The Best of the Rest

State title contenders don’t always have to be ranked heading into the region and state playoffs. Here are a few dangerous teams heading into the home stretch as The Best of the Rest.

Class AAAAAA

Lambert's Connor Mannion is a Navy signee | Ty Freeman
Lambert’s Connor Mannion is a Navy signee | Ty Freeman

Lambert  (22-2, 17-0) – Region 6
Sixes are wild with the Longhorns. Lambert peaked at No. 6 in the poll in Week 6, but following a 1-2 showing at the Lake City Classic including a 73-37 drubbing from the hands of current No. 6 McEachern, the Horns dropped out and haven’t returned since. Those two losses have been Lambert’s only of the season. Playing in Region 6 hasn’t challenged Coach Scott Bracco’s team too much as they are still the favorite to go undefeated if they can slip past Johns Creek, who is having their best year ever. The Longhorns have the size and depth to make a run in the state tournament. 6-foot-7 forwards Connor Mannion (Navy) and Ross Morkem (North Georgia) pose problems inside and out for opponents while Andrew Melms, Tanner Hall and Austin Deckard are all experienced guards

 

gladiators_G_logo_1442954597002_233944_ver1.0Johns Creek (22-2, 16-1) – Region 6
Coach Pete Goggin has guided the Gladiators to their best season in school history. Johns Creek doesn’t have the size inside like Lambert, but they can match them with their perimeter play. Mark Lancaster (15.2 ppg), Mason Henkel (12.3 ppg, 6.1 rpg) and Ian Joseph (10 ppg, 5.1 rpg) form a steady trio on offense. They will have a chance to earn a signature win over rival Lambert this Friday. In their first meeting the Gladiators fell 64-53. Johns Creek’s only other loss came to No. 8 Brookwood 65-62 in overtime.

TeShaun Hightower | Photo By Ty Freeman
TeShaun Hightower | Photo By Ty Freeman

Collins Hill (21-3, 10-3) – Region 7
The Eagles peaked at No. 5 in Week 2 and have strung together an impressive record while battling adversity. Injuries and sickness has riddled the team but Coach Ty Baumgardner has kept them in position to grab a top seed out of Region 7, which has suffered a bit of a down year compared to how Region 8 has shaped up. No. 1 Norcross beat the Eagles 93-72 in December but escaped by just two, 50-48 on Jan. 19. A 63-57 loss to Duluth is Collins Hill’s only other loss. The Eagles will likely find themselves in the top ten entering region tournament play barring a loss to Peachtree Ridge. New Orleans-commit AJ Cheeseman is a handful inside while TeShaun Hightower has come aboard and established himself as one of Gwinnett’s most explosive scorers. Coach Baumgardner has been able to build a lot of depth in part to all the injuries they have faced.

Austin Dukes, Coach Pierce, Alphonso Willis, Tre Sconiers | Photo By Ty Freeman
Austin Dukes, Coach Pierce, Alphonso Willis, Tre Sconiers | Photo By Ty Freeman

Grayson (18-6, 9-6) – Region 8
Grayson climbed to No. 9 in Week 8 before the gauntlet known as Region 8 hit them. Coach Geoffrey Pierce has playmaking senior guards in Alphonso Willis and Austin Dukes, both averaging over 17 points per game. Tre Sconiers is a strong force inside, hustling on the glass averaging over eight points and eight rebounds a night. Freshman Kenyon Jackson has provided a sometimes dominant presence in the paint, posting close to 10 rebounds and four blocks per game.

Al Durham | Photo By Ty Freeman
Al Durham | Photo By Ty Freeman

Berkmar (17-7, 12-3) – Region 8
Don’t look now, but the Patriots have quietly snuck their way to the top of one the state’s most competitive regions. Five-straight wins have put Berkmar in a position to steal the No. 1 seed heading into the region tournament. Friday night’s showdown at No. 10 Shiloh will determine the regular season champion. After a pedestrian 3-3 start, Coach Greg Phillips’ team has figured things out and has passed almost every stiff test presented. Wins over Grayson, 3ANo. 5 Jenkins, Dacula 2x and Brookwood are all resume boosters. Indiana-commit Al Durham is flanked by Jay Estime and Zach Cooks. Estime battled a nagging injury early in the year while Cooks was waiting to become eligible. The two guards along with a slew of other good ones such as Lane Foster, Josh Faulkner and Leroy Jones IV have the Patriots peaking at the right time.

Kevon Tucker | Photo By Ty Freeman
Kevon Tucker | Photo By Ty Freeman

Dacula (18-6, 11-4) – Region 8
The Falcons have bounced between the No. 8 and No. 9 spot in the top ten all year and have proven they can score with anyone in the state between the dynamic duo of Derek St. Hilaire and Kevon Tucker (Wofford), but they have also proven that if their shots aren’t falling they can get run out of the gym. After scoring a huge 66-57 win at home against No. 10 Shiloh on Jan.16, ten days later the Generals throttled the Falcons at home, 74-44. On Tuesday they dropped to Berkmar 66-46, but rebounded on Wednesday with a 54-39 win at No. 8 Brookwood, stopping the red-hot Broncos. If Demari Edwards, Juwan White and Shayne Buckingham can provide consistent sparks, the Falcons can make a nice run in the tournament.

IMG_8158Milton (16-7, 13-2) – Region 5
Milton opened the year ranked No. 5 in the state after a shuffling of the roster brought three transfers into the starting lineup, giving Coach Matt Kramer on paper potentially one of the best in the state, but things haven’t worked out. The size is there with 6-foot-8 Chris Lewis (Harvard) and move-in Kyrin Galloway. Lewis missed a couple games due to a leg injury early in the year and missed the Lake City Classic, some of Milton’s worst showings which plummeted them out of the rankings. After a 74-68 loss to 5A No. 3 McIntosh, the Eagles laid an egg getting embarrassed by Lambert 93-67 and lost to 1A No. 2 North Cobb Christian 70-59, who was reeling without their starting point guard, losing three in a row before beating Milton. The talent is there for the Eagles to get hot and they have proven they can hang with No. 2 Wheeler, losing by 11 and four points, they just need to get over the hump and ride Alex O’Connell’s sweet stroke.

