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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Copley beats Northwest 68-54


CANAL FULTON: There is a lot of change going on at Northwest High School.

By next year, indoor sports will move from the gym at the middle school to the 5-year-old high school building where a gym is being constructed.

Northwest is in its first year of not playing in a league. Scheduling is a big obstacle, and that means playing larger schools like Copley, which defeated Northwest 68-54 Tuesday night in a nonleague battle of the Indians at tiny Northwest Middle School.

Northwest has played several Division I schools, one reason its record is 6-6.

Coach Mike Lower has the players hustling and refusing to back down from playing such competition.

Weve had some exciting games against some exciting opponents. It is a challenge every night, Lower said. This is a stretch of six or seven Division I teams that, if we are willing to compete, we will get better.

Northwest has applied to join the Portage Trail Conference in lieu of the impending departures of East Canton and Windham, but so far, has not been accepted.

Kenny Paramore, a 6-foot-1 junior who led Copley with a game-high 22 points, hopes his Indians (8-4) can still get a piece of the Suburban League title, where they are 5-2. League leader Nordonia has not lost.

We came in here playing hard because we want to win out, Paramore said.

Copley coach Mark Dente said: It was a great game for us for a nonleague game. They are extremely well-coached and mixed up their zone defenses against us, which is what we normally see. Our quickness seemed to overcome that.

Copley wanted to use its speed and quickness to force Northwest into an up-tempo game that would make the hosts panic and either make errant passes or take quick shots.

A putback rebound basket by Paramore gave Copley a 17-16 lead after the first quarter.

At halftime, Copley went into the locker room up 35-31 following two 3-point shots by Brandon Gathagan.

Mike Riley, a 6-foot-4 center who led Northwest in scoring, made 14 of his 21 points in the first half.

We should have gotten him the ball with the advantage we had in height, Lower said.

The lack of size is something Dente and the team have talked about this season. They are averaging 68 points in the past 10 games.

Our defense is our offense. We are an undersized team and we press for 32 minutes; they present matchup problems, Dente said. One of the things I told them tonight weve seen that [bigger players] before; it is irrelevant. Our kids are starting to believe.

Ryan Brotherton had 15 points for Northwest and Dan May added 10.

Jayln Tyler, a 6-2 junior who scored 17 points, likes the hectic, in-your-face, pressing defensive style that Copley plays.

We come out here and play with energy and we have the heart to play against bigger players, Tyler said.

Lower said: Weve played Kenmore, Jackson and a few others. The thing that impressed me more is not only that they play quick, but they play hard.

They played harder than any team weve faced this season and that was key. We have another one Saturday night at home against GlenOak.

Read the high school blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/varsity_letters/

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Woodridge girls defeat Southeast 65-38


CUYAHOGA FALLS: SheKiera Brooks is quick to say that she is really superstitious.

As far as the Woodridge senior is concerned, 13 is a sweet number.

The Bulldogs continue to improve on their own school record as they defeated Southeast 65-38 at Woodridge on Wednesday night in a Portage Trail Conference County Division game.

With the victory, the Bulldogs are 13-0 overall. They already had surpassed the best start in school history, which was 9-1.

Woodridge is also 9-0 in the division and looking for its first conference title since the 1999-2000 season.

Brooks is the Bulldogs leader and she showed off her skills in the victory over the Pirates (7-6, 6-3). The senior guard scored 18 points, had five assists, eight rebounds and eight steals.

For most players, a bad shoot-around is not a good sign for the upcoming game, but that is not the case for Brooks.

When I have a bad shoot-around, it means I am going to have a good game, Brooks said. If I miss all my free throws in the shoot-around I think I will make them all in a game. I couldnt buy a basket in warm-ups and did not have a good first quarter, but then I started playing in the flow of the game.

Bulldogs coach Chris Esterak said having a four-year starter like Brooks is important to the teams success.

I have a great floor leader in SheKiera Brooks. She really sets the tone for us she is my coach on the floor, Esterak said. We are on the same page and I have the confidence in her she will settle the team down and make good decisions.

