Avery's junior varsity and varsity basketball schedule home games for Friday evening have been postponed due to inclement weather. No reschedule date has been released at this time.
The Vikings will now open conference play on Monday, December 21st against Hendersonville.
Friday, December 18, 2009
Edwards Captures Walter Payton Award for Second Straight Year
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. - Appalachian State University quarterback Armanti Edwards cemented his standing as the most decorated player in NCAA Division I FCS history when he became the first two-time winner of the Walter Payton Award on Thursday evening at the Chattanooga Marriott. The Payton Award has been presented annually to the nation’s top FCS player since 1987.
Edwards became the first two-time winner in the 23-year history of the award by out-distancing Southern Illinois running back Deji Karim and Elon wide receiver in voting by national media and sports information directors.
Edwards threw for a school-record 3,291 yards and ran for 679 more in 2009, good for an average of 330.8 yards of total offense per game, which ranked third nationally. He also ranked among the nation’s top 20 in rushing touchdowns (t-3rd - 18), completion percentage (4th - .680), passing yards (8th), scoring (10th - 108 pts.), passing efficiency (12th - 147.90 rating), completions (13th - 257) and touchdowns responsible for (16th - 30).
For his career, Edwards ranks second in FCS history behind only Steve McNair with 14,753 yards of total offense (McNair amassed 16,823 at Alcorn State from 1991-94). With 10,392 passing yards and 4,361 rushing yards, he is the only player in Division I history (FCS or FBS) with at least 9,000 passing yards and 4,000 rushing yards in a career and the only FCS player to reach the 8,000 passing/4,000 rushing plateau. He was responsible for 139 touchdowns in his career (74 passing, 65 rushing), highlighting his 64 ASU and 14 Southern Conference records.
ARMANTI EDWARDS’ SCHOOL RECORDS
Single-Game Rushing – 313 vs. Richmond, 2007*
Rushing Yards Per Attempts – 10.1 vs. Richmond, 2007
Rushing Yards by a Quarterback – 313 vs. Richmond, 2007*
Passing Yards – 433 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Completion Percentage (min. 10 comp.) - .895 (17-19) vs. Wofford, 2008
Touchdown Passes – 5 vs. Wofford, 2008
Touchdowns Responsible For – 7 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Season
Rushing Yards by a Quarterback – 1,588, 2007
Rushing Yards by a Freshman – 1,153, 2006
Rushing Yards by a Sophomore – 1,588, 2007
Passing Yards – 3,291, 2009
Pass Attempts – 378, 2009
Pass Completions – 257, 2009
Completion Percentage (min. 100 comp.) - .680 (257-378), 2009
Passing Efficiency – 170.2, 2008
Touchdown Passes – 30, 2008
200-Yard Passing Games – 10, 2009
Consecutive 200-Yard Passing Games – 5, 2009
Passing Yards by a Freshman – 2,251, 2006
Passing Yards by a Sophomore – 1,948, 2007
Passing Yards by a Senior – 3,291, 2009
Total Offense – 3,970, 2009*
Touchdowns Responsible For – 41, 2008*
250-Yard Total Offense Games – 10, 2008*
Consecutive 250-Yard Total Offense Games – 5 (four times)
300-Yard Total Offense Games – 8, 2009*
400-Yard Total Offense Games – 4, 2009
Wins By a Starting Quarterback – 13, 2006
Postseason
Single-Game Rushing Yards – 313 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Game Rushing Touchdowns – 4 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Game Pass Attempts – 54 vs. Montana, 2009
Career Pass Attempts – 342
Single-Game Completions – 29 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Career Completions – 216
Single-Game Passing Yards – 433 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Career Passing Yards – 2,885
Single-Game Touchdown Passes – 4 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Career Touchdown Passes – 19
Single-Game Total Offense Attempts – 69 vs. Montana, 2009
Career Total Offense Attempts – 564
Single-Game Total Offense Yards – 495 vs. Richmond, 2007
Career Total Offense Yards – 4,186
Single-Game Touchdowns Responsible For – 7 vs. Richmond, 2007
