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Girls favs?

BigWinners

VaPreps Honorable Mention
Oct 3, 2015
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The Mountain 7 girls are not quite as dominant this year, so who outside 2D could win a state title in girls? It’s a rarity if the M7 girls don’t bring home the gold but the gap has closed. Wise is still led by McAmis, one of the top scorers in VHSL history but they have been more vulnerable than expected. Ridgeview is very very good too, a sliver below Wise and GC has an elite player and a lot of talent around her too so if they make it in, they’ll be a tough out.

In the rest of 2A, who are considered favorites? John Marshall won the East last year but came up short against Wise. Are they very good again? Clarke County won it in 2023 IIRC, Luray beat GC in 2020 or 21, but other than that I can’t remember the M7 not winning the state title. Someone can remember better than I can and the dumb VHSL doesn’t have a list of champions easily accessible
 
FTR, Robin Dotson, the Wise Central HC, has made the state finals nine times since 2013 and won seven. Lost to Clarke in 2023 and Floyd County in 2013. RV and GC also have state titles since 2012, RV once beat Union, another M7 team, in the championship. I think the M7 also had one more year that two M7 girls squads made the title game but I could be mistaken.
 
By my findings:
24-Wise
23-Clarke County (beat Wise)
22-Wise
21-Luray (GC)
20-GC
19-Wise
18-Wise
17-Wise
16-Ridgeview (Union)
15-Wise
14-Wise
13-Floyd County (Wise)
12-Meridian (was George Mason) (beat GC)
11-Radford
2010-Meridian George Mason

So since 2010, there have been 15 2A girls champs. Nine all came from same district, Wise winning seven, GC once with title loss to Luray in 21, and RV once (defeating another M7 team, Union. The West has won, by my count, ten of the 15. 2B has won the other five I believe. 2C has one, 2B five, 2D nine.
 
I'm going with Clarke and Central Wise in the championship, with Wise winning another one.
 
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Central Wise vs. Clarke Co. Overall, basketball is down in girls 2A. John Marshall does not look very good, the Bull Run is down. With that being said, Clarke Co will be in in the Final this year and next (young). McAmis and the Wise crew may be able to get another win this year (if they can make it through the Mountain 7 gauntlet).
 
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As of Feb 5 2025:​


BIG STONE GAP, Va. – Emmah McAmis moved into No. 2 on the Virginia High School League’s career scoring list on Tuesday night and her team remained No. 1 in the Mountain 7 District.

McAmis tossed in 30 points to raise her career total to 2,740 as Central cruised to a 66-36 girls basketball victory over the Union Bears.

According to the VHSL’s online record book, McAmis surpassed 2009 Waynesboro graduate Devon Brown’s total of 2,728 points on the career scoring ledger for female hoopers in the state.

Only Phoebus High School legend La'Keshia Frett – who later starred at the University of Georgia and for four WNBA teams – has more as she graduated in 1993 with a staggering 3,290 career points.
 
I remember La'Keshia Frett ( 3,300 ). She was all in the news and newspapers, back during my active duty days in the 757. She was a big deal at Phoebus High School.
 
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I'm picking Wise to win it again. McAmis will be too much for the rest of 2A.
McAmis is a monster. But Alainah Mckavish for Clarke is tough. Big part of the state title team a few years ago as a freshman. Now a Junior has played lights out this year. I remember McAmis scoring 30 plus in that state final game against Clarke 2 years ago all while on a sprained ankle. Unbelievable performance on her part. I think we get a rematch with CC vs Wise from 2 years ago. I'm picking CC. I know what CC has and I only know McAmis. Not saying the team isn't good around her I just don't follow that close. Hopefully another good game if they both can navigate their way there
 
I watched Alainah McKavish against Prince Edward Tuesday night WOW she was dominate inside and from the outside, 31 points and 15 rebounds. Just from watching that game not only can the starters play but there bench is very solid, at one point Clarke had 4 Freshman on the floor and didn't miss a beat. They are young too only 1 senior starter.
 
I read Emmah McAmis is 21 points away from 3000. I’m betting she gets that tonight. Ridgeview could pull the upset though. They’ve played Central close all season. They were hot from behind the arc last match up. McAmis just got it done 2nd half & put the Warriors over the top. Should be a great game tonight at the Prior Center.
 
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I watched most of that game (Central/Ridgeview) - I REALLY thought it was Ridgeview's night.

The atmosphere was electric as well!
 
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I watched most of that game (Central/Ridgeview) - I REALLY thought it was Ridgeview's night.

The atmosphere was electric as well!
I agree, watched it on NFHS & it was everything a high school game should be from the players on the court to the atmosphere in the stands. The announcer for Prior Center does an excellent job too. I thought Ridgeview was going to pull it off but you can’t count McAmis or Coach Dodson out ever.
 
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Question, what makes Wise so good in lady’s basketball? They have a feeder system, legendary coach, just the program to play at, etc?

Asking because I’m genuinely out of the loop…
 
Question, what makes Wise so good in lady’s basketball? They have a feeder system, legendary coach, just the program to play at, etc?

