It has been 21 years since the Western Nebraska Community College men’s soccer team captured a Region IX championship.
                On Saturday, the Cougars scored two second-half goals and went on to down Otero College 2-0 in the championship match at Landers Soccer Complex. The win sends the Cougars to the NJCAA national tournament in Wichita, Kansas, which starts November 17 and runs until the 23rd.
                WNCC is the first team to punch their ticket to the national tournament. The other regions/districts still have to play. The national tournament seedings will be announced at 11 a.m. MST on November 12. Nationals are made up of the eight district/region champions and four at-large teams.
                For coach Todd Rasnic it is his first with the men’s program since he took over in 2005. The Cougar women won a regional title in 2008. But, this is the first time WNCC will be at nationals as the other times the Cougars had to go through a district final. Not this year, though.
                Rasnic was one happy coach after the game and with under two minutes left in the match, it could be seen as he went down the line of his bench players giving them a high five and hugs.
                “I have been at the school for a long time and this has been an event for me that eluded me in winning the Region IX championship and getting a chance to compete at nationals. So, needless to say, I am over the moon happy with what happened here today,” Rasnic said. “I would be remised if I didn’t take the time and say that I give 99 percent of the credit to Eseah Ingram, my assistant coach. He has done an excellent job of connecting with the players this year and spends countless hours watching game video and breaking games down and the nitty-gritty work. The players did it. With all that being said, we are super excited that we won and get a chance to compete at nationals.”
                Ingram, who used to play for Rasnic and is now the assistant coach, was humbled to see his players celebrate the victory. The players even lifted Ingram up and tossed him in the air in a celebratory salute to their assistant and winning regionals.
                “This means everything. We haven’t won a Region IX title since 2003 and if my math is correct, 21 years ago,” he said. “We were in position a couple of times, we were the number one seed a couple of times, and today we made history so it means everything to us. We are enjoying the moment and enjoy the game over the weekend and come next week our focus is on nationals.”
                Ingram, a Scottsbluff High graduate that went on to play soccer at Shaw University, said the players bought in to what they were doing all season.
                “This is special right now. For me I am blessed that Coach Rasnic come in and trusted in what I was doing and I am happy that the boys bought in to know what we were doing in the long hard season. We knew that if we played our game, we could compete with anybody. Today, we endured the pressure and got a little luck in some aspects and when our chances happened, we put it in the back of the net.”
                Rasnic said it was a very competitive match against a talented Otero squad that were unlucky on some of their shots and WNCC get lucky on their shots.
                “It was a tale of two halves,” Rasnic said. They came out strong. I kind of assumed that the pace they were playing they wouldn’t be able to keep the pace as hard as they were playing. I just literally felt like we paced ourselves correctly without taking our foot off the gas. We were attacking for 90 minutes and I think that paid off for us in the end. We are grateful and we are looking for the opportunity to go to Wichita in a couple weeks.”
                The luck that Ingram was talking about was the ball bouncing the Cougars way as Otero had three shots early in the first half that hit the side or upper poles and bounced back into the field of play. One Otero shot hit the left pole and then hit the right pole and then came back to the left and out of play. That is how close the Rattlers were to scoring. If those shots wouldn’t have caromed off, the Rattlers might have been up 3-0 early.
                WNCC goalkeeper Owen Henderson, a freshman from Greeley, Colorado, said the defense helped win the game for them and games are won with a little luck.
                “The first half was kind of scary, but no one wins without a little bit of luck,” Henderson said. “After we scored the first one, we locked it down for 40-plus minutes and then we scored a second one and we locked it down even better. Our defense was really good. After we scored that second goal, I think we had all that momentum and it pushed us to defend and we locked down. We knew that after the next 30 minutes we would be able to hold that trophy a little.”
                For Henderson, he bought in to what the coaches told him during his recruiting trip and now he gets to savior the national tournament.
                “When I first came on my visit here, Eseah told me I was a collegiate-level player and that we were going to make some noise this year. He stuck with his word. I trusted him the whole way and I trusted my teammates and everything we did was together,” Henderson said. “It just feels amazing that it all paid off.”
                The first half saw both teams have plenty of shots and unofficially, Otero had five key shots in the half, including a couple that the kicks were like field goals in football. WNCC had two good shots in the first 15 minutes as well, but shots by Eduardo Oliveira and Maxime Niyibaho went wide. The score at halftime was scoreless.
                The second half saw the Cougars come out ready. Just two minutes in, a shot went wide. A minute later, the Cougars put together a nice run and a pass by Oliveira to Niyibayo went into the net for the 1-0 lead.
                Otero came back and had five shots that went high, some were like kicking a field goal or they just missed from corner kicks or free kicks that Henderson made saves on.
                With 16:34 to play, WNCC scored an insurance goal when Lucas Ovalle set up for a free kick. His kick was on target and went into the net for the score.
                After that, Otero kept trying to get a goal to come back but each time the Cougar defense thwarted the shots from going into the net in some fashion.
                While the Cougars are the first team to punch their ticket, Henderson said, it is time to get back to work.
                “I think nationals will be fun and exciting. I have never imagined to be able to do that,” he said. “When Eseah told me that we were going to make noise this year, I am honestly speechless about nationals. I don’t know what to expect but it is amazing I am doing this my freshman year and I want to try to do this again next year, too.”
 
