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Tate’s early hot hand fuels App State rout of Colgate, 72-50

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By David Rogers. WILIMINGTON, N.C. — A slow start quickly morphed into a flash fire on Nov. 29, with Appalachian State men’s basketball storming to a convincing, 72-50 win over Colgate at Trask Coliseum. It was the first game of the Live Oak Bank Holiday Classic’s second day, with the win leaving the Mountaineers 2-0 for their trip to the coast and 5-2 on the young, 2024-25 season.

After a barrage of 3-point shooting and 50 percent shooting from the field, overall, helped the Raiders dismantle tournament host UNC-Wilmington on Nov. 27, 72-59, App State expected a challenge, particularly from the perimeter. But the Mountaineers were able to limit Colgate’s outside shooting and instead beat them at their own game.

Behind a long distance performance for the ages by senior Myles Tate in the first half. After the first media timeout, the Mountaineers scored 20 consecutive points, including three straight 3-pointers by Tate, to take a 19-point lead, a margin that barely shrank at any time for the rest of the game.

Tate finished the contest shooting 4-of-8 (50 percent) from behind the 3-point arc, accounting for 15 total points on the afternoon. Forward C J Huntley missed on all three of his 3-point attempts but it hardly mattered as he went on to put down a game-high 19 points. Center Jalil Beaubrun was also in double figures for the day’s work, landing 11 points to go with 6 rebounds.

The Raiders have been to the NCAA “March Madness” tourney seven times, including five of the last six years. They were the Patriot League’s regular season champions in 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023, and 2024. They didn’t win the league’s regular season in 2021, but they made up for it by being the conference tourney champions that year. An interesting tidbit: Colgate started its basketball program in 1900-01.

The Mountaineers were not intimidated by the Raiders’ pedigree, to be sure. dominating in five primary categories:

    • Points from turnovers: APP 23, COL 7
    • Points in the paint: APP 36, COL 20
    • Second chance points: APP 11, COL 5
    • Fast break points: APP 12, COL 7
    • Points scored by bench: APP 16, COL 8

The bench points advantage came in spite of the court time being dominated by four Mountaineers each playing more than 30 of the 40 game minutes. That included Tate (33 minutes), Huntley (35 minutes), Jackson Threadgill (35 minutes) and Dior Conners (32 minutes). The fifth starter, Beaubrun, was on the court for 21 minutes. The only other players to get meaningful court time were Luke Wilson (16 minutes) and Anthony Alston (12 minutes). Alston poured in 8 points off the bench while Wilson added four as well as six rebounds.

Next up for the Mountaineers will be the tournament finale against host UNC-Wilmington on Saturday, Nov. 30, with tipoff slated for 3 p.m., following the noon curtain-raiser between Colgate and Sam Houston State.

UNCW salvaged its host weekend by defeating Sam Houston State on Nov. 29, 69-60, after falling to Colgate on the tournament’s first day, 72-59.

 

VIDEO: Blowing Rock’s Colley captures Manchester Road Race title

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By David Rogers. Manchester, Conn. — More than 12,000 runners braved the cold and rain on Nov. 28, in the 88th year of the Manchester Road Race — and Blowing Rock-based ZAP Endurance team member Andrew Colley bested a strong field that included 2024 Olympians

It is hard to call the Manchester Road Race a “turkey trot” even if run every year on Thanksgiving Day. The 4.7 mile course historically attracts a strong field of professionals to toe the line near the front at the start, this year including Colley, as well as other top athletes like 28-yearold Edwin Kurgat, who finished No. 7 at the Paris Olympics at the 5,000 meters’ distance. Kurgat finished No. 3 in Manchester, nipped at the tape by another professional, Eduardo Herrera, the 2024 Mexico national champion at 1500 meters (3:43.73).

Colley, 33, trailed Kurgat by a step with almost two minutes to go in the race but showed off some of his mountain training by going past the now U.S. athlete born in Kenya on a down, then uphill finishing segment. Once past, he continued to gain separation.

Colley’s winning time was 21:09, a 4:28 mile pace. Herrera finished six seconds later, in 21:15 (4:30 pace), just ahead of Kurgat’s 21:19 (also a 4:30 pace).

The last almost two minutes of the 2024 Manchester Road Race, courtesy of ZAP Endurance

CLICK: att.iGsyMhFZSKEcIThmAdus65jAbk0BpNplE6cuI1GDavo

Bradbury tops Men’s Cross Country all-conference selections

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Named men’s cross country “Runner of the Year” for the Northwestern Conference, Watauga High School’s Will Bradbury led a virtual posse of Pioneers as all-conference selections, joined by “Coach of the Year,” Randy McDonough.

