Holiday Hoops
Longwood coach Dennis Terry had the ambitious dream of hosting a national-caliber holiday boys basketball tournament. He went door to door to raise $14,000 for housing and food and other logistics, turning an idea into reality.
Longwood will host Long Island Lutheran, Our Savior New American, Grady (Brooklyn), Mount Zion (Durham, N.C.), Fairley (Memphis, Tenn.) and two Philadelphia teams, Ben Franklin and Celestrial, in the Longwood Rim Rockers Tournament. The three-day tournament begins Thursday. It ends with the championship game Dec. 29 at 6 p.m. Tickets each day are $5, which includes all four games. For more information, visit www.newyork. ihigh.com/longwood on the Internet . . . Whitman and Uniondale boys will meet for the second time in three weeks if they make it to the final of the Frank Gugliotta Memorial Tournament on Dec. 28. Whitman won the first meeting, 63-54, in the final of the Uniondale Tipoff Classic on Dec. 14 … Amityville’s Claude Byer Tournament begins Thursday with Deer Park playing St. John the Baptist, and Central Islip against Amityville. The final is Dec. 29. New coach Tom Tolliver organized the event to honor former coach Byer, who retired after last season with 360 career wins. Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 21 Dec 2001
Riverhead 15171410-56 |
Longwood 24242915-92 |
R: Scott 9, Trent 6, Harris 16, Holmes 9, Miller 2, Davis 5, Kelly 6, ALexander 3. Totals: 20-11-56. L: Alonzo 12, Bardeguez 20, Flowers 2, France 2, Hoyte 2, Plok 5, Rawlins 5, Thomas 20, Treffert 20, Williams 4. Totals: 36-17-92. Dec. 22
Alonzo, Thomas Lead Longwood: [NASSAU Edition]
Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 28 Dec 2001:
Tremaine France (six points) made a three-pointer from the right side with 2:30 left in the fourth quarter to give host Longwood a three-point lead in a 73-63 victory over Ben Franklin (Philadelphia) in front of 500 last night in the first round of the Rim Rockers Holiday Tournament.
Clarence Alonzo (17 points) tied the score at 60 when he made a layup with three minutes left. Alonzo and Amiel Thomas (21 points) each scored eight points in the fourth quarter after Longwood trailed 50-46 at the end of the third. Darnell Corbit led Franklin with 16 points. Longwood plays Mt. Zion (N.C.) at 8 tonight in the second round.
Our Savior New American 91, Grady 69: Oumar Sylla (18 points, eight rebounds) made two three-pointers to give OSNA a 12-2 lead early in the first quarter. OSNA’s Juan Diego Tello Palacios had 17 points and nine rebounds and Konimba Diarra 13 points and 12 rebounds. Quincy Douby led Grady, last year’s PSAL A champ, with 29 points. OSNA plays Celestrial (Philadelphia) at 6 tonight in the second round. B: Corbit 16, Campbell 10, Bryant 4, Jackson 10, Smith 7, McLean 2, Wilson 5, Glover 9. Totals: 22-14-63. L: Alonzo 17, Bardeguez 2, Flowers 4, France 6, Rawlins 7, Thomas 21, Treffert 16. Totals: 30-9- 73.
Celestrial (Phila.) 84, L.I. Lutheran 60: Brandon Wilson had 17 points and 10 rebounds and John Buck 15 points and 10 rebounds for Long Island Lutheran. Antwan Miller had 21 points for Celestrial. Lutheran plays Grady (Brooklyn) at 2 p.m. today in the losers’ bracket.
Mt. Zion (N.C). 15122624-77
Longwood 1514919-57 |
MZ: Dandridge 20, Theiro 15, Tangara 9, Simmons 9, Webber 4, Burns 14, Roberts 6. Totals: 29-13-77. L: Alonzo 9, Bardeguez 6, Mortley 3, Polk 4, Rawlins 11, Thomas 7, Treffert 17. Totals: 21-6-57. Dec. 29
Tourney’s Last Day a Bummer: [NASSAU AND SUFFOLK Edition]
Jason Molinet. STAFF WRITER. Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 30 Dec 2001
Longwood coach Dennis Terry should have been in his glory yesterday.
Instead, the last day of the Longwood Rim Rockers Tournament, a tournament he started this year, turned from festive into farce.
