HONOLULU — The Mililani softball team played its full 2025 season without the benefit of its home field due to campus renovations. So the Trojans made do, settling in at the University of Hawaii’s Rainbow Wahine Softball Stadium this week.
They’ve become a postseason fixture in Manoa. Mililani powered past Maryknoll, 10-7, in a matchup of OIA and ILH champions Friday night to become the first team to record a repeat Datahouse/HHSAA Division I championship since Campbell from 2015 to 2017.
Mililani’s 20-year head coach Rose Antonio told the Spectrum OC16 crew that the degree of difficulty jumped a level this year.
“It’s hard to get to this game, to the championship and to win,” said Antonio, who attained her fourth state title (2009, 2014, 2024) among her school’s five. “But we made history today, because we’re always repeating second place. Now we’re repeating as champs.”
Mililani went back to back to claim this year’s HHSAA D1 Championship in their win over the Maryknoll. Congratulations Trojans!#spectrumoc16sports #HHSAAsoftball #hawaiisoftball #mililani pic.twitter.com/LV82VxC4Os
— Spectrum OC16 Sports (@OC16Sports) May 10, 2025
[Note: See below for more photos of Mililani-Maryknoll in the HHSAA D-I softball championship.]
Kahiau Aina, Ori Mailo, Hinano Bautista and Kodie Ancheta launched home runs as the Trojans (15-1) flexed the top-to-bottom lineup power that opponents feared all season. Ancheta, the catcher, hit a third-inning grand slam from the 9 spot.
The intimidation factor was real for a team that lost only once, to OIA West rival Campbell in late March. The third baseman Mailo, an Oklahoma commit, wore a special crimson batting helmet branded with the Sooner "O" as she had all season.
Mililani run-ruled opponents in exactly half of its games. It appeared they had a chance to do so again Friday as they broke the game open with four runs in the second and five in the third.
Earlier, Kapaa came back to beat Pearl City, 7-5, for a second straight title in Division II for the KIF’s Warriors. They became the first program to go back-to-back in D-II since Saint Francis in 2018 and 2019.
Sophomore ace Bautista nearly went the distance to attain her second state title in as many high school seasons.
The Trojans got an invaluable pickup for their successful 2024 title defense in Punahou transfer Aina, an elite shortstop. Aina had a handful of defensive gems to go with her 3-for-4 outing with three RBIs.
“My heart’s just racing,” Aina, the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, told Spectrum OC16. “I feel super happy about this team and what we accomplished this entire season.”
Kahiau Aina was good at the plate and equally as good defensively. She has wheels and power. She went 3 for 3 to help Mililani win over Maryknoll to capture the HHSAA D1 Championship.#spectrumoc16sports #HHSAAsoftball #hawaiisoftball #impactplayer #mililani pic.twitter.com/bWxJOjQXK5
— Spectrum OC16 Sports (@OC16Sports) May 10, 2025
She credited her teammates for achieving the “two-peat.”
“One we start rallying, it’s never stopping,” Aina said. “Once somebody catches a barrel, it just goes through the entire team.”
The Spartans did not go quietly into the night. They scrapped for three runs in the top of the seventh, chasing Bautista to entertain thoughts of finding a koa companion to their breakthrough 2022 state trophy. But Mililani’s Taylor Adriano coolly came on to record the final out.
“I’m not gonna lie. I was getting nervous,” Antonio admitted.
Kasi Cruz went the distance for the Spartans (14-5).
Maryknoll catcher Palehua Silva went 2-for-3 and had her team’s lone home run.
Kapaa goes back to back in D-II
In Division II, Kapaa proved the better of two unbeatens as it rallied out of a three-run hole against Pearl City to hang a second straight banner.
Catcher Jaicie Martinez went 2-for-4 with a triple and four RBIs as the Warriors (15-0) attained their third state softball title in the last four years. It was the fifth overall by a KIF school.
“We’ve been through this,” Martinez told the Spectrum OC16 crew of coming back. “All we need is seven innings. Give us seven innings and we’re unstoppable.”
Jaicie Martinez caught an excellent game and had a triple with the bases loaded that broke the game open against the Chargers and helped the Warriors claim the State D2 Championship!#spectrumoc16sports #HHSAsoftball #hawaiisoftball #impactplayer #kapaa pic.twitter.com/I9Fdp0cyEq
— Spectrum OC16 Sports (@OC16Sports) May 10, 2025
Leadoff hitter Sienna Yamashita went 2-for-4 with a triple and was named tournament Most Outstanding Player.
Karlee Rose Keale, who had a no-hitter against Pac-Five in a five-inning game in Thursday’s semifinals, tossed a seven-hitter for coach Blair Yamashita.
“She carried us through this whole tournament,” Martinez said. “She got a no-hitter yesterday and she dealt all weekend long.”
Phoenix Sky Lumabao and pitcher Haley Shinjo homered in the loss for the Chargers (13-1), who were in pursuit of the OIA’s first D-II softball crown since Aiea in 2017.