DC – Washington Catholic Athletic Conference | Archive | January, 2009

Boys Basketball: Paul VI 46, St. John’s 44

By Kyle Wannen
For DigitalSports.com

Paul VI’s Erick Green had been held scoreless in the first half and his team trailed 22-14 heading into halftime against St. John’s Wednesday night.

But he didn’t panic.

Green scored five points in the final minute including a last-second jumpshot to lead the Panthers to a 46-44 win over the Cadets.

“My mind was on attacking the rim and trying to get that last-second shot,” Green said.

“Erick stepped up. That’s what big-time players do,” Panthers coach Glenn Farello said. “He’s such a great leader as a point guard distributing the ball. He stepped up and took care of things for us.”

With ten seconds remaining Paul VI (11-8) stole the ball from St. John’s (8-9) after the inbounds pass and the ball found it’s way into Green’s hands. He raced up the court and hit a running jumper just before the clock reached zero.

The Virginia Tech recruit who transferred from Millbrook High School before the season also hit a three-pointer with 50 seconds remaining to tie the game at 44.

“In the first half I think I didn’t come focused to the game,” Green said. “I’m glad my teammates picked me up. In the second half I came out with the mindset just to take over and lead my tram.”

Paul VI also got 10 points off the bench from Deon Jones and nine points from Eugene McCrory.

The Panthers trailed by nine early in the third quarter. After a timeout they went on a decisive 7-0 run to close the gap and score wavered back and forth between the two teams until the final buzzer.

“We’ve won three of the last four games on last second shots,” Farello said. “I think we’re getting used to it. That’s why you didn’t see us panic.”

The Cadets lost despite getting 17 and 16 points from Derrick Thomas and Chris Martin respectively.

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For Ryan Out Loud! Blog 3

FOR RYAN OUT LOUD!
Chapter 3: Jan. 21, 2009

For
all those who watched the Presidential Inauguration on television
Tuesday, if you saw that tiny speck of tan and blue on the National
Mall, that was me.

It was a long, tiring day, filled with miles
of walking in the wrong direction, in the right direction and in any
direction where I could move more than a couple inches.

But it was also an emotional day that I’ll treasure forever.

My
day started at around 6 a.m., which, by a sports reporters’ measure, is
insanely early. (When I cover a game at night I typically get to bed,
after writing the story and posting the photos and videos, by about 3
a.m.) Anyway it was early, but I was pumped to see President Barack
Obama.

List of things in my jacket pockets: 2 newspapers, 1
bottle of water, 3 sandwiches, 1 glasses case, 3 trash bags we hoped to
sit on…yeah right, 1 deck of cards, chap stick, keys, wallet, cell
phone, 2 cameras, tape recorder, extra batteries, gloves.

With
my amazing/beautiful wife Kristin and her father (and my second dad)
John were in our group. This was a day after the same three of us
attended the free Aretha Franklin
concert at the Kennedy Center, where we waited in line for six hours,
were denied tickets, then snuck in anyway.

On Tuesday, we drove
to the Silver Spring metro and got on without any problems. The ride
was just fine, but as soon as we stepped off at Gallery Place Chinatown
it was a mad house.

At that point, we thought there were a TON of people. That was nothing compared to what we found at the Mall.

Our
goal was to get to the Mall so we could simply be amongst the excited
people and watch the inaugural address on a big screen television. Yes,
I could have done that at home (and part of me wished I had when my
knees and feet were aching by the end of the day) but it’s just not the
same.

We convinced ourselves that we had to do it after hearing
Dad’s story about passing up a Louis Armstrong concert a year before
the legend’s death. He was living in Montana and, improbably, Louis
Armstrong came to play nearby. Dad knew who Louis was but elected not
to go, not because he had something else going on, but because he just
didn’t feel like it. It still eats him up inside (sorry to bring it up
again, Dad). So we couldn’t let him or ourselves pass this chance up.

Back
to the streets. After asking about five people for the best way to get
around road blockages and to the Mall, and getting five different
directions, we finally found the I believe 4th street tunnel under the
parade route. After what I have to estimate (based on my soreness
today) was a hmmmmmm 300-mile walk, we finally arrived at the Mall.