Terry used donations and grit to bring the finest collection boys basketball talent Long Island has seen in some time for what was the premier holiday event in the tri-state area.
Then came the news that Brooklyn powerhouse Grady, slated to face Philadelphia’s Ben Franklin in the seventh-place game at noon, opted to forfeit without informing anyone it wasn’t going to show.
Grady, which stayed at a nearby hotel, checked out in the morning and went home. It was the fourth loss for defending PSAL Class A champion Grady in eight days, a streak which began with a defeat at Amityville last Saturday. All that Franklin’s visibly disappointed players could do to pass the time was shoot in the gym before the start of Game 2.
“What was disappointing was we didn’t even get a phone call,” Terry said. “The other team traveled so far and Grady didn’t even have the common courtesy to tell them they weren’t coming.”
Then came a controversial call and stunning finish in the fifth- place game that pitted Long Island Lutheran against Fairley of Memphis, Tenn.
Memphis’ highly recruited swingman, Johnnie Jackson, a 6-6 senior, took an inbounds pass from midcourt, swooped down the left sideline and stepped inside the three-point arc. Then he fired a baseline jumper at the buzzer, apparently forcing overtime.
But the trail official, Sal Passamano, immediately signaled the shot a three-pointer. Fairley ran off the floor with an improbable 60- 59 victory while Long Island Lutheran players and coaches stood with jaws agape.
“Life isn’t always fair,” Lutheran coach Ronn Hall said. “It’s a tough lesson to learn. We did have the opportunity to ice the game. That’s something I’ll talk about to the kids, too.”
Arthur Onoura, who led Lutheran (3-2) with 21 points, provided the defensive play of the game when he swatted away Malando Story’s shot in the paint with 10 seconds left and Lutheran clinging to a 59-57 lead.
Josh Corbin had a chance to put Lutheran ahead to stay when he went to the line with five seconds to go, but he missed both attempts and Fairley (11-5) came down with the rebound. Officials called time out because the clock didn’t immediately start.
Fairley inbounded with three seconds remaining and it went to the smooth-shooting Jackson (29 points), who is being sought by UConn, Boston College and Arkansas among others.
Was it a three?
“I don’t know,” Jackson said with a smile. “I just shot the ball.”
The third-place game, a 76-59 victory by Our Savior New American over host Longwood, lacked the intrigue of the earlier games. It also was not what the home crowd came to see. (Attendance for all three games was a smaller-than-expected 800.) The only suspense came at halftime when the gym was evacuated after the fire alarm went off.
Our Savior, which improved to 13-3 one season after leaving the IPPSAL for an independent schedule studded with national-caliber opponents, put the game away with a 15-3 fourth-quarter run. Brian Treffert hit three three-pointers and finished with 13 points for Longwood (3-3).
Juan Palacios scored 19 points and grabbed six reboundsm, and point guard Jamar Wilson, who signed early with Albany, added 16 points and five assists for Our Savior.
Philadelphia’s Celestrial Prep capped off the tournament by outslugging powerhouse Mt. Zion Christian Academy of Durham, N.C., 73- 58, in the title game after trailing 34-32 at the half. Celestrial (10-2) was led by Aaron Cook with 17 points. Norman Simmons finished with 16 points for Mt. Zion (11-6).
The tournament was a grand experiment, something Terry doesn’t know if he can pull off again next year. At least one coach was glad he tried.
“I have a lot of respect for Coach Terry and his iniative to bring in great teams from all over,” OSNA coach Ron Stelzer said. “It’s great for Long Island. It raises the profile of Long Island basketball.”
