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There Is No Crying In High School Basketball

Posted by Michael Glick at Mar 13, 2008 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )

There's Now Crying in High School Basketball

With Championships At Stake, Tears Likely

Lake Clifton's Antoine Allen wipes away tears. Crying, once considered a sign of weakness, is now accepted and common during playoffs.
Lake Clifton's Antoine Allen wipes away tears. Crying, once considered a sign of weakness, is now accepted and common during playoffs. (Preston Keres -- The Post)
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By Jeff Nelson
Special to The Washington Post
Friday, March 14, 2008; Page E05

 

Three years later, Tommy Kramer still recalls every moment, every detail from one of the most compelling high school basketball championship games in recent memory.

He can picture his Bethesda-Chevy Chase teammates trying to corral one more rebound to seal a state title. He can see the final seconds of overtime descending and B-CC failing to come up with a loose ball amid chaos. Then, the most enduring image -- Randallstown's final shot going in at the buzzer.

"That's pretty much burned in my memory, the end of that game," said Kramer, who was a sophomore reserve in 2005. "It's that clear in my mind. I remember seeing our point guard, Carl Buck, collapse, and one of our forwards collapse. They were on the floor forever."

A generation ago, according to interviews with a dozen area coaches, the players on a team that lost in such painful fashion would have taken a deep breath and walked off the court. Emotions would have been suppressed; tears would have been unthinkable. But not anymore.

If there's one certainty this weekend as state high school basketball championships are decided in Maryland and Virginia, it's that tears will fall.

Sometimes they will come from the winners, sometimes the losers, sometimes both. But at the end of nearly every game, regardless of sex, some players will break down and cry.

"I think it's a human thing," said Eleanor Roosevelt Coach Rod Hairston, whose team is the three-time defending Maryland 4A girls' champion. "I don't think it's a boys' or girls' thing anymore. When you put so much time and effort into something, I think you can't help but have those kinds of emotions and feelings about the outcome."

Now a freshman at Stanford University, Kramer remembers his teammates -- especially the seniors -- letting it all out. They wept on the court as Randallstown's players celebrated; they wept on the bench while waiting for their second-place trophies; they wept in the locker room as the seniors contemplated the end of their playing careers.

"I've never seen that kind of emotion until my guys [three] years ago," Bethesda-Chevy Chase Coach Steve Thompson said. "I didn't cry, but I wanted to. For them."

Male and female coaches who attended high school in the 1970s said girls always have been permitted to cry. It's always been an acceptable outlet of female emotion.

Not so for their male contemporaries. In that era and the years preceding it, coaches said, tears represented "weakness" and "being soft."

"I could never [imagine] my high school coach crying when he played," said Gwynn Park Coach Michael Glick, a 1984 high school graduate. "I think generationally, it wasn't accepted."

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Yellow Jackets ready for one more chance at a crown

Winters Mill awaits in Friday’s 2A semifinal

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The 2007-08 season has marked the re-emergence of the most successful boys’ high school basketball program in Maryland public schools history as Gwynn Park has won 25 of 26 games.

But as the Yellow Jackets recent history in the state semifinals has pointed out, the program’s 10 state titles mean nothing when a new year and another visit in the state Final Four arrive.

When the Yellow Jackets suit up to play Winters Mill in a state Class 2A semifinal at 9 p.m. Friday at Comcast Center, they will have a challenging task in front of them. The other three teams in the 2A Final Four — Randallstown, Wicomico and Winters Mill — have a combined 62-13 record. Gwynn Park beat Randallstown, 73-60, during the Christmas break.

Approaching the season with confidence, the Yellow Jackets figured they would be in this position.

‘‘We did think we were going to be state champions before the season started,” said senior standout Sean Thomas following Gwynn Park’s 72-56 victory against McDonough in the 2A South Region final. ‘‘We had that trust in each other. I believe if we stay focused and humble and continue to play our way, we should finish with a title.”

The Yellow Jackets have benefited from a deep corps of seniors and a number of juniors who have stepped up this season. Senior point guard and co-captain Harold Washington has been one of the county’s most impressive players, averaging 19 points, 12 rebounds and five assists per game. Meanwhile, junior forward Corey Anderson has been an important piece of the puzzle for the Yellow Jackets, averaging 15 points, 13 rebounds and nine rebounds.

Throw in Thomas (21 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists) and senior multi-sport star Chibuike Achuko and Gwynn Park has a formidable lineup. But the Yellow Jackets may be without one important piece as senior forward Ronnell Leggett suffered three fractures of his left orbital bone, leaving Gwynn Park coach Mike Glick unsure about his availability.

