Whitko Shocks Valley At Plymouth Sectional
July 28, 2016 at 4:25 p.m.
PLYMOUTH -ÊWhitko junior Alan Robbins had something to prove against Tippecanoe Valley in the Plymouth Sectional.
After the underdog Wildcats defeated the No. 10 Vikings by two points earlier in the season, the Whitko squad wanted to prove that it wasn't a fluke.
Wednesday night in Plymouth, the Wildcats, led by Robbins, did just that by topping the Valley team 48-45 to advance to the sectional semifinal against Knox Friday night.
"I wasn't the one who did it, the kids did," said Whitko coach Don Zawlocki. "They wanted this, and they played hard."
Former Wildcat Alex Frantz scord the first basket of the game at the 7:37 mark, but Whitko's Drew Spangle and Brad Walpole hit back-to-back three-pointers to make the score 6-2 in Whitko's favor.
Then Andrew Kramer hit a basket and Trey Eaton and Frantz netted back-to-back three-pointers to give Valley an 11-6 lead with 3:46 left in the first quarter.
At the 1:18 mark, Robbins cut Valley's lead to two, 11-9, by sinking a trey.
That's where the score stayed until the 7:13 mark in the second quarter when Brad Walpole hit a basket for Whitko and tied the score at 11-all.
Ross Stutzman hit a basket to restore the Vikings' lead, but with 6:10 left in the second frame, Valley was dealt a severe blow.
In a span of less than a minute, Viking leader Eaton was called for three straight fouls, forcing him to go to the bench.
At the 5:44 mark, Valley held a 15-14 advantage, but less than a minute later Whitko started a 10-0 run to build a nine-point lead, 24-15.
Whitko held a 27-15 advantage at the half, but Valley was not out of the game.
"We got ourselves into a hole early in the second quarter," said Valley coach Bill Patrick. "We were playing from behind through much of the quarter."
Eaton re-entered the game to start the third, and Frantz netted the first basket of the second half at the 6:52 mark.
But with 6:13 left in the third, Eaton was called for his fourth foul and headed back to the bench for the remainder of the quarter.
However, the Vikings fared better in the third quarter than they had earlier in the game. Valley outscored Whitko 11-9 and cut the Wildcat lead to six, 36-30, going into the final quarter of play.
Eaton entered the game again in the fourth quarter to spark the Vikings. Frantz hit two free throws and the first field goal of the fourth to cut the Viking deficit to two, 36-34.
John Woods and Walpole combined to build Whitko's lead back to five, 39-24, but it did not last for long.
Stutzman hit the front end of two free throws but missed the second. Frantz grabbed the rebound and put it back up for a basket to slice the difference back to two, 39-37.
After Robbins hit both sides of a double bonus, Eaton kicked into gear. He hit a basket and then two free throws to tie the score at 41-all.
Ben Garber broke the tie with a free throw, but Valley's Andrew Kramer answered with a basket that gave the Vikings their first lead, 43-42, since early in the second quarter.
At the 1:28 mark, Brandon Harmon sank two free throws for Valley to increase the Viking lead to three, but again the lead did not last long.
Just 12 second later, Robbins sank a two-point basket and was fouled on the play. He hit the free throw to convert the three-point play and tied the score at 45.
With 43 ticks left on the clock, Whitko's Spangle broke the tie by hitting the front-end of a double bonus opportunity.
Valley missed a shto at the other end of the court, and Whitko got the rebound. Robbins was fouled on the play and hit both free throws to give Whitko a three-point advantage with eight seconds left on the clock.
"(Robbins) is the type of kid you want to have the ball when the game is on the line," said Zawlocki. "He's the kid who wants to take that shot, make that free throw. And he's our best free throw shooter."
Valley had one last chance to tie the score and got the ball to Eaton behind the three-point arc. Just as he went to shoot the basket, Whitko's Garber stripped the ball from Eaton's hands, securing a Wildcat victory.
"It hurts to lose in the tournament," said Patrick. "You play all season to advance in the state tournament. To lose the first game of the sectional is tough. Winning the sectional was one of our biggest goals, so this is a major disappointment."
Frantz led all scorers with 17 points. He also pulled down 17 rebounds. Eaton who spent nearly half the game on the bench in foul trouble, finished the game with seven points and three rebounds.