Longwood 2216109-57 |
Sachem 9251117-62 |
Patrick Narciso (13 points) hit two free throws with 1:30 left to give Sachem a 59-57 lead. Elias Valentin and Michael Mosby (15 points, 16 rebounds) added free throws to seal the win. Brian Treffert led Longwood with 15 points. L: Alonzo 8, Bardequez 3, Flowers 2, Polk 10, Rawlings 5, Thomas 14, Treffert 15. Totals: 23-7-57. S: Hall 9, Valentin 6, Howard 7, Clarke 6, Narciso 13, Mosby 15, Stapleton 6. Totals: 17-24-62. Jan. 2
Longwood 55, Smithtown 53: Brian Treffert hit a three-pointer with 18 seconds left for Longwood in League I. Akin Rawlins’ three at the end of the third cut Smithtown’s lead to 42-39. L: Alonzo 13, Bardeguez 6, Polk 2, Rawlins 6, Thomas 12, Treffert 16. Totals: 23-2-55. S: Bonacher 2, Keaton 12, McMillian 13, Miller 8, Mourispp 4, Olsen 14. Totals: 22-2-53. Jan. 6, 2002
Longwood 11111413-49 |
Patch-Medford 921017-38 |
Amiel Thomas had 11 points and 11 rebounds for Longwood. Chad Henderson came off the bench to block four shots, and Tremaine France had four steals for Longwood. L: Alonzo 9, Bardeguez 7, France 3, Henderson 4, Perez 1 Polk 7, Rawlins 5, Thomas 11, Treffert 2. Totals: 18-11-49. PM: Funaro 9, Donegain 2, Dmeza 9, Miller 5, Morales 11, Paquette 2. Totals: 15-5- 38. Jan. 9
Floyd 14121213-51 |
Longwood 9102320-62 |
F: Hodgson 23, Nichols 12, Curtin 5, Rayson 4, Borak 2, Howe 4, Spinks 1. Totals: 15-19-51. L: Alonzo 12, Bardeguez 6, France 1, Polk 4, Thomas 29, Treffert 10. Totals 23-13-62. Jan. 13
Longwood 13242014-71 |
Brentwood 2592022-76 |
L: Alonzo 8, Bardequez 10, Henderson 4, Rawlins 5, Thomas 32, Treffert 12. Totals: 28-12-71. B: Hernandez 10, J. Luderman 15, Koerner 13, Efekoro 19, Graham 4, Day 3, A. Luderman 1, Garcia 11. Totals: 27-15-76. Jan. 16
Ward Melville 11151815- 59 |
Longwood 24162321- 84 |
Brian Treffert scored 10 of his 19 points in the first quarter as Longwood (4-2) went on a 24-11 run. Treffert also hit five three-pointers. Clarence Alonzo added 11 points, 8 rebounds and 9 assists. Paul Barrett scored 18 for Ward Melville (2-3).WM: Aliperti 9, Montrovil 5, Barrett 18, Toscano 12, Lortie 2, Murgulin 5, Daum 4, Irizony 1, Priolo 3. Totals: 24-8-59. L: Alonzo 11, Bardeguez 12, France 9, Henderson 9, Hoyte 2, Perez 2, Polk 2, Rawlins 2, Thomas 13, Treffert 19, Williams 2. Totals: 33-11-84. Jan. 19
THIS WEEK / A Look at the Top Games and Players / Suffolk: [NASSAU AND SUFFOLK Edition]
REPORTED BY DEIRDRE BURNS. Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 22 Jan 2002
BOYS BASKETBALL
Stony Brook at Port Jefferson (Today, 5:45 p.m.): The first of two meetings this week between the League VII schools and Class C contenders. They meet again at 7 p.m. Saturday at Stony Brook. Port Jeff features Jacob Clark; Stony Brook has Steven Harney.
Sachem at Longwood (Saturday, 2 p.m.): Sachem has a super bench, which is working its way into the starting lineup, and must rotate fresh players to hang with Longwood‘s guards in this League I game. Clarence Alonzo plays a superb point for Longwood. Sachem, led by Patrick Narciso, won, 62-57, on Jan. 3.
Small Guys Play Big for B’Wood: [SUFFOLK Edition]
Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 16 Jan 2002:
Brentwood sent out a small, five-guard lineup following the timeout and executed its play to perfection … except that John Luderman missed the three-pointer.
But the scrappy Brentwood players battled for the rebound, tapping the ensuing loose ball from player to player until it landed in the hands of wide-open Kenny Koerners. The 5-7 guard promptly launched and made a three-pointer from the left corner.
Koerner’s basket gave his team a one-point lead with 1:50 left in Brentwood’s 76-71 League I boys basketball victory last night, but it also might have had a profound, long-term effect.
Brentwood (4-0), a youthful team that has two players and one starter returning from last year’s Suffolk Class A championship squad, is playing with a new-found confidence after losing four of its first six non-league games.
But the Indians are unblemished in league action, and their victory over talented Longwood (2-2) gives them a major confidence boost in their push toward another postseason run.