Glick understands that Winters Mill, which features 6-foot-7 Rashad Blackwell (8.7 points, 8.1 rebounds) and star guard Cammeron Woodyard (20.5 points, 4.5 rebounds and three assists), will be a test.

‘‘They’re a great team, very well coached and have a great player going to Penn State,” Glick said of the Falcons and Woodyard, who has committed to PSU. ‘‘We have our work cut out for us.”

Gwynn Park should be wary of the task at hand because the team has lost three state finals this decade (2000, 2002 and 2004). The 2004 final, a 66-65 loss to Baltimore’s Douglass High in the final seconds, was particularly heartbreaking.

‘‘Based on what I’ve read about them, they are really well-coached,” Winters Mill coach David Herman said. ‘‘They play hard and get after the ball. Our kids play hard and I think real good defense and we’re ready to play.”

Glick said the Yellow Jackets have another factor on their side.

‘‘I feel if we survived the county, then we can compete with anyone in the state,” Glick said. ‘‘I think [Prince George’s] County has a great feeder system and having four [boys] teams make it [to the state semifinals] from all four classifications shows that we’re the best basketball county in the state and in the nation.”

E-mail Terron Hampton at thampton@gazette.net.

Boys Class 2Astate semifinals

Gwynn Park (25-1) vs.Winters Mill (19-5)

When: 9 p.m. Friday.

Where: Comcast Center,University of Maryland,College Park.

Players to watch: Gwynn Park — Sean Thomas (21 ppg, 10 rpg, 7 apg); Harold Washington (19 ppg, 12 rpg); CoreyAnderson (15 ppg, 13 rpg, 9 apg). Winters Mill — Cammeron Woodyard (20.5 ppg); Devon Lesniak (14.6 ppg).

Gwynn Park (25-1) vs. No. 12 Winters Mill (19-6)
Time // 9 p.m.

Outlook // Led by 6-foot-5 guard Cammeron Woodyard, who has committed orally to Penn State, Winters Mill has been one of the metro area's hottest teams, winning 10 straight by an average of 23 points, including a 71-49 victory over Middletown in the Class 2A West title game. The Falcons, however, could be facing their toughest opponent all season in perennial Prince George's County power Gwynn Park, which is ranked No. 5 in the Washington area. The Yellow Jackets, who began the season with 22 straight wins, are led by the trio of 6-3 guard Sean Thomas (averaging 21 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists), 6-3 guard Harold Washington (19 points, 12 rebounds) and 6-5 forward Corey Anderson (15 points, 13 rebounds). Gwynn Park has won 10 state titles, though none since 1988, despite advancing to the final four times since 1999. Winters Mill, the Carroll County champion, returns to College Park for the second time in school history, after its semifinal loss in 2006. The Falcons are led by Woodyard (20.5 points per game), another future college player in 6-foot McDaniel recruit Devon Lesniak (14.6 points, five assists) and 6-7 forward Rashad Blackwell (8.1 rebounds).

The Sun's pick // Gwynn Park

2A champion pick // Randallstown
Posted at 10:30 AM ET, 02/28/2008

Bozeman, Nickelberry Among Those at P.G. Title Game

Plenty of college coaches at last night's Prince George's County championship game to see fourth-ranked Laurel beat fifth-ranked Gwynn Park, 57-50. And plenty of players for them to see. Laurel center Will Alston had 18 points and six rebounds. Gwynn Park guard Harold Washington had 23 points and backcourt mate Sean Thomas added 10. All three are likely mid-level Division I players. Washington had perhaps the most impressive night, continually attacking the basket and showing an ability to get to the rim.

I didn't get a chance to take roll, but spotted after the game were Morgan State Coach Todd Bozeman and Hampton Coach Kevin Nickelberry, both of whom know the area as well as anyone. VMI and Mount St. Mary's also had coaches at the game. Nickelberry, of course, knows Laurel Coach Keith Coutreyer and Gwynn Park Coach Mike Glick from their time together at Columbia Union College in the early 1990s.

Also, spoke to Northwestern Coach Gerald Moore earlier this week, who said that Temple Coach Fran Dunphy is expected to attend the Wildcats' playoff game Saturday night at Bladensburg to scout forward Terrence Burke.

