P2P NCS Softball Honors
Amador Valley's Danielle Williams is the NCS Player of the Year.

ALL-NORTH COAST SECTION

Player of the Year
DANIELLE WILLIAMS, AMADOR VALLEY




Over the past eight years, just two names have graced the circle on a consistent basis for Amador Valley, and the most recent one capped a phenomenal four-year career by leading the Dons to the North Coast Section Division I championship, the second-such title during the tenure of Northwestern-bound Danielle Williams.

This year's title came somewhat improbably for the Dons, and certainly as a direct result of Williams' effort in the circle. After losing to cross-town rival Foothill in the EBAL championship game, by a score of 8-0 which left many people assuming that the Falcons had Amador Valley's number, Williams refused to let that be the end of her legacy.

"(Danielle) put this team on her back in NCS this year, and at other times throughout the year," said Amador Valley coach Teresa Mayes-Borchard. "She sacrificed a good majority of her Senior Grad Night celebration the night before the game, to be fresh and ready to go against Foothill. Then, she had the team singing and dancing on the bus on the way to the game. We were loose and ready to play because of her."

Loose and ready to play is one thing, but the bigger factor was Williams' complete dominance during a brilliant post-season run. In the first round, against Mt. Eden – in the Dons' first game following the big loss to Foothill – Williams made an early statement with a no-hitter and 20 strikeouts. A game later, in the quarterfinals, she doubled twice, drove in two runs, and struck out 12 batters in a two-hit performance against Castro Valley. The best was yet to come.

"We were so close as a team this season, and we all wanted so badly to win for one another. Personally, I wanted to get it done so badly so our other senior (Halle Uhl), for Coach T (Mayes-Borchard), and for everyone in our program," Williams said. "And facing Foothill again was certainly motivating, because I certainly don't like to lose at all, but especially not the way we did the last time we played them. We wanted to face them again in the final."

The shutout streak continued in the NCS semifinals against top seed and BVAL co-champion Freedom, as Williams struck out 15, allowed two hits, and helped her own cause with a home run. At this point, her performance was so expected by those around the section, that when Foothill beat Heritage in the other semifinal and the Dons were leading Freedom in the fifth inning, the title game matchup was a foregone conclusion.

"There's no way Danielle is allowing (Freedom) to come back," stated Foothill coach Matt Sweeney, when told it appeared his Falcons would be facing Amador Valley again in the final. "She's too good and too determined for that to happen."

With the rematch in the final, her Amador Valley teammates again turned to Williams for leadership, and she delivered. As a result of her own effort, she inspired those around her.

"The team followed Danielle's lead in that NCS run, and they came alive for her. They made something magical happen," Mayes-Borchard said. "Her NCS run was just incredible. It's so amazing to see what she can do. The way she bounced back from that Foothill game was just incredible."

Looking back to the EBAL title game, many factors came together which resulted in the stunning final score. First, Williams was late to warmups after completing a long Advanced Placement exam for college that afternoon. Her pitches never quite materialized like she was used to, and the Dons knew when they fell behind by three runs that there would be no coming back against Falcons' standout pitcher Nicole May. As a result, the end snowballed against them.

"Our whole thought late in that game was not to let May and (Courtney) Beaudin see another pitch," Mayes-Borchard explained. "At that point, we wanted to save a few things for NCS."

Save a few things they did, and Williams delivered with one of the top all-around performances of the year. Not only did she post her fourth straight shutout effort in the playoffs, but homered and doubled at the plate – collecting two of the Dons' three hits against May - to lead Amador Valley to the 2-0 victory.

"I told the team not to listen to the noise around the (Pleasanton) community after the EBAL title game," Mayes-Borchard remarked. "We came out on fire in the NCS title game, and Danielle led us there."

The title game was certainly a moment of celebration for the Amador Valley community, but also the end of an era, as Williams graduates with her two NCS titles under her belt, and plenty of growth along the way, having followed another four-year standout in the circle when she arrived on campus.