“They are talented, but what they lack is experience,” Brentwood coach Marty Riger said of his players. “That is what we are getting. The more they succeed with tough games like this, the more confident they are going to become.”
Ofo Efekoro (19 points) made six foul shots down the stretch to secure the win. Luderman added 15 points.
Amiel Thomas led Longwood with 32 points.
Longwood 15122021-68 |
Smithtown 1215824-59 |
Amiel Thomas (eight) and Alex Bardaguez totaled 14 of the team’s 20 points in the third quarter as Longwood (6-2) took a 12-point lead. Thomas had 19 points, 13 rebounds and 6 assists. Dan Rubertone had 18 points for Smithtown (4-4).L: Alonzo 10, Bardeguez 14, France 4, Henderson 4, Rawlins 7, Thomas 19, Treffert 10. Totals: 25-17-68. S: Bonacker 4, Keaton 13, MacMillan 13, Olsen 11, Rubertone 18. Totals: 26-5-59. Jan. 30
Whitman Defeats Longwood
They came at him the way a wave overwhelms an unsuspecting beach- goer, dragging him under at midcourt.
Jim O’Neill is one of the “other guys” on the Whitman boys basketball team, a junior forward who gets by more on gritty hustle than talent. And fate called upon him to decide last night’s Suffolk Class A championship game against No.6 Longwood.
The top-seeded Wildcats saw their six-point lead evaporate in the final minute as scrappy Longwood refused to fold. Momentum had swung decidedly against Whitman by the time O’Neill was sent to the foul line with 3.5 seconds left.
About 27 seconds earlier, O’Neill had a chance to add to Whitman’s one-point lead when he took an inbounds pass from Chris McCarthy and streaked toward the basket on a back-door play. But he fumbled the ball and lost it out of bounds. That was on his mind as he stepped to the foul line.
“It was a perfect pass and I just dropped it,” said O’Neill, who finished with a career-high 10 points and six rebounds. “I wanted redemption. I didn’t want to be the reason why we lost.”
With a crowd of 1,900 at Stony Brook University looking on, O’Neill drained both foul shots. And when Clarence Alonzo’s heave from midcourt sailed over the basket, Whitman could celebrate its 49- 46 victory by swarming the team’s unlikely hero.
“He’s a tough kid,” Whitman coach Tom Fitzpatrick said. “That’s why he starts for us.”
Whitman (20-2), making its fourth straight appearance in the championship game, took home the title for the second straight season. The Wildcats will face Suffolk Class B champion Amityville for the overall championship at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Stony Brook before moving on to the Class A Southeast Regional final/Long Island championship.
But the Wildcats nearly didn’t get past Longwood (15-7), which proved to be playoff-tough after playing in Suffolk’s competitive League I. The Lions took a 41-39 lead on a basket by senior Israaiyl Flowers with 3:41 left.
“Their guards are quick and pressure you,” said 6-7 Whitman senior Matt Ross, who finished with eight points and 10 rebounds. “Everywhere you go, they are there with you.”
Then Ross and guard Antoine Agudio intervened in a big way.
One game after scoring 35 points, Agudio had 16 points and 17 rebounds. He pulled down a defensive rebound, ran the court and hit Russell Hamilton in stride for an easy layup to tie it at 41 with 2:36 left, sparking an 8-0 spurt that gave Whitman control.
Agudio followed O’Neill’s putback and a block by Ross at the other end with a layup to make it 45-41 with 1:29 left. Ross made it 47-41 by slamming home Agudio’s miss with 1:03 to go.
But Longwood refused to go away. Team captain Akin Rawlins hit a three-pointer with 49 seconds left. Alex Bardeguez stole the inbounds pass and Alonzo (seven assists) drove to the hoop to cut it to 47-46 with 35 seconds left. Rawlins missed the front end of a one- and-one with 10 seconds to go to leave Whitman ahead by one. That’s how it remained until O’Neill finished off the Lions.
“The foul line – we’ve struggled there all year,” said Longwood coach Dennis Terry, whose team converted just 3 of 13 attempts. “If Akin didn’t hit the three, it wouldn’t have been a game anyway.”
