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FULL HIGHLIGHTS Largo’s Buzzer-Beater Win over Gwynn Park 12/10/2016

Brandywine, MD was the place to be on Wed night as the teams exchanged lead down the stretch and into OT. It was Largo who would get the W on a buzzer-beater 3 in OT by senior Christian Caldwell.

FULL HIGHLIGHTS Largo’s Buzzer-Beater Win over Gwynn Park 12/10/2016 Capitol Hoops Basketball February 11, 2016 7:24 am Brandywine, MD was the place to be on Wed night as the teams exchanged lead down the stretch and into OT. It was Largo who would get the W on a buzzer-beater 3 in OT by senior Christian Caldwell. http://capitolhoops.com/?p=5561

Aaron Parker helps Gwynn Park hang tough to edge Central and stay perfect

The Yellow Jackets’ road game at Central was tied with less than three minutes left in the fourth quarter, and Parker recognized drastic measures were necessary. No. 7 Gwynn Park had arrived with a perfect record, but everything from the whistles that made the visitors throw up their hands to the barrage of three-pointers the Falcons were pouring in seemed to foreshadow an upset.

As he hovered near the rim, Parker wasn’t having it. He switched the basketball to his left hand underneath the basket and whipped in a layup to take the final lead of a gutsy, 79-75 win on Friday night in Capitol Heights.

“I don’t usually make it, but I just went for it,” Parker said. “I knew we was going to win then. I knew it was over.”

Parker took over in the second half, bulling his way into the paint and dropping 16 of his 28 points in the third quarter of the Prince George’s County 3A/2A/1A conference

During a back-and-forth first quarter, Gwynn Park senior guard Marlon White started hot. He drained three three-pointers and scored 10 of his 15 points in the first eight minutes.

Gwynn Park (16-0, 9-0 Prince George’s 3A/2A/1A) settled down and controlled the game for much of the second quarter, but Central ended the half on a 7-0 run to tie the game at 36 heading into halftime. That surge was highlighted by a deep three from senor Daquan Simmons (16 points).

Central (10-3, 6-3) took the lead late in the third quarter behind back-to-back threes from junior Trent Dixon, one of the Falcons’ brainy players whom Coach Lawrence Pugh said he trusts to take smart shots. Dixon finished with 16 points and drew dances from his home stands with his accuracy.

“We did a good job of getting the crowd involved,” Dixon said. “They just fought back.”

Junior Javani Brown broke away in transition to lead Central with 17 points. His last drive brought the Falcons within a bucket of tying the game for the tenth time, but Parker answered with another hesitation move at the rim.

After the game, Parker was pumping his fist, and Gwynn Park Coach Mike Glick could finally relax.

“I just think this is the best basketball county in the United States, and I think we’ve got the best public basketball in the state of Maryland,” Glick said. “This typifies how good the public schools are. Every game’s a battle.”

MSA Top-25 boys basketball rankings: Jan. 31st – Feb. 6th

MSA Top-25 boys basketball rankings: Jan. 31st – Feb. 6th

It wasn’t the most ideal week for athletes across Maryland as Winter Storm Jonas dumped nearly three feet of snow throughout the state. And though that was the case, cleanup crews were able to shovel and dig their way out of the “snowpocalypse” to at least be able to get in one day of athletic events on Saturday, January 30th.

Not much has changed in our basketball rankings for the past week. No. 4 Oakland Mills cruised to a convincing 47-point win over Reservoir while Kennedy trumped No. 18 Springbrook in our upset of the week.

No. 10 Quince Orchard and No. 11 Hammond both earned 17-point victories. Springbrook dropped out of the Top-25 while Centennial entered the 25th slot.

Every Monday, Maryland Sports Access will provide boys basketball rankings from the regions of Baltimore, Frederick, Howard, Montgomery and Prince George’s.

Teams from those regions are compiled and ranked Associated Press style based off of how the panel feels about where they stand up to date.

Panel: Kyle McFadden, MSA Co-Founder; Ben Spector, MSA writer; Kendall Hilton, Co-Founder of Fan-I Sports; Marcus Helton, DMVelite Editor-in-Chief

1. Eleanor Roosevelt Raiders (3) – 103 points (14-2) LW: 1

County: Prince George’s, 4A

Last week: none

Notable wins: Northwestern by 36, No. 3 Wise by 2, High Point by 26, La Plata by 44, Laurel by 36, DuVal by 36, Bladensburg by 31, No. 15 C.H. Flowers by 6, Suitland by 40, No. 25 Bowie by 4

