Kake freshman Aurora Davis and sophomore Eden Hallingstad and Angoon junior Lisa Kookesh-Booth go for a loose ball during the Lady Thunderbirds 54-12 win over the Eagles on Wednesday during the 2025 Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Girls Basketball Tournament at Thunder Mountain Middle School. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)

Region 1A tournament starts with a slam

Skagway dunks Thorne Bay, Kake presses Angoon

Skagway junior Royce Borst drove the baseline and threw down a dunk over a Thorne Bay defender and fans in attendance at the Thunder Mountain Middle School gymnasium knew the Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Basketball Tournament was underway.

The Panthers ran early and often in their 62-25 win over the fiesty Wolverines, opening with a 13-0 run with over five minutes remaining in the first stanza.

Borst had nine of the run, junior Camden Lawson and sophomore Ryder Calver the other baskets.

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

Thorne Bay junior Anna Congdon put the first two Wolverines points on the scoreboard with a rebound score to stop the Skagway blitz.

“It is awesome,” Congdon said after the game about being at regions. The Wolverines did not have enough girls to form a team so Congdon, junior Bonnie Campbell and freshman Madison Reid were allowed to play on the boys squad.

Skagway junior Royce Borst (4) dunks over a Thorne Bay defender during the Panthers 62-25 win over the Wolverines Wednesday during the 2025 Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Boys Basketball Tournament at Thunder Mountain Middle School. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)

Thorne Bay would play the Panthers even down the final half of the stanza as senior Stephen Campbell, junior Davin Hamby and Congdon found the basket.

Skagway closed the quarter with Borst scoring six, and Calver and Lawson four apiece for a 27-12 lead. Borst would not return to the game due to an ankle injury, but is expected to be ready for their next game.

“I’ll see how my foot feels,” Borst said after the game. “There should be more in store. It feels good to be here. Our goal is to win it all. We just keep telling ourselves we have to keep the pressure, we can’t let up on these teams. Just got to keep going.”

The Panthers would hold the Wolverines to just seven points in the second quarter — all scored by Hamby — while Lawson found three shots past the arch to lead Skagway and take a 45-19 lead at the half.

Skagway would hold a 58-21 lead after three quarters.

“Basketball truly means a lot to us and we tried our hardest to make it here, and no matter what happens at regionals we did our best and that’s all that matters,” Thorne Bay’s Campbell said.

Added Thorne Bay’s Reid, “And it is an honor to be here, It’s a real honor to be even able to come here.”

Said Thorne Bay’s Congdon, “It is awesome.”

Lawson led Skagway with 21 points, Borst 15, freshman Zane Coughran eight, sophomore Ryder Calver six, junior Kaleb Cochran and freshman Logan Rupprecht four apiece, senior Landon Rodig and freshman Dane Ames two apiece.

Thorne Bay junior Anna Congdon (24) and Skagway freshman Logan Rupprecht go for a rebound in the Wolverines 62-25 loss to the Panthers on Wednesday during the 2025 Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Boys Basketball Tournament at Thunder Mountain Middle School. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)

The Panthers hit 1-5 from the charity stripe, the Wolverines 2-7.

Junior Davin Hamby led Thorne Bay with 10 points, eighth grader Tristan Dolan added four, sophomore Jordan Kohn three, Congdon, freshman Madison Reid, sophomore Jayden Kohn, and freshman Averi Wadsworth two each.

“Lead by example,” Thorne Bay coach Mel Cook said. “You have to teach these kids it is not about being so young, all of them are basically 10th graders or below, just being positive. And sportsmanship goes a lot farther than a win every single game. We stay positive and we do stuff outside the sport together also that keeps them positive, little things like college stuff, to keep them positive and motivated.”

Skagway next plays at 4:30 p.m. Thursday against the winner of Wednesday’s Klawock/Hoonah game. Thorne Bay plays an elimination game at 8 a.m. Thursday against the Klawock/Hoonah loser.

Kake girls 54, Angoon girls 12

The Kake Lady Thunderbirds used a tenacious halfcourt trap defense to blow past the Angoon Eagles.

Kake’s pressure resulted in four steals, two apiece by sophomore Eden Hallingstad and junior Lydia Change, in the first three minutes of action which led to baskets by Hallingstad, junior LilyIda Jackson, sophomore Brooklyn Hallingstad, a three-point fouling play by Jackson and a Jackson rebound score for an 11-0 lead.

“It meant a lot,” Jackson said of the game. “I had been in a slump. Our defense brings our offense, it was a lot of fun. We just have to keep doing what we’re doing. If we communicate and we bring the fire every time then we’ll do good. It happens every time.”

Angoon senior Tatum Johnson scored the Eagles first basket with 1:37 left in the first quarter.

Kake freshman Kristine Jackson-Williams, B. Hallingstad and freshman Aurora Davis closed out the stanza for a 17-2 lead.

Kake continued to apply the pressure and went on an 8-3 run with two steals to open the second quarter, and finished the stanza with a 7-2 run with a steal and three rebounds by Chang for a 32-5 advantage at the half.

