
Joe Williamson motioned to senior Leah Seitz to check in during the final seconds of the Corvallis High girls basketball team’s game against Silverton on Feb. 16.
The Spartans were in the process of finishing off the Silver Foxes to wrap up the Mid-Willamette Conference championship.
Standing at the scorer’s table waiting to check in, Seitz had a puzzled look on her face as she glanced over to Williamson, almost asking her coach why he was putting her back in of a game with so little time left and the game in hand.
“The five of you on the floor at the end — league champs,” Williamson said.
It was a fitting ending for the five seniors who have played together the better part of the past six years.
“It was just kind of subtle,” point guard Gabe Johnson said. “Look, we’re all in. We made it this far. It was very heart-touching.”
Kayla Laney also realized what was happening.
“I remember standing at the foul line and I was getting ready to block out and then I look over and I see Leah and I looked around and I saw that we were all in and I was like, yeah,” she said. “I looked at Joe and he was beaming.
“It was epic.”
That could best describe the journey that Seitz, Johnson, Laney, her sister Karly and McKenzie Redberg have taken since they first began all playing together on a seventh-grade Future Spartans team.
Through all the ups and downs this group — known as the Fab 5 — was able to start and finish their final regular season home game.
And they were able to embrace as the final horn sounded and celebrate a conference title.
Who could have ever dreamed their story would play out as it has.
From scrawny seventh graders to mature young women, this group has overcome numerous challenges to become a team many feel can reach the 5A state title game in a week.
“It’s been a lot of fun,” Johnson said. “We’re all grown up and adults and to see us go off to college. It’s sad but it’s good for us.”
But the journey could all come to a quick end Saturday night at home in the second round of the playoffs against Bend. Or it will end next week at the state tournament in Portland.
“It’s just weird,” Redberg said. “It’s basically been the five of us since the beginning of my basketball career, and just knowing that it’s basically over, it’s depressing. They are like everything to me. We’re like the five best friends.”

Regardless of when the end comes, it has been quite the experience.
“It’s been such a journey,” Kayla Laney said. “We’re the only five left from our Future Spartans team. I just think it’s going to be a huge binding but breaking point. We are just so close as a team. You don’t get many teams that have this much chemistry.”
The journey nearly came to a premature ending two years ago.
Sophomore year was on of the worst for the Fab 5. The Spartans struggled to a 4-10 MWC record and a 9-16 overall mark.
It wasn’t so much the losses that made the season so tough to handle, it was the pain the year brought from the overall experience.
Redberg and Johnson were in their second year on varsity, while the Laneys were in their first year with the varsity team. Seitz played a lot of JV and swung to varsity.
“I cried like every night,” Seitz said. “I felt like there were so many different things that I look back now that we needed to work on, not just on the basketball court but as a team. Being a team and then playing basketball and we hadn’t even gotten the team part down. It was oh, I don’t want to think about sophomore year.”
The season ended with an embarrassing 75-55 thrashing at Lebanon.
At that point, each of the players contemplated whether they wanted to continue playing.
“It was really tough,” Karly Laney said. “I just felt like our middle school years and all that time we put in and everything was a letdown. It was worthless time spent. It was really hard. I wanted to give up and never touch a basketball again.”
“It definitely tried us a lot and definitely put us in a position to question, do we want to play this because we love it, or do do we want to play it because we want to win?” Kayla Laney said.
“I think all of us had thoughts of quitting, but overall we decided to persevere and we we’re like you know what, we want to play because we love the game. There’s not much more than you can do.”
One decision that helped the players rethink possibly walking away from the game came when coach Scott Lasswell resigned after 15 seasons as head coach.
They waited anxiously as a new coach was hired.
It’s ironic that the final game of sophomore season was against Lebanon.
As it turns out, Williamson, who was co-coach of the Warriors in that game, decided to apply for the open position.
When he got it, the Fab 5 decided to give him a shot.
Redberg was all set to focus on soccer and track, but she listened to what Williamson had to say and considered giving basketball another go.
“He said, ‘It’s a whole new season, get over it and see what happens. I promise it will be different. Go through the summer’ and I said, ‘OK,’ ” Redberg said. “So I kind of went with it.”
Williamson left an immediate impression on Kayla Laney, too.
“I love Joe,” she said. “The first thing he said when he met me was, ‘Girl, you need to gain weight.’ I was like, ‘Nice to meet you.’ ”
While Williamson may have caught Laney off guard, it was the kind of personality that the players were craving.
They tasted some success in the summer league games and began to bond. Soon, those bad experiences began to melt away.
“I think there was a moment when he first got hired and we all went to USBA camp where we all met each other,” Johnson said. “I think a lot of us thought this was a whole new year, a whole new coach. We’re going to start all over. From there we’ve gotten here.”