Sachem 8151010- 43 |
Longwood 139917- 48 |
S: Hall 7, Valentin 2, Howard 2, Clarke 8, Norman 8, Narciso 2, Mosby 14. Totals: 18-5-43. L: ALonzo 8, Bardeguez 7, France 3, Henderson 2, Rawlins 1, Thomas 9, Treffert 18. Totals: 14-15-48. Jan. 27
Patch-Medford 91193- 32 |
Longwood 1271220- 51 |
P: Funaro 10, Miller 4, Morales 7, Paquette 1, Stanton 10. Totals: 11-7-32. L: Alonzo 12, Bardeguez 4, Flowers 3, France 3, Polk 6, Rawlins 7, Thomas 16. Totals: 20-10-51. Feb. 3
Longwood 9161717-59 |
Floyd 18101721-66 |
Ryan Hodgson and David Nichols each scored 15 points for Floyd (5-4). Dennis Curtin added 14 points and 10 rebounds. Amiel Thomas led Longwood (7-3) with 16 points.L: Alonzo 13, Bardeguez 2, France 2, Henderson 3, Polk 12, Rawlins 1, Thomas 16, Treffert 10. Totals: 21-15-59. F: Hodgson 15, Nichols 15, Curtin 14, Makofsky 4, Wunsch 8, Spinks 6, Laysor 4. Totals: 25- 13-66. Feb. 6
Brentwood 11151317-56 |
Longwood 13121525-65 |
B: Hernandez 6, Luderman 10, Koerner 13, Efekoro 10, Walsh 11, Garcia 6. Totals: 21-9-56. L: Alonzo 12, Bardeguez 15, Henderson 4, Polk 9, Thomas 8, Treffert 17. Totals: 23-16-65. Feb. 9
Alonzo Leads Longwood: [SUFFOLK Edition]
Thier, Michael. Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 09 Feb 2002
Longwood sophomore Clarence Alonzo sat in the back of his classes Friday and spoke to no one.
That’s what happens before a meeting of the last two Suffolk Class A boys basketball champions.
“Somebody asked me about the game and I just said, ‘We’ll see what happens tonight,'” Alonzo said. “I wasn’t talking junk to nobody.”
Today, the talking can resume. Alonzo helped Longwood defeat League I-leading Brentwood, 65-56, Friday night before a season-high crowd of 1,500. Alonzo had 12 points, 7 assists and only one turnover for Longwood (11-6, 8-3).
“Clarence played a heck of a game,” Longwood coach Dennis Terry said. “He’s the sort of person that gets everybody involved, but has the ability to score himself.”
The 5-9 point guard also had six rebounds, and had four of his seven assists in the fourth quarter as Longwood extended its 40-39 lead.
Senior guard Brian Treffert scored 13 of his 17 points in the quarter. Treffort hit a three-pointer, a pair of free throws, and a 15-foot jumper in a span of 1:30 late in the fourth to help Longwood withstand Brentwood’s comeback.
“He’s becoming more of a complete player on both ends of the court, certainly on the offensive end,” Terry said of Treffert. “He’s becoming more than one-dimensional. He’s more than just a shooter.”
John Luderman hit a three- pointer to pull Brentwood (10-6, 8-2) within 56-54 midway through the fourth quarter of a game that had 10 lead changes.
Brentwood retains control of first place, with a game in hand over Longwood, which has only Tuesday’s game against Ward Melville left before the playoffs begin Feb. 19.
Earlier in the year, Alonzo set a team single-game record for assists at 13, eclipsing his brother Vernon’s mark of 12 set in 1997.
“He’s come a long way,” Terry said of Alonzo, a second-year starter who was one of only five Longwood freshmen to ever play varsity. “Each year, he gets better and better. He understands from tonight’s game every facet to run the point and get the team going.”
THIS WEEK / A Look at the Top Games and Players / Suffolk: [NASSAU AND SUFFOLK Edition]
REPORTED BY STEVEN D. SIDERATOS. Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 12 Feb 2002:
Ward Melville at Longwood (Today, 6 p.m.): It was Longwood (10-1 League I) that handed Ward Melville (9-1) its only loss this season, 49-47, on Jan. 18. Melville undoubtedly wants payback, as well as the league title, but Longwood has won the last 16 meetings.