You can have great players in other places, but if you dont have a player to get them the ball and to break the press. We havent been pressed [much] in her four years here. They try here and there, but she is a one-man press breaker.

The Bulldogs are also a team with many dimensions.

Woodridge has the luxury of starting talented post players in Lizzie Wilkinson and Kara Kelleher. Wilkinson, a 6-foot junior who is coming off a back injury, scored 11 points and grabbed 13 rebounds.

I rested all weekend and was ready to go, Wilkinson said.

Kelleher scored eight points and had two blocked shots.

She stepped up for us today in guarding Shayna White. Lizzie and Kara are a great tandem, Esterak said. Kara does not always get the scoring Lizzie does, but she does a lot of little things for us. She will guard the other teams biggest post player.

The Bulldogs showed their depth throughout the game, particularly when Morgan Thompson fouled out with a quick fourth foul and when she protested drew a technical foul, which was her fifth with 4:10 left in the third quarter.

When Thompson, who scored 14 points showing both long-range ability and several slick moves to the basket, fouled out, Esterak simply moved his guards around. Starter Kapri Watson had eight points and handled the ball more and Alex LoPrinzi stepped in and scored six points.

The Pirates got a terrific game from White, the junior center who was extremely effective on the offensive glass and led all scorers with 16 points, and Brittany Butcher came off the bench to score eight points.

Esterak said the team is far from perfect, needing more work on free throws, better defense in press situations, and making layups. While making sure the team keeps improving, the coach also is enjoying the record-breaking season.

It is a great ride. We focus a game at a time and if we do that we can go 20-0, Esterak said. Our goal is to get the highest seed possible [in the sectional-district tournament].

Read the high school blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/varsity_letters/

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

Perfect Panthers hold off Royals' charge to win


FRANKLIN TWP.: Manchester has been virtually unchallenged by its opponents the entire season.

And Saturday afternoon, the Panthers looked like they would easily continue their undefeated season as they led Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy by 19 points at halftime.

A strong second half by the Royals challenged Manchester, but the Panthers clutch free-throw shooting in the fourth quarter was enough to defeat CVCA 70-63 in a PAC-7 game at Manchester High School.

In the first half, the Panthers (11-0, 8-0) played in machine-like fashion, running the fast break, rotating the ball around the perimeter and forcing 20 turnovers,.

Manchester coach Tucker Pappas watched his team play with energy and enthusiasm in the first half, and the game appeared to be on its way to becoming a blowout.

The first-quarter 19-16 lead was stretched to 42-23 by halftime.

We have spurts where we can go and hit you quick, Pappas said. Then we have mental lapses where we stop playing and we think it is over. It is frustrating.

You see glimpses of how good we can be, but then you see glimpses of how bad we can be. When we are not playing hard and playing smart. We are not very good.

It would be hard to convince CVCA of the final assessment.

When the defense was not forcing turnovers, the offense was crisp, hitting four 3-point shots in the first half, two from senior Angela Durgala, who scored 15 of her game-high 24 points.

Durgala credited the Royals for making adjustments, but was perplexed why the team struggled.

They [CVCA] started to recognize our jumps and what we were doing and took that stuff away, Durgala said. If we play like that [in the second half] we are going to be in a lot of trouble.

We were doing just dumb things like committing turnovers and not getting back on defense.

CVCA (8-4, 5-3) doubled its first-half output and outscored the Panthers 23-14 in the third quarter to cut the Panthers lead to 56-46.

The Royals more aggressive offensive attack also put Panther starters Kayci Krzynowek, Michelle Noble and Autumn Brown on the bench in the third quarter with four fouls each.

Ashley Tyna, who led the Royals with 17 points, scored nine points in the third quarter, Halston Maresh had six of her 15 points and Cassie Wilson scored five of her seven points in the quarter.

Pappas got on his team after the third quarter for not moving on defense.

