Chenango Valley shoots down Greene for tourney title

Basketball

Greene Holiday Showcase
Boys Final
Chenango Valley 78, Greene 53
Consolation Final
Trumansburg 60, Oxford 57
Girls Final
Chenango Valley 42, Greene 34
GREENE – Matt Mullins followed up a 23-point game in the semfinal round with a career-best 32 points in leading Chenango Valley to a title win over the host Trojans in Friday’s Greene Holiday Showcase final.
Mullins canned 7-of-10 from three-point range and scored 23 points in the first half to spark his club to a 40-27 lead.
Greene made a brief run early in the third closing to 40-32 after a Chris Engler bucket. Chris Mack and Mullins answered quickly just 11 seconds apart with a pair of three balls to kickstart an 11-3 run and put the game out of reach. “We didn’t do a good job of getting to their shooters, and we knew we had to stop their penetration and kickouts,” said Greene coach Jeff Paske. “We made a little run to start the third, but just like that, it was back to 14 points and that was it.”
CV was 10-for-18 on three-point attempts and over 50 percent shooting for the game. Mullins’ 55 points over two games earned him Most Valuable Player honors.
Engler scored 15 for Greene and Mike Porter added 14 in the loss.
Oxford fell short in the consolation game to Trumansburg as it failed to hit a three-point shot to tie the game down the stretch.
In a back-and-forth contest, Oxford’s leading scorer, Ben Burdick, went down with an ankle injury with just under five minutes left in the game, and didn’t return. “That hurt us (Burdick’s injury) because he has been our go-to guy down the stretch in tight games,” said Oxford coach Tim Davis.
Burdick led his club with 15 points.
Girls’ Final
Plagued by foul trouble in the first half, the Trojans’ girls fell behind CV by double digits and did not recover in Friday’s final.
Donnalynn Cross, named the tourney’s MVP, led the Warriors with 13 points, while Alanna Cooney added 12.
Trojans starters Jess Smith, Liz Wentlent, and Lizzy Buhl all sat significant minutes in the first half with foul maladies, and in that two-period stretch, Greene managed just 12 points and trailed by 11 at halftime. “Those are three important scorers for us, but we still managed to hang in the game defensively,” said Greene coach Bill Case. “CV is a disciplined team, so when they got the lead, they worked the shot clock down. I did feel we did a nice job in the second half and outplayed them.”
Smith had seven in the fourth quarter and led Greene (5-3) with 14 points.
Boys’ Final
CV: Chris Mack, 4 0-0-10; Eric Bidwell, 1 0-0-3; Matt Mullins, 11 3-4-32; Kris Boyce, 2 1-1-5; Seth Mohney, 4 4-5-12; Scott Kisloski, 2 0-0-4; James Sodan, 4 0-0-8; Myles Pedrosa, 0 0-0-0; Matt Bobel, 1 2-2-4. Totals: 29 10-12-78
Greene: Trevor Johnson, 1 0-0-2; Corey Breck, 1 0-0-3; John Carlin, 2 0-0-4; Mike Porter, 5 0-0-14; Amell, 1 4-4-6; Chris Engler, 3 9-14-15; Anthony McDaniels, 0; Adams, 1 0-0-2; Ben Williams, 1 0-0-2; Cameron Daniels, 2 0-0-5. Totals: 17 13-18-53.
Score by quarters
CV 18 22 22 16–78
Gr. 17 10 13 13–53
Fouled out: none. Three-point goals: (CV) Mullins 7, Mack 2, Bidwell. (G) Porter 4, Breck, Daniels. Officials: Miner, McPeek.
Girls’ Final
CV: Kelsey Ruffo, 0; Donnalynn Cross, 5 3-4-13; Allanna Cooney, 3 6-8-12; Molly Silvanic, 0; Demetria Kermidas, 2 0-0-4; Jessica Aswad, 0; Katie Lowell, 2 5-8-9; Elizabeth Heller, 0; Stephanie Hoffman, 2 0-1-4; Chelsea Dean, 0. Totals: 14 14-21-42.
Greene: Barb Borst, 2 0-2-5; Holly Davis, 0; Candice Browning, 1 0-0-2; Erin Smith, 0 0-2-0; Monica Puglisi, 0; Megan McDermott, 4 1-2-9; Lizzy Buhl, 1 0-1-2; Liz Wentlent, 1 0-3-2; Jessica Smith, 6 1-3-14. Totals: 15 2-13-34.
Score by quarters
CV 9 14 12 7–42
Gr. 6 6 9 13–34
Fouled out: (G) Wentlent. Three-point goals: (G) Borst, J. Smith. Officials: Carey, Ferrarese.
Boys’ Consolation final
T-burg 60, Oxford 57
T’Burg: Finnigan, 1 0-0-2; Barry, 2 0-0-4; Hastings, 3 0-1-6; Susine, 2 1-2-6; Smith, 5 3-5-15; Zach Golden, 9 0-0-18; K. Sielaff, 0; Van Houten, 1 4-4-7; Blass, 0; Geuder, 0 2-5-2. Totals: 23 10-17-60.
Oxford: Trevor Nelson, 0 2-2-2; Steve Locke, 3 0-0-6; Scott Seiler, 3 1-2-8; Wes Tynan, 1 0-0-2; Andrew Hubman, 0; Ben Burdick, 5 5-7-15; Kyle Smith, 3 1-4-7; Jeff Champlin, 0 2-2-2; Alex Champlin, 2 1-2-5; Trey Seifert, 4 0-0-8; John Witchella, 0; Hugh Witchella, 1 0-0-2. Totals: 22 12-19-57.
T-burg 25 10 8 17–60
Oxf. 22 8 14 13–57
Fouled out: none. Three-point goals: (O) Seiler. (T) Smith 2, Susine, Van Houten. Officials: Ehrie, Fletcher.

