T C Williams High School | Archive | March, 2008

Most-Watched Videos: Week of March 17-23, 2008

By Phil Murphy
Content Editor, DigitalSports.com

These are the most popular videos — by number of views — on the
Northern Region pages of Digital Sports for the week of March 17- 23,
2008.

The clips are posted counting down from No. 25 to the one that received the highest amount of attention from you, the fans.

For your enjoyment, here are the most popular videos from last week:

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Most Watched Videos: Week of March 10-17

By Phil Murphy
Content Editor, Digital Sports

These are the most popular videos — by number of views — on the Northern Region pages of Digital Sports for the week of March 10- 17, 2008.

The clips are posted counting down from No. 25 to the one that received the highest amount of attention from you, the fans.

For your enjoyment, here are the most popular videos from last week:



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DS Reporter Template: Game Story

Titans Complete the Dynasty — And Fulfill the Dream
There were still 19.1 seconds showing on the clock at the Siegel Center on the campus of Virginia Commonwealth University Friday night when the celebration started. T.C. Williams junior Edward Jenkins stood at mid-court and flashed the now famous “dynasty” diamond with his hands.

Titan senior Anthony Winbush was awaiting the ball at the foul line — striking the exact same pose as he grinned broadly towards the team’s student-cheering section.

On the bench, senior Travis Berry — who shined in the 70-57 Titan victory over Bethel in the Virginia AAA state championship game — sat huddled on the bench with fellow senior Tomas Camara, their arms linked as they bounced up-and-down in their chairs like little boys, far too anxious to sit still.

“It was a long time before the clock expired,” Jenkins said. “It felt like it took forever. … But we achieved our goal.”

And when those final seconds finally ticked away and the buzzer sounded, it was like a choreographed event. The entire Titan team leapt to their feet and rushed the court, and then proudly held the “dynasty” sign high above their head as they bounded around toward their cheering fans.

All except head coach Ivan Thomas.

He, instead, simply crumbled to his knees on the hardwood floor at the Siegel Center. His arms remained outstretched for several seconds as he bobbed up-and-down and wept with joy — and immense gratitude.

Fittingly, it was Berry, Jenkins and Winbush — who scored all but 11 of the Titan’s points in the championship game — who ultimately pulled Thomas to his feet and wrapped him in a long and tearful embrace.

“This was really sweet because … I’m a man of faith,” said Thomas, who was still choked up long after the championship trophy had been handed to the Titans. “And He blessed my family, and my team family to come through some tough things. And so, I thought that’s what you saw over these last three games. You saw a team that believed in a little bit more than just each other; in something higher.

“It means a lot to bring the title back to Northern Virginia.”

T.C. Williams (29-3) becomes the first Northern Region team to win a state championship since Lee did in 1981. It marks the Titans’ second state title overall, having also won in 1977.

“I can’t even explain it,” said Berry, who came off the bench to shoot 5-of-8 from three-point range for a game-high 23 points. “It’s the greatest feeling ever. We knew we were going to win the game, we just didn’t know by how much. But to put it down like this? It feels great. Confidence will take you a long way.”

Despite T.C. Williams’ dominance in Patriot District play — the Titans have won 52 games against district opposition over the past three seasons — there were few outsiders who predicted they would run with that same ease through the state tournament. Fewer thought a win would come against a Bethel team that entered the finale not only boasting a 30-1 record, but also six Division I players on its roster.

But the Titans led the championship game from start-to-finish on the strength of its pressure defense and sharp-shooting ways.

T.C. Williams forced 12 first-half turnovers — 20 in all — and didn’t necessarily settle for easy layups on the other end of the floor. Oftentimes, instead, the Titans pulled up for jump shots, many of them from behind-the-arc. In all, T.C. Williams shot 52-percent from the field and a whopping 47-percent from three-point range.

In addition to Berry’s five three-pointers, Jenkins (22 points) and Winbush (14) each added a pair, including a dramatic, 40-foot jumper that Winbush nailed as time expired at the end of the third quarter that pushed the Titans’ lead to 48-30 and sent their fans into a frenzy.

“It’s a great feeling because any body on our team can go off on any night,” Winbush said. “We have great chemistry. It’s all about chemistry. ”

It was also — all season long — about teamwork.

