A couple of Port Angeles teams squared off in the final of the 2017 Larry Quinn Memorial Basketball Tournament at Bo Griffith Memorial Gym in Montesano on Jan. 29.
In the end it was the Threat topping the Avalanche for the title, marking the end of the tournament that honors a beloved Montesano girls basketball coach who passed away suddenly in 2013.
Some 150 girls from across the region made up the 10 teams that participated in the weekend event. Money raised through team entry fees, raffle ticket sales and concessions totaled more than $6,000 the first day alone and all proceeds go toward funding scholarships for graduating Montesano High School students.
Quinn was a lifelong resident of Montesano, graduating from Montesano High School in 1984. He himself was a formidable force on the basketball court and, after attending Grays Harbor College and Central Washington University, he put his love for the game, his community and the young people of Montesano into coaching girls basketball. His teams were always solid fundamentally, and even stronger in character.
Among the volunteers, players and families that packed the gym all weekend were four Montesano seniors, all current Bulldog basketballers and all part of the last team Quinn coached. Cheyann Bartlett, Josie Talley, all-time school points leader Jordan Spradlin and the school’s three point shot record holder Josie Toyra shared some of their fondest memories of the coach Sunday.
There was the time in Seaside, Ore., right before the tipoff of a championship game. The night before the team had found novelty rubber teeth, truly ghastly gag teeth. As Quinn was starting his pregame pep talk and last-minute instructions to his team, they all put the fake teeth in their mouths, and when Quinn noticed his pregame strategy session came to a screeching, laughing halt. Now loose, and already well-prepared, the girls went on to win that game, and that team — which included Quinn’s own daughter, Hannah — produced the best win/loss record of any Montesano High School girls basketball team in school history over their four years of playing together. This season the team is 15-3 and ranked fourth in the state among class 1A teams.
Toyra’s mom, Roni Sue Toyra, grew up with Quinn and along with Brandon Klinger ran the effort behind the tournament – this was the fourth – with dozens of volunteers from throughout the community helping with everything from tournament registration to concessions.
“For a basketball tournament we bring a lot of business to the Harbor in a slow month,” said Roni Sue. “The teams stay in Monte, Aberdeen and at the beach.” The Montesano hotel was booked solid for the event, for example.
Quinn married Renee Richardson in 1993 and had three children. The oldest daughter, Lindsy, is a student at Washington State University, and both Hannah and her twin brother Noah will graduate from their parents’ alma mater this year. She spoke about the scholarship given in honor of her late husband, including the unique way it is awarded. Lyndsy, Hannah and Noah
“The kids send us an essay, how they share some of the same characteristics as Larry, and how they plan to continue using that character in their lives after school,” she said. Since all the recipients up to this point were personally touched by Larry’s influence, deciding who gets scholarships and who doesn’t has been particularly difficult. “Larry would have hated that part,” she said.
The scholarships are for graduating Montesano High School seniors. “You don’t have to be good in sports, you don’t have to have a 4.0,” said Renee. “The scholarship is based on character.”
For more information on the scholarship, search Facebook for the Larry Quinn Memorial Basketball Tournament.