Class AAAAA

Rico Smith | Photo By Kevin Eckleberry | LaGrange Daily News
Rico Smith | Photo By Kevin Eckleberry | LaGrange Daily News

LaGrange (19-5, 8-3) – Region 1
In Week 5 the Grangers were ranked No. 8, but by Week 7 they fell out. LaGrange is extremely dangerous if both Rico Smith and Laperion Perry get going. Smith was an All-State performer a year ago and is first-year head coach Mark Veal’s go-to guy. Mike Hardy, Qua Epps and Alex Dantzler also contribute from the perimeter while Bryan Fanning and Kenan Gray can do damage on the low block at 6-foot-6. Region 1 has been very competitive this year. With Northside-Columbus remaining on the schedule, a win could either propel them to the No. 1 seed or potentially drop them down to the third or fourth.

Moses Williams | Photo By Jon-Michael Sullivan | Augusta Chronicle
Moses Williams | Photo By Jon-Michael Sullivan | Augusta Chronicle

Richmond Academy (18-5, 9-1) – Region 2
The addition of Madison Williams (Illinois State) has helped the Musketeers become a contender in AAAAA. Six players score over seven points per game led by Williams’ 11.5 per. Sophomore guard Dantavian Stephens will be a player to keep an eye on over the next two seasons. Two heartbreaking losses to 3A No. 4 Laney by single digits are a strong indicator that the Musketeers can be a force in the state playoffs. Their balanced attack will be important as they will likely run into No. 8 Warner Robins come Region 2 tournament time.

IMG_8417
Byron Abrams guarding Cedar Shoals’ Jerrick Mitchell

Heritage-Conyers (17-6, 9-4) – Region 8
Region 8 has transformed into the deepest region in the state with at least one good team going to see their season end short in the region tournament. Heritage-Conyers was ranked No. 5 in Week 5, but a four game swoon saw the Patriots tumble out of the top ten. Coach Vernon Denmark’s team remains scary if they regain their form. Wins over 1A No. 3 Southwest Atlanta Christian, Berkmar, 2A No. 10 Macon County and Duluth were no fluke. Junior Jordan Thomas can stroke from deep and leads the team in scoring at 14.2 points. Isaiah Banks and Byron Abrams are both versatile players while Charles Moore is the leader at point guard averaging 11.5 points, 4.4 rebounds and 4.9 assists.

IMG_7664Apalachee (17-5, 9-4) – Region 8
Oh Kamar Baldwin. The Butler signee has averaged just a shade under 29 points, close to 12 rebounds, five assists and four steals per game, making him one of the most elite players in the state and a legitimate Mr. Basketball candidate. The Wildcats haven’t cracked the rankings this year, but they are prime to upset someone in the region tournament and grab better than a No. 4 seed. Derek Miller, a 6-foot-6 sophomore, has emerged as an important post presence. Jabari Hill has played well alongside Baldwin as well and has proven to be a reliable scorer.

Class AAAA

AJ Jones | Photo By Melinda Pease | Walton Tribune
AJ Jones | Photo By Melinda Pease | Walton Tribune

Walnut Grove (22-3, 8-2) – Region 4
After reaching No. 6 in Week 7, the Warriors finished the regular season out with a bang, beating No. 5 Eagle’s Landing 64-59 before drilling Hampton 67-41. Since losing back-to-back games to Eagle’s Landing and Henry County in mid-January, the Warriors have won five-straight. Seniors have come up big for Walnut Grove and Coach Ryan Terry. AJ Jones and Faizon Jackson both average over 13 points per game while Deandre Durham and Jatahj Malcom both can provide a spark when needed.

CS5Ym_CWsAQAvAMSandy Creek (17-6, 7-2) – Region 5
The Patriots opened the year ranked fifth and played up to their ranking for the beginning of the season, but have since dropped out. Their only two region losses came to Carrollton and Whitewater by two points apiece. Other losses have come to 5A No. 3 McIntosh 69-51 and No. 6 Grady, 67-66. Sandy Creek also has two out-of-state loses. Looking at the level of competition they have played, the Patriots should be ready to hone in and take care of the Region 5 tournament. The pieces are in place. Gardner-Webb signee Christian Turner playing point guard averaging 14.1 points, 6.0 rebounds, 6.3 assists and 3.6 steals. Elias Harden averages 21.3 points as a 6-foot-6 wing and Keith Heard II and Evan Jester are shot blocking and rebounding machines.

Tyree Crump
Tyree Crump

Bainbridge (17-7, 11-3) – Region 1
The Bearcats opened at No. 4 in the poll before losses hindered their progress and knocked them out. Looking back, Bainbridge’s losses have come to quality opponents. 2A’s No. 1 Thomasville 2x and No. 2 Seminole County have handed Bainbridge three losses, but the Bearcats were able to defeat the defending 2A state champs in the rematch, 82-69. Other losses have come to No. 8 Monroe, Westover, Americus-Sumter and Chipley (FL). UGA signee Tyree Crump is pouring in 21.8 points per game to power the ‘Cats. Both Trevon Shaw and DeVonte Jones have seen their scoring dip in their senior seasons, but are still viable and dangerous options.

Class AAA

Khavon Moore | Photo By HoopSeen
Khavon Moore | Photo By HoopSeen

Westside-Macon (19-5, 13-2) – Region 2
Khavon Moore leads the Seminoles. The 6-foot-8 sophomore averages 21.3 points, 10.6 rebounds, 3.8 assists, 2.8 steals and 2.8 blocks. The key for Coach Josh Grube will be to find consistent threats around him. Junior Samone Reed averages 11.3 points with guards Ben Elder (9.9) and Gerimie Mitchell (7.5) rounding out Westside’s top options. Moore’s ability to take over games makes the Seminoles and intriguing team come playoff time. The supporting cast will need to play well if they want to make a run in state.

Justin Cave
Justin Cave

Islands (18-6, 10-3) – Region 1
It has been a sensational turnaround season for the Sharks. They will play in their first ever state tournament game unless disaster strikes. Defending state champ No. 5 Jenkins humbled the Sharks 91-65 on Jan. 5, but this Tuesday Islands scored its biggest win in school history, edging the Warriors 61-59. Three juniors combined for 48 points led by Justin Cave’s 22. The 1,000-point scorer is averaging 21.5 points per game. Hugh Durham and freshman Trae Broadnax both score over 12 points a night. Size could be an issue in the state tournament with Justin Cutter, their best interior player, standing 6-foot-3.

