Thursday, February 4, 2010

Vikings vs. Cancer Night this Monday against Hendersonville

Monday night's Avery basketball contests against Hendersonville will be "Vikings vs. Cancer" Night at Viking Gym.

Donations will be accepted during the evening to assist Haley Calloway, former Lady Viking basketball player who is undergoing cancer treatments at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. If Monday's game is postponed, the event will be held on the night Avery is rescheduled to play Hendersonville.

Vikings Varsity Sweeps Owen, Time Change for Mountain Heritage contest

The Avery Lady Vikings handled the Owen Warlassies 69-60 in Swannanoa on Wednesday night to push its current win streak to seven straight games. Avery scored the first eight points of the game and put Owen behind by 18 points after one quarter, as the Vikings scorched the nets for a 24-6 lead. The Warlassies slowly cut into the Viking margin, however, narrowing the gap slightly to 14 at 35-21 at halftime.

A 10-point third quarter from Avery senior Sara Wiseman paced the Big Red attack as the Lady Vikings extended their lead to 53-34 with eight minutes to play.

Down but not out, the Warlassies mounted a rally to narrow the lead to nine points at 58-49 after a Shae Frizzell three-pointer with 2:26 to play. Owen then strategized to send the Lady Vikings to the line, a move that backfired on the Warlassies as Avery calmly sank 14 of its 19 free throws in the final period and 31 of 42 shots (73%) overall.

Lauren Avery was sent to the line on six separate occasions in the final stanza, making 10 of 11 free throws to rebuild the Avery margin to a dozen points. Owen fought hard but the Vikings withstood a final rally and captured the nine-point win.

Wiseman scored a total of 20 points with six rebounds and three steals before fouling out with just over three minutes left to play. Lauren Avery ended the night with 19 points and six rebounds, while Katelynn Eudy added 15 points, 9 rebounds, 5 steals, and 4 blocks. Mercedes Bentley chipped in with eight points, with eight assists and six steals coming from Elyse Perry.

Avery forced Owen into 33 turnovers in the contest and held the Warlassies to 40 percent shooting from the field. The Lady Vikings improve to 18-2 overall, with a 10-1 mark in Western Highlands Conference play.

The Avery varsity boys and Owen put on a show for the crowd on Senior Night in Buncombe County. Owen jumped out to a 24-14 lead after one quarter. For the Vikings, the only offense for much of the first half came from conference player of the year candidate Dustin Clarke, who scored 13 of Avery's 14 points in the quarter.

Clarke continued to fire on all cylinders as the second quarter ensued with some help from teammate Timmy Stewart. Stewart hit three baskets, including a three-pointer from the wing, to cut the Owen lead to 36-30 in the final 30 seconds of the half. A three-point shot at the buzzer from Owen's JD Chaplain rebuilt some of the lead lost, giving the Warhorses a 39-30 at halftime.

Avery was kept in the contest by Dustin Clarke's 22 points, while the frontcourt duo of Tony Halvorson and Ben Marett had their way on the low block, scoring a number of baskets on offensive rebounds and putbacks.

During halftime the Avery coaching staff made number of adjustments, moving Timmy Stewart from a forward defensive position to that of a guard to cover talented Owen point guard Bruce Wallace. Clarke, meanwhile, was moved to the forward position on defense to help with covering the Owen trees and help the Avery frontcourt to offset the duo of Marett and Halvorson.

The coaching strategy proved to be a stroke of genius. Offensively a supporting cast of scorers emerged for the Big Red in the third quarter, including Dylan Eppley and Joey Potter, who helped Avery to an 8-2 run to start the second half and cut the Owen lead to three points. A three-point play from Eppley tied the score at 41 midway through the period. A Clarke jumper gave Avery its first lead of the second half at 45-44, but Owen answered with a 9-0 scoring run to close the stanza, sparked by two additional three-pointers from Chaplain to propel Owen to a 53-45 lead after three quarters.

Owen scored the first bucket of the final stanza to lead by ten, but the Vikings found its second wind with a 12-0 run to regain the lead at 57-55. After being held to only two baskets in the third quarter, Clarke again found space and made the Warhorses pay in the final eight minutes.

