B-G boys clinch playoff spot; G-MU girls fall to Franklin

Boys’ Basketball

B-G 72, Afton 59
AFTON – In a season of firsts, Bainbridge-Guilford qualified for the Midstate Athletic Conference for the first time in several years outscoring Afton Tuesday evening.
Ryan Porter scored 24 points for B-G (11-5), who reached its highest point total of the season. Austin Bauerle had 18 points, 11 rebounds, and five steals, while Brooks Harmon and Corbin Palmer netted 10 points apiece.
“It was tough for us with Corbin (B-G point guard) out of the lineup at the beginning of the year, but this is satisfying for us,” said B-G coach Greg Warren. “Since we beat Oxford (on Dec. 30), we have come together and proved we can beat a team we haven’t beaten in a long time.”
Palmer and Harmon also dished out five assists apiece for the Bobcats, who have won nine out of 10 games.
Mitch Decker scored 24 points for Afton, and Cameron Oswald added 20.
B-G: Ryan Porter, 9 6-6-24; Austin Bauerle, 6 3-4-18; Brooks Harmon, 3 2-2-10; Corbin Palmer, 3 2-2-10; Lucas Butcher, 3 0-0-6; Ray Frederick, 1 2-2-4; Tim Walts, 0;. Totals: 25 15-16-72.
Afton: Josh Davy, 0, Ricky Parsons, 1 2-2-5, James Westfall, 3 0-1-6, George Salonas, , Mitch Decker, 9 2-3-24, Cameron Oswald, 8 4-6-20, Matt Olin, 2 0-0-4, Ben Shearer, 0. Totals 23 8-12-59.
B-G 11 21 15 25–72
Aft. 12 13 9 25–59
Fouled out: none. Three-point goals: (BG) Bauerle 3, Harmon 2, Palmer 2. (A) Decker 4, Parsons 1. JV: B-G won 50-49.

Hancock 68, Oxford 38
HANCOCK – Hancock made 13 three-pointers including the first six it attempted in blowing out Oxford Tuesday on its senior recognition night.
Warren Drake canned five trifectas on his way to a 22-point night, and Tom Banicky pumped in four threes – all in the first half – to finish with 18. “Everything they did was right,” said Oxford coach Tim Davis. “They were the real deal tonight, and they made us look silly.”
The Wildcats had a 27-point advantage on three-point makes finishing 13-for-22 overall from beyond the three-point arc.
Andrew Golden scored nine for Oxford, who play at Sidney next week in the MAC playoffs.
Oxford: Justin Schray, 3 1-2-8; Ryan Moore, 2 0-0-4; Andrew Golden, 4 0-2-9; Paul Wonka, 2 0-0-5; Kevin Davis, 3 0-0-7; Eric Dilfer, 2 1-2-5. Totals: 16 2-6-38.
Hancock: Tom Banicky, 7 0-0-18, Eli Holton-Chandler, 0, Tyler Phillips, 6 2-2-15, Ryan Smith , 2 2-2-8, Luke Worzel, 1 0-0-3, Zach Worobey, , Warren Drake, 8 1-1-22, Joe Petriella,1 0-0-2 . Totals: 25 5-5-68.
Oxf. 11 5 8 14–38
Han. 20 16 11 21–68
Fouled out: none. Three-point goals: (H) Drake 5, Banicky 4, Smith 2, Worzel, Phillips. (O) Schray, Golden, Wonka, Davis. JV: Oxford won 49-42.

