Gonzaga College High School | Archive | February, 2009

WCAC Boys Basketball Quarterfinals Summary

LOOK BELOW FOR SEPARATE GAME STORIES AND ABOVE FOR VIDEOS AND PHOTOS FROM ALL THE QUARTERFINALS!

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

The teams at the top each had their respective scare, but all but one came out victorious in Saturday’s WCAC boys basketball quarterfinals.

The upset of the night came in the final game at Galludet University, in which sixth-seeded Paul VI rolled to a 52-34 win over Virginia rival O’Connell. The Panthers avenged a buzzer-beater loss from early in the regular season and a blowout loss at the hands of the Knights from a few weeks ago.

The other three games were certainly exciting as well.

Fifth-seeded Good Counsel led for almost the entire game against Bishop McNamara, but the Mustangs were able to force overtime and came out victorious once there, 65-58. Brandon Coleman sealed the win with a thunderous dunk in overtime.

Second-seeded Gonzaga was in a very similar situation before winning, 73-68, in overtime. The Eagles trailed St. John’s, who they had beaten three times already this season, for much of the game. The Cadets had the final possession in regulation with the game tied but were unable to win it on the final shot.

In overtime, Gonzaga’s Tyler Thornton continued his dominance, scoring five points to push his game total to 26 points. Cahli Thomas also hit a big-time three-pointer in overtime to help the Eagles come reach Sunday’s semifinals against Paul VI.

Even top-seeded DeMatha got a scare from eighth-seeded St. Mary’s Ryken. The Knights jumped out to a 9-0 lead and trailed by just one point entering the fourth quarter. DeMatha senior point guard Marcus Rouse got the Stags on track, however, with 10 points in the fourth quarter en route to a 55-42 win.

Paul VI Gets Revenge

Paul VI had lost to O’Connell twice this season – once in heart-breaking style and once in embarrassing fashion.

Saturday night, the sixth-seeded Panthers repaid the favor both ways, beating the third-seeded Knights 52-34 in the WCAC boys basketball quarterfinals at Galludet University.

Paul VI (14-14) will next take on Gonzaga at 7 p.m. Sunday at American University.

“We’ll take the win in the playoffs,” Paul VI coach Glenn Farello said. “It’s a fair trade.”

O’Connell (21-7) beat Paul VI (14-14) on a buzzer-beating layup on Jan. 16 in their first meeting this season. Then the Knights took it to O’Connell less than two weeks ago with a 61-37 home victory.

The Knights knew that heading into the final regular season home game, they would need a win over St. John’s to get a rematch with O’Connell in the WCAC playoff quarterfinals. So that became the most important game of the year. They wanted another shot at their Virginia rivals.

“After what happened, we had to get them back,”  senior forward Raven Barber said. “I was angry; it was bad man. We had to bring it together and come out here and ****.”

Big men Eugene McCrory and Barber led the way for the Panthers. McCory scored 15 points and grabbed 14 rebounds and Barber notched 13 points and 10 boards.

Their performance was drastically different from the one they had in the second meeting with O’Connell, in which McCrory said he and Barber were “dominated” by O’Connell’s Jordan Burgess and Larry Savage. The Knights have more offensive rebounds than the Panthers’ total rebound count in that game.

“Last time we played them, their bigs really handled us,” Farello said. “This is their first year in WCAC’s so they’ve had to learn a lot. They’ve gone through their ups and down and handled the adversity of it.”

Much like their bigs, Paul VI had undergone its share of tumbles and triumphs this season. The Panthers opened the year nationally ranked and were expected to be beating some WCAC powerhouses. But the Panthers stumbled to a 7-11 conference record.

Still, Paul VI came into the playoffs thinking anything could happen. And despite losing more games than expected, the Panthers were right there in a majority of them.

“We’ve been right there knocking on the door and tonight we were able to burst through it,” Farello said.

Paul VI broke out to a big lead early and never looked back. The Panthers scored the game’s first six points and went into the second quarter with a 16-4 lead.

The Panthers led by nine at halftime, which was as close as O’Connell would ever get. The Knights also pulled to within nine down with about three-and-a-half minutes left, before McCrory converted and and-one opportunity.

Erick Green finished with 10 points and fellow guard Deon Jones notched nine. O’Connell was led by David Eismieier’s 11 points and Kendall Marshall with nine.

Thornton, Thomas Lead Gonzaga in Overtime

It was the start of overtime and Gonzaga had just narrowly escaped regulation still wearing last year’s WCAC crown.

And on the end line, getting ready to inbound the ball was Tyler Thornton, joking and smiling.

It seems that for the Duke-bound junior guard, nothing can get him rattled. And thus was the case Saturday afternoon, when Thornton’s cool 26 points led Gonzaga to a 73-68 overtime win over St. John’s in the WCAC quarterfinals.

“The playoffs in the WCAC, you can’t for anything better than an overtime game with your biggest rival,” Thornton said. “I was happy, ready to get the game going in overtime and I knew we were going to pull it out.”

Second-seeded Gonzaga (25-4) trailed the seventh-seeded Cadets (13-17) — whom they had beaten three times this season already — by nine points more than midway through the third quarter.

That’s when Thornton turned it on, notching and and-one conversion, then another jumper bucket before the end of the quarter. He had eight of Gonzaga’s 12 points in the quarter.

“He’s our leader,” Gonzaga coach Steve Turner said. “He stayed focused tonight and made big plays when we needed them most.”

St. John’s maintained a steady lead for most of the fourth quarter and led by one point with 32.3 seconds after a free throw by Erik Koebke, who was subbed in for the first time all game for injured Denzel Primus-Devonish just for the free throw.

Thornton took the ball on the next possession and drove down the court to draw the foul with 26.6 seconds remaining. He sunk one of two free throws, but Primus-Devonish missed a three-point attempt to win the game, sending it into overtime.

“I knew we had the momentum, I knew they were on the down a little bit,” Thornton said. “It was time for us to attack.”

Thornton converted a lob pass from Ian Hummer for an and-one just 11 seconds into overtime, giving the Eagles even more of a boost. But St. John’s responded with a deep three pointer from Chris Martin.

Next was what Thornton called the biggest shot of the game. With about three minutes left, the ball came out to Gonzaga sophomore Cahli Thomas, who wasn’t even guarded most of the game and who was very reticent to shoot from behind the arch despite that.

Thomas, despite hitting huge game-tying or game-winning shots in games against Good Counsel and O’Connell this year, has had a self-admitted mental block.

But this time, Thomas caught the ball and shot in stride. It swished through the net, giving Gonzaga a lead that it would never surrender.

“I just wanted to step up for my team again; I’m used to it now,” Thomas said. “That shot I was actually kind of nervous, but you still have to step up and take it.”

McNamara Comes From Behind to Beat Falcons

It seemed that Good Counsel had an answer for every advance Bishop McNamara had in Saturday’s WCAC boys basketball quarterfinals.

That is, except for a monstrous Brandon Coleman dunk. Coleman threw down a two-handed slam in overtime to lift fourth-seeded McNamara to a 65-58 win over Good Counsel, sending the Mustangs into Sunday’s semifinal against DeMatha.
   
“Like I’ve said all year, the dunk is to get momentum on our team,” Coleman said. “We had the momentum going into overtime and that just sealed the deal. I felt like that was the ****** blow.”

Fifth-seeded Good Counsel (18-11) took an early lead in the first quarter and had Bishop McNamara (21-8) chasing from then on.

The Mustangs pulled even by the end of the first quarter, but Good counsel continued to hit big shots to maintain the lead. Julius Francis became a big force inside for the Falcons and finished with 12 points. Louis Young also got hot, scoring nine points in the third quarter alone.

The Falcons built and eight-point lead at one point before McNamara came out strong in the fourth quarter. Usual leaders Rashad Whack and Talib Zanna found the net for big buckets and the Mustangs helped themselves by going 10-for-10 from the free throw line in the quarter.

Good Counsel, meanwhile, missed four straight free throws in the final minute, including with the game tied and 11.2 seconds remaining. McNamara had the ball for the final possession in regulation. Ryan Washington, who found Coleman for his overtime dunk, tripped and a jump ball was called, giving possession to the Falcons.

“We knew we had to get it done, we knew we had to strap up and forget about the first half,” Coleman said. “We had the crowd on our side. We knew we fought hard to be here and this is our time.”

Whack opened overtime with a jumper and Coleman followed with his dunk after the Mustangs ran 1:15 off the clock. Good Counsel got a pair of free throws following, but Zanna dealt a heavy blow by rebounding a missed free throw and putting it back in for a four-point lead.

From there, McNamara hit its final six free throws to seal the game while the Falcons managed just one field goal in overtime.

“Our guys really hung tough mentally and physically down the stretch,” McNamara coach Marty Keithline said. “The game up there was a battle, the game at our place was a battle so everyone knew it was going to be a battle today.”

Even DeMatha Gets a Scare

It seemed that at any moment during Saturday’s quarterfinals, top-seeded DeMatha was simply going to start pulling away.

But when St. Mary’s Ryken kept delaying that moment, and delaying it more, a certain sense of concern started to creep over the Stags.

“It was scaring us for a little bit,” senior guard Marcus Rouse said.

But in the end, DeMatha finally went on the run many expected and came out with a 55-42 win over the scrappy Knights behind a scrappy senior of its own.

Rouse was pivotal down the stretch, scoring 10 points in the fourth quarter to seal the game for the Stags. More than scoring the points, he made other critical plays like steals, assists and rebounds to jumpstart the Stags.

“This is my last year, I’m a senior. So I’m trying to win a championship, point blank,” Rouse said. “Whatever I’ve got to do to get my team rolling, that’s what I’ve got to do.”

St. Mary’s Ryken took a 9-0 lead off the start with three three-pointers, including two from Gokhan Sirin, who finished with a team-high 10 points. DeMatha charged back to take a lead in the second quarter, but St. Mary’s Ryken just wouldn’t go away.

“It’s the toughest game,” DeMatha Coach Mike Jones said. “You’ve got all the butterflies and the build-up. A lot of guys, this is their first varsity WCAC playoff game. There’s a lot of reasons to expect the youth on our team to respond the way they did today.”

The Knights (12-17) scored six straight points to start the third quarter and were just one point entering the fourth quarter after a last-second steal and layup by Kai Smith.

DeMatha sophomore Quinn Cook kicked off the fourth quarter with an and-one play, followed by back-to-back field goals by senior Naji Hibbert. The final blow was back-to-back three-pointers by Rouse that gave the Stags a 14-point lead in a matter of minutes.

“We’ve got some seniors that didn’t allow us to stay dead,” Jones said. “Marcus Rouse had a great day today. He kind of played us out of it himself.”

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Private Wins Private vs. Public All-Star Game

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

Nick Sorkin’s hockey All-Star game appearance started with a stumble – literally.

During player introductions, the Bullis senior was tripped by public schools foe Jake Lynes of River Hill and nearly took a spill.

But Sorkin had the last laugh, scoring two goals and adding an assist in the private schools’ 4-1 victory over the public schools in Friday’s Private vs. Public Inaugural All-Star Game in Rockville.

“I’ll get him back for that one,” said Sorkin, who scored 45 points this season in just 13 games played. That’s second most in the state to Georgetown Prep’s Justin Butler, who notched 70 points in 19 games.

There were many smiles and much laughter during Friday night’s festivities. The idea for the game, which rose money for the Montgomery Cheetah’s Youth Hockey Program, was conceived just three weeks ago by organizer John Pflieger, Jr.

There was a public vs. privates hockey All-Star game five years ago before it was stopped because of a supposed lack of interest in high school hockey. Since then, many Maryland public schools have created hockey teams.

This past season Wootton won its second straight Maryland Scholastic Hockey League title while Calvert Hall took the Mid Atlantic Prep Hockey League crown.

“I had a great chance this year to watch some real outstanding hockey and these kids have put on a great show tonight,” Phlieger Jr. said. “The public schools have doubled the number of programs they have and I think they’ve shown tonight they are very, very competitive.”

But not competitive enough to beat the privates. Sorkin scored his first goal off an assist from Landon’s David Mann just a few minutes into the game.

He then followed up with his second goal just about four minutes later off an assist from teammate Alec Helman.

“You’re always trying to do something special,” Sorkin said, before addressing the rivalry. “They think they can hang with us.”

While the two teams often shared banter back and forth, there was still a tinge of competitiveness throughout.

DeMatha’s Casey Thrush put the private schools up 3-0 in the third period with help from assists by Helman and Sorkin.

 Atholton’s Paul Fletcher got the public schools on the board with a goal with one minute, 24 seconds remaining off an assist from Jon Cohen of Wootton.

Georgetown Prep’s Butler capped off the scoring with a goal with 13 seconds remaining on an assist from Good Counsel’s Michael Chen.

“It’s all fun and games in the locker room — we all talk a little joking smack,” Helman said. “But the joking doesn’t go that far. We’ve got to win.”

The game also featured a charity shoot out between players and Miss Virginia, Tara Wheeler, who was a hockey goalie for Penn State and who tried out for the US Women’s Olympic Hockey Team.

Helman and Sorkin had two of the more memorable shots. Helman slid head first into Wheeler, knocking her back into the goal. Sorkin picked up the puck with his stick and dribbled it in the air while moving towards the net before pulling a fancy move to beat her.

Wheeler did stop 19 of 24 penalty shots, however.

“I’m tough,” Wheeler said with a laugh. “I’m keeping my goaltending skills up.”

ALL-STAR ROSTERS
*nicknames given by event organizer Rhett Butler

PRIVATE SCHOOL ALL-STARS
Justin “The Dynamic and Dangerous” Butler, Georgetown Prep
Ryan “The Talented” Bunting, Landon
Michael “The Tough” Chen, Good Counsel
Devin “Catch Me If You Can” Drewyer, Georgetown Prep
Charles “Fast Feet” Gage, Landon
Shaun “The Comptetitor” Gibbons, DeMatha
Patrick “Hard Hitting” Hall, Georgetown Prep
Alec “The Crafty Scoring Machine” Helman, Bullis
Brian “The Towering” Kelly, DeMatha
David “Leader of the Bears” Mann, Landon
Blake “Intimidating” Shue, Landon
Nick “Man With The Hands” Sorkin, Bullis
CJ “Grease Lighting” Sweigart, Georgetown Prep
Casey “Mr. Awesome” Thrush, DeMatha
Zach “Do It All” Walz, Calvert Hall
Michael “The Awesome” Ward, Landon
Zach Weiner, Bullis
Kenneth “Human Brick Wall” Maclean Jr., Calvert Hall
Matt “Shut Them Down” Tyler, Gonzaga

PUBLIC SCHOOL ALL STARS
Zach “Attack” Abelman, Walter Johnson
Adam “The Excellent” Altieri, Glenelg
Josh “Bring It” Bretner, Wootton
Richard “The Great” Brogden, Magruder
Jon “Get It Done” Cohen, Wootton
Paul “The Powerful” Fletcher, Atholton
Jonathan “All Talent All The Time” Freel, Magruder
Adam Goodman, Jewish Day School
Mike “Superstar” Greene, Northwest/Germantown
PJ “The Gifted” Hall, Wootton
Chris “Mr. Wonderful” Kelly, Whitman
Jake “The Scoring Threat” Lynes, River Hill
Patrick “Heading to the Naval Academy” Maguire, Richard Montgomery
Mike “Mr. Magnificent” Murtyn, Churchill
Michael “The Enforcer” Owen, Magruder
Dylan “The Gifted” Skarupa, Wootton
Andrew “The Rain Maker” Stein, Wootton
Zack “Mr. Everything” Wolfe, Whitman
Griffin “Stop Them All” Farha, Churchill
Chris “Can’t Touch This” Hogan, Wootton
Stefan “The Terminator” Theunissen, Richard Montgomery

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Beltway Ballers: Boys Basketball Top 10

Boys Beltway Basketball

Top-10 Rankings

This week’s DigitalSports Beltway Ballers top-10 poll shuffles up a bit as DeMatha picked up a victory over Gonzaga; Despite a small drop in the standings from Friendly, the same top-10 teams remain in this week’s poll.

*Records as of Monday, Feb. 23*

1. Montrose Christian (Ind.) 20-1;   LW: 1
Defeated Ballou High School, 2/20

2. Springbrook (Montgomery County) 21-0;   LW: 2
Defeated Wootton, 66-46, 2/17; Quince Orchard, 54-52, 2/20

3. DeMatha (WCAC) 23-3;   LW: 6
Defeated Gonzaga, 68-65, 2/20

4. Chantilly (Northern Region); 22-1  LW: 5
Defeated Centreville, 82-61, 2/19; Westfield, 2/20, 67-46

5. Gonzaga (WCAC) 24-4;   LW: 4
Defeated Bishop Irenton, 69-54, 2/20; Lost to DeMatha, 68-65, 2/20

6. Lackey (SMAC) 17-1;   LW: 7
Defeated North Point, 86-77 (OT), 2/20

7
. Friendly (Prince George’s County) 19-2;   LW: 3
Lost to Potomac, 79-76, 2/17; Defeated Gwynn Park, 56-43, 2/20

8. T.C. Williams (Northern Region) 23-2;   LW: 8
Defeated South County, 82-50, 2/17; Lee, 77-71 (OT), 2/19; Annandale, 76-57, 2/20

9. Mount Vernon (Northern Region) 19-4;   LW: 9
Defeated Yorktown, 64-55, 2/18, Stuart, 55-50, 2/20

10. Laurel (Prince George’s County) 17-5;   LW: 10
Defeated Suitland, 70-45, 2/17; C.H. Flowers, 63-53, 2/20;

Others receiving votes:

Bowie (Prince George’s County)

Click HERE to view the Washington, D.C. Area page of DigitalSports.com.

*Teams
considered for the Beltway Ballers poll include those in the DCIAA,
Loudoun County, Montgomery County, Northern Region, Prince George’s
County, Prince William County, Southern Maryland Athletic Conference,
and WCAC, as well as other independent private schools.*

Wish to chime in on the Beltway Ballers Poll? E-mail James A. McCray III

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Swimming: Churchill girls, Prep boys win Metros

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

Swimmers know what’s supposed to happen in the pool come Metros.

They know who they’ve beaten, who’s been training hard, who has the fastest times. And if they don’t, they’re quickly told.

But when Churchill’s girls swimming team heard the swimming community talking about how they were set to end Good Counsel’s 12-year run of winning Metros, it freaked them out a bit.

“It scared me,” junior Alicia Watkins said, “when we first heard we were going to win Metros, when everybody was talking about us.”

Now, months later after feeling the hype, Churchill fulfilled its billing, breaking Good Counsel’s dominance by scoring 414 team points compared to Good Counsel’s 337. Whitman placed third and Walter Johnson girls took fourth.

Churchill also won the overall title, combining boys and girls scores, by scoring 677 points compared to Good Counsel’s 610.

Whereas last week, when Churchill clinched the boys and girls county championship and tossed Coach Rodney Van Tassell into the pool, this week the entire team went in for a swim.

It may be the start of a changing of the guard in the high school swimming scene, which has been long dominated by the public schools.

“I think this says a lot about the parity of swimming in this area,” Van Tassell said. “I think that’s the way it’s going to be for a while.”

The Bulldogs did it the way they’ve been doing it all year, with depth and a select few standout moments. Overall, Good Counsel won six events, compared to just two by Churchill.

Capping off the day was a triumphant Churchill victory at the 400-yard freestyle relay. The Bulldogs had lost to Walter Johnson in duals, divisionals and counties but ended up winning by a full second.

Watkins was dominant throughout the day, and especially so during her leg of the 400-yard freestyle relay. Individually, she won the 500-yard freestyle by a staggering 5.33 seconds, besting her personal best of 5:03 with an automatic All-American time of 4:56.03.

“I kept telling them all year that’s our best relay,” Van Tassell said. “It was all just a matter of them believing they could do it.”

Georgetown Prep claimed the boy’s title by 21.5 points over Gonzaga. The Little Hoyas were led by senior Brady Fox, who broke his own 100-yard fly Metros record with a time of 48.71. Fox also chased the 100-yard back Metro record but fell 0.39 milliseconds short.

Prep also won the 200-yard medley relay and 200-yard free with Matt Thomas.

“Standing here with my best time in the 100 fly, a great relay split, I’m happy,” Fox said. “I’m a little disappointed with my 100 back but I did what I needed to do. … Our main goal was to just win the meet.”

Several other Metros records were toppled Saturday. O’Connell’s Michael Flach broke the 500-yard free with a time of 4:26.02, more than four seconds less than Yuri Suguiyama’s 2000 record. Poolesville junior Cara Chuang broke her own record in the 100-yard backstroke by 0.38 milliseconds with a time of 55.24.

Good Counsel’s boys 200-yard free relay – consisting of Zack Wepasnick, Matt Reinheimer, Casey Stodter and Kevin Vallario – toppled Paul VI’s record from 1999 with a time of 1:25.71.

Gonzaga’s 400-yard freestyle relay team – consisting of Brian Murphy, Brendan Whipkey, Doug Mackenzie and Pat Sullivan — topped Georgetown Prep and broke the Little Hoyas’ record by nearly four seconds.

Walter Johnson sophomore Elizabeth Pepper, O’Connell’s Flach, Good Counsel freshman Sarah Haase and Sherwood’s Emily Ryczek were all individual double champions.

Event 1: Boys 200 Medley Relay
Georgetown Prep (Brady Fox, Raymond Chi, Matt Thomas, Adam Spencer) – 1:34.99

Event 2: Girls 200 Medley Relay
Whitman (Victoria Kuhn, Reia Tong, Danielle Schulkin, Lauren Poore) – 1:48.41

Event 3: Boys 200 Free
Matt Thomas, Georgetown Prep – 1:38.81

Event 4: Girls 200 Free
Elizabeth Pepper, Walter Johnson – 1:50.55

Event 5: Boys 200 IM
Michael Flach, O’Connell – 1:51.15

Event 6: Girls 200 IM
Sarah Haase, Good Counsel – 2:04.17

Event 7: 50 Free
Pat Sullivan, Gonzaga – 20.86

Event 8: 50 Free
Emily Ryczek, Sherwood – 23.99

Event 11: Boys 100 Fly
Brady Fox, Georgetown Prep – 48.71

Event 12:
Girls 100 Fly
Danielle Schulkin, Whitman – 56.00

Event 13: Boys 100 Free
Kevin Vallario, Good Counsel – 45.73

Event 14: Girls 100 Free
Emily Ryczek, Sherwood – 51.72

Event 15: Boys 500 Free
Michael Flach, O’Connell – 4:26.02

Event 16: Girls 500 Free
Alicia Watkins, Churchill – 4:56.38

Event 17: Boys 200 Free Relay
Good Counsel (Zack Wepasnick, Matt Reinheimer, Casey Stodter, Kevin Vallario) – 1:25.71

Event 18: Girls 200 Free Relay
Good Counsel (Sarah Haase, Morgan Dailey, Nora Considine, Blair Webb) – 1:38.14

