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News / Sports / Clark County Sports

Migrating Penguins: Clark College hoops teams look beyond Northwest

By Becca Robins, Clark College Independent
Published: January 27, 2016, 11:02pm

Editor’s Note: This story was written by a staff member of The Independent, Clark College’s campus newspaper, as part of a collaboration with The Columbian called Voices From Clark College. It was published Wednesday in The Independent.

Throughout Clark College’s fall quarter, neon pink signs lined the walls of O’Connell Sports Center proclaiming in bold letters: “Women’s basketball players wanted.”

Now, about halfway through the season, the 11-member team features eight freshmen, with six of those players from beyond Washington and Oregon.

The geographic diversity of the roster is nothing new, head coach Al Aldridge said. Clark continues to take advantage of the NWAC recruiting zone that allows them to offer scholarships to players from 10 states, including Hawaii and Alaska, and the province of British Columbia. Athletes from outside of this zone may play for Clark but may not receive scholarships, according to athletic director Ann Walker.

Walker said the women’s and men’s basketball teams are each allocated 22 quarters of 65 percent tuition scholarship funds per year by the state of Washington.

That includes freshman Hawaii native Breann Nueku.

“Al saw my YouTube video, and we connected from there,” Nueku said.

Not only has she had to make the adjustment to collegiate basketball, but Nueku had the added challenge of adjusting to a new home.

“Basketball keeps me busy, so I don’t think about longing for home as much,” she said. “Not having my family and friends come to games has been a big thing for me. Being here, it’s harder for them to make it to my games, but it’s nice that they can livestream it.”

The Penguins take a week off from playing or practicing during Thanksgiving and 10 days off for winter break to allow players to go home and be with their families. Nueku did just that.

“The biggest difference is probably the weather,” Nueku said. “In Hawaii it’s warm and sunny, but it’s cold here,” she laughed.

Assistant coach Lisa Parker “is like the mom of the team,” Aldridge said, and players who are feeling cold and lonely can come to her for comfort.

Some other schools have diverse rosters, such as Green River Community College in Auburn, which bolsters its roster with players from Texas, Alaska, Nevada and Idaho, in addition to local players.

On the other hand, nine of the 10 players for the women’s undefeated conference leader, Lane Community College in Eugene, Ore., are from Oregon or Washington. Players for Linn-Benton Community College in Albany, Ore., all hail from Oregon.

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Washington community colleges generally have more diverse rosters than Oregon schools. Aldridge said that could be because Oregon colleges can offer their athletes full tuition scholarships as opposed to Washington’s 65 percent.

“It’s hard to get kids to come to Washington without help,” Aldridge said. Schools like Clark end up having to reach out to players in an assortment of states.

NWAC recruitment rules are more lax than NCAA policies, Walker said

“There aren’t a lot of rules,” she said. “You can start talking to high school players when you want, as much as you want. If community colleges were limited to the same rules and limits that four-year schools are, then they’d be behind even more.”

The NWAC rules are unclear about the academic side of the athletes’ education. While athletes must remain full-time students by taking a minimum of 12 credits, the rules state that players must also remain in “good academic standing.”

“It’s ambiguous because what might be good academic standing at Lower Columbia is different than here,” the athletic director said. “So each school defines it differently. Some don’t define it at all.”

Clark interprets the policy as a 2.0 GPA minimum, which Walker said is new since her hiring in 2014.

Aldridge said the young roster this year is largely due to several players graduating last spring. Also, six expected returning players decided not to come back right before school started.

“The objective was to see if some kid walking the halls wanted to play basketball that we hadn’t seen,” he said. This prompted the printing of the pink flyers.

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