Friday, February 27, 2015

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS - GONZAGA HS. - ALL-MET ELITE

2015
 WCAC 
BOYS BASKETBALL
 CHAMPIONS
 GONZAGA HS. 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

GONZAGA HS.
WASHINGTON D.C.

No. 7 Gonzaga won the WCAC crown, 77-68, over No. 2 DeMatha before a packed house at Bender Arena on the campus of American university. 

Gonzaga: Chris Lykes: 23 points (5-8 3-ptr), 4 rebounds, 2 assists. Sam Miller: 19 points (2-3 3-ptr), 5 rebounds. Prentiss Hubb: 17 points, 4 rebounds. Bryant Crawford: 8 points, 3 rebounds, 7 assists.


DeMatha: DJ Harvey: 18 points, 11 rebounds. Markelle Fultz: 16 points, 8 rebounds. Terrell Allen: 11 points, 6 rebounds, 8 assists. Thomas Bruce: 14 points, 7 rebounds. 

Thursday, February 26, 2015

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL 1st TEAM - ALL-MET ELITE

2015
 WCAC
 BOYS BASKETBALL
 1st TEAM 
 ALL-MET ELITE 
First Team All-WCAC

ANTHONY COWAN 
ST. JOHNS HS.
WASHINGTON D.C.

Markelle Fultz, DeMatha

Franklin Howard, Paul VI

Jamir Moultrie, McNamara

Anthony Cowan, St. John’s

VJ King, Paul VI

Sam Miller, Gonzaga

Ako Adams, O’Connell

Bryant Crawford, Gonzaga

Chris Lykes, Gonzaga

DJ Harvey, DeMatha 

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL 2nd TEAM - ALL-MET ELITE

2015
 WCAC 
BOYS BASKETBALL 
2nd TEAM 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

AARON THOMPSON
PAUL VI. HS.
FAIRFAX VA.



Second Team All-WCAC

Nate Darling, DeMatha

Jeffrey Dowtin Jr., St. John’s

Donte Etheridge, St. Mary’s Ryken

Terrell Allen, DeMatha

Aaron Thompson, Paul VI

Corey Manigault, Paul VI 

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL 3rd TEAM - ALL-MET ELITE

2015 
WCAC 
BOYS BASKETBALL 
3rd TEAM 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

JAMAAL KING
BISHOP O'CONNELL HS.
ARLINGTON VA.

Third Team All-WCAC

Kylia Sykes, St. John’s

Jamaal King, O’Connell

Jamar Watson, McNamara

Thomas Bruce, DeMatha

Nicolas Fennell, Carroll 

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL PLAYER OF THE YEAR - MARKELLE FULTZ - ALL-MET ELITE

2015
 WCAC 
BOYS BASKETBALL
 PLAYER OF THE YEAR 
 MARKELLE FULTZ 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

DEMATHA HS.
HYATTSVILLE MD.

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL COACH OF THE YEAR - MIKE JONES - DEMATHA - ALL-MET ELITE

2015
 WCAC
BOYS BASKETBALL 
 COACH OF THE YEAR 
 MIKE JONES 
 DEMATHA 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

DEMATHA HS.
HYATTSVILLE MD.


Tuesday, February 24, 2015

2015 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP SCHEDULE - ALL-MET ELITE

2015
 WCAC BOYS BASKETBALL 
CHAMPIONSHIP 
SCHEDULE  
 ALL-MET ELITE 


Thursday, February 26th 2015
at 
American University
8:00 pm
 Dematha vs. Gonzaga

Monday, February 23, 2015

GONZAGA HS. BRYANT CRAWFORD SPORTS STARS OF TOMORROW VIDEO - ALL-MET ELITE

GONZAGA HS. 
BRYANT CRAWFORD 
SPORTS STARS OF TOMORROW 
VIDEO 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

GONZAGA HS. 
WASHINGTON D.C.

Monday's 2015 WCAC Semifinal Boys's Basketball Schedule - ALL-MET ELITE

Monday's
 2015 WCAC 
Semifinal Boys's Basketball 
Schedule 
ALL-MET ELITE

Monday, February 23 at American U
Tickets will be $10 each for the Boys Game
6:00pm: St. John's at DeMatha
8:00pm: O'Connell at Gonzaga

*There is not a site or date yet for the championship game. The WCAC is working on finalizing that. 