Tyler Phillips | Photo By Matt Hamilton | The Daily Citizen
Tyler Phillips | Photo By Matt Hamilton | The Daily Citizen

Coahulla Creek (19-5, 12-3) – Region 6
The only team to challenge undefeated No. 3 Calhoun? The Coahulla Creek Colts. After 60-52 loss earlier in the year, the Colts pushed the Yellow Jackets to the brink before bowing out 65-58 in overtime. Alex Fisher went off for 26 points and 10 rebounds to lead the charge. They aren’t the tallest, fastest, or strongest team, but Coach Matthew Queener gets every ounce of production out of every single player. Patience on offense leads to open looks and solid defense leads to eliminating second chance points. The Colts can also get hot from deep, as Fisher hit four three-pointers in the overtime loss. JR Laird finished with 15 points and showed he can drive the lane and knock down open threes. If teams overlook the Colts in the playoffs, they will be in deep trouble. Coahulla Creek can control tempo and take away the fastbreak for teams who like to run.

Class AA

Temple (18-3, 7-1) – Region 5
The Tigers need to beat Manchester on Friday to gain a share of first place in the region and potentially steal the No. 1 seed away from the Blue Devils on the final weekend. Peyton Applegate is a legit 6-foot-7, 245-pound center that can shoot it from outside and bang inside for baskets. He will be the key to solving the Blue Devil puzzle. They lost to Manchester 65-62 on Jan. 19.

Wendell Carter Jr.
Wendell Carter Jr.

Pace Academy (13-10, 11-2) – Region 6
The Knights started the season at a woeful 2-8 thanks to playing a national schedule. Things have gotten better for the Knights, the preseason No. 2, but a loss to No. 4 Lovett in overtime 66-63, dropped Pace out. Expectations have been high for Pace after a 27-3 season and a 15-0 region record. With 6-foot-8 Isaiah Kelly moving in to play inside with 6-foot-10 Wendell Carter Jr., the No. 1 ranked junior in the nation, the Knights’ struggles this year have been unforeseen. Penn-commit Zack Kaminsky is still in the mix standing 6-foot-6 as a three-man, but for some reason Coach Demetrius Smith’s group hasn’t dominated like they did last year. If they are able to finally piece things together, it should come as no surprise if the Knights are tipping off in Macon for the state championship.

6da42435-84c3-4200-8e1d-9f7403344b2e_3aa19fdd-4268-4b67-b17a-614c002f0c16_originalHoly Innocents’ (15-7, 6-6) – Region 6
Injuries have derailed the Golden Bears, but don’t count them out just yet. When everything was clicking and everyone was healthy in Week 7 the Bears peaked at No. 4 in the state. Jules Erving has improved into a versatile forward for Coach Terry Kelly. Size inside has been a strength, but that is where the injury bug has bitten Holy Innocents’ the most. Two 6-foot-7 centers have traded missing action. Brent Duncan has been sidelined for nearly half the season and is continuing to work his way back into game form. Richard Surdykowski stepped up in his absence, but a late stress fracture in his foot was too much to overcome and has recently cut his junior season short. If Duncan can get healthy and the Golden Bears can hit their stride, they will be an interesting team to watch in the state tournament, if they are able to grab a top four seed out of the muddled Region 6 featuring Pace Academy, GAC, No. 4 Lovett and Wesleyan.

Class A

Photo By Pat Molnar
Photo By Pat Molnar

Paideia (12-12, 7-3) – Region 5
Three-straight losses have sunk the Pythons, all three coming to ranked teams. Big men Addison Owen and Robbie Holley stand 6-foot-6 and 6-foot-7. Owen along with junior guard Solomon Burt-Murray are among the team’s top scoring options. Paideia’s biggest win came early in the season against No. 10 Tattnall Square Academy, 54-35. The Pythons are still looking for a signature win and are inching closer towards getting one. According to the GHSA Power Ratings, they might need a couple to sneak into the state playoffs, ranking No. 19 at last check.

Photo By krtigers.org
Photo By krtigers.org

King’s Ridge (13-9, 7-5) – Region 6
The Tigers trump Paideia with four-straight losses after a solid start to the year. 7-foot behemoth Tolu Jacobs is finally eligible, but hasn’t provided the impact expected from a player of his size. Instead King’s Ridge has taken it on the chin from some of the Class A-Private’s best, losing to No. 5 Whitefield Academy 60-47, No. 4 St. Francis 82-55, No. 1 Greenforest 74-45 and Walker 48-41. If Coach Scepter Brownlee can get the Tigers back on track with Ellis Merriweather leading the charge, they could upset a team or two in the state playoffs, but right now they have to worry about getting there as they rank 13th in the Power Ratings, before their slide.

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Hawkinsville (14-8, 9-6)– Region 4
Junior CJ Smith leads Hawkinsville in scoring at over 17 points and five rebounds per game. The Red Devils peaked at No. 4 in Class A-Public in Week 7, but suffered a three game losing streak that knocked them out. Wins at No. 9 St. Anne-Pacelli and Perry are Hawkinsville’s biggest wins. Region 4 has proven to be tough with Pacelli, No. 7 Central-Talbotton and No. 8 Taylor County all on the schedule.

No. 3 Calhoun uses overtime to stay undefeated

No. 3 Calhoun 65, Coahulla Creek 58 OT

It took an extra period, but No. 3 Calhoun (22-0, 15-0) was able to stay undefeated on Tuesday night against Coahulla Creek (19-5, 12-3), slipping past the Colts 65-58.

Winning has been synonymous with Calhoun, the AAA powerhouse, in nearly every sport. Known for its football program, the Yellow Jackets have shown sting ever since Coach Vince Layson slid over a couple seats to head coach. Since his arrival in 2012-13, Layson has compiled an 88-13 record and has dominated inside the region at 56-5.

Coahulla Creek, a burgeoning new program, is in search of the success Calhoun has had. Since opening in 2011-12, the Colts have improved their win total each year under Coach Matthew Queener and hold an all-time record of 44-65.

