Park View High (Sterling) | Archive | February, 2007

“Role” of a Lifetime for Broad Run’s Tabatabaian Helps Spartans Win Dulles District Tournament

 

On the Sidelines with Dan Sousa

 

By Dan Sousa
Loudoun Prep Sports Editor

 

South Riding
(Feb. 20, 2007) – Normally Broad Run High School senior forward Joe
Tabatabaian is a role player, but on Monday night he had the role of a
lifetime as he helped the Spartans knock off Park View 53-48 to win the
AA Dulles District tournament title at Freedom High School.

 

Broad Run —
led by the “fire and ice” combo of Adrian Mines and Mark McGlone, along
with the surprising Tabatabaian — jumped out to a 9-0 lead in the
contest and never trailed. 

 

The
district’s preseason favorite, Broad Run (18-7) struggled at times
during the regular season and came into the tournament as the No. 4
seed. The Spartans, however, are playing their best ball of the season
and have won seven straight after becoming one of the lowest boys seeds
in recent memory to capture the district tournament.

 

“We are happy to be that comet that comes around every few years,” said Broad Run coach Larry Boomer.

 

The
Spartans earned for the second straight year a road trip to the state’s
No. 1 ranked team. Last year it was R.E. Lee and this year it will be
Millbrook in
Winchester.

 

“Ironic, how many teams play the No. 1 team in the state in the first round in back-to-back years,” asked Boomer.

 

For Park View (19-6) the loss ended a season in which the Patriots improved from 7-16 the previous year.

 

“This season
was a huge turnaround for us,” said Park View coach Jeff Schneider.
“Hopefully we are starting a tradition of success again in Park View
basketball.”

 

The Patriots
were 19-3 this season against every team not named Broad Run, dropping
a 51-49 overtime loss to the Spartans on Jan. 8 and then a
heartbreaking 70-58 on Feb. 9 that prevented the Patriots from claiming
a share of the district regular season title.

 

“Broad Run beating us three times, I wouldn’t have thought it could happen,” said Schneider.

 

You can bet
Broad Run AD Jack Kirby wasn’t thinking about making bus plans for a
regional playoff trip after the team hit a midseason slump that
included a 20-day winless streak during which they lost at Potomac
Falls (51-42), at Heritage (62-48) and shockingly at home to Freedom
(65-63). Even when Broad Run starting winning again, it wasn’t pretty
as the team struggled to a 62-60 win on Feb. 2 over winless Briar Woods.

 

Then the
team, that features nine seniors on the roster, turned things around
behind the leadership of point guard Jamil Snyder. The Spartans are not
deep at the point position so having an off-night is not an option for
Snyder and he has not only responded but he does it with a refreshing
ego-free attitude on the court. Snyder is Old School in the sense that
he is a point guard that considers his job to make his teammates look
good and help his team win, even if that means that some nights his
name doesn’t show up in the scoring column.

 

“During the
regular season we lost focus,” said Snyder as he clutched the
tournament trophy after Monday’s win. “We knew we had to win or it
would be the last time for us boys to play together and we have been
playing together since third grade. Some of us have known each other
since kindergarten.”

 

Broad Run in
the last two weeks is now looking like that team that was picked to win
the district all along. Stopping the “M&M” boys (McGlone and Mines)
is no longer an easy solution to stopping the Spartans as Travis Clarke
has found his touch from 3-point range, Ricky Jasper is coming off the
bench and slashing to the basket with confidence and role players such
as Scott Hiatt, Hedi Saidi and Tabatabaian are making clutch plays.

 

Monday’s
Broad Run blitz to start the game featured two players with different
profiles but each with his own axe to grind. The 6-foot-4 Mines is
often known as the “ice” part of the “fire & ice” tandem with the
more fiery 6-5 McGlone, but since the release of the all-district
selections prior to the start of the tournament, which left Mines
completely off either the first or second team, Mines has taken to the
court with a new attitude.

 

Mines has
been swatting away shot attempts as if he was personally smacking the
ballots out of coaches hands that didn’t think he warranted an
all-district nod. In the quarterfinals against County he had 13 points
including two dunks, four rebounds and two blocks. In the semifinals he
scored 20 points with another dunk and 11 rebounds and five blocked
shots. It was more of the same Monday as he opened the game with an
acrobatic drive to the basket

 

McGlone
immediately stole the ball as the Spartans applied fullcourt pressure
and Tabatabaian aggressively to the ball to the hole for a layin.
  Another Patriot turnover and this time Tabatabaian gave Mines the perfect lob for one of his patent alley-oop dunks.

