After defeating Walter Northway 40-37 within the opening spherical of the Alaska 1A basketball event on Wednesday, the Shishmaref women basketball group loved a celebratory meal.
However after they returned to their van within the car parking zone, they discovered the motive force’s facet window shattered, and a few of their belongings had been lacking.
Group members and fogeys stated among the many gadgets had been money, a few gamers’ backpacks and head coach Curtis Nayokpuk’s bag that included some instruments of the commerce like a clipboard. However most necessary to the group’s present state of affairs was a bag of uniforms that had been taken.
It despatched the group on a virtually 24-hour quest to seek out uniforms earlier than its quarterfinal matchup with event’s high seed Lumen Christi on Thursday night.
The group’s jerseys had been new this season, and Nayokpuk stated the group’s outdated jerseys had been being shipped to Anchorage and is likely to be utilized in future video games this weekend. However they wouldn’t probably arrive quickly sufficient for Thursday’s matchup.
Different choices had been initially thought-about, together with utilizing a set of the Shishmaref boys jerseys. However as an alternative of getting house and away uniforms, the boys’ had been reversible, which means they solely wanted one set and had no extras to spare.
He stated a number of faculties provided their jerseys to be used, together with groups from Wasilla and Palmer. Ultimately, the group ended up sporting uniforms from Service Excessive’s women group in Anchorage.
Whereas they weren’t the green-and-black uniforms that Shishmaref followers would acknowledge, the white Service jerseys with green-and-yellow trim had been an affordable approximation.
“We had been scrambling to determine which jerseys to make use of and the women picked Service,” he stated. “They appreciated these the very best.”
That solved a part of the quick drawback. However seniors Vicki Olanna and Autumn Barr had been each left with out footwear after their luggage had been taken within the incident.
Dennis Davis, whose daughter Makayla Nayokpuk performs on the group, donated $300 to assist the gamers get new footwear. There have been additionally funds raised on Fb by family and friends for the group.
Makayla Nayokpuk made a visit to the van proper earlier than the break-in, leaving her shaken, in response to Davis.
“She was sort of shook up, you understand, final evening as a result of she went to the van like proper earlier than that occurred,” he stated. “I imply, you by no means know what may occur.”
Curtis Nayokpuk stated the van was inside eyeshot of the place the group was sitting, however they had been too busy having fun with one another’s firm and wouldn’t have seen a break-in.
The shattered window brought on extra complications for the group, which needed to swap the van for a completely functioning car. The entire occasion positively caught with the group from Shishmaref, the Northwest Alaska neighborhood on Sarichef Island within the Chukchi Sea.
“They’re somewhat shocked,” Curtis Nayokpuk stated. “I attempt to preserve them upbeat and attempt to preserve them comfortable.”
However the outpouring of help has been overwhelming as nicely. Earlier than Thursday’s recreation, the Lumen Christi group met their opponents with a big cache of snacks.
The gamers stated it felt odd to placed on the uniforms earlier than the sport, however the incident introduced them nearer. And for the group that normally performs because the Northern Lights, gamers stated it was enjoyable to be an animal for a recreation. Service Excessive’s mascot is the Cougars.
Shishmaref misplaced the quarterfinal recreation 32-24 however stated their reminiscences of the event shall be of generosity, not defeat.
“It doesn’t matter the place you’re at in Alaska,” Davis stated. “I imply, everyone’s, you understand, calling and attempting to determine the place they will donate or assist or, you understand.
“Alaska is the most important state, however it’s the smallest state on the identical time.”
(ADN and Arctic Sounder reporter Alena Naiden contributed to this report)