Asking because I’m genuinely out of the loop…
They have feeder system for sure. They have 3rd grade girls playing a physical "man to man" style that gets refined as they get older. Dotson is heavy on fundamentals. The kids sit down on defense, stunt, recover, box out (and they are physical). Offensively, they have had big time athletes develop into D1 players (Logan Reynolds, JMU)/ McAmis. When they haven't had those type of players they have had Post players that dominate (Sophie Mullins). Add Dotson's demanding style of doing things the right way and it's the perfect storm of great basketball. This has always stuck : Bill Parcells, "If you don't teach 'em to bite as a puppy, they won't bite when they're dogs"
 
Back to back chips for Central. McAmis drops 25 and Central wins by 13+
 
Winchester Star article about Clarke County - John Marshall game

RICHMOND — With just 1:59 left in the first quarter, the scoreboard showed John Marshall with a nine-point lead, and for the third time, a Clarke County girls’ basketball player with at least two fouls next to her uniform number.

There was still plenty of basketball left to be played, and as the rest of the game showed, the Eagles were determined to make the most of it. But they just could never quite shake the difficulties created by those early fouls.

John Marshall led for the last 27 minutes and 34 seconds and finished with a 67-54 win in the Class 2 state semifinals on Friday at Huguenot High School. It’s the most points allowed by Clarke County (24-5) all season.


Yasmin Hall scored 28 points and Tiara Herron scored 25 for the Justices (14-9), who will play Central (Wise) — a 58-43 winner over Ridgeview in Friday’s other semifinal — on Thursday in the Class 2 title game at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. It will be a rematch of last year’s title game won by Central.

The Eagles are the only team to beat Central in state competition since the 2021-22 season, doing so in the 2023 title game. They seemed to be on course to play Central again with 15 straight wins by double-digits heading into Friday, but John Marshall’s offensive execution and ability to draw fouls was too much for Clarke County to overcome.

After taking a 15-7 lead after one quarter (Hall had 11 points in the period), the Justices made 17 of 33 field goal attempts over the last three quarters, including 5 of 14 3-pointers. For the game, the Justices made six 3-pointers to the Eagles’ two (Haley Foltz hit both to account for her six total points).

And while John Marshall barely made 50 percent of its free-throw attempts, the Justices sure made a lot of free throws.

Clarke County was in foul trouble all game and was whistled for 31 fouls. John Marshall made 19 of its 36 attempts from the line while Clarke County made only 6 of 15 (the Justices committed 15 total fouls). John Marshall made 7 of 13 shots from the line in the fourth quarter, a period in which four Eagles fouled out and the Justices led by at least eight points throughout.

Clarke County head coach Regina Downing said the Eagles were never really able to play the way they wanted to because of their foul trouble.

“It took us out of our game,” Downing said. “We couldn’t do the things we need to do out of our matchup zone, so we had to switch up and go to a 2-3 zone, which we hadn’t really run all year. It took us out of our rhythm.”

Both teams had trouble with ball possession (Clarke County had 22 turnovers to John Marshall’s 21), but the Eagles might have been able to pressure the Justices into more if not for foul trouble. Eight of the turnovers the Eagles forced came in the first quarter.

“We just couldn’t get anything going like we normally do,” Clarke County junior Alainah McKavish said. “We normally get stuff from our defense, and we didn’t get too much tonight.”

McKavish (team-high 18 points to go with nine rebounds, three assists and two steals) sat for the rest of the first quarter after picking up her third foul with 3:07 left and the Eagles trailing 9-4.

McKavish would return for the start of the second quarter and stay in until fouling out with 28 seconds left in the game, but she spent a lot of time playing without her fellow starters.

Paige Stemberger (10 points, two steals) sat for the rest of the first half after picking up her third foul with 7:21 left in the second quarter. Devin Simmons-McDonald picked up her third foul with 4:32 left in the second quarter and sat the rest of the half, which ended with the Eagles trailing 30-24.

Clarke County was able to use its normal playing rotation for much of the second half, but the Eagles had to llmit their aggressiveness somewhat to do that. Paige McKavish (five points, three assists) saw her situation become precarious as well when she picked up her fourth foul with 1:33 left in the third quarter.

“We had to play straight up,” Simmons-McDonald said. “We couldn’t reach or anything. If we touched them, it was a foul the whole game.”

With 8.5 seconds left in the third quarter, Herron ran the length of the floor after a steal and was fouled while going up for a shot on the other end. She made both free throws to close John Marshall’s 12-2 run over the last 3:29 of the third quarter, which gave the Justices a 50-36 lead.


Clarke County did find some success in the fourth quarter, with Stemberger scoring two baskets and Alainah McKavish scoring one as part of a 6-2 run that made it 54-46 John Marshall with 4:13 left. But the Eagles — who began playing man defense in the fourth quarter — would get no closer.

“We cut their lead down, and the next thing you knew we were in foul trouble again,” said Downing, who wished the Eagles hadn’t waited until the fourth quarter to play man.