The Colts challenged the Jackets back on Jan. 2, falling 60-52, Calhoun’s only single-digit win. Early on Tuesday it looked as if Calhoun would breeze past the Colts as Coahulla Creek missed three wide open layups to start the game which could have been a sign for things to come, but Calhoun wasn’t able to bury them.

At the end of one, it was 17-15 in favor of the host Yellow Jackets. Malik Lawrence came away with a late steal and pitch ahead to Kaelan Riley for a layup before the buzzer to give Calhoun the lead.

The Yellow Jackets pushed the lead out to 26-15 using an 11-0 run before JR Laird hit an And-1 with 4:18 left in the second quarter. Colts leading scorer Alex Fisher scored seven points in the first quarter, but was held to two in the second as Calhoun surged ahead.

Calhoun carried a 32-25 halftime advantage into the second half before Fisher caught fire.

The senior poured in 10 of his game-high 26 points in the third and cut the Colt deficit to 46-44 entering the fourth quarter.

Fisher quickly drilled his fourth three-pointer of the game with 7:20 remaining to give Coahulla Creek its first lead of the second half. Back and forth the two teams went down the stretch, battling each other and the poor officiating. Missed calls, make up calls and general inconsistency from the men in stripes plagued the game but both teams persevered.

Chapin Rierson gave Calhoun the lead back at the 4:20 mark following a rebound and a coast-to-coast And-1 lay in to make it 52-51. It seemed like the Yellow Jackets regained control after Ray Reeves used his body to shield a defender for a layup with 3:34 left. Two minutes later Riley, the Jackets’ leading scorer, knocked the ball off a Colt’s leg. It ended up in the hands of Jireh Wilson, who drove the length of the court to score two of his 15 points, making it 56-51 with 1:44 left.

Coahulla Creek would not go away however. Out of a timeout, Caleb Lewis hit JR Laird after he slipped into the corner for three, closing the lead to 56-54 with 1:31 to play.

Riley began chewing up clock up top with 45 seconds when it looked like the Colts were about to foul as a defender ran at him. Riley bobbled the ball but regained possession and found Rierson open down low. As Rierson went up for the easy two, Fisher came out of nowhere to pin his shot on the backboard, giving the ball back to the Colts with 29.9 seconds.

Lewis drove to the hoop and threw up a contested shot that didn’t drop. Malik Lawrence gathered the rebound, got fouled and went to the line for a 1-and-1. Lawrence sank the first attempt, but his second shot rimmed out. Fisher took the ball up the court and drove the lane, connecting on a basket plus the foul, tying the game at 57 after the free throw with 13.7 ticks left.

Calhoun’s final possession resulted in Wilson driving and dishing to an open Reeves up top for three. His shot hit the back iron and bounced into Riley’s hands whose putback tantalizingly fell short rolling off the rim sending the game into overtime tied at 57.

A crucial momentum changing play happened half way through the extra period. At the 2:37 mark Kaelan Riley picked the pocket of a Colt and charged down the floor. He took a look over his left shoulder to see a man close behind, but not close enough to make a play on the ball. As Riley went to gather himself for what looked like a surefire dunk his foot slipped egregiously. Instead of the travel being called, Coahulla Creek was whistled for the foul.

Riley knocked down his first free throw but missed the second. Wilson came up with the rebound before more controversy ensued. One referee called a jump ball while the other whistled a foul. The crew met and decided to keep the foul call, sending Wilson to the line and in the process fouling out Colt point guard Caleb Lewis.

Up 60-58 with 1:12 remaining, Coach Layson dialed up the play of the night off of the inbound underneath the basket. Wilson received the ball on a rotation after the initial pass in and riffled a pass inside to a wide open Riley for an And-1 that hung on the rim and dropped in, breaking the hearts of Coahulla Creek as the lead grew to 63-58 with 59.2 seconds left putting the game out of reach.

My Take: One of the best games of the season took place in Calhoun, Georgia last night. I wasn’t sure what to expect heading into the game. Calhoun is a machine, crushing everyone while Coahulla Creek has been one of the state’s most pleasant surprises. The Colts are the opposite of an “airport team”. When they step off the plane and step onto the court, they don’t look like an imposing team, but boy do they know how to play. Calhoun had the size, strength and athletic advantage boasting all its football stars but they were unable to shake the Colts. Coach Matthew Queener used a patient and methodical offense to control the tempo. Dribble handoffs up top lulled the Yellow Jackets to sleep before either Alex Fisher, JR Laird or Tyler Phillips would attack. The Colts started off slow in the first quarter, missing three quick layups, but they battled for second chances led by Phillips’ 13 rebounds. Coahulla hit six threes on the night and its unquestioned leader was Fisher. The senior was unconscious down the stretch making every big play needed, whether it be to attack the rim or pull up off the dribble for three. He finished with 26 points, 10 rebounds and four blocks.

As well as Fisher played however, Calhoun always had an answer. The winning culture shone through as the Yellow Jackets battled through adversity and relied on their upperclassmen to close the game out. Kaelan Riley, Jireh Wilson, Malik Lawrence and Chapin Rierson combined for 58 points. Riley was relentless inside with 16 points and 13 rebounds while Wilson and Lawrence did damage on the perimeter. Wilson scored 15 points and dished out five assists and Lawrence scored 15. Rierson didn’t have his best game, struggling to finish inside but still made plays when his team counted on him the most, none bigger than when he showed off his versatility grabbing a rebound and taking it all the way to the hole for an And-1. Calhoun will have a target on its back going into the region and more importantly state tournament, especially if they are able to enter unblemished. Whoever draws Coahulla Creek will have their hands full if they don’t take the Colts seriously. The veteran group consisting of six seniors and four juniors play very hard for Coach Queener. With a strong core of guards in Caleb Lewis, Alex Fisher and JR Laird the Colts have a chance to sneak up on teams and will likely get one last crack at Calhoun in the Region 6 championship if everything plays out chalk.

