By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — What do Maggie Cheves, Kate Sears, Josiah Railey, David Gragg, Bill Torgerson and Bryson Payne have in common?
The first three were named Northwestern Conference “Player (or Swimmer) of the Year” in their respective sports, Swimming, Women’s Basketball, and Men’s Basketball. The final three were named “Coach of the Year” in those same sports, respectively.
The conference released its all-conference nods earlier this week and Watauga High School was well-represented.
FILE PHOTO. Michael Makdad dives into the pool at the start of the Men’s 200 IM, which he won during the Northwestern Conference league championship meet. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
2024/2025 NORTHWESTERN ЗA/4A ALL CONFERENCE – SWIMMING
Women’s Champion: Watauga
Women’s Swimmer of the Year: Maggie Cheves – Watauga
Women’s Coach of the Year: David Gragg – Watauga
Men’s Champion: South Caldwell
Men’s Swimmer of the Year: Owen Griffith – South Caldwell
Men’s Coach of the Coach: Maura Schaffer Greer – South Caldwell
All-Conference Women
Lola Herring – Watauga
MK Riddle – Watauga
Athena Elliott – Watauga
Tessa Buchanan – Watauga
Hannah Wasson – South Caldwell
Kyra Westerfield – South Caldwell
Peyton Felts – South Caldwell
Chloe Bolick – South Caldwell
Maggie Cheves – Watauga
Ama Higgs – Hibritren
Addie Wilson – Watauga
Chessy Martin – Watauga
Addy Connor – Hibriten
Kaylee Moore – South Caldwell
Acacia Felmlee – Hibriten
Reese Sturgill – Alexander
Chloe Penley – Hibriten
All-Conference Men
Owen Griffin – South Caldwell
Mason Hubbard – South Caldwell
Max Clark – South Caldwell
Nathan Hall – South Caldwell
Sean Causby – Freedom
Braden Cullen – Freedom
Nicholas Chiota – Freedom
Nate Carswell – Freedom
Nathan Mull – Hibriten
Stacy Eggers – Watauga
Michael Makdad – Watauga
Gilbert Lanson – Watauga
Silas Powell – Watauga
Harris Inman – South Caldwell
JP Andrews – Hibriten
Titus Felmlee – Hibriten
Justin Schlageter – Hibriten
Ethan Hass – South Caldwell
Brendan Rothwell – South Caldwell
Women’s Team ScoresÂ
Watauga 385 points
South Caldwell 245
Hibriten 238
Alexander Central 139
Freedom 78
Ashe County 28
Men’s Team Scores
South Caldwell 272 points
Watauga 248
Hibriten 217
Freedom 198
Alexander Central 164.5
Ashe County 3.5
2024/2025 NORTHWESTERN ЗA/4A ALL CONFERENCE – WRESTLING
Regular Season Champion: South Caldwell
Lower Weight Wrestler of the Year: Bridger Fairchild (Ashe County)
Upper Weight Wrestler of the Year: Luke Osborne (Ashe County)
Tournament Champion: South Caldwell
Tournament Most Outstanding Wrestler: Kaleb Flores-Martin (South Caldwell)
All-Conference Selections
Ryland Walker (South Caldwell)
Xander Vue (Freedom)
Brayden Reid (Hibriten)
Landen Wilson (Ashe County)
Marshall Brown (Ashe County)
Logan Rudisill (South Caldwell)
Bridger Fairchild (Ashe County)
Mason Yount (South Caldwell)
Kaleb Pearson (Freedom)
Iziah Ayers (Alexander Central)
Kaleb Flores-Martin (South Caldwell)
Gabe Smith (Ashe County)
Mason Hollar (South Caldwell)
Connor Walley (Alexander Central)
Luke Osborne (Ashe County)
Camden Brock (Watauga)
Coy Greer (Watauga)
Coan Suttles (South Caldwell)
Noah Koenig (Hibriten)
Alex Engle (South Caldwell)
Mikey Portante (Watauga)
Mario Quivera (South Caldwell)
Aidan Plemons (Watauga)
Alan Vicente Perez (Freedom)
Ashton Woodruff (Hibriten)
Ben Bare (Ashe County)
Cade Hartis (Alexander Central)
Trenton Stevens (Hibriten)
Liam Perry (Watauga)
Carson Smith (Watauga)
Landon Baker (Hibriten)
Avin Crawford (Hibriten)
FILE PHOTO. Watauga senior guard Julie Matheson (1) looks to drive baseline at Lake Norman on March 7. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
2024/2025 NORTHWESTERN ЗA/4A ALL CONFERENCE – WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
2024-25 Women’s Basketball All Conference Champions: Watauga
Player of the Year: Kate Sears – Watauga
Coach of the Year: Bill Torgerson – Watauga
All Conference Selections
Kate Sears – Watauga
Julie Matheson – Watauga
Kaitlyn Darner – Watauga
Blair Haines – Watauga
Jeff Parham – South Caldwell
Ava Anderson – South Caldwell
Kristin Barber – South Caldwell
Peyton Caldwell – Freedom
Haven Gladden – Freedom
Meredith Wile – Alexander
Aamori Patterson – Hibriten
Abby Sheets – Ashe Co
Honorable Mention
Chloe Wilson – Watauga
Izzy Torgerson – Watauga
Maggie Wilks – South Caldwell
Holland Weisner -S Caldwell
Kaitlyn Hagmann – Freedom
Malayah Adams – Alexander
Addison Jack – Alexander
Karlee Starnes – Hibriten
Zoe Rector – Hibriten