Friday, February 20, 2015

Remarks Congratulating the 1985 31-0 Championship Spingarn High School Basketball Team - ALL-MET ELITE

Remarks Congratulating 
the
 1985 
31-0 Championship 
Spingarn
 High School
Basketball Team 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

SPINGARN H.S.
WASHINGTON D.C.

Remarks Congratulating the Championship Spingarn High School Basketball Team
March 15, 1985

The President. The way I see it, there's no more fitting way to mark the coming of St. Patrick's Day than by greeting the Green Wave. So, welcome to the White House, all of you.
Students. Thank you.

The President. Well, we're very happy to see and meet our champions, the members of the City High School Basketball Championship Team of 1985 and we congratulate you.

And I can tell you that I know a little more about your victory than you think I do. I've heard about how Anthony Duckett, Emmanuel Jones, and Ernest Hall got together to control the boards; and I know that Robert Smith played with the flu; and I know that Sherman Douglas got 14 points; and I know Melvin Middleton played in spite of an injury that he received in the first play of the game. And I know that you faced a really strong and fine team in DeMatha -- do I have the name right on that?

Coach Wood. You're right.

The President. All right, and that you had to work hard to win. I know all this because Kathy Reid, the wife of Joe Reid, your English teacher, is an assistant to Don Regan here in the White House. And Kathy gave us no peace. We couldn't get any work done in the White House until Spingarn won. So, believe me, on behalf of a grateful nation, I thank you.

We really are proud of you and of all the people who've helped you. I think you ought to be proud of your coach, John Wood, who, himself, graduated from Spingarn. And I hope you thank your assistant coach, Robert Burrell. This ceremony is part of a plot to wean him from his lollipops. [Laughter] We're going to get him on jelly beans. [Laughter] And I congratulate your principal, Clemmie Strayhorn.

You know, the past few years the Spingarn concert choir has sung at the White House during Christmas tours. And the graduates of Spingarn include Michael Graham and Elgin Baylor, Earl Jones and Dave Bing -- that's quite a powerhouse that you've been running, Clemmie.

Spingarn has brought honor to this city. And even though Nancy and I came here just a few years ago -- we liked it enough to ask for a few more, as you know -- we feel like citizens or members of the city of Washington, and we personally feel that you've done us all proud here in this city.

So, thanks, and God bless to all of you, and thank you for coming by to say hello.

Coach Wood. Mr. President, we would like to thank you for the generous invitation that you have extended to the Spingarn basketball team and also the cheerleading staff.

At this particular time, we would like for you to sign a basketball for us, and we will treasure it, this basketball, for a great deal of time.

The President. Any place in particular on here? I've got a pen.

Coach Wood. That will be fine, wherever your signature -- wherever you put it.

The President. Looks like there's room under there.

[At this point, the President signed the basketball.]

Coach Wood. Also, Mr. President, we would like to give to you something we would like for you to cherish -- a picture of the Spingarn basketball team -- --

The President. Thank you very much.

Coach Wood. -- -- and also we would like for you to have a basketball, the basketball that we used to beat DeMatha, and we are extending that to you.

Thank you.

The President. You mean I get the game ball? [Laughter]

Coach Wood. You get the game ball.

The President. Well, thank you very much.

Coach Wood. Thank you.

The President. I'm very pleased with all of this and to have this picture. It's a beautiful -- isn't that the Lincoln Memorial?

Coach Wood. Yes, it is.

The President. Well, that's great.

Coach Wood. It exemplifies academic excellence.

The President. Well, I'm glad to hear that that goes along with basketball.

I must say, I'm glad there's still some here that are along about my height -- [laughter] -- but you all are growing bigger these days. [Laughter] But I'm pleased to have you all come down today.

I had hoped that there was going to be an opportunity -- you could have a little visit -- and I was reading about Reverend Jackson's appearance before your student body the other day, and I thought it was a very wonderful thing that he did with regard to drugs. I thought that was just great.

I did, though, then think that maybe he didn't quite understand our program with regard to aid to education, for college aid. We're not really cutting that back; we're redirecting it a little.

We found out, and we don't think that people with incomes of a hundred thousand dollars a year need your parents and others like them paying taxes to help put their kids through college. They ought to be able to do that themselves. And so what we've done is redirect the aid to people who really can claim a need for having help.

And we've set a cap so we can increase the numbers of -- $4,000 of student aid in the form of jobs, grants, so forth, which is the average across the country, total thing of tuition and fees and room and board and so forth -- all the State colleges and universities in the country.

And, in addition, students would be eligible for guaranteed loans of another $4,000. And we actually will be spending -- I think the figure's around $13 billion on that.

