Month: December 2019

Orange junior Kessel Summers talks 3rd place finish at JKO

Orange junior Kessel Summers finished 3rd at 126 pounds in this weekend’s Jim King Invitational at Orange High. On Saturday, Summmers defeated Eli Kays of Sanderson 7-3 in the consolation final. Summers finished the weekend 4-1. He was in the same weight class as Kobe Early of Cary, who was named the Most Valuable Wrestler of the tournament. Nonetheless, Summers scored three pins. He is 9-2 so far this year. In 2018, Summers qualified for the 3A State Championships at 113 pounds when he finished 3rd in the Mideast Regionals, He pinned Shyheem Davis of Southern Durham in 4:57 to advance to the Greensboro Coliseum. He finished the year 39-14 with 17 pins and helped Orange win its 16th consecutive conference championship. 

Orange junior Kessel Summers talks 3rd place finish at JKO

Orange junior Kessel Summers finished 3rd at 126 pounds in this weekend’s Jim King Invitational at Orange High. On Saturday, Summmers defeated Eli Kays of Sanderson 7-3 in the consolation final. Summers finished the weekend 4-1. He was in the same weight class as Kobe Early of Cary, who was named the Most Valuable Wrestler of the tournament.

Cedar Ridge’s James Rosati-Brown talks 5th place finish at JKO

Cedar Ridge’s James Rosati-Brown finished 5th at 152 pounds in the Jim King/Orange Invitational this weekend. On Saturday afternoon, Rosati-Brown shook off an early leg injury to pin Luke McDonald of Middle Creek in 3:40. On Friday, Rosati-Brown pinned Cody Kenyon of Northern Durham in 17 seconds. In the quarterfinals, he earned a 10-6 decision over Jordan Alexander. This was the first time that Rosati-Brown competed in the JKO. Last month, Rosati-Brown won both of his matches in a tri-match against Apex Friendship and Green Hope in Morrisville. He finished fourth in the Red Wolves Invitational at Cedar Ridge last month, which included a pinball win over Michael Romero of Southwest Guilford. 

Cedar Ridge’s James Rosati-Brown talks 5th place finish at JKO

Cedar Ridge’s James Rosati-Brown finished 5th at 152 pounds in the Jim King/Orange Invitational this weekend. On Saturday afternoon, Rosati-Brown shook off an early leg injury to pin Luke McDonald of Middle Creek in 3:40. On Friday, Rosati-Brown pinned Cody Kenyon of Northern Durham in 17 seconds.

Orange wrestling runner-up at JKO; Cedar Ridge’s Pritchard 3rd at 132

One week after Cardinal Gibbons handed Orange just its second dual match regular season loss since 2016, the Crusaders returned to Hillsborough to end Orange’s dominance in the Jim King Invitational.

The Crusaders had three individual champions to win the overall team competition in the 39th Jim King/Orange Invitational. Gibbons won the two-day event with 200.5 points. Orange, which had won the JKO four consecutive years, finished second with 162 points. Person, a runner-up in 2018, finished 3rd at 166 points.

19 teams participated in the two-day event, including seven squads from Wake County and five from Durham.

Cedar Ridge finished 11th with 86 points. It was the Red Wolves best performance in the JKO since 2011, when they came in 8th with 92 points with two individual champions (Eli Schultz at 170 pounds and Mike Mastrianni at 182).

Gibbons, participating in the JKO for the fourth straight year and who finished 15th in 2016, is only the sixth school in the 39-year history of the event to win the tournament. Cary has won 22 JKOs. Orange has nine. Riverside has five. Jordan has two titles and Northwest Guilford won in 2014.

The Imps, who have participated in all but one of the JKOs (they missed 1981), finished 5th with 132.5 points.

Orange, with its youngest team in years, made some history they would have rather forget. It was the first time in tournament history that the Panthers didn’t have a wrestler reach the championship final in any of the 14 weight classes.

Nine Orange grapplers made their JKO debut. Of the 14 Panther participants, only Joshua Dunn, Kessel Summers, Matthew Smith-Breeden, Henry Joubert-Stanzel and Tayton Alvis had JKO experience.

“I think the guys showed a lot of heart,” said Orange wrestling coach Spenser Poteat. “We had some positive spots. We just have to keep working. I’m sure our coaches will have the guys ready for the next competition.”

Summers earned 3rd place at 126 pounds. After losing to Richie Rizzuto of Leesville Road in the semifinals, Summers rebounded to pin Isaac Rameriz of Riverside in 2:07, then defeated Eli Kays of Sanderson 7-3 in the consolation final.

In his first JKO appearance, Orange’s Xavier Tinnen had a 3rd place finish at 195 pounds. Tinnen pinned Chatham Central’s Gerli Amador in 1:43 in the consolation final. Tinnen went to the consolation bracket after being pinned by Holden Cypher of Millbrook, who eventually won the tournament.

Tinnen won four straight matches to capture third place. After a forfeit win over Sanderson’s Deavon Lucas, he pinned Tyler Kendall of Northern Durham in 39 seconds. He also pinned Person’s Zak Lieske in 1:28 in the consolation semifinals.

For Cedar Ridge, Daina Pritchard finished 3rd at 132 pounds. He scored a 9-1 decision over Smith-Breeden in the consolation final.

Pritchard scored pins in both of his Friday matches. He defeated Ryan Rago of Cary in 1:31. In the quarterfinals, Pritchard pinned Owen Matheney of Apex in :55. Isaiah Olive of Middle Creek defeated Pritchard 10-1 en route to the 152 pound championship.

In the consolation semifinals on Saturday morning, Pritchard had a thrilling match against Gibbons’ Samuel Freeman that extended to overtime. Pritchard scored the match’s final takedown to win 11-9.

In a year of underclassmen learning on the job across Hillsborough wrestling, Cedar Ridge freshman Fernando Martinez finished 4th at 106 pounds in his JKO debut. Martinez, who finished 2nd in the Red Wolves Invitational last month, now has a 10-3 record for the season after going 4-2 this weekend. Martinez pinned Leesville Road’s Aydan Gavisdalla in 2:43 to reach the 3rd place match, where he lost to Eastern Alamance’s Christopher Watson.

Cedar Ridge’s James Rosati-Brown came in 5th at 152 pounds. Despite, injuring his right leg early, Rosati-Brown pinned Luke McDonald of Middle Creek in 3:40 to end his day.

Orange’s Korbin Nevius (160), Nathan Hecht (182), and Joshua Guzman (285) all finished fourth. Guzman wrestled in place of senior heavyweight Juan Navarro, who missed the tournament because he had his wisdom teeth pulled.

Orange’s Tyler Larkin finished 5th at 220.

Cary’s Kobe Early, the 126-pound champion, was named Tournament Most Valuable Wrestler.

Orange wrestling runner-up at JKO; Cedar Ridge’s Pritchard finishes 3rd at 132

One week after Cardinal Gibbons handed Orange just its second dual match regular season loss since 2016, the Crusaders returned to Hillsborough to end Orange’s dominance in the Jim King Invitational.

The Crusaders had three individual champions to win the overall team competition in the 39th Jim King/Orange Invitational. Gibbons won the two-day event with 200.5 points. Orange, which had won the JKO four consecutive years, finished second with 162 points. Person, a runner-up in 2018, finished 3rd at 166 points.

19 teams participated in the two-day event, including seven squads from Wake County and five from Durham.

Cedar Ridge finished 11th with 86 points. It was the Red Wolves best performance in the JKO since 2011, when they came in 8th with 92 points with two individual champions (Eli Schultz at 170 pounds and Mike Mastrianni at 182).

Gibbons, participating in the JKO for the fourth straight year and who finished 15th in 2016, is only the sixth school in the 39-year history of the event to win the tournament. Cary has won 22 JKOs. Orange has nine. Riverside has five. Jordan has two titles and Northwest Guilford won in 2014.

The Imps, who have participated in all but one of the JKOs (they missed 1981), finished 5th with 132.5 points.

Orange, with its youngest team in years, made some history they would have rather forget. It was the first time in tournament history that the Panthers didn’t have a wrestler reach the championship final in any of the 14 weight classes.

Nine Orange grapplers made their JKO debut. Of the 14 Panther participants, only Joshua Dunn, Kessel Summers, Matthew Smith-Breeden, Henry Joubert-Stanzel and Tayton Alvis had JKO experience.

“I think the guys showed a lot of heart,” said Orange wrestling coach Spenser Poteat. “We had some positive spots. We just have to keep working. I’m sure our coaches will have the guys ready for the next competition.”

Summers earned 3rd place at 126 pounds. After losing to Richie Rizzuto of Leesville Road in the semifinals, Summers rebounded to pin Isaac Rameriz of Riverside in 2:07, then defeated Eli Kays of Sanderson 7-3 in the consolation final.

In his first JKO appearance, Orange’s Xavier Tinnen had a 3rd place finish at 195 pounds. Tinnen pinned Chatham Central’s Gerli Amador in 1:43 in the consolation final. Tinnen went to the consolation bracket after being pinned by Holden Cypher of Millbrook, who eventually won the tournament.

Tinnen won four straight matches to capture third place. After a forfeit win over Sanderson’s Deavon Lucas, he pinned Tyler Kendall of Northern Durham in 39 seconds. He also pinned Person’s Zak Lieske in 1:28 in the consolation semifinals.

For Cedar Ridge, Daina Pritchard finished 3rd at 132 pounds. He scored a 9-1 decision over Smith-Breeden in the consolation final.

Pritchard scored pins in both of his Friday matches. He defeated Ryan Rago of Cary in 1:31. In the quarterfinals, Pritchard pinned Owen Matheney of Apex in :55. Isaiah Olive of Middle Creek defeated Pritchard 10-1 en route to the 152 pound championship.

In the consolation semifinals on Saturday morning, Pritchard had a thrilling match against Gibbons’ Samuel Freeman that extended to overtime. Pritchard scored the match’s final takedown to win 11-9.

In a year of underclassmen learning on the job across Hillsborough wrestling, Cedar Ridge freshman Fernando Martinez finished 4th at 106 pounds in his JKO debut. Martinez, who finished 2nd in the Red Wolves Invitational last month, now has a 10-3 record for the season after going 4-2 this weekend. Martinez pinned Leesville Road’s Aydan Gavisdalla in 2:43 to reach the 3rd place match, where he lost to Eastern Alamance’s Christopher Watson.

Cedar Ridge’s James Rosati-Brown came in 5th at 152 pounds. Despite, injuring his right leg early, Rosati-Brown pinned Luke McDonald of Middle Creek in 3:40 to end his day.

Orange’s Korbin Nevius (160), Nathan Hecht (182), and Joshua Guzman (285) all finished fourth. Guzman wrestled in place of senior heavyweight Juan Navarro, who missed the tournament because he had his wisdom teeth pulled.

Orange’s Tyler Larkin finished 5th at 220.

Cary’s Kobe Early, the 126-pound champion, was named Tournament Most Valuable Wrestler.

Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: Mekai Collins

This week’s Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week is senior basketball guard Mekai Collins. The Cedar Ridge men’s basketball team defeated the North Carolina School of Science and Math in its season opener 77-48 on November 18. Collins is the leading scorer for the Red Wolves. Last season when Collins played for Orange, he averaged 15.6 points per game, which led the team. Collins is a native of Southern California and carried his fandom of the Los Angeles Clippers to the east when he started attending Cedar Ridge as a freshman. Collins plays for the North Carolina Gators AAU team, based in Greensboro, during the spring and summer. His flashy ball handling skills and the ability to finish off the dribble has made Mekai one of the most entertaining players in the Big 8 Conference. 

Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: Mekai Collins

This week’s Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week is senior basketball guard Mekai Collins. The Cedar Ridge men’s basketball team defeated the North Carolina School of Science and Math in its season opener 77-48 on November 18. Collins is the leading scorer for the Red Wolves.

Franklin scores 27, Brooks 25 as Orange runs past S. Alamance 97-74

There was no question the Orange men’s basketball team had offensive firepower returning this year, even after losing leading scorer Mekai Collins.

But even the most optimistic Panther fan may have been stunned by Friday night.

Despite leading scorer Joey McMullin fouling out early in the fourth quarter, the Panthers ran up its most points in a game in nearly 13 years.

Kendell Brooks, who had scored a combined 14 points in Orange’s opening three games, registered a stunning 25 points off the bench as the Panthers surged past Southern Alamance 97-74 on Friday night in Patriots Gymnasium.

Junior guard Jason Franklin also had a career-high of 27 points as the Panthers bombarded the Patriots with 15 3-pointers.

It was the most points for Orange in a single game since February 9, 2007 in a 109-104 win over Cedar Ridge.

Orange completed a string of three games in four days with a 4-0 record, its best start in at least 14 years.

Southern Alamance (1-3) was led by 6-5 center Grant Thompson, who scored 22 points, the highest among four Patriots in double-figures. But he scored only two points in the final quarter, long after Orange pulled away.

While you wouldn’t know it looking at the scoreboard, Orange had its fair share of adversity en route to highest scoring game of the decade. In front of a packed gymnasium in Graham, the Panthers were called for eight of the first nine fouls in the first half, and the first seven fouls of the second half. Each of Orange’s five starters picked up two fouls before halftime.

That’s why Brooks’ contribution was so huge. And so surprising.

After he scored two points against Southern Lee the night before, Brooks put up ten in the first quarter and went into halftime with 13.

“He’s got it in him,” Orange Coach Derryl Britt said. “We’ve known it, which is why he was pulled up from JV last year. It took him some time for him to get acclimated to the speed of the game at the varsity level. He knows he’s an integral part of the team now.”

An up-tempo, full court, faster-than-Metallica-in-the-mid-80s pace was established right off the jump ball when Orange’s Machai Holt scored off a lay-in and Jerec Thompson canned the first of his five 3-pointers to send Orange up 5-0.

The Patriots responded with a 13-3 run, including a three-pointer from Dylan Brewer and a three-point play from Evan Shaw, who sent starting point guard J.J. Thompson to the bench with two fouls. Shortly after McMullin drained a trey to end a 11-0 Patriot spree, he also picked up his second foul.

As the Patriots controlled the offensive boards early, it would have been easy for Orange to panic. Instead, Franklin hit consecutive 3-pointers to even the game at 14.

Then Brooks went to work. After a steal by Tucker Miller, Brooks canned his first 3-pointer. Brooks scored seven consecutive points to send Orange ahead 24-15, including a coast-to-coast lay-in that forced a Patriots timeout.

Southern Alamance opened the second quarter with a 12-1 run to take the lead back, which ended with freshman Harrison Watson scored on a field goal after being fouled by Jerec Thompson.

Orange responded with a three-pointer from Jerec Thompson, and McMullin blocked a shot by Brewer, leading to another Thompson trey. After Grant Thompson threw in a jump hook, McMullin scored six consecutive points to push Orange ahead 37-33. After Brooks scored on an acrobatic lay-in, reserve Jared Wood scored Orange’s final four points in the first half to send the Panthers into the locker room ahead 47-41.

The Patriots were unable to keep up with Orange’s overwhelming pace in the second half. Brooks and Franklin canned two 3-pointers in the third quarter, while Jerec Thompson added another.

Holt ended the game in classic fashion after he slammed home his tenth point with 1:06 remaining, then was called for a technical foul (his fifth foul) for hanging on the rim. With victory in hand, Holt existed by blowing kisses to the Orange contingent, who stood and applauded as the Panthers’ secured its first road win of the year.

ORANGE 97, SOUTHERN ALAMANCE 74

ORANGE–Jerec Thompson 18, Jason Franklin 27, Machai Holt 10, Joey McMullin 9, Tucker Miller 4, Kendrell Brooks 25, Jared Wood 4.

SOUTHERN ALAMANCE: Dylan Brewer 6, Evan Shaw 15, Marcellus Walker 11, Elijah Deanhardt 2, Grant Thompson 22, Ben King 2, Maddux Smith 2, Harrison Watson 10, Chandler Eakes 2.

3-Pointers ORANGE 15 (Jer. Thompson 5, Franklin 4, Brooks 4, McMullin 2) SOUTHERN ALAMANCE 3 (Brewer 2, Shaw)

FOULED OUT: ORANGE (McMullin, Holt) Southern Alamance: none.

Orange guard Aaliyah Harris talks career high 17 points vs. Southern Alamance

Orange sophomore guard Aaliyah Harris scored a career-high 17 points as the Lady Panthers defeated Southern Alamance 47-39 in Graham on Friday night. In the second half, the Lady Panthers were held to two field goals, but Harris went 4-of-4 from the foul line to help Orange pull out its second win of the season. It was just the second time in Harris’s career that she scored in double figures. Last year, she put up 12 points in a 55-48 win over Franklinton in the Granville Central Holiday Tournament. She scored nine points against Granville Central in the season opener on Tuesday. Orange hosts South Granville on Tuesday in Hillsborough. You can hear that game starting at 6 on Hillsboroughsports.com.