Losses: DeMatha by 22, Bishop McNamara by 5

2. Gwynn Park Yellow Jackets – 95 points (13-0) LW: 2

County: Prince George’s, 2A

Last week: none

Notable wins: Northern by 29, Forestville by 20, Crossland by 16, Urbana by 18, No. 5 Douglass by 5, CMIT by 46, Crooms by 38

Losses: none

3. Oakland Mills Scorpions – 92 points (13-1) LW: T4 (+1)

County: Howard, 2A

Last week: WIN, Reservoir by 47

Notable wins: Wilde Lake by 24, Mt. Hebron by 25, Howard by 35, Centennial by 3, Glenelg by 37, No. 11 Hammond by 6, Winters Mill by 9, River Hill by 20, Atholton by 46, Reservoir by 47

Losses: Glenelg Country by 11

4. Douglass Eagles – 91 points (10-1) LW: T4

County: Prince George’s, 2A

Last week: none

Notable wins: No. 8 Poly by 16, Northwestern by 43, No. 24 Crossland by 14, Clinton Christian by 26, No. 14 Largo by 13, Fairmont Heights by 57, Forestville by 22

Losses: No. 2 Gwynn Park by 5

5. Dr. Henry A. Wise Pumas – 90 points (9-3) LW: 3 (-2)

County: Prince George’s, 4A

Last week: none

Notable wins: Miller by 9 (Va.), DuVal by 47, Kent County by 22, West Charlotte (N.C.) by 21, No. 15 C.H. Flowers by 38, Suitland by 52, Bladensburg by 13, Parkdale by 34, No. 25 Bowie by 1

Losses: DeMatha by 13, No. 1 Eleanor Roosevelt by 2, Riverdale Baptist by 21

# 9 Gwynn Park 72 vs # 6 Douglass 67 

Gwynn Park never trailed in the second half in their loan regular season match-up of the year with 2A rival Douglass. Isaiah Miles almost triple-doubled as he went for 18, 10, and 8. The Yellow-Jackets were led by junior transfer Justin Faison who led all scorers with 22. Cameron Hayes led Douglass with 21.

Justin Faison, Gwynn Park step up in gritty win over No. 6 Douglass

January 12 at 10:33 PM

Gwynn Park junior Justin Faison walked onto his home court Tuesday night for pregame warm-ups, heard the roar of an overflow crowd that had filled the bleachers midway through the preceding junior varsity game and realized his decision to return to public school had been a good one.

“It was a special moment,” he said. “When I saw the crowd was packed, and everybody came just to see our team play, I feel like we arrived.”

Faison and company spent the next two hours proving they belong in the conversation among the Washington area’s top boys’ basketball teams this season. In a battle of unbeaten Prince George’s County rivals, No. 9 Gwynn Park answered every challenge and pulled out a 72-65 win over No. 6 Douglass in Brandywine.

But it was the way in which the Yellow Jackets accomplished the feat, keeping their poise after a late Douglass rally, that could carry meaning well beyond Tuesday.

Faison, who transferred to Gwynn Park this fall after playing for McNamara’s JV team last year, finished with a game-high 22 points, and 11 of them came in the fourth quarter. The point guard knifed into the lane at will during the final five minutes of action, and went 10 of 11 from the free throw line for the contest.

Forward Isaiah Miles added 18 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists, controlling the paint and slamming home a couple thunderous jams while Douglass struggled to penetrate Gwynn Park’s 2-3 zone defense.

A three-point play by Faison sparked a 9-2 run that allowed Gwynn Park (11-0, 4-0 Prince George’s 3A/2A/1A) to eventually open a 64-55 lead with less than three minutes to go in regulation.

Coach Michael Glick “said that you can thrive in these moments, so I took that to heart, and I feel like I could finish at the rim whenever I wanted to,” Faison said.

But Douglass (8-1, 4-1) didn’t wilt, and the Eagles mounted a frantic charge behind junior Donald Carey. He promptly scored five of his 15 points in a five-second span to bring the Eagles back within striking distance. When junior Savion Ward hit a three-pointer from the wing with 1 minute 20 seconds left, they had suddenly trimmed the deficit to two.         

Gwynn Park never lost its cool, though, as three different players, including Faison, combined to score seven of the final nine points to ice the game.

“It seems like a different kid steps up every game,” Glick said.

Afterward, all the talk was about how these two neighboring schools might not meet again until the Maryland 2A South region final. They only face one another once this regular season because of the addition of several vocational schools to Prince George’s 3A/2A/1A league play this winter.

The stakes were evident from the opening tip, as Douglass senior Cameron Hayes scored for 10 of his 21 points in the first quarter. But the Yellow Jackets were undeterred, despite losing to the Eagles three times last year. They went on an 11-0 surge when Faison hit consecutive three-pointers to give them the lead for good.

This, after all, was a moment he had been waiting for.