Unadilla Valley 70, Delhi 54
DELHI – Unadilla Valley significantly outplayed Delhi at the outset and the start of the second half to pick up its sixth win of the season Tuesday.
Justin Hofer scored 24 points for the Storm (6-9), Brandon Miles had a season-high 18 points, and Brett Smith tacked on 10. UV led 23-12 after one quarter, and extended the lead to 23 points over the next two stanzas.
“We played excellent halfcourt defense in the first half, and turned steals into easy baskets,” said UV coach Matt Osborne. “We also shot the ball well from the perimeter.”
UV: Kurt Haycook, 1 3-6-5; Jack Wilcox, 0 1-4-1 ; Jesse Ranger, 2 0-0-5; Brandon Miles, 7 4-6-18; Justin Hofer, 9 4-4-24; Nate Mackey, 0 1-2-1; David Anderson, 1 0-0-2; Brett Smith, 4 0-0-10; Gunnar Sheldon, 2 0-0-4; Nate Shackelton, 0; Kevin Thomas, 0; D. Aikins, 0. Totals: 26 13-22-70 .
Delhi: Ben Gifford, 6 2-2-18; Brandon Simonds, 5 2-2-15, Ethan Jhan, 0; Tucker, 0 2-2-2 Brandon Snyder, 0, Tyler Hymers, 2 1-2-5 Zack Fogle, 0, Denison, 4 0-0-11; Brian Hannigan, 0 , Jimmy King, 0 5-6-5. Totals: 16 12-14-54.
UV 25 15 19 13–70
Del. 13 9 13 20–54
Three-point goals: (D) Gifford 4, Simonds 3, Denison 3. (UV) Smith 2, Ranger, Hofer 2.

Girls’ Basketball

Franklin 52, G-MU 37
COPES CORNERS – Franklin dominated the middle two periods outscoring G-MU 35-18 to erase the Raiders’ good start.
Blake Stensland scored seven in the opening period for G-MU, who took a 12-8 lead after eight minutes of play.
Franklin sophomore Jordan Beers, who had four in the opening period, scored 23 of her game-high 28 points during the second and third quarters. Beers was aided by Jessie Terrano, who finished with 13 points.
“We were playing well and playing good defense, then all of a sudden we were down 10 and then 15,” said G-MU coach Jim Johnson. “Beers is tough to stop.”
Stensland led G-MU (5-11) with 15 points, and that included three three-pointers. Miranda Hill chipped in with 10 points. The Raiders complete their regular season on Friday when they play at Edmeston.
Franklin: Jessie Terrano, 5 2-4-13 , Emily George, 0, Marissa Cawley 2 0-1-4; Kristin Heidenreich, 0, Mariah McNeilly, 0, Keri Schmidt, 0, Jordan Beers, 10 7-10-28 , Angie Willert, 1 0-2-2, Mara Stalter, 2 1-2-5, Lucie Komorova, 0. Totals: 20 10-19-52.
G-MU: Miranda Hill, 4 2-7-10; Victoria Hutzley, 0; Jenn Mason, 0; Sabrina Brooks, 2 0-0-6; Blake Stensland, 6 0-0-15; Kali Murphy, 0; Logan Eltz, 0; Kristen Barnes, 2 0-0-4; Whitney Gilbert, 0; Lauren Hill, 0; Nichole Savarese, 1 0-2-2; Shelby Hartwell, 0. Totals: 15 2-9-37.
Frk. 8 17 18 9–52
GMU 12 8 10 7–37
Fouled out: none. Team fouls: (G) 17, (F) 8. Three-point goals: (F) Terrano, Beers, (G) Stensland 3, Brooks 2. Officials: Mulligan, Porter.

S-E 66, DeRuyter 12
DERUYTER – Sherburne-Earlville’s reserves and new players up from the junior varsity saw plenty of court time Tuesday night in a non-league victory at DeRuyter.
Bridget Daniel, up from the JV, led the Marauders (14-4) with 14 points, and fellow JV import, Lily Berg scored eight.
“We were able to give some of the new players some court time and get them comfortable before sectionals,” said S-E coach Karen Mulligan. “The JV kids and the reserves got quite a bit more playing time, and they all did some good things for us tonight.”
S-E is idle until the start of the Section III playoffs next week.
S-E: Sierra Morris, 3 1-2-7; Briana Vibbard, 0; Jordan VanAlthuis, 1 0-0-2; Mikayla Solloway, 3 0-0-6; Bridget Daniel, 7 0-0-14; Karly Wagner, 1 1-2-3; Ashley Eaton, 3 0-0-7; Kelsie Christian, 3 0-0-6; Sarah Cole, 2 0-0-6; Savannah Irwin, 1 0-0-3; Lily Berg, 3 2-4-8; Cassie Beaver, 2 0-0-4. Totals: 29 4-8-66 .
DeRuyter: Danielle Darrow, 0; Danielle Campbell, 2 0-0-4; Courtney Randall, 2 0-2-6 0; Sammy Gordon, 0; Bethany Prince, 1 0-1-2; Jessica Cox, 0; Christina Jimenez, 0. Totals: 5 0-3-12.
S-E 20 17 7 22–66
DeR 6 2 4 0–12
Fouled out: none. Three-point goals: (SE) Cole 2, Irwin, Eaton. (D) Randall 2.