Ally Greer – Ashe Co
Abby Eller – Ashe Co
FILE PHOTO. Jace Blocker finishes off a monster dunk during the Feb. 14, 2025, men’s basketball game between Watauga and Ashe County. Photo by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
2024/2025 NORTHWESTERN ЗA/4A ALL CONFERENCE – MEN’S BASKETBALL
2025 Men’s Basketball All Conference Champions: Watauga and South Caldwell
Player of the Year: Josiah Railey – Watauga
Player of the Year: Jay’on Connor – Alexander
Coach of the Year: Bryson Payne – Watauga
All Conference Selections
Cade Keller – Watauga
Jace Blocker – Watauga
Maddox Greene – Watauga
Josiah Railey – Watauga
Tyler Cline – S Caldwell
Connor Setzer – S Caldwell
Caleb Greene – S Caldwell
Amore Connelly – Freedom
King Johnson – Freedom
Jay’on Connor – Alexander
Bryce Peters – Ashe Co
Rob Beasley – Hibriten
Honorable Mention
Jackson Love – Watauga
Lawson Wilkes – S Caldwell
Carter Anderson -S Caldwell
Kobe Johnson – Freedom
Braxton King – Freedom
Jaheim Redmond – Alexander
Cole Treva – Ashe Co
Christian Reynolds – Hibriten
Julius Martin – Hibriten
By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Sportswriters usually wait until someone has been tested in college before describing an athlete as a “generational talent.” Perhaps it is premature, but Watauga High School women’s basketball senior Kate Sears could well be the deserving exception.
Even if the defender is a bigger athlete, Kate Sears finds a way to get by and to the basket. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
CONSIDER:
It was the ultimate compliment on March 7, 2025, in what became Sears’ final high school game, when Lake Norman double- and triple-teamed her from start to finish in the NCHSAA 4A West semifinals. Holding the Watauga point guard to “just” 18 points (well below her season average of nearly 28 points per game) allowed the No. 2-seeded Wildcats to move on to the 4A West bracket final against No. 1 McDowell and potentially winning a state championship.
Sears is the only player in 2025 to be voted All State by the North Carolina Basketball Coaches Association for three consecutive years (2025 balloting has not yet been completed or announced). She was voted 1st Team All State in 2024, her junior season. She was voted 2nd Team All State in 2022 and 2023, her freshman and sophomore seasons.
Sears was voted District 11’s “Player of the Year” in her freshman, sophomore and junior seasons. Will her senior season follow?
She was named 3A/4A Northwestern Conference “Player of the Year” AND the conference tournament’s “MVP” for each of those first three seasons.
Sears’ growth and impact is reflected in Watauga’s team accomplishments:
Four consecutive Northwestern Conference regular season championships
Four consecutive Northwestern Conference tournament championships
Finishes in the NCHSAA 4A Women’s Basketball Championship playoffs:
Freshman year – Sweet 16
Sophomore year – Elite 8
Junior year – Final Four
Senior year – Elite 8
Evidence of Sears’ basketball skills surface in the numbers. Without getting into the specifics, it is remarkable that Sears leads Watauga in every statistical category maintained by MaxPreps (scoring, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks, as well field goal percentage and 3-point field goal percentage).
Kate Sears is a disruptive force on defense, too. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
According to MaxPreps, Sears is among the Top 20 players nationally in assists per game (No. 2), double-doubles (No. 19) and free throws made (No. 14).
Also according to MaxPreps, Sears ranks in the Top 25 of eight statistical categories in all of North Carolina, including assists per game (No. 1), double-doubles (No. 2), free throws made (No. 2), charges taken per game (No. 8), points per game (No. 8), rebounds per game (No. 17), field goals made (No. 17), and 3-pointers made (No. 24).
In the NCHSAA 4A West division, which includes 54 competing large schools, Sears’ dominance is even more commanding, including rebounds per game (No. 1), free throws made (No. 1), assists per game (No. 1), charges taken per game (No. 1), double-doubles (No. 1), points per game (No. 2), field goals made (No. 4), and 3-pointers made (No. 6).
In the 6-team Northwestern Conference, the Pioneer senior is No. 1 in points per game, rebounds per game, field goals made, free throws made, assists per game, blocks per game, charges taken per game and double-doubles. She is No. 2 in 3-pointers made and steals per game.