"In the beginning, I felt I was carrying on the Amador Valley legacy, and living up to Johanna (Grauer). As I grew, I focused on being more of a leader," Williams stated. "It was awesome this year, having so many younger players who I could be a role model to, to help them grow as students and athletes."

Now, Mayes-Borchard will need to find another arm in the circle, someone who will become just the third starting pitcher for the Dons in a nine-year stretch. But it is likely Williams' demeanor which will be most difficult to replace.

"We will continue forward, and we won't change our gameplan or strategies," Mayes-Borchard said. "But Danielle has been an incredible leader, and she has grown so much. She was a leader of servitude, serving this program and her teammates. That's hard to replace."

Williams' final numbers also tower above all others, finishing the year with a 21-4 record, having struck out an amazing 363 batters in 178 innings pitched, while allowing just 74 hits all year.

For her efforts throughout the season, we are pleased to recognize Danielle Williams as the North Coast Section Player of the Year.

Other players considered include Freedom's Vanessa Strong, Foothill's Nicole May, and Bishop O'Dowd's Frankie Hammoude.


Coach of the Year
TERESA MAYES-BORCHARD, AMADOR VALLEY





Just like there was no question as to Amador Valley finishing the year as the No. 1 team in both the Prep2Prep North Coast Section and Northern California rankings this past season, there was also little question that Dons coach Teresa Mayes-Borchard would be the hands down winner as the North Coast Section Coach of the Year.

Mayes-Borchard had the Dons at the top in our NCS and Northern California rankings for most of the season, but after 1-0 and 8-0 losses to cross-town Pleasanton arch-rival Foothill, people were anointing the Falcons, rather than the Dons, as the top NCS and NorCal team going into the NCS Division I playoffs. Even the NCS seeding criteria almost had Mayes-Borchard and her girls as an afterthought, after only giving them a No. 4 seed.

But then, a potentially tragic incident turned into a spark for the Dons and their faithful fans, resulting in a journey to the NCS Division I title game. Mayes-Borchard got into a motorcycle accident, and the girls rallied around her; simultaneously, Northwestern-bound Danielle Williams became virtually unhittable in the playoffs.

Just a few days after the 8-0 loss to Foothill in the East Bay Athletic League tournament title game, and a day before the Dons were to face Mt. Eden in the first round of the playoffs, Mayes-Borchard was on her motorcycle when she hit an oil slick and then made contact with a car.

“Thank goodness I had a good helmet, leather jacket and boots,” Mayes-Borchard remarked.

Even so, she suffered a broken collarbone and three broken ribs.

“I tried to get the doctors to release me early so I could get to practice,” continued Mayes-Borchard with a bit of a chuckle. “But I was in Castro Valley and they had cut up my clothes prior to transporting me to the hospital. I called my assistant Jenny (Williams) from the hospital and said I couldn’t make it to practice, but I’d see them the next day.”

An arm-in-sling Mayes-Borchard arrived at the Mt. Eden game and the rest is history.

“I showed up and coached third base but I was in a lot of pain,” Mayes-Borchard said. “But I’ve been in a lot of pain on and off the last couple of years, and nothing was going to stop me from being at that game.”

The younger Williams asked her coach if she was okay, and promptly went out and started performing magic in the circle and at the plate. After four shutouts, it was Mayes-Borchard and her girls who were all smiles in the postgame huddle and taking home the hardware, after Williams pitched a four-hitter with 11 strikeouts and hit a home run in a 2-0 NCS D1 title game victory over Foothill.

For Mayes-Borchard, it was her third NCS D1 title in the five years since she took the Amador Valley helm from East Bay softball legend Julie Marshall in 2014, after assisting Marshall from 2007 when both started at Amador Valley and also started the Lady Hustle travel ball team.

Just winning one NCS D1 title in what is one of the state’s toughest divisions is a testament to a solid program and coach, but winning three in five years is almost a Herculean accomplishment, and with what went on this year it could almost be called a miracle considering there were other unfortunate twists to the story of Mayes-Borchard and her girls.

Mayes-Borchard’s motorcycle accident was only one of two vehicular accidents that befell Amador Valley, and one of two big personal obstacles for Mayes-Borchard to overcome this season.