Career Touchdowns Responsible For – 37
Single-Game Touchdowns Scored – 4 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Game Points Scored – 24 vs. Richmond, 2007
Postseason Wins By a Starting Quarterback – 11
Career
Rushing Yards by a Quarterback – 4,361*
Passing Yards – 10,392*
Pass Attempts – 1,180
Pass Completions – 768
Completion Percentage (min. 250 comp.) - .651 (768-1,180)*
Passing Efficiency – 154.2
Touchdown Passes – 74
Passing Yards per Game – 203.8
200-Yard Passing Games – 24
Total Offense Attempts – 1,935*
Total Offense – 14,753*
Total Offense Per Game – 289.3
Touchdowns Responsible For – 139*
250-Yard Total Offense Games – 35*
300-Yard Total Offense Games – 24*
400-Yard Total Offense Games – 8
Wins By a Starting Quarterback – 42
* Denotes Southern Conference Records
2009 Walter Payton Award Voting
NAME
Armanti Edwards Appalachian State 431
Terrell Hudgins Elon 268
Deji Karim Southern Illinois 259
Matt Nichols Eastern Washington 178
Dominic Randolph Holy Cross 174
Ryan Perrilloux Jacksonville State 142
Jeremy Moses Stephen F. Austin 109
William Ford South Carolina State 39
Michael Herrick Northern Arizona 31
Cameron Higgins Weber State 30
Toddrick Penland McNeese State 29
Curtis Pulley Florida A&M 26
Chase Reynolds Montana 24
Bryant Lee Southern 20
Pat Grace Northern Iowa 18
David Sinisi Monmouth 17
Pat Devlin Delaware 16
Andre Roberts The Citadel 13
Trevyn Smith Weber State 12
James Mallory Central Connecticut St. 10
*Matt Szczur Villanova 9
*Eric Ward Richmond 6
*Scott Riddle Elon 3
*Tim Toone Weber State 1
Edwards became the first two-time winner in the 23-year history of the award by out-distancing Southern Illinois running back Deji Karim and Elon wide receiver in voting by national media and sports information directors.
Edwards threw for a school-record 3,291 yards and ran for 679 more in 2009, good for an average of 330.8 yards of total offense per game, which ranked third nationally. He also ranked among the nation’s top 20 in rushing touchdowns (t-3rd - 18), completion percentage (4th - .680), passing yards (8th), scoring (10th - 108 pts.), passing efficiency (12th - 147.90 rating), completions (13th - 257) and touchdowns responsible for (16th - 30).
For his career, Edwards ranks second in FCS history behind only Steve McNair with 14,753 yards of total offense (McNair amassed 16,823 at Alcorn State from 1991-94). With 10,392 passing yards and 4,361 rushing yards, he is the only player in Division I history (FCS or FBS) with at least 9,000 passing yards and 4,000 rushing yards in a career and the only FCS player to reach the 8,000 passing/4,000 rushing plateau. He was responsible for 139 touchdowns in his career (74 passing, 65 rushing), highlighting his 64 ASU and 14 Southern Conference records.
ARMANTI EDWARDS’ SCHOOL RECORDS
Single-Game Rushing – 313 vs. Richmond, 2007*
Rushing Yards Per Attempts – 10.1 vs. Richmond, 2007
Rushing Yards by a Quarterback – 313 vs. Richmond, 2007*
Passing Yards – 433 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Completion Percentage (min. 10 comp.) - .895 (17-19) vs. Wofford, 2008
Touchdown Passes – 5 vs. Wofford, 2008
Touchdowns Responsible For – 7 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Season
Rushing Yards by a Quarterback – 1,588, 2007
Rushing Yards by a Freshman – 1,153, 2006
Rushing Yards by a Sophomore – 1,588, 2007
Passing Yards – 3,291, 2009
Pass Attempts – 378, 2009
Pass Completions – 257, 2009
Completion Percentage (min. 100 comp.) - .680 (257-378), 2009
Passing Efficiency – 170.2, 2008
Touchdown Passes – 30, 2008
200-Yard Passing Games – 10, 2009
Consecutive 200-Yard Passing Games – 5, 2009
Passing Yards by a Freshman – 2,251, 2006
Passing Yards by a Sophomore – 1,948, 2007
Passing Yards by a Senior – 3,291, 2009
Total Offense – 3,970, 2009*
Touchdowns Responsible For – 41, 2008*
250-Yard Total Offense Games – 10, 2008*
Consecutive 250-Yard Total Offense Games – 5 (four times)
300-Yard Total Offense Games – 8, 2009*
400-Yard Total Offense Games – 4, 2009
Wins By a Starting Quarterback – 13, 2006
Postseason
