Experience matters.
A fourth-place finish at the state tournament this time a year ago and a plethora of players with pressure-stake familiarity at the Yakima Valley Sun Dome made for the Washougal Panthers playing what coach Brian Oberg described as relaxed, poised, and their brand of basketball to open this year’s Class 2A girls Hardwood Classic.
“You could tell they were a little bit rattled,” Oberg said.
The “they” Oberg referred wasn’t his Panthers following a 52-36 victory March 1; it was East Valley of Yakima, a team with a 34-15 win-loss mark at a venue 10 minutes from their high school’s campus.
The Panthers shot 58 percent over the first 16 minutes, had a double-digit lead midway through the first quarter and grabbed a 20-point lead inside two minutes to go in the second quarter.
Washougal was up 30-16 at halftime, and held the Red Devils to 14 percent shooting. All of East Valley’s field goals in the first half came from Kaleigh Denton. The rest of her teammates went 0-for-17, including a scoreless drought that lasted eight minutes.
East Valley finished at 23.5 percent for the game, and got no closer than 13 points to the Panthers. Credit Washougal’s defense for all of that.