Sometimes Kate Sears attacks the basket vs. fierce opposition. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
MaxPreps doesn’t publish records for players recording triple-doubles, but Sears has recorded 12 triple-doubles in the 2024-2025 season. Notable performances include:
39 points, 17 rebounds, 13 assists vs. East Lincoln (Dec. 14)
22 points, 20 rebounds, 10 assists vs. North Wilkes (Dec. 17)
50 points, 16 rebounds, 11 assists vs. South Caldwell (Jan. 31)
43 points, 21 rebounds, 15 assists vs. Freedom (Feb. 12)
Since watching Sears embarrass older middle school opponents — as a 6th-grader at Blowing Rock School — our interest in what she might do at the next level has grown with each passing season, level after level.
Recently, Sears announced her acceptance of a scholarship offer to play NCAA Division I women’s basketball at Virginia Tech. As Watauga was preparing to go deeper into the playoffs last week, High Country Sports sat down with Sears for a one-on-one conversation about her basketball career and life plans.
Kate Sears is among the most unselfish of players, always looking to get her teammates the ball. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
High Country Sports: What is it that drives your passion and performance in basketball?
Kate Sears: I am super competitive and always have been, so it is natural to gravitate toward sports, especially team sports, working together with a group of people who are like minded and want to achieve similar goals. That helps motivate me to try and reach my full potential. I work really hard because I don’t want to let my teammates down. They work hard and I want to hold up my end of the bargain.
High Country Sports: While your ability to take over a game is impressive, you may be best known and appreciated for your unselfish play, getting your teammates involved.
Kate Sears: I am going to do whatever it takes to win. That might be different every game, depending on the matchups. I am going to do my best, whether that is rebounding or finding an open teammate for them to score, because an opponent may be keying on me. I believe in my teammates. They work hard in practice, taking a lot of shots to be ready to hit them in a game. I trust their work ethic.
Among the best ball-handlers of all high school women’s basketball players. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
High Country Sports: In an earlier interview a few years ago, you credited your older brother, Jake, for being a significant influence on your early development as a basketball player. Can you expand on that?
Kate Sears: Growing up, I was always super competitive and playing outside with my older brother, Jake. Well, I always wanted to beat him. I try to take that same kind of competitiveness out onto the court against other people — almost making it like I am trying to play against my brother and I want to beat him. He has been an important influence, watching him grow up and go on to play for the Watauga men’s team and getting to go to his games. As the younger sister, I have always been excited for my moment to be out there and playing. Jake has always been so supportive and he still comes to my games here at Watauga.
High Country Sports: We also see your mother and father at every game, home and away. What can you tell us about their influence on your basketball career?
Kate Sears: I wouldn’t be in this position if it weren’t for my mother and father. Not only have they been super supportive in taking me off the mountain to play with the travel teams but every day one of them is coming after practice to rebound for me. They have always been supportive of the goals I have and are going to help with whatever it takes to reach those goals.
As a freshman, Kate Sears takes aim on a free throw. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
High Country Sports: You mention travel ball… how is that different than playing for your high school team?
Kate Sears: Travel ball is a whole different world than high school, in good ways and ways that maybe aren’t as good. In travel ball you are coming together with other girls who are really good players and we all have a goal of going on to play NCAA Division I basketball. You don’t practice as much as in high school so you may not develop the same level of chemistry with your teammates. In some respects, it is more pickup basketball. I like high school ball where you are playing with your best friends and you are practicing every day. So you have to make an adjustment to play a different style, but it is something you have to do if you want to play college basketball at a higher level. It is harder to adjust back to travel ball because the speed of the game is usually a lot faster and more physical. It is more similar to how it is going to be in college.
High Country Sports: When you were playing for Blowing Rock School in the sixth grade, then Watauga head coach Laura Barry told us she didn’t want to wait three years to get you on the high school team. You eventually played a couple of years for her then, when she moved on to Davidson College, for your current coach, Bill Torgerson. What can you tell us about the differences?
Kate Sears: Coach Torgerson and Coach Barry are different, but similar, too. Every coach has different philosophies, different things to focus on or not focus on. Torg has been huge in pouring confidence into me. He knows how hard I work and sees the success I have on the court. So he kind of lets me off that leash a little bit. He trusts me and that boosts my confidence even more. You are not always going to agree on everything with a coach but he has always been really good with the two of us talking through things. Maybe he sees something that I don’t see or I see something he doesn’t see. He has allowed me to reach out to him about those things. We have mature conversations about what is best for the team.
High Country Sports: What is it about playing for your high school team that you really treasure?
Kate Sears: I get to play with my best friends. I have played with Julie Matheson and Kaitlyn Darner since second and third grade, so we know each other’s tendencies very well. That helps with our chemistry and played well together. To reach our full potential, a lot of that has to do with the chemistry we have on and off the court.
High Country Sports: Fellow senior Chloe Wilson has sort of blossomed in real time this year after not having played organized basketball, previously. What have you seen in her development and contributions?
Kate Sears: Chloe is a huge piece of our success this year, just in her development as a player and teammate. When summer and fall workouts started, it was a lot for her because she had never played organized basketball and there was a lot to learn all at once. She has been great, really open to Coach Torgerson coaching her and open to her teammates giving her advice. She frequently asks for extra reps after practice and asks for help on certain things. She is getting more comfortable and getting more time on the court. That is huge for us because there are things she can do that no on else on the team can do. For sure, as the biggest and a very athletic player on the court, she takes some of our opponents’ attention away from me as well as from our other shooters.
