Wednesday, October 31, 2012

High school football 1st and 10: Playoff brackets taking shape, Robert Martin rolling up big numbers, and more gridiron notes

ANDREW P. SHAY, The Patriot-News, October 31, 2012 11:54 a.m. View full size Harrisburg running back Robert Martin is averaging 15.4 yards per carry over his last five games. - (SEAN SIMMERS, The Patriot-News)High school football news and notes entering Week 10: 1. The playoff clock is ticking. As we get ready for the final week of the regular season in District 3, the playoff brackets are taking shape (find them here). Right now it appears the Mid-Penn will have anywhere between 17-19 teams earn a postseason invitation. The only Tri-Valley League club in the mix is Millersburg in Class A. Nearly half of the Class AAAA and AAA brackets will most likely feature Mid-Penn teams. Make sense considering we have the largest league in the district. Still a big number. 2. Based on the current District 3 power ratings system — big fan by the way — it might be time for the Mid-Penn Conference to consider a slight course adjustment in terms of division alignment. How about moving Bishop McDevitt into the Commonwealth Division and sliding Carlisle to the Keystone? Just a suggestion. 3. Harrisburg running back Robert Martin continues to put up ridiculous numbers. In his last five games the junior, who doubles as a member of that lethal Cougars linebacker corps, has rolled up 865 yards in only 56 carries. That’s 15.4 yards per carry. 4. My Diet Shasta six-pack of Ginger Ale for Week 9 goes to Williams Valley’s Owen Daniel. The wide receiver-defensive back-kick returner for the undefeated Vikings caught a 32-yard touchdown pass, returned a punt 73 yards for a score and a had a 100-yard interception return for a TD in a 48-0 blanking of Newport. That’s a rare variety pack. 5. Hershey quarterback Zach Drayer is one of the more underrated signal callers in the conference. The senior is tough as nails and isn’t afraid to get his nose bloody running the ball. In an impressive 47-28 drubbing of Red Land, Drayer flashed his dual threat skills. He completed 11 passes for 238 yards and five of those targets went for touchdowns. 6. If Palmyra had made the jump to the Keystone Division last year there would not be this level of concern about the Cougars’ program. This is a nasty combination of Class AAAA and AAA teams on almost a yearly basis. This season seven of the eight teams are currently in the District 3 playoff field. It was always going to be a big jump. This year it’s just mean. Take a few years before asking the tough questions. 7. Susquehanna Twp. is potentially a lethal No. 2 or 3 seed in the District 3-AAA field. The Indians have found a offensive scheme that’s unlocked this monster. The defense has been there from Week 1. Normally by this time of year coach Joe Headen’s team has already played its best football. That is clearly not the case this season. You’ve been warned. 8. Congratulations to Middletown on picking up its first win of the season. The Blue Raiders under second-year head coach Rob Deibler have been close for a few weeks to nabbing victory No. 1. Running back Chris Holloman rolled up 257 yards and three touchdowns in a 47-17 triumph over Boiling Springs to clear 1,000 yards for the season. 9. In the preseason my partner Eric F. Epler offered this one-liner about West Perry: “Stopping the Z-Train seems harder than calculus.” He was referring to Mustangs quarterback Zach Smith. Congrats partner, you nailed that one. West Perry is 7-2 and appears playoff bound. And Smith? The senior has 1,873 total yards of offense with 30 touchdowns. 10. In 20 years of covering high school football, I can't remember two quarterbacks throwing for a combined 700 yards in a single game. Bishop McDevitt’s Alec Werner and Andrew Ford of Cedar Cliff came within nine yards of reaching that milestone. The duo completed 39 passes for 691 yards and seven touchdowns. More impressive might have been these two gunslingers completing 64 percent of their passes.

Atlantic City Showcase 13U Blue Championship Recap: Team Dejavu Raises The Trophy

Team Dejavu Gets It Done Team Dejavu won the Basketball Spotlight Atlantic City Showcase 13U Blue Division championship. Congrats to Team Dejavu and welcome to Basketball Spotlight. Stay tune as we bring you more coverage from the 13U division of this event.