Single-Game Rushing Yards – 313 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Game Rushing Touchdowns – 4 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Game Pass Attempts – 54 vs. Montana, 2009
Career Pass Attempts – 342
Single-Game Completions – 29 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Career Completions – 216
Single-Game Passing Yards – 433 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Career Passing Yards – 2,885
Single-Game Touchdown Passes – 4 vs. South Carolina State, 2008
Career Touchdown Passes – 19
Single-Game Total Offense Attempts – 69 vs. Montana, 2009
Career Total Offense Attempts – 564
Single-Game Total Offense Yards – 495 vs. Richmond, 2007
Career Total Offense Yards – 4,186
Single-Game Touchdowns Responsible For – 7 vs. Richmond, 2007
Career Touchdowns Responsible For – 37
Single-Game Touchdowns Scored – 4 vs. Richmond, 2007
Single-Game Points Scored – 24 vs. Richmond, 2007
Postseason Wins By a Starting Quarterback – 11
Career
Rushing Yards by a Quarterback – 4,361*
Passing Yards – 10,392*
Pass Attempts – 1,180
Pass Completions – 768
Completion Percentage (min. 250 comp.) - .651 (768-1,180)*
Passing Efficiency – 154.2
Touchdown Passes – 74
Passing Yards per Game – 203.8
200-Yard Passing Games – 24
Total Offense Attempts – 1,935*
Total Offense – 14,753*
Total Offense Per Game – 289.3
Touchdowns Responsible For – 139*
250-Yard Total Offense Games – 35*
300-Yard Total Offense Games – 24*
400-Yard Total Offense Games – 8
Wins By a Starting Quarterback – 42
* Denotes Southern Conference Records
2009 Walter Payton Award Voting
NAME
Armanti Edwards Appalachian State 431
Terrell Hudgins Elon 268
Deji Karim Southern Illinois 259
Matt Nichols Eastern Washington 178
Dominic Randolph Holy Cross 174
Ryan Perrilloux Jacksonville State 142
Jeremy Moses Stephen F. Austin 109
William Ford South Carolina State 39
Michael Herrick Northern Arizona 31
Cameron Higgins Weber State 30
Toddrick Penland McNeese State 29
Curtis Pulley Florida A&M 26
Chase Reynolds Montana 24
Bryant Lee Southern 20
Pat Grace Northern Iowa 18
David Sinisi Monmouth 17
Pat Devlin Delaware 16
Andre Roberts The Citadel 13
Trevyn Smith Weber State 12
James Mallory Central Connecticut St. 10
*Matt Szczur Villanova 9
*Eric Ward Richmond 6
*Scott Riddle Elon 3
*Tim Toone Weber State 1
Vikings Sweep West Wilkes in Hoops Action
It was a clean sweep on Thursday night in Viking Gym as the Avery basketball teams won both junior varsity contest and won decisively in each varsity contest.
The Avery Lady Vikings junior varsity club opened its game with a 10-0 scoring run and led 12-2 after one quarter. West Wilkes rallied to cut the lead to 19-12 at the half, but the Lady Vikings came out of the locker room on fire, utilizing a 19-5 scoring run in just over four minutes to put the contest out of reach. Avery took a 45-27 lead after three quarters and cruised to the 61-32 victory.
Kelsie Clarke exploded offensively for the Big Red with 26 points, six steals, and four assists. Shayna Vance added nine points, with eight points from Megan Dellinger as well as five points, seven rebounds, seven steals, and four assists from Monica Estep. Makayla Nichols tallied 20 to lead West Wilkes.
In JV boys action, Avery jumped on top early and took a 39-26 win. The Vikings led 8-1 after the first quarter and held an 18-9 halftime advantage. In the second half, Avery used its pressure defense and patient offense to distance itself from the Black Hawks, taking a 33-18 lead through three quarters before taking the 13-point victory. Lane Smith led Avery with 13 points, with 11 points by Austin Lyons.
In varsity action, both Avery teams were dominant in winning by large margins. The Lady Vikings varsity girls grabbed an early advantage and forced the Lady Black Hawks into numerous turnovers throughout the contest. Avery took a 22-10 lead after one quarter and roared to a 34-13 halftime bulge.
The second half was anti-climactic as the entire Avery roster saw extended minutes on the playing floor. After three quarters, the Lady Vikings maintained a comfortable 52-23 lead and went on to capture its sixth straight victory with a 68-31 win.
