldwell and she picked up tourney MVP honors, too. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Now sporting a 19-5 overall record, 10-1 in the Northwestern Conference and brandishing both regular season and conference tournament titles, the Pioneers await the seedings and first round pairings of the NCHSAA 4A Women’s State Championship playoffs. The first round is slated for Tuesday, Feb. 25, with the matchups to be announced Sunday evening (Feb. 23).

Key Team Stats

  • FG% – WAT 58.8% (30-51), SC 29.5% (13-44)
  • 3FG% – WAT 31.8% (7-22), SC 23.5% (4-17)
  • FT% – WAT 83.3% (5-6), SC 78.3% (18-23)
  • Points in the Paint – WAT 40, SC 16
  • Points off Turnovers – WAT 9, SC 4
  • 2nd Chance Points – WAT 2, SC 6
  • Fast Break Points – WAT 4, SC 0
  • Points from Bench – WAT 2, SC 0

Key Performers

  • WAT – Kate Sears: 31 points, 10 assists, 6 rebounds, 3 blocks, 1 steal
  • WAT – Blair Haines: 14 points, 5 rebounds, 1 assist
  • WAT – Kaitlyn Darner: 10 points, 3 steals, 2 assists, 3 rebounds
  • WAT – Julie Matheson: 9 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 blocks
  • SC – Ava Anderson: 19 points, 2 assists, 1 steal, 7 rebounds
  • SC – Kristin Barber: 20 points, 4 assists, 2 rebounds
  • SC – Holland Weisner: 7 points, 5 rebounds

BONUS PHOTOS

All photos by David Rogers for High Country Sports

 

App State falters vs. Marshall, 76-58

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By Katherine Jamtgaard. BOONE, N.C. — The App State women’s basketball team fell short to Marshall, 76-58, on Wednesday.

“I thought Marshall had a great game plan. I thought that we lost the momentum at the end of the first quarter and were plagued with a little bit of foul trouble in that second quarter with senior Eleyana Tafisi on the bench. I thought we just really struggled. Our team just feels a little bit out of sync and out of rhythm right now,” said head coach Alaura Sharp.

“We’ve got to find a way to get together as a group and figure out what do we want out of these last few games,” added Sharp, “because I think that it’s a slippery slope. We have a lot of seniors. I think the end is starting to come. They are feeling a little pressure and it’s just gotten us away from being us. Obviously, as a staff, we’ve got to evaluate and see how we can hit our rhythm. I still believe in our group. I know we can do it. We’ve got a great opportunity to bounce back on Saturday and just try to really work to be us, where we’re playing with joy and we’re playing with energy.”

Senior Zada Porter led the Mountaineers for an eighth game this season, netting 15 points. She drained 7-of-8 from the field on Wednesday and has scored double-figures in 15 games during the 2024-25 campaign. Additionally, Porter dished out a team-high four assists. Junior Rylan Moffitt scored 10 points for the Mountaineers and made a pair of blocks. App State’s top rebounder was senior Emily Carver, who grabbed eight. The Mountaineers netted 20 points off the bench and made four blocks compared to Marshall’s one.

The Mountaineers opened play with a 7-0 run as junior Elena Pericic drained a pair of freebies, Porter made a tip-in, and junior Emily Hege drilled the first 3-point bucket of the game. Layups from Porter and Moffitt kept the Mountaineers ahead, 13-9. Carver contributed a trey, extending App State’s lead to 16-9. Marshall found momentum with a 10-0 run and closed the period with a 19-18 edge, despite a layup from Pericic, who was assisted by Porter. Porter, Pericic, and Moffitt combined for 12 of App State’s points, contributing four apiece.

The Thundering Herd, which controlled the lead for the remainder of play, extended its lead with a 14-0 run as the Mountaineers faced a scoring drought. The Black and Gold’s drought was broken by a freebie from freshman Hekla Nökkvadóttir. Moffitt netted four of App State’s seven points and made both of her blocks during the second period.

Early in the third quarter, Pericic made a layup, Porter landed a jumper, and Tafisi made a fastbreak layup to chip into Marshall’s lead (46-31). Carver, who combined with Porter for nine of App State’s points in the period, made a pair of layups for the Mountaineers. She also grabbed four of her eight rebounds in the quarter. Despite a Hege trey and a three-point play from Porter, Marshall closed the quarter with a 62-41 advantage.

In the fourth quarter, Porter made a layup to chip into Marshall’s lead. The Mountaineers found momentum with a 10-0 run that featured jumpers from Moffitt and Hege, a pair of freebies from Neira, and layups from Neira and Porter. The Herd answered with a run of its own to extend the deficit to 74-53. With 1:28 left in the period, senior Asjah Inniss drained the Mountaineers’ sole trey of the quarter. Despite a final jumper from junior Seneya Martinez and App State outscoring Marshall, 17-14 in the quarter, the Mountaineers fell short 76-58.

Up Next

The Mountaineers will close their 2024-25 home slate with a 3:30 p.m. Alumni Day clash against James Madison on Saturday. The game against the Dukes is part of a doubleheader with the men’s program, which will host Marshall at 1 p.m. Fans are encouraged to come early for the men’s game and stay late for the women’s game. One ticket will get fans into both games and fans can claim BOGO tickets when they use the promo code MOUNTAINSTRONG. App State faculty and staff will receive free admission when they show their App Cards.