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CVC Girls Basketball

Cedar Valley Christian - Girls Basketball

Silver's bullet shoots Huskies to 2nd win

The coach was yelling, “Don’t shoot.”

Even her teammates admitted afterward they were hoping she wouldn’t do it.

But Cedar Valley Christian senior Carly Silver was all alone in her spot at the top of key. And so she cooly sailed in a 3-point shot. That brought the Huskies to within one point of Unity Christian with four minutes to go Saturday night in their first home game of the season.

The 300-or-so fans who packed the shoe box-sized gym went wild.

And they went wilder still when, just 30 seconds later, Cedar Valley freshman star Shelby Hembera dropped in a chippy to put her team ahead 37-36.

“No fouls,” Huskie Coach Craig Foote echoed again and again. “Stay straight up. Do not  foul anybody.”

And, he repeated during a time out, “Don’t shoot it unless you have a wide-open lay-up.”

His girls took heed.  A three-minute eternity and two made free throws later, they won their second game of the year 39-36 over the Knights of Fulton, Ill.

Silver, who hadn’t played organized basketball since the fifth grade and came out only because there were just four players at the time on the roster, said she was confident when she jacked up the long set shot in a crucial situation.

“I thought I’d make it,” she said.  She’s only taken five shots in 10 games this season, all from the exact same spot, and has connected on three of them.

Sitting on the bench as the only sub on what is now a six-girl roster (with manager Taylor Fields an extra in an emergency), freshman Alyson Woods said she watched the play as if in slow-motion.

“Shock and awe,” is how she described it.

The girls were beside themselves after boosting their record to 2-8, this time in front an enthusiastic crowd in a less-than-regulation 74-foot gym that also serves as the school cafeteria.

“It just you can win with six players,” said junior Lindsey Cach.

Foote, in his third year as coach after earlier stints as an assistant at Marion and Lisbon, said Cach was the key to the victory.

Unity Christian’s 6-foot-1 center Hannah Dykstra had scored all 20 of her team’s points in the first half.  Using a box-and-one defense in the second half, Cach held her to only three shot attempts and no points the rest of the way.

“Let anybody shoot but Dykstra,” Foote kept exhorting his team.  And fortunately for the Huskies, no one fouled out.  Though dressed, Woods has been sick and hasn’t put in a full practice all week.

Hembera, who again led her team with 18 points, ended up with four fouls, as did Cach and spunky senior point guard Ellen Rodriguez.  Huskie junior Izzy Hoffman, who closed out the game with 12 seconds left by banking in one free throw and missing the next, said victory on the home floor was especially sweet.

“It’s nice to be able to play in front of our own fans for a change,” she said.

The next it will happen is Feb. 6 when Cedar Valley plays host to Waterloo Christian.

“This one was a special win,” said Foote. “It was senior night, and it will be one the girls will always remember.”

UNITY CHRISTIAN (36): Cindy Trent 4 0-0 8, Jillian Bajema 0 0-0 0, Hannah Dykstra 9 2-5 20, Vanessa Frederick 2 0-0 4, Erin Wessels 1 0-2 2, JoLynn Frederick 1 0-0 2. Totals 17 2-7 36.

CEDAR VALLEY CHRISTIAN (39) – Carly Silver 1 0-0 3. Ellen Rodriguez 3 0-0 6, Lindsey Cach 3 0-2 6, Izzy Hoffman 2 1-3 6, Shelby Hembra 5 8-9 18. Totals 14 9-14 39.

Halftime – Unity 20, Cedar Valley 19. 3-point goals – Unity 0, Cedar Valley 2 (Hoffman, Cach) Total fouls – Unity 10, Cedar Valley 14. Fouled out – none.

Last Updated on Sunday, 15 January 2012 01:00
 

Cedar Valley Christian - Girls Basketball

Cedar Valley girls fall short at Iowa Mennonite

KALONA - The Cedar Valley Christian girls basketball team made a strong rally Saturday before losing to Iowa Mennonite, 54-43, in Kalona.

The Huskies (1-8) chopped a 15-point deficit to just three points in the fourth quarter before falling short.

Shelby Hembera led Cedar Valley with 21 points, Ellen Rodriguez scored 12 points and Lindsey Cach had nine.

Kristin Davis topped Iowa Mennonite (2-10) with 15 points and Olivia Yutzy scored 14.

