Grunseth and Warner were second-team ….
Grunseth and Warner were second-team All-ECC selections last winter and are primed for big senior years as well.
Warner took a big step forward last year, averaging 17.5 points, 8.7 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game and had a run in the second half of the season where she scored at least 19 points in nine of 12 games. That included two 30-plus point performances.
Grunseth enters her fourth varsity season, coming off a 2018-19 campaign where she averaged 16.6 points, six rebounds, 3.3 assists and 2.6 steals in 20 games played.
âGrace, Lydia, Warner and Mikayla, theyâre all going to be great leaders,â Weir said. âTheyâre just great leaders. I donât know how else to say it. They lead, they show by example. Theyâre always so energetic and positive and really helping those underclassmen.â
Syryczuk averaged a modest 5.0 points per game, but contributed 2.8 assists and 1.4 steals per game and is the spark of Gilmanâs defense. Waichulis has been part of the varsityâs guard rotation for two seasons.
âLydia is such a good defensive player and her shot has come around so well the last couple years,â Weir said. âI expect weâll be getting some points out of her. The steals and defense alone from that kid is all I can ask for. Sheâs just a little Energizer bunny.â
Sophomores Aubrey Syryczuk and Emma Grunseth had good scrimmages Monday and figure to be key pieces to the puzzle. Grunseth averaged 6.6 rebounds per game as a freshman and figures to increase her 3.9 points per game scoring average from a year ago. Syryczuk chipped in 3.2 points, 3.9 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game last year and gives the Pirates another athletic presence.
âAubrey and Emma played a lot of AAU this summer and you can definitely see they had a ball in their hands throughout the summer,â Weir said. âIt was good to see.â
Junior guard Katelynn Schmitt has caught the coachesâ attention in the early going and is another player who fared well Monday. Madisyn James, Ava Gunderson and Hannah Vick are just some of the sophomores who got varsity minutes as freshmen and Weir said thereâs a freshman or two on this yearâs roster who could crack the varsity rotation.
âThey just need to get the experience,â Weir said. âItâs unfortunate we have to play Colby, Neillsville and Loyal right away because those teams will attack them mentally and physically. Weâll do our best. Weâre going to have to throw them in and see how they handle it.â
Weir said she found it interesting when she asked the team to write down its goals for the season that most centered on the ideas of improving communication and work ethic and having fun. Few mentioned wins, championships or the post-season.
But, that could be a good thing. As several players experienced during the volleyball season, improved communication and attitude were keys to that championship season.
âI think theyâve realized if they can grow together and communicate and become more of a team that thatâs going to take them to the level they want to be at,â Weir said.
Climbing the Eastern Cloverbelt ladder wonât be easy. The Pirates tied Columbus Catholic for fifth place last year at 7-8. Colby went 16-0 and won its first 25 games last year before falling in a WIAA Division 4 state semifi nal, while Neillsville was 13-3 in league play, Owen-Withee was 11-4 and Loyal was 10-6.
Colby lost first-team All-ECC picks Ashley Streveler and Alyssa Underwood and secondteam pick Vanessa Lopez, but senior guard Hailey Voelker, another first-team pick, gives the Hornets a great player to build this yearâs club around. Loyal brings back first-team senior guard Remi Geiger and Neillsville has been a model of consistency for years in the conference.
Owen-Withee will be an interesting team to watch following the retirement of the stateâs girls basketball record holder in wins, Al Guthman, and the loss of center Jennifer Wendler, the leagueâs three-time Player of the Year. Columbus Catholic doesnât figure to be a pushover either.
âThese first four games are big,â Weir said. âWeâve gotta get âem.â