 

Park View
again turned the ball over. In fact, the Patriots committed turnovers
on their first six possessions. Normally when a team falls behind 9-0
you would say they were cold from the field but we will never know as
Park View didn’t attempt an official field goal until 4:30 in the game
had elapsed.

 

Tabatabaian
is a role player for the Spartans and he openly admits this senior
season has not been what he had hoped for. He starts but may not log as
many minutes as some of the players off the bench. He plays aggressive
defense and sets hard screens on offense, but he is not known for his
scoring. That is, until Monday when he proceeded to knock down a
3-pointer and then crash the offensive boards – against the tall Park
View line-up – for another basket. In all, Tabatabaian would score a
career-high 12 points including a key 3-pointer in the final quarter
after Park View had cut the lead to one point.

 

“This was
the best game in my life, hands down,” said Tabatabaian. “I felt big.
It felt good to be out there. They were sleeping on me so I had to step
up and help my team.”

 

It looked as
if Broad Run might turn the game into a runaway as the Spartans led
27-13 in the second quarter as McGlone was left open for mid-range
jumpers that barely moved the net as they fell through and Jasper
showed off the proper way to execute a reverse layin.

 

Park
View battled back, mostly behind the heart and hustle of Thomas Mulabah
who finished with a game-high 21 points and 13 rebounds.
  Mulabah
is listed a 6-1 in the tournament program but plays like he is 6-6. A
defensive lineman that should get some division 1 interest next year,
Mulabah moved up and down the court with amazing agility for a player
his size. Honestly, taking a charge from Mulabah in full sprint is an
option not covered by most major medical care.

 

In the
fourth quarter, when Park View threatened to send it down to the wire,
McGlone established himself by getting to the free throw line. Mines
had one last late Valentine for the Maroon Crew of Broad Run with a
block of Mulabah that prevented Park View from cutting the lead to two
points with 1:30 to play.

 

The Patriots
last gasp came when Amechi Anyaugo took a pass from Mulabah and
reversed the ball in while getting fouled. He completed the three-point
play with 1:04 left to make it 50-47 Broad Run.

 

The Patriots
then tried for the turnover vs. the quick foul or were simply too slow
to foul. Either way, the result was that 34 seconds elapsed before
McGlone was sent to the line where he dropped two more free throws to
make it 52-48 with 30 seconds left.

 

Good Spartan
defense slowed the Park View offense down enough that the Patriots took
off another 18 seconds trying to get off a shot attempt. Mulabah was
fouled and he made the first but missed the second. Anyaugo, however,
got the rebound and kicked it back out for a 3-point attempt by Danny
Foley but it was short. Mulabah got the rebound but he also missed as
the ball spun out.

 

It wasn’t
just going to go Park View’s night and maybe that should have been
clear early in the game when Mines hustled to save a ball from going
out of bounds and he blindly whipped the ball behind his back … and off
a Park View players face and out of bounds.

 

Broad Run ball. Broad Run ballgame.

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Shepherd Offers Scholarship to Dudinski

By: Dan Sousa

Sterling (Feb. 8, 2007) – Park View High School
running back Deric Dudinski was offered a partial scholarship
to Shepherd on Wednesday, but the Patriots’ all-time leading rusher is
considering walk-on offers to Division I schools according to his coach
Andy Hill.

“I expect that he will sit on this for now,” said
Hill. “He will not know what walk-on opportunities will be available
until later this week or next.”

Hill said that there is a possibility that Virginia,
Rutgers and Rhode Island could all offer Dudinski “preferred walk-on”
status.

“I believe he will earn a scholarship at any of those schools within a year,” said Hill.

Dudinski could also be in line for some offers from other Division
II schools such as East Stroudsburg (PS) and Carson-Newman (Tenn.).

In other recruiting news from Park View, defensive
lineman Corbin Barnes has received a partial scholarship offer from
Shepherd and he has gotten interest from East Stroudsburg (PA),
Viringia State and Carson-Newman (Tenn.). Barnes is expected to make a
decision in the next several weeks.

