In 1982, Kay Konerza of Lester Prairie set a single game scoring record for girls' basketball in Minnesota in an 81-26 victory over Winsted Holy Trinity. Konerza was in the first wave of high-profile girls' basketball players in Minnesota.
Saturday night, her record of 58 points was broken by McKenna Hofschild, a 5-foot-3 guard from Prior Lake, who scored 63 points in a game her team lost 99-95 to Park Center in the Breakdown Classic at Hopkins High School.
Back in the Day: Konerza was in the first wave of high-profile girls' basketball players in Minnesota. There was one game during her senior season that was attended by coach Andy Landers of Georgia and Rene Portland of Penn State, two of that era's top programs.
I drove up to Lester Prairie with Landers, killing time in the afternoon playing video games at a now boarded-up restaurant in Howard Lake, and back to the Twin Cities with Portland, where I got a quality lesson on the state of women's college basketball at the Green Mill in St. Paul.
Konerza kept a diary of her recruiting, which was published in the Star Tribune, and wrote in the final part that she would attend Louisiana Tech, the highest-profile program of that time along with Southern Cal and Old Dominion.
Back to today: Now known as Kay Bachert and a teacher in Texas, Konerza has been an AAU coach and the oldest of her children is planning to play college basketball at Division II Western Colorado.
After being informed that her record was broken, Bachert sent me an email with a message that she wanted to have forwarded to Hofschild. I sent it along to her coach, and Bachert said it was fine to publish it.
Here it is: