Campbell’s Ramble: The Return of Campbell
Hello loyal readers, it’s been a while since the last edition of Campbell’s Ramble and it’s good to be back. In this edition we talk a little basketball, and I’m going to make a prediction for the College Football Playoff National Championship Game. Since we are in the meat of basketball season however, my formatting is going to be a little bit different than the more football focused editions. Due to the nature of basketball, I will only be providing my thoughts on 8 teams a week, not like football where I did every ACC team who played a game. Those teams will be the 3 triangle based ACC schools (Carolina, Duke, State) along with Syracuse (my school) and then 4 other ACC squads that I find interesting for this edition. For predictions, I will be picking at least one game for every ACC team, with repeats allowed. Enough talk about the rules though, let’s talk hoops!
Duke
Right now, this is the only local team I feel I can actually trust to win a game. Early on in the season when Duke’s 150 game non conference home win streak was snapped at the hands of Stephen F. Austin, it seemed like this would be a bit of a rebuilding year for the Blue Devils. That being said, the Dukies flipped the script and haven’t lost a game since. Despite a tough test in Atlanta at Georgia Tech, Duke is clearly the best team in the conference right now. Tre Jones is the best point guard in the conference and Vernon Carey has the ability to take over in the post and because of those two, Coach K’s team is one of the few real championship contenders this season.
North Carolina
This team is truly terrible right now. With Cole Anthony, Anthony Harris, and Sterling Manley all out injured. The Heels only have 4 of their top 7 rotation players healthy. Not to mention Christian Keeling being nowhere close to being as good as advertised. A team with no real starting point guard available and only 3 ACC starting caliber players (Bacot, Brooks, Robinson) available is destined for failure. With a very strong 2020 recruiting class, the Heels probably have another championship window left in the Roy Williams era, but it’s going to be a rough rest of the season.
NC State
Like every NC State in the 21st century, the Pack are wildly inconsistent once again. You see a big comeback win over Notre Dame, only to see Kevin Keatts’s squad put up a pathetic performance in a road loss to Virginia Tech. I don’t know what to make of the Wolfpack this season. If you had to ask me whether NC State will make the tournament this year I would lean slightly towards yes due to how much I like Markell Johnson, but I really just can’t decide whether this team is actually good or not.
Syracuse
Syracuse lives and dies by the 3 pointer. Their defense is not very good, largely due to the fact that Bourama Sidibe doesn’t box out to save his life and teams constantly snag offensive rebounds on the Orange end of the court. Because of this, Cuse is forced to shoot from 3 point land to make up for the defensive meltdowns. Thankfully, when you play a team that shoots as poorly as Virginia, it doesn’t take that much to beat them. A solid performance from Joe Girard III and Elijah Hughes gets Syracuse a nice little win in overtime against the defending champs.
Syracuse still has a chance to make a run for an NCAA tournament bid, but Girard and Hughes will have to drag them kicking and screaming to the field of 68.
Virginia
This UVA team might be better defensively than last year’s championship team. Unfortunately, they can’t shoot to save their lives. Not a single Cavalier is hitting more than 40 percent of their shots beyond the arc, and as a team are shooting only 27 percent from three. It’s so unfortunate to have to watch a team just fall off a cliff like the Hoos have, and I have my doubts that Virginia makes the tournament this year.
Clemson
Yes, this Clemson team broke the 59 game losing streak in Chapel Hill. No, that does not mean they are good. This might be the worst team in Brad Brownell’s tenure at Clemson. Thankfully for Brad, the win in Chapel Hill might just be enough to keep him around another season at the helm of the Tigers.
Florida State
If there is ever a year for Lenny Ham to make his first Final Four appearance, this is the one. A weak ACC leaves Florida State with plenty of opportunities to rack up wins and get themselves a favorable draw in the NCAA field. With a very balanced scoring attack, the Noles don’t have to rely on one man to win games like so many other teams this year are forced to. Vassell, Forrest, and Walker can all contribute day in and day out and it’s looking like this could be the best team Florida State has had in a long time.
Boston College
Like Clemson, don’t let the early 3-2 conference record fool you into thinking the Eagles are good. They are not. Jim Christian is a good coach who can make Boston College a fairly competitive team despite minimal talent levels. That being said, the conference wins are against Wake Forest, Notre Dame, and then a Virginia team who can’t shoot. It’s not like the Eagles have been giant killers here, and they’re going to be near the bottom of the conference at the end of the season.
Basketball Predictions
Duke vs. Clemson. Duke 89-60
Virginia Tech vs. Wake Forest. Virginia Tech 82-71
Virginia vs. Florida State. Florida State 61-49
Notre Dame vs. Georgia Tech. Georgia Tech 75-73
Miami vs. NC State. NC State 83-76
Boston College vs. Syracuse. Syracuse 70-57
North Carolina vs. Pitt. Pitt 68-63
Louisville at Duke. Louisville 77-76
Last edition record: 1-5
Season record: 19-12
CFP Championship Prediction
Clemson vs. LSU. Clemson 41-38
Last edition record: 7-1
Season record: 42-23
Basketball Power Rankings
1. Duke
2. Florida State
3. Louisville
4. Virginia
5. Virginia Tech
6. NC State
7. Syracuse
8. Miami
9. Boston College
10. Georgia Tech
11. Clemson
12. Pittsburgh
13. Notre Dame
14. North Carolina
15. Wake Forest
Cedar Ridge wrestling wins Buccaneer Cup
A good year for western Hillsborough wrestling continues.
The Cedar Ridge wrestling team claimed the Buccaneer Cup at Bartlett Yancey High School on Saturday, the first team championship claimed by a Hillsborough squad this year. The Red Wolves finished with 38 points in the six-team tournament. Granville Central finished 2nd with 32 points. Burlington Cummings had 30 points.
Durham School of the Arts, Graham and Bartlett Yancey also participated.
In an unusual round robin format, five Cedar Ridge wrestlers won individual championships.
Freshman Fernando Martinez claimed the 106-pound championship by winning all three of his matches. Martinez scored two pins. In the match that decided his weight division, he defeated Granville Central’s Trevor Johnson 13-11 in the first sudden victory round. Martinez, who finished runner-up in the Red Wolves Invitational on November 23, is now 25-6 with 12 pins.
Daina Pritchard won the 138-pound championship after scoring three pins in three matches. He defeated Jakoby Casselman of Bartlett Yancey in 3:00 to claim the title. Pritchard, who finished 3rd in the Jim King/Orange Invitational on December 7, is tied with Martinez for the team-lead with 25 wins. He now has 16 pins.
James Rosati-Brown claimed the 152-pound championship with the largest workload of any of his teammates. He won five matches, all by pitfall. Rosati-Brown pinned Blake Collins of Bartlett-Yancey to finish the tournament with an unblemished record. It was the second time this season that Rosati-Brown has placed in a tournament. He finished 5th in the JKO.
Rosati-Brown is 24-9 with 15 pins.
Ruffin Wyrick took the 170 pound championship to improve to 20-9. He now leads Cedar Ridge with 18 pins. Wyrick pinned Marcos Padron-Diaz of Durham School of the Arts in 20 seconds, leading to the final where he pinned Randy Smith of Bartlett Yancey.
At heavyweight, Louis Tedder won his first individual championship of his career. Competing in two matches, Tedder pinned Adonay Pineda-Sorto of Durham School of the Arts and Jalik McNair of Bartlett Yancey.
Alex Christian was on the verge of taking the 182-pound championship. Christian finished 3-1 with pinfall wins over Ashton Applewhite of Granville Central, Dalton Roberson of Cummings and Alexander Salinas of Durham School of the Arts. Dylan Wall of Bartlett Yancey pinned Christian in the championship match.
Cedar Ridge entered the season after the graduation of Darius McLeod, who amassed 97 wins in his career. McLeod is now at Western Carolina University, but checked in on his former team during the Tiger Holiday Classic last month at Chapel Hill High School.
In other results, Cedar Ridge’s Kady Watkins won her seventh match of the season. As she prepares for the NCHSAA Girls State Tournament on February 8 in Winston-Salem, Watkins pinned Wasim Alsaidi of Barlett Yancey at 120 pounds.
