Hawaii State | Archive | July, 2008

Alayna Galeai- $500 DigitalSports.com Applause Scholarship Recipient

Kingsley Ah You
www.HawaiiDigitalSports.com Owner
Kahyou@digitalsports.com

Hawaii Digital Sports is proud to announce that Alayan Galeai a recent graduate of Kahuku High School has been awarded the $500 DigitalSports.com Applause Scholarship.  Alayan submitted an essay on her challenges and accomplishments.  She will be playing volleyball for Notre Dame de Namur the Argos who are members of the Pac-West Conference. 


Hard work and Determination Pays-off

Essay by Alayna Galeai

   
How does a teenager overcome adversity? It’s not an easy task when you
are surrounded by peer pressure, everywhere you turn there is
competition. I was in my prime time during Freshmen year with
volleyball season. Our team won every game including the championships.

   
Than basketball season started and at first I joined the sport to stay
in shape. The season was going smoothly and our team proved to be worth
challenging.  Our rival was Farrington and we met them at the
championships.  That game was the turning point of my life. I got hurt
and tore one of the major ligaments in my knee. Being oblivious to the
fact that perhaps I just might need medical attention I neglected to
put much thought into it until I went to the doctors. I was told that I
wouldn’t be able to play for a year and that my knee would require
surgery.

    It was as if someone told me that my heart would
stop beating for a year! Perhaps the doctor should have said just that,
because sitting out one whole year would keep me behind. I would have
to sit out my whole sophomore year and I would have to work extra hard
to be back up there.  It was a preposterous idea to even try and
comprehend, but it was to no avail my knee had temporarily impeded my
chances of playing for a year.

    The whole year I was out I
had my surgery and couldn’t walk for two months. It was a trying time
of excruciating pain and the worst two months of my life. The rest of
the year I had to go through rehab to strengthen my knee. The surgery
left me with a new found fear for playing.  I was worried and scared to
move a certain way in case I make matters worse for myself. The game I
once played so passionately became a mental game for me. It took me a
long time to get back into the swing of things. Every night for months
I went running to try and get back into shape with constant lifting of
weights to continue to strengthen my knee.

    Before going to
volleyball tryouts for my junior year, I had to get clearance from my
doctor. I was told that I had to get a customed-made knee brace that
would cost me a thousand dollars.  It was one that I would have to wear
every time I was involved in any physical activity. Although the brace
made me feel handicapped, I struggled to scrutinize ways of playing
with the huge brace that made me look like I had another leg connected
to my knee.  However, my desire to play was greater than the feeling of
looking handicapped.

    Volleyball tryouts came around and my
coaches told me to take everything slowly and not to rush right back
into sports. The volleyball season was good but not the best for me.
Wearing the brace made me look feeble in the eyes of my coach, and as a
consequence I was treated the way my knee looked – handicapped! I
wasn’t able to play much and it really affected me because I wasn’t
able to play to my potential. The same thing happened with basketball
where I still wasn’t given the opportunity to play up to my potential.

   
The summer leading to my senior year I worked even harder. I was
determined to prove that I could play just as good as any player on the
team without any physical challenges.  I went to the Reno volleyball
tournament then to volleyball camps and came back to Hawaii right in
time for volleyball tryouts.  I had to make an impact because it was my
last year. My volleyball season became the season where everything was
as I pictured, hoped and prayed for.  I started every game and played
the entire game. I was the team captain, I made the Hawaii-state
All-Star team, received the most inspirational player, and our team
took second in OIA and fourth in the State of Hawaii.

    After
volleyball season, basketball started. My basketball season also turned
out to be just as I had wished for. Although we didn’t make it to
states, I was just happy that I was able to contribute to my team and
got good playing time. I was the team captain, named the “impact
player” of the game for Oceanic cable and invited to play in the Mufi
Hannemann Jamboree.  It was an invitational all-star tournament for top
players from high school and college levels in the state of Hawaii. It
was a great experience for me.

