Roughriders earn third straight tourney title

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Pima edged Miami 58-56 for the 47th Eastern Arizona Holiday Tourney title on Dec. 29. It was the Roughriders’ third straight top finish. Pima defeated Thatcher 42-20 on De. 28 and Valley Union 65-13 on Dec. 27. Kneeling, from left, are Macy Allred (12), Hanna Ashby (14), Jessica Schmidt (20), and Sadie Richardson (22). Standing is assistant coach Dave Allred, head coach Roy Corona, Kennedy Minor (21), Kelsi Brimhall (23), Ady Hoopes (43), Lea Llamas (10), Kyli Mattice (13), Madison Gann (15), Ella Wiltbank (25), and assistant coach Stephanie Hoopes.

Finale 19th of 47 decided by single digits

By Raymundo Frasquillo

THATCHER – Pima edged Miami 58-56 to capture the 47th annual Eastern Arizona Holiday Tourney title on Dec. 29. It was the third straight title for the Roughriders, also earning the 2022 and 2021 titles.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Pima head coach Roy Corona hydrates throughout the championship game.

Pima topped Thatcher 42-20 in the second round on Dec. 28 and Valley Union 65-13 in the first round on Dec. 27 while Miami qualified for the finale by downing Saint David 62-36 and Safford 51-42.

The 10-2 Roughriders have participated in 44 tourneys with a 75-57 meet record and Miami (9-3) in seven (7-14). The Roughriders have won the three recent meets plus three others while the Vandals were in their initial finale.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Ady Hoopes (10) sights in on the basket during a free throw attempt. The Pima junior sank 4-4 in the first quarter to account for four of six team points. She finished the game with 12 points and was named to the all-tourney team.

Saint David (14-1) defeated Thatcher (3-9) 54-34 for third place, Fort Thomas (11-6) defeated Safford (3-11) 60-49 for fifth place, and Morenci (6-7) defeated Valley Union (7-11) 60-40 for seventh place

Safford and Fort Thomas advanced in the second round with wins of 45-38 over Morenci and 74-15 over Valley Union, respectively.

The other opening round results were Thatcher 42-36 over Fort Thomas and Saint David 35-33 over Morenci.

47th Eastern Arizona Holiday All-Tourney Team

Meet champion Pima and runner-up Miami both had three players on the 2023 honor team. Pima had senior Leah Llamas and juniors Ady Hoopes and Sadie Richardson. Miami had juniors Leeyah Goss and Savannah Pietila and freshman Tamia Pietila, the most valuable player.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Sadie Richardson (22) looks to take a shot while guarded by Miami junior Leeyah Goss (2). The Pima junior totaled a team-high 14 points and Goss seven. The pair was named to the all-tourney team.

Third place Saint David had juniors Anissa Jacquez and Mayla Trejo, fourth place Thatcher seniors Jade Griffin and Sophie Welker, fifth place Fort Thomas senior Tyesha Wilson, sixth place Safford sophomore Hannah Schade, seventh place Morenci senior Elena Leonard, and eighth place Valley Union senior Kali Prudler.

Jacquez and Trejo were also on the 2022 team and Jacquez on the 2021 team.

Tamia Pietila contributed 71 points and averaged 23.7 points per game, Schade (62, 20.7), Wilson (46, 15.3), Trejo (39, 13.0), Hoopes (37, 12.3), Prudler (35, 11.7), Jacquez (34, 11.3), Llamas (32, 10.7), Goss (30, 10.0), Richardson (30, 10.0), Griffin (28, 9.3), Savannah Pietila (28, 9.3), Leonard (23, 7.7), and Welker (12, 4.0).

Championship: Pima – 58, Miami – 56

Miami had a 12-6 first quarter advantage but a 19-12 second quarter outing gave Pima a 25-24 halftime edge. The Vandals returned from the break with a 21-17 effort to head into the third quarter leading 45-42. A 16-11 final 8-minute Pima effort gave the Roughriders the necessary margin for a win.

The game’s sixth tie, the third of the second half, and only one in the fourth quarter of 52-52 with 2:35 remaining was broken by Miami 15 seconds later. However, the 54-52 edge would be short-lived.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Tamia Pietila (5) tries to dribble past Pima senior Lea Llamas (10) en route to the basket. The Miami freshman netted 25 points and Llamas 12. The two players were both selected for the all-tourney team. Pietila was named the most valuable player.

Pima senior Lea Llamas drilled a 3-pointer with 1:52 left to put the home team ahead 55-52. Junior Sadie Richardson added a field goal with 1:25 left for a 57-54 advantage and senior Ella Wiltbank sank 1-2 free throws with 20 seconds left to account for the Roughriders’ total.

Miami countered four seconds into the final minute with sophomore Drianna Dosela’s field goal. It would be the visitors’ final points.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Miami freshmen Tamia Pietila (5) and Kayana Jackson (33) position themselves for a rebound. Pima senior Lea Llamas (10) released a pair of free throws for naught during the fourth quarter.

Pima totaled 21 field goals (four 3-pointers) plus 12-26 free throws versus 19 field goals (three 3-pointers) plus 13-16 free throws by Miami.

Richardson netted 14 points on seven field goals, junior Ady Hoopes 12 on three field goals plus 6-12 free throws, Llamas 12 on five field goals (two 3-pointers) plus 0-2 free throws, and junior Kelsi Brimhall 11 on three field goals (one 3-pointer) plus 4-8 free throws. Senior Ella Wiltbank added 6 points and senior Madison Gann had 3.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Miami fans show and voice their approval of the Vandals’ court play during the championship contest.

