Thunder Mountain’s Brady Carandang shoots the ball over Juneau-Douglas’ Kolby Hoover on Friday, Feb. 2, 2018. Carandang is the leading scorer returning for the Falcons this season. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire File)

Thunder Mountain’s Brady Carandang shoots the ball over Juneau-Douglas’ Kolby Hoover on Friday, Feb. 2, 2018. Carandang is the leading scorer returning for the Falcons this season. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire File)

Junior-heavy Falcons seek Region V redemption

Thunder Mountain at Seattle tourney starting Wednesday

Thunder Mountain High School boys basketball coach John Blasco has an open-door policy for alumni.

On any given weeknight at the Thunderdome, sophomores and juniors will be running the same drills as players several years removed from the program. Alumni like Chase Saviers, the Falcons’ second all-time leading scorer now at Southwestern Oregon Community College, serve as inspiration, and in some cases, mentors, to current players.

“He’s what made me have a better shooting ability,” junior Bryson Echiverri said Wednesday at practice. “Me and him getting on The Gun (basketball shooting machine) every night in the summer. I love how he takes the ball to the rack. I just saw his game and wanted to improve.”

The junior watched Saviers once score 40 points against Juneau-Douglas High School, and ever since that February 2017 night, he’s dreamed of surpassing Saviers’ single-game scoring mark. After the speedy playmaker scored 30 points in a 67-59 win against Sitka last weekend, that day may be coming sooner rather than later.

“He’s a competitior so he finds ways to score, he’s really good at creating,” Blasco said. “I knew he was capable of it, I didn’t think it would be that early in the season. I’m happy he got there that quick — we needed him to to get those two wins.”

With just two returning seniors in Puna Toutaiolepo and Hansel Hinckle, Echiverri and the rest of the junior class make up the heart of this year’s Falcons, who head on their second roadtrip this week. Brady Carandang is a knock-down 3-point shooter while Kamron Falls (6 feet, 1 inch), Braden Jenkins (6-3) and Petersburg transplant Stone Mason (6-4) are all relatively untested at the varsity level.

“There’s a lot of nice pieces,” Blasco said. “We just haven’t all played together enough for me to really know what our true strengths are. We know Puna’s tough; Bryson had a real nice weekend in Sitka; there’s some guys that worked really hard this offseason. But I haven’t gotten to a point where I know exactly how to blend them all together in one system.”

Falls is one of the players that put in offseason work, expecting his number to called much more this season.

“It’s a lot different than last year,” Falls said. “I feel like I actually have to contribute more. Everyone has to contribute more. We’re a young group, so everyone has to step up.”

Thunder Mountain has not won the Region V Championship in four years. After going 5-3 in the region last season, the Falcons dropped back-to-back Region V Tournament games by just two points. They lost to Ketchikan 49-47 and JDHS 47-45.

“We have a lot to prove this season, especially from the heartbreaking loss last year in regions,” Carandang said. “We have to come out and prove ourselves again this year.”

Guards Jonathan Stephens (senior), Bernard Yadao (senior), Oliver Mendoza (sophomore) and forwards Andrew Dilley (senior), Connor Guizio (senior), Meki Toutaiolepo (sophomore) round out the varsity squad.

The Falcons will be playing their first-ever out-of-state tournament to continue the season. Thunder Mountain is one of 16 teams playing in the Franklin High School Tournament of Champions in Seattle. The tournament will likely contain the strongest competition of the season, with three schools currently ranked in the top-10 in their respective states. Thunder Mountain plays against Tacoma, Washington’s Stanwood High School on Wednesday. Learn more and tune into the tournament at rainieravenueradio.world/franklin-tournament.

2018-19 season schedule

(Home games in bold)

Dec. 26-29 Franklin High School Tournament of Champions (Seattle)

Jan. 2 at West Valley

Jan. 3-5 Mt. McKinley Bank Holiday Classic (Fairbanks)

Jan. 11-12 Colony*

Jan. 16 at Wasilla

Jan. 17 at Bartlett

Jan. 18-19 at Barrow

Jan. 25-26 at JDHS, 8 p.m.