Posted at 9:28 AM ET, 02/20/2008

Good Thing Sutton Got Off to Good Start

Plenty of college coaches in attendance last night at Largo. Seton Hall Coach Bobby Gonzalez and assistants, Loyola Coach Jimmy Patsos, Maryland assistant Keith Booth and some folks from Boston College. But it was a quick night for the main attraction as Largo 6-11 center Maurice Sutton was ejected in the first quarter for throwing a punch. Sutton had been off to a great start and Largo Coach Lewis Howard said Sutton got caught retaliating. Regardless, never a good situation when a potential recruit can't make it through a full game for the coaches in the gym that night. That said, all indications are that Sutton once again proved his ability. Loyola's main interest is believed to be Gwynn Park guard Harold Washington, who scored a game-high 24 points in the 75-63 victory.

Yellow Jackets take unbeaten record into 2A regional

First-round playoff games are set for Friday, with quarterfinals taking place Tuesday and region semifinals set for March 6. Region finals will be next weekend.

2A South

Easily the talk of the 2A South has to be undefeated Gwynn Park (23-0). The Yellow Jackets are the No. 1 seed, but will have an interesting time trying to get back to its first state Final Four since 2004, when they lost to Douglass (Baltimore) in the state title game on a shot in the final seconds. The Yellow Jackets get a first-round bye and will host the winner of Saturday’s game between No. 8 Oakland Mills (6-14) and No. 9 Central (5-16).

Meanwhile, Fairmont Heights, which staggered at the end of the season to a 13-7 finish, earned the 2A South’s No. 4 seed. The defending region champion Hornets will face No. 13 Mount Hebron (3-17) on Friday.

If the Hornets win their first-round game, they will return to action Tuesday against the winner of Friday’s game between No. 5 Calvert (4-15) and Frederick Douglass (10-12).

If both the Yellow Jackets and Hornets advance beyond the second round, Gwynn Park will host Fairmont Heights in what would be the third meeting between the two teams.

Second-year Gwynn Park coach Mike Glick eagerly awaits the playoffs.

‘‘Basically, we’re excited we’re the No. 1 seed and we’re excited that we’ll have the opportunity to be able to host a lot of the rounds,” Glick said. ‘‘For us to matriculate through, we’ll have to beat one or two of the teams that we will have faced for the third time this season. The best thing I can say about my team this year is that it is one of the few teams that I’ve coached in over 20 years that has gotten better and better as the year has gone along.”

 4A South

The 4A South Region, composed entirely of county schools, has some interesting pairings that make some teams appear to be playing in different positions than their seeds would indicate.

Laurel (17-2) drew the 4A South’s top seed after losing just one County 4A League game. Henry A. Wise (17-5) had an impressive regular season and earned the 4A South’s No. 2 seed. Eleanor Roosevelt (14-5) has the third seed, and Bowie (15-7), with a strong late-season finish, captured the 4A South’s fourth and final seed. All seeded teams earned a first-round bye.

The second-round matchups may be the story of the 4A South tournament. Laurel will host the winner of a first-round game between No. 8 Oxon Hill (10-8) and No. 9 Charles H. Flowers (7-13). Meanwhile, on the same side of the bracket, Bowie will play a less-challenging opponent than Laurel when the Bulldogs host the winner of No. 5 High Point (2-16) and No. 12 Parkdale (2-18).

Second-seeded Wise will most likely face No. 7 DuVal (13-7), which plays No. 10 Suitland (4-18) in a rematch of the regular season finale. Roosevelt, on the other hand, will play host to the winner of the game between No. 6 Bladensburg (9-12) and No. 11 Northwestern (8-13).

3A South

Midway through the regular season, the Largo boys seemed a lock for a top seed in the 3A South Region, but stumbled late and finished 18-4. Nonetheless, Largo did earn the No. 3 seed and will face the winner of the game between No. 6 Crossland (10-10) and No. 11 Westlake (14-6). No. 7 Friendly (12-9) will host No. 10 Potomac (6-16) on Friday with the winner playing No. 2 Huntingtown (17-3). Last season, Largo went undefeated until being upended by Bethesda Chevy-Chase in the state semifinal.

1A South

The MPSSAA did something new this year for the Class 1A draw as the 1A West and the 1A South Regions were subdivided into sectionals.

In the nine-team 1A South, Surrattsville (7-12) and Forestville (6-13) will face one another in the South Sectional on Monday. The winner moves on to face the winner of Tuesday’s game between South Carroll and Glenelg.

E-mail Terron Hampton atthampton@gazette.net.