"We had to play most of the game without Trey, our best player," said Patrick. "He had three fouls early and had to sit out most of the second quarter. When he got his fourth foul early in the third quarter, it hurt."
But Robbins was the star of the night with 16 points on a nearly perfect performance. He was 5 of 6 from the field, including a three-pointer. Robbins was a perfect 5 of 5 from the charity stripe and pulled down three rebounds.
Whitko improves to 8-13, while Valley ends the season 17-4. Two of Valley's four losses came to Whitko. The Wildcats face Knox at 6 p.m. Friday in the semifinal of the Plymouth Sectional.
WHITKO 48, No. 10 TIPPECANOE VALLEY 45
Valley 11 8 11 15 - 45
Whitko 9 18 9 12 - 48
Valley FG FT R S Pts.
Eaton 2-7 2-3 3 1 7
Frantz 7-18 2-2 17 1 17
Kramer 2-7 0-0 1 1 5
Wise 2-2 0-0 2 0 4
Stutzman 3-5 2-4 5 2 8
Beyers 0-2 0-0 0 0 0
Hartzler 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Harmon 1-2 2-2 2 0 4
Totals 17-44 8-10 30 5 45
Whitko FG FT R S Pts.
Robbins 5-6 5-5 3 0 16
Woods 1-5 4-8 4 1 6
Walpole 3-7 0-1 2 1 7
Garber 2-6 6-9 4 2 10
Spangle 1-6 2-4 2 0 5
Walter 1-1 1-2 1 1 3
Day 0-0 1-2 0 0 1
Hobbs 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Lopshire 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 13-31 19-31 16 5 48
Three-point goals -ÊValley 3-16 (Eaton 1-5, Frantz 1-5, Kramer 1-5, Stutzman 0-1), Whitko 3-5 (Walpole 1-3, Robbins 1-1, Spangle 1-1). Fouls -ÊValley 22, Whitko 14. Fouled out -Ênone.
Seventh-Ranked Tigers Not Slowed By East Noble
By Dale Hubler, Times-Union Sports Writer
WATERLOO - Against a team that loves to slow the game's tempo, the only thing that slowed seventh-ranked Warsaw was that the game was played a day late.
Postponed from Tuesday because of weather, the Tigers downed East Noble 62-47 Wednesday night in the opening game of the DeKalb 4A Sectional, advancing to Friday's semifinal round.
"The kids were really ready to go," 23rd-year Warsaw coach Al Rhodes said. "They were extremely disapointed we didn't get to play Tuesday, just because we've been pointing to the sectional for so long."
A year ago in the Elkhart Sectional, it was East Noble ending Warsaw's season. Wednesday night it was Warsaw improving to 20-2 and the Knights ending their season at 10-11.
Well into what Rhodes calls a three-year plan for his eight seniors, the Tigers played nearly flawless basketball against East Noble, and will now play Carroll, which upset No. 10 Columbia City 55-50, Friday at 6 p.m. Warsaw downed Carroll 69-55 in last Friday's regular season finale.
Wawasee and No. 5 DeKalb will play in Friday's bye game at 7:30 p.m., with the winners playing Saturday for the championship.
Wednesday's first quarter may have been exaclty what Marty Johnson-coached East Noble was looking for, as the Knights led 10-9 after the first eight minutes of play.
The second quarter was then everything the Tigers were looking for, as Warsaw opened the frame with an 8-0 run and led 29-19 at halftime.
"We wanted to keep the defensive pressure on them and speed the tempo up," Rhodes said. "In the second quarter William Knepper gave us a huge lift offensively."
After a Brad Seiss three-pointer gave Warsaw a 12-10 lead early in the second stanza, the 6-foot-3, 270-pound Knepper crashed the boards and went back up for two. With just under two minutes remaining in the half, a Knepper field goal gave the Tigers a 10-point lead.
Knepper, Warsaw's sixth man and generally its spark plug, finished the game with seven points on 3-of-4 shooting. He also grabbed five rebounds and made two steals.
In a game that lasted just over an hour, Tiger senior Greg Clay led all scorers with 27 points. The 6-4 senior led the team in rebounds with eight, was 3 of 5 from the arc and 6 of 8 from the charity stripe.
The Tigers, who turned the ball over just twice, committed only two fouls and put forth the highest offensive total allowed by East Noble all year, also got 13 points from Jerad Shaw, seven from Ryan DeGeeter and six from Seiss.