While the girls were at the Carew Tournament in Orange County, tragedy struck and Mayes-Borchard and her assistants had to keep the girls together and focused. The girls opened with a win over a very solid and state-ranked Huntington Beach and had just lost a 1-0 heartbreaker to state-ranked Cathedral Catholic-San Diego. They were scheduled to meet a state-ranked Norco the next day when they got some bad news that necessitated getting one of the players to Pismo Beach.

“We had a father involved in a serious ATV accident and got word the evening before the Norco game,” Mayes-Borchard said. “We all had trouble sleeping that night waiting on word on how he was doing. Trying to rally them for that game was really hard.”

Amador Valley lost to Norco and then to Mater Dei-Chula Vista to go 1-3 at the Carew, and it dropped them down in the various state rankings, but the good news is the team dad is recovering from his injuries and was even able to get to the playoffs to cheer the team on to victory.

If all this was not enough, there is plenty more. When Mayes-Borchard said she’s been in pain on and off for a couple of years she means it.

The pain began in August of 2016 with a surgery that didn’t go well and necessitated two additional surgeries in October and December. She was bedridden for several months, but somehow got out of bed in February, largely at Marshall’s urging, to coach in 2017, although her movement in the third-base coach’s box was impaired.

Since then she’s had to have 16 nerve blocks due to the pain, with several coming just before and during this past season. All this, as a result of nerve damage, is affecting her heart, blood pressure, and causes numbness. Once some healing takes place, she will have a fourth surgery.

After going through a physically painful 2017 season, plus the pain on the field of getting upset in the playoffs as the top seed, she still wasn’t finished. Despite almost two years of constant suffering, Mayes-Borchard answered the bell for the 2018 season.

“I really wanted to be out there with the girls,” said Mayes-Borchard. “It was really hard at the beginning of the season. My assistant coaches and seniors had to pick it up.”

They picked their coach and leader up, and she carried them when they were down and seemingly out after the 8-0 loss to Foothill.

“After the Foothill loss, I looked every one of them in the eye and said ‘do not give in, do not quit. Do you all understand me? We have got this and I need you to trust me on this,” Mayes-Borchard recalled.

Knowing what they knew about what their coach was going through, and the adversity that struck the team at the Carew tourney, it all somehow fired up the girls, and with Williams dealing and the girls hitting, the Dons brought home the bacon.

“Seeing her out there with everything she’s been going through definitely fired me up, and especially in the playoffs,” Williams said. “We all wanted to be there for her like she was there for us this season when her health wasn’t that good, and for me all four years. Coach doesn’t just teach softball, she teaches life lessons. She’s just a great coach.”

“My main coaching philosophy is to teach resiliency and grit, so when hard times hit I have to be a role model for that,” Mayes-Borchard said.

“Another basic premise of what I teach the girls is it’s a safe place to fail,” Mayes-Borchard continued. “When something hard happens, it's usually right before something fantastic happens. It’s like an arrow. It doesn’t launch from the bow until its pulled back.”

She might be in constant pain that’s real hard to live with, but what’s truly fantastic is her arrow is soaring as high as can be. For her efforts, and her inspirational story this season, we are pleased to honor Teresa Mayes-Borchard as the North Coast Section Coach of the Year.

Other coaches considered for this award include Foothill's Matt Sweeney, Moreau Catholic's Christine Krisman, Cloverdale's Margaret Fitzgerald, and St. Joseph Notre Dame's Jason Shelton



FIRST TEAM ALL-NCS

Nicole May, Foothill
Position: Pitcher
Year: Sophomore

The first-team All-EBAL selection went 20-2, with both losses coming to Amador Valley. The verbal Oklahoma commit posted a 0.65 ERA, striking out 209 batters in 128 innings pitched. For good measure, she hit .404 at the plate, with four home runs.


Danielle Williams, Amador Valley
Position: Pitcher
Year: Senior

The NCS Player of the Year and EBAL MVP did not allow a run during the Dons' playoff march, and homered in both the semifinals and the championship game. For the season, the Northwestern-bound Williams struck out a whopping 389 batters in 192 innings pitched, going 23-4 with a 0.55 ERA.


