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2016 Maryland 2A State Semifinals 2016 Maryland 2A State Semifinals - DMVelite.com Video of 2016 Maryland 2A State Semifinals - DMVelite.com Highlights from the 2016 Maryland 2A state semifinals, which saw New Town defeat Gwynn Park and Middletown down Queen Anne's. Includes interviews from New Town vs. Gwynn Park.
New Town guts out resilient win over Gwynn Park in 2A semifinals March 12, 2016 ?Kyle McFadden ?HS Basketball ?0 COLLEGE PARK — Competitive nature. It’s the engine behind every successful team, no matter how big or small, college bound or a high school one-and-done. Mike Daniel knows such fieriness wakes himself up, and his New Town Titans out of bed each and every morning preparing for battle on the hardwood war-zone, whether in practice or a live game. “It’s just like being in the gym,” Daniel, the head coach, said. “Gym is war when we go at each other, it’s war.” Mental toughness and a hard-nosed demeanor has carried the Titans through many down-to-wire games, boasting an almost squeaky clean record in single-digit contests. The Class 2A semifinal on Friday night, in what was billed the game of the tournament, was just another war New Town has experienced countless of times this year. They gutted out a 65-58 victory over Gwynn Park with a resilient mindset to launch them into the state championship game against Middletown on Saturday. Their single digit ball game record improves to an impressive 11-1. “They never say die,” Daniel said. “They never say, ‘We’re done’. We play until the very last second of every game.” With under three minutes to go, New Town commanded a 14 point lead and appeared to coast into their second straight finals appearance. A little over two minutes later, and with 40.6 seconds remaining, Gwynn Park was on the verge of pulling off the improbable — wiping a 14 point deficit to just one off a Marlon White 3-pointer, two Aaron Parker free throws and layups from Isaiah Miles and Kollin Mitchell. New Town then took a deep breathe and remembered, this wasn’t their first rodeo. “We all have been here before,” senior center, Chris Fitzgerald said, who finished with 14 points, seven rebounds and four blocks. “We stay together and we know what we have to do.” Free throws from Devin Smith (14 points, six rebounds and five assists), Deonte Hicks (14 points) and Fitzgerald preserved the Titans chances at repeating for a state crown. “Anytime my guys step to the line, I feel comfortable,” Daniel said. “They’ve been doing it all year.” Eight lead chances occurred in the first half. New Town trailed only once in the final 16 minutes. Gwynn Park, who is known for their blistering speed, but not for towering height, were overwhelmed the majority of the contest by New Town’s abundancey of length around the rim. “I definitely think our size had a huge factor,” the 6-foot-7 Fitzgerald said. Up next for New Town is a game they are heavily favored to win, the 2A state championship against Frederick County’s Middletown. “As a coach, (winning a state championship) is one of the greatest feelings you’ll ever have,” Daniel said. “We’ll be ready for Saturday.”

No. 1 New Town boys return to state finals by holding off Gwynn Park

New Town beats Gwynn Park for return to boys basketball state finals
Glenn GrahamContact ReporterThe Baltimore Sun
One year after winning the Class 1A crown, New Town is a win away from claiming the 2A title.

New Town senior guard Devin Smith was right where he wanted to be in Friday's suddenly close Class 2A state semifinal game against Gwynn Park: the free-throw line.

The circumstance was dire. The Yellow Jackets had pressed and hit baskets and in a frenzied stretch of 41 seconds, turned the No. 1 Titans' comfortable 10-point cushion into one measly point with 40 seconds left.

Smith sank the two free throws — restoring much-needed calm — and he sank two more free throws later, while the defense held the rest of the way for the Titans to come away with a 65-58 win over Gwynn Park at Maryland's Xfinity Center.

New Town, which claimed the Class 1A state title last season, will seek the program's third championship Saturday, taking on the Middletown-Queen Anne's winner. Game time is set for 6 p.m.

Smith was one of three Titans to score 14 points — Chris Fitzgerald and Deonte Hicks were the others — and no points were more important than the two he showed perfect aim on to send the Titans on their way.

"Toward the end of the game, they started trapping a lot, so we really needed someone to knock down free throws and that's my job as a point guard and I knocked them down," he said. "Yeah, I was confident."

A second-half team all season, the Titans showed the same form with a 14-0 run at the end of the third quarter that turned a tight game into a 47-35 advantage with 6:43 to play. They stayed in control for much of the quarter until the Yellow Jackets made an abrupt push.

The New Town lead was 10 when Marlon White hit a 3-pointer to cut it to 59-52 with 1:23 left. Then came New Town turnovers. The Yellow Jackets hit two free throws. And then a follow basket from Isaiah Miles. When Kollin Mitchell came away with another steal and finished with a layup, the Yellow Jackets had all the momentum with the Titans' lead trimmed to 59-58 with 43 seconds left.

"It's been happening all year — we just find a way," New Town coach Mike Daniel said.

He later added: "We never say die, we never say we're done and we play until the last second of every game. It's just like being in the gym [during practice]. It's a war when we go after each other. So when we come out, we have the attitude of knowing what we have to do to be successful."

The Titans have often started slow on offense in games this season, relying on their strong team defense and increased urgency in the second half to capture wins.

But that wasn't the case Friday, thanks in large part to the 3-point shooting of Hicks in the first quarter. He hit three straight 3s and added two free throws in a two-minute stretch that gave the Titans a 13-6 lead with 3:33 left in the first quarter. The Yellow Jackets got nine points from Aaron Parker in the first half, and would take a 19-18 lead midway through the second quarter before the Titans got five late points from Smith to take a 27-24 lead at the half.

Senior forward Quincy Roche also reached double figures for the Titans with 12 points, while Gwynn Park got 15 each from Parker and Justin Faison.

glenn.graham@baltsun.com

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Boys Basketball

State semifinals

(at Maryland's Xfinity Center)

Class 2A

1 New Town 65, Gwynn Park 58

GP – Faison 15, Miles 10, White 9, Parker 15, Mitchell 9. Totals: 18 18-30 58.

NT – Johnson 8, Smith 14, Roche 12, Faust 3, Fitzgerald 14, Hicks 14. Totals: 20 20-28 65.

Half: NT, 27-24

New Town Holds on to beat Gwynn Park in 2016 MD 2A semifinal Capitol Hoops Basketball Gwynn Park Press Conference after losing to New Town in the 2016 MD 2A semi-finals ? CH Play of the Day – Gwynn Park’s Aaron Parker & New Town’s Quincy Roche meet above the rim Gwynn Park Press Conference after losing to New Town in the 2016 MD 2A semi-finals ? New Town Holds on to beat Gwynn Park in 2016 MD 2A semifinal March 12, 2016 9:05 am Despite a comeback for the ages that saw Gwynn Park come back from a 14 point deficit to cut the lead to one (in a game with no shot clock) Gwynn Park was unable to get over the hump, and ended up on the wrong end of a 65-58 final to New Town.

Maryland 2A boys’ basketball semifinals: No. 8 Gwynn Park rallies but falls to New Town

March 11

The fourth-quarter clock at University of Maryland’s Xfinity Center ticked below three minutes Friday, and nobody would have blamed the Gwynn Park boys’ basketball team if it went quietly into the College Park night. But these Yellow Jackets had a resolve few could match this winter, and it once again emerged at the end of the Maryland 2A state semifinals.

No. 8 Gwynn Park fell short of its first trip to the state final since 2010 in a 65-58 loss to New Town, but not before it showed the Baltimore Sun’s top-ranked team exactly how it got to this point.

Trailing by 14 points with less than three minutes to go, the Yellow Jackets nearly pulled off a shocking comeback with a full-court press that forced a succession of steals, ignited a 15-2 surge and put them in position to send the game into overtime.

Once two New Town foul shots left Gwynn Park down just 61-58, junior Justin Faison (15 points) let loose a three-pointer from the top of the key with 23 seconds left. The fans from Brandywine gasped, perhaps expecting it to go in considering the Yellow Jackets were just nine days removed from overcoming an 18-point deficit in the 2A South region semifinals against Douglass.

The ball sailed wide left, and New Town soon iced the game at the free throw line. But everybody involved couldn’t help but be impressed with the exciting finish Gwynn Park created.

“That comeback defines our team, defines our year,” Coach Mike Glick said.

The Yellow Jackets (24-3) were ultimately done in by poor free throw shooting and an inability to solve the 2-3 zone New Town (23-2) employed.

“Their length was the majority of the problem,” forward Isaiah Miles noted.

And yet Gwynn Park stayed close in the first half despite a poor shooting performance. It then briefly took the lead in the third quarter by creating turnovers and getting out on the fast break

But the Titans responded with a powerful 14-0 run that didn’t end until early in the fourth quarter. It provided the defending 2A state champions with just enough cushion late.

Senior Aaron Parker led Gwynn Park with 15 points and 11 rebounds and Miles also had a double-double (10 points, 12 rebounds), but “we just couldn’t get over the hump,” Faison said.

That, however, did little to dissuade Glick’s pride in what took place during the frantic final few minutes.

“One of the most resilient bunches I’ve coached in 23 years,” he said. “I’ve never been prouder of a team than I am of this team. Went out like champions. Just came up a possession or two short.”

Mark Giannotto is a Montgomery County native who covers high school sports for The Washington Post. He previously covered Virginia and Virginia Tech football for five years.