HONOLULU — When Honokaa coach Daphne Honma finally got her “move the ball and rotate” message across, her players responded by running the offense through their dominant bigs down low.
HONOLULU — When Honokaa coach Daphne Honma finally got her “move the ball and rotate” message across, her players responded by running the offense through their dominant bigs down low.
The top-seeded Dragons employed stifling defense Thursday and rolled to a wire-to-wire 61-49 victory over Kalani in the quarterfinal round of the Hawaii High School Athletic Association Division II basketball tournament.
Honokaa shot 25 of 41 (61 percent) but committed 30 turnovers in the rugged win. Meanwhile, the Falcons finished with just 13 converted field goals in 55 attempts (23.6 percent).
Senior center Hunter Liftee led the way for the Dragons with a game-high 20 points and 10 rebounds, while junior forward Eliyah Fernandez chipped in a double-double with 18 points and 13 boards. Senior Chancis Fernandez managed eight points but also contributed a game-high six assists and pulled down five rebounds to cap the victory.
“Twenty points is the most for me this season,” Liftee said. “My coaches told us to ‘give it to the bigs’ because (Kalani) is small. That’s how I scored most of my points.”
With the win, Honokaa advances to face Molokai — which moved on thanks to a gritty 41-35 victory over Kapaa in its quarterfinal — in a 5 p.m. semifinal today at Kaimuki. The defensive-minded Farmers (12-1) advanced despite converting just eight of 39 field-goal attempts, and survived by sinking 25 of 44 free throws compared to Kapaa’s nine conversions from the charity stripe.
Honokaa (12-2), the reigning Big Island Interscholastic Federation champion, is pursuing the program’s first state title, which is currently held by two-time defending champion Kamehameha-Hawaii. The Warriors had won the previous six BIIF titles, but were upended by the Dragons in the league title game.
Kalani (7-8) of the Oahu Interscholastic Association received a team-leading 18 points from senior guard Carly Kakuda.
The Dragons started the game on an 8-0 run, and despite a dominant defensive performance that held Kalani without a field goal for nearly seven minutes of the first period, the white-and-green-clad squad could only establish a 14-6 first-quarter advantage. Turnovers plagued Honokaa, as the game’s designated home team gave the ball away 10 times in the opening period and 19 times in the first half.
“We were fired up and excited to play, and just played a little crazy,” Honma said. “It was definitely better late than never once we settled down and got to business. We ended up doing OK.”
The Dragons overcame the sluggish start and used a 15-3 run midway through the second quarter to establish breathing room with a 25-11 advantage. The run was sparked by Liftee, who accounted for nine of Honokaa‘s points during the streak, and dropped in 11 first-half points to lead all players.
Kalani ended the first frame with three made free throws to narrow the intermission deficit to 25-14, but the Falcons struggled miserably on offense to the tune of 3-of-23 made field goals and six free throws in 14 attempts throughout the first half.
Kamehameha-Hawaii 64, Farrington 58
Casey Poe and Riana Arima powered the Warriors back to the Division II semifinals.
Poe scored 28 points — going 9 of 13 from the field and 10 of 14 from the free-throw line — with 10 rebounds and Arima added 24 points at Kalani High in Honolulu.
Kamehameha (11-4), which overcame a 55-27 rebounding disadvantage, will play Hawaii Baptist in a 7 p.m. semifinal today at Kaimuki. The Eagles (10-0), the Interscholastic League of Honolulu champions, beat Castle 41-31 in their quarterfinal.
Penina Faumui led OIA champion Farrington (9-4) with 28 points and 16 rebounds.
Le Jardin 51, Kohala 25
The Cowgirls (7-8), the BIIF’s third-place team, lost in consolation play at Kalani, ending their season.
Statistics were not available at press time.