The two teams traded baskets for much of the latter portion of the final quarter. A Clarke layup gave Avery a four point lead at 61-57 at the 3:27 mark, but Owen rallied and eventually tied the contest at 63-63 on a Marett basket and free throw. Clarke sank key free throws to put the Vikings back up by a pair. On Owen's final meaningful possession, a shot attempt from Chaplain was rebounded by Kody Hughes. The Avery junior was fouled and sank two huge free throws to provide the for the final margin in a thrilling 67-63 win.

Dustin Clarke finished a career night with 36 points, 12 rebounds, 8 steals, and 5 assists. Dylan Eppley netted ten points, with seven points from Joey Potter. Chaplain finished with 15 points for Owen, while the combination of Halvorson and Marett combined for 35 points.

The Avery boys improve to 10-8 overall, with an 8-3 conference mark.

Avery travels this afternoon to Burnsville to take on Mountain Heritage. The JV girls contest will start at the special time of 3:30 p.m. in advance of a coming winter storm.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

VIKING SCHEDULE CHANGES

There has been two changes to the upcoming Avery Vikings athletics schedule:

  • The Avery basketball game scheduled at Mountain Heritage for Friday has been moved up a day to Thursday evening due to potential inclement weather.
  • The Western Highlands Conference Wrestling Tournament scheduled for Friday at Owen High School has also been moved ahead a day to Thursday.

Vikings Split Pair of Duals as Postseason Nears


Avery’s wrestling team earned a second consecutive triumph on the mat with a 35-16 match victory over Hendersonville. It was Senior Night at Viking Gym, and Avery honored its lone senior Nick Malgadey.

The evening got underway at 112 pounds with a double forfeit. Viking junior Brock Yackey quickly dispatched his opponent in the 119 pound class with a 15-0 technical decision. Nick Malgadey picked up a forfeit win 125 pounds to put Avery ahead 11-0. Both clubs forfeited at the 130-pound weight class, and Avery surrendered a forfeit at 135 pounds to make the score 11-6 in favor of the Vikings.

At 140 pounds Avery’s Taylor Potter was defeated by pinfall to give the Bearcats its first lead at 12-11. Bryan Moody wrestled hard and prevented extra team points by pinfall at the 145 pound class, falling in a 12-1 decision to give the Bearcats a 16-11 advantage.

A double forfeit occurred at the 152 pound weight class, and CJ Vance put Avery back on the winning track at 160 pounds with a first period pin to help the Vikings regain a 17-16 lead.

Following a double forfeit at 171 pounds, Kyle Greene stepped up in a huge way as he earned a pinfall victory at the 1:55 mark in the first period to boost the Avery edge to 23-16. Lucas Lecka earned a forfeit win at 215 pounds and Colton Blackburn won by forfeit at the heavyweight class to provide for the final margin.

On Thursday evening, however, the Vikings ran into a deep and talented roster of wrestlers in Columbus from Polk County. The Vikings only managed a single decision victory during the dual when Brock Yackey defeated Polk’s Jose Rameriz by a 13-6 score.

C.J. Vance also put up a strong effort as he fell by a final match score of 24-10. Vance registered ten escapes in the match, but could not overcome a strong effort from Polk’s James Maxwell.

The remainder of the match was all Wolverine victories by either pin or forfeit as Polk County defeated Avery 76-3.

Avery was scheduled to travel to Madison to make up a rescheduled dual meet this past Tuesday to conclude regular season competition, with the conference tournament scheduled for this Friday at Owen High School.

Junior Varsity Basketball Roundup

The Avery junior varsity basketball teams experienced both highs and lows last week. The junior varsity girls team swept games against conference foes Hendersonville and Polk County, earning head coach Pat Daniels his 100th career win with the program. However, the JV boys lost point guard Shea Buchanan to injury in a loss at Hendersonville and came up short in a home game last Thursday to the Polk Wolverines.

Junior Varsity Girls:
In last week’s contest at Hendersonville, the Avery defense dominated an overmatched Lady Bearcats club in a 63-22 win.