The Knights cut the deficit to seven, 38-31, in the third but Warsaw enjoyed a double-digit lead throughout the final frame.
While Warsaw only had two turnovers, East Noble had the ball stolen eight times and was outrebounded 26-19.
"I thought our trap was the key to the game," Rhodes said of the Tigers' stingy defense. "We were able to speed the tempo up. I also thought we handled the boards pretty well."
East Noble was led offensively by the 13 points of senior Zach Beiswanger. Sophomore Kyle Wert added 11, while Jeff Wedding and Tyler Martin chipped in with six each.
NO. 7 (4A) WARSAW 62 EAST NOBLE 47
East Noble (10-11) 10 9 15 13 - 47
Warsaw (20-2) 9 20 15 18 - 62
East Noble FG FT R S Pts.
Wert (G) 5-9 0-0 3 1 11
Beiswanger (G) 5-9 1-1 5 0 13
Shook (F) 2-3 0-0 2 0 4
Wedding (F) 3-5 0-0 2 0 6
Poppy (C) 1-3 0-0 4 0 2
Troyer 2-4 0-0 1 0 5
Martin 3-6 0-0 1 0 6
Deming 0-0 0-0 1 0 0
Taulbee 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 21-40 1-1 19 1 47
Warsaw FG FT R S Pts.
Seiss (G) 1-2 3-4 0 1 6
G. Clay (G) 9-14 6-8 8 2 27
C. Clay (F) 1-7 0-0 1 0 2
Shaw (F) 5-11 3-4 6 2 13
DeGeeter (C) 3-4 1-2 4 1 7
Knepper 3-4 1-2 5 2 7
Datta 0-1 0-0 1 0 0
Moore 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Walmer 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Kindig 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Scott 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Fussle 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 22-44 14-20 28 8 62
Three-point goals - East Noble 4-13 (Beiswanger 2-5, Wert 1-3, Troyer 1-3, Shook 0-1, Martin 0-1), Warsaw 4-10 (G. Clay 3-5, Seiss 1-2, Shaw 0-2, Datta 0-1). Fouls - East Noble 14, Warsaw 2. Fouled out - none.
Jimtown Ends Triton's Season
Times-Union Staff Report
NORTH JUDSON -ÊTrailing Jimtown 14-4 after the first quarter, Triton's varsity boys basketball team ended its season with a 51-27 loss Wednesday in the opening round of the North Judson 2A Sectional.
Triton, which won 1A sectional titles the past three years under former coach Joe Bennett, ends its first season under Mike McBride with a 6-15 record.
Six-foot-7 center Kyle Johnson scored Jimtown's first 12 points of the game and finished with a game-high 20. He tallied 18 in the first half and only missed one shot throughout the game. Teammate Jeremy Herring added 10 points and 10 rebounds in the 24-point win.
Todd Blackford scored six to lead Triton, while Steven Boyer added five.
Jimtown will now play Bremen in Friday's semfinal round. Bremen advanced by downing North Judson 40-35. LaVille and Glenn will play in Friday's bye game.
JIMTOWN 51, TRITON 27
Jimtown 14 15 15 7 - 51
Triton 4 8 8 7 - 27
Jimtown - Luce 0 0-0 0, Woolwine 1 0-0 2, DeShone 2 0-0 5, Groh 0 1-2 1, Squibb 1 0-0 3, Leighton 0 0-0 0, Secor 1 0-0 2, Whitaker 4 0-0 8, Herring 5 0-1 10, Huff 0 0-0 0, Johnson 9 2-2 20, Iziary 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 3-5 51.
Triton - Landis 0 0-0 0, Boyer 2 0-2 5, Moore 1 2-2 4, Yankovich 0 0-0 0, Blackford 3 0-0 6, Nifong 0 0-0 0, Wanemacher 1 0-2 3, Saville 1 0-0 2, Kuhn 0 0-0 0, Watkins 2 0-0 4, Bell 0 0-0 0, Barton 1 0-0 3. totals 11 2-6 27.
Three-point goals - Jimtown 2 (Squibb, DeShone), Triton 3 (Wanemacher, Boyer, Barton). Fouls - Jimtown 9, Triton 12. Turnorvers - Jimtown 14, Triton 10. [[In-content Ad]]
PLYMOUTH -ÊWhitko junior Alan Robbins had something to prove against Tippecanoe Valley in the Plymouth Sectional.
