Bear Brawl opens good for hosts, And rival boys teams from WR and Northside
mbrown@sunmulti.com
Stephen Walls tried anything and everything to get his Houston
County High boys basketball team out of the opening round of his own
tournament, the 2012 Chick-fil-A Bear Brawl. Even going to the deepest reaches
of his bench.
Walls’ five starters used that time sitting down and
watching others take on the Peach County High Trojans wisely. They took their
defensive play to new heights and turned what looked like a double-digit loss
into a 43-42 victory.
Of course, it took two free throws from Parris Jester with
exactly 0.4 seconds left on the fourth-quarter clock to establish that winning
margin, but everything that happened in those last few seconds mirrored all
that it took for the Bears to even be in a position to win.
The second half didn’t exactly begin with things looking
bleak for Walls and his troops. Peach County had the lead, but only by three
points at 22-19. For five to six possessions, though, the Bears produced not a
thing on offense, settling for one-and-done trips on one end. Three times the
Trojans pushed the ball down court to stretch the lead to 28-19.
Walls, as he did in the first half when the need to shake
things up arose, made wholesale changes. Forward A.J. Burton was the first to
change how things were turning out with an offensive rebound and a steal.
Another forward, Cornelius Lawhorn, stole the basketball as well.
The only thing that did not change was offensive production.
Peach didn’t stay silent for long going up by 10 at the 4:29 mark of the third
quarter. From a steal and a scrap on the floor for a loose rebound, the Trojans
stood ahead by 13, 33-20.
Houston County finally registered a field goal at 3:46, and
it was from a 3-point shot made by reserve guard Taylor Boyett. The football
quarterback actually sunk two from behind the arc in the period, and that
brought some hope to the Bear side. The fourth quarter began with Peach holding
a 34-26 advantage.
What really changed the complexion of the game was the
full-court defensive pressure, which kept the basketball on the Houston
offensive end long enough for a 9-0 run. Taran Wooten took a hard foul in the
lane at 6:22, and Davon Akins took advantage of some wayward dribbling for a
steal that cut the lead down to one.
Jamarkus Williams had a pair of steals one after the other,
and with less than five minutes to play Houston County was in front 35-34.
Peach used little time to get that lead back, but with Lawhorm back on the
court as a defensive and rebounding factor, the game swayed from one side to
the other.
Coming out of a Bear timeout, Peach stole the inbound to
lead 38-37. But Houston snatched it back, and point guard Andrew Graham cleared
everyone out to drive, draw a blocking foul and sink two at the line. It was
41-38 with 1:26 to play.
At 1:13, a press turnover put Peach ahead one more time, and
the Bears missed their chance at a response. But at 42-41, the Trojans threw
the ball into the hands of Wooten. Again, the one shot for the lead would not
fall.
Peach could not run the clock out nor add, and the Bears
looked at one more opportunity with just 3.5 seconds showing. The home run pass
from end to end went to Akins, who missed. It was Jester taking a foul on the
rebound and calmly securing the tying and winning free throws.
Williams had 10 points to lead the Bears. Graham scored nine
and Boyett eight.
Houston County led by as much as six in the opening quarter.
Graham stuck a jumper off a steal, Williams made a 3 and Wooten converted from
a strong driving move inside. Jester also stole the basketball from a
double-team, and Graham snunk a second-chance trey for 10-4.
The Bears had more takeaways, like one from Jester, but
failed to cash them in. Akins, the leading scorer, was also struggling to find
a range. Peach was open for an offensive rebound basket to get within two. Out
of a timeout, Williams ended the brief Houston slump with a 3-ball.
Going into the second, Peach trailed 13-10. It was a
slow-paced quarter with the Bears making more unforced turnovers than shot
attempts and the Trojans trying to establish a presence inside. Peach found an
open man on the weak side and lead 18-17 at 2:25.
As the Trojans forced a pair of takeaways, Walls went to his
substitutes for the half’s final two minutes. They only gave up one basket, and
Boyett stuck in a jumper to bring the halftime score to 22-19.
Houston County faced sub-region rival Warner Robins High in
Friday’s semifinal. The Demons coasted to a victory in the first round when
they played Richmond Academy.