Top Performers
Calhoun
Kaelan Riley – 16 points, 13 rebounds, 1 assist, 4 steals, 1 block
Jireh Wilson – 15 points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 steals, 1 block
Malik Lawrence – 15 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 1 block
Chapin Rierson – 12 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 3 blocks
Ray Reeves – 6 points, 1 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal

Coahulla Creek
Alex Fisher – 26 points, 10 rebounds, 2 assists, 3 steals, 4 blocks
JR Laird – 15 points, 4 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals
Tyler Phillips – 8 points, 13 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 bock
Caleb Lewis – 4 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 block

Where are they now? (February update)

A monthly check up on how some of last season’s top GHSA players are faring as freshmen at their respective D-1 schools:

Class AAAAAA

Jaylen Brown (Wheeler to Cal)
15.8 ppg, 5.5 rpg, 1.9 apg, 46.4 FG%

Shembari Phillips (Wheeler to Tennessee)
3.2 ppg, 1.0 rpg

Derek Ogbeide (Pebblebrook to UGA)
3.6 ppg, 4.4 rpg

Ty Hudson (Pebblebrook to Clemson)
2.0 ppg

Trhae Mitchell (Pebblebrook to South Alabama)
N/A

Bryce Brown (Tucker to Auburn)
8.7 ppg, 35.1 FG%

Devontae Cacok (Alpharetta to UNC-Wilmington)
4.2 ppg, 2.8 rpg, 66.7 FG%

Marcus Sheffield (Chattahoochee to Stanford)
7.0 ppg, 2.7 rpg

Ricky Madison (Norcross to High Point)
3.5 ppg, 2.1 rpg

Class AAAAA

Lamont West (Miller Grove to West Virginia)
N/A

Class AAAA

Tracy Hector (Jonesboro to Kennesaw State)
1.9 ppg, 2.4 rpg, 1.5 apg

Austin Donaldson (Jonesboro to Georgia State)
10 minutes

Malik Benlevi (Jenkins to Georgia State)
2.1 ppg, 1.1 rpg

Montae Glenn (Carrollton to Georgia Southern)
5.4 ppg, 4.6 rpg, 60% FG

Ty Cockfield (Johnson-Gainesville to Stetson)
7.1 ppg, 0.9 apg, 1.9 rpg

Class AAA

Tookie Brown (Morgan County to Georgia Southern)
17.5 ppg, 3.0 rpg, 3.3 apg, 2.0 spg

Austin Venable (Banks County to Presbyterian)
3.9 ppg, 2.0 rpg, 48.5% FG

Antwan Maxwell (Johnson-Savannah to Charleston Southern)
N/A

Class AA

Reggie Reid (Harlem to FGCU)
4.0 ppg, 1.7 rpg, 3.7 apg, 0.7 spg, 34.8% FG

Trevon Scott (McIntosh County Academy to Cincinnati)
N/A

Eric Jamison (GAC to Gardner-Webb)
N/A

Class A

Malik Beasley (St. Francis to FSU)
17.5 ppg, 5.6 rpg, 1.3 apg, 1.0 spg, 51.8 FG%, 41.9 3PT%

Kaiser Gates (St. Francis to Xavier)
2.9 ppg, 2.5 rpg

Josh Coleman (St. Francis to Coastal Carolina)
27 minutes

‘Turtle’ Jackson (Athens Christian to UGA)
1.5 ppg, 0.7 rpg, 0.8 apg

Justin Ravenel (Greenforest to Florida A&M)
8.3 ppg, 2.6 rpg

Courtney Alexander (Whitefield Academy to Tennessee Tech)
2.0 ppg, 3.0 rpg, 50 FG%

Trey Kalina (North Cobb Christian to UTC)
N/A

Week 11 Rankings

Class AAAAAA

  1. Norcross (20-2)
  2. Wheeler (17-5)
  3. Pebblebrook (16-7)
  4. Tift County (21-2)
  5. Westlake (16-4)
  6. McEachern (19-3)
  7. Newton (20-3)
  8. Brookwood (16-6)
  9. Campbell (16-5)
  10. Shiloh (16-5)

 Class AAAAA

  1. Miller Grove (21-2)
  2. Allatoona (23-0)
  3. McIntosh (19-2)
  4. Gainesville (16-4)
  5. Cedar Shoals (22-2)
  6. Riverwood (23-1)
  7. South Paulding (20-3)
  8. Warner Robins (15-2)
  9. Effingham County (20-3)
  10. Southwest DeKalb (20-4)

 Class AAAA

  1. Jonesboro (20-3)
  2. Lithonia (18-4)
  3. Liberty County (18-1)
  4. St. Pius (19-4)
  5. Eagle’s Landing (22-1)
  6. Grady (19-3)
  7. Upson-Lee (19-3)
  8. Monroe (16-5)
  9. Thomson (16-4)
  10. Worth County (17-4)

 Class AAA

  1. Morgan County (18-4)
  2. South Atlanta (19-4)
  3. Calhoun (21-0)
  4. Laney (20-2)
  5. Jenkins (19-3)
  6. Central-Macon (21-2)
  7. Westminster (19-2)
  8. Callaway (14-3)
  9. Banks County (21-2)
  10. Johnson-Savannah (17-5)

Class AA

  1. Thomasville (21-1)
  2. Seminole County (18-4)
  3. Crawford County (19-2)
  4. Lovett (16-4)
  5. Vidalia (21-3)
  6. Swainsboro (14-7)
  7. Chattooga (21-1)
  8. Dublin (19-4)
  9. Early County (17-5)
  10. Macon County (16-5)

Class A-Private

  1. Greenforest (20-2)
  2. North Cobb Christian (17-3)
  3. SWAC (14-8)
  4. St. Francis (15-7)
  5. Whitefield Academy (14-8)
  6. Our Lady of Mercy (17-3)
  7. Lakeview Academy (19-4)
  8. Stratford Academy (15-5)
  9. St. Anne-Pacelli (14-8)
  10. Tattnall Square Academy (14-7)

Class A-Public

  1. Wilkinson County (16-5)
  2. Turner County (18-5)
  3. Calhoun County (14-8)
  4. Treutlen (19-2)
  5. Hancock Central (16-5)
  6. Lincoln County (14-5)
  7. Central-Talbotton (16-8)
  8. Taylor County (15-7)
  9. Randolph-Clay (15-8)
  10. Quitman County (16-8)

 Welcome to February. The cold month of January heated up during its final week seeing a multitude of upsets that has given the rankings its most movement over the entire season. Class AAAAAA saw two powers take major hits. Westlake took over the No. 1 ranking from Shiloh back in Week 2 and held serve for eight weeks before falling to No. 5 this week after an 81-80 loss at home to new No. 9 Campbell on Tuesday and a 59-57 loss at Douglas County (13-9) on Friday. The Spartans have won five-straight now in Region 3, highlighted by wins over Westlake, Douglas County 72-61 and Langston Hughes, 79-74. The aforementioned Shiloh saw its struggles continue, dropping to No. 10 after a 62-59 loss to Brookwood on Friday, who debuts in the polls at No. 8. The Generals had lost two in a row before rebounding on Tuesday with a 74-44 throttling of Dacula (17-5), who started their downward spiral the week before. Shiloh looked back on track after the bounce back win, but the Broncos ambushed them. The Generals showed resilience on Saturday beating Grayson (17-5) 61-47. As Shiloh has sank in the ranking, they have dragged down Grayson and Dacula with them, knocking last week’s No. 10 and No. 9 teams out of the top ten.