The Lady Vikings led 14-0 after one period as part of a 24-2 overall run to start the game. Avery led 31-5 at halftime and the entire Lady Vikings roster saw extensive action against a Hendersonville team that had only three players score points in the game.

Kelsie Clarke led Avery with 15 points, five steals, and four assists, with nine points apiece from Megan Dellinger and Monica Estep. Brooke Buchanan added six points, 10 rebounds, and a pair of assists.

“Hendersonville had a couple of good players, but we were able to spread the ball around. Both point guards played well tonight. We tried to give everyone time on the floor and everyone played hard,” Coach Pat Daniels said after the win. “We’ve got a lot of mature sophomores. We have a fun-loving group, but we also need to continue stepping up. We have work to do on our traps and rebounding, though. Our guards need to work a little on keeping their head up dribbling down the floor. But I’m proud of how all the girls stepped up tonight.”

Tuesday’s win was a special one for Coach Daniels, as he earned his 100th victory. The sixth-year head coach’s teams have experienced unprecedented success. Mountain Heritage is the only current conference team to have defeated Avery during the stretch, with the Lady Vikings winning the Western Highlands Conference tournament every season of his tenure.

“The time has flown by. I absolutely love to coach,” Coach Daniels said of the historic win. “(Coach) Missy (Lyons) set up this program several years ago when she took over the varsity girls program and got the youth coming to the camps, which makes all the difference in the world. I have to give God the glory. He’s been good to us and provided us with great talent and classy players and teams.”

Avery raced out and never looked back in a 63-29 romp of Polk County last Thursday night. The Lady Vikings led 16-4 after the first quarter, and pulled away with a 15-3 run in the second period to lead by 24 points at the half.

Kelsie Clarke paced the Lady Vikings with 21 points, eight assists, and four steals. Taylor Hobbs had a great evening shooting the basketball with ten points, while Shayna Vance added eight points and four rebounds, with four points, 12 rebounds, and four blocks from Brooke Buchanan. Ten Avery players scored in the win.

“We switched Johanna Pittman and Shayna Vance’s positions this evening and both adjusted really well and had good games,” Coach Daniels said after the win. “Polk has some possibilities to play well, but they just didn’t have any ball-handlers to deal with our press. When our girls play determined on both ends of the floor, we’re almost unstoppable. The girls are really buying into our system.”

The junior varsity girls return to action Wednesday at Owen (Madison has no JV girls team, so the girls will not play at Madison), as well as travel to Mountain Heritage on Friday.

JV Boys:

Avery’s junior varsity boys dropped a tough contest at Hendersonville last week. The teams played a nip-and-tuck first period. A three-pointer at the buzzer by Dillon Greene tied the contest at 12 after one quarter.

The second quarter was also closely fought. Lane Smith scored five points in the frame, with four points from Austin Lyons, but Hendersonville held a 27-24 advantage at the end of the first half.

With the score 31-26 in favor of Hendersonville at the 4:22 mark of the third quarter, Avery starting point guard Shea Buchanan went to the floor hard after drawing contact from a Hendersonville player. Buchanan injured his knee on the play, was helped off the court and taken to a local hospital.

Without its floor general, Hendersonville opened up a six-point edge after the third quarter. Avery rallied as Dustin Clark scored eight second-half points, but the Bearcats pulled away late for a 55-44 win.

Clark led the Vikings with 14 points, while Bryce Pittman also registered double-figures in the scoring column with ten. Lane Smith added nine points.

In Thursday evening’s game at home against Polk, Avery struggled to find its offense. Polk opened up an 11-2 lead after one period and extended its advantage to double-figures at 19-8 at halftime.

As the second half unfolded Avery refused to lay down and mounted a comeback. Avery outpaced Polk 11-7 in the stanza to cut the deficit to 26-19. The Wolverines hit 7 of 8 free throws in the closing period, however, to hold its lead and capture a 38-28 win over the Big Red.
Clark was Avery’s lone player scoring double-figures with 13 points. No other Viking scored over four points.

