Eagles lose to Wolverines in season opener

Proficient shooting from the perimeter couldn’t propel the Issaquah Eagles girls basketball team to a victory against the Bellevue Wolverines.

The Wolverines girls basketball team, who captured the Class 3A state championship during the 2015-16 season, cruised to a dominating 79-59 win against Issaquah in a non-league matchup on Nov. 30 at Bellevue High School.

The Eagles, who trailed Bellevue 36-20 at halftime, didn’t get deterred despite trailing by a significant margin. The Eagles hit nine three-pointers in the game to keep Bellevue’s lead to less than 20 points for most of the contest. Eagles junior Mariah Van Halm, who scored 14 points in the loss, is confident her team will rebound in its upcoming contests.

“We are in every single game we play. We just need to limit our turnovers and not allow them so many second chances,” Van Halm said of the loss to Bellevue.

Van Halm was thrilled to see her team hitting their field goals from the perimeter, but said her squad is determined to fine-tune all aspects of the game in order to reach their goals this season.

“It was working for us tonight. We have been working on shooting a lot at practice but that is not going to be our only way that we can score,” she said. “We want to make it to state (tournament). It is a whole new team and no one knows what to expect but we want to get to state.”

Bellevue unveiled a full-court pressure offense for the majority of the first half, which frustrated the Eagles’ offensive attack. Bellevue head coach Noah Wulbert, who is in his first season as the team’s head coach after being a Wolverines assistant coach the past nine seasons, said his team’s philosophy is to constantly put pressure on their opponents.

“We really want to create chaos. We are all about our defensive pressure and making everything not easy for the teams we face. We work really hard on our conditioning. We just kind of wore them (Issaquah) down and wore them down,” Wulbert said.

The Wolverines may have lost stars Anna Wilson, Shelby Cansler, Quinessa Caylao-Do and Tatiana Streun from last year’s championship team to graduation, but Wulbert is confident in his team’s abilities on the hardwood this year.

“People are counting us out and think we lost everything. We really have a chip on our shoulder right now. We want to show people what we got,” Wulbert said. “We want to get back to state again and really set the tone. That is what we’re here for.”