- December 4, 2025
Tariq Shakir runs the point for the Pirates in a home game against Cape Coral on Jan. 4. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Matanzas senior Ryleigh Smith looks for an open teammate out of a double team by St. Joseph. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Matanzas sophomore Ruby Fogel scored nine points against St. Joseph. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Matanzas guard Karaja McCoy (3) gets back on defense in a game against St. Joseph on Jan. 4. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Ruby Fogel (10) looks for an open teammate in the Pirates' game against St. Joseph. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Rya'sir Jefferson shoots a free throw against Cape Coral. Jefferson scored 30 points against Ridgeview on Jan. 6 in the Kiwanis Holiday Tournament. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Freshman Aurora Purdy scored nine points against St. Joseph. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Sophomore Keegan Murray brings the ball past halfcourt against St. Joseph. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Henry Robinson Jr. scored 17 points against Cape Coral. The freshman forward missed the previous game after splitting his chin open against Palatka. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Laila Krebs brings the ball upcourt. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Senior Laila Krebs scored a team-high 12 points against St. Joseph. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Matanzas freshman Aurora Purdy takes an outside shot against St. Joseph on Jan. 4. Photo by Brent Woronoff
Matanzas senior Tariq Shakir has scored in double figures in six of his last seven games. Photo by Brent Woronoff
The Matanzas boys and girls basketball teams have both struggled this season, but the boys have been improving with four wins in their last six games, and girls coach Travis Boone has seen positive signs with his squad too.
Both teams lost close games at home on Jan. 4, the day before the Pirates hosted the Kiwanis Holiday Tournament. That would be the highlight of the week for the girls team, but the boys followed with victories on Jan. 5 and Jan. 6.
Against St. Joseph on Jan. 4, the Matanzas girls went on a 15-5 run to pull to within two at 35-33 entering the fourth quarter. But their lack of depth showed in the final eight minutes — they dressed just seven players — and they fell 54-36. Laila Krebs scored a team-high 12 points.
“I’m very proud of that effort,” first-year coach Travis Boone said. “It proved a lot to me as well as themselves that they can play without being at full strength.”
The Pirates were missing starting point guard Taylor Boone, who had rolled her ankle in practice earlier in the week, while some other players were still out of town for the holiday break, Travis Boone said. In the fourth quarter, the Pirates were visibly fatigued, he said.
The Matanzas girls (2-13) had some players back for the tournament but were overmatched against two talented teams, losing 60-22 to Atlantic Coast (11-1) and 51-14 to Jacksonville Raines (9-5).
The Matanzas boys (5-9) defeated Jacksonville Parker 67-52 on Jan. 5 at the Bernard Wilkes Classic at Jacksonville Ribault. The Pirates got balanced scoring with four players in double digits — Tariq Shakir 16 points, Henry Robinson Jr. and Rya’sir Jefferson 15 each and Jezeriah McCoy 10. Robinson also had 16 rebounds.
Returning home on Jan. 6 for the second day of the Kiwanis tournament, Matanzas trounced Ridgeview 79-47. Jefferson (30) and Robinson (25) combined for 55 points. The 6-foot-7 Robinson pulled down 15 rebounds.
On Jan. 4, the Pirates hosted Cape Coral, which arrived a day early for the tournament. The Seahawks (12-6) wound up winning three games in three days in Palm Coast, defeating Matanzas (56-51), Spruce Creek (60-42) and Jacksonville Westside (58-53).
Matanzas led Cape Coral 45-37 after three quarters, but the visitors went on an 18-4 run to go up 55-49 with 1:03 left. With about two minutes remaining, the Seahawks held the ball for nearly a minute, but the Pirates had committed just one team foul in the half to that point and had to foul four times before sending Cape Coral to the line.
When the Seahawks did shoot free throws, they struggled, hitting just 7 of 25 in the game. But the Pirates couldn't take advantage.
“We didn't hit shots, and we just kept turning the ball over,” Matanzas coach Henry Robinson Sr. said.
Robinson Jr., who scored a team-high 17 points, committed his fourth foul late in the third quarter and sat out the first half of the fourth quarter.