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Rolling along

LH bowling team flourishes in inaugural season

By Rob Burchianti 7 min read
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Submitted photo The Laurel Highlands boys bowling team won the Southeast Section championship of the WPIBL and placed eighth in the state in its inaugural season. Members of the team were (front row, from left) Danny O'Neal, Gavin Ainsley, Lucas Deguia, Jack Johns, Aiden Milsom, Jacob Johnson, Josh Reed, Roman Haskins, (back row, from left) coach Jimmy Yex and head coach Kenny Riddell.
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Submitted photo The Laurel Highlands boys bowling team earned this plaque for winning the 2025-26 WPIBL Southeast Section championship.
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Submitted photo The Laurel Highlands boys bowling team earned this plaque for placing third in the Western Pa. Regional championships, which earned them a spot in the state finals.
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Submitted photo The Laurel Highlands boys bowling team starting five this season were (from left) Aiden Milsom, Jack Johns, Gavin Ainsley, Danny O'Neal and Roman Haskins. The Mustangs finished 9-1 during the regular season to win the WPIBL Southeast Section championship on a tiebreaker over Connellsville.

Kenny Riddell was a three-sport athlete who earned all-section honors in football, basketball and baseball his senior year at Laurel Highlands and went on to play college basketball at Waynesburg and then at California University of Pa.

Since then the 2004 Laurel Highlands graduate has gone on to coach a variety of sports while teaching at his alma mater, including boys and girls basketball, football, baseball and cross county.

One feat had always eluded him, however.

“Through all that I’d never won a section title,” Riddell said.

He finally fulfilled that aspiration this year as head coach of a team in its inaugural season.

Meet the Laurel Highlands boys bowling team, winners of the Southeast Section title in the Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Bowling League (WPIBL).

The Mustangs finished first in the six-team section with a 9-1 record, beating out Connellsville, which also was 9-1, on a tiebreaker.

Not bad for a first-year team.

The Mustangs’ starting five were junior Aiden Milsom (198 average), seniors Jack Johns (198), Gavin Ainsley (192.7) and Roman Haskins (188.9) and junior Danny O’Neal (186.6).

Riddell looked back on how the idea of a bowling team at Laurel Highlands came to fruition.

“It all kind of started in my classroom,” Riddell recalled. “I’m a bowler and I was just talking with some of my students about it. A few of them said that would be really cool if we had a school team. They ended up looking it up online. This was about four years.

“It got off the ground with just an in-house spring league, all LH kids. We got a really nice turnout, anywhere from 35 to 50 kids. We started off at Mount Vernon and did that for about three years but then they closed.

“After that I was wondering do we even want to keep doing this? Then the kids who were seniors this year asked if we could try and get in on the WPIBL, which is not part of the WPIAL but is a part of the PIAA. I said alright.”

Riddell pushed forward.

“I had been thinking about doing that for years and then I finally said letĢƵ give it a shot,” he said. “Even though I know we’re not going to get a whole ton of funding for this, I thought thatĢƵ OK, we’ll fundraise ourselves, we’ll figure it out.”

Not long after the team was formed and ready to compete.

“I give all the credit to the kids and their parents,” Riddell said. “They did a great job of getting the money we needed to get in the league. The guys at Manor Lanes put up the entry fee money and we got in a section with Connellsville, Norwin, McKeesport, Belle Vernon and Yough. It was a really competitive section, especially between us and Connellsville. Belle Vernon was really good also.

“We ended up squeaking it out and winning the section our first year in the league.”

League matches consist of three games with five bowlers from each team.

“You get two points for every game you win and one point for total pins,” Riddell explained. “ThatĢƵ the tiebreaker. You bowl everybody twice. You have five bowlers and you can sub out at any time, but you just can’t reinsert until the next game.

“It was a cool experience. We just took it one game at a time. We were very senior heavy so we’ll be losing a lot going into next year.”

The Mustangs followed a solid regular season with a strong showing in the postseason.

“They did just a phenomenal job,” Riddell said. “We won the section and made the WPIBL playoffs. We didn’t make it to the finals but we had an automatic bid to the next round, the Western Pa. Regionals and placed third there. That earned us the bid to states. There were only six teams from Western Pa. there. We competed out in Lancaster and did pretty well, finished eighth overall in the state. The boys just bowled their butts off.”

Riddell lauded his bowlers.

“We had two senior captains, Jack Johns and Gavin Ainsley,” Riddell said. “Jack is one of those smooth lefties that makes something really hard look really easy. Gavin is our anchor in every sense of the word. HeĢƵ a great bowler, but more importantly, heĢƵ the rock of our team. You can’t tell if he threw a great ball in the pocket or a nasty split. ItĢƵ the type of mentality that you wish everyone has.

“Aiden Milsom was our lead-off guy and he really set the tone for us. If he was on, we had a pretty good shot at winning. Roman Haskins and Danny O’Neal round out our varsity roster and both are more than capable of popping off a 250 game at any time.

“Another senior, Jacob Johnson, literally never bowled before we started practice in November. Just an incredible athlete that continuously got better and better every time he threw. Anthony McCoy is our final senior and he was another one that was capable of doing great things when he got going.

“Last but not least, (junior) Lucas Deguia was another one that we talked into bowling last minute and continuously improved every match. Now, he is going to be heavily relied upon going into next year. We expect big things.”

Riddell had plenty of coaching help along the way.

“I fancy myself a decent bowler and I did my best, but those guys from Manor Lanes were a huge help,” Riddell said. “Jimmy Yex, who we met at the bowling alley once we started practicing, is a great bowler that provided the boys with expert advice on how to approach each shot that they took. His patience, guidance and dedication were instrumental to our success.

“In addition, Dave Show and his son Tyler Show from Manor Lanes were critical to our success for not only the use of their facility, but their expertise and direction that was given to the boys free of charge.

“I’d also like to thank the LHSD administration for their support as we started something from scratch. Also, a special thank you to Jason Scott for not only supporting us as a sponsor, but donating a vehicle for us to use.”

Riddell started bowling himself as a youngster.

“I bowled when I was a kid and then when I was in college,” Riddell said. “Then I started coaching basketball and doing all that kind of stuff, then had kids and bowling kind of got away from me.

“I got back into it about four years ago because my dadĢƵ a bowler also. I got into his league and thought it was fun. I carried a 205 average when I left Mount Vernon after they closed. I went to Yough this year which is ConnellsvilleĢƵ home turf and I want to go to Manor next year.

“I have to throw out some credit to ConnellsvilleĢƵ head coach, Joe Soltis. He bowls in the same league as I do. He kind of gave me the push I needed to get this team going.”

Riddell sees a bright future for the bowling team.

“I think we’re going to be pretty good next year, too,” he said. “We have a pretty good freshman coming up. ItĢƵ too much fun not to do it. ItĢƵ a blast.”

Now when Riddell walks by the trophy case at Laurel Highlands, he can finally be proud to know there will be a piece of hardware in there for a section championship that he played an integral part of winning.

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