Class of 2019 Players Ready To Make Mark At Super Skillcase

Judah McIntyre (Brooklyn, NY) As we previously stated the Class of 2019 is loaded with talent and most of the top players on the East Coast will be traveling to the Super Skillcase. Here’s a little of preview of some of the top ballers heading to Atlantic City High School this weekend. Judah McIntyre (Brooklyn, NY): That’s right the ultimate floor general has reclassified in the Class of 2019. That means we get an extra year of watching him survey the floor like a surgeon. This past summer he quarterbacked New Rens to a #10 finish in the country. Can’t wait to see him this weekend. Tyler Brelsford (Ellicott City, MD)- Tyler Brelsford is a name that ring bells around the country. He not only helped his AAU squad achieve high levels of success but he also made his mark on the camp circuit. He has proven to be one of the top point guards in the USA. Certified Winner! Terrence Williams (Clinton, MD)- The versatile forward has shown tremendous progress in developing his perimeter game. He demonstrated these new traits at the 3rd Annual J.E.M. All Star Classic. Now he should be up for the challenge of going against the best on the East Coast. The Super Skillcase should also only enhance those developing skills. Joshua Pierre Louis (Plainfield, NJ)- Joshua is now prepared to come out of the shadows of his older brother Nate. He showed flashes in the past but I think this event will allow him to go full throttle. We are looking for a big weekend out of this youngster. Jahmir Young (Upper Marlboro, MD)- Young returned to the Spotlight this past season with PV Select and made the MDC All Tournament Team. The southpaw was used to the bright lights as he starred in our tournament in the 4th Grade. Now he should be ready to test his skills against the national competition. Mekhi Long (Bryans Road, MD)- Long showed his worth during the AC Showcase. He made the All Tournament Team by getting out into transition and converting buckets. He has the type of game that should adapt well to the Super Skillcase. We will be watching.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Boys basketball: Harrisburg's Haiishen McIntyre finalizes his college choice by signing with High Point (N.C.) University

BULLOCK, The Patriot-News, May 14, 2012 11:55 p.m.
Shown in his final performance at Harrisburg's Kimber Gymnasium, high-scoring Haiishen McIntyre is getting ready to make his Division I debut with the High Point Panthers. - (SEAN SIMMERS, The Patriot-News)
Harrisburg's Haiishen McIntyre, shown in the District 3-AAAA title game against Chambersburg, signed a letter of intent Monday with High Point University. - (SEAN SIMMERS, The Patriot-News)

Apparently, if you’re a senior from the greater Harrisburg area and NCAA Division I college basketball is on the agenda, North Carolina is the place to be.
Harrisburg’s Haiishen McIntyre became the fourth local senior to align with a Carolina-based program Monday, as the Cougars’ prolific backcourt star signed with the Big South Conference’s High Point Panthers.

High Point is coached by University of North Carolina product Scott Cherry, a Dean Smith protege.

"It’s a long process," said the 6-2, 160-pound McIntyre, who earlier this month issued a verbal commitment to Binghamton just days before BU head coach Mark Macon was dismissed. "To finally find a school is a good feeling, especially when you get a full scholarship."

"This is clearly the single-most difficult recruiting situation I've ever experienced," said Harrisburg coach Kirk Smallwood, whose last NCAA Division I signee was Quincy Roberts (St. John's) in 2008.
Difficult would help to explain McIntyre's situation with Binghamton, which was on and then, when Macon was relieved, off.
Yet not long after McIntyre’s Binghamton prospects disappeared, High Point was among several schools to reach out.
Within days, video of McIntyre’s on-court exploits reached Cherry & Co. His transcripts also were quickly dispatched, landing in the proper High Point hands.

