Senior guard keys turnaround for Marysville Pilchuck boys hoops

Every victory this season has been particularly sweet for Marysville Pilchuck senior Michael Painter.

Because it wasn’t that long ago that wins were pretty hard to come by for Painter and the Tomahawks.

Painter is the only remaining player who was on the Marysville Pilchuck varsity team that went 1-19 in the 2012-13 season — his sophomore year. The Tomahawks improved last season and have found their stride this year, finishing the regular season 15-5 and battling with Stanwood down to the wire for a league title.

“It’s crazy, that transition that we made,” Painter said. “Coming from 1-19, what an experience to be able to play out here with my team — my family — and be going for that league championship.”

Painter remembers the struggles from his sophomore season, and how it was occasionally difficult to stay positive.

“Sometimes it was tough,” Painter said. “You always came in saying, ‘OK, we’ll win the next game.’ But being realists, it was kind of difficult to think that way at times. It was all about repetition. Do that ritual. Treat every game the same. I enjoyed that season a lot, even though we didn’t play very well.

“It was a lot of life lessons,” Painter continued. “You came out there everyday and prepared as hard as we do now. We had a lot of inexperience. You have to get down and lose a couple of games before you can learn from it. That’s what we did.”

Marysville Pilchuck head coach Bary Gould said Painter was a definite bright spot in the tough 2012-13 season.

“Mike is really a very special and unique individual,” Gould said. “I remember him being frustrated, like we all were, with losing. But I never remember him staying there. He had frustrating moments, instead of frustrating days.”

The lone victory for the Tomahawks that season came in the second-to-last game against Oak Harbor on Jan. 29. Marysville Pilchuck’s Dante Fields made a layin as time expired to give the Tomahawks the victory over the second-place Wildcats.

Painter had eight points in the game.

“I feel like you find yourself really, really, really having to coach, to motivate and think of new things,” Gould said. “I think it helps when you’re close in games, and a lot of those games were close. I just remember wanting to build on the things that we did well. It’s crazy how painful it is when it’s happening but you multiply that pain for the players by times 10. We get to be around later on when it improves and they didn’t. That was their season.”

Marysville Pilchuck’s transformation really began toward the end of last season. The Tomahawks finished the year 10-13 overall, with a big 70-49 win over Wesco 3A South No. 1 Glacier Peak in its district opener as the No. 4 seed out of the North. Marysville Pilchuck lost to Shorecrest — the eventual district champs — by four points in the semifinals and then defeated Ferndale 60-58 before falling to Mountlake Terrace in a loser-out game.

“Last year our whole motto was, ‘Why not us?’ We were looking at the Seahawks and seeing how well they were doing,” Painter said. “We just thought, ‘Why not us? Why can’t we go out there and do something for MP?’ It was really cool. We really thought we were going to go all the way. That may sound weird, but that’s really how we felt. We have so much trust in our teammates and that’s how we feel right now. We’re trying to go as far as we can.”

Painter’s senior campaign has been a bit easier for the third-year varsity player. Marysville Pilchuck heads into the district tournament not as an underdog, but as a team with legitimate hopes of getting one of the district’s three berths in the regional round.

With returners like Painter, Cole Grinde, Nate Heckendorf and Bryce Juneau, hopes were high for the Tomahawks this season.

“We’ve talked a ton about just looking at it one game at a time and not going beyond that,” Gould said. “But again, if we’re realistic we haven’t been to the state tournament since I was a high school senior. That was 1993 — a lot of years ago. It would be really awesome for these guys, for this community, if we could somehow, some way get back there.”

Marysville Pilchuck and Stanwood battled into overtime on Tuesday, with the Spartans prevailing on a buzzer-beating 3-pointer to clinch the league title.

Fittingly, on the Tomahawks’ senior night, it was Painter who made several big shots and finished with a game-high 30 points.

“You cheer for him because he’s such a wonderful young man,” Gould said. “He’s putting the team on his back and he’s unstoppable inside. He’s so poised and so patient and so selfless and smart — he’s the consummate high school player. It was senior night and I gave him a hug and said, ‘I don’t know what I’m going to do without Michael Painter.’”

Stanwood head coach Zach Ward, who played with Gould at Marysville Pilchuck in the 1990s, is among those impressed with the Tomahawks’ turnaround the past couple seasons under Gould.

“I told him before the game I’m proud of what he’s done with that group,” Ward said. “They started 1-19, he invested in some kids and you can see by their effort (Tuesday night) that paid off. He’s one of the most positive people I know just in life, and I think that shows with where he’s brought that program back to be.”