There
were people as far as the eye could see, not a patch of grass showing.
There were people in the trees and standing on top of porta potties.
After probably an hour of jockeying for position (that means moving
about 10 feet and taking some elbows, forearms and several Stone Cold
stunners) we made it to a spot where we could watch the jumbo tron and
hear the speakers.

The speeches and prayers (minus the poem)
were amazing and inspiring, but the crowd’s reaction, with the cheers
and tears was what I came for and what I will tell my children about.

Anybody,
those in the sports world included, had to recognize the magnitude of
what happened yesterday and it was an honor to be a bystander in
history.

OKAY, ONTO SPORTS

I admit, hockey is
one of the few sports I have never covered in my lifetime, which is
strange because I truly appreciate and enjoy the sport.

I got an
email from a Blake student, Jordan Klemko, last week asking if
DigitalSports.com could start covering Montgomery County hockey. Since
it’s not a sanctioned county varsity sport, I hadn’t really thought
about hockey to be honest.

But it’s a fantastic idea and I
immediately told him that I’d love to start. I look forward to covering
the DeMatha vs Gonzaga game next Monday and a couple other
DigitalSports.com writers have already been there. Click below to check
out the coverage.

Wootton vs. Whitman
Magruder vs. Northwest

TONIGHT IS THE NIGHT!

A
brief statement about how excited I am for tonight’s basketball game
that I’m covering. It’s WCAC top-dog DeMatha vs. defending conference
champion Gonzaga. There may not be any rivalry better in the entire
Washington region.

Game is at Gonzaga at 7:30 tonight. It’s going to be rocking. I’m going to be VERY pumped.

Stags Notes: DeMatha’s backcourt is deep and filthy sick nasty – that’s about as good as my compliments get.

Gonzaga
Notes: Tyler Thornton is edging his way into the BBMITWCAC Award.
That’s right, the Best Big Man In The WCAC Award. Thornton, a Princeton
recruit, outplayed Bishop McNamara’s Talib Zanna (Pittsburgh) last week
and has a chance to dominate inside against DeMatha’s Mikael Hopkins
and Chris Frank.

DeMatha is currently ranked No. 2 in the DigitalSports Beltway Ballers and Gonzaga is No. 3.

LASTLY, THE RAVENS

1.    Yes, my beloved Ravens lost in the AFC championship to the stinkin’ Steelers.
2.    Don’t bring it up.
3.    There’s always next year

CHECK OUT THE PREVIOUS BLOGS!
Chapter 1
Chapter 2

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Boys Basketball: No. 3 Gonzaga 86, No. 2 DeMatha 76

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

Nobody needed to tell Gonzaga’s players that being the defending WCAC champions should still be the team to beat.

Gonzaga simply reminded the rest of the Washington DC boys basketball followers with an 86-76 home win over the Stags Wednesday night.

The No. 3-ranked Eagles now own the top spot in the WCAC standings with a 7-1 conference mark and 16-2 overall record. Gonzaga’s only WCAC loss was against O’Connell on Dec. 9 and the Eagles are now on a nine-game win streak.

“This was definitely a big one,” Gonzaga senior forward Ian Hummer said. “We just wanted to show we’re No. 1 in the conference, probably No. 1 in the area as a matter of fact.”

Hummer scored a career-high 32 points as he pretty much had his way against DeMatha’s front-court. Cedrick Lindsay did the rest from the backcourt as he scored 21 points to go along with Tyler Thornton’s 13.

Gonzaga also sank 21-of-21 free throws.

“I know I had 32, a new career-high, but I’m not really worried about that,” Hummer said. “I’ll just score 10 points, if we beat DeMatha, I’m fine with that.”

DeMatha (14-2, 6-1) was led by 18 points from senior Naji Hibbert (18 points), 15 points from Josh Selby (Tennessee) and 10 points from Quinn Cook, Victor Oladipo and Jerian Grant each.

The Stags were viewed by many to be the team to beat this year with a deep roster chalked full of Division I talent. Gonzaga, while being the defending champions, lost talented forward Cameron Johnson and Max Kenyi.

While Gonzaga was still seen as a strong team, it wasn’t the same championship team. But Wednesday proved that doesn’t mean the Eagles are a worse team.

“We already knew we were the best team,” said Lindsay, who made 9-of-9 free throws.

DeMatha started hot our of the gates, as the Stags scored the game’s first points on a slam dunk by Mikael Hopkins. Gonzaga stormed back and took a 14-7 lead on a Cahli Thomas three-pointer.