So, I was glad that he suggested that you ask, but I'm sorry that we didn't have the chance to ask, so I just decided to answer it right here for you.

But, again, God bless you, and congratulations. You've really -- 31 straight; that's quite a record. Good luck to all of you.

Students. Thank you.

Reporter. Mr. President, what about [Secretary of Labor] Ray Donovan?

The President. We'll be releasing a statement later on.

Q. Is he leaving, sir?

The President. We'll be releasing a statement later on, Andrea [Andrea Mitchell, CBS News].

Q. What are your feelings about it?

The President. I still have faith and confidence in Ray Donovan.

Note: The President spoke at 2:06 p.m. in the Rose Garden at the White House.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

M.I.T 2015 Maryland Invitational Tournament CHAMPIONSHIP WINNERS - ALL-MET ELITE

M.I.T
 2015
 Maryland Invitational Tournament 
CHAMPIONSHIP WINNERS 
 ALL-MET ELITE 


8U - TEAM TAKEOVER GOLD 
MD HOYAS - RUNNER-UP

9U - TEAM LOADED 
CHICK WEBB/ BMORE FINEST - RUNNER UP 

10U - CHICK WEBB / BMORE FINEST 
TEAM TAKEOVER - RUNNER-UP 

11U - MD FINEST - GOLD RUNNER-UP
DREAM CHASERS - SILVER RUNNER -UP

12U - TEAM TAKEOVER 
NEW WORLD - RUNNER-UP

13U - ACADEMY PREP HAWKS 
TEAM TAKEOVER GREY - SILVER CHAMPION

14U - MD PLAYMAKERS - GOLD RUNNER-UP
BALTIMORE SUPREME - SILVER CHAMPION
MD FINEST - SILVER RUNNER-UP 


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

UNDER ARMOUR CRAB BALL CLASSIC ALL-STAR YOUTH COMBINE 7th and 8th GRADE - ALL-MET ELITE

UNDER ARMOUR
 CRAB BALL CLASSIC
 ALL-STAR YOUTH COMBINE 
7th and 8th GRADE 
TRYOUTS
 ALL-MET ELITE 

Friday, February 6, 2015

NIKE KD 7 EXT QS "Floral" KEVIN DURANT - ALL-MET ELITE

NIKE
KD 7 EXT QS
 "Floral" 
KEVIN DURANT 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

MONTROSE CHRISTIAN HS.
ROCKVILLE MD.
Nike KD 7 EXT QS "Floral"

The new Nike KD 7 EXT QS “Floral” debuts a brand new design on the KD 7 EXT silhouette. The multicolored floral print incorporates gold damask and plant motifs splashed across a Midnight Navy base, above a white midsole and a translucent blue outsole. Otherwise, the tongue, mid-foot strap and interior of the shoe are made with Hazelnut Brown leather. You can purchase the Nike KD 7 EXT QS “Floral” on February 12 at select Nike Sportswear retailers for $200 USD.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

ST. JOHN'S HEAD COACH Sean McAloon - ALL-MET ELITE

ST. JOHN'S HEAD COACH 
Sean McAloon 
 ALL-MET ELITE
ST. JOHN'S HS.
WASHINGTON D.C.

How humble can kids be when all you do these days is list your offers, game stats, highlight plays, mix tapes, etc? Sickening

VCU's Treveon Graham ready to carry the load - ALL-MET ELITE

VCU's
 Treveon Graham 
ready
 to carry the load 
 ALL-MET ELITE 

ST. MARY'S RYKEN HS.
LEONARDTOWN MD.
COURTESY OF THE USA TODAY

RICHMOND, Va. -- Treveon Graham is 6-foot-6 and a stone-cut 220 pounds. Those measurements and his on-court verocity have inspired his VCU teammates to dub him “Freight Train.” This nickname is often shortened to “Freight”, and it neatly implies the mass and force that the Rams’ leading scorer and rebounder exerts on those who clutter his path. It is difficult to imagine him operating any other way. But sitting in a courtside folding chair after a recent practice, Graham assures a visitor that he was not always like this. He was, in fact, one of the fast kids.

“People don’t believe me now,” Graham says. “But I have medals. I have medals that show that I was fast.”

They hang in the trophy case off to the right as you enter his Bowie, Md., home: A silver medal for the 100 meters, and a bronze for the 200, from a long-ago Junior Olympics event. Graham says he once had a picture on his phone for proof and he offers to bring them out if  if anyone remains unconvinced. Even if it’s myth, no one at VCU is fact checking at the moment. After a season-ending injury to one of its stars, and after its first loss of the Atlantic-10 campaign, the program needs to believe in Graham now more than ever.