Vanessa Strong, Freedom
Position: Pitcher
Year: Senior

The BVAL MVP and Southern Utah commit went 18-2 in the circle with a 0.78 ERA and 169 strikeouts in 126 innings pitched. That included a perfect game in the Falcons’ Division I quarterfinal win over College Park. For good measure, she hit .423 with four home runs.


Frankie Hammoude, Bishop O’Dowd
Position: Catcher
Year: Senior

The Player of the Year in the WACC-Foothill, Hammoude powered the Dragons to the Division II title game by hitting .569 with nine home runs, including a grand slam in the semifinal victory over Concord. The Oregon State-bound senior was also walked 18 times, and registered 14 assists from behind the plate.


Hope Alley, Foothill
Position: Catcher
Year: Junior

The first-team All-EBAL selection and University of Pittsburgh commit hit a blistering .457 with five home runs, six triples, and 15 stolen bases, all while playing an elite non-league and league schedule. The rangy shortstop was also the lynchpin of the Falcons’ defense.


Bella Vick, Alameda
Position: Infielder
Year: Senior

The first-team WACC-Foothill selection and University of San Diego commit hit .531 for the Hornets, with four home runs, 12 doubles, and 27 RBIs. She also walked 10 times and had a .603 on-base percentage.


Nicole Hammoude, Bishop O’Dowd
Position: Infielder
Year: Junior

The first-team WACC-Foothill selection and verbal Cal commit led the section with 13 home runs, also hitting .500 with 37 RBIs and seven stolen bases.


Julia Scardina, Marin Catholic
Position: Infielder
Year: Junior

The North Carolina State commit and first-team All-MCAL selection led the Wildcats back to the section championship game, hitting .571 with nine home runs, 16 doubles, and 39 RBIs. Scardina compiled those numbers despite also being walked 26 times. In the NCS Division III title game, she homered and drove in four runs during the loss to Moreau Catholic.


Gabriella Williams, Carondelet
Position: Outfielder
Year: Sophomore

Williams was a first-team All-EBAL selection for the Division II champion Cougars after hitting .541 with 10 home runs, nine doubles, and 38 RBIs. She had six hits and eight RBIs during the playoffs. Adding to her impact was a 9-2 record with a 2.08 ERA in the circle, with 93 strikeouts in 74 innings pitched.


Viviana Gamez, Newark Memorial
Position: Outfielder
Year: Junior

The Player of the Year in the MVAL, Gamez hit .500 for the Cougars, with seven home runs, seven doubles, 25 stolen bases, and 27 RBIs. The speedy left-hander also walked 17 times, and registered 17 assists from the field.


Sydney Frankenberger, California
Position: Outfielder
Year: Junior

The first-team All-EBAL center fielder captained a young Grizzlies' team this season, one which captured 19 victories and returns all 12 players from this year's roster. The two-spot hitter in the Cal lineup, Frankenberger had numerous multi-hit games for the Grizzlies, including a season-high five hits in a late-season win over Monte Vista.


Tehya Bird, Cloverdale
Position: Utility
Year: Sophomore

The verbal Oregon commit led the Eagles to the NCS Division V title this season, hitting .667 with 11 home runs, 37 RBIs, and 51 runs scored, while also going 19-1 with a 1.01 ERA in the circle, striking out 136 batters in 118 innings pitched.


Melika Ofoia, Swett
Position: Utility
Year: Senior

The TCAL-Stone MVP for the fourth straight year, the New Mexico State-bound Ofoia did everything for Swett this season. She hit .594 with seven home runs, eight triples, 13 doubles, 37 RBIs, and 15 stolen bases, and also took her turn in the circle, going 10-5, despite being a natural catcher. She graduates with a career .647 batting average, with 35 home runs and 112 RBIs.


Alexis Bishop, San Marin
Position: Designated Hitter
Year: Sophomore

Bishop was named Player of the Year in the MCAL after leading the Mustangs to a perfect mark in league play and wins in their first 23 games. The sophomore catcher hit .594 with 12 home runs, 10 doubles, and 38 RBI, compiling a 1.260 slugging percentage and 1.911 OPS.