Senior Javonta Campbell and Winbush running the point. Berry and Jenkins shooting lights-out. Camara, Winbush and senior Joshua Jordan pulling down rebounds. Juniors Dominique Copeland and Gavin Peterson, sophomore Ryan Yates and senior Ricky Colbert playing lock-down defense. And so much more.

“This team has every component that a team needs,” Thomas said. “This team here … they are a team.”

And they — as they showed time and time again with the diamond they formed with their hands — are a dynasty in the making.

“Well, diamonds are forever and so, what they’re saying is … we created a dynasty there at T.C.,” Thomas explained, mimicking the hand signal with open palms. “We are 52-0 in the Patriot District. We haven’t lost a game in three years. We are the best team in Northern Virginia over the past three years, make no doubt.

“Diamonds are forever and so will our team be at T.C. We will keep doing this — working hard every day and every year — and the dynasty will continue.”

Email: awatts@digitalsports.com

No. 1 T.C. Williams  19  13  16  22  —  70
Bethel                    11    7  12  27  —  57

T.C. Williams — Campbell 1 1-5 3; Winbush 4 4-7 14; Jenkins 8 4-11 22; Yates 0 0-2 0; Camara 1 0-1 2; Berry 7 4-6 23; Jordan 2 2-4 6. Team totals: 23 15-36 70. Bethel — Meredith 1 2-2 4; Evans 4 1-2 11; Lee 1 1-3 3; Olivier 5 9-11 19; Weaver 6 2-4 14; Jarvis 1 0-0 2; Bacote 1 0-0 2; Djim 1 0-0 2. Team totals: 20 15-22 57. Three-pointers — T.C. Williams 9 (Berry 5, Jenkins 2, Winbush 2); Bethel 2 (Evans). Rebounds — T.C. Williams 28 (Winbush 9, Camara 5); Bethel 41 (Olivier 11, Cooperwood 8). Assists — T.C. Williams 16 (Winbush 5, Jenkins 4); Bethel 7 (Evans 2, Lee 2).

By Angela Watts
Managing Content Editor, DigitalSports.com

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Virginia AAA Semifinal: No. 1 T.C. Williams 63, Petersburg 46

By Angela Watts
Managing Content Editor, DigitalSports.com

** Check below the story to find a video player with 12 min of highlights from Tuesday night’s game.

T.C. Williams senior Anthony Winbush stood near the top of the key with less than two minutes to play in the third quarter of the Titans’ Virginia AAA state semifinal against Petersburg at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Siegel Center in Richmond.

He eyed fellow senior Travis Berry as Berry dribbled on the right wing.

Then, in an instant, Winbush saw it. The Crimson Wave defenders had vacated the left side of the lane, leaving him with a clear path to the basket. His eyes lit up, and he shot a quick, wide-eyed glance at Berry before taking off.

And it worked to perfection, with Berry providing the alley — Winbush the oop.

The dunk brought the Titan fans to their feet and proved a virtual exclamation point on what proved a 63-46 victory over the Crimson Wave. With the win, T.C. Williams (28-3) advances to face Eastern Region champion Bethel (30-1) at 8:45 p.m. Friday in the championship game.

The last Northern Region team to win a state title was Lee in 1981.

“Give them a little bit of a knockout punch and see how resilient they are,” T.C. Williams Coach Ivan Thomas said of his thought behind the designed play. “High school kids get so emphatic about dunks … and they did, they dropped their heads and [Petersburg Coach Bill Lawson] called a time out after they scored. It was a gamble that paid off.”

And the final blow couldn’t have been provided by two more fitting players. Berry (game-high 20 points, six rebounds) and Winbush (19 points, five rebounds) dominated the third quarter, combining to score 18 of the Titans’ 20 points in the pivotal period.

T.C. Williams, which trailed by seven points after the first quarter, rallied to take its first lead of the game, 16-15, with 4 minutes, 25 seconds remaining in the first half when Berry drained one of his four three-pointers. Although taking the lead — and the momentum — the Titans held only a slim, 27-23 edge at half time.

But T.C. Williams went on an 8-0 run to open the third quarter — including three consecutive layups by Winbush — to push their lead to double-digits. The Crimson Wave did mount a run of its own to close the gap to 35-28 on a jump shot by junior big man Cadarian Raines (nine points, 12 rebounds) with 4:15 left in the third. But Berry responded with back-to-back three pointers to push T.C. Williams’ lead back to 13.