No. 8 Brookwood earned its signature win to enter the poll on Friday. It has been a long time coming for Coach Daniel Bowles. From a 5-win season in 2011-12, Bowles advanced the team to 16-10 the next year, but fell on hard times, going 12-14 in 2013-14 and 7-19 last season. The Broncos finished second to last in Region 8 last year but now find themselves in a log jam for fourth place. The resume has been impressive for Brookwood. Wins have come over Berkmar (14-7), White County (16-7), Johns Creek (21-2), GAC (14-9), Heritage-Conyers (17-5), Grayson (17-5) and now No. 10 Shiloh (16-5). Micah Kinsey and Bubba Parham have been a lethal 1-2 punch in the backcourt. Kinsey, an unsigned senior point guard, is as true a leader as they come averaging 11.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, 7.6 assists and 4.5 steals. Parham leads the team in scoring from his two-guard spot averaging 16.3 points.

No. 7 Newton drops two spots after a tough loss to rival Rockdale County (12-10) on Senior Night, 52-50. The Rams had taken first-place in Region 2 momentarily after beating Tucker (18-5) on Wednesday, 58-48. Pebblebrook leaps three spots to No. 3 and in the process pass No. 4 Tift County, who doesn’t climb the top five even after two Westlake losses. The Falcons have been playing their best basketball of the season and received some scoring punch from someone other than Collin Sexton and Jared Harper, in Dwight Murray. The sophomore guard scored 18 points in a 72-48 win over Langston Hughes. Pebblebrook leaps No. 4 Tift County based upon strength of schedule and more importantly, Preston Horne, the Blue Devils’ leading scorer, being out for the remainder of the season with an ACL injury. Pebblebrook has a chance to cement itself among the top five, getting a rematch at Westlake on Tuesday, a game they lost 76-70 at home earlier in the year.

On the precipice of cracking the top ten remain Lambert (21-2), Johns Creek and Collins Hill (20-3). The same goes for Lambert and Johns Creek as it does with Tift County. The Longhorns and Gladiators have complied great records and will be a legitimate No. 1 and No. 2 pair out of Region 6, but the region is weak and doesn’t stack up to the likes of Region 3, 7 and 8, which has put six teams in the top ten (No. 1 Norcross, No. 3 Pebblebrook, No. 5 Westlake, No. 8 Brookwood, No. 9 Campbell, No. 10 Shiloh). Both teams are both still in search of their key signature win.

The only change in Class AAAAA came between the bottom two spots. No. 9 Effingham County moves up a spot over No. 10 Southwest DeKalb. The Rebels have passed every test presented to them in Region 3, with their latest A+ grade coming against Statesboro (17-6) last week, scoring a 51-35 win on the road. No. 10 Southwest DeKalb lost at home against No. 1 Miller Grove in front of a capacity crowd on Tuesday, 53-45. McDonalds All-American and UConn signee Alterique Gilbert scored a game-high 17 points to fend off a wild Panther rally, scoring nine of the Wolverines’ 10 fourth quarter points. No. 5 Cedar Shoals and No. 8 Warner Robins both have challenges coming up. The Jaguars host Heritage-Conyers (17-5) on Tuesday in a rematch of a 54-51 victory which saw Cedar Shoals lead for only the last 6:06 of the game to earn the Region 8 road win. The Demons visit Jones County (14-9) and potent scorer Devin Wooten. The senior guard pours in 25.6 points per game.

Region 6-AAAA was won on Friday night as No. 2 Lithonia used an 11-3 run in the third quarter to pull away from No. 4 St. Pius and land a 56-48 win over the Golden Lions on Senior Night. UT-Chattanooga signee Rodney Chatman went off for a game-high 24 points and grabbed six rebounds in the region clinching win. Kerney Lane posted 19 points and seven rebounds in the loss. No. 3 Liberty County moves up two spots following a season sweep of No. 9 Thomson, 80-72 on the road.  Grady tumbles two more spots to No. 6 after a 67-62 loss at home to Lithonia on Tuesday. The Knights weren’t at their best later in the week, but they still managed to pull out a 56-52 overtime win against Columbia. Sandy Creek (15-6) lasted just one week in the top ten after resurfacing. The Patriots lost 58-56 to Carrollton on Friday but quickly turned around and beat Fayette County 76-64. In for Sandy Creek is No. 8 Monroe, their second time in the poll. The Tornadoes get the nod over 17-7 Bainbridge. On Jan. 23, Monroe beat the Bearcats 65-52. UGA signee Tyree Crump was held to 8 points on 1-of-8 shooting. Emeshaun Offord leads Monroe in scoring and poured in 23 points in the win. The Bearcats are in consideration to make the top ten after drilling No. 10 Worth County 93-79 last week. Crump shook off his prior bad shooting performance and dropped in 45 points. No. 7 Upson-Lee ran its win streak up to 14 games with a 62-61 edging of Westside-Macon on the road. No. 1 Jonesboro beat Pike County 116-14; a 102-point win. It’s not the first time Coach Daniel Maehlman has run the score up on the lowly Pirates. They drilled them 80-19 on Jan. 15.