“I thought the kids stepped in well in the absence of Shea,” Vikings JV boys head coach Reggie Oakes said after the week’s action. “Our defense looked good at times, but our offense needs improvement. It seemed at crucial times that Polk wanted it more.”

The junior varsity boys began a busy three-game week by venturing to Madison on Tuesday. Avery fell behind in the first half and trailed by as many as 22 points in the late third quarter. The Vikings rallied behind the hot shooting of Austin Lyons to cut the Madison lead to as little as eight. The hole proved too deep to dig out of, however, as Madison took a 63-48 home victory.

Avery's junior varsity teams play at Owen on Wednesday, and finishes at Mountain Heritage on Thursday rather than the originally scheduled date of Friday due to weather concerns.

Lady Vikings Basketball Steamrolls Hendersonville, Polk

Avery continued to roll through conference foes last week in a pair of lopsided wins, routing Hendersonville 72-47 on the road last Tuesday and blowing out Polk County 62-37 at home last Thursday evening.

In Tuesday’s contest, Avery had early difficulties getting its offense untracked, but found its shot late in the opening half. Avery then pulled away in the second half to outdistance the Lady Bearcats.

Avery was careful with the basketball, committing only two turnovers in the first half. Nevertheless, Hendersonville was economical with its shooting in keeping the game close through the first quarter. Avery made only five of its first 20 shots in the first half, allowing the Lady Bearcats to remain within a pair at 11-9 after one quarter.

The second stanza was a different story as the Lady Vikings gained control. Avery used a 5-0 scoring run to open the quarter, eight first half points from Sara Wiseman, and a separate 6-0 scoring spurt late in the quarter to take a 36-17 halftime lead. The advantage could have been much greater had Avery shot better than its 3 for 15 effort from the free throw line in the half.
Avery extended its advantage to 24 points at 54-30 after three periods and cruised to the 25-point win.

Sara Wiseman led Avery scorers with 13 points, nine rebounds and two blocks. Lauren Avery scored 12 points, six rebounds, and three steals, while Katelynn Eudy registered another double-double with 11 points and 15 rebounds, in addition to four steals.

Hendersonville’s Brooks Walz was one of only five Lady Bearcats to score in the game, but led all scorers with a game-high 22 points.

Last Thursday night the Lady Vikings hosted the Polk Lady Wolverines. The contest was the final regular season matchup between Avery head coach Missy Lyons and Polk head coach Mitch Davis, as Davis announced he is leaving the school after the semester to enroll in seminary toward a missionary career.

Avery opened up the game white hot from the field, hitting 9 of its 19 shots in the frame. Mercedes Bentley netted seven points in the quarter, while Elyse Perry added six points.

The Lady Vikings took care of the ball by committing no turnovers in the opening stanza for the second consecutive game, while the Avery defense forced seven Polk turnovers in the quarter. Polk made just three shots in the period and the Big Red led by a 24-6 score after eight minutes.

As the second quarter unfolded, Avery continued its barrage on the Lady Wolverines. Lauren Avery scored six of her nine first-half points in the period to help stretch the Viking lead to 38-14 at halftime.

Through two quarters the Lady Vikings already had statistics indicative of a full game. Elyse Perry scored six points and hit her game average of five assists in the first half alone. Avery added six rebounds, three assists, and three steals to her first half point total. Polk’s Melinda Morgan netted 10 of the team’s 14 first-half points.

In the third quarter the Lady Vikings were bolstered by nine additional points from Lauren Avery as the Big Red extended its lead to 51-22. Mercedes Bentley added seven second-half points and ten Lady Vikings in all scored as Avery picked up its eighth conference win and 16th win overall against two losses.

Lauren Avery ended the night with 18 points, nine rebounds, four steals and three assists, with a season-high 14 points from Mercedes Bentley.

For the senior Avery, she has steadily rose her scoring and rebounding averages through the course of the season, and credits her success both in Thursday’s win and throughout the season to her teammates.

“I owe it to the team. I thought we played great team ball,” Avery said after Thursday’s win. I think this team is very united and we’re unselfish as a team.”

Teammate Perry ranks among the region’s leaders in assists with over five per game and nabs four steals per contest.