Watauga’s senior boys, led by Will Bradbury, got to the front early on Aug. 17, in Clash of the Classes. Photographic image by David Rogers

Of the 13 student athletes named to the all-conference team, 10 of the young men are members of the Watauga team.

Northwestern Conference “all-conference” selections:

  1. Will Bradbury – Watauga
  2. Grady Gates – Watauga
  3. Calvin Zwetsloot – Watauga
  4. Bryce Corpening – South Caldwell
  5. James Bostrom – Watauga
  6. Elliott Taft – Watauga
  7. Zeke Walker – Watauga
  8. Samuel Rex – Watauga
  9. Griffin Duncan – Alexander Central
  10. Levi Anderson – Watauga
  11. Zachary Zirkle – Alexander Central
  12. Jonah Norris – Watauga
  13. Andres Roman – Watauga

NWC Final Men’s Standings

  1. Watauga
  2. Alexander
  3. Freedom
  4. South Caldwell
  5. Hibriten
  6. Ashe County

Watauga dominates Northwestern all-conference Women’s Cross Country Selections

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Pioneer senior Annabelle Stewart was wearing her trademark “shades” when she crossed the finish line at the Northwestern Conference championship meet in October, just like she had in finishing among the best all season. This time, though, she also earned the NWC nod as “Runner of the Year,” joining head coach Randy McDonough (“Coach of the Year”) in headlining the conference selections.

Cali Townsend finished No. 1 in the Clash of Classes freshman girls race on Aug. 17 at State Farm Intramural Fields. Photographic image by David Rogers

Of the 13 individual total number of individuals selected to All-Conference, 11 are Pioneers:

  1. Annabelle Stewart – Watauga
  2. Cali Townsend – Watauga
  3. Janie Beach-Verhay – Watauga
  4. Clara Noble – South Caldwell
  5. Lainey Johnston – Watauga
  6. Lily Kimbrough – Watauga
  7. Josephine Walker – Watauga
  8. Ama Higgs – Hibriten
  9. Susanna Goff – Watauga
  10. Carrie Bradbury – Watauga
  11. Ava Langley – Watauga
  12. Anna Norris – Watauga
  13. MaKenzie Pyatte – Watauga

NWC Women’s Cross Country – Final Team Standings

  1. Watauga
  2. Alexander
  3. Ashe County
  4. Freedom
  5. South Caldwell
  6. Hibriten

It’s a capper! 15 Pioneers earn all-NWC recognition

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Winning a seventh straight undefeated conference championship is a good way to earn a lot of nods to the all-Northwestern Conference team and Watauga didn’t disappoint with 15 players earning recognition, including “Player of the Year” (Maddox Greene), “Offensive Player of the Year” (J T Cook), and “Defensive Player of the Year” (Trathan Gragg).

Evan Burroughs fends off a Mallard Creek defender for a short gain on Nov. 23, in Round 2 of the state playoffs. Photo by Jared Everett for High Country Sports

“Special Teams Player of the Year” was awarded to Hibriten’s Landon Key and “Coach of the Year” honors went to Alexander Central’s Butch Carter.

FINAL LEAGUE STANDINGS

  • 1 – Watauga
  • T2 – Alexander Central
  • T2 – Freedom
  • 4 – South Caldwell
  • T5 – Ashe County
  • T5 – Hibriten