No movement was seen in AAA. No. 2 South Atlanta survived a 36-point fourth quarter from Jackson-Atlanta on Tuesday to win 72-71 on the road. No. 3 Calhoun faces its last test of the season before entering the state tournament, welcoming 19-4 Coahulla Creek on Tuesday. The Colts lost by just eight in their previous meeting, 60-52. Jireh Wilson scored 31 points to lift the Yellow Jackets. Caleb Lewis and Alex Fisher will need monster games in order to upset Calhoun. Elsewhere, No. 6 Central-Macon survived Spencer (7-16) for their 14th straight win, 73-69. No. 7 Westminster puts its 18-game winning streak on the line against rival Blessed Trinity (11-11) this Tuesday. No. 9 Banks County got its revenge against North Hall. The Leopards won 62-47 at North Hall following a 67-66 loss on Dec. 21.

And then there was won. Lovett moves up two spots to No. 4 in AA and in the process kicks Pace Academy (11-10) out of the ranking after holding the No. 4 spot, with a 66-63 win in overtime against the Knights. Crawford Schwieger hit a three at the buzzer to send the game to overtime for the Lions. Henry Richardson torched the Knights from deep, hitting 6-of-9 threes for 23 points. Ryan Greer added 14 points, six rebounds and seven assists while Schwieger netted 12 points in the statement victory. Wendell Carter Jr. had 24 points and Isaiah Kelly 17 in the loss. Pace’s roller coaster of a season now sees them out of the top ten late in the year. They have a respectable Region 6 record at 9-2, but the region as a whole has been up-and-down for various reasons. At points in the season, four teams filled the top ten, but now just Lovett remains. Holy Innocents’ (15-6) drops from No. 9 to unranked following a 63-46 loss at Pace. The Golden Bears have been riddled with injuries. Brent Duncan, the team’s top low post option at 6-foot-7, has missed half the season with an injury. Back up 6-foot-7 center Richard Surdykowski played exceptionally well, but a stress fracture in his foot has cut his junior season short. For GAC (14-9, 9-3), Garrett Covington a Gwinnett Daily Post Super Six selection has left in the middle of the season. Brian Coffey, a recent North Florida-commit, is gone as well leaving first-year Head Coach David Eaton’s team in shambles.

Outside of Region 6’s turmoil, Region 1 features a rematch of one of the best games of the year and possibly a future state championship matchup between No. 1 Thomasville and No. 2 Seminole County. The defending state champion Indians took down the bigger Bulldogs on Jan. 9 at home, 71-65. Thomasville has since regained the No. 1 ranking in the state and will try to hold it for good if they are able to slow down Jordan Harris (UGA) and Anfernee King. No. 6 Swainsboro moves up four spots and has proven that it is more dangerous than its modest record suggests. The Tigers drilled No. 8 Dublin 75-61. No. 9 Early County and No. 10 Macon County both re-enter the top ten after Pace and Holy Innocents’ fall out.

In a legit battle of 7-footers in Class A-Private, No. 1 Greenforest crushed King’s Ridge 74-45, dropping the Tigers (13-8) out after just one week as they lost three straight games. Justin Forrest finished with 21 points and five assists, collecting the 1,000th point of his career along the way. Ikey Obiagu battled with newly eligible Tolu Jacobs inside, nearly 14-feet worth of bodies. Obiagu outclassed Jacobs with 14 points, 11 rebounds and six blocks. Jacobs, with the muscle advantage, could only muster three points and fouled out early in the fourth quarter. No. 2 North Cobb Christian crushed Christian Heritage 73-39. No. 6 Our Lady of Mercy swapped places with No. 7 Lakeview Academy due to an impressive win at Walker 73-57, dropping the Wolverines out of the ranking. Replacing Walker and King’s Ridge are No. 9 St. Anne-Pacelli and No. 10 Tattnall Square Academy. The Trojans sneak into the top ten thanks to a 69-67 win over No. 8 Stratford Academy and a 64-59 win over First Presbyterian Day before slipping to Landmark Christian 74-69. Tattnall Square has nice wins on its resume such as No. 9 St. Anne-Pacelli (14-8), 2A No. 6 Swainsboro (14-7), 1A-Public No. 1 Wilkinson County (16-5) and wins over No. 8 Stratford (15-5) and First Presbyterian (13-8).

Class A-Public saw Hancock Central fall from No. 1 to No. 5 following a 61-59 upset at Lincoln County, who rises four spots to No. 6. It was the Red Devils’ first win over Hancock in over 25 years. Following back-to-back losses, Lincoln County has turned things around winning three-straight. They followed Tuesday’s momentous victory over the Bulldogs with a 82-40 drubbing of Glascock County and a 61-54 win against Georgia Military in which they held Luke Lawson, the state’s third leading scorer at 25.7 points per game, to two points. Ahmad Rand flirted with another triple-double, posting 10 points, nine rebounds and nine blocks. With Hancock’s loss, No. 1 Wilkinson County takes over. The Warriors have great size inside and have won seven-straight. No. 2 Turner County continued along its warpath to the No. 1 spot while No. 4 Treutlen drops a slot due to strength of schedule. No. 10 Quitman County enters the top ten, but it is No. 7 Central-Talbotton who is making the most noise right now. A 66-61 win over No. 8 Taylor County pushes the Hawks into contender status.

Ahmad Rand’s near triple-double helps No. 10 Lincoln County survive GMC

No. 10 Lincoln County 61, Georgia Military 54

Coming off of its biggest win in school history, a 61-59 upset of No. 1 Hancock Central, No. 10 Lincoln County (14-5, 7-3) had won two straight games entering Saturday’s rematch with Georgia Military (10-7, 5-3), who had beaten the Red Devils 75-68 in overtime two weeks prior. With region seeding on the line heading into the Region 7-A tournament, upstart Lincoln County was looking to ride its momentum to another important victory. They did so, using an explosive first quarter to hold on 61-54 in Lincolnton.

The Red Devils came out and punched the Bulldogs in the mouth, opening up a quick 7-0 lead before Head Coach James Lunsford burned his first timeout. Just 55 seconds later, Lunsford called his second as Lincoln County led 9-2 after a Zach Crite And-1 at the 6:02 mark. Sophomore point guard Maciah Gunby tacked on Lincoln County’s third And-1 of the first quarter to go up 16-2, but he would later pick up back-to-back charge calls, sending him to the bench with three fouls in the first quarter.

Georgia Military’s Luke Lawson entered the game third in the state in scoring at 25.7 points per game. The free shooting guard got his first hoop with 2:32 left in the opening quarter to make it 20-5, but he would not score again as Zae Gartrell shut him out the rest of the way.

