RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

James Naismith, the Man Who Invented Basketball, Probably Knew There Could Be Nights Like This. Valley Girls' Coach Joe Sigrist Substituted Early and Often In a Mismatch Against North. But Even That Couldn't Hold Down the Score. The Tigers, Who Made It To the Class 5-A State Tournament Last Season, Led At the Half, 59-2, Then Went On To Win Their 2014-2015 Opener, 91-17

By RON MALY

Coach Joe Sigrist has the makings of another outstanding girls' basketball team at Valley High School.  Sigrist's 2013-2014 squad had
enough firepower, defense and scrappiness to win 22 games and make it to the class 5-A state tournament. Whether this season's team reaches that level remains to be seen, but the Tigers opened their schedule by cruising past overmatched North, 91-17, tonight at the Bill Coldiron Fieldhouse on the Valley campus. Sigrist substituted early and often after his team opened a 29-2 lead after one quarter behind 6-foot senior guard Grace Vander Weide. Everyone on the Valley team [other than the student managers] played, including those who had participated in the preliminary game--a 53-5 victory by Valley's junior varsity over North's JV squad. Unfortunately for North's JV and varsity teams, there is no "mercy" rule in basketball as there is in high school football. In football, the clock runs continuously if a team has a lead of at least 35 points in the second half.  And no basketball fan in his or her right mind should expect a coach to tell his players to not shoot or rebound, regardless of the score. All a coach can do is substitute liberally in both halves, as Sigrist did.  If any team needed a mercy rule, it was North. Valley's halftime lead was 59-2. After three quarters, it was 68-6. Valley can look ahead to tougher competition as the season progresses. As for North, well, I hope there are better nights on the horizon.  At least no one could fault the Polar Bears' effort tonight. They did as well as they could against a far superior opponent.