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Rose Classic

Dean Kids Inc. Presents Rose Classic Basketball Leagues
12/31/13 - 07:07 PM

Overview

The Rose Classic, established in 2006, has become the benchmark brand for organized, competitive basketball for the female student athlete.  The Rose Classic creates a unique atmosphere where these student athletes can grow athletically and socially.  Since its inception, the "Rose" as it is affectionately known, has attracted some of the nations top talent that has gone on to have success in college, overseas and the WNBA.  Some standouts that have participated in the "Rose" are Epiphany Prince (Rutgers/Chicago Sky), Kia Vaughn (Rutgers/NY Liberty), Shannon Bobbit (Tennessee/Indiana Fever), Samantha Prahalis (Ohio State), Erica Morrow (Syracuse), Maggie Lucas (Penn State), Stephanie Dolson (UConn), Bria Hartley (UConn), Jenn O'Neil (Kentucky), Bra'Shey Ali (Kentucky) and China Crosby (Virginia).

The Rose Classic runs  Spring and Fall cycles on an annual basis.  The league is open to High School, AAU, Travel and other organized teams.  Players must be 19 years and under and cannot have been enrolled in or attending college.

With the Elite Level of support provided by NIKE, the Rose Classic has become a platform to tune up for both the AAU and High School seasons.

About Dean Kids Inc.

Dean Kids Inc. is a 501c3 non-profit organization, founded in June 2000 and based in Brooklyn, NY.  The mission of Dean Kids Inc. is to enrich the lives of student athletes by enhancing their experiences both on and off the court.  Our tournaments provide a safe, organized and competitive atmosphere.  We inspire achievement through mentorship, education, community service and support.  All this done in an effort to empower our student athletes to be productive leaders of society.


Corporate Sponsors

The buisnesses and individuals listed are among the growing number of loyal donars that have generously lent there support since 2006.

Nike, Inc.

Checks & more

Concord Market

PSAL

Vinnie's Style

Park Slope Eyewear

77th Precinct

88th Precinct

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Kenny Kallina's Top 100 Club Teams
3/24/13 - 12:55 PM

Along with our friends at All Star Girl’s Report Kenny Kallina has been the only grassroots basketball analyst to public club basketball rankings for the last four years on a national level. This year we kick of the 2013 travel season with our Pre-Season Top 100. We will be doing a post spring evaluation ranking for our next poll. If you should be ranked – Email KennyKallina@Gmail.com and nicely tell me why.

The Bull once again sits atop the club basketball world until he is dethroned.

The Bull once again sits atop the club basketball world until he is dethroned.

  1. Tennessee Flight (Murfreesboro, TN)
  2. Cal Sparks Gold (Los Angeles, CA)
  3. All Ohio (Columbus, OH)
  4. Cy Fair Shock (Houston, TX)
  5. Tree of Hope (Seattle, WA)
  6. North Tartan (Minneapolis, MN)
  7. Kentucky Premier (Lexington, KY)
  8. Epiphany Prince Elite (New York, NY)
  9. Palmetto 76ers (Columbia SC)
  10. Boo Williams (Newport News, VA)
  11. Miami Suns (Miami, Fl)
  12. Team Takeover (Washington DC)
  13. West Coast Premier (Los Angeles, CA)
  14. Garner Flames (NC)
  15. Philly Belles (Philadelphia PA)
  16. Mac Irvin Fire (Chicago, IL)
  17. New Jersey Sparks (New York, NY)
  18. DFW T-Jack (Dallas, TX)
  19. Illinois Xcitement (Chicago, IL)
  20. Indiana Elite Bailey (Indianapolis IN)
  21. Cal Ballers (Oakland, CA)
  22. Michigan Crossover (Detroit MI)
  23. Sophia Young Elite (San Antonio, TX)
  24. San Antonio’s Finest (San Antonio TX)
  25. Lady Phoenix Rudd (NC)
  26. California Swish (Los Angeles, CA)
  27. New York Gauchos (Newark, NJ)
  28. City Rocks (Albany  NY)
  29. EBX (Oakland, CA)
  30. FGB (Jacksonville, Fl)
  31. Peak Performance (Atlanta, GA)
  32. Missouri Phenoms (Missouri)
  33. Boo Williams Richmond (Richmond VA)
  34. Midwest Elite Platinum (Chicago IL)
  35. Cincinnati Angels (Cincinnati, OH)
  36. Team Adidas St Louis Elite (St Louis MO)
  37. Philly Triple Threat (Philadelphia, PA)
  38. Spice Gym Rats (Indianapolis IN)
  39. WP Celtics (Atlanta, GA)
  40. Ring City (Newark NJ)
  41. Toronto A-Game (Toronto CA)
  42. Essence (Tallahassee, FL)
  43. Northwest Blazers (Spokane, WA)
  44. All Iowa Attack (Ames, IA)
  45. Rhode Island Breakers (Providence RI)
  46. Fairfax Stars (Fairfax, VA)
  47. New Heights (New York NY)
  48. Alabama Flight (Birmingham, AL)
  49. Kansas City Select (Kansas City MO)
  50. Western PA Bruins (Pittsburgh, PA)
  51. EBO (San Diego, CA)
  52. Team Penny (Memphis TN)
  53. AOT (Atlanta, GA)
  54. New Mexico Heat (NM)
  55. Cal Sparks NorCal (Sacramento CA)
  56. South Mississippi Elite (Hattiesburg, MS)
  57. Georgia Metros (Atlanta, GA)
  58. Blue Star Florida (Orlando, Fl)
  59. New Hampshire Rivals
  60. Cincy Heat Premier (Cincinnati OH)
  61. Exodus NYC (New York, NY)
  62. Alabama Southern Starz (Huntsville, AL)
  63. California Storm (Los Angeles, CA)
  64. Louisiana Pumas (New Orleans, LA)
  65. Minnesota Metro Stars (MN)
  66. California Stars (Stockton, CA)
  67. Atlanta Lady Celtics (Atlanta, GA)
  68. Duncanville Tigers (Duncanville TX)
  69. SMAC Ballers (Ohio)
  70. FBC California (CA)
  71. Team Concept (Portland, OR)
  72. Michigan Elite (MI)
  73. Texas Prep Elite (Houston TX)
  74. South Florida Lady Jaguars (Davie, FL)
  75. GSB Arizona (Arizona)
  76. Missouri Valley Eclipse (MO/KS)
  77. Dayton Metro (Dayton OH)
  78. Colorado Basketball Club (Denver, CO)
  79. FBC Georgia (Atlanta GA)
  80. Wiggins Waves (La Jolla CA)
  81. CSS Bison (NE)
  82. South Carolina 76ers (Columbia SC)
  83. Lone Wolf (VT)
  84. Georgia Hoopstars (Atlanta, GA)
  85. D1 Greyhounds (Huntington, WV)
  86. La Familia (Newark, NJ)
  87. Southeastern Lady Blazers (Columbus GA)
  88. Norfolk Express (Norfolk VA)
  89. Vegas Elite (Las Vegas, NV)
  90. Arkansas Mavericks (Fayetteville, AR)
  91. Minnesota Fury (MN)
  92. Wisconsin Playground (WI)
  93. Houstonians (Houston TX)
  94. West Virginia Thunder (Huntington WV)
  95. Georgia Jaguars (Columbus GA)
  96. Illinois Defenders (Chicago, IL)
  97. Central Florida Elite (Orlando, FL)
  98. Blazers Exposure (Columbus GA)
  99. Kentucky Retros (Louisville, KY)
  100. New England Crusaders (Boston MA)

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Bianca Cuevas of Nazareth Regional HS and Exodus AAU team serves as face of the Rose Classic basketball tournament
4/5/12 - 10:23 AM

Nazareth Regional HS standout Bianca Cuevas poses in the Rose Classic uniform.

When Anton Marchand was organizing the Rose Classic six years ago, he needed a face, someone who could be the proverbial poster girl for the event and draw in other players and teams.

Epiphanny Prince fit the description well, and the Rose Classic took off. Then when Prince was gone, Sammy Prahalis took over.

Now, it’s Bianca Cuevas’ turn.

Following in the footsteps of such players as Prince — now playing overseas — and Prahalis — likely on her way to the WNBA — Cuevas, a sophomore at Nazareth Regional HS, has taken over as the torchbearer for the Classic, one of the most popular tournaments in the country for high school and AAU teams.

The Rose Classic officially begins on April 14 but games honoring the memory of former Nazareth coach Apache Paschall will be played on Saturday at the Ronald Edmunds Learing Center in Brooklyn.

Cuevas doesn’t have many responsibilities related to the event other than showing up and playing well. Her inclusion in the Classic is enough to raise its profile, especially considering how popular she’s become on the city basketball scene.