The first quarter ended with the Red Devils in control 23-8. With Gartrell locking up Lawson on the perimeter, it was Ahmad Rand patrolling the paint. The 6-foot-7 junior has been deemed as the ‘best kept secret’ in Georgia, but won’t be much longer. He finished the night with 10 points, nine rebounds and nine blocks to stifle GMC. Halfway through the second quarter Lincoln County was cruising up 31-8, but Coach Lunsford’s Bulldogs began to claw back.

An 8-0 run cut the lead to 31-16 before Rand found Crite in the corner for three. The Red Devils took a 35-21 advantage into the half, but since trailing 18-3 to open the game, the Bulldogs had outscored Lincoln County 18-17.

The Bulldogs canned three three-pointers in the second quarter and 6-foot-6 senior Alex Moss began to go to work inside, finishing with eight first half points to breathe life into GMC. With Gunby on the bench, Coach Wesley Wuchte’s main ball handler, Ty Elam stepped in. The dreaded 5-foot-10 guard scored seven of his 15 points in the first half to keep the Devils in front.

In the third quarter, Von Holloway started making things happen in the high post. He caught and looked diagonal, hitting a cutting Javon Reid for two.

Then he took it himself and drew his second And-1 opportunity on his way to finishing with eight points and six rebounds.

Late in the third quarter, Rand continued his block party, picking up his seventh swat of the day before Lincoln County entered the final frame with a commanding 49-31 lead.

Things soured for Lincoln County in the fourth. Moss began to take over, playing the passing lanes to pick off a pass and score two of his game-high 23 points, 13 which came in the final eight minutes.

The onslaught was on as the Red Devils tried to weather the storm which came in the form of Moss, Malik Foston and the Bulldog press. Foston drilled four threes and finished with 15 points and five steals, keying the GMC pressure. With 2:37 remaining, Lincoln County held a 57-42 advantage but the lead did not feel safe, especially after Rand had to come out of the game after cutting his hand on the rim while blocking a shot.

With under two minutes to play, GMC sliced the deficit to 11 points. Feeling the heat and the momentum all in the visiting Bulldogs’ corner, Coach Wuchte turned to Rand, now heavily bandaged, to re-enter the game but upon subbing in the referees would not allow him back on the court due to a drop of blood on his shorts. Wuchte in disbelief hurried Rand back into the locker room to change shorts with a teammate. With 30 more crucial seconds off the clock with Rand not on the floor, the Bulldogs brought the game within single digits at 57-48 with 1:15 left, the closest they had been since the first three minutes of the first quarter.

Things continued to meltdown even with Rand back on the floor, as the Red Devils brain cramped and allowed GMC to throw the ball over their heads on a made basket for a wide open layup which was goaltended by Rand at the last second, making it 57-50 with 41.9 seconds to play, a frantic 14-4 run.

Gunby was sent to the line and sank both free throws. The Bulldogs would never climb any closer than a seven-point deficit as the Red Devils survived the late rally which saw the Bulldogs outscore Lincoln County 23-12 in the fourth quarter.

My Take: Lincoln County is not a team people are going to want to face in the state tournament. Class A-Public goes by the flawed “Power Ranking” system introduced by the GHSA, so it will be imperative for the Red Devils to do well in the region tournament to ensure they do not get shafted. Lincoln County lost back-to-back games before scoring a signature win over No. 1 Hancock Central, the Red Devils first win over the 1A-Public powerhouse in over 25 years. That momentum obviously carried over as they smoked Glascock County 82-40 on Friday and opened Saturday’s game on an 18-3 run. Zach Crite is a versatile scorer from his wing position. The senior has enough strength to barrel his way inside and also shows touch from beyond the arc. Maciah Gunby was slapped with foul trouble early but played well when he was on the floor. His two late free throws in the fourth quarter thwarted Georgia Military’s furious comeback. Von Holloway was like a bull in a china shop at times inside, showing off his football mentality when attacking the basket and going after rebounds. He needs more polish when finishing inside against contact, but he did an exceptional job of being patient working the high post and deciding whether to attack the cup or look down low for a dump off. Ahmad Rand was Ahmad Rand. The junior can’t be slept on anymore. He has come out of nowhere and exploded onto the scene with his season average of nearly a triple-double and he didn’t disappoint, flirting with another to add to his school-record, collecting 10 points, nine rebounds and nine blocks. Rand is a late bloomer and is just starting to scratch the surface of the potential he holds. Right now he is an elite rim protector. He showed a feathery touch from one foot inside the three-point line, burying a jumper. Inside, he displayed nice footwork, ducking in between defenders to score baskets. Rand is a gem in Lincolnton and could become something of a legned in the football town if he continues to put 110% into improving his game every single day. For me, the unsung heroes of the game were Zae Gartrell and Ty Elam. Elam stepped in when Gunby was saddled with three fouls and produced admirably, finishing with 15 points and four steals off the bench. Gartrell only scored two points, but his tenacious defense on Luke Lawson was spectacular, not even letting the gun slinger think about firing up shots.

Georgia Military witnessed Lawson’s worst game of the season, but in turn probably saw Alex Moss’ best game. The 6-foot-6 senior battled for 23 points and seven rebounds inside, working for every hoop he got against Rand and the Red Devil interior. He averages 11 points and 9 rebounds on the year and has been a workhorse inside all season for Coach James Lunsford. Malik Foston, a funky shooting freshman, looked good as well. He netted 15 points and picked up five steals leading the charge defensively as the Bulldogs quickly worked their way back into the game.

Top Performers

Lincoln County
Ahmad Rand – 10 points, 9 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals, 9 blocks
Zach Crite – 16 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals
Ty Elam – 15 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 4 steals
Von Holloway – 8 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists
Maciah Gunby – 8 points, 1 assist

Georgia Military
Alex Moss – 23 points, 7 rebounds, 1 assist, 3 steals
Malik Foston – 15 points, 1 rebound, 1 assist, 5 steals
Andrew Weimer – 8 points, 3 rebounds, 1 steal
Luke Lawson – 2 points, 6 rebounds, 1 assist
Markus Taylor – 4 points, 8 rebounds, 2 steals
Dustin Hostetter – 1 point, 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 1 block

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