HHSAA basketball: Slow starts dooms Honokaa in semifinal loss

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.

If there were do-overs at the HHSAA boys basketball tournament, Honokaa coach Jayme Carvalho surely would have taken one early-on Friday.

If there were do-overs at the HHSAA boys basketball tournament, Honokaa coach Jayme Carvalho surely would have taken one early-on Friday.

University overwhelmed Honokaa at the outset of their semifinal and raced to a 54-39 victory at Kaimuki High in Honolulu to advance to the Division II championship game.

”We gave effort until the end, but we started really slow,” Carvalho said. “We were running in quicksand.”

The problems were two-fold for the BIIF runner-up Dragons (9-6), who routinely placed three of four scorers in double figures during league play. Against the Junior Rainbows (13-3), the ILH runner-up, Honokaa didn’t have any players reach double digits. It trailed 23-9 after the first quarter.

Carvalho said Honokaa didn’t rebound the ball as well as it did in a 40-37 victory against Roosevelt in the quarterfinals, leading to too many second-chance opportunities for University. He also felt and the Dragons didn’t adapt quickly enough to University’s zone defense.

“Defensively, we were overaggressive,” Carvalho said.

Other the end, Honokaa wasn’t aggressive enough.

“(University) was pressing everybody,” Carvalho said. “Everybody I talked to said they pressed.

“They respected us and didn’t press. They played us like teams did in the preseason on Oahu. They came out in a wide zone and we were too tentative against it.”

Kea Callihan and Kelvin Falk each scored eight points for Honokaa and Jonathan Charbonneau added six and eight rebounds.

Honokaa shot only 25 percent – it was 1 of 13 on 3-pointers – was outrebounded 44-36 and made only one assist against 27 turnovers. The Dragons were only 10 of 22 from the free-throw line.

Ryan Hobus (19 points) and Anson Canencia (16) paced University, which seeks its first state title since 1988 against Seabury Hall at 5 p.m. Saturday at Stan Sheriff Center. The Junior Rainbows committed 31 turnovers but shot 44.2 percent.

Honokaa also gets a chance to play at Stan Sheriff on Saturday, taking on ILH champion St. Francis in the 1 p.m. third-place game.

“You know we’re going to fight and battle hard,” Carvalho said.

Kalani 50, St. Joseph 48, OT: Cole deSilva led all scorers with 23 points in a consolation match at Farrington, but the BIIF champion Cardinals saw their season end at 8-8.

Ruka Suda and Manato Fukuda also scored in double figures for St. Joe. DeSilva was 11 of 12 from the line.

Division I

Baldwin 59, Waiakea 52: Calvin Mattos finished with 18 points and eight rebounds but the BIIF champion Warriors shot a measly 1 of 13 on 3-pointers at Stan Sheriff Center for a two-game exit at states.

Jonovan-Taje Akaka led the Bears (11-6) with 18 points and eight rebounds as the Maui runner-up shot 47.9 percent. Baldwin led 33-27 at halftime.

The Warriors (12-2) forced 23 turnovers but only registered one assist on 36.4 percent shooting and didn’t do themselves any favors with 11-of-19 shooting from the free-throw line.

Noah Ferreira and Kahinu Alapai finished their Waiakea careers with 12 and eight points, respectively.

Combined with league runner-up Konawaena’s two-game exit, the BIIF is 0-8 that past two seasons at states in D-I.