Event 19: Boys 100 Back
Brady Fox, Georgetown Prep – 49.19

Event 20: Girls 100 Back
Cara Chuang, Poolesville – 55.24

Event 21: Boys 100 ******
Evan Wollman, DeMatha – 56.07

Event 22: Girls 100 ******
Sarah Haase, Good Counsel – 1:02.51

Event 23: Boys 400 Free Relay
Gonzaga (Brian Murphy, Brendan Whipkey, Doug Mackenzie, Pat Sullivan) – 3:05.97

Event 24: Girls 400 Free Relay
Churchill (Natalya Ares, Shannon Ridge, Maria Watkins, Yvonne Huo) – 3:33.12

TEAM STANDINGS

Boys

1.    Georgetown Prep – 433
2.    Gonzaga – 401.5
3.    Good Counsel – 273
4.    Churchill – 263
5.    DeMatha – 252
6.    Walter Johnson – 193
7.    Sherwood – 156
8.    O’Connell – 139
9.    Paul VI – 137
10.    Wootton – 131
11.    B-CC – 117
12.    Blair – 116.5
13.    Whitman – 110
14.    St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes – 108
15.    Northwest – 96

Girls

1.    Churchill – 414
2.    Good Counsel – 337
3.    Whitman – 306
4.    Walter Johnson – 280
5.    Holy Cross – 257
6.    St. John’s – 164
7.    Bishop Ireton – 149
8.    Northwest – 146
9.    Sherwood – 137
10.    O’Connell – 136
11.    Quince Orchard – 125
12.    Richard Montgomery – 120
13.    Poolesville – 111
14.    Holton Arms – 89
15.    Sidwell Friends – 82

Combined

1.    Churchill – 677
2.    Good Counsel – 610
3.    Walter Johnson – 473
4.    Georgetown Prep – 443
5.    Whitman – 416
6.    Gonzaga – 401.5
7.    Sherwood – 293
8.    O’Connell – 275
9.    Holy Cross – 257
10.    DeMatha – 252
11.    Northwest – 242
12.    Bishop Ireton – 229
13.    Wootton – 211
14.    St. John’s – 194
15.    Blair – 157.5

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Boys Basketball: DeMatha 68, Gonzaga 65

Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

It’s easy to forget that DeMatha point guard Quinn Cook is just a sophomore.

It’s because when it comes to playing rival Gonzaga in front of a sold out crowd, or even O’Connell on national television as he did on Tuesday, Cook treats it as just another game.

Cook stole the show again Friday night, scoring 25 points to lead DeMatha to a 68-65 win over Gonzaga in Hyattsville. It’s the second straight game in which he has notched 25 points.

The win puts DeMatha (24-3, 15-2) in first place in the WCAC with just one game remaining in the regular season and avenges a Stags loss to the Eagles from earlier this season.

Perhaps more importantly heading into the playoffs, this week has established Cook as another DeMatha scorer opponents must game plan for.

“He’s been in a lot of big games and you can see what he can do when he kind of gets it going,” DeMatha coach Mike Jones said. “When we get to the playoffs, you really won’t be able how to play him. Is he creating for others or scoring himself?”

Cook sunk two three-pointers in the first quarter and that was just the start of his hot shooting. He said he missed just four shots on the night.

“After I hit the second three, I knew it was going to be a good night,” Cook said.

Cook broke out in the second quarter, scoring nine straight points for the Stags to keep pace with Gonzaga, who was led by 25 points from Ian Hummer, 18 by Cedrick Lindsay and 15 from Malcolm Lemmons.

He opened up the second half with another three-pointer, giving the Stags a seven-point lead. Then he knocked down his final of four three-pointers to start the fourth quarter and give DeMatha a 12-point advantage.

“When you start to hit a couple shots, you kind of want the ball, but you don’t want to go overboard,” Cook said. “My teammates understand everybody has their night and I guess tonight was my night.”

The Stags still maintained a 12-point lead with about three-and-a-half minutes remaining in the game before Gonzaga (24-4, 15-3) started making a run.

The Eagles scored 12 of the games next 14 points, highlighted by a Lindsay and-one on a three-pointer and three nice layups by Hummer down low – to pull to within two points down with about two minutes remaining.

Cahli Thomas drained a three-pointer that brought Gonzaga to just one point behind with 1:07 remaining. With 22.7 left, the Eagles forced a jump ball but the arrow was in DeMatha’s favor.

The two teams traded buckets within a couple seconds of each other, with Marcus Rouse breaking free for a layup to put the Stags up 66-63 and Tyler Thornton sprinting the length of the court to bring the Eagles back to one down with 13.2 remaining.

Gonzaga was forced to foul and sent Naji Hibbert to the line. Hibbert made both free throws and Thornton’s deep three-point attempt that would have tied the game bounced off the rim.

“I was kind of scared,” Cook said. “Tyler’s shot, it should have gone in.”

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Diving: Paint Branch’s Shinholser wins Metros

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

Paint Branch senior Logan Shinholser became a level 10 gymnast as a high school freshman.

But before Shinholser never competed at that extremely high level, he quit because of injuries and time demands.

Now, after just two years of full-time diving, Shinholser’s decision seems to have paid off. Shinholser won the Metros one-meter diving championship Wednesday night with a score of 501.70 compared to 494.35 by St. John’s senior Chris Hoppler.

Churchill senior Michael Stanton finished third (457.7) and Bulldogs freshman Timothy Faerber took four with 441.00 points.

“I got invited to come dive here [at the Germantown Indoor Swim Center],” Shinholser said. “When you get invited to come here, you come.”

Shinholser, who already has a 60 percent diving scholarship to Virginia Tech, dove in summer league since sixth grade. But he only trained at the high school level for six months several years ago before focusing on gymnastics.

Once coming back to diving, he excelled very quickly. He placed fifth at Metros last year, behind both Hopper and Stanton, but continued to progress this season. He beat Stanton in the Montgomery County championships as well and traded the lead with his friend, Hoppler, all Wednesday night before pulling it out.

