Nobody would have blamed McKenna Jackson if she decided against turning out for the Washougal High School girls basketball team this year after sustaining full tears to her anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and meniscus in her left knee in August 2020.
Instead of opting out of her senior year, however, Jackson decided she would work harder than ever just to give herself a small chance of getting back on the court.
“(The team) is like a family,” said Jackson, who graduate from Washougal High in June. “They’ve done so much for me that I couldn’t just leave them with nothing. It’s unlike any other team I’ve been on in the past. We all take care of each other. They’ve always had my back, so I felt like I owed it to them to have their backs this season. And it’s just so much fun being with that group of girls.”
Jackson said she was elated when doctors cleared her to return to the court for the team’s final three games of the season. She made her season debut during the Panthers’ final regular season game of the year, against Ridgefield on June 4. She saw a few minutes of action in Washougal’s first district playoff game, a 61-59 loss to Hockinson on June 8, and then closed her career with a flourish, tallying eight points, seven rebounds, five assists and two steals in a starting role during the Panthers’ 66-36 win over Ridgefield on June 9.
“In the first game, I was expecting more from myself. I wasn’t playing how I was used to playing. I didn’t really feel like myself because I was so out of practice,” Jackson said. “Against Hockinson, I knew I wasn’t going to get minutes because they play so physically. But coming into (the last game against) Ridgefield, I felt a lot more comfortable. I didn’t feel any pressure at all because it was the last game of the season for my senior year, and I was just out there to have fun. It felt like everything that I worked for started to pay off when I started to hit shots and get steals. It was satisfying for sure.”