CEDAR VALLEY (43): Hembera 5 11-14 21, Silver 0 0-0 0, Hoffman 0 1-2 1, Cach 2 5-5 9, Rodriguez 4 4-6 12. Totals 11 21-27 43.

IOWA MENNONITE (54): K. Davis 7 0-1 15, Yutzy 6 2-3 14, Hochstetler 2 2-3 6, Schmieder 5 1-4 11, Brokaw 1 0-0 2, Yoder 0 0-0 0, Miller 0 0-0 0, Perez 2 0-0 4, Hostetler 1 0-0 2, A. Davis 0 0-0 0. Totals 24 5-11 54.

Halftime - Iowa Mennonite 28, Cedar Valley 18. 3-point goals - Cedar Valley none, Iowa Mennonite 1 (K. Davis 1).

 

Cedar Valley Christian - Girls Basketball

Cedar Valley girls claim historic victory

BETTENDORF - The Cedar Valley Christian girls basketball team collected an historic victory Friday night.

The Huskies topped Morningstar Academy, 59-44, for their first victory as a member of the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union as freshman Shelby Hembera tossed in 33 points.

Cedar Valley Christian lost its first seven games this season and hadn't scored more than 38 points all year before breaking into the victory column.

"We were ecstatic," said Coach Craig Foote. "The kids were very excited to get it."

The game was tied, 22-22, at halftime. Cedar Valley broke loose for 37 points in the second half and clinched the victory at the foul line by going 21 of 26 for the game.

Hembera made nine field goals and was 15 for 19 at the foul line. Lindsey Cach scored 12 points and Ellen Rodriguez added 10 markers, including a 6-for-7 showing at the foul line.

Morningstar Academy began the night with a 6-3 record, highlighted by victories over Northeast Goose Lake, Calamus-Wheatland, Waterloo Christian and West Liberty.

"They had experience with winning and we did not," said Foote. "It's exciting for us to beat a team with a winning record on the road."

Ashton Glaus led Morningstar with 17 points.

CEDAR VALLEY (59): Shelby Hembera 9 15-19 33, Alyson Wood 0 0-0 0, Carly Silver 0 0-0 0, Izzy Hoffman 2 0-0 4, Lindsey Cach 6 0-0 12, Ellen Rodriguez 2 6-7 10. Totals 19 21-26 59.

MORNINGSTAR (44): Eryn Parks 4 0-0 8, Manlin Debrey 0 0-0 0, Rachel Tubbs 6 1-5 14, Marisa Sorensen 1 0-0 2, Amy Botts 0 0-0 0, Justina Crawford 1 0-0 3, Ashton Glaus 5 6-9 17, Katie Wingerd 0 0-0 0. Totals 17 7-14 44.

Halftime - Cedar Valley 22, Morningstar 22. 3-point goals - Cedar Valley none, Morningstar 3 (Tubbs 1, Crawford 1, Glaus 1).

   

Cedar Valley Christian - Girls Basketball

Cedar Valley girls fall at East Buchanan

WINTHROP - The Cedar Valley Christian girls basketball team had the luxury of a sixth player Tuesday night, but the extra help was not enough to produce a victory.

Cedar Valley suffered its seventh straight loss with a 46-27 setback at East Buchanan.

Senior point guard Ellen Rodriguez played her first game for the Huskies and scored six points, the first time all season that Cedar Valley had more than five regular players in uniform. Taylor Fields, the team manager, has played a few minutes this season, but otherwise the Huskies had been playing the same five girls from start to finish.

Shelby Hembera led Cedar Valley (0-7) with 12 points. Andrea Hughson led East Buchanan (3-8) with 14 markers.

The Huskies trailed at halftime, 27-7.

CEDAR VALLEY (27): Hembera 4 4-6 12, Wood 0 0-0 0, Silver 2 0-0 6, Hoffman 0 1-2 1, Cach 1 0-0 2, Rodriguez 2 2-4 6. Totals 9 7-12 27.

EAST BUCHANAN (46): Hughson 7 0-0 14, Wideboer 0 1-2 1, Meyer 0 0-0 0, Gerbrach 2 0-0 4, Fangman 1 0-0 2, Flexsenhar 5 0-5 10, Kinney 0 0-0 0, Gentz 3 0-0 7, Goodenbouor 4 0-0 8. Totals 22 1-7 46.