Soon, a scholarship offer was extended.
Before things really, really got dicey.
"It never really reached that point," said McIntyre, who plans on majoring in sports medicine. "Once [the Binghamton] situation happened, all of my coaches were right on it and I had schools actually calling me the next day."
"They saw ‘Sheen enough on the AAU circuit," said Bobby Thomas, who coached the Mid-Penn Motion AAU outfit that included McIntyre. "They were very familiar with him. It wasn’t like I was selling ‘Sheen to them, they were busy selling me and the people around him on High Point University."
"This wasn’t the first time they’d heard of him or seen him. They told me this was too good to be true, for them to get a player of his caliber this late in the [recruiting] season."
Well, a Panthers program that was 13-18 last season (10-6 in the Big South) and 40-52 during Cherry’s three seasons, is getting a terrific player with high-octane offensive skills.
Projected as a combo guard, McIntyre landed first-team Class AAAA all-state laurels after averaging a school-record 24.2 points per game for a Harrisburg club (21-7) that reached the state quarters. The two-time Patriot-News Big 15 selection also averaged 6.5 rebounds and 5.0 assists per game.

"His better days are ahead of him," Smallwood said. "He’s a legitimate college guard and I think, in the right system, he’s gonna flourish."

"I heard good thinga bout Coach Cherry and his staff, and I passed that along to 'Sheen's mom (Arlene) and Coach Smallwood," Bobby Thomas said. "All the credit goes to Haiishen and his people.
"I think it's a great fit. When a situation like this comes along, a lot of kids say no. But I told them how 'Sheen's a good kid and [High Point] said he asked some tough questions. So, kudos to him."
Now that he’s headed for High Point, the optimistic McIntyre is ready to flourish. He won’t be alone in North Carolina either, as Central Dauphin’s Devin Thomas (Wake Forest), Red Land’s Mike Zangari (East Carolina) and Cedar Cliff’s Logan Stumpf (Gardner-Webb) also are headed to D-I programs in that hoops-happy state.

In fact, McIntyre will have the chance to play against Thomas and Stumpf next season.

"Just because you're in North Carolina, he'll get games against UNC, Duke and N.C. State -- just because you're there," said Smallwood, who was disappointed that McIntyre didn't receive more attention locally, particularly from Penn State.

"I'm looking forward to seeing him against some of the better competition in North Carolina as well as his conference games, just to see how he matches up."
Count Bobby Thomas among the others who genuinely believe McIntyre will match up rather well.
In a number of ways.
"I had this kid across the country and you couldn't ask for a better person to represent a uniform and a university," Bobby Thomas said. "He's a student-athlete period. He's a student first and the athletic part comes second.
"I have no doubt in my mind that he's gonna make central Pennsylvania proud."
Right now, McIntyre is just happy to have the recruiting process in the rear-view mirror. Now he can concentrate on rehabbing the surgically repaired knee he injured in the District 3-AAAA title game against Mid-Penn Commonwealth playmate Chambersburg.
He's also anxious to get his first in-person look at High Point -- since the quick courtship prevented him from traveling to North Carolina. Nonetheless, he's been busy researching and studying everything he can find about his next destination.
Especially since he's planning to begin classes in early July.
And regardless of how his recruiting process went down -- and all the moving parts that never really stopped moving until he put his name on a letter of intent Monday -- he's just happy it's all over.
"[Landing a D-I scholarship is] another goal accomplished," said McIntyre, who also considered Mount St. Mary’s, Coppin State and several other places. "Plus, I’ll have an opportunity to play against one of my good buddies at Wake Forest, Devin Thomas.

"They play good competition and get some TV time, so it should be a good experience for me."