The Panthers responded and slowed the Royals down enough in the fourth quarter to eke out the win despite Krzynowek, who had 18 points and is one of their best ball-handlers, fouling out.

The victory was also preserved by Noble, Durgala and Taylor Mattioli combining to make all eight of the teams free-throw attempts in the fourth quarter.

Royals coach Ryan Tyna said the difference between the first and second halves was as much mental as it was any physical changes.

We talk about playing with confidence and we gave them a little bit too much respect. There was a stretch in the second quarter where we did not get back on defense and got a little confused and they [the Panthers] made us pay for it, Tyna said.

It was 18-16 and we miss a layup and suddenly we are down 19. We werent moving hard with aggression to the rim.

The second half we did a better job of that, which opened up some kick-outs.

Read the high school blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/varsity_letters/. Also on Twitter at http://twitter.com/MBeavenABJ. Follow ABJ sports on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/sports.abj.

Posted by Akron Beacon Journal at 12:37 PM · 55 Views · Read Full Post
Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Tallmadge 61, Cuyahoga Falls 48: Blue Devils roll in second half


TALLMADGE: As the calendar has turned to 2012, the pressure to win seems to naturally pick up with the distraction of the holiday season behind everyone.

Players and coaches can try to deny it, but the two weeks around Christmas and New Year seems to take everyone out of sync.

That urgency of the new year seemed to kick in for Tallmadge in the second half as the host Blue Devils pulled away from Cuyahoga Falls and defeated the Black Tigers 61-48 Tuesday night in a nonleague game.

First-year Tallmadge coach Aaron Hinkle was happy to see his players finally find some rhythm as the game progressed.

We cannot make an excuse for not playing well during the break; everyone is in that situation, Hinkle said. But it is nice to get back in the routine of being in school.

One thing I have seen recently is we have been practicing better. We are learning how to win.

Tucker Linder said he hopes the team is finally ready to improve upon its 4-4 record.

We should be better in the Suburban League. We started off the year real well, then we seemed to get lackadaisical, said Linder, who scored eight points.

Hinkle saw something he believes is a key to future success.

This was not our best-played game, but as far as the eight guys in our rotation goes, they dramatically contributed to our success tonight. We could look at each other, and know we made mistakes but we hung together, Hinkle said. We all did not bring our A game, but they all made plays that contributed to the outcome.

In the third quarter, the Blue Devils clicked both inside and outside for a 21-9 advantage and a 43-32 lead. Tallmadge got 3-point shots from Eli Baker, Bryon Cook and Michael Strand and Nathan Jackson and Jacob Wood combined for six points inside.

Wood came off the bench to score 10 points and Jackson had eight points using their height advantage over the smaller Black Tigers.

We started to get the ball inside to our big players [Jackson and Wood] and playing to our strengths, Hinkle said.

We need to be more aggressive in going to the basket, Linder said.

Anthony Gotto was one of the unsung heroes for the Blue Devils, scoring 12 points and making sure the offense ran smoothly in the second half.

Baker and Strand each finished with eight points.

The Black Tigers went ahead 13-2 in the first quarter led by Jacob Slones seven points, including a 3-point field goal, but never built any momentum from that point on.

The Blue Devils cut the lead to 15-8 by the end of the first quarter and trailed 23-22 at halftime with seven different players scoring.

At the end of the first half, we were tentative on offense and complacent and hesitant on defense, Hinkle said.

For Cuyahoga Falls and coach Rob Slone, it was a night of second-half frustration, missing layups and short shots and simply not making any shots in the second half from the outside except for Ricker with two 3-pointers and Devin Speicher, who scored six of his nine points in the fourth quarter.

The Black Tigers (2-4) were led in scoring by Josh Ricker with 13 points and Jacob Slone with 10 points.

Read the high school blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/varsity_letters/. Also on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ABJ_Varsity. Follow ABJ sports on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/sports.abj.

Posted by Akron Beacon Journal at 2:46 PM · 40 Views · Read Full Post