After the underdog Wildcats defeated the No. 10 Vikings by two points earlier in the season, the Whitko squad wanted to prove that it wasn't a fluke.
Wednesday night in Plymouth, the Wildcats, led by Robbins, did just that by topping the Valley team 48-45 to advance to the sectional semifinal against Knox Friday night.
"I wasn't the one who did it, the kids did," said Whitko coach Don Zawlocki. "They wanted this, and they played hard."
Former Wildcat Alex Frantz scord the first basket of the game at the 7:37 mark, but Whitko's Drew Spangle and Brad Walpole hit back-to-back three-pointers to make the score 6-2 in Whitko's favor.
Then Andrew Kramer hit a basket and Trey Eaton and Frantz netted back-to-back three-pointers to give Valley an 11-6 lead with 3:46 left in the first quarter.
At the 1:18 mark, Robbins cut Valley's lead to two, 11-9, by sinking a trey.
That's where the score stayed until the 7:13 mark in the second quarter when Brad Walpole hit a basket for Whitko and tied the score at 11-all.
Ross Stutzman hit a basket to restore the Vikings' lead, but with 6:10 left in the second frame, Valley was dealt a severe blow.
In a span of less than a minute, Viking leader Eaton was called for three straight fouls, forcing him to go to the bench.
At the 5:44 mark, Valley held a 15-14 advantage, but less than a minute later Whitko started a 10-0 run to build a nine-point lead, 24-15.
Whitko held a 27-15 advantage at the half, but Valley was not out of the game.
"We got ourselves into a hole early in the second quarter," said Valley coach Bill Patrick. "We were playing from behind through much of the quarter."
Eaton re-entered the game to start the third, and Frantz netted the first basket of the second half at the 6:52 mark.
But with 6:13 left in the third, Eaton was called for his fourth foul and headed back to the bench for the remainder of the quarter.
However, the Vikings fared better in the third quarter than they had earlier in the game. Valley outscored Whitko 11-9 and cut the Wildcat lead to six, 36-30, going into the final quarter of play.
Eaton entered the game again in the fourth quarter to spark the Vikings. Frantz hit two free throws and the first field goal of the fourth to cut the Viking deficit to two, 36-34.
John Woods and Walpole combined to build Whitko's lead back to five, 39-24, but it did not last for long.
Stutzman hit the front end of two free throws but missed the second. Frantz grabbed the rebound and put it back up for a basket to slice the difference back to two, 39-37.
After Robbins hit both sides of a double bonus, Eaton kicked into gear. He hit a basket and then two free throws to tie the score at 41-all.
Ben Garber broke the tie with a free throw, but Valley's Andrew Kramer answered with a basket that gave the Vikings their first lead, 43-42, since early in the second quarter.
At the 1:28 mark, Brandon Harmon sank two free throws for Valley to increase the Viking lead to three, but again the lead did not last long.
Just 12 second later, Robbins sank a two-point basket and was fouled on the play. He hit the free throw to convert the three-point play and tied the score at 45.
With 43 ticks left on the clock, Whitko's Spangle broke the tie by hitting the front-end of a double bonus opportunity.
Valley missed a shto at the other end of the court, and Whitko got the rebound. Robbins was fouled on the play and hit both free throws to give Whitko a three-point advantage with eight seconds left on the clock.
"(Robbins) is the type of kid you want to have the ball when the game is on the line," said Zawlocki. "He's the kid who wants to take that shot, make that free throw. And he's our best free throw shooter."
Valley had one last chance to tie the score and got the ball to Eaton behind the three-point arc. Just as he went to shoot the basket, Whitko's Garber stripped the ball from Eaton's hands, securing a Wildcat victory.
"It hurts to lose in the tournament," said Patrick. "You play all season to advance in the state tournament. To lose the first game of the sectional is tough. Winning the sectional was one of our biggest goals, so this is a major disappointment."
Frantz led all scorers with 17 points. He also pulled down 17 rebounds. Eaton who spent nearly half the game on the bench in foul trouble, finished the game with seven points and three rebounds.
"We had to play most of the game without Trey, our best player," said Patrick. "He had three fouls early and had to sit out most of the second quarter. When he got his fourth foul early in the third quarter, it hurt."