Hoppler had a 6.35 point lead after the ninth round of 11, but Logan scored a 58.5 on his next dive compared to Hoppler’s 40.5 to retake the lead. He headed into the finals with the pressure of making that stand up.

“I was dying,” Shinholser said. “I was thinking, ‘Don’t mess up.’ There’s been many times when I got into the last dive about to win or make finals and I’ve fallen on my face.”

Shinholser botched his finals dive after having the lead at Zones in June, then went flat on his stomach at Nationals this past August, which barely cost him a spot in the finals.

This time, he planned a bit of a safer dive for the end, one in which he still posted a 45.1 score. Hoppler, saddled with the pressure of notching a 56.75 on the final dive to tie, hit a 49.40.

It was a bittersweet moment for both divers as they are good friends and train together on a daily basis. They even text message each other with tips and new moves they learn and clap for each other during the meet.

“It was anybody’s game,” said Hoppler, who was competing on the one-meter boards for just the third time this season. “Logan and I go back-and-forth every single meet. It really depends on who’s going to hit it that day.”

“We knew this one would be a nail-biter,” Shinholser added. “I was nervous, but I guess I pulled it through. It was one of those things where you go big or go home and I guess I went big.”

Churchill’s Stanton and Faerber also had standout meets. Stanton finished third for the second time in his career while Faerber showed why he may be the favorite next year and beyond. As just a freshman, Faerber is already one of the most dedicated and talented divers on the board.

“Honestly, the next three years, he’s got it in the bag,” Stanton said.

“He’s got three years of winning,” Shinholser added. “I couldn’t let him win this year.”

FINAL RESULTS

1.    Logan Shinholser (Paint Branch) – 501.70
2.    Chris Hoppler (St. John’s) – 494.35
3.    Michael Stanton (Churchill) – 457.70
4.    Timothy Faerber (Chuchill) – 441.00
5.    Eric Sachs (Rockville) – 390.50
6.    Jordan Lesser (Wootton) – 386.60
7.    Noah Levine (Whitman) – 322.70
8.    Brian Doremus (Wootton) – 282.60
9.    Colby Shinholser (Springbrook) – 280.95
10.    CJ David (Landon) – 280.90
11.    Brian Hack (Georgetown Prep) – 280.25
12t. Michael Vlahakis (Rockville) – 279.35
12t  Noah Richter (Magruder) – 279.35
14.  Thomas Fergus (Gonzaga) – 269.85
15.  Christopher Kittleberger (Springbrook) – 258.60
16.  Luke Winkler (St. John’s) – 246.40
17.  Patrick Belaga (Landon) – 246.25
18.  Todd Singer (Whitman) – 245.55
19.  Andy Goldschmidts (Magruder) – 244.00
20. Bobby Schmitz (DeMatha) – 233.10

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Hockey: DeMatha 5, Gonzaga 2

By Kyle Wannen
For DigitalSports.com

With just over five minutes remaining in Wednesday’s game against rival Gonzaga, DeMatha junior Casey Thrush found himself in a familiar situation thanks to a nifty pass from senior Shaun Gibbons.

After winning a draw, Gibbons flicked a high, arcing lob pass from his own blue line which dropped perfectly in front of the streaking Thrush, who corralled the puck, deked once to his backhand, and slid a sly shot underneath Eagles goalie Matt Tyler. It was the Stags’ first lead in the game as they came back to defeat Gonzaga 5-2 in the WCAC semifinal playoff game.

“Me and my buddy, Shaun, we set that play up a lot off the faceoff,” Thrush said. “He wins it and he’s pretty good at that little chip out. Normally it’s off the glass but I think he decided to put a little flair into it. So that was nice and laying it right in front of me and I just couldn’t thank him enough for that pass. It was great.”

Even though the Stags (21-15-2-2) outshot the Eagles 25-14 through two periods they still trailed by a goal, 2-1, heading into the second intermission and couldn’t seem to catch a break. Gonzaga took six different penalties in the second period but the Stags only converted on one power play when senior Mike Nowicki tapped in a pass from junior Mike Williams. What would have been Nowicki’s second goal of the period was waved off with just over a minute remaining because the goal was knocked loose before the puck went in.

DeMatha coach Tony MacAulay could only tell his team to keep up their efforts heading into the third period against the Eagles (11-6-2).

“We had to come back to some things we’ve been preaching all year,” MacAulay said. “That was just dedication to each other, staying with the system and above all, effort, and I think once we stayed to that course, that’s when we really found success. Success is measured when a team isn’t performing well or when the chips are down and we’re really happy with how our guys bounced back today.”

“I don’t think the bounces really went our way the first two periods and we just kept the same game plan and no one tried anything different and it eventually paid off for us,” Thrush said.

The Stag’s effort finally paid off halfway through the third period when Williams took a pass into the offensive zone and laced a wrist shot into the net for a short-handed goal which tied the game 2-2. After Thrush’s brilliant goal, he and Williams added empty net goals and goalie Drew Weigman finished with 19 saves to seal the victory.

“I wasn’t even supposed to go on the ice,” Williams said. “I jumped out there, it was a great pass from the [defense], right up the ice and I just knew I had to bury it. About five minutes left and it was just something I had to do.”

Gonzaga scored the lone goal within the first minute of the first period when junior Sam Gerdano tapped in a cross-ice pass from senior Warren Coady. Tyler made a number of brilliant saves to keep the Eagles leading and he finished with 31 saves. Senior Alex Bodenheimer also blasted a slap shot past Weigman with just under three minutes in the second period.

The win set up a championship match between DeMatha and Calvert Hall, who defeated the Stags 2-1 on December 3.

“Guys see the legacy before us,” MacAulay said. The guys that come before us, that’s what they did; filling roles and becoming leaders and young men. It’s a special feeling because they are becoming good hockey players. They are developing and it’s a pleasure to be around such a good group of guys.”