No, Graham is not wired like the kinetic Briante Weber, the expert thief and igniter of the Rams’ “Havoc” defense, who suffered a season-ending knee injury last Saturday. Graham is equipped, though, with a stubbornness borne from being underappreciated at nearly every stage; this is the player who woke at 5 a.m. to ride a bus two hours to his preferred high school when he had other, closer options. The dedication complements a consistency in both production and approach that has led to 16.8 points and 6.7 rebounds per night, along with career-best shooting marks of 47.1 percent overall and 41.9 percent from beyond the three-point arc. Depending on how far the Rams can go, Graham may evolve from a recruit with two scholarship offers to the program’s all-time leading scorer, fulfilling the destiny only his current coach saw for him.

“Usually on game day I say one rosary,” St. Joseph’s coach Phil Martelli says. “When we play Graham, I say two rosaries. Other than prayers, I don’t know how you guard him.”

For VCU, how “Havoc” functions without Weber is the more immediate concern. As of Tuesday morning, the senior was the national leader in total steals (78), steals per game (3.9) and steal percentage (8.7). He was 12 pilfers shy of breaking the NCAA career record when he suffered a torn ACL, MCL and meniscus against Richmond. For years, Weber’s skills perfectly accentuated the Rams’ pressure defense, and vice versa. “His hands are like a magician,” VCU coach Shaka Smart mused the day before Weber’s injury.

“We don’t have another guy on our team that we can say, hey, go do what Briante Weber did,” Smart says now. “It doesn’t work that way. What we need is for (replacements) to step up and be the best version of themselves and not necessarily try to be Bri. We’re still going to try to be VCU and play the way we play. We’ll see how that works out without him.”

As he entered high school at St. Mary’s Ryken in Leonardtown, Md., Graham hadn’t yet grown to six feet. In basketball, he’d relied on that “medal-worthy” speed -- “Just flew past everybody and shot a layup,” he says -- before a sophomore-year growth spurt and weight gain changed his mindset. Suddenly everyone on the junior varsity squad seemed smaller. “I knew I was going to get stronger in the offseason,” Graham says now, “and play some bully ball.”

As Graham and his production grew, other area powerhouses -- DeMatha Catholic, Bishop O’Connell -- tried to entice Graham into a transfer. He stuck with the near-dawn wakeups and four-hour round trip to St. Mary’s Ryken. On the AAU circuit, Graham’s D.C. Triple Threat club saw several players split off to form Team Takeover in 2009; he remained with the less-renowned Triple Threat roster.
The words of his mother, Katrina, rang louder than any other calls: Be loyal. Don’t run when things get tough. “I didn’t feel that I needed to move just for me to prove that I was good,” Graham says.

Remaining loyal left Graham with two scholarship offers, to Cleveland State and VCU. But it also left him with Smart, and his vision for what Graham could accomplish. Smart first articulated it as Graham sat in his office on a visit to campus, when the player was a 6-4 tweener without a star next to his name on recruiting sites: You can be the all-time leading scorer here, Smart told him. Graham all but laughed it off as a transparent sales pitch. When Smart visited his home and sat down for Graham’s favorite dinner -- fried chicken, candied yams and seafood salad -- the VCU coach repeated himself. He looked at Katrina Graham and told her that her son could score more points than anyone ever had at the school. By then, Smart had said this enough that Graham was convinced the coach actually believed it.

And he did. Smart offered Graham a scholarship based off of video footage; he’d never seen Graham on a court, in-person. “The guy could just score,” Smart says. “Probably the bigger schools, whatever you call them, maybe didn’t think he was tall enough. I don’t know. To me, it was a no-brainer.” Smart recalls watching an AAU event in Washington D.C., on July 31, 2010. As Graham dropped 30-plus points on a talented D.C. Assault club, with about a dozen high-major schools represented in the audience, Smart and then-VCU assistant Mike Jones looked at each other with unspoken panic. This could turn out badly for us, Smart thought.

Instead, no one noticed. “People really didn’t see me as that player that was going to make it,” Graham says. “Whatever school I chose, I was going to have to prove everybody wrong when I got there. It wasn’t disappointment. It was buckle down and show people what I can really do.”