Last week, Cedar Ridge earned its first Big 8 Conference win of the season by beating Northern Durham 63-10 at Poe Gymtorium. Wyrick, Alex Christian, Gio Poma, and Louis Tedder all earn pinfall victories. Rosati-Brown defeated Shamari Zachary 7-6. Poma’s victory sewed up the win for Cedar Ridge.
Cedar Ridge returns to action on Friday in the Dash Classic in Willow Springs. It will be a two-day tournament.
1,000 Man: Cedar Ridge’s Mekai Collins discusses scoring 1,000 career points
Just before the holidays, Cedar Ridge guard Mekai Collins quietly eclipsed a rare milestone. He scored his 1,000th point in his high school career in the Red Wolves’ game against Chapel Hill on December 9. Collins scored 12 points, which put him exactly at 1,000 points. He surpassed the mark the following night with 26 points in Cedar Ridge’s 56-47 with over the Durham School of the Arts. Collins started his career at Cedar Ridge, scoring 245 points his freshman year. As a sophomore, Collins scored 333 points. This season, he has led Cedar Ridge to four wins, three more than they had all of last season. He is the first Cedar Ridge player to surpass 1,000 points since Peyton Pappas in 2016 Pappas is the all-time leading scorer in school history. A native of California, Collins is a big Los Angeles Clippers fan. He will return to action on Tuesday night when Cedar Ridge travels to East Chapel Hill. You can hear that game on Hillsboroughsports.com live starting at 7:30 with Tim Hackett on the call.
Collins Career Night Lifts Cedar Ridge past Northern Durham. By Tim Hackett
In many instances, basketball can be a true team sport. Collapse defense, tic-tac-toe passing, alley-oops – none of those elements are possible without effort, communication and teamwork. In many instances, strong teams where everyone contributes can win games, and even championships.
But on many other occasions, the sport of basketball can create a star, a player who, nearly single-handedly at times, is the difference between victory and defeat. Other players can deliver good or even great games, sure, but that one (or two in today’s NBA) star is the player the fans, coaches, and other players expect to always deliver. And the brightest stars nearly always do. Picture someone like Jimmer Fredette at BYU, Brittney Griner at Baylor, LeBron James when he went back to the Cavaliers – superstar players who nearly always help their team overcome whatever opposition they face.
Friday night in Hillsborough, the fans inside Red Wolves Gym got to see two more players that fit that kind of bill – Maya Hood and Mekai Collins. Hood dominated after halftime to help Northern Durham overcome one of Cedar Ridge’s best team performances of the season in the women’s game, while Collins dominated throughout to lead Cedar Ridge to its second-straight conference win in the men’s.
It was always meant to be Mekai Collins’ night. He was celebrated pregame for joining the rare group of Red Wolves to have reached 1,000 points in his career earlier in the week, but it had been an up-and-down week for him: the night after he dropped a season-high 29 points against his old friends at Orange, he finished with only four in a loss at Granville Central, a season-low. The question on Friday was a clear one: which form of Mekai Collins (and Cedar Ridge) would come to play? The answer became clear quickly: the former.
A solid Northern Durham team played well in the second quarter, cutting an early Cedar Ridge edge down to 22-20 with strong efforts from football veterans Javion Hart and Anthony Freeman, returning to Hillsborough after wreaking havoc on the gridiron there just a few months prior. But Cedar Ridge scored eight of the final ten points of the second quarter and the first 22 points of the third, and the Red Wolves (4-8, 2-2 Big 8) cruised to a 76-51 victory over the Knights (4-11, 2-4). It was the Red Wolves’ second-largest margin of victory and second-highest point total of the season, after they routed the School of Science and Math in their season opener to match their win total from a year ago.
Collins was his usual dynamic self from the jump, causing turnovers, snagging rebounds, setting up clean looks with no-look passes, and, of course, scoring: still playing deep into the fourth quarter with his team up big, he hit back-to-back threes to give him a career-best 32 points and salt the game away. He hit 12 field goals, including a trio of deep balls, in another stellar all-around outing.