“Our team is so good at getting open and we read each other so well. Honestly if I can pass the ball off and not shoot it, I’d rather do that,” Perry remarked after her eight point, seven assist performance Thursday. “Each time we go out Coach tells us to let our defense create our offense, and I really think that has been a turning point. We play tight defense and we talk to each other when we see screens and help each other out which has been a huge part of our success.”

Avery has three road games over three nights this week. The Lady Vikings traveled to Madison on their Senior Night and decimated the Lady Patriots by a 71-48 final score behind 18 points (16 in the second quarter alone) from junior guard Mercedes Bentley. Avery travels to Owen on Wednesday, then to Mountain Heritage on Thursday.



Editor’s Note: Avery High School is asking for the help of all fans and students to PAINT IT BLACK or RED in Viking Gym during Avery's regular season home finale on Tuesday, February 9th vs. Mitchell by wearing BLACK or RED t-shirts!
Young Adults Helping Haiti (YAHH) & UIC raised $320 to assist the country of Haiti with earthquake relief at Thursday night's home contest against Polk. The groups plan on holding a second fund raising effort for Haiti during Avery's Senior Night contest in Big Red Country against Mitchell on Tuesday, February 9th.

Vikings Drop Thriller to Hendersonville; Rally to Beat Wolverines

This week the Avery boys varsity basketball team experienced the gamut of the comeback spectrum. Last Tuesday, January 26th Avery jumped to an early lead in Hendersonville against the #6 state-ranked Bearcats, only to have the home team roar back to hand Avery an 82-78 defeat.

On Thursday night the Vikings returned the favor, rallying from a 12-point halftime deficit at home against Polk County. Avery was beneficiary of a career night from junior Kody Hughes as the Big Red pulled out a 79-71 victory.

Avery had its best start to a game all season in the first quarter at Hendersonville. The Vikings converted on 11 of its 19 shots in the stanza and scored a whopping 27 points in the quarter, bolstered by ten points from center Dylan Eppley, to take an eight-point lead after the first period.

Although Hendersonville shot a respectable 40 percent from the field in the first half, Avery’s streak of great shooting continued through the remainder of the first half. Avery shot 61 percent from the field through the first two quarters. Dustin Clarke was 6 of 10 from the field in the first half and netted 17 first-half points as the Vikings led by a dozen at 50-38 at intermission.

As the second half ensued, it became apparent that the Hendersonville pressure and speed began to reverse the tide of momentum Avery had worked so hard to build. The inside play of Keyvon Young and perimeter play of guards Desmond Whiteside and Paul Posthumus.

An 8-0 scoring run in the first two and a half minutes of the second half quickly brought the Bearcats to within four. The Bearcats tied the game at 59 apiece, but a shot from the wing by Avery’s Mark Polsgrove gave the Vikings the slim two-point lead entering the final quarter.

Hendersonville benefited from a number of foul calls during the second half. The Bearcats took 17 free throws in the final quarter and made 12 of them. In comparison, Avery took only 19 free throws for the entire game.

Avery’s Clarke heated up from the field, helping the Vikings stay close each time the Bearcats threatened to pull away. Dustin scored ten points in the quarter despite fatigue from constant double-teams, relentless Bearcat defensive pressure, and his own defensive assignment of guarding Hendersonville’s speedy point guard.

The Bearcats led late as Whiteside netted a pair of baskets and ten of his 21 points for the game during the fourth quarter. Twice Avery rallied in the final two minutes, drawing to as close as three points when a Polsgrove three-pointer with 11 seconds left drew the Vikings to within 81-78. Hendersonville managed to hold on in the end to escape with a four-point win.

Clarke ended the night with 29 points, seven rebounds, five assists, and three steals. Dylan Eppley finished with a season-high 19 points and eight rebounds.

“I felt in the second half we played some good basketball. The game sometimes depends on how the ball bounces and the breaks go. At times we needed a break and it didn’t go our way,” Avery head coach Bo Manis said following the game. “We had some shots we weren’t able to hit. Had we made them, we may have kept the lead. We had a hard time adjusting to how the officiating called the game. The officials seemed to change the way they called the game in the second half compared to the first. It just seemed the breaks we needed every now and then didn’t come, especially on the road. I accept the loss for that game, though. The kids absolutely played their hearts out.”