Blink, and Kate Sears is by you, driving the baseline. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
High Country Sports: Let’s transition to your decision to accept Virginia Tech’s scholarship offer. What went into that decision?
Kate Sears: I love the coaching staff at Virginia Tech. Head coach Megan Duffy recruited me when she was at Marquette, but that was pretty far away from home. I couldn’t see going to Milwaukee. I am not really a city girl. But when she got the job at Virginia Tech and offered me a scholarship there, it was a huge draw because it was not too far from home. Blacksburg is a really cool place and VT’s support for women’s basketball is unmatched. It was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. As I learned about the women who are there and will be there, it became something I wanted to be a part of.
High Country Sports: What was that recruiting process like? I think you had over 40 scholarship offers, many from Division I, “Power Four” schools.
Kate Sears: Toward the end of my recruiting process, I was considering some schools that are a plane ride away and that would have definitely made it harder for my parents, family and friends. They want to come watch as much as they can. So Virginia Tech became a good fit because they can come watch me play but they won’t be in my backyard. So it was important for me to go somewhere my parents liked as much as I do. Towards the end, the schools I was considering were Clemson, Kansas, Michigan, Princeton, Purdue, Wake Forest… but some of those places I fell in love with other than Virginia Tech involved a plane ride. That was hard for me to think about, as well as for my parents and family.
High Country Sports: Have you thought much about your role on Virginia Tech’s team, playing with other talented players?
Kate Sears: Every team I have been on, I have always had a different role. Even the four years here at Watauga, my role has changed a little bit each season. On a travel team, it may not be ‘Hey Kate, let’s go get a bucket right now.’ Instead, it might be, ‘Let’s get so-and-so the ball because they are on a roll right now. You have that in high school, too, but it is on a different level with travel teams. College will be more like that, too. In college, it will be a big thing to get into their system and learn how me, as a point guard, can play with those other good players. They are all really good Division I basketball players. Depending on what my role will be, I will try to own it and do what I am asked to help our team win.
High Country Sports: A few years ago the NCAA had a great marketing tagline, that the vast majority of college student athletes go pro in something other than sports. Have you thought about potentially playing in the WNBA or what you might like to do after your playing days are over?
Kate Sears: I haven’t thought too much beyond college. I have definitely thought about going into coaching after my playing days are over, largely because of all the coaches I have played for and even those who have recruited me over the years. They have been important influences. So that is something I’d like to share with the next generation, to be a positive influence. We’ll see where life takes me. In college, I plan on studying business and am particularly interested in the business side of things in sports. Whether or not it is coaching, I will probably try and stay in the sports industry. What I have learned throughout the recruiting process is how many jobs there are in sports that have little to do with playing.
A sure bet? Kate Sears is going places with purpose — and competitive drive.
By David Rogers. PENSACOLA, Fla. — Leading the game for almost 25 of the 40 minutes, No. 6 seeded App State men’s basketball nonetheless faded in the end, upset by No. 10 Old Dominion, 61-56.
Myles Tate changes direction at the top of the key vs. Old Dominion on March 7. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
In this game, just when it looked like one of the Sun Belt Conference adversaries would gain separation, the other came clawing back to take the lead, the largest of which for ODU was just five points at the end. The largest lead for App State was 6 points, at the end of the first half, 36-30.
The Mountaineers had a five-point lead with 8:48 remaining, but scored just five points for the rest of the contest. App State missed 10 of 11 shots from the 8:48 mark until the end of the game, allowing Old Dominion (15-19) to go on a 9-0 scoring run. It was a lead they would never relinquish.
App State head coach Dustin Kerns tries to help App State players figure things out late in the game against Old Dominion, March 7, in Round 4 of the Sun Belt Conference tournament. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
By David Rogers. PENSACOLA, Fla. — Down 19 points with 7:29 left in the women’s basketball game vs. Marshall, for App State it was “Carver time.” In the space of three minutes, Mountaineer senior Emily Carver knocked in three, 3-pointers and added an acrobatic layup and a free throw to help shrink the deficit to 10 points before fouling out.
With Carver gone, senior guard Mara Neira picked up the slack with four quick 3-pointers of her own. But the clock was winding down and the Mountaineers were forced to foul in hopes of getting the ball back on Marshall misses at the charity stripe. Unfortunately for the favored High Country athletes, the No. 11-seeded Marshall players made good on their free throws and kept No. 6 App State at a distance to win, 75-66.
The Thundering Herd began to get separation on the scoreboard at the end of the first quarter, then expanded the deficit to nine points (35-26) by intermission. Led by starting guard Aislynn Hayes’ nine points in the third period, Marshall built on the lead to sport a commanding, 14-point advantage at the start of the final period (55-41).
Still, with Carver and Neira doing most of the late scoring, the Mountaineers tried to make it interesting at the end.
In speaking with reporters later, App State head coach Alaura Sharp acknowledged both the opponent as well as the “fight” of her Mountaineers.
