High School Sports

Bee’s Best: 2024-25 girls basketball All-Stars and Players of the Year

Alexis Swillis was a big target for the Clovis West girls basketball team this season.

Standing at 6-foot-3, she was an imposing figure and a force.

She was continually relied on when the Golden Eagles needed short buckets.

Swillis finished her career with 1,266 points, according to section historian Bob Barnett.

Swillis averaged 15.2 points per game, 8.9 rebounds and was the Tri-River Athletic Conference Player of the Year.

“Coaches and teammates pushing me,” said Swillis, who acknowledged after last season she needed to be more physical.

“I’m almost probably the biggest person in the Valley (among high school girls basketball players). Just using that to my advantage.”

Her leadership helped the Golden Eagles to another Tri-River Athletic Conference and Central Section Division I championship.

Swillis is The Fresno Bee’s Player of the Year.

“She’s a 6-3 post player, but she’s so much more than that,” Clovis West coach Craig Campbell said. “She’s an athlete, so coachable — I mean, there’s everything. Her growth this last year has been tremendous to see when she got healthy and cleared and started playing for us now. We’ve really pushed her.”

Despite the loss to Archbishop Mitty, where the Golden Eagles almost pulled it out, Swillis was happy that her teammates fought hard until the final buzzer sounded.

Clovis West girls basketball coach Craig Campbell is The Bee’s 2025 girls basketball Co-Coach of the Year and his star player Alexis Swillis is girls basketball player of the year.
Clovis West girls basketball coach Craig Campbell is The Bee’s 2025 girls basketball Co-Coach of the Year and his star player Alexis Swillis is girls basketball player of the year. CRAIG KOHLRUSS ckohlruss@fresnobee.com

The loss didn’t define the season. Clovis West still finished 33-1, but she hopes the season continues to set the standard.

“We had a big senior class,” Swillis said. “I feel like all of us stepped up and just felt like showing the freshman class how we basically do it. It was fun.”

Swillis will play college basketball at UNLV.

Co-Coaches of the Year: Craig Campbell, Clovis West and Anna Almeida, Caruthers

There is no denying what Campbell and Almeida have done for their respective teams.

This season was historic for both. Clovis West was on an undefeated run. Caruthers had another state title on the mind.

Campbell knew there was noise prior to the season that this could be a down year for Clovis West.

Clovis West girls basketball coach Craig Campbell is The Bee’s 2025 girls basketball Co-Coach of the Year.
Clovis West girls basketball coach Craig Campbell is The Bee’s 2025 girls basketball Co-Coach of the Year. CRAIG KOHLRUSS ckohlruss@fresnobee.com

Not even close.

The Golden Eagles put up a memorable season, but still fell one game short.

Campbell was still proud of his team.

“Each team has their own journey, their own path,” Campbell said. “We lost a couple talented seniors in Athena (Tomlinson) and Ariyah (Smith) last year. We knew we were going to have a lot of senior leadership. We have four college-bound seniors in this class. The maturity, we’re a little different than the past.

“I never thought we’d be 33-0 or whatever we were heading into our last game. We figure we’d have four or five losses in the process. We beat two of the top teams out of Oregon. We beat the Nevada state runner-up and one of the top teams out of Florida.”

Almeida, meanwhile, wanted another state title.

Her Blue Raiders won their first in 2019. Then Caruthers returned to Sacramento in 2024 and won.

For a second year in a row, Caruthers High girls basketball coach Anna Almeida is The Fresno Bee Coach of the Year.
For a second year in a row, Caruthers High girls basketball coach Anna Almeida is The Fresno Bee Coach of the Year. ANTHONY GALAVIZ agalaviz@fresnobee.com

This year? No problem for Caruthers.

The Blue Raiders defeated Rancho Bernardo 56-37 in the CIF Division II state title at the Golden 1 Center.

“They all wanted it,” Almeida said. “It took a lot of learning curve by the girls. All of them wanted to say that they were going to be state champions.”

Almeida saw a look into her players where they had “more focus” this season than they had before.

Her players answered the call.

For that, she earned another Coach of the Year.

“It’s a testament, to the community that supports us and all the coaches that support me,” she said. “Not just my staff, but my coaching village who I get the opportunity to work alongside.”

Large School Player of the Year: Sadie Sin, Clovis

Sin powered the Cougars to a 25-9 overall record and 7-3 in the TRAC.

She was the go-to player for the Cougars, averaging 17.5 points per game while shooting 56% from the field.

Sin has always been a key player for Clovis, where she often finds a way to get to the basket with her quick awareness.

Medium School Player of the Year: Asia Jackson, Sierra Pacific

Jackson led the way for the Golden Bears, averaging 14.7 points and 6.9 rebounds per game in helping Sierra Pacific to a 50-43 victory over Monache in the Central Section Division II championship.

In that game, she finished with 10 points and five rebounds.

Small School Player of the Year: Emmi Almeida, Jr. Caruthers

Whether it’s from her mom or something else, Almeida is another coach on the court for the Blue Raiders. She did that by leading by example.

She helped Caruthers to back-to-back state championships, scoring 21 points in the final this year.

For the season, she averaged 12.4 points and 6.9 assists per game.

Bee All-Stars

Apajok Ayuen, Jr., Sierra Pacific

Aleeawa Badoni, Sr., Sierra

Kyah Bartlett, Jr., Monache

McKenzee Batemon, Sr., Hanford West

Jaelyn Bourdeau, Sr., Coalinga

Laniece Brinston, Jr., Hanford West

Brooklyn Davis, Jr., Coalinga

Rian Jones-Dillihunt, Sr., El Diamante

Jalissa Espirito, Dinuba

Sienna Evans, Sr., San Joaquin Memorial

Janessa Garza, Sr., Farmersville

Jennifer Gonzalez, Sr., Strathmore

Nyleigh Gregory, Soph., Roosevelt

Sanai Herod, Jr., Bullard

Jadyn Johnson, Sr., Yosemite

Bethany Mendoza, Sr., Firebaugh

Lali Maciel, Jr., Coalinga

Keegan Medeiros, Sr., Clovis West

Natalie Membreno, Jr., Mendota

Izabel Mendez, Sr., Caruthers

Jaylee Moore, Soph., Caruthers

Vivian Moore, Sr., Central

Melanie Navarro, Sr., Lindsay

Alexa Perryman, Sr., San Joaquin Memorial

Gabby Ramos, Sr., Clovis East

Milly Rojas, Jr., Monache

Jilari Sandoval, Jr., Mendota

Ava Schletewitz, Jr., Immanuel

Malayjah Shanklin, Soph., Hoover

Saiya Sidhu, Sr., Clovis

Kayla Silva, Sr., Hanford West

Gi’Anna Smith, Fr., Buchanan

Gia Souza, Soph., San Joaquin Memorial

Keira Thomas, Fr., Immanuel

Mia Va’asili, Sr., Caruthers

Riley Walls, Sr., Clovis West

Caris Williams, Sr., Bullard

This story was originally published May 4, 2025 at 5:30 AM.

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Anthony Galaviz
The Fresno Bee
Anthony Galaviz writes about sports for The Fresno Bee. He covers the Las Vegas Raiders, high schools, boxing, MMA and junior colleges. He’s been with The Bee since 1997 and attended Fresno City College before graduating from Fresno State with a major in journalism and a minor in criminology. Support my work with a digital subscription
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