G-MU 44, Tioga 40
G-MU 41, DeRuyter 27
DERUYTER – Playing its third game in four days, G-MU found its offensive stride in the second half to defeat Tioga in the title game of the DeRuyter Tournament Saturday.
Most Valuable Player, Drew Hartman, scored 14 of his 18 points in the second half, and G-MU made the Tigers pay at the foul line connecting on 8-of-11 attempts. The victory pushed G-MU’s mark to 6-3 overall as it returns to Tri-Valley League play later this week.
“We were kind of slow-footed and robotic in the first half (against Tioga),” said G-MU coach Bill Hartman. “We kind of took the reins off them in the second half and asked them to play quicker, but not hurry.”
Peter Schmidt, and all-tourmament selection, added 14 points in the win as G-MU turned a deficit in the first half into a double-digit lead early in the fourth quarter.
Friday, the Raiders overcame shooting woes to pour it on in the fourth quarter and pull away from the host Rockets.
Held to just 23 points over three periods, Dan Moreno scored six in the last stanza and Schmidt five. Moreno and Hall had 12 points apiece in the win. “We played much better, but simply couldn’t score in the third quarter,” Hartman said. “We ratcheted it up in the fourth quarter and executed well.”
G-MU : Paul Wildfeir 0, Nate Talbot , Dan Moreno 3 5-9-12, Drew Hartman 2 1-2-6, Cody Hall 4 2-3-12, Luke Hall 1 0-0-2, Tim Sloan 0, Travis Andrews 0, Pat Mosomillo 0, Luke Acanfora , Peter Schmidt 4 1-4-9, Nate Dubben 0. Totals: 14 9-18-41.
DeR: Brandon Meacham, 4 1-2-11; Dustin McClure, 4 3-4-11; Eric Duncan, 0; Nick Brown, 01-2-1; Nate Sutherland, 0; David Renette, 1 0-0-2; Eric Skeele, 0; Jacob Newton, 0; Shawn Meigs, 1 0-2; Josh Fuller, 0. Totals: 10 5-8-27.
Score by quarters
GMU 13 7 3 18–41
DeR 6 11 0 10–27
Fouled out: none.Three-pointers: (G) Hartman, Moreno, C. Hall 2 (D) Meacham 2.
Tioga: Kameron Sowell, 2 1-1-5; Luke Monell, 7 4-7-20; Matt Cox, 0; Henneman, 1 1-2-3; Jeff Keaty, 2 0-0-4; Scott Williams, 4 0-0-8. Totals: 15 5-9-40.
G-MU : Paul Wildfeir 0, Dan Moreno 2 0-0-4, Drew Hartman 7 3-5-18, Cody Hall 2 2-3-6, Luke Hall 1 0-1-2, Peter Schmidt 5 4-6-14. Totals: 17 9-15-44.
Score by quarters
Tioga 10 9 8 13–40
G-MU 9 6 16 13–44
Fouled out: (T) Williams. Three-pointers; (G) Hartman. (T) Monell.
All-tournament picks: (G) Drew Hartman (MVP), Peter Schmidt; (T) Monell, (D) Brandon Meacham.