On Thursday evening the Vikings returned home to host a Polk County Wolverine club that defeated Avery 74-68 in their first meeting earlier in the month in Columbus.

Before the contest Avery High School honored Dustin Clarke by presenting him a game ball recognizing his 1,000 career points scored feat which he reached earlier in the week.

Polk and Avery played a tight first quarter as the Wolverines led 19-16 through the first eight minutes. Wolverines guard Andre Overholt paced Polk with a pair of three-pointers and 13 first-half points. Avery received ten points from Clarke and three baskets by Dylan Eppley in the first two quarters, but five made three-point shots and eight different players scoring points for Polk helped the Wolverines lead by a dozen at 38-26 at halftime.

“We didn’t play good defense the first half. Whoever we played in the first half would have had a great night the way we played,” Coach Manis said. “I don’t think we were focused in the first half, and credit Polk for taking advantage of that.”

Coming out of the locker room, the Vikings showed confidence and played with the same precision the team showed in the first half of Tuesday’s Hendersonville contest. Avery lit up the Polk defense for 55 percent shooting from the floor and scored 31 points to erase the Wolverine advantage.

Luke Pittman scored seven of his eight points for the game during the quarter, and a three-pointer from the right wing by Timmy Stewart as time expired gave Avery a 57-56 lead going to the final stanza.

“Timmy made himself available for the shot, had a good look at the basket, and it got our bench into the game and excited us,” Coach Manis said. “I knew if we just kept pushing Polk, our shots would start falling and they would wear down.”

Polk stayed close in the second half largely due to its three-point shooting. The Wolverines were 12 of 26 for the game from beyond the arc, highlighted by four three pointers in the second half by guard Jeff Bontrager.

In the final eight minutes, the Vikings received a much needed lift with the game in the balance from junior Kody Hughes. After scoring five points in the first half, Hughes swished a pair of key three-point baskets in response to scores from Polk. Kody scored 16 points in the second half to help preserve the Viking edge.

A second three-point basket from Stewart in the fourth quarter pushed the Avery lead to seven at 70-63 with two minutes left to play. Polk could get no closer than five for the remainder of the game as Avery hit free throws to ice the win.

“In the second half we came out and did the things we are good at doing. I knew they were playing their third game of the week, and we started to wear them down. We continued to push the ball up the floor. We weren’t talking on defense early, but when we started talking on the floor we started communicating better. That was a sort of ripple effect that spread to all the players and it re-energized us.”

Clarke led Avery with 22 points, eight rebounds, four assists, and two steals, while Hughes scored a career-high 21 points, including three 3-pointers as part of a 6 of 12 shooting night. Dylan Eppley had 10 points with eight rebounds, with nine points from Joey Potter and eight points, seven rebounds from Luke Pittman. The Avery defense held Polk’s leading scorer Overholt scoreless in the second half.

“Joey started our momentum by moving without the ball and Kody made several huge shots. They stayed with it and didn’t get frustrated, which paid off in hitting the big shots,” Coach Manis said.

Avery won its second thriller in a row with a 62-58 win at Madison on Tuesday, improving its overall record over the .500 mark at 9-8 and to 7-3 in conference play. Avery travels to Owen on Wednesday. The scheduled Friday game at Mountain Heritage has been moved ahead a day to Thursday out of concern over inclement weather possibilities.

Editor’s Note: Avery High School is asking for the help of all fans and students to PAINT IT BLACK or RED in Viking Gym during Avery's regular season home finale on Tuesday, February 9th vs. Mitchell by wearing BLACK or RED t-shirts!

Young Adults Helping Haiti (YAHH) & UIC raised $320 to assist the country of Haiti with earthquake relief at Thursday night's home contest against Polk. The groups plan on holding a second fund raising effort for Haiti during Avery's Senior Night contest in Big Red Country against Mitchell on February 9th.