Lauren Avery and Hayley Pyatte each scored 16 points in the Big Red triumph. Lauren added seven rebounds, while Hayley added four rebounds and three steals. Sara Wiseman chipped in with 14 points and six rebounds, with six points apiece from Megan Tennant and Katelynn Eudy.
The Vikings shot just under 46 percent from the field in the win, while holding West to only 31 percent shooting.
West was paced by Laura Cantrell's double-double of 10 points and 11 rebounds. along with seven points from Jessica Bumgarner.
In the nightcap, the Avery varsity boys were white hot on the offensive end to start its contest with the Black Hawks. The Vikings scorched the nets in the first eight minutes by hitting on 10 of its 19 shots, including a Dustin Clarke dunk, en route to taking a 23-8 lead after one quarter.
The snowball continued to roll downhill over the Black Hawks. West had difficulty keeping up with the Avery speed, while the Vikings were converting on inside shot attempts that they had been missing in previous contests. Although Avery suited up only eight players for the game due to injury, seven Vikings scored in the first half. The Vikings stretched their lead to 21 points at 35-14 by halftime.
As the game continued, it became apparent that the theme was not only the dominant team performance by the Vikings, but the individual effort of Dustin Clarke. The talented junior guard wowed the crowd in Viking Gym with three slam dunks on the night. The final two jams, the second of which an athletic 360-degree spin and slam, earned Clarke technical fouls for hanging on the rim, disqualifying Avery's leading scorer midway through the fourth quarter. Clarke ended the night with 26 points, 13 assists, seven rebounds, and six steals.
The entire Avery team enjoyed a great night on the court, leading 59-20 after three quarters on the way to a 73-35 victory. Joey Potter poured in 18 points for the Vikings, with eight points and six rebounds from Dylan Eppley.
Luke Foster and Garrett Hamby scored eight points apiece for the Black Hawks, with seven points from Lucas Stinson.
Avery shot 61 percent from the field in the second half and 53 percent for the game. The Vikings nearly matched West's total of 12 field goals for the game in just one quarter, when the Vikes drained 11 shots in the third quarter. West shot only 23 percent from the field for the night.
Weather permitting, the Vikings JV girls are scheduled to host Cloudland on Friday, with the JV boys hosting Crossnore Academy. The Avery varsity teams will host Thomas Jefferson Academy in their Western Highlands Conference opener Friday night.
The Avery Lady Vikings junior varsity club opened its game with a 10-0 scoring run and led 12-2 after one quarter. West Wilkes rallied to cut the lead to 19-12 at the half, but the Lady Vikings came out of the locker room on fire, utilizing a 19-5 scoring run in just over four minutes to put the contest out of reach. Avery took a 45-27 lead after three quarters and cruised to the 61-32 victory.
Kelsie Clarke exploded offensively for the Big Red with 26 points, six steals, and four assists. Shayna Vance added nine points, with eight points from Megan Dellinger as well as five points, seven rebounds, seven steals, and four assists from Monica Estep. Makayla Nichols tallied 20 to lead West Wilkes.
In JV boys action, Avery jumped on top early and took a 39-26 win. The Vikings led 8-1 after the first quarter and held an 18-9 halftime advantage. In the second half, Avery used its pressure defense and patient offense to distance itself from the Black Hawks, taking a 33-18 lead through three quarters before taking the 13-point victory. Lane Smith led Avery with 13 points, with 11 points by Austin Lyons.
In varsity action, both Avery teams were dominant in winning by large margins. The Lady Vikings varsity girls grabbed an early advantage and forced the Lady Black Hawks into numerous turnovers throughout the contest. Avery took a 22-10 lead after one quarter and roared to a 34-13 halftime bulge.
The second half was anti-climactic as the entire Avery roster saw extended minutes on the playing floor. After three quarters, the Lady Vikings maintained a comfortable 52-23 lead and went on to capture its sixth straight victory with a 68-31 win.
Lauren Avery and Hayley Pyatte each scored 16 points in the Big Red triumph. Lauren added seven rebounds, while Hayley added four rebounds and three steals. Sara Wiseman chipped in with 14 points and six rebounds, with six points apiece from Megan Tennant and Katelynn Eudy.
The Vikings shot just under 46 percent from the field in the win, while holding West to only 31 percent shooting.
West was paced by Laura Cantrell's double-double of 10 points and 11 rebounds. along with seven points from Jessica Bumgarner.
