Dayton Daily News

Season brings excitement to coach’s family

- By Jeff Gilbert

Basketball season brings excitement to the Addison household.

Last year Seth Addison became head coach of the girls program at West Carrollton after four years as an assistant. The Pirates emerged from years of winning no more than a few games to finish 10-10. This year the Pirates are 2-0 with a 74-59 victory over rival Miamisburg, a foe that has long dominated the series.

Then on Wednesday at 6 a.m., Addison and his wife and assistant coach Daylnn welcomed a son, Lonzy Seth Addison III, into the world to join their daughter.

“She was actually in labor Monday when we beat Miamisburg,” Lonzy Seth Addison II said. “So that was the perfect gift when the girls gifted me with that win.”

In the first round of the sectional tournament last year, Miamisburg beat the Pirates 64-32. But life has changed for the Addisons and their team.

“The ceiling is high for us this year,” Addison said. “This is the most talented group since I’ve been at West Carrollton, and this one of my favorite groups because of how they get along.”

The Pirates are led in scoring by sophomore guard Selena Frost at 17 points a game. She scored 23 against

Miamisburg. Backcourt mate Taryn Dewberry, a senior, is averaging 14 points.

“They’re our two point guards who grab the girls and put them in a huddle without the coaches even asking them to do that,” Addison said. “And they get everybody calm. They lead by example, and I couldn’t ask for more.”

The balanced scoring also includes juniors Ashiya Moddickes at 13 per game and Butler transfer Neveah Milerton at 10.5 per game.

The season is young and the teams to beat to get to the top of Miami Valley League are Sidney in the Valley Division and Tippecanoe. But the Miamisburg win was a confidence boost for the Pirates.

“We knew we had a 10-10 season, but we want more,” Addison said. “That was our first test, and I think we did great with our first test in showing that we can make a deeper run into the tournament this year.”

■ Trotwood boys: The Rams started well with a 79-76 win over Chaminade-Julienne, but coach Rocky Rockhold knows it’s early.

“I don’t put too much stock into wins in November, nor do I put a lot of stock in losses in November,” he said.

Still, after last year’s COVID-interrupte­d and smallcrowd­s season, Rockhold was happy to his young team won in a hostile environmen­t.

“I felt good that this group

is learning, that they’re working hard and they’re fun to coach,” he said. “From that perspectiv­e it feels good, but I don’t know what it means big picture to get a win in November.”

The Rams are led by sophomores Tim Carpenter, Delamarr Blanton and Will Yates. Carpenter scored 24 against CJ and 26 in a 101-74 win over Stivers. Yates also had 26 against Stivers. Mike Smith

is another sophomore starter, and junior Mykel Morton is scoring in double figures off the bench.

The Rams finished 10-7 last year in a season that never got rolling like it usually does for them. Their first game was in January and by the time they had played two games they had practiced only twice.

“It’s altogether different,” Rockhold said. “The feel in locker room’s different, the feel on the sidelines is different, our practices even have a different edge. It’s more than just being able to practice. Our kids have some routine because they’re physically in school now. A lot of structure was missing in our kids’ lives a year ago.”

 ?? JEFF GILBERT/CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Trotwood-Madison’s Tim Carpenter during a Division II OHSAA tournament game last season vs. Oakwood at Trent Arena in Kettering.
JEFF GILBERT/CONTRIBUTE­D Trotwood-Madison’s Tim Carpenter during a Division II OHSAA tournament game last season vs. Oakwood at Trent Arena in Kettering.

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