In the other boys semifinal, Choctaw, a visiting club from
Ft. Walton Beach, Fla., faced the third city school in the Bear Brawl field,
the Northside High Eagles.
Ken Price and Northside went to two overtimes with another
entrant from Augusta, Josey High. Kyle Johnson had six points in the extra
minutes to pace the Eagles to the win 81-77.
For the game, Johnson scored 16. Three more of Price’s
players were in double figures. Robert Davis scored 17 points, Jarius Smith 15
and Justin Burnam 14.
What Josey brought to the Bear Den was a long and rich
heritage in basketball, and it showed in how they handled the ball, passed and
jumped for catches.
Northside seized early momentum for a 12-2 lead sparked by
Smith. He had two steals leading to five points by Johnson. Davis also scored
three in the run, catching a lob pass actually intended for 6-10 center
Christian Kennedy.
Kennedy was still able to do his part in the period with two
blocks. Davis swatted one shot away, and scored from another turnover caused by
Smith. Price went to his 5-for-5 exchange of players, and as Josey pressed
Kevondre Hunt passed to T.J. Spann for two and 16-6.
The two reserves worked together a second time on a takeaway
basket, and Smith, at 13 seconds, answered a 3-ball hit by Josey. It was 23-16
after one quarter, Josey beating the quarter buzzer.
That shot, however, began a 8-0 run with two extra-long
3-point makes. Kennedy snapped it on a tip-in, and Davis’ press steal produced
two, but Northside’s main problems in the second quarter came from turnovers
and cold outside shooting.
Josey had six points off takeaways and two running the floor
from a long miss. The Eagles were 0-for-6 in the perimeter game.
At 1:39 Darrin Clark found an open Burnam to end a 7-0 run,
and Johnson ended the half putting back a long miss. Josey never led by more
than four, and it was 35-33 at the break.
But with four more from takeaways, the Eagles were down
seven, 42-35, in the third period. Down 44-40, Northside tried to make things
happen on defense, and Josey showed it was not as effective in the half-court
offense. Johnson nailed a 3 at 3:07 in an 10-0 run that ended the period.
Burnam scored the final four making it 48-44.
GIRLS PLAY
Houston County High’s girls took an easy route to the
semifinals by routing Hapeville Charter Thursday.
Rival Warner Robins wasn’t as fortunate as Tom Mobley and
the Demonettes faced a familiar foe in their Bear Brawl history, Peach County
High. Point guard Narisa Woolfolk scored 18 points in a 48-34 final.
Though Warner Robins had much more basketball possession
time in the opening quarter, the Demonettes found themselves trailing 11-4. A
3-pointer banked in for the Lady Trojans at 2:48. Three times Warner Robins
lost chances to shoot off of turnovers caused by Mobley’s reserve players, and
the Demonettes were 0-for-4 at the line.
With 3.5 seconds on the clock, senior Asha Stegall sunk a
3-pointer as she went from corner to corner in ball reversal set. Despite all
the missed chances, the Demonettes only trailed 11-7 after one.
But Peach reeled off five straight to start the second,
Woolfolk drawing a foul on the run for a three-point play. Woolfolk then found Amber
Tucker (who missed an open shot earlier) a second time. This time Tucker upped
the lead to 20-8.
Stegall cashed in a mid-court steal, but it was bad turnover
after bad turnover by Warner Robins that symbolized play.
Peach later
outhustled the opponent for a loose ball to stick in a jumper for 26-13. Hoping
for a boost for the second half, Tesia Walker ended the first on a stick-back
(27-15).
Woolfolk twice had a steal-and-score combination early in
the third, and Warner Robins couldn’t change its total until 4:19, Walker
taking an assist by Stegall. Destini Johnson, as the Demonettes were trying to
stage a comeback with its press, banked in a 3 at 2:05 (34-24).
Ce Ce Carroll also made a steal for two by Stegall, and
after three Peach was only up eight 34-26.
Walker turned the first possession into points on a
put-back, but the Lady Trojans answered to begin a 9-0 spurt. Woolfolk caught
the ball underneath and made it a three-point play.
Stegall led the Demonettes with 17 points.
HHJ News
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