In the nightcap, the Avery varsity boys were white hot on the offensive end to start its contest with the Black Hawks. The Vikings scorched the nets in the first eight minutes by hitting on 10 of its 19 shots, including a Dustin Clarke dunk, en route to taking a 23-8 lead after one quarter.
The snowball continued to roll downhill over the Black Hawks. West had difficulty keeping up with the Avery speed, while the Vikings were converting on inside shot attempts that they had been missing in previous contests. Although Avery suited up only eight players for the game due to injury, seven Vikings scored in the first half. The Vikings stretched their lead to 21 points at 35-14 by halftime.
As the game continued, it became apparent that the theme was not only the dominant team performance by the Vikings, but the individual effort of Dustin Clarke. The talented junior guard wowed the crowd in Viking Gym with three slam dunks on the night. The final two jams, the second of which an athletic 360-degree spin and slam, earned Clarke technical fouls for hanging on the rim, disqualifying Avery's leading scorer midway through the fourth quarter. Clarke ended the night with 26 points, 13 assists, seven rebounds, and six steals.
The entire Avery team enjoyed a great night on the court, leading 59-20 after three quarters on the way to a 73-35 victory. Joey Potter poured in 18 points for the Vikings, with eight points and six rebounds from Dylan Eppley.
Luke Foster and Garrett Hamby scored eight points apiece for the Black Hawks, with seven points from Lucas Stinson.
Avery shot 61 percent from the field in the second half and 53 percent for the game. The Vikings nearly matched West's total of 12 field goals for the game in just one quarter, when the Vikes drained 11 shots in the third quarter. West shot only 23 percent from the field for the night.
Weather permitting, the Vikings JV girls are scheduled to host Cloudland on Friday, with the JV boys hosting Crossnore Academy. The Avery varsity teams will host Thomas Jefferson Academy in their Western Highlands Conference opener Friday night.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Live from App State: Mountaineers host Milligan
6:00: Good afternoon from Holmes Center in Boone as we are here to watch the Mountaineers host the Milligan Buffs. The Lady Mountaineers are tied with ETSU just after halftime in the opening game tonight. We will also have updates as we get them from Avery as they are playing at home tonight. Hope you have a great evening, and are ready for the snow that is suppose to come this weekend! We will be back in just a little bit with some more updates.
6:35: With 6:00 left in the game, ETSU leads 80-77 over the Lady Mountaineers.
7:00 With free throws down the stretch, the Lady Mountaineers overcame a Lady Buc lead to take a 92-86 victory. Up next: the Mountaineer men host the Milligan Buffs.
8:25: At the break, App State leads Milligan 56-41.
8:58: With 12:36 remaining, the Mountaineers led 81-63, but the Buffs are making them earn their points in a well played game.
9:16: With 3:44 remaining, the Mountaineers continue to lead as they have broken the century mark 105-84.
9:28: We are final in Boone as App takes a 113-91 victory. Thanks and hope you enjoyed!
9:30: Armanti Edwards has won the Walter Payton award in Chattanooga. We will have more information on that has it becomes available.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Third Time’s the Charm! Lady Panthers Rally Late to Capture First Toe River Conference Tournament Title
The ultimate elation of any championship basketball team is realized with the cutting down of a net symbolic of the accomplishment of winning a title.
Following a regular season championship with only two losses in conference play, the Avery Middle School Lady Panthers entered the postseason conference tournament as the odds-on favorite to capture the tournament title.
Although the Lady Panthers encountered a pair of determined and worthy opponents inCane River during Thursday’s semifinal round and Harris in Saturday’s championship game, the Silver and Black of Avery walked out of East Yancey Middle School Saturday night toting regular season and postseason tournament championship trophy hardware and a newly-snipped cotton basketball net.
Saturday’s championship appeared to be in doubt as early as Thursday night when the Lady Panthers met a surprisingly tough Cane River Lady Rebels club. Avery took a 9-4 lead after one period and led comfortably at 19-11 at halftime.
Cane River made a game of it during the second half, slicing the Avery lead to 27-22 after three quarters. Avery caught its second wind during the final six minutes as Lauren Burleson scored four of her 13 points in the final stanza. Cane River cut the lead to two points with 45 seconds left to play, but a Haley Woody basket in the paint helped propel the Lady Panthers to a 34-29 win over the Lady Rebels.
Woody paced the Avery attack, dominating the paint as she scored a game-high 16 points in the win. Only four players in all scored for the Lady Panthers, but the club survived and advanced to Saturday’s final.