Miami freshman Tamia Pietila netted 25 points on seven field goals (two 3-pointers) plus 10-12 free throws, junior Savannah Pietila 13 on four field goals (two 3-pointers) plus 3-4 free throws, and junior Demetria Dosela 11 on five field goals plus 1-2 free throws. Junior Leeyah Goss had 7 points.

3rd Place: Saint David – 54, Thatcher – 34

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Pima senior Madison Gann (15) tries to block a shot attempt by Savannah Pietila (3). The Miami junior netted 13 points and was selected to the all-tourney team.

Saint David scored in double figures during all four quarters compared to once by Thatcher. The result, the Tigers led 12-6 after the opening quarter, 23-14 at halftime, and 37-25 heading into the fourth quarter.

Saint David made 17 field goals (five 3-pointers) plus 15-27 free throws while Thatcher had 13 field goals plus 8-23 free throws.

Senior Mayla Trejo tossed in a game-high 20 points on six field goals (three 3-pointers) plus 5-6 free throws, senior Anissa Jacquez 12 on three field goals plus 6-7 free throws, and sophomore Emelynn Jacquez 12 on five field goals (one 3-pointer) plus 1-6 free throws. Senior Halee Deskins and freshman Hart both added five points.

Nine scored for Thatcher with none in double figures. Senior Jade Griffin and junior Sophia Estrada both had six points, junior Cambria Wakefield and sophomore Makenzi Lunt five apiece, senior Emma Green and Hughes three each, juniors Kenady Davis and Audrey Smith along with sophomore Emry Nelson two apiece.

5th Place: Fort Thomas – 60, Safford – 49

Fort Thomas sophomore Adaia Lorenzo dialed long-distance thrice and senior Tyesha Wilson once early in the third quarter en route to a 28-10 outing. It broke a 24-24 halftime deadlock.

Safford never tied or retook the lead in the fourth quarter despite turning in a 17-8 fourth-quarter effort, it was nine points short of a tie.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: The 14-member all-tourney team included, from left, Addison Hoopes, Sadie Richardson, and Lea Llamas of Pima, Sophie Welker and Jade Griffin of Thatcher, Tyesha Wilson of Fort Thomas, Hannah Schade of Safford, Leeyah Goss, Savannah Pietila, and Tamia Pietila of Miami. Also selected but not pictured were Anissa Jacquez and Mayla Trejo of Saint David, Elena Leonard of Morenci, and Kali Prudler of Valley Union. Tamia Pietila was tabbed the most valuable player.

For the game, the Bulldogs connected on 19 field goals (two 3-pointers) plus 11-21 free throws compared to 23 field goals (seven 3-pointers) plus 7-16 free throws by the Apaches.

Sophomore Hannah Schade netted 21 points on eight field goals (one 3-pointer) plus 4-10 free throws and senior Jaiden Mortensen 14 on five field goals (one 3-pointer) plus 3-3 free throws. Freshman Kenna Macario added seven points, Camilla Smith five, and both junior Marley Jurado and freshman Jazz Mortensen two each.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: Fort Thomas head coach Lee Haws checks to see if all the Apaches understood the diagramed play during a time-out.

The Fort got 14 points from senior Tyesha Wilson on seven field goals (four 3-pointers) plus 2-2 free throws and 11 from Lorenzo on four field goals (two 3-pointers) plus 0-2 free throws. Sophomore Kaylee Benally added six points; juniors Raeleigh Hawkins, Tawnee Jones, and Kirah Moses, sophomores Kynnedee Bryce, Corey Cody, and Makayla Chapman four apiece, and freshman Jamie Johnson two.

7th Place: Morenci – 60, Valley Union – 40

The Blue Devils outscored the Wildcats 16-9 in the fourth quarter, but it was not enough to offset the 27-point deficit.

Raymundo Frasquillo Photo/Gila Herald: EAC Athletic Director Paul Demuth noted no one was turned away from the championship games as seats were still available. The score table sits as a beacon in a sea of basketball fans.

Morenci tossed in double-digit scoring in each of the first three quarters, leading 15-8 following the opening quarter, 32-15 at halftime, and 51-24 heading into the final eight minutes.

For the game, Morenci connected on 26 field goals (four 3-pointers) plus 4-16 free throws while Valley Union made 12 field goals (one 3-pointer) plus 11-18 free throws.

Sophomore Adriana Carbajal netted a game and career-high 16 points on eight field goals plus 0-4 free throws. Senior Elena Leonard and junior Kayla Wilson added nine points apiece, sophomore Rozlyn Funari eight, senior Ciantae Dosela seven, junior Sway Cordova six, freshman Mayeli Salazar three, and junior Tayah Wilkes two.

For Valley Union, senior Kali Prudler had 26 points on nine field goals (one 3-pointer) plus 7-12 free throws. Senior Lauren Cabral added five points, junior Lexi Boss four, Valdez three, and Cox two.

Prudler’s 26 points tied the offensive efforts of 12 previous participants scoring that amount during the prior 46 meets. The first to reach that amount was Morenci’s Dodo Chavez during the 1977 (2nd) tourney in a 51-53 semifinal loss to Round Valley.