Gould, in his 10th year as the head coach at Marysville Pilchuck, won a league title his first season. But that was a while back and leads to a unique dilemma for the Tomahawks head coach should MP find itself celebrating a district championship.

“Just thinking about cutting down nets,” Gould said. “Coaches that have all that success, they’re just so used to doing it. This is just an afterthought for us, like, ‘Oh my gosh, do we have a method for doing something like that if we get to do it? A net-cutting strategy? Who gets the ladder? Who’s holding the ladder?’

“We don’t want Mike to get hurt.”

Painter wants to take it one step further.

“The ideal ending is to play in the (Tacoma) Dome,” he said. “To get there and show everyone that Marysville Pilchuck has a strong basketball program. And to kind of take away from that incident on October 24th — the shooting. Everyone kind of sees our school as that and I feel like our football program worked really hard to show everyone that we’re a community. The basketball program is trying to do that as well.”

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Sports

Arlington head coach Nick Brown talks with his team during a time-out against Marysville Getchell during a playoff matchup at Arlington High School on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024, in Arlington, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Arlington boys basketball coach Nick Brown steps down

Brown spent 18 seasons as head coach, turning the Eagles into a consistent factor in Wesco.

Players run drills during a Washington Wolfpack of the AFL training camp at the Snohomish Soccer Dome on Wednesday, April 10, 2024 in Snohomish, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
Arena football is back in Everett

The Washington Wolfpack make their AFL debut on the road Saturday against the Oregon Black Bears.

Seattle Kraken defensemen Jamie Oleksiak (24) and Will Borgen (3) celebrate a goal by center Matty Beniers (10) against the Buffalo Sabres during the second period of an NHL hockey game, Tuesday, in Buffalo, N.Y. (Jeffrey T. Barnes / The Associated Press)
Kraken leaving ROOT Sports for new TV and streaming deals

Seattle’s NHL games are moving to KING 5 and KONG, where they’ll be free for local viewers.

Lake Stevens pitcher Charli Pugmire high fives first baseman Emery Fletcher after getting out of an inning against Glacier Peak on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, at Glacier Peak High School in Snohomish, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Lake Stevens tops Glacier Peak in key softball encounter

The Vikings strung together a three-run rally in the fifth inning to prevail 3-0.

UCLA pass rusher Laiatu Latu, left, pressures Arizona State quarterback Trenton Bourguet during the second half of an NCAA college football game Nov. 11, 2023, in Pasadena, Calif. Latu is the type of player the Seattle Seahawks may target with their first-round pick in the NFL draft. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun, File)
Predicting who Seahawks will take with their 7 draft picks

Expect Seattle to address needs at edge rusher, linebacker and interior offensive line.

Seattle Storm guard Sue Bird brings the ball up against the Washington Mystics during the second half of Game 1 of a WNBA basketball first-round playoff series Aug. 18, 2022, in Seattle. The Storm’s owners, Force 10 Hoops, said Wednesday that Bird has joined the ownership group. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)
Seattle Storm icon Sue Bird joins ownership group

Bird, a four-time WNBA champion with the Storm as a player, increases her ties to the franchise.

Seattle Mariners’ J.P. Crawford (3) scores on a wild pitch as Julio Rodríguez, left, looks on in the second inning of the second game of a baseball doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies Sunday, April 21, 2024, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Mariners put shortstop J.P. Crawford on the 10-day IL

Seattle’s leadoff hitter is sidelined with a right oblique strain.

X
Prep roundup for Wednesday, April 24

Prep roundup for Wednesday, April 24: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Seattle Mariners star Julio Rodriguez connects for a two-run home run next to Texas Rangers catcher Jonah Heim and umpire Mark Carlson during the third inning of a baseball game in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday, April 23, 2024. It was Rodriguez’s first homer of the season. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)
Finally! Julio Rodriguez hits first homer of season

It took 23 games and 89 at bats for the Mariners superstar to go yard.

X
Prep roundup for Tuesday, April 23

Prep roundup for Tuesday, April 23: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Seattle Seahawks linebacker Jordyn Brooks (56) is taken off the field after being injured in the second half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings in Minneapolis, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021. The former first-round pick is an example of the Seahawks failing to find difference makers in recent NFL drafts. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
A reason Seahawks have 1 playoff win since 2016? Drafting

The NFL draft begins Thursday, and Seattle needs to draft better to get back to its winning ways.

Shorewood and Cascade players all jump for a set piece during a boys soccer match on Monday, April 22, 2024, at Shoreline Stadium in Shoreline, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Shorewood shuts out Cascade 4-0 in boys soccer

Nikola Genadiev’s deliveries help tally another league win for the Stormrays.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.