Girls basketball: Missouri state of mind

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Sterling senior Stephanie Kester puts up a shot against Rockford Lutheran during the teams' Class 3A Genoa-Kingston Sectional semifinal Monday. She tied a school record with six 3-pointers and scored a team-high 24 points. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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GENOA – The Tweet from Michael Pasley arrived before tipoff,
telling me I needed to
try covering games in Missouri. 

Apparently, accommodations for media members in that great state aren’t good for high school basketball games. 

It was a response to a Tweet about a slight adventure Christopher Heimerman and I had while trying to get to the press area at Genoa-Kingston High School for Monday’s 3A girls regional semifinal between Sterling and Rockford Lutheran.

Sterling won on Monday, 60-54.

The mention of Missouri reminded me of the summer of 2008 when I spent a week in Joplin covering a bunch of 11-and-12 year old girls play in the Little League Central Regional for softball. 

The first player to come to mind was Stephanie Kester. The slighty-built, blonde-haired hurler was the unquestioned ace of the staff. 

When she took the circle, Sterling was going to win. She seemed to have radar that popped out of her golden locks and zeroed-in on the glove of catcher Mackenzie Staples. 

Kester, Staples and other girls like Bailey Oetting and McKenna Pearson helped that team earn third-place at the Little League World Series in Portland, Ore., later that summer. 

Kester’s radar was fully functioning on Monday night. This time, it was dialed into the bottom of the net at Genoa-Kingston High School. 

It started with a 3-pointer from the corner off a Gabby Sandoval assist with 6 minutes, 30 seconds left in the first quarter. 

The shot was part of an 11-0 run that turned into a 13-2 advantage by the end of the first quarter. 

She hit three more 3-pointers in the second quarter as Sterling led by as many as 13. 

“It was awesome,” Pearson said. “We shoot together in warmups, and she wasn’t hitting a thing. Usually, she is hitting everything. 

“Then she came out and started to make shots. I went up to her and told her that she needed to keep shooting because she wasn’t missing.”

Kester finished with 24 points and tied a school record for six 3-pointers. 

Her hot shooting was a stark contrast to pretty much everyone else on the court. 

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