Tester
Named Rookie of the Year
El
Dorado News-Times article
It's tough
for a sophomore to make much of an impact on a team that
returns five senior starters and eight of its top nine
players from the previous year. Forget making an impact,
most sophomores would be content with any playing time at
all.
El Dorado's
Kristian Tester, the News-Times Rookie of the Year, isn't
like most sophomores.
Tester
moved into the starting lineup, started every game and
helped lead the Lady Cats to the Class AAAAA state
tournament and their first winning season (17-9) in
recent memory.
"She
did exactly what we needed her to do," said Coach
Brad Slatton. "In fact, I thought she held herself
back some. She could've scored more but she understood
that was not what this team needed. She did everything I
wanted her to do."
The 5-5
sophomore led the team in scoring early in the season as
El Dorado cruised through the nonconference schedule.
When the Lady Cats got into the AAAAA-South season,
however, Tester looked to get the ball inside more than
for her own shot.
"It
was a different level of competition," said Tester.
"Early on, we were playing smaller schools, it wasn't
the AAAAA competition. I think I molded myself into my
role later in the year."
On the
season, Tester averaged 11 points and led the county with
5.9 assists per game. She led the team in assists, free
throws made and free throws attempted. She was second on
the team in steals and third on the team in scoring.
"She
added a whole different dimension they never had before,"
said Sheridan coach Rick Treadway. "She took care of
the ballhandling. She was the stabilizer. She can drive
or hit the outside shot. She really balanced out their
team. She was exactly what they were looking for."
Tester's
biggest contribution to El Dorado was being the team's
primary ball handler. Last year, teams couldn't wait to
apply full court pressure to the Lady Cats. This season,
El Dorado rarely saw any pressure as teams showed their
respect to the rookie point guard.
"Not
only did she blow away the assist record but everybody's
assists were up," said Slatton. "Everybody
became a better player because she was out there. The
shooting percentages were up because of the shots they
were getting and our turnovers were down."
El Dorado's
team stats show a marked improvement this year over the
previous two seasons. The Lady Cats averaged 60 points
per game, which was up from 48.6 a year ago. The team had
just 429 turnovers, compared to 570 last year; had 445
assists compared to 315 last year and had 239 steals
compared to 191 last year. The Lady Cats averaged five
more shots per game and shot a higher field goal
percentage.
The season
wasn't all white roses for Tester, however. There was
plenty to learn and a lot of the lessons came under the
lights for everyone to see. The high level of competition,
night-in and night-out, proved to be the biggest
challenge.
"At
this level, you have to play every game and I didn't
realize that until I got here. It surprised me but I
thought I handled it well," said Tester. "As
far as scoring and passing, I thought I did pretty well.
On turnovers, I had a couple games where I had a bunch of
turnovers. I let their guards get to me but overall, I
think I did pretty well."
The AAAAA-South
features some of the toughest sophomore point guards in
the state, including Sheridan's Samantha Anglin and Lake
Hamilton's Katie Mattingly. Tester showed she is
definitely in that same class.
"I
want to be the best," she said. "They're making
me work harder to get where I want to get. If they want
to get where I want to get, they're going to have to work
harder, too."
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