Thornton scored eight of Gonzaga’s first 10 points to start the second half, drawing a DeMatha timeout. The Stags charged, outscoring the Eagles 14-4 to close the half, capped by a layup by Oladipo off a nice assist from Selby.

Gonzaga erased that lead in less than two minutes behind two Hummer layups and a Thornton jumper. The two teams traded hoops from then on, with Gonzaga taking a steady lead behind a pair of long Lindsay three-pointers.

Lindsay struggled a bit in the first half so Thornton grabbed him and said the team would need his sharpshooting in the second half.

“He just told me to shoot the ball,” Lindsay said.

The Eagles took an 11-point lead at the start of the fourth quarter behind a Malcolm Lemmons field goal, Lindsay and-one and Hummer layup and never looked back from there.

Gonzaga outscored DeMatha, 58-43, in the second half.

“That’s not DeMatha basketball,” DeMatha Coach Mike Jones said. “We gave up more points in the second half then we usually give up in a game.”

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Wrestling: Georgetown Prep wins Capital Duals

The Inaugural Capital Duals were held at St. John’s College High School this weekend.  Nine teams from Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. participated.

Georgetown Prep won the inaugural team championship with Boy’s Latin of Baltimore and St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes rounding out the top three teams.

In one of the most anticipated matches of the tournament Maryland No. 7-ranked Skip Newberger beat Maryland No. 13-ranked Giancarl Zerega.

In other action, Maryland No. 6-ranked Junior Monzey of Georgetown Prep and defending D.C. City Champion & National Prep Qualifyer Alec Regulinski battled into three overtimes in one of the most exciting matches of the day. Monzey won by decision on a penalty point awarded by the referee when Regulinski did not bring him back down to the mat within the required five seconds.

Each wrestler who went undefeated by winning all four matches of the tournament also received individual trophy awards.  

Team Placing

1st – Georgetown Prep
2nd – Boys Latin
3rd – St. Stephen’s St. Agnes

Undefeated at the Capital Duals (4-0 on the day):

103  Brandon Cedar – St. Mary’s Ryken
103  Patrick Hutton – Georgetown Prep
112  Dean Kime – Yorktown
112  A. Khaaden – Washington & Lee
119  Parke Overmiller – Georgetown Prep
125  A.J. Parks – Sidwell Friends
130  Jenkins Monzey – Georgetown Prep
130  Nolan Padubec – Yorktown  
135  E. Fessell – Georgetown Prep
140  B. Hirsh – Sidwell Friends
152  Bobby Gribbon – Georgetown Prep
160  Billy Gribbon – Georgetown Prep
160  Zachary Griffitt – St. Mary’s Ryken
171  Skip Newberger – Boy’s Latin
171  Tyler Dykes – St. John’s
189  Junior Monzey – Georgetown Prep
215  Everette Epstein – St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes
285  Josh Tobin – Sidwell Friends

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Beltway Ballers: Girls Basketball Top 10

Girls Beltway Basketball

Top-10 Rankings


With the exception of a flip-flop, nine area girls teams protect their respective spots in the DigitalSports Beltway Ballers poll; One team finds itself back in the poll this week.

*Records as of Monday, Jan. 19*

1. Riverdale Baptist (Ind.) 14-2;     LW: 1

2. Eleanor Roosevelt (Prince George’s) 8-1;     LW: 2

3. Elizabeth Seton (WCAC) 13-1;     LW: 3

4. Paint Branch (Montgomery County) 10-2;     LW: 4

5. Oakton (Northern Region) 15-0;     LW: 5

6. Mt. Vernon (Northern Region) 14-1;     LW: 6

7. Forest Park (Prince William) 10-2;     LW: 7

8. Largo (Prince George’s County) 9-2;     LW: 9

9. Thomas Wootton (Montgomery) 11-1;     LW: 8

10. Good Counsel (WCAC) 13-3;     LW: N/R

Others receiving votes:

St. John’s (WCAC)

H.D. Woodson (DCIAA)

Dr. Henry A. Wise, Jr. (Prince George’s County)

North Point (SMAC)

Great Mills (SMAC)


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, Loudon 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: 2009 Wildcat Wrestlefest

Click on the “Photos” and “Videos” links above for pictures and video highlights from the event.