Kake sophomore Brookyn Hallingstad (24) and junior Lydia Chang (12) pressure Angoon junior Jessie Nelson (10) during the Lady Thunderbirds 54-12 win over the Eagles on Wednesday during the 2025 Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Girls Basketball Tournament at Thunder Mountain Middle School. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)

Jackson led Kake with a game-high 16 points, B. Hallingstad 12, Davis nine, Jackson-Williams six, Chang and sophomore Madison Padgett four apiece, E. Hallingstad two and freshman Isabel Nelson one.

Kake hit 2-4 at the charity stripe, Angoon 1-5.

Junior Lisa Kookesh-Booth and sophomore Ali Nelson led the Eagles with four points apiece, Johnson and junior Faith Ramey two apiece.

“We hustle,” Angoon eighth grader Emma Bowen said. “We try to get back into our defense. Now we have to have more defense, teamwork, hustling and rebounds.”

Another key to the Kake win was a young flag bearer who ran around the court during breaks in the action, stirring up the Thunderbird spirit and raising the gym roof.

“It feels pretty good, just cheering our team for the town, “ flag bearer Jonas Hollingstad, 12, said. “We just run around with the flag and stuff and it is fun. And Kake gets riled up.”

Next up for the Kake girls is Thursday’s 10 a.m. game against top-ranked Klawock. Angoon next plays in an elimination game Friday at 1 p.m.

• Contact Klas Stolpe at klas.stolpe@juneauempire.com.

Angoon sophomore Ali Nelson (21) dribbles under pressure from Kake sophomore Madison Padgett (22) during the Eagles  54-12 loss to the Lady Thunderbirds on Wednesday during the 2025 Alaska Airlines Region V 1A Girls Basketball Tournament at Thunder Mountain Middle School. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)

More in Sports

Filcom’s Tony Yadao runs Mt. Edgecumbe defender Tyrell Cromer through a screen by Garrett Bryant (31) during Mt. Edgecumbe’s 86-79 A Bracket elimination game win Friday at the 76th Annual Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament in Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé’s George Houston Gymnasium. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Championships set for Gold Medal tournament on Saturday

Juneau v. Mt. Edgecumbe; Craig v. Hooper Bay; Sitka v. Klukwan; Metlakatla v. Hydaburg; Angoon v. Haines.

Rick Thoman created this graphic to display the snow drought measured at Anchorage International Airport in the 2024-2025 season thus far. (Graphic by Rick Thoman)
Alaska Science Forum: Snow’s absence and welcome presence

Rick Thoman noted in a recent report that the paucity of 2024-2025… Continue reading

The author prefers gambling on new shrimp sports more than putting money into a casino or betting on sports. (Photo by Jeff Lund)
I Went to the Woods: Money Madness

I doubled our money. Then lost the winnings. Then lost the initial… Continue reading

Klukwan’s Andrew Friske (12) blocks a shot by Metlakatla’s Danny Marsden as Klukwan’s Stuart Dewitt and Brian Friske look on during their 65-63 Masters Bracket elimination game win over Metlakatla on Thursday at the 76th Annual Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament in Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé’s George Houston Gymnasium. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Thursday Gold Medal play features semifinal action

Big guns fill half the championship final berths, four more teams exit tourney

Mt. Edgecumbe’s Zach Anderson (50) scores on a screen by Brian Friske (33) as Southeast Boys’ Ryan Lee (40) closes out during Mt. Edgecumbe’s 81-55 A Bracket elimination game win Wednesday at the 76th Annual Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament in Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé’s George Houston Gymnasium. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Shakeout of teams underway as Gold Medal hits halfway point on Wednesday

You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here.

Filcom’s Alwen Carrillo (11) floats a shot over Southeast Boys’ Ryan Lee (40) during Filcom’s 77-74 A Bracket win Tuesday at the 76th Annual Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament in Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé’s George Houston Gymnasium. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
New bracket, new thrills and elimination games Tuesday at Gold Medal

Return of A Bracket features recent JDHS star Alwen Carrillo against TMHS grad Samuel Lockhart.

Metlakatla’s Willie Hayward floats through Klukwan defenders Dave Buss (22), Erik McCormick (6) and Andrew Friske (12) during Masters Bracket action Monday at the 76th Annual Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament in Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé’s George Houston Gymnasium. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Monday madness at Gold Medal

Late night track meet, early morning celebration, mid-day shootout.

A red-winged blackbird male shows off his colorful “epaulets.” (Photo by Bob Armstrong)
On the Trails: Spring comes slowly

February ground to a halt and March slowly geared up. Days were… Continue reading

Hydaburg’s Devin Edenshaw looks for a move against Hoonah’s (#2) during a C bracket game Sunday at the the 76th Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament on Sunday, March 23, at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Opening day of 76th Juneau Lions Club Gold Medal Basketball Tournament sets the bar high

Big games, little games, games of all shapes and sizes are underway at weeklong tournament at JDHS.

Most Read