“If you watched us last Thursday, we’ve made major progression to our game. We’ve gotten back on track to where we were during the regular season. Our shot selection tonight was so much better and we hit more shots than we did in our last game with Cranberry. We cut down on our three-point shots and concentrated on working our offense from the inside out,” Lady Panthers head coach Donnie Johnson said immediately following the win. “I thought overall we played a great game, particularly in the second half when we did a good job to answer their baskets by throwing the ball inside.”
In Saturday’s championship game Avery met a familiar foe in Harris, the team who upset the Lady Panthers in their last meeting in Spruce Pine. It was the third meeting of the season between the teams, as well as Avery’s third straight tournament championship game appearance.
Harris held the advantage for much of the first half of play before a late flurry propelled the Lady Panthers into a slim 14-13 halftime lead. The Lady Blue Devils did not wilt under the championship pressure, answering the Avery rally to lead by two scores for a portion of the third quarter.
With 50 seconds left to play, Harris seemed on the cusp of winning the championship as it held a 30-26 lead and Avery’s strongest force inside in Haley Woody had fouled out of the contest.
Avery displayed the true heart of a champion to rewrite the ending to the tournament story. Jodi Poore scored her only points for the game when she drained a clutch three-pointer from the corner to cut the deficit to 30-29. Avery’s trademark defensive pressure forced a Harris turnover in the backcourt.
Following a timeout, Avery’s Lauren Burleson took advantage of an opening to hit a ten-footer from the baseline, putting the Lady Panthers in front 31-30 with 20 seconds left to play. Avery forced one final turnover in the final five seconds as Shannon Smith intercepted an outlet pass to seal the Lady Panther triumph.
Lauren Burleson led six Avery scorers with 12 points, including six of the team’s final nine points in the fourth quarter. Teammate Breanna Heaton poured in eight and both Shannon Smith and Haley Woody added four points in the win. Kennedi Grindstaff of Harris led all scorers with 14 points in a losing effort.
“I was thinking “Finally!” after the buzzer sounded. This is our third year in a row to make the tournament championship, and you start doubting yourself after dominating the regular season. Every year we made the tournament championship we would lose, so it’s good to finally get the monkey off my back,” a jubilant Lady Panthers head coach Donnie Johnson said after the win. “I felt like our guards were crucial and the catalyst in our team not falling apart. Our press gave Harris some problems but they were able to beat us downcourt in the times they beat our press. I was a little worried that they were going to go coast-to-coast on us to win the game, thenShannon came up with the big steal at the end.”
The victory is a great accomplishment for a team that played throughout the season with a never-say-die attitude, and is also a rare double feat, as the Lady Panthers also captured the conference volleyball tournament title earlier in the fall.
“We just never give up. Give the girls all the credit in the world because they just kept playing,” Coach Johnson said. “This is a special group who has won championships, and this eighth grade class has witnessed us winning a championship every year they were at Avery Middle. They’ve etched their names in the history books, so to speak, having won the school’s first-ever basketball tournament championship. It says a lot about the character of this team. They’re a close and confident group and they’ll truly be missed.”
Burleson, Heaton, and Smith were each named to the All-Conference team, while Burleson, Heaton, and Woody were recognized as All-Tournament for their efforts.
In the boys tournament, Harris scored on two free throws following a technical foul call againstCane River with three seconds left to provide the final margin in a 41-39 Blue Devils victory.
Congratulations to the Lady Panthers and to all the local middle school teams on a great hoops season!
Following a regular season championship with only two losses in conference play, the Avery Middle School Lady Panthers entered the postseason conference tournament as the odds-on favorite to capture the tournament title.
Although the Lady Panthers encountered a pair of determined and worthy opponents in
Saturday’s championship appeared to be in doubt as early as Thursday night when the Lady Panthers met a surprisingly tough Cane River Lady Rebels club. Avery took a 9-4 lead after one period and led comfortably at 19-11 at halftime.
Cane
Woody paced the Avery attack, dominating the paint as she scored a game-high 16 points in the win. Only four players in all scored for the Lady Panthers, but the club survived and advanced to Saturday’s final.
“If you watched us last Thursday, we’ve made major progression to our game. We’ve gotten back on track to where we were during the regular season. Our shot selection tonight was so much better and we hit more shots than we did in our last game with Cranberry. We cut down on our three-point shots and concentrated on working our offense from the inside out,” Lady Panthers head coach Donnie Johnson said immediately following the win. “I thought overall we played a great game, particularly in the second half when we did a good job to answer their baskets by throwing the ball inside.”