“Obviously, I want to give a lot of credit to Marshall. They are rolling right now and playing very well at a high level. It’s amazing what they’ve done all these games in a row,” said Sharp.
“I feel like our team could have thrown in the towel down 19, but that fight, that grit, that stick with it (attitude) shows a lot about the character of our (team). I’ve had a lot of fun coaching this group.” Sharp added.
By David Rogers. HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — The No. 7-seeded Watauga men’s basketball season came to a close on March 7, losing to a very talented No. 3 North Mecklenburg in the Elite 8 round of the NCHSAA 4A Men’s Basketball Championships, 84-48.
A strong inside performance by the Vikings’ Chadlyn Traylor (28 points) along with long range contributions from a quartet of shooters in senior guard Carson Evans (23), junior guard Ashton Pierce (10), sophomore guard Alek Lewandowski (6) and senior guard Greg Murray (6) proved to be too much firepower for the Pioneers on this night. The Vikings Wilson Estwick also contributed seven points from close range.
Cade Keller (10) attracted a lot of defensive attention in Watauga’s Elite 8 matchup with North Mecklenburg on March 7. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
Watauga was buoyed by a large contingent of High Country basketball fans and a large student section, but North Meck jumped out to 37-29 lead by halftime, then piled it on in the second half while using a stifling defense to keep the Pioneers’ usual scorers at bay.
Watauga’s leading scorer, junior combo guard Cade Keller, was limited to 11 points on the night, while senior guard Maddox Greene added 9. Senior guard/forward Josiah Railey scored all of his seven points before intermission.
North Meck extended its record of defeating opponents by 21 or more points to 21 games this season. They will face No. 13 seeded Chambers in the state playoffs’ semifinals and West bracket championship. The Cougars advanced with a 70-63 win over No. 9 Myers Park. Earlier in the week, Myers Park received a bye into the Elite Eight when the NCHSAA 4A West bracket’s No. 1 seed was reportedly disqualified for using an ineligible player.
SCORING SUMMARY
WAT – Cade Keller (11 points)
WAT – Maddox Greene (9)
WAT – Josiah Railey (7)
WAT – Jace Blocker (6)
WAT – Landon Smith (5)
WAT – Jackson Love (5)
WAT – Paul Taylor (3)
WAT – JT Cook (2)
NMK – Chadlyn Traylor (28)
NMK – Carson Evans (23)
NMK – Wilson Estwick (7)
NMK – Ashton Pierce (10)
NMK – Alek Lewandowski (6)
NMK – Greg Murray (6)
NMK – Nick Estell (2)
NMK – Mario Hays, Jr. (2)
BONUS PHOTOS
All photographic images by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
By David Rogers. MOORESVILLE, N.C. — How do you spell R-E-S-P-E-C-T?
A fast start by No. 3 seeded Watauga women’s basketball led to an early, 8-point lead over No. 2 Lake Norman in the Elite 8 round of the NCHSAA 4A Women’s Basketball Championships, but defensive adjustments by the host Wildcats — including respectful double- and triple-teaming of Pioneer point guard Kate Sears — proved to be too much for the High Country’s favorite daughters. Lake Norman took command in the second quarter and cruised to a convincing, 86-66 win and advance to the state playoffs’ Final Four.
With Lake Norman keying on Watauga’s Kate Sears, sophomore guard Blair Haines had more open looks than usual on March 7, contributing to her team-high 25 points in the Elite 8 matchup. Lake Norman prevailed, 86-66. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
Lake Norman will face No. 1 seeded McDowell in the West bracket’s championship match while the 4A East bracket No. 1, Hoggard, will meet No. 2 Wakefield in the other state semifinals encounter.
Against Watauga, Lake Norman’s strategy of double- and at times triple-teaming Sears proved effective. The Pioneers’ other shooters, Blair Haines, Julie Matheson and Izzy Torgerson, did their best to fill the void and keep Watauga within reach through the first half, but ultimately the loss of Sears’ prolific offensive production took its toll.
Sears finished with 18 points, well below her season average, while Haines used five 3-pointers to record a team-high 25 points on the night. Matheson added nine points and Torgerson eight points, including two from long distance.
It was a hard day at the office for Watauga women’s basketball players against the senior-laden and taller Wildcats of Lake Norman, although Izzy Torgerson (5) did find her way to the basket to contribute 8 points in the first half. Here, Lake Norman’s Samantha Shehan defends. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
“We got off to a great start,” said Watauga head coach Bill Torgerson after the game. We got up eight (points) and forced a timeout. We were scoring it well and getting some stops that kept them from getting into the best parts of their press.
“But the defense was what we expected,” added the second-year Pioneer head coach. “They face-guarded Kate and had another player behind her. Every time Kate caught it, they trapped her. Kate did an incredible job of continuing to work to get open and then connect on long passes. Her teammates did a great job executing in breaking to the spots they were supposed to be in. Blair Haines was one the players that really seized the opportunity of all of those double-teams on Kate. I thought she played her best game, shot it well, and her 25 points were obviously a huge part of what kept us in it.”