Area Teams Compete at Wildcat Wrestlefest

By Paul Frommelt
pfrommelt@digitalsports.com

By Phil Murphy
pmurphy@digitalsports.com

Team Results

Woodbridge
Annandale 35, Woodbridge 35 (Annandale win on tiebreakers)
Woodbridge 74, McLean 3
Woodbridge 52, Centreville 17
Riverbend 40, Woodbridge 33
Woodbridge 41, Battlefield 28

Battlefield
Woodbridge 41, Battlefield 28
Battlefield 48, Centreville 24
Annandale 46, Battlefield 20
Battlefield 47, Edison 26
Annandale
Annandale 51, McLean 26
Annandale 46, Battlefield 20
Annandale 47, Edison 30
Annandale 35, Woodbridge 35 (Annandale win on tiebreakers)

Edison
Edison 51, Centreville 24
Battlefield 47, Edison 26
Annandale 47, Edison 30
Centreville
Edison 51, Centreville 24
Battlefield 48, Centreville 24
Woodbridge 52, Centreville 17
Centreville 41, McLean 27
South County
South County 42, Dominion 0
South County 68, Stuart 6
South County 42, Loudoun Valley 21
South County beats Paul VI
Dominion 
South County 42, Dominion 0
Paul VI 72, Dominion 6
Riverbend 66, Dominion 15
Stuart 69, Dominion 12
Loudoun Valley
Loudoun Valley 36, Riverbend 27
Paul VI 37, Loudoun Valley 31
South County 42, Loudoun Valley 21
Loudoun Valley 57, Stuart 18
Paul VI
Paul VI 72, Dominion 6
Paul VI 37, Loudoun Valley 31
South County beats Paul VI
Paul VI beats Riverbend
Stuart 
South County 68, Stuart 6
Riverbend 48, Stuart 26
Stuart 69, Dominion 12
Loudoun Valley 57, Stuart 18

Check back later for more results. To submit results, contact Paul Frommelt at pfrommelt@digitalsports.com.

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Beltway Ballers: Boys Basketball Top 10

Boys Beltway Basketball

Top-10 Rankings


Two new teams introduced to this week’s DigitalSports Beltway Ballers poll; Gonzaga moves to the No. 3 spot

*Records as of Monday, Jan. 19*


1.
Montrose Christian (Ind.) 14-1;     LW: 1

2. DeMatha (WCAC) 15-1;     LW: 2

3. Gonzaga (WCAC) 15-2;     LW: 4

4. Springbrook (Montgomery County) 12-0;     LW: 3

5. Friendly (Prince George’s) 10-1;     LW: 6

6. Chantilly (Northern Region) 13-1;     LW: 8

7. Bowie (Prince George’s) 10-1;     LW: N/R

8
. Lackey (SMAC) 10-2;     LW: 10

9. Bishop McNamara (WCAC) 12-4;     LW: 6

10. Thomas Stone (SMAC) 9-2;     LW: N/R


Others receiving votes:


Bishop O’Connell (WCAC)

T.C. Williams (Northern Region)

Laurel (Prince George’s)

Riverdale Baptist (Ind.)


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


*Teams considered for the Beltway Ballers poll include those in the DCIAA, Loudon 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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Girls’ Basketball: Holy Cross 74, O’Connell 46

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


*Click HERE for full video gallery.

*Click HERE for full photo gallery.

Traffic concerns due to surrounding inauguration activities caused the tip-off between Holy Cross and O’Connell to be moved up 15 minutes on Monday afternoon.

And the Tartans made sure the result was secure before the original start time rolled around.

Holy Cross hit four of its six first-half three-pointers in the first quarter, jetting ahead to an early 16-point lead, en route to a 74-46 win — its sixth in a row — over O’Connell on the road.

“We were kind of on a losing streak for a while,” said Tartan senior Lia Henry, whose team had lost three of four before its current six-game conference streak. “But now that we’re winning, I think everyone is working together a lot more.

“We had a lot of line-up adjustments. Working together, people that played well together, had a lot to do with how we’re winning.”

Added Coach Russell Davis: “The whole month of December we used multiple line-ups. We tried to take a look at who was playing well on our team and we just started clicking.”

That frequent rotation has paid dividends in January. With so many players getting minutes, Holy Cross is 6-0 this month, averaging 71.2 points per game, while allowing just 43.2 points.