SECOND TEAM ALL-NCS

Madison Papenhausen, San Marin
Position: Pitcher
Year: Sophomore

The MCAL Pitcher of the Year and verbal Utah commit led the Mustangs during their 23-game winning streak to start the year, and finished the season with a 16-1 record in the circle, posting a 0.51 ERA with four no-hitters, 11 complete game shutouts, and 179 strikeouts in 110 innings pitched. Adding to her prowess was her .565 batting average, with four home runs, nine doubles, and 27 RBIs.


Delia Scott, Heritage
Position: Pitcher
Year: Junior

Scott was rock in the circle for the Patriots, leading them to a BVAL title and Division I semifinal berth. For the year, she was 14-2 with five complete game shutouts, including a perfect game against cross-town rival Liberty.


Sofia Earle, Carondelet
Position: Pitcher
Year: Senior

Earle hit .384 with six doubles at the plate, but it was her time in the circle for the Cougars which led them to the Division II championship. She notched 11 wins and posted a 1.15 ERA with 163 strikeouts in 110 innings pitched. Earle tossed seven complete game shutouts, including a no-hitter against San Ramon Valley, and allowed a total of six hits and one run in Carondelet's successful four-game playoff run.


Courtney Beaudin, Foothill
Position: Catcher
Year: Sophomore

The first-team All-EBAL selection hit .417 with seven home runs, six doubles, and 27 RBIs, while also drawing a team-high 18 walks. Defensively, she was near impossible to run against, throwing out five of the seven runners who were brave enough to try.


Madison Kahwaty, Livermore
Position: Infield
Year: Senior

The first-team All-EBAL selection hit .479 with 22 RBI at the plate, and was especially rock-solid in the field. The Pacific-bound senior flawlessly handled over 100 chances defensively without an error.


Riley Ehlen, Heritage
Position: Infielder
Year: Senior

The first-team All-BVAL selection and Loyola Marymount commit hit .526 with 11 home runs and 25 RBIs for the league champion Patriots, while also handling the hot corner at third base all season.


Lindsey Osmer, Alhambra
Position: Infielder
Year: Senior

The MVP of the DAL-Foothill, Osmer hit .439 with three home runs and five triples, while adding 10 stolen bases and committing just one error all season for the Bulldogs.


Aliyah Yates, James Logan
Position: Infielder
Year: Senior

The first-team All-MVAL selection hit ,469 with five home runs, 10 doubles, and 25 RBIs for the league champion Colts, while committing just one error all season defensively.


Olivia Cazares, James Logan
Position: Outfielder
Year: Senior

The first-team All-MVAL selection hit .431 with four triples, five doubles, and a team-high 31 runs scored. She also did not commit an error in the outfield.


Mackenzie Nelson, Freedom
Position: Outfielder
Year: Senior

The first-team All-BVAL selection and Sonoma State commit slugged nine home runs and had a team-high 34 RBIs for the Falcons. She was especially impressive during tournament action, homering in all but one game at the Reed Tournament and in two of the four games during pool play at the Livermore Stampede.


Haley Fuentes, Moreau Catholic
Position: Outfielder
Year: Junior

The first-team All-MVAL selection hit .429 with two home runs, three triples, six doubles, and 24 RBIs for the section-champion Mariners, while adding 13 stolen bases. Fuentes was on fire in the Division III playoffs, with six hits and eight RBIs combined in semifinal and championship game victories, including a perfect 4-for-4 day at the plate in the final.


Caroline Evans, St. Joseph Notre Dame
Position: Utility
Year: Freshman

The verbal Utah commit hit .569 for the Pilots, with eight home runs, eight doubles, 22 stolen bases, and 27 RBIs. She also went 13-2 with a 1.09 ERA in the circle, striking out 132 batters in 96 innings pitched. In the NCS Division IV title game, Evans led St. Joe's to the championship by pitching a no-hitter and hitting a home run in the 4-0 win over Del Norte.