But Robbins was the star of the night with 16 points on a nearly perfect performance. He was 5 of 6 from the field, including a three-pointer. Robbins was a perfect 5 of 5 from the charity stripe and pulled down three rebounds.
Whitko improves to 8-13, while Valley ends the season 17-4. Two of Valley's four losses came to Whitko. The Wildcats face Knox at 6 p.m. Friday in the semifinal of the Plymouth Sectional.
WHITKO 48, No. 10 TIPPECANOE VALLEY 45
Valley 11 8 11 15 - 45
Whitko 9 18 9 12 - 48
Valley FG FT R S Pts.
Eaton 2-7 2-3 3 1 7
Frantz 7-18 2-2 17 1 17
Kramer 2-7 0-0 1 1 5
Wise 2-2 0-0 2 0 4
Stutzman 3-5 2-4 5 2 8
Beyers 0-2 0-0 0 0 0
Hartzler 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Harmon 1-2 2-2 2 0 4
Totals 17-44 8-10 30 5 45
Whitko FG FT R S Pts.
Robbins 5-6 5-5 3 0 16
Woods 1-5 4-8 4 1 6
Walpole 3-7 0-1 2 1 7
Garber 2-6 6-9 4 2 10
Spangle 1-6 2-4 2 0 5
Walter 1-1 1-2 1 1 3
Day 0-0 1-2 0 0 1
Hobbs 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Lopshire 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 13-31 19-31 16 5 48
Three-point goals -ÊValley 3-16 (Eaton 1-5, Frantz 1-5, Kramer 1-5, Stutzman 0-1), Whitko 3-5 (Walpole 1-3, Robbins 1-1, Spangle 1-1). Fouls -ÊValley 22, Whitko 14. Fouled out -Ênone.
Seventh-Ranked Tigers Not Slowed By East Noble
By Dale Hubler, Times-Union Sports Writer
WATERLOO - Against a team that loves to slow the game's tempo, the only thing that slowed seventh-ranked Warsaw was that the game was played a day late.
Postponed from Tuesday because of weather, the Tigers downed East Noble 62-47 Wednesday night in the opening game of the DeKalb 4A Sectional, advancing to Friday's semifinal round.
"The kids were really ready to go," 23rd-year Warsaw coach Al Rhodes said. "They were extremely disapointed we didn't get to play Tuesday, just because we've been pointing to the sectional for so long."
A year ago in the Elkhart Sectional, it was East Noble ending Warsaw's season. Wednesday night it was Warsaw improving to 20-2 and the Knights ending their season at 10-11.
Well into what Rhodes calls a three-year plan for his eight seniors, the Tigers played nearly flawless basketball against East Noble, and will now play Carroll, which upset No. 10 Columbia City 55-50, Friday at 6 p.m. Warsaw downed Carroll 69-55 in last Friday's regular season finale.
Wawasee and No. 5 DeKalb will play in Friday's bye game at 7:30 p.m., with the winners playing Saturday for the championship.
Wednesday's first quarter may have been exaclty what Marty Johnson-coached East Noble was looking for, as the Knights led 10-9 after the first eight minutes of play.
The second quarter was then everything the Tigers were looking for, as Warsaw opened the frame with an 8-0 run and led 29-19 at halftime.
"We wanted to keep the defensive pressure on them and speed the tempo up," Rhodes said. "In the second quarter William Knepper gave us a huge lift offensively."
After a Brad Seiss three-pointer gave Warsaw a 12-10 lead early in the second stanza, the 6-foot-3, 270-pound Knepper crashed the boards and went back up for two. With just under two minutes remaining in the half, a Knepper field goal gave the Tigers a 10-point lead.
Knepper, Warsaw's sixth man and generally its spark plug, finished the game with seven points on 3-of-4 shooting. He also grabbed five rebounds and made two steals.
In a game that lasted just over an hour, Tiger senior Greg Clay led all scorers with 27 points. The 6-4 senior led the team in rebounds with eight, was 3 of 5 from the arc and 6 of 8 from the charity stripe.
The Tigers, who turned the ball over just twice, committed only two fouls and put forth the highest offensive total allowed by East Noble all year, also got 13 points from Jerad Shaw, seven from Ryan DeGeeter and six from Seiss.