Full List of all-NWC Selections

ALL CONFERENCE HONORABLE MENTION
School Student Athlete School Student Athlete
Watauga Maddox Greene Watauga Nyle Peays
Watauga J T Cook Watauga Cam Hall
Watauga Trathan Gragg
Watauga Luke Edimisten
Watauga Evan Burroughs
Watauga Caleb Dewey
Watauga Brady Lindenmuth
Watauga Dillon Zaragoza
Watauga Matthew Leon
Watauga Landon Smith
Watauga Carson Gunnell-Beck
Watauga Callan Riordan
Watauga Everett Gryder
Watauga Jack Wilson
Alexander Central Wade Queen Alexander Central Jaheim Redmond
Alexander Central Sawyer Chapman-Mays Alexander Central Luke Barnes
Alexander Central Garson Millsaps
Alexander Central Kaleb Genwright
Alexander Central Maurice Howell, Jr.
Alexander Central Brennen Little
Alexander Central Hunter McGuire
Alexander Central Justus Millsaps
Alexander Central Adian Baity
Alexander Central Cole Pennell
Alexander Central Jamison Rowe
Freedom Tiras Walker Freedom Eddie Branch
Freedom Kaden Davis Freedom Braylen Beam
Freedom Kobe Johnson
Freedom Eli McMeans
Freedom Isiah Green
Freedom Zaydrian Hausley
Freedom Jaiden Belin
Freedom Prima Belin
Freedom Lofton Parlier
Freedom Kaleb Pearson
South Caldwell Bryce Johnston South Caldwell Kaden Laritts
South Caldwell Bryson Genwright South Caldwell Miles Lackey
South Caldwell Landon Borders
South Caldwell J P Smith
South Caldwell Carter Bley
South Caldwell Malcolm Spradling
South Caldwell Connor Setzer
South Caldwell Max Yount
Ashe County Ian Graybeal Ashe County Coltin Greer
Ashe County Bridger Fairchild
Ashe County Bryce Peters
Ashe County Caleb Blackburn
Ashe County Luke Osborn
Hibriten Garrison Leonhardt
Hibriten Grayson Bentley
Hibriten D’Kodan Mitchell
Hibriten Korbin Riley
Hibriten Sawyer Nelson
Hibriten Landon Key

Ashe County, Watauga dominate all-NWC volleyball selections

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — After losing a strong group of seniors in 2023 to graduation, a “down year” might have been expected for the Watauga High School women’s volleyball team. In the early matches of the 2024 season, the potential of the up and comers was evident, but so was the rebuilding phase.

The Pioneers struggled in a purposefully challenging non-conference schedule, going 3-6. Most of the losses were 3-0 sweeps but a turning point in the season arguably came on Sept. 5, when they lost a 5-set nail biter to Greater Metro 4A powerhouse, Cox Mill. In taking the Chargers to the brink of victory, Watauga gave notice that the young team was arriving.

From there, the Pioneers rolled on to a 6-2 Northwestern Conference record, 10-9 overall. They split the home-and-home matchups with Ashe County and Alexander Central, but swept through all other conference opponents, officially finishing No. 2 in the overall NWC standings, behind only Ashe County, but earning the top 4A seed coming from the 3A/4A conference in the state playoffs.

Not surprisingly, Ashe County and Watauga dominated the all-NWC selections, the Huskies with seven players recognized, including “Player of the Year” Lanie Bowers and “Coach of the Year” Dalton Lewis.  The Pioneers placed six on the list, including “Offensive Player of the Year” Emma Pastusic. South Caldwell’s Sydnee Bumgarner got the nod as “Defensive Player of the Year”

The Full List of All-NWC Selections

ALL CONFERENCE HONORABLE MENTION
School Student Athlete School Student Athlete
Ashe County Lanie Bowers Ashe County Isabella Farmer
Ashe County Maylee Blevins Ashe County Liza Weaver
Ashe County Lorali Overcash
Ashe County Alexis Rollins
Ashe County Abby Sheets
Watauga Emma Pastusic Watauga Caroline Childers
Watauga Grace Tillery Watauga Kaitlyn Darner
Watauga Lainey Gragg
Watauga Kora Knight
Alexander Central Emily Haas Alexander Central Makayla Williams
Alexander Central Hallie Harrington Alexander Central Reagan Pierce
Hibriten Parker Boggs Hibriten Lily Moore
Hibriten Bella Hawkins Hibriten Ryver Moss
South Caldwell Sydnee Bumgarner South Caldwell Mcartney Harrington
South Caldwell Faith Raby South Caldwell Miley Blair
South Caldwell Keira Reid
Freedom Kaitlyn Hagamann Freedom Ava Whitaker
Freedom Emma Buchanan

 

Alexander Central duffers highlight top spots, Watauga places three on all-conference list

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Alexander Central’s Meredith Wike and head coach Brent Durmire swept the Northwestern Conference individual honors as “Player of the Year” and “Coach of the Year,” respectively, and led the Cougars to the regular season conference championship, but South Caldwell led all schools with four all-conference selections, followed by Watauga and ACHS with three each, and Hibriten with two.

ALL CONFERENCE
School Student Athlete
Alexander Central  Meredith Wike
Alexander Central Parker Matlock
Alexander Central Laurel Mitchell
South Caldwell Addison Worsley
South Caldwell Caroline Ingle
South Caldwell Kennedy Setzer
South Caldwell Addison Whitman
Watauga Chloe Weigl
Watauga Theresa Copenhaver
Watauga Ariail Lewis
Hibriten Trinity White
Hibriten Summerlin Gragg
Ashe County Chloe Neal

 

Sevensky, Ganley and Honeycutt headline NWC all-conference soccer selections

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — To top off another Northwestern Conference championship, Watauga had 10 players receive all-conference recognition plus special honors for head coach Josh Honeycutt (Coach of the Year), senior forward Curtis Sevensky (Offensive Player of the Year) and senior David Ganley (Defensive Player of the Year.

In a counterattack, Watauga defender David Ganley (6) looks to pass vs. Ashe County on Oct. 31 in Jack Groce Stadium. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Alexander Central’s Jaylen Bennett got the nod as the conference “Player of the Year.”

The final standings for the 2024 season were:

  1. Watauga
  2. Hibriten
  3. Alexander Central
  4. Ashe County
  5. South Caldwell
  6. Freedom

The full list of NWC All Conference selections:

ALL CONFERENCE HONORABLE MENTION
School Student Athlete School Student Athlete
Watauga Curtis Sevensky Watauga Orin Ellis
Watauga David Ganley Watauga Gabe Madritch`
Watauga Gavin Lipinsky
Watauga Jude Jackson
Watauga Thomas Moss
Watauga Alex Aguilar
Watauga Ben Myers
Watauga Solomon Triplett  
Watauga Lucas Hamilton
Watauga Noah Van Werkhoven
Hibriten Eric Meza Hibriten Lukas Sanderlin
Hibriten Faris Cerrato Hibriten Truett Healy
Hibriten Dalton Henderson
Hibriten Elkin Najera
Hibriten Nehemias Perez
Hibriten Alex Martinez
Hibriten Titus Felmlee
Hibriten Miguel Garcia
South Caldwell Pedro Guevara South Caldwell Eli Speagle
South Caldwell Paxton Perkins South Caldwell Jeremiah Arney
Alexander Central Jaylen Bennett Alexander Central Ozzie Romero
Alexander Central Elijah Bolick Alexander Central Ethan Holdren
Alexander Central Cory Mayes
Alexander Central Carson Davis
Alexander Central Cooper Deal
Alexander Central Jeremiah Bennett
Ashe County Bubby Franca A Ashe County Nathan Allen
Ashe County Luke Tracy Ashe County Pablo Barcenas
Ashe County Jeremiah Esudero
Freedom Samuel Quinonez

 

Carver sizzles, Tafisi provides a spark in Mountaineers’ 82-64 romp over Gardner-Webb

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — Senior guard Emily Carver caught fire in the second half, scoring 17 of her 27 points in third quarter on Nov. 27 vs. Gardner-Webb, leading the Mountaineers past the Bulldogs, 82-64, at the Holmes Convocation Center on Senior Night.

Not to take anything away from Carver’s performance, but it was the return of senior guard Eleyana Tafisi in a first quarter cameo performance that provided the spark for the Mountaineers. With the Bulldogs ahead by nine points and the seconds ticking down on the first quarter, the Mountaineers’ senior transfer from Utah Valley University threaded her way down the lane through traffic, drawing a foul and sinking two free throws to narrow the deficit.

It was Senior Night at the Holmes Center for App State’s women’s basketball team. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Tafisi’s appearance helped stem the tide of 3-pointers that widened the Q1 lead for the Bulldogs, their starting guard Elle Blatchford making 2-of-3 from behind the arc and team scoring leader Ashley Hawkins adding 1-of-2 from long distance. Meanwhile, the Mountaineers shot a dismal 2-of-16 from the field in the first quarter, including going 0-for-7 from behind the 3-point line.

There is no question that Tafisi brought energy, and it continued into the second quarter as App State whittled the deficit down. Fittingly, it was Tafisi’s 3-pointer with 3:45 to go in the half that put the Mountaineers ahead for the first time since the opening seconds of the ball game.

Emily Carver (10) scored 27 points against Gardner-Webb on Nov. 27, 17 of them in the third quarter. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

After the game, App State head coach Alaura Sharp told reporters that she had considered playing Tafisi in the Nov. 24 game vs. Richmond, but ultimately decided against it. The senior guard’s official release date from the earlier injury was Dec. 1.

“When I told Eleyana that I was going to play her for a few minutes tonight, she was very excited,” said Sharp.

Those few minutes turned into 15 total minutes for the game. From a cause and effect standpoint, Tafisi was a difference maker, the team registering a +23 during her time on the court, a team-high. While she scored only seven of those points, personally, her energy lifted the performance of everyone around her, including Carver, who buried 4-of-7 attempts from behind the arc.