Longwood 21191714-71 |
Ward Melville 1071313-43 |
L: Alonzo 6, Bardeguez 10, Flowers 2, France 3, Henderson 8, Mortley 4, Perez 3, Polk 7, Rawlins 4, Thomas 8, Treffert 16. Totals: 27-15-71. WM: Aliperti 4, Montrowl 6, Barrett 6, Johnson 3, Gerold 9, Pirolo 16. Totals: 18-2-43. Feb. 13
Longwood 78, Half Hollow Hills East 66: Brian Treffert (25 points) and Akin Rawlins each scored five points in overtime for No. 4 Longwood (14-6). Dan Hilton (24 points) made a three-pointer from the top of the key at the end of regulation to tie the score at 62 for No. 5 Hills East (16-4). Corey Johnson (13 points) gave Hills East its first lead of the game, 54-53, when he made a free throw with four minutes left. Amiel Thomas had 10 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists and Alex Barduez had 17 points and seven rebounds for Longwood, which will face No. 1 Whitman in the semifinals at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Floyd. Feb. 22
Agudio Turns On the Juice as Whitman Rolls: [SUFFOLK Edition]
Michael Thier. STAFF WRITER. Newsday, Combined editions; Long Island, N.Y. [Long Island, N.Y]. 24 Feb 2002:
Perhaps Antoine Agudio’s stunning power surge came from wrapping the fingers on his left (non-shooting) hand with bright red electrical tape.
What else could explain the junior forward tying his career high of 32 points last night? Agudio led undefeated and top-seeded Whitman to a 78-48 win over No.4 Longwood in a Suffolk County Class A boys basketball semifinal at Floyd.
Agudio said the tape was more of a fashion statement, “like the pros wear.” As for what generated his electric performance, Agudio said: “Basically, my father. He said we’re nothing until we win Class A like he did in 1982.”
Agudio’s father, Alex, was the state player of the year at Whitman that season. If outings like last night become routine, Antoine might have a shot at duplicating both of those feats.
“The kid is just awesome,” said Longwood coach Dennis Terry, who was clearly too amazed by what he’d seen to be depressed about the end of his season.
In fact, Terry’s posture often was as spectacular as the action on the court. When Nick Carter adjusted his body in midair to hit a leaner that gave Whitman (20-0) a 56-30 lead with 1:16 left in the third quarter, Terry simply threw up his hands.
“Hey, what can you do?” Terry said. “That was a tough move. You’ve got to give credit where credit’s due.”
Agudio lit up in the third quarter, scoring 12 points as Whitman increased its 13-point halftime lead to 58-31. He sank Longwood (14- 7) when he hit a three-pointer off the dribble from the right wing to give the Wildcats a 42-28 lead. His basket began a two-minute, 15-0 run that ended, fittingly, on another three- pointer by Agudio.
“They slept on me,” Agudio said. “The whole Class A slept on me. But I can shoot. And I had to show them.”
Carter, who had 11 assists, facilitated Agudio’s night, but the sophomore transfer from Long Island Lutheran found time to work on his own stats. Carter scored five straight points during the run and brought the crowd of 1,500 to a fever pitch when he split two defenders in the lane with a windmill layup. Then Carter hit the leaner that prompted Terry’s gesture. About two minutes later, Brian Faustin provided another thrill when he followed an errant shot with a dunk that gave Whitman a 58-30 lead.
What’s even scarier than this team that has torn through the Suffolk playoffs is that Agudio and Carter will only be better next season. Especially if they can get a trip to Glens Falls under their belts. But that road first leads to Stony Brook University, where Whitman will meet No. 3 Bay Shore in the Class A final at 9 p.m. Wednesday. Whitman already has beaten Bay Shore twice, 65-49 and 59- 52.
“If we keep focused and stay on the same page,” Carter said, “I think we can do it.” He could have been talking about Bay Shore … or Glens Falls.
SUFFOLK CLASS A TOURNAMENT
Semifinal – At Floyd
Longwood 19162320-78 |
Whitman 184917-48 |
L: Alonzo 11, Bardeguez 9, Henderson 2, Mortley 3, Perez 4, Polk 1, Thomas 16, Kelly 2. Totals: 16-15-48. W: Agudio 32, Carter 12, Faustin 8, Ross 11, Sutton 2, Alexander 1, Camberis 6, Orrechia 2, McKay 2, Hiller 2. Totals: 30-12-78.