The Wildcats’ scoring outburst in the second quarter and beyond was led by junior shooting guard Kelsey Rhyne (game-high 29 points) and a pair of Shehan sisters, Samantha (14 points) and Alexis (23 points), both seniors. Rhyne’s scoring included five shots made from behind the 3-point arc.
Watauga senior guard Julie Matheson (1) looks to drive baseline at Lake Norman on March 7. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
For Watauga’s young squad, going up against Lake Norman’s senior laden roster with five athletes 5-10 or taller, including three over 6-0, was a stern test against an athletic team with a distinct height advantage.
“It was great to see how fearless our players were,” said Torgerson. “We didn’t look scared at all. The players were aggressive and made a lot of winning plays. It’s been a heck of run these seniors have given us. Their leadership is incredible, with how coachable they are and the effort and focus they give. Some of the underclassmen talked in the locker room after the game about all the different ways they lead from talking on the floor to creating a family atmosphere.”
Perhaps Watauga’s early energy was fueled by the large crowd of Pioneer supporters turning out for this important game on the road.
“It was another great crowd. Our side was full and I know the players loved it when they came running out for warm ups and were greeted by all of those cheers. The community has seen and appreciates what high character these young women show on the court — in their competitiveness, their perseverance, and their sportsmanship. When the community is rooting for the players, I think the players try to rise to that standard and make the community proud. They’ve done a tremendous job of representing our Watauga community well.”
SCORING SUMMARY
WAT – Blair Haines (25 points)
WAT – Kate Sears (18)
WAT – Julie Matheson (9)
WAT – Izzy Torgerson (8)
WAT – Chloe Wilson (3)
WAT – Kaitlyn Darner (3)
LKN – Kelsey Rhyne (29)
LKN – Alexis Shehan (23)
LKN – Samantha Shehan (14)
LKN – Rayana Minard (9)
LKN – Adason Buoniconti (6)
LKN – Aliya Williams (3)
LKN – Addison Sirianni (2)
BONUS PHOTOS
All photographic images by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
Lake Norman double- and triple-teamed Watauga point guard Kate Sears on March 7, in the Wildcats’ 86-66 win over the Pioneers. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
It was a hard day at the office for Watauga women’s basketball players against the senior-laden and taller Wildcats of Lake Norman, although Izzy Torgerson (5) did find her way to the basket to contribute 8 points in the first half. Here, Lake Norman’s Samantha Shehan defends. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
Watauga senior guard Julie Matheson (1) looks to drive baseline at Lake Norman on March 7. Photographic image by Jared Everett for High Country Sports
By David Rogers. CLEMMONS, N.C. — Trailing by seven points late in the third quarter — in hostile territory — didn’t faze visiting Watauga on March 4. The Pioneers shrugged off the deficit, clamped down defensively and outscored host West Forsyth in the final stanza en route to a thrilling, 62-59, “Sweet 16” NCHSAA 4A Men’s Basketball Championship tournament win.
The No. 7 seeded Pioneers will go on the road again March 7, to Huntersville for an Elite 8 matchup against North Mecklenburg.
Taking care of business
Sometimes it is the little things that make a difference in basketball game outcomes, like making or missing free throws. Combined with a disruptive defensive effort by Watauga that limited the Titans to just 10 points in the fourth quarter, West Forsyth going a combined 2-for-6 from the charity stripe in the final stanza was instead a “gift” for Watauga.
A strong inside game by Watauga forward Jace Blocker kept the Pioneers within striking distance early on, even if trailing. Blocker ended up tying with guard Cade Keller for team-high and game-high scoring honors, with 18 points, but 14 of those points came in the first half when only senior guard Josiah Railey was also consistently finding the hoop. Railey finished with 16 points, 10 of them in the first half.
The Pioneers flipped the game script in the second half. The team’s leading scorer, Keller, was held in check by the Titans before intermission. He only managed two points prior to halftime thanks largely to the defensive attention from West Forsyth on the Pioneers’ high-scoring junior combination guard. Whatever adjustments made by Watauga’s coaching staff when the fans were refilling their popcorn buckets certainly worked, though, because Keller exploded for 16 of his tied-for-game-high 18 points in the third (9 points) and fourth (7) quarters.
Meanwhile, the versatile Railey continued his consistent contributions and junior forward Brady Lindenmuth came off the bench to score five points in the second half, four of them in the critical fourth quarter. Not necessarily known for his accuracy from the free throw line, the big man came through in the clutch, hitting 3-of-5 from the charity stripe in the second half, including 2-of-3 in the final period.
West Forsyth senior small forward Cale Lloyd tied with Watauga’s Keller and Blocker for game-high scoring honors, at 18 points. He nailed four 3-pointers along the way to lead the Titans’ offensive production. Jacari Brim (15 points) and Kamuari Manuel (12) also got into double figures.
Of note, Watauga’s Railey recorded another double-double in the game, with 10 rebounds to go with his 16 points.
Now 21-7, Watauga travels to Huntersville to face a 27-3 North Mecklenburg team that advanced with a convincing, 94-57 win over Weddington. In Round 1, the No. 3 seeded Vikings defeated Mallard Creek, 68-51, and in Round 2 thumped Davie, 90-50.