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Beltway Ballers: Boys Basketball Top 10

Boys Beltway Basketball

Top-10 Rankings

The top three teams hold steady in this week’s DigitalSports Beltway Ballers poll; In addition, one new team enters this week’s poll and two position swaps take place in the middle of the pack.

*Records as of Monday, Feb. 16*

1. Montrose Christian (Ind.) 19-1;   LW: 1
Defeated St. John’s, 75-41, 2/10; Shabazz (N.J.), 57-48, 2/15

2. Springbrook (Montgomery County) 18-0;   LW: 2
Defeated Gaithersburg, 95-57, 2/10

3. Friendly (Prince George’s County) 18-1;   LW: 3
Defeated Crossland, 80-68, 2/10; Largo, 56-53, 2/13

4. Gonzaga (WCAC) 23-3;   LW: 5
Defeated Paul VI, 49-44, 2/10; Bishop McNamara, 61-55, 2/13; Archbishop Carroll, 66-57, 2/15

5. Chantilly (Northern Region) 20-1;   LW: 4
Defeated Westfield, 63-51, 2/10; Falls Church, 75-38, 2/13

6. DeMatha (WCAC) 22-3;   LW: 7
Defeated Carroll, 65-39, 2/10; Bishop Ireton, 71-48, 2/13; Bishop McNamara, 52-46, 2/15

7. Lackey (SMAC) 17-2;   LW: 6
Defeated Huntingtown, 60-50, 2/11

8
. T.C. Williams (Northern Region) 20-2;   LW: 8
Defeated Lake Braddock, 64-44, 2/10; Hayfield, 61-55, 2/13

9. Mount Vernon (Northern Region) 17-4;   LW: 9
Defeated Yorktown, 77-70, 2/12

10. Laurel (Prince George’s County) 15-5;   LW: N/R
Defeated Northwestern, 72-49, 2/10; Eleanor Roosevelt, 70-43, 2/13

Others receiving votes:

Bowie (Prince George’s County)

Bishop O’Connell
(WCAC)

Gar-Field (Prince William County)

Thomas Stone (SMAC)

Gwynn Park (Prince George’s County)


Click HERE to view the Washington, D.C. Area page of DigitalSports.com.


*Teams
considered for the Beltway Ballers poll include those in the DCIAA,
Loudoun County, Montgomery County, Northern Region, Prince George’s
County, Prince William County, Southern Maryland Athletic Conference,
and WCAC, as well as other independent private schools.*

Wish to chime in on the Beltway Ballers Poll? E-mail James A. McCray III

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Wrestling: Sidwell Friends wins third D.C. City title

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

Sidwell Friends has won the DC City wrestling championships by much larger margins, been much more impressive and had finer seasons than this year.

But Saturday’s third straight city title is by far the sweetest, Coach Lou Heberer said.

That’s because Sidwell Friends won it with two hands tied behind its back. Wrestling without defending tournament champion Nick Raab and captain Josh Tobin, the Quakers still beat the competition by 34.5 points.

“It was harder,” Heberer said. “We took more pleasure winning this one.”

Sidwell Friends (15-5) notched five individual champions in Justin Young (103), AJ Parks (125), Nathaniel Howell (130), Brian Hirsh (140) and Alex Regulirski (189). The Quakers had seven finalists.

But even more satisfying was placing 11 of its 12 entered wrestlers in the top four, which met a challenge Heberer assigned his team before the tournament started.

“Coach Lou, he made it clear that we were all going to have to step up as a team to fill those spots,” Regulirski said. “Losing three weight classes, that’s nothing to sniff at.”

Tobin was at the tournament on crutches while Raab was, according to Regulirski, in Hawaii.

That meant the door was open for Gonzaga to perhaps come in and knock off Sidwell Friends. The Eagles last won the tournament during the 2005-2006 season, but since the Quakers have ruled the roost. Sidwell Friends won by 96.5 points last year.

“It’s pretty important to us and our coaches to make sure that legacy is upheld,” Regulirski said. “It’s a big deal to win this tournament, especially when you’re winning without a lot of key wrestlers.”

In Raab’s stead, Nick Jones advanced all the way to the 215-pound finals. Howell emerged from a jumbled 130-pound weight class, where he was seeded No. 3, to win the title. Michael Jones reached the 135-pound finals while not being seeded in the top two either.

Sidwell Friends had five first-year varsity wrestlers place in the tournament.

“It’s a real testament to our strength and our coaching staff and hopefully us that we were able to pull this win out,” Parks said.

GONZAGA BLUE, NOT PURPLE

The Eagles certainly felt like they let a chance at the city championship, a goal to win since before the season started, slip through their fingers.

Sidwell Friends’ absences opened up the first for Gonzaga, but the Eagles, who were coming off a solid showing at WCAC’s and St. Albans had some disappointing losses.

At 130 pounds, Andrew Estes led second-seeded Charlie DeCell, 4-0, before getting pinned in the third period. At 135, Paolo Rigor led Sidwell’s Michael Jones, 9-0, before having to injury default because he dislocated his shoulder.

Pair those with a loss by top-seeded Anthony Oliverio (145) in his first match and it was impossible for Gonzaga to win.

There were some bright spots for the Eagles for sure, however. Paul O’Neill was named Outstanding Wrestler for beating St. Albans’ Beau Young by pin at 3:53. He moves on to National Preps, where he came one win away from placing last season.

“Hopefully I’ll win a couple matches there, maybe place if all goes well,” O’Neill said. “Just train hard and hope for the best.”

Zak Thompson also continued his standout wrestling since coming back from a knee injury in January, winning the 119-pound championship via pin.

DIFFERENT LEARNING CURVES

For St. John’s wrestler James Wenzloff, winning the DC City title is just another step towards proving himself on the national level.

Wenzloff won one match and lost two at national preps last year. He said the scene was a little too much to handle.

