February 2, 2013
Hoover closing in on winning season
Girls basketball notebook
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Herbert Hoover is quietly approaching a milestone.

The Huskies (10-6) are on pace to have their first winning season since 1996. They came close last season, finishing with a 12-13 mark after losing to Scott in their first regional appearance since the early 1990s.

"I thought we had a pretty good group coming in,'' said Huskies fifth-year coach Greg Ullman, who lost four starters to graduation. "Probably the biggest thing, we forget eight of our top 10 in our rotation are ninth and 10th graders. We're very, very young. They've done a really good job. They've really come along well.

"I definitely think there's bigger and better things. We're at a point now where we expect to win. We're not a scheduled win anymore. It's all the kids. They've worked really hard. They've done everything I've asked them to. I don't think they're happy at all. They're talking they want to do more. They want to be a threat to get to the state tournament.''

And for the Huskies, it has truly been a team effort with no player averaging double figures and six different players scoring in double digits in their 16 games. Senior Jordan Marshall is the top scorer at 8.8 points, followed by Caroline Thornburg (7.9) and Bailey Aab (7.6). Marshall and Makayla Shamblin are the only two seniors on the squad.

"That's kind of a two-edged sword,'' Ullman said. "It's good that [opponents] don't know who to guard, but it's bad that you don't know who to go to. I guess our go-to person is whoever has a good game that night. Every night we go to a game, we don't know who it's going to be.''

Hoover's 1996 squad finished 11-10 and was coached by Jeff Holliday. Some of the Huskies' top players included Cary Friel, Missy Anderson, Lori Grindstaff, Jenny Blackwell and Jennifer Kee. Missy Anderson is now Missy Smith, who coaches softball at Hoover and volleyball at George Washington, where she has won three AAA state titles.

"We've got an opportunity,'' Ullman said. "Nothing's a given at all. I thought this was going to be our best shooting team, but we're not. I'm somewhat encouraged by that because we're winning games. I'm kind of hopeful if we hit a stretch where we all click at the same time, we could be a dangerous team.''

Competitive balance

St. Albans has been competitive this season with the top teams in the state, but the Red Dragons are still lacking that one ingredient to put them over the top.

SA led Class AAA No. 1 Greenbrier East 20-18 in the opening half of Thursday's Big Atlantic Classic matchup before succumbing to a 65-39 loss. The Red Dragons (8-9) have gone toe-to-toe with Huntington (55-42), George Washington (37-25) and Princeton (52-49) in losses this season.

"What it's going to take is consistency,'' said coach Scott James after Thursday's loss. "Following coach's game plan. We started out well [against Greenbrier East]. We played with them for really about a quarter and a half.

"We were down 18-11 and came back and took the lead 20-18, then they went on a 14-2 run to end the half and we're down by 10. We come out and don't run the offense in the second half. Too many turnovers led to easy baskets.''

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