Diary Of A Baller: Lucas Hudson (Center Valley, PA) Entry #4

John Wall and Lucas Hudson Hello basketball world! I had another busy week. So here we go! Last Sunday, I played in the SCBL high school league and had a solid game with 13 points. I like how my three ball is connecting and my drive and kick game is coming into play as I compete against older teams. On Monday, I had off for Columbus Day. After I practiced my ball-handling drills, my friend and I went to the Tannersville Outlets in the Poconos. We both got really nice shoes from the Nike Outlet and they were cheap. We got a great deal on the Nike Lunar Hypergamers. The price was originally $110.00, but we got them for only $31.00. My mom really liked that! On Monday night I had a 1st round playoff game at the Chester League with Team Final. We came out strong and dominated the game, winning by a large margin. On Tuesday, after school, our soccer team made banners for the homecoming game and had a pizza party. On Wednesday, we had our homecoming game. During half-time, the eighth grade players presented a rose to their mothers. All the mothers had big smiles. We won our game 6-0. I had a ton of saves. After the game, my parents drove me to the Team Final Chester League game. This was a semi-final playoff game against the Chester Boys and Girls Club team that earned the number one seed. At one point in the game, we were down by twenty points. We fought hard and with two minutes to go in the game, we came back and were down by only two points. Sadly, at the end, we lost by six points. If we had a few more minutes, I know we could have won. So now Team Final is finished with the Chester Fall League. It was a competitive and fun league and I’ll miss playing there. Thursday after school, I had another soccer game. We played the number one team in the league and won 1 - 0. After that I worked out with Coach Derrick Mims for two hours. It was a very intense workout and we worked on a lot of pick ‘n roll plays, and situations. Friday, our middle school went on a field trip to the Franklin Institute to see the Dead Sea Scrolls. The museum was very interesting and we all had a great time. On Saturday, we had our soccer playoffs. We won the semi-final game (3-0), my third shut-out game. Then we played the championship against our big rivalry. We heard they were talking a lot of trash on Facebook about our team and our coach. So we used that as fuel to go at them hard and we won the championship 2 -1! I’m really proud of my teammates winning this championship and was honored to be chosen to play in the all-star game this coming Tuesday. Today was the showdown between Team Final Blue and Team Final Yellow at the Competitive Edge Fall High School league. For this league, Coach Orlando split up our team into a Yellow and Blue unit. Each team had players from last year and also some new players that are trying out for our team. The game was very close throughout with neither team going up by more than 6 points at any time of the game. At the end, my Yellow team made 8 out of 8 free throws in the final 2 minutes to hold on for a six point victory. Our coaches tell us all the time how important free throws are to win the close games and today really proved the point. It was hard playing against my fellow teammates today and we all look forward to being one team again when we open the AAU season at the Basketball Spotlight Tip Off Classic in December. That’s only seven more weeks to get ready. So work hard; play hard! See you guys next week.

Diary Of A Baller: Lucas Hudson (Center Valley, PA) Entry #5

Lucas At 5 Years Old Hello Basketball World! I had another busy week with school, basketball, soccer and working out. On Monday after school I had a great workout with Coach Derrick Mims and Chris Muniz. As always, there was a lot of conditioning and skill work. We focused on the pick ‘n roll and how to attack it. On Tuesday morning I got up at 6 a.m. to go to my favorite trainer, Obe Roundtree. I worked out for an hour before school. Working out with Obe is never boring. Each workout is different and seems to be harder than the last. Right after school, I went to the soccer field with some of my team mates for the all-star game. I played goalie (my regular position) for the first half, but during the second half Coach Gillespie let me play offense for the first time in my life. Without having a clue about playing offense in the field, I surprised myself and everyone else by scoring two goals! It was a great feeling. After the game, my coach told me and my mom that if he knew how I could play in the field, he would have put me there more often. Playing soccer was a lot of fun and thank you, Coach Gillespie for being a great coach. Tuesday night I was invited to an open gym at Central Catholic High School in Allentown. I got a good run. Thank you, Coach Dennis Csencsits, for inviting me. Wednesday, after school, my dad took me to DeSales University for some shooting. We got up a ton of shots. I like how I’m shooting the ball right now. On Thursday, I went home from school and did some ball handling drills, but I couldn’t go to a gym for a full workout because I had a lot of homework and two big tests the next day. Friday, I had another workout before school with Obe and it was one of the hardest strength workouts I’ve ever had. For 45 minutes we did ropes, weights, and kettle bell exercises without any breaks. After school, my dad took me to Life Center Academy for a Team Final workout. We did a lot of ball handling and we worked on moving without the ball. On Saturday, I had a game in the SCBL league and made five three-pointers in the first half. I ended up scoring 31 points. After the game, I went to Dorney Park with my good friend, Justin Merraro. We had a great time and stayed until 11 p.m. Next weekend, I’m heading to Atlantic City for the Micah Lancaster Super Skillcase. I am looking forward to learning new drills and competing against some of the top players in the country. So that was my week and remember Psalm 37:4: “Take delight in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart.” See you guys next week!