Although Hawkins sunk a couple of free throws to tie the game at halftime, 35-35, the Mountaineers had the spark they needed. Behind 10 points by Carver and a pair of layups from Asjah Inniss and Zada Porter, along with pressing defense that stifled any Bulldog response, App State jumped out to a 14-point lead in just the first three minutes of the third quarter — and they kept building on it, leading by as many as 18 points in Q3 and 23 points in Q4.

Starting guard J’Mani Ingram, who transferred to App State from Pearl River Community College for the 2023-24 season, recorded 14 points on the night, most from inside the paint. Porter, also one of the nine seniors on the Mountaineer roster, was the third Mountaineer in double figures, scoring 10 points, but had one of the most impressive stat lines of any player on the night with 8 assists, 3 rebounds, 3 steals, and one block in her 19 minutes on the floor. Included in those points: 4-of-4 shooting from the charity stripe.

Rylan Moffitt scores against Gardner-Webb on Nov. 27. Photographic image by David Rogers for High Country Sports

Junior forward Rylan Moffitt, a transfer last year from Daytona State and the Mountaineers’ top rebounder in 2023-34, was in form again with a team-high 9 rebounds to go along with 6 points and 2 assists in her 24 minutes off the bench.

Now 3-3, the Mountaineers’ next challenge is Dec. 1 at Vanderbilt (7-1), with an impressive win in Palm Springs, Calif. vs. Arizona on Nov. 26, 71-60, before a loss the next day to Michigan State, 78-70, in the same Acrisure Classic tournament.

App State rallies late to take down Sam Houston, 66-63

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By David Rogers. WILMINGTON, N.C. — This time, Myles Tate took the shot — and it was a game-winner, too.

Just three days after the App State redshirt senior earned a winning assist on a play designed for him to take the last shot — but didn’t — he took the shot that put the Mountaineers ahead, 64-63, with 24 seconds remaining against Sam Houston State on Nov. 27. It was a lead they would never relinquish. Including two late free throws made by forward Jalil Beaubrun and stellar defensive play, the Mountaineers won the day, 66-63.

Played at Trask Coliseum as the opening game of the Live Oak Bank Holiday Classic, a men’s basketball tournament hosted by the University of North Carolina, Wilmington, the game drew 2,519 basketball fans to the 5,200 capacity indoor arena.

At least some of the mid-week, pre-Thanksgiving allure was the matchup dynamics: Sam Houston coming into the game as the No. 44 team in the country in Scoring Offense (out of 355 NCAA Division I programs), averaging 84.6 points per game, vs. App State’s reputation as a tough defensive opponent. Both teams came into the UNCW-hosted matchup with 3-2 records.

By most measures, the Nov. 27 encounter was a defensive battle from start to finish, the lead see-sawing back and forth. The largest lead by either team was five points, App State early at 17-12, and Sam Houston late at 57-52. The lead changed hands 16 times and was tied 11 times during the 40 minutes of playing time.

When the Bearkats’ guard Lamar Wilkerson made a short jumper with five minutes remaining, giving Sam Houston its biggest lead of the afternoon, momentum seemed to have shifted to the Huntsville, Texas-based public university, with an enrollment of more than 20,000 students across 80 degree programs, a school size similar to App State.

But the Mountaineers were far from done. Just over 30 seconds later, Sunday’s buzzer-beating hero against William & Mary, junior guard Dior Conners, drained a 3-pointer to jumpstart App State’s closing, 14-6 run to win the day.

Conners accounted for six of those closing points, including the dagger from behind the arc but also three consecutive free throws when he was fouled by Wilkerson while attempting another 3-pointer.

App State’s improvement at the charity stripe in this game was significant to the outcome. The Mountaineers were successful on 17-of-22 free throw attempts (77 percent), which is a marked improvement over a 59 percent season average that has them in the bottom 10 of the 355 teams in NCAA Division I. In addition to Conners’ sharpshooting from the line in the closing minutes, the Mountaineers’ Beaubrun made the final two free throws to ice the game.

Although Wilkerson recorded a game-high 22 points for the Bearkats, Conners led the Mountaineers with 19 points, closely followed by Tate’s 17 points. Beaubrun pulled down a game-high 9 rebounds.

Aside from improvement at the free throw line, the Mountaineers were 7-of-24 (29 percent) from behind the arc, while limiting the Bearkats to just 3-of-14 made shots from long distance.

With Thanksgiving Day off, App State will play Colgate at noon on Friday, then UNCW in the tournament finale on Saturday. In the other tournament game on Nov. 27, Colgate defeated UNCW, 72-59.