WNCC men’s basketball falls twice in Utah
 
                EPHRAIM, Utah – The Western Nebraska Community College men’s basketball team had a tale of two days in their season-opening classic over the weekend in Ephraim, Utah, at the Snow Classic.
                On Friday, the Cougars gave No. 7 Salt Lake Community College all they had and then some in falling to the Bruins 109-104 in double overtime. On Saturday, the host team Snow College earned a 112-67 win.
                WNCC will be back in action Wednesday when they host Eastern Wyoming College in a 6 p.m. start.
                Friday’s game with Salt Lake was one where the Cougars fell behind 41-25 at halftime and then outscored the Bruins 60-44 in the second half. With under a minute to play, WNCC trailed 88-85 when Salt Lake missed free throws. WNCC got the rebound and Toms Linis attempted a 3-pointer with 11 seconds to play but was fouled. Linis netted all three charity tosses to tie the game and the game went into overtime.
                Late in the first overtime, Salt Lake led 92-90 when Elijah Burney nailed two free throws to tie the game. Salt Lake made one of two free throws with 43 seconds to play. WNCC took their first lead of the overtime at 94-93 as Mathiang Maker got a one-handed offensive rebound tip in. Salt Lake came back down and nailed 1 of 2 free throws with 19 seconds to play to tie the contest at 94 to force a second overtime.
                Salt Lake went up by eight in the second overtime at 104-96 but the Cougars came back to get it within 104-100 on two technical shots by Elijah Hollins and then a bucket by Maker. WNCC came within 108-104 late when Reece Randolph made one of his four 3-pointers, but that wasn’t enough.
                WNCC had six players in double figures, led by Hollins with 22 followed by 16 points each from Maker and Randolph. Burney had 15 points while Kellon Harris and Linis each had 12 points.
                WNCC had 41 rebounds with Maker grabbing 11 and Harris getting 10.
                Salt Lake had two players combine for 70 points as Mason Bendinger had 45 and Trey Brown had 25.
                Saturday’s contest with Snow saw the Badgers jump out to a 53-33 halftime lead and never looked back.
                WNCC shot 36 percent from the field and buried six treys. Snow shot 59 percent from the field and had 15 3-pointers.
                The Cougars had just one in double figures as Hollins tallied 20 points with three treys. Hollins, Harris, and Caleb Swisher each had a 3-pointer in the contest.
 
Friday’s Game
WNCC                25 60 9 10 – 104
Salt Lake           41 44 9 15 – 109
WNCC
Kellon Harris 12, Elijah Hollins 22, Mathiang Maker 16, Elijah Burney 15, Toms Linis 12, Reece Randolph 16, Isaiah St. Preux 4, Kendrick Preston 7.
 
Saturday’s Game
WNCC                33 34 – 67
Snow                   53-59 – 112
WNCC
Kellon Harris 9, Elijah Hollins 20, Mathiang Maker 9, Elijah Burney 9, Toms Linis 2, Noah Jones 2, Reece Randolph 6, Isaiah S. Preux 4, Caleb Swisher 3, Kendrick Preston 1, Dorin Niguema 2.
 
WNCC women open season with two wins
 
                RIVERTON, Wyo. – The Western Nebraska Community College women’s basketball team opened the season with a pair of big wins at the Hampton Inn Tip-off Classic in Riverton, Wyoming, over the weekend.
                The Cougars women received a pair of 22-point outings from freshman Zozefine Sipolina in the two wins.
                The Cougars opened the season with an 82-45 win over Fort Hays Tech Northwest where four Cougars finished in double figures. Saturday’s game against Central Wyoming College saw the Cougars place six in double figures for the 92-47 win.
                Saturday’s action against the host team saw a dominating show. Central Wyoming won their opener on Friday against Eastern Wyoming College 91-81.
                On Saturday, the Cougars took control early as they led 29-7 after one period and led 45-15 at halftime.
                WNCC was outscored in the third period but outscored the Rustlers 29-10 in the fourth for the win.
                WNCC shot 52 percent from the field with 10 3-pointers.
                Sipolina had 22 points with four 3-pointers, while Nataly Dunka had 16 points. Laura Montiel tallied 14 points with eight assists, while Adelina Urtane had 12 points and six boards. Helena Kuck had 11 points with three treys.
                Friday against Fort Hays Tech Northwest (formerly Northwest Kansas Technical College), the Cougars led 29-17 after one period and led 47-25 at halftime. WNCC outscored Fort Hays 35-20 in the second half.
                WNCC shot 38 percent from the field and buried eight 3-pointers. Sipolina had 22 points with three treys while Urtane tallied 20 points with 14 rebounds and two treys.
                Hernandez had 13 points with 11 rebounds while Montiel had 12 points and six rebounds and seven assists.
                WNCC, 2-0, will be back in action next Saturday when they host Casper College at Cougar Palace in a 1 p.m. contest. Casper is 0-2 on the season after falling twice at the Snow College Classic to Utah State-Eastern 75-64 and Snow College 70-68 over the weekend.
 
Friday’s Game
WNCC                29 18 15 20 – 82
FHTN                   17 8 5 15 – 45
WNCC
Helena Kuck 5, Laura Montiel 12, Adelina Urtane 20, Zozefine Sipolina 22, Nataly Dunka k7, Lidia Hernandez 13, Katie Vierra 1, Asia Mitchell 2.
 
Saturday’s Game
WNCC                29 16 18 29 – 92
C. Wyoming    7 8 22 10 – 47
WNCC
Helena Kuck 11, Laura Montiel 14, Adelina Urtane 12, Zozefine Sipolina 22, Nataly Dunka 16, Lidia Hernandez 13, Asia Mitchell 4.