The Knights cut the deficit to seven, 38-31, in the third but Warsaw enjoyed a double-digit lead throughout the final frame.
While Warsaw only had two turnovers, East Noble had the ball stolen eight times and was outrebounded 26-19.
"I thought our trap was the key to the game," Rhodes said of the Tigers' stingy defense. "We were able to speed the tempo up. I also thought we handled the boards pretty well."
East Noble was led offensively by the 13 points of senior Zach Beiswanger. Sophomore Kyle Wert added 11, while Jeff Wedding and Tyler Martin chipped in with six each.
NO. 7 (4A) WARSAW 62 EAST NOBLE 47
East Noble (10-11) 10 9 15 13 - 47
Warsaw (20-2) 9 20 15 18 - 62
East Noble FG FT R S Pts.
Wert (G) 5-9 0-0 3 1 11
Beiswanger (G) 5-9 1-1 5 0 13
Shook (F) 2-3 0-0 2 0 4
Wedding (F) 3-5 0-0 2 0 6
Poppy (C) 1-3 0-0 4 0 2
Troyer 2-4 0-0 1 0 5
Martin 3-6 0-0 1 0 6
Deming 0-0 0-0 1 0 0
Taulbee 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 21-40 1-1 19 1 47
Warsaw FG FT R S Pts.
Seiss (G) 1-2 3-4 0 1 6
G. Clay (G) 9-14 6-8 8 2 27
C. Clay (F) 1-7 0-0 1 0 2
Shaw (F) 5-11 3-4 6 2 13
DeGeeter (C) 3-4 1-2 4 1 7
Knepper 3-4 1-2 5 2 7
Datta 0-1 0-0 1 0 0
Moore 0-1 0-0 0 0 0
Walmer 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Kindig 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Scott 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Fussle 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Totals 22-44 14-20 28 8 62
Three-point goals - East Noble 4-13 (Beiswanger 2-5, Wert 1-3, Troyer 1-3, Shook 0-1, Martin 0-1), Warsaw 4-10 (G. Clay 3-5, Seiss 1-2, Shaw 0-2, Datta 0-1). Fouls - East Noble 14, Warsaw 2. Fouled out - none.
Jimtown Ends Triton's Season
Times-Union Staff Report
NORTH JUDSON -ÊTrailing Jimtown 14-4 after the first quarter, Triton's varsity boys basketball team ended its season with a 51-27 loss Wednesday in the opening round of the North Judson 2A Sectional.
Triton, which won 1A sectional titles the past three years under former coach Joe Bennett, ends its first season under Mike McBride with a 6-15 record.
Six-foot-7 center Kyle Johnson scored Jimtown's first 12 points of the game and finished with a game-high 20. He tallied 18 in the first half and only missed one shot throughout the game. Teammate Jeremy Herring added 10 points and 10 rebounds in the 24-point win.
Todd Blackford scored six to lead Triton, while Steven Boyer added five.
Jimtown will now play Bremen in Friday's semfinal round. Bremen advanced by downing North Judson 40-35. LaVille and Glenn will play in Friday's bye game.
JIMTOWN 51, TRITON 27
Jimtown 14 15 15 7 - 51
Triton 4 8 8 7 - 27
Jimtown - Luce 0 0-0 0, Woolwine 1 0-0 2, DeShone 2 0-0 5, Groh 0 1-2 1, Squibb 1 0-0 3, Leighton 0 0-0 0, Secor 1 0-0 2, Whitaker 4 0-0 8, Herring 5 0-1 10, Huff 0 0-0 0, Johnson 9 2-2 20, Iziary 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 3-5 51.
Triton - Landis 0 0-0 0, Boyer 2 0-2 5, Moore 1 2-2 4, Yankovich 0 0-0 0, Blackford 3 0-0 6, Nifong 0 0-0 0, Wanemacher 1 0-2 3, Saville 1 0-0 2, Kuhn 0 0-0 0, Watkins 2 0-0 4, Bell 0 0-0 0, Barton 1 0-0 3. totals 11 2-6 27.
Three-point goals - Jimtown 2 (Squibb, DeShone), Triton 3 (Wanemacher, Boyer, Barton). Fouls - Jimtown 9, Triton 12. Turnorvers - Jimtown 14, Triton 10. [[In-content Ad]]