The Titans maintained that double-digit lead the rest of the game.

“I didn’t expect anything less from Travis when he came [in] and hit big shots,” Thomas said. “Travis has been taking big shots all season for us. And, he has that Reggie Miller-syndrome — [always thinking that] the next one is going in. And if the last one missed, something’s wrong with the ball. That’s just his mentality.

“Winbush is the brains of our team. Edward Jenkins is the heart of our team. And Travis Berry is the confidence of our team. He’s never lacking in it.”

T.C. Williams will need all of that — brains, heart and confidence — and more if it is to defeat Bethel Friday night and claim the Titans’ first Virginia AAA title since 1977.

“It would mean a lot for us to bring a title back home,” Berry said. “We haven’t won a title in almost 30 years, and for us to bring it home would be a big thing, especially in my senior year.”

But a victory — and an end to the 26-year Northern Region state championship title drought — certainly won’t be an easy task against the one-loss Bruins, who boast seven players over 6-feet-4-inches tall on their 15-man roster.

“The celebration … it was surreal,” Thomas said of the Titans’ post-game locker room scene after advancing to the finale. “I think it kind of hit ’em.

“But they understand they’ve got a monster in front of them. So they’ve still got work to do.”

Email: awatts@digitalsports.com

No. 1 T.C. Williams  6  21  20  16 — 63
Petersburg             13  10  11  12 — 46
T.C. Williams — Campbell 0 5-8 5; Winbush 8 3-4 19; Jenkins 3 0-2 6; Yates 1 0-0 2; Camara 1 1-1 3; Berry 8 0-0 20; Peterson 2 2-2 6; Jordan 1 0-0 2. Team totals: 24 11-17 63. Petersburg — Moore 1 1-4 3; Scott 4 1-1 10; Rassoull 3 4-5 10; Taylor 1 0-0 2; Raines 3 3-4 9; Rhodes 4 3-8 12. Team totals: 16 12-22 46. Three-pointers — T.C. Williams 4 (Berry 4); Petersburg 2 (Rhodes, Scott).

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Boys’ Virginia AAA Quarterfinal: No. 1 T.C. Williams 59, King’s Fork 39

By Angela Watts
Managing Content Editor, DigitalSports.com


** Re-live Saturday’s VHSL AAA State Quarterfinal in 13 minutes with the video player below.


Northern Region champion T.C. Williams strolled into Robinson High early Saturday evening, dressed in matching navy blue blazers and corresponding headphones in preparation for what they thought would be a 6 p.m. tip-off against Eastern Region runner-up King’s Fork.

What it found, instead, was a blackout.

The stands were full, but the lights at Robinson High — host to three Virginia state quarterfinal basketball games on Saturday — had been out for more than an hour-and-a-half.

What ensued after the unexpected delay, though, was a very different kind of lights-out performance.

“It actually worked a little to our advantage,” Titans’ third-year Coach Ivan Thomas said. “I told them, ‘Stay focused.’ We’ve been through too much — stall ball and physical ball and you know what? A little power outage ain’t going to hurt us.”

And it most certainly did not.

Top-ranked T.C. Williams, which led by just two points at half time, outscored the Bulldogs by 18 points over the final 16 minutes of play in what proved a dominating, 59-39 victory over King’s Fork.

With the win, the Titans (27-3) advance to the Virginia AAA Final Four at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Siegel Center.

T.C. Williams will meet Petersburg from the Central Region at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday in its semifinal pairing. The other Group AAA semifinal between Bethel (Eastern Region) and John Marshall (Central Region) will be played at 3:45 p.m. on Tuesday, with the championship game set for 8:45 p.m. on Friday night.

No team from the Northern Region has claimed a state title since Lee did in 1981 — nearly a decade before any of the current Titans were even born. But T.C. Williams superb senior sixth-man Travis Berry says the Titans are ready to buck that trend.

“This team is very capable because, like I said before, we play as a team,” Berry said. “And when you have a team that plays as a team, there’s nothing you can do to stop them.”

Such teamwork was evident Saturday, when Berry came off the bench to lead the Titans with a game-high 22 points, including four shots from beyond the three-point arc. Seven other Titans scored in the game, including junior guard Edward Jenkins (11 points).