B-G 42, Afton 24
AFTON – Bainbridge-Guilford pulled away with an 18-7 third quarter to clinch the fourth spot in the Midstate Athletic Conference playoffs.
Shania Vandermark and Randi Conway each scored six points during the third as the Bobcats extended their halftime lead to 35-20. “We kind of went into a lull in the second quarter, and I’m not sure what happened,” said B-G coach Bob Conway. “We came out in the third quarter and played well. We got some steals that we converted into layups, and Randi hit a couple of jumpers.”
Vandermark scored 17 and Conway 15 for B-G (11-5), who will play at Harpursville next week in the MAC semifinals.
Payton Cutting scored 12 points to pace Afton.
B-G: Shania Vandermark, 8 1-6-17; Gia Cuomo, 0; Randi Conway, 6 2-2-15; Abbey Smith,; Morgan Bulllis, 0 1-2-1; Alissa Rivera, 0; Amber DeGroat, 1 0--2; Caitlan Vandermark, 2 0-0-5 ; Micah Hopkins, 0; Betsy Holden, 1 0-2-2. Totals: 18 4-12-42.
Afton: Sierra Palmatier, 0 0-2-0, Mikala Sherman, 0, Makalliah Harris-Palladino, 0, Bailey Sherman, 4 0-0-8, Payton Cutting, 4 4-12-12, Annette Vernon, 0, Katerina Werth, 1 0-0-2, Subrina Brotzman, 0 0-2-0, Ashley Rogalski, 1 0-0-2. Totals: 10 4-16-24.
B-G 13 4 18 7–42
Aft. 5 8 7 4–24
Fouled out: none. Three-point goals: (B) Conway, C. Vandermark. JV: B-G won 45-25.

Oxford 46, Hancock 33
HANCOCK – Oxford won its seventh straight game, and likely clinched one of the top four spots in the Midstate Athletic Conference playoff race, Tuesday night at Hancock.
Lindsay McGraw hit two three-pointers in the first half for Hancock to keep her club within four of Oxford, 25-21.
Oxford took control in the third period, and defensively, held the Wildcats to four second-half field goals. “We really settled down in the second half and took better care of the ball,” said Oxford coach Chris Palmer. “Holding them to just five points in the third quarter was one of our highlights.”
Oxford shot 10-for-20 from the field in the second half in outscoring Hancock 21-12. Julianne Heggie led three Oxford players in double figures scoring with 12 points. Lacey Barry added 11, and Jacquelyn Heggie tacked on 10.
Oxford: Emily Smith, 3 0-0-6; Sarah Renaud, 0; Bridget Rice, 1 1-2-3; Sam Barrows, 0; Jacquelyn Heggie, 5 0-0-10; Julianne Heggie, 6 0-2-12; Lacey Barry, 4 3-4-11; Brooke Noble, 2 0-2-4. Totals: 21 4-10-46.
Hancock: Ashley Banicky, 0; C. Smith, 2 0-0-4; Brooke Sherburne, 0; Kayla Barringer, 2 0-0-4; Lea Newman, 0; Paige Rubera, ; Jen Wormuth, 0; Lindsay McGraw, 3 0-0-9; Sayla Kane, 0 2-2-2; Caitlin Wormuth, 3 8-10-14; Katie Wainman, 0. Totals: 10 10-12-33 .
Oxf. 10 15 11 10–46
Han 13 8 5 7–33
Three-point goals: (H) McGraw 3. JV: Hancock won 26-19. Officials: Davis, Moyer.

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.