Krystyna Allman, Castro Valley
Position: Utility
Year: Senior

The first-team WACC-Foothill selection led the Trojans at the plate and in the circle, hitting .432 with two home runs, two triples, and eight doubles, while also going 9-1 with a 0.64 ERA, striking out 102 batters in 88 innings pitched.


Hana Suppus, Piner
Position: Designated Hitter
Year: Senior

The power-hitter corner infielder led the Prospectors by hitting .604 with 10 home runs, nine doubles, and 37 RBIs. Her 11 walks and four times hit by a pitch helped her get to a 2.115 OPS for the year. In her three-year varsity career, Suppus hit .659 with 22 home runs.



THIRD TEAM ALL-NCS

PITCHERS

Annabel Teperson (Marin Catholic), Camille Rodriguez (James Logan), Elizabeth Avery (Bishop O'Dowd), Madelyn Mays (Concord), Ayanna Sanchez (Antioch)


CATCHERS

Cassie Wenn (James Logan), Isabela Emerling (Alhambra), Sierra Shanoff (Montgomery), Allyson Kim (Amador Valley)


INFIELDERS

Savanah Whatley (Berean Christian), Aleya Rath (Concord), Xiara Diaz (Heritage), Janessa Khamseh (Moreau Catholic), Jojo Campusano (Newark Memorial), Deijah Pangilinan (St. Patrick-St. Vincent), Makenzie Miller (Carondelet), Mia Hildebrand (Amador Valley)


OUTFIELDERS

Kylie Opelski (Heritage), Tatum Hayes (Granada), Emily Trask (Livermore), Tatum Maytorena (Rancho Cotate), Valeria Torres-Colon (Amador Valley)


UTILITY

Katelyn Poole (Campolindo), Kyra Gardner (Piedmont), Reyna Heredia (Saint Mary's), Sully Henry (St. Vincent de Paul), Amanda Simonetti (San Marin), Anna Zoia-Buescher (Montgomery), Kayla Scott (Windsor), Rachael Bles (Petaluma)


DESIGNATED HITTER

Phoebe Fa'aita (James Logan), Haley Titone (Cardinal Newman)




HONORABLE MENTION:

ACALANES: Morgan Salmon, Ellie Palma
ALAMEDA: Lucy Helms, Sophie Piamonte
ALBANY: Sidney Plummer
ALHAMBRA: Bryanna Waters, Lauren King
AMADOR VALLEY: Mia Hildebrand, Chloe Engel
AMERICAN: Alexis Palmon, Hannah Hillman, Maddie Grissom
ANALY: Makayla Kraemer, Carson Rasmussen
ANTIOCH: Haley Painter, Alissa West, Jazmine Alanis
ARROYO: Katelyn Sturm
BAY SCHOOL: Michelle Reyfer
BEREAN CHRISTIAN: Molly Kolander, Sadie Whatley
BERKELEY: Mackenzie Andrew, Milan Machado-Buckley
BISHOP O'DOWD: Jayla Dailey, Michael Edwards-Gonzales
CALIFORNIA: Amanda Robman, Lainey Hanehan, Olivia Silvestre
CALIFORNIA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF: Mahalia Thornton
CAMPOLINDO: Tara McAteer, Abby Morris, Abbie Lee
CARDINAL NEWMAN: Isabelle Vreeland, Keegan Smith
CARONDELET: Jesse Juinio, Alexandria Schwenger, Keleva Salt
CASA GRANDE: Presley Ruoff, Katie Humphreys
CASTRO VALLEY: Courtney Rose, Skye Perez, Tianna Jacques
CLAYTON VALLEY: Sophie Wheeler, Aislyn Schwartz
CLEAR LAKE: Sara Ogden
CLOVERDALE: Heather Sterling, Vanessa Fisher, Lane Hughes
COLLEGE PARK: Emma Wigren, Alison Hess, Gabriella Zagone
CONCORD: Veronica Castaneda, Lexi San Filippo
DE ANZA: Liliana Campos, Kaylynn Parker
DEER VALLEY: Desttany Parker
DOUGHERTY VALLEY: Liberty Schlag, Jessica Kim
DRAKE: Alyssa Freed
DUBLIN: Hannah Haynie
EL CERRITO: Hannah Morse, Hannah Lane-Goldstein
ENCINAL: Christine Warren
EUREKA: Karyn Jensen, Alyssa Jimenez
FERNDALE: Taylor Watkins
FOOTHILL: Hailey Hayes, Ellen Ebbers, Lauren Hermes
FORT BRAGG: Jesse Rivera, Caitlin Nell
FORTUNA: Juliana Ortega-Miranda, Morgan Murray
FREEDOM: Allyson McBroom, Ashlie Livermore, Kalissa Heihn
FREMONT CHRISTIAN: Kaylah Dutra
GRANADA: Jessica Marty, Angel Duffy, Shaye Mott
HAYWARD: Diamond Survine
HEAD-ROYCE: Samantha Patterson-Kohout
HERCULES: Leanne Pinto
HERITAGE: Michaela Farr, Juliana Sargent, Morgan Hess
JAMES LOGAN: Lacey Sandoval, Tyavana Salazar
JUSTIN-SIENA: Melissa Corona, Clare Garcia
KELSEYVILLE: Tymeka Green
KENNEDY-FREMONT: Angela Kim
KENNEDY-RICHMOND: Ally Hersh, Samone Anderson
LAS LOMAS: Mary Locher, Alissa Gardenal, Tricia Leong
LAYTONVILLE: Cassie Homer
LIBERTY: Emily Muniz
LIVERMORE: Haiden Arruda
MAKING WAVES: Kendell Stewart
MARIA CARILLO: Leah Twyman
MARIN CATHOLIC: Izzy Incaviglia, Breanna DeLacy
MIDDLETOWN: Aly Ferguson
MIRAMONTE: Cassidy Wall
MONTE VISTA: Cassidy Cheong, Julia Jamison
MONTGOMERY: Ashley Baker, Olivia Gabriel
MOREAU CATHOLIC: Gabby Franco, Gabi Perez, Arielle Acosta
MT. DIABLO: Angelina Perez, Melissa Becerra
MT. EDEN: Elizabeth Phillips, Arianna Fernandez
NEWARK MEMORIAL: Lexi Sao, Janisa Rojo, Haylee Nelson
NORTHGATE: Hannah Brajkovich, Olivia Lee
NOVATO: Maddie Perryman, Isabella Harding
PETALUMA: Indya Smith, Chandler Mevis
PIEDMONT: Camille Creighton, Caroline Strauch
PINER: Courtney Peterson
PINOLE VALLEY: Lydia Quiros, Andrea Siverson
PITTSBURG: Madisyn Leffle
RANCHO COTATE: Kaylee Drake, Makayla Barnes
REDWOOD: Mandy Weitenhagen, Catherine Jensen
REDWOOD CHRISTIAN: Mackenzy Moul
SAINT MARY'S: Caili Anderson, Alyssa Karbala-Docherty
SALESIAN: Raiven Robinson, Amber Holland
SAN LEANDRO: Aly Lopez
SAN LORENZO: Sarah Giles, Abigail Lopez
SAN MARIN: Kayla Simonetti, Toni Spina
SAN RAFAEL: Michela Celi
SAN RAMON VALLEY: Maryssa Hanson
SONOMA VALLEY: Abby Alcayaga
ST. HELENA: Carter Dahline
ST. JOSEPH NOTRE-DAME: Caroline Bridges, Chantel Zavala
ST. PATRICK-ST. VINCENT: Jae Pangilinan
ST. VINCENT DE PAUL: Sarah Sarlatte, Abby Chamberlain
SWETT: Crystel Ruaro
TAMALPAIS: Kassidy Stetler, Sofia Piombo
TENNYSON: Ana Santiago, Aylin Lopez
TERRA LINDA: Sydney Costan, Micayla Valeschini
UKIAH: Kelly-Ann McKeown
UNIVERSITY: Jane Rand
WASHINGTON: Ashley Tosh
WINDSOR: Alyssa DeCasas
YGNACIO VALLEY: Angela Garcia