Leading by two early in the third quarter, the Titans scored 12 unanswered points to break open a 40-26 lead with 3 minutes, 47 seconds to play on a run that included 3-pointers by Berry and senior swingman Anthony Winbush, a putback by sophomore forward Ryan Yates and a fast break layup — plus a pair of free throws — by Jenkins.

But even more important than its offensive balance was the stingy defense played by the entire T.C. Williams team. The Titans rotated players on King’s Fork standouts Jaquon Parker and Jamar Wertz, holding them to nine points a piece.

“We just click together,” Thomas said. “We just play team basketball. I’m so pleased. And that — that’s an impressive victory. That’s the Eastern Region, and that’s against two very good players in Wertz and Parker. They’ve been giving the Eastern Region fits all year long, but we can get after it on defense a little bit.

“That’s going to be the difference, period. Who can lock up? Who can play defense? And I knew that would be the difference tonight. I’m very proud of them. Whatever happens, I’m proud of them.”

Email: awatts@digitalsports.com

King’s Fork              14  10    6    9  —  39
No. 1 T.C. Williams  15  11  17  16  —  59


King’s Fork —
Patterson 3 0-0 6; Riddick 0 0-2 0; Wertz 2 5-5 9; Parker 2 5-6 9; Copeland 5 5-9 15. Team totals: 12 15-22 39. T.C. Williams — Campbell 1 1-2 3; Winbush 3 0-0 7; Berry 8 2-2 22; Via 2 0-0 4; Dickinson 0 0-1 0; Jenkins 4 2-2 11; Jordan 4 0-0 8; Yates 1 0-0 2; Camara 1 0-0 2. Team totals: 24 5-7 59. Three-pointers — T.C. Williams 6 (Berry 4, Jenkins, Winbush).

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2008 DigitalSports Basketball Showcase is Big Success

By Angela Watts
Content Managing Editor, DigitalSports.com

** Highlights added! Look below the story for three separate video players showing highlights from all three of Saturday night’s events.**

The best Northern Region boy’s basketball players took center stage at Mount Vernon High School Saturday evening for the first annual DigitalSports Basketball Showcase.

More than 600 fans filed into Skinner Field House to watch 49 different Northern Region players representing 24 of the area’s 30 schools participate in the three-and-a-half hour event that included a three-point shootout, a slam dunk contest and an All-Star game.

It even took two extra periods to decide the All-Star game, as the Liberty/National District All-Stars, led by Langley Coach Travis Hess, edged the Patriot/Concorde District All-Stars, led by T.C. Williams state champion Coach Ivan Thomas, 111-108, in double overtime. The game was filled with high-flying dunks, sharp-shooting from the outside and well-timed passes, but it was — perhaps fittingly — Major senior Marquel De Lancey who took home MVP honors after leading his squad to victory on his home floor. De Lancey scored all 20 of his team-high points after half time.

The field of three-point shooters was whittled from 26 competitors to down to two finalists — W.T. Woodson senior Coleman Bacon and South Lakes senior Curtis Keys. They squared off in a head-to-head competition that looked as if it might also end in a tie, but Keys drained the three-point “money” ball on his final rack to narrowly defeat Bacon, 10-8.

The night’s final event saw the field of slam dunkers reduced from 11 to two, pitting South Lakes senior Jay Bowman against Annandale senior Erik Etherly in one final head-to-head battle with two dunks each. The pair stood knotted at 46 after one dunk each (the maximum score was 50), but Etherly garnered three more points from the judges on his final dunk for the 93-90 win.

All-Star Game       1st  2nd  OTs  —  FINAL
Concorde/Patriot  34   65     9         108
Liberty/National    36   63    12   —    111

Concorde/Patriot — Ryan Farrar, CV, 1 2-2 4; Bart Reese, OK, 1 0-0 3; Craig Gaylord, WP, 3 0-1 7; Anthony Winbush, TC, 11 0-0 25; Travis Berry, TC, 3 0-0 9; Drew Aunon, RB, 1 0-0 2; Erik Etherly, AN, 11 6-7 28; Aaquil Atkins, HF, 4 2-4 13; Tad Dickman, LE, 3 2-2 10; Josh Jordan, TC, 3 0-0 6. Team totals: 42 12-16 111. Liberty/National — Jay Bowman, SL, 5 3-3 13; Marquel De Lancey, MV, 7 6-11 20; Curtis Keys, SL, 3 0-0 7; Reggie Williams, WK, 3 0-0 6; Drew Smerdinski, MD, 1 0-0 2; Ahmed Malik, LG, 3 2-2 9; Jamire Davis, ED, 6 4-4 19; Greg Whitaker, WT, 3 1-2 7; Tarek Ammoury, ML, 3 2-2 8; David Grebb, YK, 0 2-2 2; Kendall Wallace, ED, 6 0-2 12; Ryan Davenport, LG, 1 1-2 4. Team totals: 41 19-30 111. Three-pointers — Concorde/Patriot 13 (Winbush 3, Berry 3, Atkins 3, Dickman 2, Gaylord, Reese); Liberty/National 6 (Davis 3, Davenport, Keys, Malik).