“We thrust that upon her at a very early age,” Marchand said. “She’s been excellent, actually.”

Cuevas, who plays for the Exodus AAU team, first played in the Classic as a sixth-grader, competing against high schoolers.

By the time she was a freshman, Cuevas was “pretty much the show,” Marchand said.

“Fearlessness — not something you see (often) in a girl that young,” Marchand said of the 16-year-old.

Cuevas says she’s been told she’s the marquee player in the event, but she prefers not to get caught up in worrying about such things and instead keeps it simple, focusing on the games.

In fact, Cuevas rarely speaks to the media, even after games. Her teammates enjoy her wit, particularly after losses, but for her, words come about as infrequently as turnovers.

Still, Marchand says Cuevas has the game and the personality to draw a crowd wherever she goes.

“She is fun to watch,” said Ron Kelley, who took over as co-coach at Nazareth after Paschall died in January.

The Classic, which is played in the spring and fall, included 16 teams when it started six years ago.

The cycle that begins next week will feature 86 teams, not including those on a waiting list.

Now sponsored by Nike, the Classic gives away countless amounts of gear and clothing to its participants. And for the first time ever, Nike is selling a Rose Classic sneaker at select Foot Locker stores.

Cuevas was the only player to get an early pair, which she tested out and gave feedback on.

The Classic cycles typically last 10 weeks and culminate with a playoff round. Cuevas’ team, Exodus, has nine tournament wins, each of them under the guidance of Paschall, who suffered a fatal heart attack on Jan. 3.

“He was a huge factor (in building up the event),” Marchand said.

Now, even without Paschall, Exodus is still the shining star of the tournament, which will

feature such programs as New Heights, the Lady Falcons, New York City Heat and the New England Crusaders, which could bring as many as six teams.

Every year, Marchand said, an unexpected team emerges. But stars such as Cuevas, Sadie Edwards, Darius Faulk and Brianna Butler make Exodus a logical favorite — again.

“We have such a talented team,” Edwards said.


 

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Aaliyah Lewis Update
3/30/12 - 10:23 AM

Joe Fenelon
NYCHoops.net Staff Writer

Bishop Ford head coach, Mike Toro, knew exactly what he had in his point guard, a leader, Aaliyah" the Rabbit" Lewis. After leading the Lady Falcons JV team to an undefeated city championship as a freshman, the 5-foot-5 sophomore had to adjust to the physical play and speed of the varsity game and competing against some of the nation's best players in the CHSAA.
 

J. Fenelon
Aaliyah Lewis

Lewis just finished her junior campaign and guided her team to a 22-6 record, while averaging 12 points, 4 assists, 3 rebounds, and 3 steals per game.NYCHoops.net got a chance to speak to her high school head coach, Mike Toro about Lewis' future.

Toro said, "Aaliyah is a player everyone hopes to be one day, she is determined and willing to do whatever to help her team win. Next year, I expect her to lead the way with a core of new faces that will be new to the varsity level." Toro went on to say, "She currently has offers from St John's, Hofstra, Rutgers, and has interest from Iona, Boston College, Seton Hall, West Virginia, Virginia Tech, Louisville, Maryland and many more."

Lewis got the nickname, "the Rabit," at the Nike Rose Classic in Brooklyn, NY, because of her speed. The Staten Island native is a fierce competitor on both ends of the court. She has the tools to be a great defender because of her quick hands, feet, and good reflexes. She is a true point guard that looks to get others involved and when her jumper is on, she is a nightmare to defend. She loves to attack the rim and can finish with contact from bigger players.

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Long Island's Sammy Prahalis inspires Ohio State fans and vexes Big Ten opponents
3/10/12 - 01:29 PM

With 20.1ppg and 6.3 apg, Long island's Sammy Parhalis leads the Big Ten in both categories.

By Kevin Armstrong\New York Dailynews

COLUMBUS, Ohio — There’s a lightning bolt tattooed behind Ohio State point guard Sammy Prahalis’ left ear lobe, a heart behind the right.

Her left wrist is inked with flames that become visible as she grabs a right-handed rebound and pivots left, the open court serving as a canvas for the most creative player in the women’s game.

She narrows her eyebrows and pushes the ball at full speed, hesitating only near the top of the opposite 3-point arc before proceeding. She disarms one defender with a pass fake to the corner, takes two bounding steps — first right, then left — and finishes her rim-to-rim run with a wraparound delivery to forward Ashley Adams for an easy layup.

The crowd alights in approval. It is one of four assists for the Long Island product on Senior Night at Value City Arena. Two thousand fans hold sticks with images of her smile; 11 students wear white T-shirts that spell out THANK YOU #21. She scores 42 points — a school record — exits to a standing ovation and leaves Ohio State coach Jim Foster, a Vietnam veteran, with glassy eyes and a quivering lower lip.

“Thank you for putting up with my crazy self,” she says.

Prahalis, a vexing, volatile contrarian, fancies herself a modern-day Pistol Pete Maravich, emptying a bottomless bag of tricks to lead the conference in points per game (20.1), assists (6.3) and minutes played (37.6). As she readies for the NCAA tournament, she slaps the ball past defenders, slips no-look passes to teammates and slaloms down the lane. A high-wire act in low-top sneakers, she suspends her shooting hand after made baskets and lifts her right index finger — tattooed with “Shh…” — following electric plays.

“I don’t know that there’s anyone like her out there,” says Dave Richardson, the team’s strength coach. “You’re talking about a 5-foot-6, 120-pound white girl who will literally change her stride to step on someone’s hand who is lying on the floor.”

Her antics don’t amuse her opponents. While a senior at Commack High on Long Island in 2008, opposing fans at Walt Whitman threw Skittles at Prahalis, who pranced across the court. In Iowa this year, irate Hawkeye supporters booed every time she touched the ball. When she came out of the tunnel at Penn State on Feb. 20 a fan held up a photograph of her crying after a 10-turnover performance in the 2010 NCAA tournament and requested her signature. She has been obscenely heckled.

“Twenty percent of the world didn’t like Mother Teresa, either,” Foster says.

Prahalis is tempered by Foster, a 63-year-old head coach who tended bar during his first two years in the profession, and Debbie Black, a wild-eyed assistant who was dubbed “The Tasmanian Devil” during a professional stint Down Under. Together they tightened the reins on the precocious Prahalis, convincing her to exchange flavor for efficiency. In turn, they stunned the status quo. Prahalis has a 2:1 assist-to-turnover ratio.

“There are days you want to strangle her and there are days you want to hug her,” says Black, who played under Foster at St. Joseph’s. “I get her and I love her.”

Her evolution has been highly visible. She is a natural blonde who dyed her long locks, typically tied into a ponytail that stretches down to her waist, jet black during her freshman year of high school and painted her nails black from then on.

“It adds a little mystery,” she says.

Her motivation, never lacking, is needled into her skin. It is a tattoo scripted in Latin by the crook of her right arm. It reads:

Oderint, dum metuant.

The translation is trash talk.

Let them hate, so long as they fear.

***

Warning signs abound. Atop a shelf inside Prahalis’ childhood bedroom on the second floor of the family’s home midway down a dead end street in Dix Hills, L.I., a wooden board emblazoned with white lettering lies against the lavender wall.

Nobody gets in

to see the wizard

Not nobody,

not no how!


Her magic first manifested itself behind a facemask. At 6, she asked her father, John, head of the local Police Athletic League, if she could play football. At 11, she wore eye black and scampered ahead of all chasers for five touchdowns in one game. She finished the season with 21, then doubled down on defense. From her linebacker assignment she broke through blocks to claim marquee status in the Monster 52 scheme.

“She was our monster,” John Prahalis says.

As tailback, she took the ball on a toss and exploded through defenders, but she discovered her match in an opening near the goal line at South Shore. Prahalis absorbed the handoff and sped toward the end zone. The opposing linebacker closed quickly. She dropped her shoulder; he dropped his. He got lower and leveled her.

“I’m glad she got up,” says her father, who played football in college at Villanova. “Two trains collided.”
She did not play the next year.

“I got more girly,” she says.

Her elusiveness carried over to basketball. By seventh grade she started on the Commack High varsity, but tutorials extended to the North Babylon Town Hall’s annex. Jerry Powell, a basketball junkie with a growing skills academy, welcomed her inside the wood-panelled walls and drilled her on ball handling, asking her to dribble through her legs while simultaneously catching another basketball with her free hand.

“She was raw meat,” he says. “I added seasoning.”

Powell played matchmaker, too. He recommended her to Apache Paschall, head of the Exodus AAU program based out of a Lower East Side gym.

They toured playgrounds, visiting Rucker in Harlem and the caged-in court at West Fourth and Sixth Avenue for runs. She accepted all challenges, squaring off against men who underestimated her and older women who left their children in strollers on the sidelines to go against Prahalis.