    Even though my knee surgeries
threatened to thwart my dream to play varsity in my senior year, I knew
that it was all up to me.  I knew I had to work hard, push myself and
do my very best. I knew I had to not only prove to my coaches that I
was the same player I was before even with the braced knee, but I also
had to prove to myself that my will and determination was stronger than
my fear to fail.  Through all the pain and frustrations I made it. 
Although it was a drawback experience for me, I’m grateful it happened
because I now stand as a changed person and individual.  I realize now
that it takes more than talent and passion to get somewhere.  It takes
will, determination and effort to make the team.  Such driven will and
determination then leads to hard work, and no matter how physically
challenged one can be, anything is possible.  It does not take talent,
it takes heart to make the team.  And that is exactly what I am walking
away with this year. I, an individual with handicapped knees and
perhaps to some crippled in some way, I am walking away with a heart
full of hope and full of determination to not let anything stand in my
way of fulfilling my dreams.  I thank my mother and siblings for being
my cheerleaders on the sideline in every possible way. I thank my dad
for being my mentor, my coach on the side, my counselor and my number
one fan. I thank my coaches for believing and trusting that I could
make a difference. I thank my Heavenly Father for giving me another
chance to prove myself. I’m happy that I’ve ended my senior year on a
good note…it’s a good feeling.

Volleyball Profile


Name:  Alayna-Lori Sulesa Galeai

Address:  55-666 Kamehameha Hwy., Laie, HI 96762

Email: galeait@polynesia.com

School:  Kahuku High & Intermediate School

Parents: Tipa & Taliilagi Galeai

Volleyball Experience: 7 years school and club

Other Sports Played: Soccer and Basketball

Athletic Honors: Lettered three years in basketball and volleyball. All-star in volleyball. All-star in basketball, most Inspirational volleyball player. Basketball impact player. Team Captain for volleyball and basketball.

Tournaments:2002  Junior Olympics, 2003 Junior Nationals, St. George Elite, UC Davis, Las Vegas, Reno, Aloha Region and South Pacific tournaments.

Clinics: Aloha Region, Junior Nationals, South Pacific.

Height: 5’11”

Interest: Sports – basketball & volleyball, hiking, biking with friends, boogie boarding, jumping off Laie point, working at kapaka farm with dad.

Personal: Born August 10, 1995 in Oahu, Hawaii…third daughter of Tipa and Taliilagi Galeai. Expects to major in Exercise Science…honor roll student…loves the outdoors… enjoys making new friends and keeping old ones. Loves to hike Laie Falls. Has three sisters and one brother: Alethea, Adrianne, Aja and Tipa-Jesse (baby Tee).

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5th Annual Hawaii High School Alumni Volleyball Tournament

Dayne Teves

www.pchsathletics.com



The
Pearl City High School Volleyball Program will be hosting their 5th
Annual Alumni Volleyball Tournament fundraiser for the upcoming fall season. The
tournament will be for all Hawaii High
School
graduates from 2008 and earlier. (No current
high school players) All players on each team must be from the same high school.
All team rosters will be reviewed. Please check our website for updated
information. www.pchsathletics.com



Due
to a large turnout from previous year, teams will be taken on a first come first
serve basis.


Any
questions please contact

Dayne
Teves
at
(808) 375-3705 or

E-mail
d-tech@hawaii.rr.com


Host: Pearl City High School

Fee: $60
(due July 23rd)


When: August 2nd
Saturday

Time: (Women) 8:30 am (please be ready
by 8am)

  (Men) 1
pm

Location: Pearl City High School Gym


Format: USVA Rules, 10 teams (max)
for each division

Pool
Play 2 sets till 21pts (no deuce) Top 2 teams advance

Playoffs single elimination 1 set
to 30pts. Win by 2pts. (no cap)

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HAWAII ALL-AMERICAN IMPRESSES AT PHILIPPINE OLYMPIC FESTIVAL

Information Provided by:
Vanley Auna
President, NorthShore-Live.com, LLC
anuav001@gmail.com

Edsa Shangri-La, Manila,
Philippines, July 2, 2008 – Danica Leilani
Auna
, 17, a Filipino American from
Hauula, Hawaii and two-time Hawaii state wrestling champion from Kahuku High
School and two-time United States Girls’ Wrestling Association All-American, participated
in the women’s wrestling portion of the Philippine Olympic Festival held at the
Tondon Sports Complex in Metro Manila this past weekend. 