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

From Steel-High to Susquehanna, basketball player Jordan Millberry has traveled a long way

You’re 12 years old – almost 13 – and you’ve already developed the kind of reputation on the hardwood that has kids from all over calling you “A.I.”, after your hero, Allen Iverson, whose fast, smooth and loose playing style you’ve unconsciously already adopted as your own. You’re 12 years old, and already you’ve seen more grittiness in the world than most children ever should. Mom’s been in and out of prison for most of your life. Dad’s never been in the picture. As the middle child in a group of eight, you’ve seen your older siblings misstep, and watched as they’ve tried to clean up their lives and start over. But life isn’t hard for you. Not like that. You’re Jordan Millberry, and you don’t look at things that way because that’s not the kind of kid you are. So instead, you take pleasure in everything you have going for you. You have a caring extended family and a doting grandmother – the woman who raised you, and who’s become perhaps the most important person in your young life. You take pride in your athletic ability, and play both basketball and football like you were born to do it. You enjoy the company of a tight band of friends who are more like brothers, really, because you’ve all played basketball together since you were 7, traveled to tournaments together, and dream about one day winning a state championship together – as Rollers. Steelton is your town, and you roam the familiar streets content in the knowledge that you belong. This place, with its ethnic neighborhoods, old steel mills, and rough-hewn wood houses where folks still call cheerily to each other from the porch, is home. You’re 12 years old, and you’re content with your life. Then, one day, everything changes. Good People Known to everyone as “Miss Viv”, Vivian Millberry was an iconic, matriarchal figure in Steelton, who, in her 71 years, managed to raise her own six children, numerous grandchildren, and more than a hundred other state-assigned foster children. “Miss Viv” became a parent when she had her first child, Arnetta Primas, in 1957. She never slowed down, and only stopped on Dec. 10, 2008. The day she died. Her unexpected passing took the family by surprise. At Halloween, Nanna was fine. But at Thanksgiving, she was in the hospital, and by Christmas she was gone, a victim of cancer that had spread so fast there was nothing doctors could do. She was everyone’s grandma, but she and Jordan were particularly close. They used to exercise together, at night, the boy following Nanna’s quirky workout regimen. They’d wrestle together too, the old woman displaying surprising strength to out-maneuver and trap her wiry, but well-muscled grandson. The Millberrys were staunch Rollers fans, and for years, Vivian, and her husband, Melvin, would attend sporting events at the high school, always cheering loudly. Jordan never got to meet his grandfather because Melvin died in 1990, but as his cousin, Kimarie Brown likes to remind him, grandpa was such a big Steel-High sports fanatic that the Rollers were mentioned in his obituary. “They would be so proud of you, you have no idea,” Brown tells Jordan regularly, the comment as much a testament to what the boy has already made of himself, as it is a reminder of everything he could one day become. When Miss Viv died, folks around town wondered what would happen to the four Millberry children. But there was never any cause for worry. Kimarie Brown, the oldest of Nanna’s 28 grandchildren, and her husband, Anthony Brown, volunteered to take in all four kids because she wanted to keep the brood together. “I’ve known for a long time that if anything happened to my grandma, I would make this decision,” she says, resolute. It was always part of her plan, something she’d discussed with Anthony even when they were dating. “I’ve been in their lives since they were babies, so it was hard to just turn that over to somebody else,” Kimarie says. “And my grandma’s last words to me were ‘take care of them.’” So Kimarie and Anthony adopted the kids, and Jordan, Isaiah, Kapri and Karissa joined the Browns, their daughter, Taylor, and infant, Tajh, in their four-bedroom Susquehanna Township home. When Jordan found out he’d have to move to live with Kim and Anthony, he cried. The boy