In Saturday’s championship game Avery met a familiar foe in Harris, the team who upset the Lady Panthers in their last meeting in Spruce Pine. It was the third meeting of the season between the teams, as well as Avery’s third straight tournament championship game appearance.
Harris held the advantage for much of the first half of play before a late flurry propelled the Lady Panthers into a slim 14-13 halftime lead. The Lady Blue Devils did not wilt under the championship pressure, answering the Avery rally to lead by two scores for a portion of the third quarter.
With 50 seconds left to play, Harris seemed on the cusp of winning the championship as it held a 30-26 lead and Avery’s strongest force inside in Haley Woody had fouled out of the contest.
Avery displayed the true heart of a champion to rewrite the ending to the tournament story. Jodi Poore scored her only points for the game when she drained a clutch three-pointer from the corner to cut the deficit to 30-29. Avery’s trademark defensive pressure forced a Harris turnover in the backcourt.
Following a timeout, Avery’s Lauren Burleson took advantage of an opening to hit a ten-footer from the baseline, putting the Lady Panthers in front 31-30 with 20 seconds left to play. Avery forced one final turnover in the final five seconds as Shannon Smith intercepted an outlet pass to seal the Lady Panther triumph.
Lauren Burleson led six Avery scorers with 12 points, including six of the team’s final nine points in the fourth quarter. Teammate Breanna Heaton poured in eight and both Shannon Smith and Haley Woody added four points in the win. Kennedi Grindstaff of Harris led all scorers with 14 points in a losing effort.
“I was thinking “Finally!” after the buzzer sounded. This is our third year in a row to make the tournament championship, and you start doubting yourself after dominating the regular season. Every year we made the tournament championship we would lose, so it’s good to finally get the monkey off my back,” a jubilant Lady Panthers head coach Donnie Johnson said after the win. “I felt like our guards were crucial and the catalyst in our team not falling apart. Our press gave Harris some problems but they were able to beat us downcourt in the times they beat our press. I was a little worried that they were going to go coast-to-coast on us to win the game, then
The victory is a great accomplishment for a team that played throughout the season with a never-say-die attitude, and is also a rare double feat, as the Lady Panthers also captured the conference volleyball tournament title earlier in the fall.
“We just never give up. Give the girls all the credit in the world because they just kept playing,” Coach Johnson said. “This is a special group who has won championships, and this eighth grade class has witnessed us winning a championship every year they were at Avery Middle. They’ve etched their names in the history books, so to speak, having won the school’s first-ever basketball tournament championship. It says a lot about the character of this team. They’re a close and confident group and they’ll truly be missed.”
Burleson, Heaton, and Smith were each named to the All-Conference team, while Burleson, Heaton, and Woody were recognized as All-Tournament for their efforts.
In the boys tournament, Harris scored on two free throws following a technical foul call against
Congratulations to the Lady Panthers and to all the local middle school teams on a great hoops season!
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
JV Basketball Splits Pair with Watauga
A week following their first encounter with the Watauga Pioneers in Viking Gym, the Avery junior varsity basketball squads traveled to Lentz-Eggers Gym in Boone for a rematch with Watauga.
In the JV girls contest, Avery fell behind early to the Lady Pioneers, trailing by a 14-4 score after one quarter. The Big Red sliced into the lead ever so slightly, but still found itself on the short end of a 24-17 halftime deficit.
Avery managed to rally behind the outside shooting of Kelsie Clark, who drained three-pointers that helped the Lady Vikings come all the way back to take a lead at 30-29 late in the third quarter. Watauga scored the final bucket in the quarter to leave the home team with a slim 31-30 lead going into the final seven minutes.
Watauga built its lead to four points early in the final frame, but Avery reeled the Lady Pioneers in to stay within a single possession at 38-35 in the game’s final minute. Watauga’s matchup zone defense was strong throughout the night and did not allow Avery to score the game-tying basket as Watauga took a 39-37 win on its home floor.
Kelsie Clark led Avery with 17 points, with ten points from Shayna Vance and seven points and ten rebounds from Brooke Buchanan.
“The girls played well, but we missed chances at the free throw line down the stretch and we also just ran out of time,” Avery Lady Vikings JV girls coach Pat Daniels remarked. ”I told the girls I was proud of them, but that we need to be able to finish games But I believe the tough non-conference schedule we’ve faced will benefit us when we get into conference play.”