“There’s no better feeling than when you show no fear,” says Nancy Lieberman, a legend who played Rucker as “Lady Magic.”

“They respect her for that.”

No matter the stage, electricity coursed through her exchanges with Paschall. In one game, Prahalis, being pressured by guards, yelled, “Apache, do something!”

He insisted she protect herself. Tough love defined their time together. When team members messed around past midnight at a hotel, he had them run wind sprints around the outside at 2 a.m. while he sat in a chair. When the girls failed to perform well, he had them stand in the parking lot with their hands over their heads.

“I wanted to kill him,” Prahalis says.

Her coach at Commack, Dennis Conroy, offered a calmer influence. He allowed her liberties, maintaining that, “You don’t make Picasso a house painter.” Conroy let her wear headphones during warmups.
Before a game against rival Northport she appeared in a shirt that read: “Hi Haters.” The next time they played it said, “I LOVE NORTHPORT.”

Conroy’s mailbox was flooded with complaints, but recruiting letters came in greater quantity, including from Foster. Known for his work with forwards and centers, Foster insisted that he would fashion his offense around Prahalis and implement a running style. Rival recruiters questioned such a promise to Prahalis, but he persisted, even though his attempts to reach Prahalis by phone proved futile. She rarely answered and he grew familiar with her ringtone, which played Alicia Keys.

“I almost began to enjoy it,” he says.

She preferred to lock herself in a gym or her bedroom. There, three walls are papered with photos of NBA players. Next to a mirror is the 2005 schedule for the AND1 Mixtape Tour. She insists street ball was but a phase.

“I ain’t no circus,” she says. “I want to win.”

Sleep comes beneath a makeshift crucifix taped to the wall. She lays her head on a pillow embroidered with the beginning of a confession.

Dear Santa,

I can explain…


***

On April 10, 2011, a message appeared on Prahalis’ Facebook page.

The author began the note with an introduction. Her name was Hannah, and she was 14 years old.

“I just wanted to let you know how you helped me get through the hardest time of my life ...” Hannah and her father bonded over the brassy brand of basketball practiced by Prahalis. The first time they saw her play, Hannah memorized a move, ran to the driveway and reenacted the sequence. The sessions ended once the cancer in her father's esophagus metastasized.

A clot developed in his brain; he died on Thanksgiving 2009.

“… I became a depressed, angry mess. The only thing that could make me even remotely happy was playing basketball and watching you play. You kind of kept me sane and prevented me from hurting myself ”

Prahalis brightened Hannah’s darkness with an in-person visit after a game, encouraging her to reach out if necessary, but Prahalis also fought her own demons. Following a loss to Minnesota during which she had more turnovers (five) than assists (four) on Jan. 15, 2009, she left the arena without a coat as snow fell. She walked across campus to her dorm, eschewing calls from her parents who had attended the game.

“Steam came from her ears,” her father says.

Tears flowed as Prahalis encountered true loss on Jan. 3. She was driving in her car when she received a phone call from Exodus teammate and future Buckeye Lisa Blair. Blair was crying hysterically.

Paschall, who was being treated for skin cancer, had suffered a fatal heart attack. Prahalis flew home for the funeral.

“I can hear his voice now yelling at us,” she says. “I miss him.”

She memorialized him on her socks, but it was her style that grew after returning to the team. Her game magnetized the Midwest. During an autograph session, one middle-aged man, there with his wife, announced himself as her biggest fan. He had driven 176 miles from Indianapolis to be there. A mother of an Ohio girl approached her father.

“All my daughter does is write papers in school about Sammy,” she said.

There is schoolwork left to do. Foster has graduated every player he’s coached in his 34-year career, but Prahalis is 10 classes short of a degree in criminal justice.

“You just hope the bird can fly,” Black says.

***

Once a loner, Prahalis is now a trendsetter. Sarah Wynn, an Ohio State junior, never played basketball but grew interested after watching Prahalis. She now paints her nails black, but decided getting one of the same tattoos would be too much. On Senior Night, Wynn led the chants for Prahalis as they serenaded the prancing assassin.

“We love you, we love you, we love you, and where you go we’ll follow, we'll follow cause we support Sammy, Sammy, Sammy.”



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/college/long-island-sammy-prahalis-inspires-ohio-state-fans-vexes-big-ten-opponents-article-1.1036786#ixzz1ouRKXdsa

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Lisa Blair makes the call
10/23/11 - 07:36 PM

 

J. Fenelon
Lisa Blair chooses Ohio State

6-foot-6 Nazareth Regional senior Lisa Blair makes her call to play her college ball in Big Ten.After coming home from her last schedules visit this past week at LaSalle University, Blair decided this weekend to choose Ohio State.

Blair held scholarship offers from over 20 schools after enjoy a great summer evaluation period. At the end it came down to Ohio State, South Florida, Morehead State and LaSalle.

NYCHoops.net spoke to Apache Paschall head coach Nazareth Regional and director of Exodus about Blair's commitment "It has to be one of the top ten things that has happened in or Exodus program," he said.

Coach Paschall added that her commitment is one of the highlights in his career in basketball. "For her not ever playing basketball until high school and coming so far in a 3½ years to committing to a top 10 program in the country is one of the biggest strives we have seen not just for myself but for women's basketball in NYC," he said.


                                                                                                                     

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Butler transfer to NY Power
9/28/11 - 08:50 AM

Joe Fenelon
NYCHoops.net Staff Writer

Last week, for the first day of classes Brianna Butler (5'11" G), formerly of PA's Penn Charter, enrolled at one of the top girls basketball school in the city and perhaps the nation.

 

M. Wingate
Brianna Butler

In a move that would change the landscape of Girls basketball, Butler has enrolled at Nazareth Regional high school

Nazareth High school strikes gold, after enjoying a great first year season as a girl's basketball Program. The Lady Kingsmen, who would eventually win the state and federation title, also made some noise on the national level participating in some of the nation's premier girls basketball events in their inaugural year.

Butler is a consensus top 10 prospect in the class of 2012, she instantly make Nazareth a contender to the mythical national championship. NYCHoops.net got a chance to speak to Butler about her recruitment.

"So far I have four schools that I will visit Penn State September 23rd with Taylor Ford, October 1st Ohio State with Taylor Ford and Lisa Blair, Kentucky October 14th Midnight madness and the last one is Syracuse I have to get a date for that one," she said.

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Kasim Alston reflects on his God Daughter Tayshana
9/15/11 - 09:07 PM

RIP Tayshana "Chicken" Murphy You will surely be missed!

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Tayshan Murphy, teenage basketball star, gunned down in case of mistaken identity: family
9/11/11 - 12:23 PM

Originally Published:Sunday, September 11th 2011, 10:30 AM
Updated: Sunday, September 11th 2011, 2:26 PM

Tayshana Murphy, 18, was shot and killed while running from the gunman, police say.
Joy Keh for News
Tayshana Murphy, 18, was shot and killed while running from the gunman, police say.

A high school basketball star was shot dead inside a Manhattan housing project Sunday in a slaying her family believes was a tragic case of mistaken identity.

Tayshana (Chicken) Murphy, 18, one of the top-rated basketball players in the country, was killed in Harlem's Grant Houses around 4:10 a.m., police said.

She was trying to outrun a gunman in the fourth-floor hallway of her building, witnesses said.

"She was pleading for her life," said friend Teka Taylor, 22. "She was saying, 'No, please, I don't have nothing to do with it.'"

Murphy had just started her senior year at Murry Bergtraum High School for Business Careers. Several colleges were actively recruiting her.


Murphy, nicknamed Chicken, was being scouted by colleges for her skills on the court. (Bryan Pace for News)

"She said, 'Mom, I'm going to get you out of the projects,' " said Murphy's mother, Tephanie Holston, whose shirt was stained with blood after she tried to save her daughter before emergency workers arrived. "She loved basketball, she lived and breathed basketball," Holston said.

Witnesses believe Murphy, who was partying with friends from the project and was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, was mistaken for a boy from the group who had fought with young men from a nearby housing project.

She died at the scene after being chased into the building by her shooter.

Murphy's mother kissed the body bag as it was loaded into a medical examiner van.

"No, no, no. I can't believe this," Murphy's sister howled as she banged on the van with both her hands.

Murphy had a brush with violence last year, when she left Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School under threat of suspension after an altercation with a 15-year-old girl.

She transferred to St. Michael's Academy in Manhattan, then started at Murry Bergtraum last September after St. Michael's shut down.

Murphy was ecstatic to be returning to the court this fall after being sidelined last year with a knee injury. "She wanted in the worst way to play," said Ed Grezinsky, her coach at Bergtraum. "She definitely would have been the leader of the team."

She never lost sight of her dream of becoming a WNBA star. "That's my goal," she told the Daily News last year. "I want to be great."

