2025-26 Spokane Women's Basketball News
Four Sasquatch earned postseason honors from the Northwest Athletic Conference, as Camia Howard, Grant Olsen, Javonte Boles, and Jasahn Redmond received East Region and All-Defensive Team recognition.
Spokane put four players in double figures and erased an early double-digit deficit, but Wenatchee Valley held off the late push to hand the Sasquatch a 91-88 road loss Wednesday night.
Spokane closed on a dominant fourth quarter Saturday afternoon, rallying past Yakima Valley 69–67 on the road.
Spokane celebrated its sophomore class with a gritty performance but couldn’t close out a 58–54 loss.
Behind a 22-point, 12 rebound performance from Camia Howard, Spokane battled throughout before Treasure Valley pulled away late.
Camia Howard (19 points, 15 rebounds) and Karis Santucci (10 points, 11 rebounds) combined for 30 points and 26 boards, but Spokane fell 62-54 after a late Blue Mountain rally.
With Camia Howard and Karis Santucci both recording double-doubles, Spokane controlled much of the afternoon before Columbia Basin used a strong fourth quarter to pull away, 62-57.
The Sasquatch showed fight down the stretch, closing the gap in the final minutes, but Yakima Valley secured the win on Saturday.
Despite a strong scoring effort from Alahondra Perez, Spokane dropped a 62–46 home decision to Walla Walla on Wednesday evening.
Spokane battled throughout, but a second-quarter scoring drought allowed Treasure Valley to create separation in a 77–61 decision on Saturday.
Spokane battled through four quarters, but Wenatchee Valley’s second-half surge proved decisive in an 89–77 NWAC loss at home.
Spokane turned momentum into separation with a 32-point second quarter, cruising past Blue Mountain for a 76–60 win at home.
Camia Howard recorded a double-double with 18 points and 13 rebounds, but Spokane came up short in a 74–43 road loss to Big Bend.
Spokane opened the game with defensive intensity but was unable to sustain its momentum, falling 62–54 to Columbia Basin on Saturday afternoon at Spokane Falls Community College.
Despite forcing 15 turnovers, Spokane was held to 34 points in a 53–34 conference loss to Walla Walla.
Spokane battled on the road but fell to one of the NWAC’s top programs.