All-Star Game

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Boys’ Basketball Top 10 — FINAL

DigitalSports.com Northern Region Boys’ Basketball Top 10
FINAL

1. T.C. Williams
    Previous ranking: 1
    Patriot District Champion and Northern Region Champion
2. Langley
    Previous ranking: 5
    Liberty District Champion and Northern Region Runner-Up
3. W.T. Woodson
    Previous ranking: 3
    Northern Region Quarterfinalist
4. Lake Braddock
    Previous ranking: NR
    Northern Region Semifinalist
5. Westfield
    Previous ranking: 2
    Concorde District Champion
6. Madison
    Previous ranking: 7
    Northern Region Semifinalist
7. Chantilly
    Previous ranking:  4
    Concorde District Runner-Up
8. Mount Vernon
    Previous ranking: 8
    National District Champion
9. Annandale
    Previous ranking: 10
    Northern Region Quarterfinalist
10. West Potomac
    Previous ranking: NR
    Northern Region Quarterfinalist

Also receiving votes: Hayfield, McLean, Yorktown

** DigitalSports.com Top 10 is selected by staff members Angela Watts, Phil Murphy and Jimmy Thomas.

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Girls’ Basketball Top 10 — FINAL

DigitalSports.com Northern Region Girls’ Basketball Top 10
FINAL

1. Lee
    Previous ranking: 4
    Northern Region Champion
2. T.C. Williams
    Previous ranking: 1
    Patriot District Champion
3. Edison
    Previous ranking: 2
    National District Champion
4. Madison
    Previous ranking: 3
    Liberty District Champion and Northern Region Semifinalist
5. W.T. Woodson
    Previous ranking: 8
    Northern Region Runner-Up
6.  Oakton
    Previous ranking: 5
    Concorde District Champion
7. Yorktown
    Previous ranking: NR
    Northern Region Semifinalist
8. West Springfield
    Previous ranking: 9
    Patriot District Runner-Up
9. Centreville
    Previous ranking: 6
10. Langley
    Previous ranking: 10
    Liberty District Runner-Up

Also receiving votes: Annandale, McLean, Mount Vernon, Westfield

** DigitalSports.com Top 10 is selected by staff members Angela Watts, Phil Murphy and Jimmy Thomas.

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Girls’ and Boys’ Playoff Basketball: Northern Region Championships

By Angela Watts
Senior Content Editor, DigitalSports.com

**Look below the story to find two separate video players — one with interviews and highlights from each championship game.

If top-ranked T.C. Williams needed proof that Saturday night was going to be its night, it came just before half time of its Northern Region championship game against No. 5 Langley. Senior left-hander Anthony Winbush heaved an off-balance, three-point shot with his right that sailed cleanly through the net as the buzzer sounded at George Mason University’s Patriot Center.

And if the Saxons needed similar proof that Saturday was not their night, they got it at the conclusion of their 66-54 loss to the Titans. Senior standout Ryan Davenport stumbled after posing for a team picture, accidentally stepped on the regional runner-up trophy and cracked the silver man right off the top.

That was the theme of Saturday’s girls’ and boys’ championship games — the have’s and the have-not’s.

No. 5 Lee got things started with what proved a lopsided, 66-40 victory over eighth-ranked W.T. Woodson that secured the Lancers’ first regional girls’ basketball title in school history.