Feb. 1-2 Service*, 8 p.m.

Feb. 7 East Anchorage*, 7 p.m.

Feb. 8-9 Ketchikan*, 8 p.m.

Feb. 15-16 JDHS*, 8 p.m.

Feb. 22-23 at Ketchikan

March 5-9 Region V 4A Tournament (Sitka)

*All home games will be played at the TMHS main gym.


• Contact sports reporter Nolin Ainsworth at 523-2272 or nolin.ainsworth@juneauempire.com. Follow Empire Sports on Twitter at @akempiresports.


More in Home

The Juneau Huskies, seen here taking the field for the second half of an Aug. 24 home game against Service High School, prevailed in a road trip game Friday night in Bishop, California, defeating Bishop Union High School 17-6. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Juneau defeats Bishop Union High School 17-6 as lots of players make lots of key plays

Huskies survive as the fittest in “caveman football” game during California road trip.

Nutaaq Doreen Simmonds (left) and Xáalnook Erin Tripp star in the play “Cold Case,” focusing on issues involving Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons, which is now performing at Perseverance Theatre. (Akiko Nishijima Rotch / Perseverance Theatre)
Perseverance’s ‘Cold Case’ tops NYT’s list of ‘15 Shows to See on Stages Around the U.S. This Fall’

Award-winning play about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons showing in Juneau until Sept. 22.

Workers at the Alaska Division of Elections’ State Review Board consider ballots on Tuesday, Aug. 27, 2024, at the division’s headquarters in Juneau. At background is the Alaska State Capitol. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
After Alaska’s primary election, here’s how the state’s legislative races are shaping up

Senate’s bipartisan coalition appears likely to continue, but control of the state House is a tossup.

Police and other emergency officials treat Steven Kissack after he was fatally shot on Front Street on Monday, July 15, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
UPDATE: Bodycam footage of Steven Kissack shooting, results of state investigation scheduled for release Tuesday

Videos, originally scheduled for Friday release, delayed until JPD gets state report, police chief says.

Workers construct a greenhouse behind the Edward K. Thomas building during the summer of 2021. The greenhouse is part of a food sovereignty project by the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska, which this week received a $15 million grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection agency to establish or expand composting operations in five Southast Alaska communities including Juneau. (Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska photo)
Tlingit and Haida gets $15M EPA grant for composting operations in five Southeast Alaska communities

Funds will establish or expand programs in Juneau, Wrangell, Hoonah, Petersburg and Yakutat.

Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo
State Rep. Andi Story, D-Juneau, speaks during a rally on behalf of Alaska residents with disabilities at the Alaska State Capitol on March 1, 2023.
Bills by Juneau legislator adding official Indigenous state languages, upgrading dock safety become law

Safety bill by Rep. Story also contains provision by Sen. Kiehl expanding disaster aid eligibility.

Nutaaq Doreen Simmonds (foreground) and Xáalnook Erin Tripp star in the play “Cold Case,” focusing on a story involving Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons, which is scheduled to make its stage debut Friday at Perseverance Theatre. (Akiko Nishijima Rotch / Perseverance Theatre)
Play revealing unseen struggles of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons debuts at Perseverance Theatre

“Cold Case” features story of rural Iñupiaq woman trying to recover aunt’s body from Anchorage.

Bartlett Regional Hospital leaders (foreground) present details of their request for financial support to keep hospice, home care and residential substance abuse recovery programs operating during a Juneau Assembly Finance Committee meeting Wednesday night. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Funding for hospital’s hospice, home health and Rainforest Recovery programs get Assembly support

Plan includes Gastineau Human Services expanding to accommodate Rainforest’s substance abuse treatment.

Most Read