Paige McKavish fouled out with with 5:05 left, then Stemberger fouled out with 4:01 left. John Marshall would then draw six fouls in the last 2:26 of the game, with Herron hitting a free throw to finish a 3-point play following Simmons-McDonald’s fifth foul on her drive down the middle of the lane with 2:03 left. That made it 60-48 with 2:03 left, and the game was never in single digits again.

“We did a goob job of controlling the pace of the game,” John Marshall coach Virgil Burton said. “I’m proud of the team.”

Clarke County was wary of John Marshall’s 3-point shooting coming into the game, and the Justices showed why. In the third quarter, Herron hit a 3-pointer that made it 45-34, and Hall hit one that made it 48-36. But the Justices also did well to punish the Eagles with their passing and drives.

“I felt they like were going to shoot the 3 a lot more, but they attacked us on the defensive end,” Downing said. “We gave up a lot of backdoors [passes that produced points].”

The Eagles shot well over the last three quarters (20 for 35), but their turnover problems and struggles from the free-throw line hurt them.

“We sped ourselves up and couldn’t identify what we doing on the offensive end,” Downing said.

Though the Eagles came up short of the ultimate goal, it was a season to remember.

Two years ago, Clarke County went 25-5, capturing the state and region titles and the district regular-season title. The Eagles lost four seniors from last year’s 17-9 region semifinalist squad, and this year featured only Alainah McKavish and Simmons-McDonald from the state championship team.

But after working in six new players, the Eagles were just one win short of a return trip to VCU after sharing the district regular-season title and winning the district and region tounaments. Stemberger and Eryn Demko (six points, five rebounds, four assists, two steals Friday) each transferred to Clarke this year.

“We had a great season,” McKavish said. “I’m just proud of everyone. We made it so far. We fought through a lot together.”

Downing said she told her players to keep their heads up for what they accomplished this year.

“We believed in ourselves and we knew we capable of being here,” Downing said. “We felt like we could get to the state tournament and win the state tournament. Overall, it was an awesome season. They stayed in here, they fought, and did the things we asked them to do. I’m proud of them.”

Downing will miss her two seniors, Simmons-McDonald (four points, four rebounds) and Caydence Roberts (three points, two assists, two steals).

“Those kids have been around our program for four, five years,” she said. “I’m really going to miss those two kids. They brought some leadership to us and a lot of upside to us. Just great young ladies.”

Simmons-McDonald also felt this year was great, and she wishes the team the best of luck in the future. It meant a lot to her to play at Clarke County.

“We all grow up at Clarke County,” said Simmons-McDonald as she talked through tears. “When I was little, I went to the camps, and as you get older, you dream of playing for that team. It really mattered that I got to.”
 
The teams from the West usually clap teams from the East.
Last year in class 1, Brunswick hung with Eastside (lost by 5). But they had a point guard that could handle the constant full court press that West teams typically employ. Most East teams can't handle that. King William has had several good teams over the years, yet when they've gotten to state competition, they were beaten by 40 or 50. Plus teams out West are playing the sport year round and doing AAU and have excellent feeder programs. I feel like it's only a seasonal sport for most girls basketball teams in the East, and it shows almost every single time they play a team from out West. Until a coach from the East gets a team to buy into playing year round, going to team camps, employing a press style of play, and most importantly, develop good guard play, nothing is going to change. Playing iso ball and just throwing up shots and hoping it goes in isn't the answer, nor will it ever be, no matter if the East typically has better overall athletes. Too much half court stuff. If I was coaching, it'd be full court press the entire game, letting my defense lead to offense, and playing an up tempo game ala Loyola Marymount from the Paul Westhead days in the late 80s early 90s, for you old heads who remember that. Somebody hire me to run a program, boys preferably or girls. I already have the system in place!!!
 
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Clarke ran a weak, spread out zone. JM guards ate that up with their speed. Gaps everywhere..

Fouls were an issue but that JM foot-speed was a real thing that was never accounted for.

Wise will beat JM 70- 30
 
Last year in class 1, Brunswick hung with Eastside (lost by 5). But they had a point guard that could handle the constant full court press that West teams typically employ. Most East teams can't handle that. King William has had several good teams over the years, yet when they've gotten to state competition, they were beaten by 40 or 50. Plus teams out West are playing the sport year round and doing AAU and have excellent feeder programs. I feel like it's only a seasonal sport for most girls basketball teams in the East, and it shows almost every single time they play a team from out West. Until a coach from the East gets a team to buy into playing year round, going to team camps, employing a press style of play, and most importantly, develop good guard play, nothing is going to change. Playing iso ball and just throwing up shots and hoping it goes in isn't the answer, nor will it ever be, no matter if the East typically has better overall athletes. Too much half court stuff. If I was coaching, it'd be full court press the entire game, letting my defense lead to offense, and playing an up tempo game ala Loyola Marymount from the Paul Westhead days in the late 80s early 90s, for you old heads who remember that. Somebody hire me to run a program, boys preferably or girls. I already have the system in place!!!
ahhh yes LOVED watching LM play when they had Bo Kimble and Hank Gathers (RIP)

And it still tears me to this day whenever I saw a video of Bo shooting free throws left handed to honor his late friend and teammate.
 
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