Girls’ Basketball

B-G 79, Marathon 28
BAINBRIDGE – B-G, usually a finalist in its own holiday tournament, captured the consolation game of the Kazalski tourney routing Marathon Friday afternoon.
B-G (5-2), who dropped a close final to eventual tourney champion Unatego, had a career-high 33 points and 12 rebounds from Jen Patten. Marcie Day chipped in with a career-high 22 points and 16 boards. “Marcie was just a dominant force on the glass. She has strong hands and good anticipation,” said B-G coach Bob Conway.
Unatego topped Oneonta, 47-34, for the title to remain unbeaten.
Marathon: Cacie Muthig 1 2-2 4, Cara Caforio 0 0-1 0, Daisey Dallo 1 0-0 3, Lauren Fritts 1 1-2 3, Casie Wood 2 5-8 9, Desiree Wickham 2 0-0 4, Jessica Belanger 2 1-2 5. Totals: 9 9-15 28.
B-G: Samantha Spalholz 1 1-3 3, Mariah Schaeffer 2 7-12 11, Jennifer Patten 13 6-8 33, Brittney Fahringer 0 1-2 1, Nicole Conway 4 0-0 9, Marcie Day 3 16-20 22. Totals: 23 31-45 79.
Mar. 10 7 5 6–28
B-G 28 11 15 25–79
Three-point field goals: (M) Dallo; (BG) Patten, Conway.
All-Tournament Team: Colleen O’Hara (U), MVP; Blake Shelton, Unatego; Maddy Harlem, Oneonta; Meredith Ridgeway, On.; Jen Patten, B-G; Casie Wood, Marathon

Downsville 41, Afton 34
DOWNSVILLE – Afton struggled from the field over the first three quarters, and was not able to make up a nine-point deficit in a non-league loss at Downsville Friday.
Stephanie Shellman scored 14 points for Downsville, who led the game from the start. “We were just cold as ice from the field,” said Afton coach John Simonds. “They played some good defense, but it wasn’t anything we haven’t seen before.”
The Crimson Knights (3-6) were 6-for-36 (16 percent) from the field over the first three periods. Melissa Oswald scored 14 points to lead Afton, who play at B-G Saturday.
Afton: Jessica Winans 0 2-3 2, Abigail Martin 0 0-0 0, Heather Simonds 2 0-1 4, Samantha Sickler 0 0-0 0, Hannah Westfall 2 0-1 4, Leanne Westfall 0 2-4 2, Joelyn Sines 4 0-2-8, Melissa Oswald 5 3-4-14. Totals: 13 7-15 34.
Downsville: Brittany D’Addezio, 2 4-8-8, Kate Hume 2 1-2-5, Stephanie Shellman, 4 5-9-14, Macy Davis 4 0-0-11, Allison Townsend 0 1-2-1, Juliane Shaw 0 0-0 0, Jennifer Seiferth 1 0-0-2. Totals: 13 11-21 41.
Score by quarters
Afton 4 5 8 17–34
Downs. 9 8 9 15–41
Three-point field goals: (A) Oswald; D 4 (Davis 3, Shellman). JV: Afton won.

Wrestling

B-GA crowns two champs at Windsor tourney
WINDSOR – B-G/Afton placed third overall at the Windsor Christmas Tournament led by titles from Justin Davy (130) and Kris Stafford (160).
Davy, who also won the Clyde Cole Tournament earlier this month, beat Jesse Carling of Waverly by injury default in five minutes even. Stafford, meanwhile, took a 5-3 decision over David Kohlbach of the host school. Davy, the fifth seed, was named the tournament’s most outstanding wrestler.
Nick Wilcox (119) and Tyler Beckwith (145) won titles for Greene, and Josh Steward (189) led Norwich with a runner-up finish losing a 6-4 decision to Josh Bean of Windsor.

Comments

There are 3 comments for this article

  1. Steven Jobs July 4, 2017 7:25 am

    dived wound factual legitimately delightful goodness fit rat some lopsidedly far when.

    • Jim Calist July 16, 2017 1:29 am

      Slung alongside jeepers hypnotic legitimately some iguana this agreeably triumphant pointedly far

  2. Steven Jobs July 4, 2017 7:25 am

    jeepers unscrupulous anteater attentive noiseless put less greyhound prior stiff ferret unbearably cracked oh.

  3. Steven Jobs May 10, 2018 2:41 am

    So sparing more goose caribou wailed went conveniently burned the the the and that save that adroit gosh and sparing armadillo grew some overtook that magnificently that

  4. Steven Jobs May 10, 2018 2:42 am

    Circuitous gull and messily squirrel on that banally assenting nobly some much rakishly goodness that the darn abject hello left because unaccountably spluttered unlike a aurally since contritely thanks

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.