Police are investigating the killing. No arrests have been made.

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Paris Hodges raises her game
8/11/11 - 04:40 PM

Paris Hodges, born and raised on the Shinnecock Indian reservation on Long Island, NY, is creating a buzz in the northeast.
 

 

J. Fenelon
Paris Hodges

The 5-foot-9 rising junior wing has gradually been increasing her stock from the beginning of the year.

After earning the MVP honors at KSA Disney Tournament in Orlando, FL in January, she came back home and led her Southampton high school team to a 13-6 record while averaging 17.1 points per game.

Prior to the July evaluation period she excelled at both the GymRat challenge in Albany NY and Hofstra University Elite camp in early June.

NYCHoops.net got a chance to speak to Hodges and her L.I. Lightning coach last week at USJN 17U tournament in DC, about her recruitment and her potential. "I want to go D1; my focus for this year is to make the All-County team and break into the 1000 point mark," said the cat quick wing.

"I think the sky is the limit for her in terms of her potential; right now we are getting contacted by a lot of mid-majors, I think she can be a major too big time player with a bit of refinement of her game and consistently hitting on her jumper; but right now it's a pretty safe bet to say she is a mid-major kid," said Long Island Lightning head coach Greg Flynn

According to Hodges' parents, the following schools have showed interest in her; Hofstra, Stony Brook, St Francis PA, Quinnipiac, Syracuse, UNC, L.I.U, and Adelphi

 

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Vaughn steps up her game
8/10/11 - 03:52 PM

Shanice Vaughn

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NY guard gets her 1st two offers
8/8/11 - 04:42 PM

5-foot-7 Amani Tatum of Archbishop Molloy is a true floor general.

 

J. Fenelon
Amani Tatum

The rising junior guard led her NYC Lady Bulldogs travel team to a 50-7 record this summer. She also led her AAU team to chips at the USJN Junior Nationals in DC, the GymRat Challenge in Albany NY and the Quaker City Challengee in Philly. As a result, Tatum has picked up her first two offers.

NYChoops.net got a chance to speak to Tatum about her recruiting thus far and her plans from the upcoming year.

"As soon as I got back home from July in the next few days I got offers from Manhattan and Stony Brook," said Tatum.

At the moment Molloy, the team won the CHSAA "A" State championship in 2011 does not have a Girls Varsity coach as Tom Catalanotto was not retained. That has not deterred the talented point guard.

"I can't and don't let anything stop me. There's a lot going on; I can't let anything distract me for my junior year," she said.

Tatum says that for the upcoming season, she is looking to improve her game and be a bit more aggressive offensively. "I'm going to just keep working hard and try and take my game to another level."

When asked at what level are you trying to play collegiate ball Tatum replied, "I'm trying to play bigger than big. I'm trying to play in the Big East."

 

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L.I. forward seizes the moment
8/2/11 - 04:26 PM

 
J. Fenelon
Makeda Nicholas
After a very productive freshman year that was cut short by a broken thumb, Nicholas wasted no time making a name for herself this summer on the circuit. She played her travel ball with NYC's Riverside Hawks in some of the biggest tournaments in the country at NIKE Chicago as well as USJN events.

NYCHoops.net got a chance to speak to Nicholas about what she will be focusing on in a school as the process begins. "I am looking for a school with great academic reputation and hopefully a recognized basketball team; this summer I wanted to improve my ball handling skills and quickness."

Riverside Travel coach Ken Parham on his star wing. "Makeda had a great summer versus good competition," said Parham. "I played her at the 3 all summer and she flourished; and many college coaches liked what they saw out of the rising sophomore; her versatility all summer was a key for her, she shoots the 3, goes to the basket and can post up she is a difficult guard every game."

According to Nicholas and her mother these are the letters that she received this summer so far; Seton hall, Rutgers, Louisiana, Louisville, Texas Tech, Stony Brook, North Carolina, DePaul, Florida State, Assumption, St. John's, UMass, Georgetown, Adelphi, Notre Dame, Quinnipiac, Duke, and Marist.

 

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Lady Choz CG talks recruiting
7/31/11 - 04:28 PM

5-foot-9 Piscataway High school standout Denaejah Grant is a very skilled combo guard that has caught the eye of quite as few D-1 schools.

 


J. Fenelon
Danaejah Grant

NYCHoops.net spoke to Grant at the NYC Lady Gauchos event, The Festival after the championship game

Grant, a New Jersey resident who travels to NYC to play for the Lady Gauchos, goes on to explain what will be the deciding factors in her choosing a college. “Distance plays no factor, I’m looking for a close-knit team, a good coach with good credentials, and a place where I can become a better player and help my career, so I can get to the next level.�

According to grant these are a few of the schools that have offered her; Rutgers, Virginia, Miami, Seton Hall, St John, Clemson, Vanderbilt, Louisville, Kentucky and Cincinnati.

"I've already taken unofficial to St John, Seton Hall, Virginia, Miami, Rutgers and Clemson said Grant. My next unofficial will be to Vanderbilt, I'm not sure when exactly but it will be in August."

As far as when she will pick her favorites schools, Grant replied, “I will narrow the schools down to five by the end of the summer.


 

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USJN girls news, notes and top performers
7/26/11 - 04:34 PM

WASHINGTON, DC - 2011 U.S. Junior Nationals USJN-17U Championships news, notes and top performers.

J. Fenelon
Mei-Lyn Bautista

Junior Nationals is one of the biggest tournaments on the East coast; games were played at four sites with well over 200 teams participating in a pool play format. Over 300 college from the NCAA, NAIA and NJCAA division's 1, 2 and 3 on hand to view the talent on hand.


News and Notes

NJ Demons checked in with the tallest player and also with one of the events youngest and shortest players. Marvadene Anderson (Rutgers Prep, Somerset NJ 2012) was the tallest prospects at the event logging in at 6'11" and 5-foot-2 Dara Mabrey of 2018.

NYC Bulldogs head coach Tom Catalanotto has done nothing but get his teams to win in 2011. First he won the NYC CHSAA class A state championship, then rode back up state a few months later to win The Gymrats Challenge and on Sunday won his bracket in pool play at the USJN.

NJ Sparks Elite's Africa Williams 5'7" G (Banneker HS, Brooklyn NY 2013) was held out of action with a rib injury.


Local Talents

NYC Lady bulldogs Brooke Gerstman 5'8" PG (Lynbrook HS, East Rockaway, NY 2014) - Gerstman played with a swagger and a chip on her shoulder, burying 3-pointer after 3-pointer. As a combo guard, she did everything needed to help her team get wins; rebounded a bit, made good decisions wit the ball in her hands, finished in transition and stayed away from turnovers.

Baseline Elite Kori Bayne-Walker 5'7" PG (Gates Chili HS, Rochester NY) - Kori's, game is like fine wine, it gets better with time. Looks are very deceiving with this prospect. She gets into the lane with ease and has the power to finish when she is bumped. Showed ability to shoot from behind the arc as well as pass and get teammates open looks at the basket.

J. Fenelon
Shanice Woodson

NY City Rocks Diandra Derosa 5'7" PG (Sommers HS, Sommers, CT 2013) - This was Derosa's first time on the July main circuit; she made up for lost time, blowing fast defender and draining down jumpers. Derosa's speed, athletic ability and ability to make shots made her a presence.

Long Island Express Allie McKenna 6'2" F (John Glenn HS, Huntington, LI, 2012) - She is comfortable with facing up and knocking down a jump shot from as far back as the arc. Allie showed the ability to catch the ball in traffic as well as finish in transition. On the defensive end, she altered a few shots and rebounded well.

New Heights Dionne Coe 5'7" G (Murry Bergtraum HS, New York NY 2012) - Coe is a guard who can do a little bit of everything. She has a quick release and can knock it down from behind the arc, and also beat defenders off the dribble and get out and finish in transition.

NYC Heat Chris Rubin 5'9" PG (Moore Catholic HS, Staten Island NY 2012) shoot the ball fairly hell and showed a high basketball IQ. Played well with-out the ball with her constant movement, she also showed the ability to handle the ball.

Long Island Lightning-Lawniczak Kelly Carey 5'8" G (Holy Trinity HS, Long Beach LI 2013) Carey is a shooter, in her first game in pool play she knocked down 4 3 pointers to get started. She has a good feel for the game.

Long Island Lightning Flynn Paris Hodges 5'9" PG (Southampton HS, Southampton NY 2013) - Hodges is a super quick guard who is excellent in the open floor. Hodges has a very quick first step which makes her very hard to guard off the dribble. She gets to the rim at ease and has the ability to finish.

