KS-Hawaii falls in third-place game

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

West Hawaii Today’s Joe Ferraro contributed to this report.

BY KIM BAXTER | STEPHENS MEDIA

HONOLULU — Senior guard Lanaki Apele has scored hundreds of baskets in his four-year varsity career at Kamehameha-Hawaii. But none were more poignant — and bittersweet — than his uncontested layup to start Saturday’s Hawaii High School Athletic Association Division I tournament third-place game.

Apele, one of the best guards in the state, dislocated his left elbow Friday in the team’s semifinal loss to Kahuku. But coach Dominic Pacheco and the Warriors coaching staff were not going to allow Apele’s career to end prematurely, with his last moments on the court being his writhing in pain, clutching his left elbow.

So they approached the Baldwin coaching staff and arranged to have Apele get one last shot, a wide-open layup. It was a feel-good moment in what has been an otherwise brutal state tournament run that finished with Kamehameha’s 53-49 loss to fourth-seeded Baldwin at the Neal Blaisdell Center.

“It means the world, especially since the other team contributed,” Apele said after the game. “I thank Baldwin so much for that. It means so much.”

It started at tipoff, with Baldwin backing away and letting the third-seeded Big Island Interscholastic Federation champions (14-3) easily win the tip. With Apele waiting by himself under his team’s basket, Kaeo Alapai tipped the ball to Kekoa Turner, who milked the moment with some between-the-legs dribbles and overly dramatic spin moves.

He eventually guided a slow pass to Apele, whose left elbow was so heavily wrapped that he only had the use of his right arm. Apele — admittedly nervous from the moment and the unexpected pressure — caught the ball in his right hand and pushed a standing, one-handed layup off the glass and in the basket.

“That was a special moment,” said junior Shaun Kagawa, who finished with 10 points. “We just wanted to get him involved in the game, the last game of the year. Unfortunately things went down (against Kahuku), but I’m happy how the game started. I’m glad that’s how it ended for him.”

Kamehameha then allowed fourth-seeded Baldwin (14-1) to score an uncontested layup, and when the Warriors brought the ball down the court, Turner intentionally stepped out of bounds to give the ball back to Baldwin and stop the game to allow the Warriors to sub Apele out one final time.

“We were honored to do it for him,” said Baldwin coach Wayne Gushiken, who guided the Maui Interscholastic League champions to their best finish at the state tournament since 2005. “Something like that, that’s bigger than a basketball game. It’s something that he’ll remember for the rest of his life.”

But as has been the norm for Kamehameha in this three-game state tournament run beset by Apele’s injury and a mystery stomach issue that affected half the team and Pacheco, the start-of-the-game good vibes didn’t last for long. The Warriors, many of them still feeling the effects of the sickness, watched a double-digit lead slowly evaporate as a second straight opponent overtook them late in the second half to squeak by with a victory.

It was a maddening three-game stretch that, despite giving the program its second-best state finish ever, left the team wondering what might have been. Kamehameha will lose seven seniors, including starters Apele, Alapai (who finished with a team-high 17 points and nine rebounds), Turner and Jacob Kackley (nine points, eight rebounds).

“The hard thing about it is what could’ve been,” Pacheco said. “That’s what we’ve got to live with, what could’ve been if we were healthy. I still feel like we’re the best team in the state. I knew this was a special group, but we had to fight through all this adversity. And unfortunately it happened, and that’s life and you can’t take things for granted. But leaving this court, I still feel like we’re the best team in the state.”

KS-Hawaii 14 9 10 16 — 49

Baldwin 8 13 11 21 — 53

Division II

c Hawaii Prep 85, Seabury Hall 57: Dakota Berman scored 18 points, leading a group of five players who scored in double figures for HPA, which led 26-8 after one quarter in the third-place game.

Ka Makani (9-6), the BIIF Division II champion, jumped out to an 11-0 lead, with Berman scoring seven points in the spurt. The senior guard went 5-of-9 from beyond the 3-point arc.

Senior guard Tyler Van Kirk tallied 17 points and 13 rebounds, juniors Kama DeSilva and Jovan Crnic had 14 points apiece, and sophomore guard Kalan Camero chipped in 11 for HPA, which shot 49 percent from the field and outrebounded Maui Interscholastic League champion Seabury Hall 53-37.

Senior guard Shane Jacob scored a game-high 21 points, and junior guard Michael Clarion added 12 points for the Spartans (7-2), who shot just 39 percent from the field.

Hawaii Prep 26 26 14 19 — 85

Seabury Hall 8 21 19 9 — 57

West Hawaii Today’s Joe Ferraro contributed to this report.