 

Before coming to the Philippines
to meet relatives for the first time, Danica set a goal to also contact the
Philippine national team so she could express her desire to wrestle for
them.  When assistant head coach, Karlo Silverio L. Sevilla III of the
Philippine National Team
, learned that Danica was interested in wrestling
for them he quickly extended an invitation for Danica to compete in two freestyle
exhibition matches against Philippine national team members Noemi Tener and Maribel Jambora (Southeast Asian Games bronze medalist). 

 

The All-American easily defeated
Tener by fall in the first round, and then decisioned, the bronze medalist, Jambora
3-0 in the second match.  Danica’s
impressive wins against the national team members prompted the Philippine
coaches to encourage her to apply for Philippine citizenship so she can
legitimately challenge for a spot on the national team.

 

The highlight of Danica’s
wrestling experience here was being able to meet veteran national team members Christina Vergara (formerly Villanueva)
and Gemma Silverio.  Danica hopes to share her talent in wrestling
by helping to improve the girls and womens wrestling programs in America as well as the Philippines.

 

The former captain of the
Kahuku girls wrestling team, began wrestling in 7th grade on the
Kahuku Intermediate team.   She made the
varsity squad as a freshman in 2005 and quickly made her mark winning the OIA
East and OIA championships at 103lbs. 
She went on to finish second in the State championships losing in
overtime, 4-2, to Carla Watase of Iolani. 
In 2006, she won the OIA East and OIA championships at 108lbs and
finished second again in the state final losing, 4-3, to Megan Morisada of
Iolani.  After winning yet another OIA
championship at 125lbs last year, she finally claimed a state title by pinning
Ariella Ing of Moanalua in the 2007 final. 
This year she won her second state title by pinning Megan Yamaguchi of
Kalani in the 120lbs championship match.



Athlete
Bio

Danica
Auna

The Short List              

·      
2012 Olympic
hopeful

·      
2x United States
Girls Wrestling Association All-American (2007, 2008)

·      
4x Hawaii State
Girls Wrestling Championship Finalist (2005-2008)

·      
2x Hawaii State
Girls Wrestling Champion (2007, 2008)

·      
2x Hawaii State
Girls Wrestling Team Champion (2006, 2008)

·      
3x OIA Individual
Champion (2005, 2006, 2007)

·      
3x OIA Team
Champion (2005, 2007, 2008)

·      
3x OIA East
Individual Champion (2005, 2006, 2008)

·      
3x OIA East Team
Champion (2005, 2007, 2008)

Did
You Know?

·      
Full name is
Danica Leilani Auna; nickname is “Bunzer”

·      
Is one of eight
children (six brothers and one sister)

·      
Loves to eat all
kinds of food especially Hawaiian and Japanese cuisine

·      
First female
wrestler from Kahuku
High School
to win two
state titles

·      
Earned 10 varsity
letters in three different sports at Kahuku
High School

·      
Is ambidextrous

 

If you’d like more
information, or to schedule an interview with Danica Auna, she is staying at
the Edsa Shangri-La in Manila,
room 621, until Thursday, July 3.  She
can also be reached by email at aunav001@gmail.com
 

 

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Game Plan- Football Camp

www.HawaiiDigitalSports.com
Kingsley Ah  You

Game Plan Football Camp at the Aloha Stadium

Click here to view more Photos

Check back for VIDEO Coverage of the 2008 Game Plan Football Camp!

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