The boys contest was a close affair. Dustin Clark scored four of Avery’s seven first quarter points as the Vikings held a 7-5 advantage after one quarter. The Vikings continued to play well on both ends of the floor, as Shea Buchanan bolstered Avery’s cause with seven points in the second period to help the Big Red maintain a slim 19-18 halftime lead.
Both clubs found their shooting stroke and offensive rhythm in the third period, almost matching the output from the entire first half. Watauga displayed resiliency in outpacing Avery 16-13 in the quarter to hold a 34-32 lead after three stanzas.
Although Avery committed 27 turnovers and was hampered by foul trouble, the Vikings found themselves with an opportunity to tie the game in the closing seconds. Trailing by three with time running out, Avery had a good look on a three-pointer to send the game to overtime. The shot did not fall, however, as Avery fell in a heartbreaking 45-41 loss.
“I thought we played great defense tonight. I felt like we executed well, but Watauga is tough to play on their floor,” Avery boys junior varsity head coach Reggie Oakes said following the game. “I thought we had a chance to win and probably should have won. “
Dustin Clark and Shea Buchanan led Avery with 11 points apiece, with eight points from Austin Lyons.
“Shea played a good game. He stepped up and made some big shots late. Dustin was a monster on the boards andAustin shot the ball well,” Coach Oakes said. “All the kids really executed well.”
Avery’s JV squads will be in action on Thursday against West Wilkes at Viking Gym. Since Thomas Jefferson Academy does not field JV basketball teams, Avery’s JV girls team will instead play Cloudland on Friday afternoon.
In the JV girls contest, Avery fell behind early to the Lady Pioneers, trailing by a 14-4 score after one quarter. The Big Red sliced into the lead ever so slightly, but still found itself on the short end of a 24-17 halftime deficit.
Avery managed to rally behind the outside shooting of Kelsie Clark, who drained three-pointers that helped the Lady Vikings come all the way back to take a lead at 30-29 late in the third quarter. Watauga scored the final bucket in the quarter to leave the home team with a slim 31-30 lead going into the final seven minutes.
Watauga built its lead to four points early in the final frame, but Avery reeled the Lady Pioneers in to stay within a single possession at 38-35 in the game’s final minute. Watauga’s matchup zone defense was strong throughout the night and did not allow Avery to score the game-tying basket as Watauga took a 39-37 win on its home floor.
Kelsie Clark led Avery with 17 points, with ten points from Shayna Vance and seven points and ten rebounds from Brooke Buchanan.
“The girls played well, but we missed chances at the free throw line down the stretch and we also just ran out of time,” Avery Lady Vikings JV girls coach Pat Daniels remarked. ”I told the girls I was proud of them, but that we need to be able to finish games But I believe the tough non-conference schedule we’ve faced will benefit us when we get into conference play.”
The boys contest was a close affair. Dustin Clark scored four of Avery’s seven first quarter points as the Vikings held a 7-5 advantage after one quarter. The Vikings continued to play well on both ends of the floor, as Shea Buchanan bolstered Avery’s cause with seven points in the second period to help the Big Red maintain a slim 19-18 halftime lead.
Both clubs found their shooting stroke and offensive rhythm in the third period, almost matching the output from the entire first half. Watauga displayed resiliency in outpacing Avery 16-13 in the quarter to hold a 34-32 lead after three stanzas.
Although Avery committed 27 turnovers and was hampered by foul trouble, the Vikings found themselves with an opportunity to tie the game in the closing seconds. Trailing by three with time running out, Avery had a good look on a three-pointer to send the game to overtime. The shot did not fall, however, as Avery fell in a heartbreaking 45-41 loss.
“I thought we played great defense tonight. I felt like we executed well, but Watauga is tough to play on their floor,” Avery boys junior varsity head coach Reggie Oakes said following the game. “I thought we had a chance to win and probably should have won. “
Dustin Clark and Shea Buchanan led Avery with 11 points apiece, with eight points from Austin Lyons.
“Shea played a good game. He stepped up and made some big shots late. Dustin was a monster on the boards and
Avery’s JV squads will be in action on Thursday against West Wilkes at Viking Gym. Since Thomas Jefferson Academy does not field JV basketball teams, Avery’s JV girls team will instead play Cloudland on Friday afternoon.
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