Dave Ornauer

Pacific SportsBlog

Okinawa-based sports reporter Dave Ornauer on military-related sports in the Far East.

Pacific high school basketball ratings, the final edition for 2008-09

Here they are, the final 2008-09 season Pacific high school basketball ratings. Before voices are raised in protest over one team being rated over another with a better win-loss record, keep in mind, these are post-Far East tournament ratings and reflect the teams' tournament performance as well as their season performance. Sort of like how a final exam is worth, say, 40 to 50 percent of your final grade. Stated another way, it's not always about how many games a team wins, but when they win them.

Heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeere we go:

Boys
1. St. Mary's International, Japan (19-14). Peaked at the absolute right time, beating Seoul American and Yokota back to back for the Titans' third Class AA crown.
2. Morrison Christian Academy (28-6 overall, 7-2 at Far East Class A). Held off hard-charging Yongsan International-Seoul for the Mustangs' third Class A title.
3, Yokota, Japan (33-2) -- If Keron Brown's 40-foot shot traveled one inch further left ... the Panthers cut down the nets in their house.
4, Seoul American (41-11) -- No way the Falcons, or anybody else except the Titans, saw that semifinal coming.
5, Seoul Foreign (26-4) -- Heartbreak wasn't restricted to Panthers and Falcons; Crusaders came up short in APAC final.
6, American School In Japan (15-9). Big closing to finish fifth at Class AA.
7, Kadena, Okinawa (31-14) -- Respectable finish.
8, Simon Sanchez, Guam (4-3 in Class AA). Strong start, but faded down Class AA stretch.
9. Guam High (10-6). Should do well during rest of Guam season.
10, Yongsan International-Seoul (14-16). Losing record? That 5-2 Class A playoff propelled the Guardians into these ratings; they even beat Morrison in the first of two final games.

Girls
1, Faith Academy, Philippines (42-0) -- Of all the Vanguards' championship seasons, this is their only unbeaten one.
2, Seoul American (31-2) -- Valiant comeback falls just short in Class AA final.
3, Osan American (21-5) -- Now owns more Class A titles than any school in the tournament's history.
4, Robert D. Edgren (17-8) -- What a nice turnaround, from 3-18 a season ago to a Class A title-game berth.
5, Seoul Foreign (15-8). APAC championship behind Brittney Rader's 25-point championship performance.
6, Kadena, Okinawa (17-15). Just one loss after the Okinawa-American Shootout, 6-1 run helps Panthers finish over .500, in Class AA final four.
7, Notre Dame, Guam (5-2 at Class AA). First Class AA appearance yields Final Four berth for two-time island champion Royals
8, International School of the Sacred Heart, Japan (16-4). The continuation of an amazing coaching job by Kurt Rose, third in Class A, just eight losses the past three seasons.
9, Nile C. Kinnick (19-9). Only a quarterfinal loss to Notre Dame kept Red Devils out of Final Four.
10, Yokota (20-8). Kinnick edges out the Panthers by winning the fifth-place Class AA game.

The Truth

Truth is this is wrong osan is no doubt numba 2 morrison what?? they loss if they where not kicked out they would have won

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About the Author

Dave Ornauer has covered DODDS-Pacific high school and Far East interservice sports for 25 years -- since his first Far East high school basketball tournament in February 1982 at Yokota Air Base, Japan. When he’s not working, Dave can usually be found reading, enjoying food and fine wine and spending time with family.

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