J. Fenelon
Tiahana Mills

New Heights Sade King 5'5" PG (Mt Vernon HS, Mt Vernon NY 2012) - King is an ultra quick guard with the ball in her hands. She uses the tear drop to perfection when floating the ball over taller defenders. She has the ability to shoot from behind the arc. King showed the ability to be a scoring point guard that gets teammates involved.

NYC Heat Mei-Lyn Bautista 5'6" PG (Mary Louis Academy, Queens NY 2015) - Bautista showed lots of ability and leadership qualities for some one that has not even played a single HS game yet. As far as her talents and abilities, she is on par with the older players. She has a very tight handle that allows her to get wherever she wants on the floor, she is a selfless passer that likes to get her teammates involved. Also showed the ability to get into the lane and finish over bigger players.

NYC Lady Bulldogs Amani Tatum 5'7" PG (Molloy Hs, Queens NY 2013) - Tatum is an old School floor general with a good handle which allows her to go anywhere on the court. She uses a variety of dribble moves to get into the lane to set up easy shoots for her teammates.

Exodus Hooper's Shanice Woodson 5'7" G ( Nazareth Regional HS, Brooklyn NY, 2013) -Woodson showed has the ability to score off the dribble and knock down the mid range pull-up jumper shot when left open she knocked down a few 3 pointers. Shanice looked effort less driving to the hole drawing defenders and dishing.

Team BX Tiahana Mills 5'7"PG (Binghamton HS, Binghamton NY 2012) - Mills is a talented lead guard that can do some damage. When not in the lane scoring she was draining 3 pointers or distributing to teammates.


 

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Ford reclassfies; drives in offers
7/22/11 - 04:36 PM

6-foot-1 Taylor Ford of Nazareth Regional high school in Brooklyn, New York, helped her team win state and federation championship in both 2008 and 2010.

Ford, who was a consensus top 100 prospects and NYCHoops.net all-state & top 10 players in 2010, chose to reclassify because she is only 16 years old.


Taylor's family and advisers felt it was in her best interest, academically and physically to re-classify, being that Ford most likely will not be attending a school NYC area.

Taylor's decision to reclassify has paid off in a number of ways so far as she has already met NCAA qualifications to play as a freshman.

After a great first half of play in the July evaluation period, NYCHoops.net got a chance to speak to Ford about her recruiting. "I picked up a few new offers from South Florida, Penn State, Ohio State and Baylor, Cal and Tennessee Tech, she said. "I plan on studying sports medicine, and distance will not play a factor in my decision when choosing a school."

Ford's gives a time line on her recruiting saying, "I will narrow my list of schools down in September and set up my visits." Prior to this July, Ford held offers from Duke, Louisville, West Virginia, South Carolina, Syracuse, Kentucky and Northeastern.
 

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Nike cancels girls Swoosh League
7/13/11 - 04:39 PM

 
For ten of those years, the girl's Swoosh League was on equal footing with the boys. That is until this season when NIKE abruptly pulled the plug, leaving 1500 potential girls scholarship players without a place to hone their skills.

"It's a shame," said NIKE Swoosh League Executive Director Ray Diaz who sited budget cutbacks as the culprit.

NSL, which features players between the ages of 10 - 17, is the only league that is wholly run by NIKE and as a consequence was the first to feel the pinch of the current economy.

With sites in all five boroughs as well as one in Brewster, NY and another in Westbury, L.I., the demise girl's portion of the NIKE Swoosh League put 218 players out-of-business at each site. "For a lot of girls, this was all they had as a way to get better," said Diaz. "This has caused a huge vacuum."

Artie Conroy who runs the Staten Island site of the NSL was forced to start his own independent girl's league in an effort to help the girls that have been disenfranchised by the league's cuts. "It's called the Staten Island Girls League," said Conroy. "We were able to get a [local] sponsor (Richard Willis Memorial Foundation) which helped reduce the cost to the kids."

Even though S.I. has managed to put together its own girls league, it comes at an an emotional cost to the players. While the Staten Island NSL Boys league is in full NIKE reversible uniforms, the S.I. Girls league, which runs along side of the NSL, could only afford to provide tee-shirts for participants. "At least it's somethin'," said Conroy.

Conroy added that many girls teams pulled out altogether or cutback on the amount of teams due to the loss of the NIKE brand cache. Quite a few Staten Island parents even complained directly to NIKE, Conroy said.

The Brewster, NY site also put together their own girl's league in response to the community outcry.

While the boys Swoosh League was seemingly unaffected, a by-product of the reduced funding is the cancellation of this summer's NSL Tournament of Champions. Normally the apex of the NSL season, the T.O.C., traditionally held at Riverbank State Park in Manhattan, was Nike Swooshes playoff. The T.O.C. featured the championship boys and girls teams from each site which determined who was the best of the best.

"We didn't have the additional money [this year] to rent the park, pay for security and stuff like that," said Diaz. "Now each site has to have their own playoff and that's it."
 

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Murray Bergtraum girls basketball player Cori Coleman commits to play at Cleveland Stae
5/23/11 - 12:25 PM

Monday, May 23rd 2011, 3:25 PM

Cori Coleman is heading to Cleveland State after leading Bergtraum to its 13th straight title.
Pace for News
Cori Coleman is heading to Cleveland State after leading Bergtraum to its 13th straight title.

Cori Coleman, the main catalyst down the stretch for the Murry Bergtraum girls' basketball team, said Monday she's signing with Cleveland State.

Coleman, a Daily News first team All-City member and finalist for city player of the year, chose the Vikings over Stony Brook and Canisius. The 5-foot-9 senior guard also received interest from East Carolina and Colorado State.

"She's a hard-working kid and always seemed to make the big basketball during the playoffs this year," said Bergtraum coach Ed Grezinsky, who guided the Blazers to an unprecedented 13th straight PSAL city championship.

Coleman, a two-year starter, averaged 15 points but her output in the postseason increased to 20 points, said Grezinsky.

Since Bergtraum's PSAL dynasty began, the program has sent at least 30 student-athletes to Division I schools. Coleman joins teammate Ashley Gomez, who signed during the early period with Canisius, as members of this year's team to earn a full athletic scholarship.

"Cori has a great attiude and is a great teammate. She'll do whatever it takes to help a teammate and win the game," Grezinsky said.

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Eighth-grader Mei-lyn Bautista makes impressive showing at Rose Classic, has HS coach excited
4/10/11 - 12:28 PM

Eighth-grade phenom Mei-Lyn Bautista made a great impression at the Rose Classic showcase.

Saturday, April 9th 2011, 5:05 PM


Bianca Cuevas was the eighth-grader who took the Nike Rose Classic girls basketball showcase by storm last spring.

After that, the pint-size point guard went on to become a key contributor to Nazareth's state Federation championship team this past season.

Now, Mei-Lyn Bautista is rapidly becoming the Rose Classic's new eighth-grader to watch, and that bodes well for Mary Louis Academy, the high school she'll be attending in the fall.

If yesterday's action at JHS 113 in Fort Greene was any indication, the Hilltoppers will be getting a star.

Playing with the Harlem USA Panthers AAU team, Bautista was the youngest player on the court at 13-years-old. And she was also the best.

The 5-3 point guard seemingly did it all, leading the Panthers to a 56-33 rout of a team called Put Me In Coach.

Bautista had 15 points on four three-pointers and three free throws. She dictated the pace, rifling pinpoint passes of varying styles that sometimes even caught her teammates by surprise. She was equally impressive defensively, alertly playing the passing lanes and picking balls off for steals.

Rose Classic co-founder Anton Marchand said watching Bautista compete against Cuevas last spring was a treat. But yesterday's performance came against some players as much as five years older in the 18U game.

"I feel like it's a privilege for me to get ready for high school," Bautista said about playing against more experienced competition. "Even though I'm going to be younger, it makes me stronger, smarter and used to faster competition in high school."

Bautista has been testing herself against stronger competition for years.

Kevin White, head coach at Mary Louis, has been coaching Bautista since she was seven. He stuck her on his CYO boys team in Whitestone - Bautista's neighborhood - where she wound up playing for six years.

"The experience playing against boys made me tougher and stronger," Bautista said.

At the same time, Bautista was playing for White's NYC Heat girls AAU program.

She will join the Heat's 16U team on a trip to Virginia next weekend to participate in the Boo Williams national tournament.

Butch Bautista, her father, said it was a no-brainer to have his daughter attend Mary Louis.

"The relationship with her and Kevin is great," he said, "and it's a great school."

White wouldn't reveal if Bautista will start in the place of star guard Karin Robinson, who graduates in June. But White left no doubt about what he thinks of her ability.

"She's a very, very good point guard," White said. "We'll see how things work out."

 

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Ali Moves up to MVP Status
11/7/10 - 09:23 AM

Bre'Shay Ali wins MVP at the Nike Rose Classic

Joe Fenelon
NYCHoops.net Staff Writer

New Jersey resident, Bre'shay Ali is a 6-foot guard who plays her High School ball in Brooklyn, NY at Nazareth Regional High School. After being one of the most dominant players in the play-offs at the Nike Rose Classic Fall Edition.