who can be spotted grinning up at the camera in the Rollers basketball team’s 2005 state championship picture, realized then that he would not get to don a Steel-High jersey. He wanted to be a Roller, to play four years of varsity basketball with his guys, the kids Coach Marc had trained as a group – the ones who’d come one point shy of finishing their seventh grade season with an 18-0 record. Losing to Central Dauphin in triple over-time stung. But that’s when the town realized that the class of 2014 held the future of Steel-High basketball in their dexterous, deliciously agile hands. Indians jersey instead of a Rollers one The Browns understood Jordan’s pain. Kim, who’d been a cheerleader and track athlete for the Rollers, could empathize because she too had to switch schools and move from Steelton to New Jersey when her mother married before her sixth grade year. “I was in New Jersey from sixth grade to ninth grade, but I was home every summer with my grandparents, and I’d be on the phone with my grandfather asking who’d won the Rollers game,” Kim says. “I remember I had a Rollers umbrella and a jersey.” She moved back to Steelton after her grandfather died in 1990, enrolled in Steel-High in the middle of ninth grade, and slept in Nanna’s room. She understood how Jordan felt when he discovered he’d have to transfer to Susquehanna Township, and she allowed him to continue living with an aunt in Nanna’s through the fall term of his freshman year. So for one season, Jordan got to wear a Rollers’ football jersey. The kid made varsity as a freshman, worked his way onto the starting lineup at receiver, and finished the season as a two-way starter after outside linebacker Clayton McNair sustained a serious head injury, and the backup subsequently also got hurt. That opened the door for Jordan, the unlikeliest of candidates at 5-foot-4, 130 pounds, to fill the open linebacker spot, and he responded with 13 tackles in the District 3 semi-final. “Listen, he’s been small all his life, so he’s found ways to overcome that,” says Marc Jones, Jordan’s AAU coach, who handpicked the boy for his Brak-Bred basketball team at the age of 7. Even then, Jordan displayed the same athletic gifts that would make him special on both the football field and the basketball court. “He was scrappy, fast, and aggressive, already you could tell he had a feel for the game,” Jones says. “He had a lot of heart, and wasn’t backing down from the big kids or nothin’. Imagine, at seven years old, how small he was then.” That hasn’t changed. As he takes the court in Susquehanna Twp’s home finale against Williamsport, Jordan is at least a head shorter than every other boy on the floor. Even in his red-and-white Indians uniform, the “2” on his jersey connects him to his Rollers because his girlfriend, Steel-High sophomore guard Jazmine Blanding, wears the same number. The Indians lead 30-15 in the second, but Williamsport has the ball. With Anthony and the five kids watching from the bleachers, Jordan drops back on defense. Reading the play correctly, he slides to the Williamsport guard to pre-empt a pass. But he’s just a step too slow. “Once he gets stronger and used to the game at this level, he’ll be much better. He’s a second late,” remarks Anthony who played basketball for Susquehanna Twp., then won a PSAC championship at Mansfield University in 1997. A second late, and a head short, Jordan is still adjusting to both varsity basketball and to his new life with the Browns. For instance, he realized in the Indians’ defeat to big man-dominated Red Land this season that trying to drive to the basket is usually ineffective. “I used to be able to just take it in, do the layups. But now I just gotta work on my jump shot, my stops, pulling up over defenders. I can’t take it in no more,” Jordan says. Instead of commanding the team the way he would have if he’d played for Steel-High’s underclassman-filled team this year, the presence of Indians’ star A.J. Dean also means Jordan has had to take an auxiliary role. They play off each other well through – as they demonstrate when Dean steals the ball, shoots down the court on a fast break, then dumps off to a wide-open Jordan, who goes in for the layup. Two points. The kid’s intense face is impassive as he turns to start back up on defense. His heart will always be in Steelton, but he’s playing for Susquehanna now