And on Monday, two of the three Tartans with double-digit scoring — seniors Henry (11 points) and Stephanie Onya (11 points) — came off the bench.

“We have experience coming off the bench,” Davis said. “We have seniors coming off the bench and they’ve got leadership. I talked with our team, especially Lia and Stephanie since they’re not starting, and they get the same minutes.

“They get the same minutes and it’s hard for teams that we play against to match that experience off the bench.”

Added Henry: “I know, our starters, they’re under a lot of pressure. So for me to just come off the bench, there’s really no pressure on me to come out and start off strong, even though I do that most of the time.

“I think it’s nice to come off the bench, even though I’d like to start.”

But given Holy Cross’ piping hot start, the starters, sixth men and role players alike could breathe easy on Monday.

The Tartans led by 24 points at the half and never allowed the Knights closer than 16 after halftime.

And when O’Connell switched from a 2-3 zone to man-to-man defense to take away the outside shot, Holy Cross turned to senior forward Natasha Thames — who recorded her second double-double in the last three games — to put the game away.

“I just had to pound it into the post,” said Thames, whose 14 points and 15 rebounds were both team-highs. “I know that I needed to step up. I had to pound it in, be tough and aggressive.”

The Tartans will need elevated efforts all-around if they are to stretch their streak to seven.

Holy Cross plays No. 10 Good Counsel (13-3) on the road on Friday. The Falcons handed the Tartans their last conference loss, 67-65, on December 14.

“I cannot wait to play them,” said Thames, who scored five points in the early-season loss. “I’m so excited. We only lost by [a few] points, so we just need to pick it up, come out strong and ready to play.”

Added Henry: “The key is probably going to be rebounding, making our shots and free throws. If we do all those things, we’re going to be set.”

E-mail: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

Holy Cross (10-6, 6-2)   22 17 14 21 — 74
O’Connell (10-6, 2-6)      6   9  18 13 — 46

Holy Cross – Thames 7 0-0 14, Anya 5 1-1 11, Henry 5 0-0 11, Williams 3 2-3 9, Johnson 3 0-0 8, Bethel 4 0-1 8, Mackey 2 0-1 6, Chase 1 2-2 5, Kabonge 1 0-0 2. Team Totals – 31 5-8 74.
O’Connell – Jones 2 11-14 17, Horvath 2 4-5 8, Bannigan 2 0-0 6, Culhane 1 2-4 4, Gadell 0 4-4 4, Lagos 1 0-0 3, Coppes 1 0-0 2, Tumelty 1 0-0 2. Team Totals – 10 21-27 46.
Three-Pointers – Holy Cross 7 (Johnson 2, Mackey 2, Henry, Williams, Chase). O’Connell – 5 (Jones 2, Bannigan 2, Lagos).

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Boys Basketball: O’Connell 36, Paul VI 35

By Alysia Deem
Multimedia Manager/DigitalSports.com

Fairfax (Jan. 16, 2009) – The O’Connell High School boys basketball team defeated host Paul VI, 36-35, in a game that came down to the final four seconds. 

It was a packed house at Paul VI.  Fans for both sides came out to cheer on their teams.  The Panthers out scored the Knights in the first and second quarters going into halftime, 20-13, with a 7 point lead.  Paul VI was being led by Eugene McCrory who scored 9 of his 11 points in the first half.  “It was a very frustrating first half,” said junior Kendall Marshall of O’Connell, who scored all 11 of his total points in the second half. 

O’Connell came out a bit stronger in the third quarter to narrow Paul VI’s lead to 26-20, but it was in the fourth quarter that the Knights really began to battle back.  O’Connell Coach Joe Wooton said, “I thought we were getting good shots in the second half.  The last two shots before Kendall’s, Larry Savage had a put back and David Eismeier had a put back, they were huge plays.”   Click here for full interview with Coach Wooton.

It wasn’t until the last seconds of the game that the outcome was clear.  With 16 seconds to go, PVI’s Erick Green drove to the basket for 2 to put Paul VI up by one. O’Connell then had one last shot, with 4.8 seconds remaining Kendall Marshall layed one in to end the game.

When asked what he was thinking in those last few seconds Marshall said, “we kind of went through the same thing last year, we went down and hit a big layup then they went down and hit a bucket at the buzzer to win it, so I kind of had deja vu in my head that whole last 10 seconds. I’m just glad we came out on top this time.”