But while Cedar Ridge had the star performer, he wasn’t the only guy on the stage Friday. Freeman delivered 15 points in a strong game for the Knights. Derrick Smith had a nine in a typically solid all-around outing. Ian Johnson turned in one of his best performances of the season with four points and a handful of steals and assists. And had it not been for Collins’ new personal best, Sam Garbee would have stolen the show in the fourth quarter – he hit three field goals for a career-high six points of his own, and his teammates’ reaction to each one epitomized the bond this Cedar Ridge team has. The Red Wolves have now won two Big 8 games in a row, and while they won’t be in contention for the conference’s top spots, a place somewhere in the middle is now there for the taking – if they want to take it.
In a battle of two teams still searching for the first Big 8 Conference win of the season, the Cedar Ridge women’s team turned in perhaps its best overall defensive performance of the season, but Knight star Maya Hood erupted for 14 of her match-high 22 points in the fourth quarter and Phoenix Smith saw her buzzer-beater for the tie swirl around the rim and out, and Northern Durham (5-8, 1-5 Big 8) held on for a 46-43 victory over Cedar Ridge (1-12, 0-4), snapping a six-game Knight losing streak and sending Cedar Ridge to its fourth straight defeat.
It was an end-to-end affair in which neither team led by more than five. Phoenix Smith and Nadia Oswald were both excellent on defense, forcing a few Knight turnovers with their full-court press. Both Oswald and Jacori Walton chipped in ten points, while Catherine Coyle’s seven and Caitlin Lloyd’s six were both career bests. But just like Mekai Collins was in the men’s game, Maya Hood was the difference-maker in the women’s. She only had one field goal in the first three quarters, but she delivered five more in the fourth, including the one that put the visitors up 45-43. Nia Boney hit one of two free throws to provide the three-point edge, and Cedar Ridge tried to draw up a shot for Oswald to tie, but she missed what would have been a long-range two. Coyle dug out the rebound and it fell to Smith in the left wing, but her stepback three to tie clanged off the back rim and went wayward – it was just Smith’s second three-point attempt of the season.
It was a bittersweet end to a great effort from a Cedar Ridge team that has rarely looked hapless in the face of a one-win season. But their best chance at a conference win fell just centimeters short, and, because of how strong throughout this Big 8 conference seems this year, the Red Wolves might not get another chance this good until they play Northern again next month. This time, they were close. Next time, they better be ready.
Cedar Ridge’s Derrick Smith talks win over Northern Durham
The Cedar Ridge Red Wolves men’s basketball team has gone from 24 consecutive Big 8 Conference losses to back-to-back Big 8 wins. On Friday night, Cedar Ridge put away Northern Durham 76-51 at Red Wolves Gymnasium. It came three nights after Cedar Ridge defeated Orange for its first win at Panther Gymnasium since 2015. Sophomore Derrick Smith had ten points for the Red Wolves. After spending his freshman season on a 1-win team, Smith has been a crucial element in the Red Wolves reaching four wins at mid season. Cedar Ridge is 2-2 in the Big 8 Conference going into Tuesday trip to East Chapel Hill. You can hear that game starting at 7:30 on Tuesday night on Hillsboroughsports.com.
Northern Durham at Cedar Ridge men’s basketball broadcast! Listen here!
The Cedar Ridge men’s basketball team defeated Northern Durham on Friday night. Mekai Collins was honored before the game for scoring 1,000 points. Listen back to the broadcast here with Tim Hackett!
Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: K.J. Barnes
This week’s Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week is senior basketball forward K.J. Barnes. On Tuesday night, Barnes scored eleven points as the Red Wolves defeated Orange 66-55 for its first win at Panther Gymnasium since 2015. Barnes has starred on the basketball floor and the gridiron for years. In October, he scored the game-winning 2-point conversion in Cedar Ridge’s victory over Chapel Hill in football. This season, Barnes has played an instrumental role as Cedar Ridge has surpassed its win total from all of last season. In his junior season, K.J. didn’t have a varsity football team to play on when the Red Wolves didn’t field a team, but he remained at Cedar Ridge. On Tuesday night, his wait paid off with a hard earned win over a crosstown rival. K.J. Barnes and the rest of the Red Wolves return to action on Friday night when Cedar Ridge hosts Northern Durham.