By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — One of the greatest reasons our culture so enthusiastically promotes young people’s participation in high school athletics are the “life lessons” learned along the way. Learning to adapt to a new set of circumstances could well explain the Watauga’s 74-55 women’s basketball win over Northern Guilford on March 4, in Lentz Eggers Gym.
Country music icon Dolly Parton is credited with saying, “We cannot direct the wind, but we can adjust the sails.” Watauga found the “wind” blowing in the wrong direction in the first quarter, falling behind 16-8 at one point, but some key adjustments allowed the Pioneers to claw back and take a 32-25 lead at intermission. It was an advantage they steadily built on in the second half.
A big student section cheered on Watauga WBB vs. Northern Guilford on March 4. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
In Watauga’s earlier meeting with Northern Guilford on Dec. 21, in Greensboro, Pioneer head coach Bill Torgerson recalled that the Nighthawks’ point guard Leena McField got into early foul trouble and senior shooting guard Cara Trippett sprained an ankle early and hardly played. Both were healthy and available for the rematch with state playoffs implications.
Add an officiating crew that allowed a much more physical game than Watauga was used to seeing, and you had a perplexing set of new circumstances — with a lot on the line if the Pioneers were to advance.
Two of the visiting Nighthawks key offensive threats opened “hot” in the first quarter, McField and senior shooting guard Malena DeLisa each netting a pair of 3-pointers. Meanwhile, the Pioneers were mostly missing from long range and senior point guard Kate Sears stubbornly forced down-the-lane and baseline drives against stiff, physical defensive efforts by Northern Guilford defenders — and they most often resulted in shots gone awry and turnovers.
It was sometimes rough going for Watauga’s Kate Sears (12) as she attacked the basket vs. Northern Guilford on March 4. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
But throughout her playing career, Sears has become a master in making adjustments. As soon as she started opting for short jumpers, the lanes opened up for her drives. She even found the bottom of the net from long range a couple of times in the second half, en route to earning game-high honors with 32 points.
Sears’ success was contagious. Fellow senior guard Julie Matheson also finished in double figures for Watauga, with 18 points, and sophomore Blair Haines added eight more.
The Nighthawks also finished with two players in double figures: McField recorded a team-high 23 points and Trippett added 16.
With the win, No. 3-seeded Watauga (22-5 overall, 10-1 in Northwestern Conference) advances to the Elite 8 in the NCHSAA 4A Women’s Basketball Championship tournament. They will play at No. 2 Lake Norman on Friday, March 7. According to the NCHSAA 4A brackets, tipoff is scheduled for 6 p.m.
Watauga’s Kaitlyn Darner (30) goes up for two vs. Northern Guilford on March 4. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
By Matt Present. BOONE, N.C. — Strong staff-day pitching and the first of two homers from Juan Correa enabled App State Baseball to take a one-run lead into the seventh inning against No. 15 Wake Forest, but the Demon Deacons moved ahead for the first time with a nine-run seventh and posted a 14-6 victory on Tuesday at Smith Stadium.
Igniting a five-RBI day, Correa hit a 411-foot, two-out homer to left with two runners aboard to produce a 3-0 advantage in the third inning. The Mountaineers (6-6) were still ahead 3-2 after six innings, but they trailed 11-4 by the time Correa stepped into the box and recorded his seventh homer of the season on a two-run, opposite-field shot that hit the pole down the right-field line in the eighth.
App State starting pitcher Cal Clark (five outs), Bradley Wilson (four outs) and Zach Lewis (scoreless inning in his season debut) combined to hold Wake Forest (11-3) without a run through four innings.
The Demon Deacons used a solo homer and a two-out RBI double to pull within 3-2 in the fifth before Cody Little, the third pitcher of the frame, took the mound with two aboard. He recorded a swinging strikeout with two runners in scoring position, then ended the next frame by getting a swinging strikeout on a 3-2 pitch with the tying run on second.
Wake Forest opened the seventh inning with four straight walks, including two on 3-2 offerings. The bases-loaded walk that tied the game preceded pinch-hitter Matt Scannell’s two-run double down the line in right.
The Demon Deacons followed a fielder’s choice that ended with an out at the plate by delivering an RBI single for a 6-3 advantage. The margin was still three runs in a two-out, bases-loaded situation when a Wake base runner going toward second beat a long, underhanded flip to the bag after a cleanly fielded grounder. One run scored on that potential inning-ending play, and the Demon Deacons used consecutive two-RBI hits to push the lead to 11-3.
App State made some late noise, cutting into its deficit on Graham Smiley’s 415-foot homer to left in the seventh and Correa’s two-run shot in the eighth, but Wake Forest scored three times in the top of the ninth.
By Jacob Plecker. NEW ORLEANS – App State Men’s Basketball standouts Myles Tate and CJ Huntley each garnered All-Sun Belt honors, the Sun Belt Conference announced Monday. Tate was named All-Sun Belt first team, becoming the fifth Mountaineer in the Dustin Kerns era to receive first-team distinction, while Huntley was named to the second team.
