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Raiders remain perfect in win over West Greene

By Jim Downey, For The Greene County Messenger 5 min read
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Jim Downey | ĢƵ

Waynesburg CentralĢƵ Selena Phillips (left) and Hunter Wasson prepare for ThursdayĢƵ Section 1 match against West Greene at the Waynesburg SportsmenĢƵ Club.

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Waynesburg Central's Colby Simkovic (left) and Abby Ozohonish take aim before the start of Thursday's Section 1 match against West Greene at the Waynesburg Sportsmen's Club.

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Jim Downey

Waynesburg Central senior Selena Phillips takes aim before ThursdayĢƵ Section 1 match against West Greene at the Waynesburg SportsmenĢƵ Club. Phillips is the defending WPIAL gold medalist.

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Waynesburg Central teammates Cameron Cernuska (left) and Abby Ozohonish sight their rifles before Thursday's Section 1 match against West Greene at the Waynesburg Sportsmen's Club.

FRANKLIN TWP. — The Waynesburg Central rifle team remained undefeated after defeating rival West Greene, 800-58x-795-58x, Thursday afternoon in Section 1 action at Waynesburg SportsmenĢƵ Club.

Waynesburg improves to 5-0 in the section and 8-0 overall. West Greene goes to 2-3 in the section.

Selena Phillips was solid for the Raiders again with a score of 100-9x.

The senior is the defending WPIAL champion, and she recognized the weight the gold medal has in her senior season.

“It puts a lot more pressure on you, definitely,” said Phillip. “ItĢƵ a lot to live up to.

“ItĢƵ definitely harder (as defending champion). You want to go out in a bang, but it doesn’t take much not to win this.”

Philips continued the thought, adding, “I want to be the best I can be. If itĢƵ not a gold medal, itĢƵ not a gold medal. If someone else wins it, thatĢƵ fine. If I win it, thatĢƵ good.”

Phillips admitted thinking about her medal defense can create issues.

“I wouldn’t think about anything. It was muscle memory. If you think, you stink,” explained Phillips. “ThatĢƵ my own fault. I shouldn’t put more pressure on me than there is.”

Phillips also plays softball and said the mental approach for each sport is different for her.

“I calm down when I go to rifle. I get hyped up for softball,” explained Phillips.

One accolade Phillips won’t be in line to receive this year is the Dave Cramer Award, given to shooters who post a perfect score in every match. She recorded a 99-9x a couple weeks ago.

Fellow senior Hunter Wasson finished ninth in the WPIAL and third in the state two years ago as a sophomore. He just had a bad day in last yearĢƵ final.

“I have the same set up as in the last three years, the same fundamentals, same concept. No need to fix whatĢƵ not broken,” explained Wasson. “Throughout my life, stuff happens. I’m not dwelling on it.”

Phillips just wants to keep doing what heĢƵ successfully done in the past.

“I have not missed a shot in 2½ years. I’m going for my third-straight Cramer Award,” said Wasson, who was perfect again with a score of 100-10x.

Wasson, who has enlisted in the Marines, wants to enjoy his last go-around.

“ItĢƵ nice to have personal accolades, get all the memories,” said Wasson. “I want to have fun.

“I want the podium and to go to states. Everyone wants that.”

Phillips and Wasson agree the team is paramount in their individual success.

“We have a really strong team,” Phillips said of the Raiders. “We’re putting all the elements together. Hunter and I come out to shoot a high 100-x total. That sets the tone.

“You have to shoot your best. You’re not shooting for yourself. You’re shooting for the team.”

“I’m a team captain. I’m out for these guys. I got their backs. Every score counts,” said Wasson. “It takes eight scores to win a match. A bad day can affect the team.

“We have some shooters this year. We’ve been very consistent. We have talented freshmen coming up. The confidence is high.”

Abby Ozohonish (100-8x), Cameron Cernuska (100-7x), Bryce Bedilion (100-6x), Shelby Burkett (100-4x), Nick Guess (100-5x), and Colby Simkovic 100-9x closed out the scoring for the Raiders.

Haileigh Thomas has been one of the Pioneers’ most consistent shooters this season and she continued that consistency against the Raiders with a score of 100-8x.

“I kind of go with the flow. It is what it is,” Thomas said of her approach. “Today, I felt comfortable. I felt good today.”

Thomas, a senior, has a lot of familiar faces on the squad with twin sister Makenzie and younger sister Allison.

DJ Jones (99-9x), Jade Rittenhouse (99-7x), Kenzie Thomas (100-7x), Shey Watson (100-10x), Piper Witlatch (100-6x), Alison Thomas (99-5x), and Corey John (98-6x) rounded out the scoring for the Pioneers.

“I played basketball in seventh and eighth grade, but hunting (and shooting) runs in my family. That sparks my interest,” said Thomas, who also shoots sporting clays.

Thomas realizes this is her last go-around and hopes she has a better day on the range than she did last year

“I get to the big shoots and don’t shoot my normal. Hopefully, this year will change,” said Thomas, who anticipates attending Waynesburg University to major in Criminal Justice. “If you don’t shoot 200-18x, you have no chance.

“I’d like to make the podium and qualify for states. I haven’t had much luck in the past. I want to be up there. As long as I go to states.

“I’ll just do my best.”

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