Halftime - East Buchanan 27, Cedar Valley 7. 3-point goals - Cedar Valley 2 (Silver 2), East Buchanan 1 (Gentz 1).

 

Cedar Valley Christian - Girls Basketball

Hembera making big impact at little CVC

She’s fit, she’s fast and she’s having fun.

Never mind that her undermanned Cedar Valley Christian girls basketball team is 0-6 in its inaugural season as a member of the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union.

Shelby Hembera, the Huskies’ outstanding freshman, has scored in double figures in five of the six games, collecting a season-high 26 points in CVC’s loss at Wapsie Valley on Tuesday.

She’s fit because she has to be. The Huskies had only five regular players in uniform for the first six games, so Hembera and all the Huskies played start to finish with no rest.

Hembera is also agile and quick. A silky 5-foot-11, she shreds defenders to seize her shot, usually from the high post.

“She is unorthodox in that she attacks the basket in the way a lot of high school girls don’t,” says her coach, Craig Foote. “She can go off both feet. She can shoot with both hands, and she has a very quick first step. It’s very hard to defend.”

With Hembera scoring 60.2 percent of her team’s points in their first six games, the Huskies haven’t found a way to win yet, but they are relishing the competition.

CVC exited the Northern Illinois Christian Conference after the last school year for two reasons, says Foote. The first was to bring its contests closer to home.

The team was traveling routinely to Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota, making for some very late nights. The kids didn’t mind it, he says, but it was rough on their schoolwork – and their parents.

“We also wanted to increase the level of competition across the board,” says Foote.

As the season approached, the Huskies came perilously close to missing their opportunity. A couple of players decided not to play basketball this year, and a handful transferred to other schools.

Hembera considered that possibility too, she says, especially when a couple of her closest friends transferred to Marion.

“I’ve thought about it,” she says. “But I don’t think I would have gotten a lot of playing time. I think I made the right decision to stay here instead of going to a bigger school. This is like my home, and it’s a really nice environment where everybody really encourages us.”

Hembera has been playing basketball in her driveway with her parents and younger sister since she was in primary school, she says. “I have loved playing ever since I was little, and it just kind of came naturally to me.”

A CVC student since second grade, she is happy to be playing her prep career at a high school with only 65 students. Students mix freely among the grades and are very supportive of the team, she says. She also appreciates being in a place where her faith is nurtured.

“Before every game I ask God to shine through me and bless our team so we don’t have injuries,” she says. “It gives me a lot of strength to know He’s with me.”

Losing has tested the team, admits Foote, but not broken its resolve.

“We’re focused on improving, on teaching the game and the values it offers – resiliency being one of them, and keeping a positive attitude. Those are not based on winning or losing, and Shelby is a great example of that. She’s always got a great attitude, whether we win or lose.”

The uncommonly poised ninth grader says it “feels really great” to be leading her team, even as she pursues a host of personal and team goals.

“I hope we can all come together as a team and be strong whether we win or lose,” she says. “I want to become a better post player and try to get 13 points per game.”

With a 16.2-point average, she has that one nailed.

After hitting 9 of 21 free throws in last Saturday’s loss to Dunkerton, she is working on her form at the line, she says with a wince.

She also hopes the Huskies can win a game – a prospect that seems likelier as the season progresses and the team begins to jell. Junior Lindsay Cach joined Hembera in double figures in a recent game and the Huskies held a third-quarter lead before running out of gas.

Hembera jokes that her tiny team has become a bit of a spectacle at their games.

“There’s our little adorable team walking in,” she says, “but that doesn’t really show what we bring to the court.”

The Huskies will get a critical boost after the break when senior point guard Ellen Rodriguez rejoins the team after a semester off.

“We like to run and press,” says Foote. “But when you’re sitting with five players, you can’t do that because you can’t get in foul trouble. When we get our sixth girl back, we’ll try some trapping.”

Longer term, the team will be bolstered by a strong upcoming group of fourth through eighth graders, says Foote. Among them is Hembera’s sister Molly, a sixth grader, who he says is just as explosive as Shelby.

But for the foreseeable future, Hembera the elder will be the yeast that keeps the team rising.

“She’s not the biggest or the strongest girl out there,” Foote says. “But she really excels in the high post, and she can go both low and high. In our last game they basically triple-teamed her the whole game. Other teams are recognizing her prowess.”

   
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