Tate’s first-team honor marks the second consecutive season that App State has had at least one player named to the All-Sun Belt first team. Additionally, two Mountaineers were named all-conference for the second straight year and the third time overall under Kerns (2023-24 and 2020-21). Tate and Huntley are also the 11th and 12th players to earn postseason All-Sun Belt distinctions in the Kerns era.
App State’s two All-Sun Belt honorees were tied for the most in the league.
Whether shooting or making a game-winning pass, Myles Tate seems to come up big every game for the App State Mountaineers. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports
Myles Tate | First Team All-Sun Belt
Tate, who was named to the Preseason All-Sun Belt third team, earned his first career postseason all-conference honor after posting one of the best statistical seasons by an individual in the league this season. Tate finished the regular season by averaging 16.5 points, 5.4 assists, 5.2 rebounds and 1.9 steals per contest. Tate is currently the only player in the country to average at least 16 points, five assists, five rebounds and 1.9 steals a game. He has accounted for 12 20-point games this season, making him one of only two players in the conference with that distinction, along with Cesare Edwards of Georgia State.
The Spartanburg, S.C., native was KenPom’s Player of the Year in the Sun Belt Conference. He finished in the top 15 in the league in scoring (second), assists per game (first), field-goal percentage (12th), free-throw percentage (10th), 3-pointers made per game (T-12th), steals (second) and minutes per game (fourth). Additionally, the senior point guard carries top-50 marks nationally in assists, assists per game and steals.
Tate has scored 496 points this season and has dished out 162 assists. He sits just four points away from becoming the 24th member of the Mountaineers’ single-season 500-point club and currently owns the third-most assists in a season in program history. He is the only Mountaineer in the Sun Belt era with multiple 10-assist games in the same season, doing so against William & Mary (Nov. 24) and Southern Miss (Feb. 5). He also has two double-doubles this season, one with assists (William & Mary on Nov. 24) and one with rebounds (Coastal Carolina on Jan. 13). He is one of just two Sun Belt players to post at least one double-double with both assists and rebounds (Dezayne Mingo, Marshall).
“I am so happy for Myles,” Kerns said. “He has earned this recognition with his play and leadership. He has worked extremely hard, and being named first-team All-SBC is a big deal. Myles Tate is a winner, and this is another accolade that is well-deserved.”
CJ Huntley | Second Team All-Sun Belt
A second-team All-Sun Belt Preseason selection, Huntley earned the first postseason distinction of his five-year career. He has blossomed into a star in his fifth and final year as a Mountaineer, averaging career highs in scoring, 3-point percentage, rebounding and assists. He enters the Sun Belt Tournament in fifth place in the league in scoring at 15.6 points per game and is sixth in rebounding at 7.9 boards per game. He is one of five players in the conference to be in the top five in the league in both scoring and rebounding entering the Sun Belt Tournament.
Huntley posted a career-best nine 20-point games this season, which makes him one of seven players in the conference to boast at least nine 20-point games for the year. He has also recorded a team-best 10 double-doubles for the year, which is the third-highest total in the Sun Belt. He tallied his first career double-double on Jan. 4 against Texas State and recorded a double-double in 10 of his final 16 contests to close the regular season.
After hitting four 3-pointers and grabbing a career-best 15 rebounds against Coastal Carolina on Jan. 8, he became the first player in the country to tally 15 rebounds and four made 3s in the same game. He also became the first Mountaineer since Marshall Phillips in 1998 to post a 20-point, 15-rebound game. Huntley capped off a 20-point, 12-rebound contest against Southern Miss with a buzzer-beating dunk to beat the Golden Eagles on Feb. 5 and matched his career high of 27 points against Marshall on Senior Day.
“CJ has had an incredible season,” Kerns said. “He is among the league leaders in many statistics. I am really proud of all of the hard work CJ has put in, and his hard work has paid off. Being All-SBC is a huge honor, and this is another accolade that adds to his legacy at App State. He has certainly earned this with his consistent play and mindset. I am so happy for CJ.”
App State now turns its attention to the Sun Belt Tournament, which will be played at the Pensacola Bay Center in Pensacola, Fla. App State earned the sixth seed and will play its first game of the tournament on Friday at 8:30 p.m. ET (7:30 p.m. CT). Due to the new tournament format, the Mountaineers will not know their opponent until the conclusion of Thursday’s matchup between No. 7 Texas State and either No. 10 Old Dominion, No. 11 Louisiana or No. 14 ULM at 8:30 p.m. ET (7:30 p.m. CT). All Sun Belt Tournament games will be streamed on ESPN+, with the championship game on March 10 also broadcast nationally on ESPN2.
2024-25 Sun Belt Conference Men’s Basketball Postseason Awards
Joe Gottfried Coach of the Year: Richie Riley, South Alabama
Player of the Year: Tayton Conerway, Troy
Defensive Player of the Year: Obinna Anochili-Killen, Marshall
Newcomer of the Year: Mark Freeman, James Madison
Freshman of the Year: Bryce Lindsay, James Madison
Sixth Man of the Year: Bryce Lindsay, James Madison