Basketball Spotlight Class Of 2016 Top 100 Prospects

The Basketball Spotlight National Player Rankings for the Class of 2016 are listed below. The list was compiled over years of coverage and we did our best to as fair as possible. Please remember this listing is just our opinion and should be taken as such. Click on players in red for highlights. FEEL FREE TO EXPRESS YOUR OPINION IN THE COMMENT SECTION BELOW THIS ARTICLE! Basketball Spotlight Class of 2016 Top 100 1. Harry Giles 6’9 Forward (Winston Salem, NC) 2. Thon Maker 6’11 Forward (New Orleans, LA) 3. Deron Davis 6’9 Forward (Denver, CO) 4. Tyus Battle 6’5 Guard (Edison, NJ) 5. Josh Jackson 6’5 Guard (Detroit, MI) 6. VJ King 6’5 Guard (Akron, OH) 7. Dedric Lawson 6’8 Forward (Memphis, TN) 8. Khalea Turner 6’9 Forward (Marrero, LA) 9. Jayson Tatum 6’6 Guard (St. Louis, MO) 10. Derryck Thorton 6’0 Guard (Simi Valley, CA) 11. Joshua Langsford 6’4 Guard (Huntsville, AL) 12. Benjamin Coupet 6’7 Forward (Chicago, IL) 13. Rodney Miller 6’9 Forward (Queens, NY) 14. Edrice Adebayo 6’9 Forward (Bellhaven, NC) 15. Trevor Stanback 6’10 Forward (Etiwanda, CA) 16. Justin Jackson 6’6 Forward (Toronto, Canada) 17. Joe Hampton 6’7 Forward (Hyattsville, MD) 18. Seventh Woods 6’2 Guard (Columbia, SC) 19. Eron Gordon 6’2 Guard (Indianapolis, IN 20. NyRhique Smith 6’2 Guard (Tinton Falls, NJ) 21. Davion Thomas 6’7 Forward (Columbus, GA) 22. Braxton Blackwell 6’6 Forward (Nashville, TN) 23. Reggie Gardner 6’3 Guard (Bowie, MD) 24. Kobe Gantz 5'9 Guard (Lancatser, Pa) 25. DeAaron Fox 6’2 Guard (Katy, TX) 26. Michael Cage 6’8 Forward (Newport, CA) 27. Mustafa Heron 6’4 Guard (West Haven, CT) 28. Adrian Moore 6’3 Guard (Conway, AR) 29. Devonte Green 6’2 Guard (North Babylon, NY) 30. Mark Vital 6’4 Guard (Lake Charles, LA) 31. Terrence Ferguson 6’5 (Flower Mound, TX) 32. Devearl Ramsey 5’10 Guard (Los Angeles, CA) 33. Mario Kegler 6’6 Forward (Jackson, MS) 34. Kobi Stephens-Simmons 6’4 Guard (Alpharetta, GA) 35. Anthony Cowan 5’10 Guard (Bowie, MD) 36. Temple Gibbs 6'0 Guard (Scotch Plains, NJ) 37. Chris Lewis 6’7 Forward (Alpharetta, GA) 38. Devin Young 6’7 Forward (Sacramento, CA) 39. Quentin Gooding 6’3 Guard (Campbellsville, KY) 40. Matthew Buulock 6'4 Forward (Elizabeth, NJ) 41. Christopher Ellis 6’1 Guard (Tracy, CA) 42. Sam Green 6’6 Forward (Bowie, MD) 43. Unique McLean 6’2 Guard (Brooklyn, NY) 44. Alani Moore 5’9 Guard (Germantown, MD) 45. Jakolby Long 6’4 Guard (Edmond, OK) 46. Lamar Stevens 6’4 Guard (Philadelphia, PA) 47. Bryce Aiken 5’9 Guard (Randolph, NJ) 48. Derrick Daniels 6’7 Forward (Dayton, OH) 49. Ako Adams 6’1 Guard (Washington, DC) 50. Aaron Augustin 5’10 Guard (Duluth, GA) 51. Tuva Mott 6’3 Guard (Philadelphia, PA) 52. Rakym Felder 5’10 Guard (Raleigh, NC) 53. DeAndre Hunter 6’3 Guard (Philadelphia, PA) 54. Asante Gist 5’8 Guard (West Orange, NJ) 55. Donovan Love 5’10 Guard (Cranston, RI) 56. Trevell Beck 6’6 Forward (Cleveland, OH) 57. Daveyon Barnes 6’4 Forward (Baltimore, MD) 58. Caleb Swanigam 6’7 Forward (Dunfee, IN) 59. Mike Buland 6’4 Guard (High Point, NC) 60. Algevon Eiehelberger 6’6 Forward (Saginaw, MI) 61. Ryan Murphy 6’0 Guard (West Hills, CA) 62. Jalen Harris 5'10 Guard (Wilson, NC) 63. Vaughn Covington 6’0 Guard (Sicklerville, NJ) 64. Idris Joyner 6’4 Forward (Plainfield, NJ) 65. Malik Dow 6’4 Forward (Louisville, KY) 66. Randall Gaskins 6’2 Guard (Fairfax, VA) 67. Wolfgang Novogratz 6’0 Guard (New York, NY) 68. Derek Funderburk 6’7 Forward (Akron, OH) 69. Jashaun Agosto 5’9 Guard (Federal Way, WA) 70. Khalir Johnson 6’5 Forward (Wilmington, DE) 71. Jamar Watson 6’2 Guard (Brandywine, MD) 72. Jared Rivers 6’0 Guard (Westbury, NY) 73. Nigel Pearson 6’5 Forward (Beaumont, TX) 74. Sa’eed Nelson 5’9 Guard (Pleasantville, NJ) 75. Donovan White 6’5 Forward (Baton Rouge, LA) 76. Gilbert Thomas 6’5 Forward (Houston, TX) 77. Loren Jackson 5’6 Guard (Chicago, IL) 78. Nnamdi Collins 6’8 Forward (Little Rock, AR) 79. Dyaire Holt 6’0 Guard (Troy, NY) 80. Tim Walker 6’0 Guard (Charlotte, NC) 81. Mickey Bell 6’3 Forward (Washington, DC) 82. Kameron Hedgepeth 6’3 Guard (Haymarket, VA) 83. Kyle Elliot 6’1 Guard (Rahway, NJ) 84. Drake Davis 6’4 Forward (Baton Rouge, LA) 85. Seth Towns 6’7 Forward (Columbus, OH) 86. Vijay Blackmon 6’2 Guard (Fort Wayne, IN) 87. Kylia Sykes 6’6 Forward (Durham, NC) 88. Ty Jerome 5’10 Guard (New Rochelle, NY) 89. Dwayne Russell 6’5 Forward (Jacksonville, FL) 90. Keandre Fair 5’11 Guard (Hartford, CT) 91. Gilberto Cue 5’8 Guard (New York, NY) 92. Anthony Carr 5’9 Guard (Philadelphia, PA) 93. Ben Rabinwitz 6’0 Guard (New York, NY) 94. Roderick Caldwell 5’9 Guard (Dayton, OH) 95. Ty Graves 5’10 Guard (Charlotte, NC) 96. Jabri McCall 5’11 Guard (Philadelphia, PA) 97. Mike Janowski 6’1 Guard (Fairfax, VA) 98. Raekwon Long 6’9 Forward (Charlotte, NC) 99. J.J Caldwell 5’9 Guard (Houston, TX) 100. Jamal Allen 5’9 Guard (Boston, MA)

Kobe gantz Class of 2016

Name: Kobe Gantz AAU Team: Team Suspact Position: Point Guard Class: 2016 Breakdown: Gantz capped off a great season with a good showing at the Basketball Spotlight Super Showcase. He’s a heady floor general with extreme confidence and the ability to make plays or get others better. During the season he hit the circuit with Back To Basics and finished things off with Central Penn Ballers. We are very excited to see what Kobe has in store for us this year. Check out his film from this past season.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Harrisburg's jv Wr Zytia Hollingsworth

Harrisburg's jv Wr zytia hollingsworth scores 4 touchdowns,307 on Chambersburg.