
The Dayton boys basketball team celebrates a fourth Oregon State 3A title a few hours after the Dayton girls won their first state crown in 23 years. Both were selected the MaxPreps Oregon Teams of the Week, presented by the Oregon National Guard.
Courtesy photo
Week 25 Winner: Dayton Boys and Girls Basketball
There are few moments in life that stop you in your tracks. A time to
take a deep giant breath, look all around and realize that all is good,
that all has been good, and that all you've worked for has been worth
it.

The Dayton girls celebrate shortly after their win
over Salem Academy.
Courtesy photo
A couple of humble gents —
Dayton (Ore.)
basketball coaches Ron Hop and Scott Spink — took that long gander on
Saturday night along the Pacific Coast in Coos Bay. That reflection
stretched into Sunday afternoon and even to the middle of the week.
"I still don't know if it's hit home yet," said Spink, who coaches the school's
girls team. "Every morning since Saturday I've had to pinch myself and say, ‘Holy cow, we're state champions.' "
Hop, who coaches the
Dayton boys,
and Spink led their teams to 3A state titles at Marshfield (Coos Bay)
Saturday and earned the honor of MaxPreps Oregon Teams of the Week,
presented by the Oregon National Guard.
It's the first time we've picked two teams the same week, but this was an improbable accomplishment.
Spink's
team (26-3) started this Pirates party with a 51-39 win over red hot
Salem Academy, winners of 10 straight entering the game, for their first
state title since 1992. Even more special to Spink is that his own
daughter
Shawnie Spink, a 5-foot-5 freshman point guard, had 14 points, nine rebounds and six assists.
The night before she had 21 points in a 45-42 upset win over Vale, which appeared to be the team to beat in the Final 8.
"Vale
was the defending champion and brought back four of five starters,"
said Scott Spink. "We watched them play and thought they were beatable,
but we were going to have to play really well.
"You want to stay
humble, but Shawnie went a little crazy. They threw every type of press
at her, had two girls chasing her. For her to score 21 and play the way
she did was pretty amazing. What made it most gratifying was that
everyone else played at their best or above also.
"We would have
been happy to make the Final 8 and bring home a trophy (top five). To
win it all, yes I would say it was a definite surprise."
Family tiesAmong the others to play at their best Friday and Saturday was 5-9 shooting guard
Teddi Hop, the youngest daughter of boys head coach Ron Hop. She also had 15 points against Vale and 12 versus Salem Academy.
Ron
Hop probably shouldn't have been watching the final moments of the
girls game Saturday. His Pirates' squad was playing Horizon Christian
for the 3A state title right after the girls game.
"We played
Horizon Christian in league and played them three times already this
season," Ron Hop said. "We knew everything about them and they about us.
I'll admit I was way more nervous about the girls game than our game."
Scott Spink knew the feeling. His son
Zach Spink, a 6-2 junior, was a starting forward for the boys.
"I was so nervous because I wanted my son to feel what my daughter did," said coach Spink.
All
Dayton sons and daughters felt triumphant Saturday as the boys (29-1)
avenged their only loss of the season with a 53-43 win, giving the
Pirates their fourth state title and second in four years.
Zach Bernards, a 5-10 sophomore guard and the team's leading scorer all season at 19 per game, led the way with 22 points and
D.J. Flowers, a 6-5 transfer from Texas, had 10 points and 11 rebounds.
Zach
Spink broke a 21-21 tie with a jumper midway through the second quarter
to give the Pirates the lead for good. He finished with nine points.
When
the final horn sounded, the large contingent from Dayton, which had
traveled almost 200 miles and four hours, celebrated the old fashion way
— at a local pizza joint in town. They shut it down.
"Lots of pictures and lots of hugs," Scott Spink said.
He
and Ron Hop actually stood up and spoke. And, they got a little choked
up. After all, so much sweat and sacrifice go into an entire basketball
season. Multiply that by 10 years for many of the kids and parents in
the community, and it's quite a journey for the parents, players and
coaches. In the case of Hop and Spink, they were all-of-the-above.
Hooting and holleringA
large chunk from the rural town of 2,500, about 25 miles southwest of
Portland, was a long way from home, but they were all together.
Cheering. Embracing. Supporting.
"It's a special place," Ron Hop said of Dayton.
That
notion was furthered the next day when both teams carpooled home.
Firetrucks and police cars paraded them through town. Any team capturing
a state title is special. But to have two teams in one night bring home
the top prize?
Magical.
"Lots and lots of people in the community showed up for the parade," Scott Spink said. "It was a special moment."
Said
Ron Hop: "We've had teams win state titles and there have been
celebrations, but nothing like this. This was the biggest by far. There
were 300-400 honking horns. There was a lot of hooting and hollering."
It was easy to cheer for these teams.
The
girls, though offensively solid at almost 50 points per game, were a
defensive force while giving up just 31.5 points per game. Seven times
they gave up 20 points or less.
Seniors
Cooper Ringnalda and
Maddie Shirley, daughter of athletic director Todd Shirley, finished off stellar careers with a bang.
Kalina Rojas, a 5-11 freshman center, clogged up the middle and was active both offensive and defensively.
The
team rose from the ashes after six consecutive losing seasons starting
in 2007-08 (2-19) until Spink returned to coaching and led the Pirates
to an 18-11 campaign in 2013-14. Still, from an 11-loss season to state
champion was a big leap. With six freshmen on the squad, "The future
looks bright," he said.
A basketball schoolThe
boys had a larger one-year rise, from 15-11 in 2013-14 to state
champions and 29-1. The transfer of Flowers, an athletic post who will
likely play guard in college, was big, but the rest of the returners
improved immensely.

Steve Spink, Dayton
Courtesy photo
"We
were pretty mediocre last season," Hop said. "The guys made some big
strides and huge sacrifices."
Bernards is a big-time scorer and had 42 points in a game. He's a spot- or pull-up shooter from about anywhere on the court.
Spink (13 points per game) was a first-team All-League player who "made the biggest improvement on the team," Hop said.
Brothers
Jarred Ashley and
Darren Ashley were excellent athletes and capable scorers, but largely put aside personal glory for the good of the team.
"Great attitudes and great effort," Hop said. "They went above and beyond."
The school is above and beyond being considered simply a football power too.
Forever and gratefully associated with legendary and late football coach
Dewey Sullivan, the Pirates must now be considered a basketball school also.
Sullivan,
an Oregon Sports Hall of Fame member, was the winningest coach in state
history with a 352-84-2 mark and five state titles in more than 40
seasons.
But there are only a handful of Oregon schools that have brought home two state titles in one evening.
Both coaches pointed to Jon "Super-handles" Hildebrandt, an All-State guard who along with current Bears tight end
Dante Rosario led Dayton to state titles in 2000 and 2001, as the biggest basketball influence on the city.
Hildebrandt runs camps locally, has his
own website, and has caught the attention of young basketball players everywhere around Yamhill County. And beyond.
"It's
been about 15 years since Jon made a real impact in this area," Ron Hop
said. "We'll always be associated with Dewey and football, which is
awesome. But this is a basketball town too. Basketball is here to stay."