“My staff and I talked about it from the beginning of the year, and we told them there was an opportunity for them to leave their legacy,” said Lee Coach Rudy Coffield, who has announced he will retire at seasons’ end to spend more time with his grandchild. “They can come back 20 years from now and say, ‘Hey, we put that banner up there.’ “

The Lancers’ pressure defense led to a whopping 18 steals against the Cavaliers, nearly all of which were converted into easy, fast-break scoring opportunities. As a result, Lee built a 20-point lead at half time and pushed that margin to as many as 30 with 3 minutes, 10 seconds remaining on a one of four three-point buckets by senior sharp-shooter Brittany Gropp (12 points).

The Lancers also got a game-high 22 points from tournament MVP Kristine Mial, a junior, and 16 more from senior J’Quita Babineaux, who also did a stellar job defensively against Cavalier standout senior center Sarah Schoof (team-high 12 points).

“All year long we knew we had six or seven girls who could put the ball in the hole,” Coffield said. “We knew that if we could get up and make them play a fast-paced game that some things would open up, like shots for Brittany … and Brittany can flat shoot the ball.”

The second-half of the championship double-header initially appeared to be a similarly one-sided, as the Titans stretched their 13-point half time lead into an 18-point advantage early in the fourth quarter on a Travis Berry three-pointer from the baseline with 7:02 to play.

But the Saxons made things interesting, going on a 15-4 run over the next five minutes, 12 seconds to close within 59-52 with 1:50 remaining on a putback by junior Derek Baker.

The Titans, though, quickly re-inserted tournament MVP Anthony Winbush — who had scored 18 of his game-high 24 points in the first half — to regain control. The last play of the game was a steal, and a thunderous dunk, by the Titans’ soft-spoken senior.

“We were down 18 and you could have rolled over and taken one on the chin,” Langley Coach Travis Hess said to his players immediately following the loss. “But you stayed in it and you gave yourself a chance to win. That’s nothing to hang your head about.”

The win marks the second consecutive regional championship for the Titans, who became the first team to successfully repeat since South Lakes won back-to-back-to-back titles from 1992-1994. T.C. Williams also has the distinction of being the only team in history to go undefeated in Patriot-District play over three consecutive seasons, going 52-0 against district teams in that span.

“We just had to pick the momentum back up,” Winbush said. “It was important to us because we wanted to make a statement. We had something to prove to all the doubters. Now we just want to carry this out and bring a state title back to Northern Virginia.”

All four of Saturday’s participants will be back in action next weekend when the Virginia AAA tournament begins. Regional runners-up W.T. Woodson and Langley will travel to face the respective Eastern Region champions, while Northern Region champions Lee and T.C. Williams will host the Eastern Region runners-up at 2 and 4 p.m., respectively, on March 8 at Robinson High School.

The last Northern Region team to win a state title was West
Springfield’s girls in 1999. No Northern Region boys’ team has won a
state championship since Lee did it in 1981.

“We just want to continue to play well,” Coffield said. “We know that the biggest thing we talked about all year was winning a state championship, so that’s their eye on the prize … and we’ll keep working toward it.”

Email: awatts@digitalsports.com

GAME 1
No. 4 Lee                   18  20  16  12  —  66
No. 8 W.T. Woodson  10   8    8   14  —  40

Lee — Hopkins 3 2-2 8; Williams 2 0-2 5; Babineaux 6 4-4 16; Moseh 0 3-4 3; Gropp 4 0-0 12; Bayoumi 0 0-2 0; Mial 10 2-2 22. Team totals: 25 11-16 66. W.T. Woodson — Gallo 3 4-4 11; Bonuccelli 2 0-0 4; Thompson 4 0-0 9; Schoof 4 4-4 12; Griffin 2 0-0- 4. Team totals: 15 8-8 40. Three-pointers — Lee 5 (Gropp 4, Williams); W.T. Woodson 2 (Gallo, Thompson).

GAME 2
No. 5 Langley         16    8  11  19  —  54
No. 1 T.C. Williams  20  17  15  14  —  66

Langley — Hunter 2 4-4 8; Baker 4 0-0 10; Davenport 6 2-4 14; Popps 0 0-1 0; Malik 5 3-4 14; Kody 3 2-2 8. Team totals: 20 11-15 54. T.C. Williams — Winbush 11 1-2 24; Berry 3 4-6 11; Jenkins 4 5-6 13; Jordan 3 2-2 8; Yates 1 0-0 2; Camara 4 0-0 8. Team totals: 26 12-16 66. Three-pointers — Langley 3 (Baker 2, Malik); T.C. Williams 2 (Berry, Winbush).

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