He was a role player as a freshman -- averaging seven points in 16.8 minutes per game -- but his scoring more than doubled as a sophomore (15.1 points per night) and increased again as a junior (15.8 ppg) and now as a senior (16.8 ppg). The sheer force in his game became the foundation for everything else. During one freshman year practice, Graham matched up with senior star Bradford Burgess in a block-charge drill. Burgess laid out Graham and drew some cheers, so Graham figured that was what he was supposed to do. On his turn, he drove on Burgess, dipped a shoulder and connected with such power that he lifted Burgess off his feet before the Rams’ best player thudded to the court.

“He has not been in a charge drill since,” VCU assistant Mike Morrell says.

Incrementally, Graham enhanced his arsenal. He began to build out his mid-range game and hone his ability to drive left before his sophomore year; now, as a senior, he’s in the 90th percentile nationally for points per possession in both scenarios, per Synergy Sports data. He focused on adding a reliable three-point shot after that, as evidenced by the career-best efficiency from behind the arc this year. Meanwhile, his stature increased, literally: Graham spurted two more inches during college. All of that, plus a gradual increase in understanding the nuances of VCU’s system, has allowed Graham to grow into what Smart calls his favorite position. “Which is, he can play every position,” the Rams coach says.

“If you have a big, slow power forward, I’m quick enough to go past him and I’m strong enough to check you,” Graham says. “If they try to switch me where a guard’s taking me, I’m strong enough where I can overpower them and quick enough where I can check you.”

Martelli’s prayerful plan to stifle Graham is a bit glib, but not far from the truth. There are no easy answers when a 6-6 player rates in the 86th percentile or better nationally in points per possession on spot-ups (1.386), pick-and-rolls as the ball-handler (1.085), isolations (1.025) and offensive rebounds (1.333). “Treveon Graham plays rim to rim and he dares you to stop him,” the Saint Joseph’s coach says. “He’s really trying to put you in the basket.”

How to combat this is anyone’s guess. Fordham coach Tom Pecora dispatched different defenders at Graham, of all shapes and sizes, to keep him guessing and making different offensive decisions. Graham responded with an efficient 14 points in 25 minutes in a 17-point win on Jan. 4, and he has continued to shape his game according to contours of whatever scheme he faces.

Take, for example, one of Graham’s best lines of the year: 26 points on 10-of-17 shooting, including four three-pointers, in a five-point win over Rhode Island on Jan. 13. “We wanted to take away the three-point shot from him,” coach Dan Hurley says. “So he drove and posted us a little bit. Once we took away a little bit of the driving and posting up, that’s when he got on the offensive glass and started making perimeter jump shots. He’s obviously a tough cover.”
With Weber gone (he was the team’s third-leading scorer), Graham will deal with perhaps even more defensive attention. But the more meaningful test will be steadying the team and keeping its fragile, half-game lead in the Atlantic 10 intact.

The good news? The Freight Train has been on track this season: He has posted double-figure scoring in 18 of his 20 games. Last Friday, Graham had a 9 a.m.-noon shift for his internship at nearby Carver Elementary School, where he talks with students or stretches them before gym class or helps teachers with their class prep. Morrell, the VCU assistant who monitors Graham’s academics, reminded Graham the day before to wake up for breakfast 45 minutes earlier than usual. When Morrell sent a text to strength coach Daniel Roose on Friday morning, Roose replied that Graham was indeed at training table at 8:15 a.m., already eating an omelet. Morrell wondered why he even bothered to ask.

No matter what the program, there is no way to draw within 268 points of a school’s all-time scoring record without remarkable consistency. (Eric Maynor, who played for the Rams from 2005-09, is the school’s leader with 1,953 career points.) Weber may provide encouragement off the bench, but Graham will be the player to whom everyone turns. “These guys look up to Tre, everyone in our program, including me,” Smart says. “Because he has phenomenal humility. And then Bri is Deion Sanders. He’s on the other end of it.”

They are two different personalities who were equally important to VCU. They were both recruiting afterthoughts, and both were on the verge of record-setting careers. And there is just one left.

On Saturday night, after an MRI confirmed the worst, Weber called his teammates into his room and delivered the news. He was done. Graham, upon hearing this, retreated to his own room. And he cried. Once Graham collected himself, he returned to Weber’s side and spent the rest of the night there.

Treveon Graham, at every step, had erased doubts about what he could accomplish. It was as clear Saturday as it is now that he carries so much more than a burden of proof. “It’s just more put on me,” Graham says, riding the team bus to George Mason, knowing he must deliver more than ever.