This slashing athlete is fluid in transition and is adept at playing three positions. Versatile and multitalented, Ali has what most recruiters would say is 'the package.'

Ali spoke with NYCHoops.net about her future plans. "I am still waiting to see what happens in the evaluation period to see what is the best option for me. There has been some though and talk of me going to prep school."


Nazareth High school head basketball coach, Apache Pascall, talks about his star. "As a freshman, Bre'shay and Bria Smith were projected to be two of the top guards in their class. Unfortunately, Ali was plagued with injuries from breaking her foot, tearing her ACL. Now in her senior year, this is the healthiest she has been in years she is back to playing on the rim and doing all the things she used to do Wining MVP of the Rose was the beginning of a good year for her."

According to Ali, she is currently being recruited by Rutgers, UNC, Louisville, and Pitt.
 

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All-Stars Come Out for Nike Rose Chip
11/1/10 - 02:46 PM

FORT GREENE, NY - The Championship weekend at the Nike Rose Classic (Fall Edition) brought out lots of talented girls. Some old faces and many new young talents. The action kicked off with a great all-star game, followed by the Championship game between Exodus NYC vs. Harlem USA.

 




West All-Stars Beat-up East All-Stars, 72-57

The West guards ambushed the East in the 4th quarter to walk away with the victory. The first quarter started off with both teams feeling each other out, playing some tough defense. The West Team held a slim 16-13 lead.

In the second quarter, the East Team caught fire behind the play of Cori Coleman's seven first half points and Bianca Cuevas' nine first half points. The East team went into half time with a 30-25 lead.

With 2:06 left to play in the third quarter, the score was tied at 35. To end the third quarter the west went on a 10- 2 run spearhead by freshman Tamara Simpson, a 5'7" guard from North Babylon HS, 2014 (8 points, 5 rebounds) and the defensive play of Oge "Cookie Monster" Uwanaka who had 2 points and 10 rebounds.

To start the 4th quarter, the West was ahead 45-37, at which point Georgetown bound Jasmine Jackson, a 5'11" senior from Old Bridge HS (NJ) and Bishop Ford's 5'5" sophomore Aaliyah Lewis took over the game. Jackson scored 6 points and grabbed 6 rebounds in the final quarter alone on two 3-point shots. Lewis literally stole the show in the final quarter with 9 points, 2 assists and 2 steals and a few jaw dropping moves.

The West team was lead by Jasmine Jackson (20 points, 10 rebounds), Aaliyah Lewis (11 points, 4 assist, 4 rebounds and 2 steals and Tamara Simpson (8 points, 6 rebounds and 1 assists). The East was lead by Cori Coleman (14 points, 6 rebounds), freshman Bianca Cuevas (11 points, 3 steals and 2 rebounds) and Karin Robinson (8 points, 4 rebounds and 1 assists).

Game MVP - Aaliyah Lewis

Exodus NYC Spanks Harlem USA, 66-35; Win Nike Rose Chip

Exodus NYC out lasted Harlem USA behind the strong play of their veteran players. Harlem USA started the game pounding the ball inside early and often to New Jersey Shabazz high school freshmen duo of Zaire O'Neil and DeAshia "Baby Dee" Jones. But at the end the first quarter, Harlem USA trailed 14-12.

To start the second quarter Exodus switched out of their 2-2-1 full court pressure, switching their personnel to a more physical front line with Bre'Shay Ali, LaBirdia Gordon and Taylor Ford. That front line caused the Harlem USA's bigs into foul trouble. To end the first half, Harlem USA trailed 30-22.

With 6:45 to play in the 3rd quarter Exodus was ahead, 35-28. For the next nine minutes they would go on a 27-2 run to end the 3rd quarter.

During that run, Jasmine Odom (8 points), Briana Butler (7 points, 5 assists, 5 steals and 5 rebounds), Taylor Ford (11 points), Tiffany Jones, Bre'shay Ali (3 points, 6 rebounds, 2 steal), Alexis Smith (11 points), Nia Oden (6 points) and Briana Sidney (6 points) all scored to blow the game open with a 32 point lead.

Championship MVP - Bre'shay Ali 6'00" W Nazareth HS, NY 2011

Regular Season MVP - Karin Robinson 5'7" PG Mary Louis Academy HS, NY 2011

Sportsmanship Award- Zaire O'Neil 6'1 F Shabazz HS,NJ 2014

Student Athlete - Brittany Lewis guard 5'7" Bishop Ford HS, NY

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Nike Rose Classic Playoff Action
10/30/10 - 09:46 AM

Zaire O'Neil & DeAshia Jones

Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY - With the open roster policy many teams took full advantage of it for the playoffs at Rose Classic. JHS 113 was jammed packed with spectators on Saturday to take in these playoff goodies.

Douglass Panthers Squeaks past NJ Sparks, 46-44

The Sparks gave a valiant effort but at the end the Douglass Panthers would sink the Spark. This game would have no love lost between the teams. Douglas Panther would jump out to an early lead and would keep control at half 25-16. With 3:00 to play in the third quarter NJ Sparks Teana Muldrow 6'1" W ( East Orange HS, NJ 2013) hit a 3 point shot to cut into the Douglass lead 25-19. With 2:05, NJ Spark's Erika Brown 5'7" G (J.F. Kennedy HS, NJ 2013) hit an and 1 lay-up to reduce the Panther Lead to 27-21. To end the Third Quarter Douglass Panthers held a 27-23 lead. With 6:40 to play in the 4 quarter, Douglass held a 5 point lead, 31-26. NJ Sparks would apply a full court press that provided multiple turnovers. NJS would turn into the turnovers into points to close the margin, 31-29 with 5:05. Douglass would never waiver their lead from this point, with 1:39 ahead 40-35, NJ Sparks's Africa Williams hit a 3 pointer to close the gap at 40-38 with 1:35 to play. It would then become a free throw exhibition. Douglass' Zaire Oneil 6'1" F ( Malcom Shabazz HS, NJ 2014) would go 3-6 from the Free-throw line in the final 2 minutes but O'Neil would knock down the final 2 Free-throws to Ice the victory for Douglass Panthers. She finished with 15 points. Douglass Panthers De Ashia Jones 6'1" F( Malcom Shabazz HS,NJ 2014) added 9 points. New Jersey Spark was led by Erika Williams with 25 points.


Exodus NYC takes All NJ Elite, 50-37

Exodus NYC went international, importing Madara Salenice 6'1" from Latvian from the Latvian National team. All NJ Elite brought in Starr Breedlove a NJ 2009 2nd team all state performer.

All NJ Elite runs out of gas in second half, Exodus pulls away with victory. To end the first quarter, NJ Elite led, 14-12, but to end the first half, Exodus took the lead at 24-20. In the third quarter, Exodus would use a 16-3 runs to pull away to a 40-23 lead. To end the third quarter, All New Jersey Elite trailed 44-23. Exodus was led by Syracuse-commit, Tiffany Jones 6'3" F (Nazareth HS, Brooklyn NY 2011). Brianna Sidney 5'10" (Nazareth HS, Brooklyn NY 2012) added 11 points, 4 rebounds and 2 steals. All NJ Elite was led by Kelcy Castro 5'8" G (Immaculate Conception HS, Fair Lawn NJ 2012) with 11 points, 3 rebounds and 1 steal.

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Slow Commute To The Top
10/3/10 - 06:16 PM

Briana Butler completed a busy summer of travel with Exodus NYC to earn a No. 8 ranking in the 2012 class by ESPN HoopGurlz.

By Lindsay Schnell
Special to HoopGurlz

It's a good thing Brianna Butler didn't start school until well into September because the 5-foot-11 guard from Philadelphia had a lot to do between the end of summer hoops and the start of her junior year at William Penn Charter School. And none of it had anything to do with basketball.

"She has three books to read before school starts, so this little break has been good for her," Mitzi Mitchell, Butler's mom, said, with a laugh.

It was a well-deserved break, for sure. For the second consecutive summer Butler and Mitchell spent hours and hours in the car driving from Philadelphia to New York City. At minimum it's a two-hour trip but Butler says there are days they've been stuck in the car for four hours. And that's just one way.

But it is a small sacrifice to make in order for Butler to play with Exodus NYC, one of the premier teams in the Big Apple.

After spending three summers with the Philly Belles, Butler decided she wanted to stretch herself and get outside her comfort zone. She was "looking for a new challenge" according to Mitchell. Butler had played one tournament with Exodus and enjoyed being pushed by the likes of Bria Hartley and Jennifer O'Neill, two former Exodus superstars who will suit up for Connecticut and Kentucky, respectively, this season.

