

Mililani freshman Makena Yonemura won the OIA girls golf championship with a final score of 150, carding a 78 in the final round. Nanami Yano from Roosevelt finished second, three strokes behind.
The wind picked up, the greens were wildly fast and Mililani freshman Makena Yonemura refused to wilt.
Yonemura carded a final-round 78 to finish at 150 and capture the OIA girls golf championship on Tuesday night at the Pearl at Kalauao. It was night by the time the final groups finished, still bright enough to play, but close to 7 p.m.
âI just like to admire how beautiful this course is. I find it as a good challenge to improve my mindset, especially, because it might make you feel like youâre a bad golfer getting bad scores, but you just push through it,â she said. âKnow what youâre capable of doing.â
The course is normally fast on the greens, a fact that ILH and OIA golfers readily attest to. It was even faster after a USGA qualifying event in the morning. Skill and patience were rewarded even more than usual in Tuesdayâs round, which was a bit windier and changed directions more often than it did Monday.
Nanami Yano of Roosevelt was second, three strokes behind Yonemura.
A USGA qualifier event in the morning meant the OIA championships had a later start than usual. The first groups teed off at 11:40 a.m.
Yonemura and her Trojans teammates celebrated the girls team championship with a three-player score of 463. Kady Matsumoto placed third overall (80-74-154) and Mia Nakaoka placed fifth (76-83-159).
Lia Choi of Moanalua placed fourth (80-78-158).
Kalani was second with a tally of 510, followed by Roosevelt (519), Moanalua (527) and Pearl City (659).
Moanalua senior Gunnar Lee won the boys individual championship, one year after finishing as runner-up to Isaac Kim. Despite tougher conditions on day two, Lee fared better with a 76 and finished at 154 on the unpredictable course.
âIâve been playing at Pearl for a long time. I played in Casey (Nakama)âs program since I was 11. I played a lot of junior tournaments here, probably more than 10,â Lee said. âThe whole week played pretty hard. Today was a little harder because of the wind. Sometimes the wind was left to right, and it would switch right to left. The rough for the USGA qualifier, the greens were an 11. It was speeding up and the grass is very firm. If you tap with your putter too hard, you get punished. This year you have to play more to the front and let it roll to the hole rather than attack the pin.â
Roosevelt placed two in the top five: Caden Kawashige, who finished second at 158, and Kanaâi Poyo-Aquino (166), who placed fourth.
Kahukuâs Keola Silva placed third (163) and Bailey Mulligan of Radford was fifth (166).
Moanalua also defended its boys team title. This makes it five in a row under coach Andrew Hoopii. In addition to Lee, the scores of Weien Chang and Austin Koki, who each finished at 167, and Tanner Tokuna (192) counted toward the team total of 680.
Mililani (691) was boys runner-up, followed by Roosevelt (705), Kahuku (709) and Kaiser (741).
Makena Yonemura from Mililani won the OIA girls golf championship.
Makena Yonemura finished with a final score of 150.
The wind picked up and the greens were fast, making the course more challenging for the players.
Nanami Yano from Roosevelt finished second, three strokes behind Yonemura.

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The door of opportunity was wide open in the girls division with the graduation of 2025 girls champion Kate Nakaoka of Mililani.
Yonemura carded a par 72 on Monday to take a four-stroke lead over Nakaoka and Yano.
Yonemura had three first-place finishes during the regular season. She shared first with Mia Nakaoka at Ala Wai on Feb. 23, led the field on March 2 at Ewa Villages, and tied for first with Rooseveltâs Yano at Hoakalei on April 13.
Yonemuraâs older sister, Mariko, placed third in the OIA championships last year and currently plays for Gonzaga. Younger sister Makena had played roughly a dozen rounds at Pearl between tournaments and practice.
âWhen you get aggressive, this course can get you in a lot of trouble if you have short-sided chips or just impossible shots,â Yonemura noted. âThe key is to just stay patient, work with what youâve got. Donât try to force anything and, yeah, just play your game.â
The wind will win. Itâs a matter of embracing a stalemate rather than fighting the invisible.
âYou have to be aware of it, but you canât let it take you down or affect you. Stay positive and even though itâs harsh greens, you just have to play it and try your best,â Yonemura said. âYesterday, I had a chip-in eagle (No. 7) and a chip-birdie (No. 14). That was the highlight of my first round.â
She credits Mariko for setting the standard.
âShe teaches me how to ignore everything on the course. She was always very positive. She never gets down on herself,â Yonemura said. âOther girls might hit farther, but she stuck to her game plan. Iâll call her tonight.â
Lee had a 78 to lead the boys after one round, one stroke ahead of Rooseveltâs Kawashige and two strokes in front of Koki (Moanalua) and Bryson Hammond (Mililani).
âI didnât look at my phone once on the course today,â said Lee, who birded No. 2 and No. 18.
He overcame a double bogey at No. 3. He also bogeyed Nos. 6, 7, 12 and 15. It was a rough day for all golfers, but it was survival of the fittest.
âI hit the bunker on my tee shot. I was thinking one shot at a time, even if I had a bad shot. Just forget about it and move on to the next one.â
Lee placed first twice in the regular season. He shared first place with Kalaheoâs Quade Martinez at Ewa Villages, and led the field at Pali on March 30.
As a freshman, Lee finished seventh at the OIA championships on the Pearl course. At Leilehua a year later, he tied for second in the OIA championships.
âIâve been working a lot on my swing every day. I put in the time with my dad (Zachary Lee). I want to thank him for wanting the best for me,â Lee said. âEver since the age of 10 we would go to (Kaneohe) Klipper two to three days a week before we moved to town. Iâve worked with a mental skills coach (Daryl Oshiro). I want to thank him, too, and my coach (Norman-Ganin Asao).â
The David Ishii/HHSAA Golf State Championships will be held at Kaneohe Klipper Golf Course. The girls tournament is on May 5-6. The boys tourney is May 12-13.
The distances were shortened a bit by Pearl officials due to the greens, and the course is a bit drier because a water pump broke two weeks ago. The course is being watered by hand for now.
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