To a player, they credit Williamson and the assistants over the past two years — Nova Sweet, Lindsay Schnell, Mark James and Tom Cox — for making the game of basketball fun again.
And for making them better players.
“He’s just been a coach for me that’s pushed me as far as I can,” Johnson said of Williamson. “He gets on people, but deep down it’s because he wants you to be the best and he knows we can be the best we can. I really thank him and Lindsay and the whole coaching staff for that. They’ve definitely changed me personally and how I play and have helped me a lot.”
As Johnson said, Williamson is able to be the fun-loving coach who will joke around with his players, but he can also make you focus and work hard.
“He’s definitely one of those coaches I will always be friends with, like I know I can come talk to him whenever I need to,” Kayla Laney said. “Like on the court he’s a coach, but outside of basketball he’s definitely one of my adult friends.
“He knows how to get to the point and yeah, he’s going to yell at you and scream at you but you know that he’s doing it because he wants you to be better and grow as a player. And like Mark says, it’s not personal it’s basketball.”
While he can be hard on the players at time, he is also that coach that makes you want to play for him. The energy and passion he brings each day gets the players ready.
“Probably how inspired he is to coach us,” Karly Laney said. “Like every day he is pumped and ready to go. Like (Wednesday) morning, 6 flipping o’clock in the morning and he walks into the gym and blows his whistle as loud as he can. Hi guys, let’s go. Right then I wanted to shank him but I love him so I can’t. ... He’s so enthusiastic, so pumped and ready. Yeah he gets mad at us but it’s because he loves us so much and he wants us to be the best and do the best that he’s willing to do anything for us to make sure we get everything we can.”
The coaches spent a lot of time, in many ways, helping the players develop. That dedication is not lost of them.
“They started to instill confidence in us, especially me because I wasn’t very confident,” Kayla Laney said. “Nova especially really helped me. She was amazing. She would come work with me on my post moves and be like, ‘Kayla, I know you can do this. You have the athleticism, you have the ability to do this, you’ve got to stop with the mental midgets, you’ve got to believe you can do this.’ Nova and Lindsay have been awesome at that.

“One thing I really love about Lindsay is before every game she sends a text. It’s always really inspirational and really gets me ready to play the game.”
What Seitz said she will remember the most about Williamson is the difference he has made in two year.
“Just the fact that he turned this program around like 180 times seven which maybe would be, I don’t know if it would be a 360 in the end but he just turned it around so much,” she said. “He’s the hero of Corvallis girls basketball.”
That turnaround began almost immediately. The Spartans shocked most of the basketball world last year as they went from 4-10 to 11-3 in MWC play and tied for the title.
Then they won a draw and received the first seed to the playoffs.
After a home win, the Spartans took on Hermiston in the quarterfinals of the 5A tournament.
And while they may have lost that game, they rebounded with two wins and a fourth-place finish.
That was one of the most memorable moments for Seitz.
“Just the fact that we accomplished such a big thing last year and I want to do the same thing this year,” she said. “Getting fourth place in state even though we lost our first game was really big to me because I didn’t realize we had the potential to win that game. I didn’t know we were that good.”
Everything looked good coming into this season. The Spartans lost just two players from last year and were a favorite to return to the playoffs and challenge for a state title.
But for Seitz, senior year has been one of her toughest. She suffered a knee injury during the soccer season and has worked hard to get back on the basketball court.

“It was probably the hardest thing that has ever happened to me in my entire life,” she said. “Until you get injured, you don’t know how hard it is.
“I am someone who gets motivated by other people and the fact that I had to work out like physical therapy by myself, I kind of felt like I was on my own when I was still on the basketball court because I didn’t have any direction because I had been gone for the first two weeks of basketball.
“I kind of lost sight of the fact that I wanted to play basketball and I made things a lot more difficult.
“When I got to the CV game and got in the game, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I forgot how to play basketball. This is what it’s like, this is why I practice, this is why I come here at ungodly hours of the morning, ungodly amounts of time to be here and focus.’ I had forgotten about it. It was an eye-opener.”
Having the support of such good teammates, but more importantly such good friends, helped make the situation easier.
“This is a special group of people,” Seitz said. “Especially for basketball because they helped me get back from my knee injury. So many times I would walk up to people bawling because I’m emotionally unstable and physically unstable and they had to deal with so much crap of mine.
“I just feel like I’ve gotten so much closer to the entire group this year. I don’t know how I’m going to go on without them. I don’t know, it’s going to be hard.”
It’s that kind of bond that has helped make the last six years so much fun for the Fab 5.
“It’s been really awesome because obviously we’re really close,” Kayla Laney said. “We’ve had our differences with each other but it’s one of those things where we just come through it because we’re teammates and friends. It’s just like siblings, you are going to fight but deep down you love each other. We can rely on each other.”
Maybe that’s why it may be tough to walk away from each other when the season ends.

“It’s going to be hard. I don’t even want to think about it,” Karly Laney said, a possible tear forming in her eye. “This Saturday is the last time I’m going to play a game on this floor and I can’t even think about that. It’s going to be a trip.”
Added Redberg: “It’s going to be sad, but I’m hoping we walk off feeling accomplished, knowing we did the best we ever could together and to know that we left a mark on CHS and that we can always come back and be like in 20 years come back and watch Corvallis basketball and say remember the time ... To be able to come back and share our memories together. But it’s going to be sad.”
So if a tear or two are shed on the floor, you might have to forgive the players.
“I think it’s going to be tough,” Kayla Laney said. “ I know I have always been told that you don’t cry on the court, but that might be hard.”
Especially after six years of ups and downs and an amazing journey that could end with a state title.