[+] EnlargeBrianna Butler
Glenn Nelson for ESPN.com Even the prospect of four hours in the car didn't keep Briana Butler from her Exodus club team.

"The opportunity to play with Bria and Jennifer and all those players was so good, and so I decided to go with them," Butler said, explaining that she parted amicably with the Belles.

The change would come with an added commute, which would turn off some parents. But Mitchell, a mother of three, had a different attitude.

"Because I really feel that when you have kids you need to give them every opportunity, when Brianna decided she wanted to go ahead and play with Exodus, I felt we needed to do it," Mitchell said. "When she was ready to take a step outside her comfort zone that's when I knew she had matured, and she really wanted this."

Many days, Mitchell and Butler have to leave their Philadelphia home at 5 a.m. in order to make it to New York in time for practice. Butler, who doesn't have her license yet, spends the morning drive sleeping but awakes when it's game time. A basketball junkie -- she gave up playing field hockey when she entered high school to focus solely on hoops -- Butler said she considered moving to New York permanently to play with Exodus kids during the school year, but decided she wanted to stay in Philadelphia and help build her high school into a better program.

For one of the top players in the 2012 class -- Butler is ranked No. 8 by ESPN HoopGurlz -- the move to Exodus has been more than beneficial.

If there is one word to describe Butler's game it probably would be "smooth." The guard is right-handed but goes to her left as well, if not better, than almost every other player in the country. She can play the one or two, can shoot deep or pull up, and knows when to score versus when to distribute. Butler says that playing with Exodus has forced her to learn how to score more, instead of just being a reliable defender.

"Before I was a defensive player and I would guard the other team's best player," Butler explained. "Now I get to be one of those players for other teams, the one they have to focus on defensively."

But more than anything, Mitchell says that joining Exodus has been great for Butler's confidence.

"They embraced her and she embraced them," Mitchell said. "It gave her swagger, which she didn't have before."

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Summer Rose Classic at Fordham
7/29/10 - 02:31 PM

Tia Scott

The first was between New Heights White vs. Central NJ Hawks in the East bracket and Long Island Lightning against New Heights Blue in the South bracket.

East Championship Bracket

New Heights White Take Down Central NJ Hawks 47-20

New Heights won the tip-off and never looked back. With 5:20 to play in the second quarter CNJH found themselves trailing 11-3. NH defensive pressure frustrated the Central New Jersey Hawks and would not allow them to execute their offensive sets. CNJH's best offensive output came in the 2nd quarter when they scored 8 points. New Heights rising senior, Tia Scott, a 5'6" PG from Cardinal Spellman (Bronx, NY), controlled the action on a well balanced NH's attack with 9 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals. Cori Coleman finished with 8 points, 6rebounds, and 3 steals. Central NJ was lead by Tara Inman with 5 points. After the game, NH head coach Rocky Rosa told NYCHoops.net that, "They played well and this was a great preparation for the Quaker City Challenge."



J. Fenelon
Samantha Defreese
South Championship Bracket

L.I. Lightning 56 Over New Heights Blue 56-53

Lightning stole the chip from host team New Heights in the closing seconds. With both teams being from the local NYC area, many of the players knew each other so the tension was high. Just last week, this LI Lighting team was cheering on The NH Blue team in DC at the Junior Nationals win over MD Flames. But today, they faced-off for bragging rights and neither team would backup from the challenge. NH rising junior PG, Sade King (11 points, 5 assists, 2rebs, 1 steal) re-injured her ankle in the semi-final game but begged her coaches to let her play in this game.

There were at least 5 lead changes in the first half. At the half, NH trailed LI Lightning 27-23. With 4:40 to play in the 3rd quarter NH tied the game at 31-31. From that point, NH extended the lead to as much as 7 points in the 3rd quarter. With 51 seconds to play NH was ahead 51-49 with possession of the ball, but things started to unravel. New Heights missed an ill-advised 3 point shot and LI Lightning capitalized on that opportunity when Seward Park High School's Jaeivonte Wright (15 points, 5rebs, 2 steals, 2 assists) took the ball to the hole and connected on the shot for an And-1 opportunity. With the score tied 51-51, Wright missed the free throw. On the ensuing possessions they traded baskets, but the LI Lightning would outscore NH's in the final seconds for the win. The Lightning was lead by 6-1 New Milford High School's Samantha Defreese with 15 points, 9 rebounds 2 blocks.

 

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The Rose Classic girls basketball tournament finding a home in Brooklyn
6/7/10 - 09:52 PM

Maria Harper, wife of former NBA star Ron Harper, talks to her team, Ring City, at Rose Classic

Saturday, June 5th 2010, 3:24 PM

 

It's the Fall of 2005 and Anton Marchand, Cleon (Silk) Hyde and Troy Lemond have an idea.

The childhood friends from Fort Greene are already fixtures on the city's boys basketball scene and have just completed their fifth summer of running the Conrad McRae tournament in Prospect Heights, an event doing so well it has an apparel deal with Nike.

But the trio notices a void in the city's basketball scene. What's missing? A top-flight tournament to showcase the best girls talent the city has to offer.

The need first comes to their attention via Epiphanny Prince, Bergtraum's star guard and a fellow Fort Greene product.

Prince has just committed to Rutgers and is months away from entering her senior season when she begs her three friends to take her to Nike's legendary IS8 tournament in Jamaica, Queens. But since the IS8 is a tournament for boys, she can't play, she can only watch.

Hyde, Lemond and Marchand drive Prince to Queens, wondering all the way why one of the best girls basketball players in the city is watching the boys instead of playing in a tournament herself.

"She'd tell us, 'Let's go to IS8, Let's go to IS8,'" says Marchand, 39. "Silk and I would ask her all the time, 'You don't have anything to play in?' She'd say, 'No.' She was the best player in the city with nothing to do."

Sure enough, Prince has just finished her AAU season with Exodus, one of the city's top girls grass roots teams, and is idle until December, the start of the high school season.

This is when Hyde, Lemond and Marchand begin brainstorming. They eventually come up with the idea to start a girls tournament, patterned after the IS8.

They aim for the coming spring, knowing if they can launch it, then Prince can be the face of their tournament.

It's the norm for committed players to not play after their senior season to avoid injury, but Prince is different. The guys know Prince would play in meaningful games during the spring leading up to her enrollment at Rutgers if they provide the venue.

 

Apache Paschall (CLICK FOR PHOTOS OF THE ROSE CLASSIC AND ITS 
PLAYERS.)

Pace, Bryan Freelance NYDN
Apache Paschall

So, Marchand calls IS8 commissioner Pete Edwards for his blueprint.

"I gave him my format and told him how I run my league," Edwards says.

The trio bottles up Edwards' formula and runs with it, and the Rose Classic is born in the spring of 2006.

"We wanted a name that was synonymous with women and class," Marchand says.

Marchand, a longtime marketer and talent evaluator in the music industry, quickly gets the word out. He and Hyde begin recruiting teams. Lemond becomes the overseer, the tourney's objective voice.

The first task is finding a site to house the tournament. They want something that embodies Brooklyn's toughness and swagger, the same way IS8 embodies Jamaica.

They zero in on JHS 113, which has one main court and no air conditioning. The feel is similar to IS8.

The next call is to Nike, which is also looking for a prized girls tourney in the city.

"We were definitely missing this elite women's component in the city," says Gerry Erasme, Nike's director of entertainment marketing for Asia Pacific and emerging markets. "It was our missing jewel in the crown for (grass roots girls) basketball."

In its first spring, the Rose Classic already has a face for its tournament in Prince. And who better? She has gained national notoriety for scoring 113 points in one game during her senior season and has the game to one day reach the WNBA.

Prince's presence helps the Rose secure 16 teams during its first spring and the organizers immediately plan on following up with a fall session later in the year.

Getting a jump on talent, the tournament now needs an edge.

Marchand develops it by emceeing the games and giving players nicknames while delivering humorous play-by-play commentary, a la The Rucker, Harlem's legendary summer tournament.

"The Rucker gives you a chance to earn a nickname," says Marchand, "and we wanted to give the girls the same thing."

Jennifer O'Neill is known as "Jenny From the Block" a tribute to her Bronx heritage and Jennifer Lopez, while Syracuse-bound forward Jelleah Sidney is  "The Nutty Professor" for her reckless-abandon style of defense and toughness.

Bianca Cuevas, a 13-year-old incoming freshman at Nazareth and the only underage player allowed in the Rose Classic's older level, is known as "Pebbles," an ode to Fred Flintstone's daughter, for her rambunctious personality. (Marchand says he hopes to pin the Rose Classic franchise tag on Cuevas for years to come, the same way he originally did with Prince).

With the formula and now the flavor, the Rose Classic takes off.

