Dru Gimlin tourney brings B-ball enthusiasts together
CALEB PEREZ | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 months, 2 weeks AGO
QUINCY – Downtown Quincy hosted the annual Dru Gimlin 3-on-3 Basketball tournament Saturday. The games began at 9 a.m. and lasted until 6 p.m., making for a full day of basketball in honor of the memory of Dru Gimlin.
“We are all truly thankful for our community and everybody that continues to come support the tournament,” said Stephanie Boorman, who runs the tournament.
This year, 123 teams registered to play, which is the most teams the tournament has seen, with last year’s tournament having 124 teams sign up, with a couple of teams unable to make the tournament. While most of the teams come from Quincy and cities in the Basin and Washington, Gimlin’s nephews from Idaho to play in the tournament as well.
The tournament went smoothly this year as there were enough volunteers to help with everything that was needed. Boorman said that there were volunteers helping coordinate other volunteers into areas where they were needed and taking charge when necessary.
“I was actually able to sit down at one point, which hardly ever happens,” she said.
She said there were once again people who didn’t even sign up to volunteer stepping in to fill roles throughout the tournament
The amount of volunteering and support from the community had increased from last year, she said. There was also a strong representation from public servants present with three council members, Pat Haley, the City Administrator, Boorman herself as the City Clerk, Jorge Trujillo, the Police Captain, David Durfee, the Fire Chief, School Board Members, teachers from Quincy and one from Ephrata, youth athletic coaches, farmers, students and numerous Quincy alumni.
“It’s a full community effort to keep that tournament going, like the day of,” said Boorman. “Everybody shows up and it’s a true blessing to see and experience.”
Boorman said there were quite a few highlights from the tournament this year that she enjoyed. One of which was when one of the third-fourth-grade brackets fell behind by an hour, she had the opportunity to show people how the courts are marked in the tournament as they transitioned the courts from having 10-foot to 8-foot hoops.
Another highlight came from the involvement of the Gimlin family in the tournament. Dru’s sister, Andrea, and her husband, Enrique, were some of the first to fill in volunteering roles wherever they were needed as court monitors for the entire day and their son, Paxton, flew in from Hawaii to court monitor with his girlfriend sitting in as a scorekeeper, said Boorman.
“They just took it and ran with it and hopped out on those courts and started court monitoring, scorekeeping, giving our court monitors breaks,” she said. “It was really fun to see them just get out there and fully involved in getting their hands dirty and taking on the roles that nobody wants to volunteer for.”
Former classmates and teammates of Dru’s are still showing up to participate in different ways, said Boorman. Two of the seniors from 2004 who coordinated the first Dru Gimlin, 3-on-3, Drew Ferguson and Joel Omlin, were back this year as coaches and spectators, as they had their own children playing in the tournament.
“It was really cool to see everything evolve and see these guys out there, getting to enjoy what they started 21 years ago,” she said.
The Smilin’ 4 Rylinn pulled pork fundraiser for Rylinn Massey was the main food vendor at the tournament, with all proceeds going to support Rylinn. The fundraiser raised over $5,000 that day, said Boorman.
Boorman said that she and the other organizers are very grateful for the continued support from the community each year in making sure that the tournament is a success.
“Even from out of town, we have people thanking us again for a wonderful tournament and they’re looking forward to next year,” said Boorman. “You just see that there’s that commitment and while there’s that commitment, there's a handful of us that are going to continue to keep it going and try to make it better next year.”
Tournament Champions
3/4 grade boys: Tribe (Moses Lake)
3/4 grade girls: Kodiaks (Leavenworth)
5/6 grade boys: Elite (Wenatchee)
5/6 grade girls: Dawgs (Cashmere)
7/8 grade boys: Drewsky Elite (Quincy)
7/8 grade girls: Buckets (Royal City)
9/10 grade boys: ML Warriors (Moses Lake)
9/10 grade girls: Lady Ballers (Quincy)
11/12 grade boys: Cuatro Amigos (Quincy)
Men’s REC: Gorge Yuckets (Quincy)
Men’s Elite: Tri-Yak Ballers (Yakima)
Men’s Mature: 3pt. Assassins (Quincy)
ARTICLES BY CALEB PEREZ
BBCC eyes budget and spring enrollment
MOSES LAKE — During Big Bend Community College’s April 30 board meeting the college President, Sarah Thompson Tweedy, shared the counts for spring enrollment and Full Time Enrollment numbers for Spring of 2026 along with updates on where the budget sits. “We still have some work to do in terms of systematically going through our expenses and seeing how much of the requests that we have before us, how many of those we can put off,” said Thompson Tweedy. “There’s the opportunity to close that gap by reducing our expenses, but the challenge is, we’ve also had some expenses go up.” As of April 15, 2026 the spring quarter head count was up nearly 18% from 2025, but total FTE’s and state-funded FTEs were down 6.9% and 11.6% respectively, according to the board agenda.
Huskies best Tigers in OT
Othello moves on to second round of districts
OTHELLO — The Othello Huskies (11-5) extended their postseason push after earning a close 2-1 victory in overtime against the Ephrata Tigers (7-10) in the first round of the 2A district tournament. The game winning goal came in second overtime when Othello sophomore Samuel Marroquin knocked the ball into the back of the net. “It was a tough game, Ephrata is definitely a tough opponent, but I feel like we had prepared well for the week,” said Marroquin. “We definitely had a good game plan and we just gave everything. We knew if this was our last game we were going to go out with a bang.” The game was a tight battle from the very beginning as the Tigers and Huskies battled under the hot sun. Othello scored in the first half and maintained their lead in throughout, going into halftime 1-0.
BASIN SPORTS SCHEDULE: May 4-11, 2026
COLUMBIA BASIN — The postseason has begun for high school athletes in our area with teams gearing up to compete against the best of the best. Check out where our local teams are heading this week.