Another Park View senior, Justin Denekas has narrowed his school choices down to Salisbury, Bridgewater or Frostburg State.

Hill said the school will hold a signing ceremony for
Amechi Anyaugo, who signed Wednesday with Norfolk State, and the other
players that make decisions sometime late next week.

The 5-foot-9, 185-pound Dudinski became the Patriots
all-time leading rusher with 5,708 career yards after rushing for 2,171
yards this season. He scored 31 touchdowns in 11 games as the Patriots
went 9-1 and then lost to Louisa in the first round of the Region II
Division 4 playoffs. The only player in Northern Virginia history to
rush for more yards in a career is Westfield’s Evan Royster (now at
Penn State).

 “For the record, I wish some of these recruiters
would look past his height and long blond hair and see that this kid
can flat out play,” said Hill.

 

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Park View evens the score with Potomac Falls

By Joe Conroy/Loudoun Times-Mirror
Special to Loudoun Prep Sports

 

Sterling (Feb. 7, 2007) – Thomas Mulabah scored 23
and Amechi Anyaugo added 21 points in a fast-paced game in Sterling
Tuesday to give the Park View High School boys basketball team a 88-78
victory over Potomac Falls.

The Patriots took a page from the Panthers’ offensive
playbook deciding to run-and-gun, using fast breaks and quick scores to
keep their opponent off-balance.

 

“That surprised us a little bit to be honest, running
the way they did,” Panthers’ coach Jeff Hawes said. “That’s the game we
want and if we play them again, I hope they want to run the ball again.”

The Patriots took a 40-38 halftime lead and pardon the pun
ran with it. Once the high-octane game was finished, with another fast
break score by Park View, the crowd needed to catch its collective
breath.

The win, coupled with Heritage’s 77-69 victory over Freedom, creates a three-way tie at 10-3 among the top boys’ teams.

“That was our goal tonight, to see what we could do
to mess things up for everybody else,” Patriots’coach Jeff Schneider
said. “Last time we played them we let Potomac Falls dictate the tempo
of the game. We didn’t push the ball up the court so they got their
defense set. Tonight we were bound and determined to not let them do
that.”

Even into the fourth quarter the packed crowd seemed
to sense Potomac Falls had something left and could strike the
finishing blow at any moment. Ben Biber scored 18 of his 23 points in
the second half, many of which came running the same slash play. Biber
was able to cut to the basket with the ball and beat his man several
times resulting in multiple scores and foul shots.

But the Patriots always had an offensive answer for
it, whether it was Mulabah underneath or Anyaugo from outside. Park
View’s free throw shooting down the stretch was also key in the win.

“I think our biggest weakness has been free throw
shooting,” Schneider said. “As a team, we’re probably shooting around
mid-50 [percent], so that was great to see that we could have that
poise and step up. I told the players at one of our last time outs,
‘They’re going to pressure you, they’re going to make runs. You just
have to keep your head and keep cool, step up to the line and hit your
free throws.'”

The Patriots and Panthers can rest for only two days
before playing another important game. Park View heads to Broad Run
Friday while Potomac Falls travels to Dominion and Heritage faces
Loudoun County on the road, each a must-win to stay alive for a chance
at playoffs Saturday.

Box

Park View 88 Potomac Falls 78

PF: Biber 23, Ahmed 20, Kott 8, Hogue 7, Flickinger 6, Byrd 5, Anfindsen 3, Hancock 3, Richards 3. Totals 25 25-33 78

PV: Mulabah 23, Anyaugo 21, Foley 15, Freeman 11, Jackson 9, Smith 4, Leizear 3, Harvin 2. Totals 31 19-22 88.

3-Pointers: PF 3 (Biber, Houge, Anfindsen), PV 7 (Anyaugo 3, Foley 2, Jackson, Leizear).

 

Joe Conroy is a staff reporter for the Loudoun Times-Mirror.
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Adrian Announces 24-Member Football Recruiting Class which Includes Park View’s Anyaugo

 

NORFOLK, Va. (Norfolk State press release & LPS staff) — Norfolk
State head football Pete Adrian announced Wednesday that 24
student-athletes have signed national letters-of-intent to play for the
Spartans beginning next season, including Park View High School
linebacker Amechi Anyaugo.