“You come here and you win this or win WCAC’s, you’re a big fish in a little pond,” Wenzlaff said. “There, you’re a little fish in a big pond. It’s really overwhelming.”

Wenzlaff is expecting major improvements now that he has one year under his belt.

“I’m looking to place there, I think I will,” Wenzlaff said. “I feel like I’ve learned how to wrestle a little better now. I strategize better now. … It’s like the game of chess and I’ve figured it out by now.”

Kevin McReynolds, however, was ecstatic just for the chance to go to preps. Reynolds, who is in his first year of wrestling, missed last week’s WCAC competition because he said he was sick and had things to take care of.

But he made sure to be back for the DC championships in order to fulfill his season-long goal of reaching National Preps.

“As the season went on I found that I could definitely be a contender at National Preps,” McReynolds said. “I’ve definitely had it on my mind and worked hard to get to it.”

INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONS

103 – Justin Young (SID) major Jimbo Briody (ZAG), 14-2
112 – Paul O’Neill (ZAG) pin Beau Young (ALB), 3:53
119 – Zak Thompson (ZAG) pin Sebastian Zaki (ANS), 3:59
125 – A.J. Parks (SID) major Stephane Guillou (ZAG), 16-8
130 – Nathaniel Howell (SID) major Thomas Francis (MSD), 10-1
135 – Eric Klockowski (MSD) pin Michael Jones (SID), 0:54
140 – Brian Hirsh (SID) pin Daniel Moynihan (ALB)
145 – Jesse Hartheimer (EB) dec Grayson Shepperd (GDS), 8-6 OT
152 – Jake Schaufeld (ALB) dec. Ethan Slater, 12-6
160 – James Wenzlaff (SJC) pin Michael Davies (SID), 3:23
171 – Miracle Amasiatu (MSD) dec Tyler Dykes (SJC), 6-4
189 – Alex Regulirski (SID) major Albert Blake (MSD), 12-3
215 – Satchel Kaplan-Allen (GDS) dec. Nick Jones, 6-1
275 – Kevin McReynolds (SJC) major David Green (ZAG), 12-0

TEAM SCORES

1. Sidwell Friends – 183.5
2. Gonzaga – 149
3. Model – 101.5
4. Georgetown Day – 101
5. St. Alban’s – 100
6. St. John’s – 68
7. St.. Anselm’s – 41
8. Edmund Burke – 39
9. Maret – 15
10. Hyde – N/A

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Boys’ Basketball: No. 5 Gonzaga 61, McNamara 55

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager
Washington D.C. Metropolitan Area

*Click the links above for complete video and photo coverage of Friday’s huge WCAC game in Forestville, Md.

For the second time this season, the Purple Eagles proved their Hummer has more horsepower than a Mustang.

Gonzaga senior Ian Hummer — who scored the game-high 17 points in the Purple Eagles’ mid-season win in the series — recorded a game-high 16 points in his team’s 61-55 road win over McNamara on Friday.

“He’s a warrior,” fifth-year Purple Eagle coach Steve Turner said. “He’s our biggest kid on the floor, so night-in, night-out he’s having to go against two or three bigs on the other team. And he just finds a way to get it done.”

Added Hummer, with a fresh cut under his left eyebrow: “They have big bodies. Guys like [Talib] Zanna, even though he’s very athletic, I feel I can go by him a lot. Their zone threw me off a little bit, because I was just in there and couldn’t really do much. But I just tried to find my way, get rebounds and threw it up.

“McNamara is one of the top teams in our league. Just to get out of here alive is a good win.”

But Gonzaga’s road to victory was not without its potholes.

After the Purple Eagles opened up a 19-10 lead through one quarter, the Mustangs tightened their zone and placed twin towers — junior forward Brandon Coleman and senior forward Zanna — in the middle.

The duo combined for 12 blocks and held Hummer scoreless in the third quarter.

Zanna, committed to Pittsburgh, scored 12 of his team-high 14 points after halftime. And Coleman — who left the game early with a lower-back injury — had nine blocks.

But the Purple Eagles never trailed by more than five points in the second half.

“With all the blocks, we got the ball back almost every single time,” said Hummer, signed to Princeton. “We just tried to calm down, try to put the ball in the basket and run our plays like we’ve been taught, just work through their run.”

That run, though, lasted for over a quarter and a half.

McNamara took the lead in the first minute of the second half and maintained it with the interior prowess of Zanna and Coleman.

But a 3-pointer by Gonzaga senior Cahli Thomas with 4 minutes, 30 seconds remaining gave the Purple Eagles the lead, 49-48 — their first since halftime. They never relinquished the advantage.

“We were up five and had the ball, but didn’t do a good job of finishing the game,” McNamara coach Marty Keithline said. “Gonzaga did a great job getting two quick scores on us after we went up by five.

“They got the momentum back and just decided there they were going to win the game.”

Added Turner: “These kids are battle-tested. Our league is a war … We were pushed these last four or five games of the regular season as if we were in the playoffs. That’s the way we’re playing.

“We know that after the regular season is over the records are erased. You have to be able to win three games if you want to win the championship.”

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

Gonzaga     — (22-3, 12-2)   19 10 12 20  —  61
McNamara  — (18-7, 11-3) —   10 18 15 12  —  55

Gonzaga –
Hummer 7 2-7 16, Lemmons 5 5-6 15, Thornton 4 5-6 13,
Lindsay 3 6-8 12, Thomas 1 2-2 5.
Team Totals – 20 20-29 61.
McNamara – Zanna 7 0-0 14, Whack 5 2-2 13, Bazilio 4 5-5 13, Coleman 3 0-2 6, Smith 2
0-0 4, Ivey 1 0-0 3, Washington 1 0-0 2. Team Totals – 23 7-9 55.
Three-Pointers – Gonzaga 1 (Thomas). McNamara 2 (Ivey, Whack).

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