This is the fourth straight win for O’Connell bringing their record to 13-3.  Paul VI falls to 9-7 for the season.

The Knights play McNamara on Sunday and the Panthers will be in action again on Saturday at Benedictine. 


























School


 1Q


 2Q


 3Q


4Q


Final


Paul VI


11


9


6


9


35


O’Connell


6


7


7


16


36




O’Connell:
Cole 1 0-0 2, Eismeier 4 0-0 10, Jones 0 0-2 0, Marshall 4 1-3 11, Williams 1 0-0 2, Harmon 1 0-0 2, Bourne 2 0-0 4, Burgess 1 0-0 2, Savage 1 1-2 3.
3-Pointers: Eismeier 2, Marshall 2.

Paul VI:
Bozeman 1 0-0 2, Jones 3 0-0 6, Green 3 1-2 7, Sanders 1 1-5 3, McCrory 5 1-2 11, Barber 3 0-0 6.

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Boys Basketball: DeMatha 68, McNamara 54

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

DeMatha freshman James Robinson and seldom-used junior forward Chris Frank never expected to be in the starting lineup this season. Not with a roster bubbling over with Division I talent and especially not against Bishop McNamara.
 
But with Tennessee recruit Josh Selby, Texas A&M signee Naji Hibbert and guard Quinn Cook – DeMatha’s top three scorers — sitting because of minor team infractions, Friday was their chance.

And in yet another testament to the depth and talent of this DeMatha team, Robinson and Frank were instrumental in leading the Stags over the Mustangs, 68-54, Friday night in DeMatha’s packed gym.

“We try to boast about how deep we are,” DeMatha Coach Mike Jones said. “Tonight we got a chance to show it, though obviously we don’t want to have something happen to force us to do that.”

Seven different Stags scored at least seven points but none had more than 10.

Robinson and Frank each scored 10 points, tied with senior Marcus Rouse for the team-high. It’s a season-high scoring mark for Frank. Junior guard Victor Oladipo, who sees far more minutes than both players but still comes off the bench, chipped in a crucial eight points.

“Last year I was sitting in the stands watching the games,” said the 14-year-old Robinson. “I never thought a year later they’d be announcing my name.”

Jones announced Friday’s starting lineup in the middle of practice Thursday to the shock of Robinson and Frank.

“I just figured we would go to a five-guard lineup,” said Frank, a 6-foot-9 junior. “When they called my name I figured it was my golden opportunity to try to shine.”

Frank tipped off opposite McNamara’s Pittsburgh recruit, Talib Zanna, who scored a game high 21 points. After DeMatha junior Jerian Grant hit a three-pointer to open the scoring, Frank poured in six straight points to consistently keep DeMatha ahead.

“I wasn’t really sure what to expect,” Frank said. “I just wanted to go out there and try my best. If it went well, keep going. If not, hope for the best, I guess.”

DeMatha (13-1, 6-0) and McNamara (11-4, 5-2) played pretty much even throughout the first half. The Stags went into the locker room with just a two-point lead, which Zanna erased on the first possession of the second half.

But the Stags pulled away in the third quarter with the usual second-team seeing extensive time once again.

Robinson hit DeMatha’s first bucket of the half, which gave the Stags the lead for good as it would turn out. Rouse nailed a three-pointer, Grant hit a jumper and Oladipo made a steal and dunk that gave DeMatha a 39-31 lead and forced a Bishop McNamara timeout.

Zanna scored out of the timeout, but Oladipo responded with an offensive rebound and put back and Robinson hit another mid-range jumper to extend DeMatha’s lead to 11.

“James isn’t a freshman,” Oladipo said. “He might be a freshman in age, but he doesn’t play or look like a freshman.”

Jones has been trying to get more playing time for Robinson because his plus-minus ratio, which measures the net points scored or surrendered while a certain player is on the court, is off the charts, as Jones put it.

But while another scoring threat means more headaches for DeMatha’s opponents, it strangely enough may mean more commotion for Jones as well, especially heading into Wednesday’s game against defending champion Gonzaga.

“Everybody tries to act like it makes it so easy because you have all these guys,” Jones said. “I actually think it’s more difficult because you have so many guys that expect to get the ball and want to get the ball and want to play. I play psychologist as much as I play coach.”

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