Eagles primed for success
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Bryce Alderton
Hopes are high in Estancia High Eagle country for the girls
basketball season.
First-year Coach Tami Rappa has an arsenal of five returning
starters from a 16-11 team that won a share of its first Pacific
Coast League title in 10 seasons last year.
The Eagles made it to the second round of the CIF Southern Section
Division III-A Playoffs before bowing out to Morningside, 59-27.
A new season ushers in Rappa, who led Charter Oak High to the CIF
Division II-A Playoffs the last three seasons and has brought a new
attitude to the Eagles.
Rappa replaces Paul Kirby, who resigned following last season
after six years as the Eagles’ head coach.
“There was more individuality last season,” Rappa said. “I heard
some condescending conversations and told the girls that needs to
stop. The new attitude is putting a positive spin on basketball. We
are a family and I think they are finally getting that this season.”
“The family” Rappa speaks of features a high-powered starting
lineup that has PCL Co-Player of the Year Trisha Wase, a 5-4 junior
guard who averaged 12 points per game, and first-team All-PCL members
Xochitl Byfield, a 5-8 junior forward who averaged 11.4 ppg as a
sophomore, and the Eagles’ leading scorer from a year ago in Tisha
Gray (13.1 ppg), a 5-9 senior center.
Krystal Mino, a 5-5 junior guard who averaged 3.3 ppg last season,
and 5-10 junior forward Nancy Castro (3.2 ppg) fill out the Eagle
starting five.
Coming off the bench will be returning juniors Reyna Garcia (5-2
shooting guard) and Olivia Maldonado (5-7 shooting guard), junior
Anabel Becerra (5-9 guard/forward) along with sophomores Imelda Pena
(5-6 point guard), Jazmine Flores (5-8 small forward), Nicolle Wilson
(5-8 guard/forward) and Ceysha Brady (5-10 guard/forward).
The Eagles’ instinct on the court impresses Rappa the most.
“I implemented a new offense and it took the girls five minutes to
get it,” Rappa said. “They’re so basketball minded and I told them
they need to rely on that. The starting five has played together for
so long, going back to (National Junior Basketball). Wase and Mino
will make behind-the-back passes and the girls know the passes are
coming to them.”
The Eagles’ strengths will be speed and quickness, but Estancia
also features a post-up game they can go to if the situation calls
for it, Rappa said.
“If the post is not useful, we can go back to being quick and
small,” Rappa said. “It’s nice to have the option of post players and
that’s something I didn’t have at Charter Oak.”
Estancia enters into its first season in the Golden West League
and Rappa is anxious to see what the league has to offer.
“I can’t wait to get a schedule so I can go see who we’re playing
against,” Rappa said.
No matter who the Eagles face, Rappa knows her team will only be
as good as the 12th player.
“We’re only as good as the last player on the bench,” Rappa said.
“It takes the first and second string to win. I want every player to
be good and I’m trying to stress that they are.”
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