After losing 26 seniors off his 2006 football team, Adrian signed an
impressive haul of players to fill immediate holes and add depth at a
variety of positions. Included on the list are eight from the Hampton
Roads area. Highlighting the list are four players who were named to
the All-Tidewater team by The Virginian-Pilot, giving the Spartans nine
All-Tidewater selections in Adrian’s first two full years of recruiting.

“I’m really excited about this class because we’re meeting the needs
we have,” Adrian said. “We recruited some size on the offensive line,
speed on defense and skill at the quarterback position. We’ve gotten a
lot more athletic at linebacker, inside and outside, and we’ve gotten a
lot more physical with this class.”

Adrian signed four highly-touted offensive linemen, led by two-time
first-team all-state player Markeece Preston of Paterson, N.J., and
first-team All-Tidewater tackle Jari Quarles of Ocean Lakes High in
Virginia Beach. They will be joined in the trenches by Kendall Noble
(Rocky Mount, N.C./Rocky Mount HS) and Ryan Hathaway (Charlotte Court
House, Va./Randolph-Henry HS).

The Spartans signed six linebackers who could all contribute right
away: Onyemechi Anyaugo (Sterling, Va./Park View HS), Hasan Craig
(Rocky Mountain, Va./Franklin County HS), Corwin Hammond (Louisville,
Ky./St. Xavier HS), Joseph Holbrook (Washington, D.C./Ballou HS),
Anthony Taylor (Virginia Beach, Va./Landstown HS) and Lamont Thorpe
(Richmond, Va./Varina HS). Each one earned first-team all-district
honors as a senior.

The Spartans added much-needed depth and talent at quarterback with
the addition of three local players: Dexter Merritt (Chesapeake,
Va./Oscar Smith), Brian Jackson (Virginia Beach, Va./Tallwood HS) and
Rakeem Kersey (Newport News, Va./Menchville HS). Jackson could also
contribute at punter, where he was first-team All-Tidewater and
All-State as a senior.

Defensively, NSU signed three linemen who should have an impact:
Dominion District Defensive Player of the Year Josh Turner (Richmond,
Va./Manchester HS), all-district performer Todd Bowden (Ashland,
Va./Patrick Henry HS) and honorable mention all-district player Nick
Lennartz (Newport News, Menchville HS).

The Spartans were hit hard by graduation this year at wideout and on
special teams, and Adrian thinks he has helped plug those holes.

Jermaine Weldon (Hague, Va./Washington & Lee HS) is an all-state
wide receiver with good size, while Josh Reamon (Gloucester,
Va./Gloucester HS) adds speed to the receiver position.

Along with Jackson, NSU’s special teams should be given a boost by
first-team All-Tidewater kicker Ryan Estep (Chesapeake, Va./Hickory
HS), kicker/punter Bill Rudd (Richmond, Va./Meadowbrook HS) and
long-snapper Stephen Coffin (Richmond, Va./Varina HS).

 

Rounding out Wednesday’s signings are three running backs: tailback
Brandon Cameron (Fairfax, Va./Robert E. Lee HS) and fullbacks Tommy
Moore (Woodbridge, Va./CD Hylton HS) and Josh Alford (Richmond,
Va./Manchester HS). All were first-team all-district selections as high
school seniors.

 Adrian said that additional signees are possible in the coming days and weeks.

 “Between this class and last year’s we will have brought roughly 50
new players into our program, and we feel that group collectively
changes the entire makeup of our team,” Adrian said.

Visit the Norfolk State website.

 

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Tip-off

Basketball sponsored by Cheers Sports

Dulles District Boys Quarterfinals


Park View 69, Broad Run 53:Thomas Mulabah scores 18 as Patriots advance to semifinals. Shane Johnson led BR with 13 points. Spartans finished year on 8-game slide. 


Dulles District Girls Quarterfinals


Briar Woods 48, Park View 44:Falcons go to the free line 42 times in the contest to Park View’s nine, outscoring Patriots at the charity stripe, 27-6. Park View trailed by 11 heading into the final quarter before closing within three but PV could never get any closer. Krysta Gardner and Ashley Adams each scored 11 for BW and Kim Bell had eight points with 13 rebounds. Gardner had 10 rebounds for a double-double. Rachel Miller led all scorers with 16 and Shernise Disney scored 10, most of it in the final quarter.

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