Pretty soon, the boys are traveling from IS8 to support Prince in Brooklyn.

"It was a little weird," says Prince.

What started as an IS8 spinoff idea is widely regarded today as the premier tournament for girls in the city.

"It's like the IS8 tournament for girls," coaches Apache Paschall (Nazareth HS and Exodus) and Anwar Gladden (South Shore HS) say.

"It's not like the female version of IS8," adds Paul Rivera, Nike's East Coast marketing manager, "it is the female version of IS8."

"That's the biggest compliment the Rose Classic can get," Marchand says.


Walk up the numbers on Adelphi Street and you'll find bagel shops, cafés, residential brownstones and a neighborhood park.

Artsy? You bet, but unassuming. Keep walking, and you'll soon unearth JHS 113, the hub of the Rose Classic.

On one Saturday, the gym is flooded with more than 100 people - some seated, some standing - all here to watch Kentucky-bound O'Neill  go toe-to-toe with Georgia-bound guard Ronika Ransford, who traveled from her home in D.C. just to play here.

And when Stefanie Dolson, Bria Hartley, Maggie Lucas, and Haley Peters join them there were six 2010 McDonald's All-Americans on one court.

"To have six McDonald's All-Americans," says former University of Virginia assistant coach Jeff House, "well, that's quite a bang for your buck."

In its fifth year of existence, the Rose Classic has become one of the top girls basketball showcases on the East Coast, and arguably the country, with a who's who of the nation's best players.

The tourney has grown to 48 teams with players aged 15-19 and operates on a spring (late March-June) and fall schedule (September-November). The Classic also has a junior division for players aged 10-14 at Bishop Ford HS.

And in April, it extended its brand to Miami, beginning with 16 teams, with plans to branch out into Boston and Los Angeles in September. This past Easter, the Rose Classic also ran the third installment of its basketball skills academy in Belize. The NCAA recently sanctioned the tournament, meaning college coaches can sit in and watch the action during live recruiting periods in the spring and fall. Local players can subsequently earn a scholarship from getting the exposure there.

The championship game is played Sunday, ending the spring season, although there is very little break for the tournament's organizers during the summer.

"I'm going to spend the summer on the road at some events, recruiting teams in Boston and Los Angeles," says Marchand. "We're going to run every one of them the same way. It's going to keep growing and getting better."

* * *

The Rose Classic is more than simply basketball. It's a hangout. There's a live DJ playing hip-hop hits from a laptop. A snack stand is run by Margot Berghout, Marchand's aunt. The cool ambiance helps the Classic lure players - even tourney alumni, who are in college now and are ineligible to play, come to hang out.

"I was just telling my friends, 'What outfit are we going to wear at the Rose Classic?'" says China Crosby, a former Manhattan Center
star and current guard at Virginia.

Says Marchand: "When you walk into the door, it's like walking onto a runway. You've got to come correct. It's the whole swagger about it. Everybody's on the main dance floor."

Erica Morrow, formerly of Bergtraum and now a guard at Syracuse, visits often.

"It's such a family environment here," says Morrow, wearing a sundress while clutching a purse with her puppy peeking out of her bag.
"Everyone knows each other."

That family atmosphere was put to the test in February, when Dimonekwa Miller, a regular player at the Rose Classic, delivered her baby.

"At first, I was embarrassed and I thought I would never come back to the Rose," Miller says. "But Anton and the guys encouraged me and comforted me in the toughest time."

Miller gathered enough strength to return to the tournament last month, pushing the stroller into the gym at 113.

"It felt like everybody just stopped and looked, like one of those Kodak moments," Miller says, "but then everybody gave me so much love and it was really inspiring."

And this is only the beginning. Says Hyde: "We're going to do whatever it takes to make sure the Rose Classic gets bigger and better each year for years to come."


 



 

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Rose Classic co-founder Anton Marchand tackles tough topic
6/6/10 - 09:53 PM

Sunday, June 6th 2010, 4:00 AM

Each team in the Rose Classic must take at least one educational workshop, as part of the tourney's student-athlete developmental series that is provided every weekend during each cycle. The roughly one-hour seminars include topics on academic eligibility for student-athletes, breast cancer awareness, money management and nutrition. And a keynote speaker is brought in to conduct each workshop.

But co-founder Anton Marchand is exploring a topic he feels players, parents and coaches are dancing around - female basketball players dating each other.

"We want to address this issue because it's like taboo right now," Marchand says. "Nobody wants to address it and it's a big issue. ... I want to be as real as I can with this thing. There's an alternative lifestyle issue with women's (basketball). Women dating each other. It goes on a lot with these very young girls. We just want to have an open dialogue. We're consciously moving toward trying to figure out a way of how to present it to them respectfully, where they at least understand before they get into those types of relationships, what they're getting into. It's an open dialogue. It's something that nobody has ever touched, but we're not going to stop until we at least educate them."

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Photos of the Rose Classic
6/6/10 - 02:21 PM

In the fall of 2005, Epiphanny 
Prince, former Bergtraum star and current Chicago Sky guard, spent a lot
 of her time watching the boys play at Nike's legendary IS8 tournament 
in Queens, when she really wanted to play in a tournament of her own.

In the fall of 2005, Epiphanny Prince, former Bergtraum star and current Chicago Sky guard, spent a lot of her time watching the boys play at Nike's legendary IS8 tournament in Queens, when she really wanted to play in a tournament of her own.

 

 

Fort Greene native Anton Marchand sees a need for a
 regular girls basketball tournament and begins the Nike Rose Classic 
with his two friends in Brooklyn. Epiphanny Prince is the face of the 
tourney in its inaugural spring in 2006.

Fort Greene native Anton Marchand sees a need for a regular girls basketball tournament and begins the Nike Rose Classic with his two friends in Brooklyn. Epiphanny Prince is the face of the tourney in its inaugural spring in 2006.

 

 

This is the fifth year of the Nike Rose Classic, which counts 48 
teams and had six McDonald’s All-Americans take the court during one 
game last month.

This is the fifth year of the Nike Rose Classic, which counts 48 teams and had six McDonald’s All-Americans take the court during one game last month.

 

 

JHS 113 on Adelphi Street in Fort Greene has players constantly 
walking in and out the gym.

JHS 113 on Adelphi Street in Fort Greene has players constantly walking in and out the gym.

 

 

Nazareth coach Apache Paschall’s Exodus program is a longtime 
force in the Rose Classic.

Nazareth coach Apache Paschall’s Exodus program is a longtime force in the Rose Classic.

 

 

South Shore coach Anwar Gladden (seated in white) has his Team 
Prince compete in the Rose Classic.

South Shore coach Anwar Gladden (seated in white) has his Team Prince compete in the Rose Classic.

 

 

-Janine Davis, formerly of St. Michael 
Academy and currently a guard at George Washington, is one of the 
tournament’s alumni who frequently returns to support the Rose Classic.

-Janine Davis, formerly of St. Michael Academy and currently a guard at George Washington, is one of the tournament’s alumni who frequently returns to support the Rose Classic.

 

 

Erica Morrow, formerly of Bergtraum and currently a guard at 
Syracuse, stops by JHS 113 to check out the action at the Rose Classic.

Erica Morrow, formerly of Bergtraum and currently a guard at Syracuse, stops by JHS 113 to check out the action at the Rose Classic.

 

 

Maria Harper (middle), coach of De Paul HS (Wayne, NJ) and wife 
of former NBA player Ron Harper, brings her New Jersey-based Ring City 
to compete in the Rose Classic.

Maria Harper (middle), coach of De Paul HS (Wayne, NJ) and wife of former NBA player Ron Harper, brings her New Jersey-based Ring City to compete in the Rose Classic.

 

 

Off the court, the Rose Classic conducts various student-athlete 
educational workshops that touch on issues such as breast cancer 
awareness, money management and academic eligibility.

Off the court, the Rose Classic conducts various student-athlete educational workshops that touch on issues such as breast cancer awareness, money management and academic eligibility.

 

 

Soon-to-be Nazareth freshman Bianca Cuevas can become the star 
player of the Rose Classic for years to come. She's already earned the 
nickname, “Pebbles.”

Soon-to-be Nazareth freshman Bianca Cuevas can become the star player of the Rose Classic for years to come. She's already earned the nickname, “Pebbles.”

 

 

Anton Marchand talks to Virginia guard China Crosby about how he 
plans to make the tournament bigger and better for years to come.

Anton Marchand talks to Virginia guard China Crosby about how he plans to make the tournament bigger and better for years to come.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

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Rose Classic: 5 Playoff Teams to Fear
5/13/10 - 09:53 PM

Briana Butler

Maurice Wingate
NYCHoops.net Publisher

In basketball, one tournament separates the women from the girls. The Nike Rose Classic, held in Brooklyn, NY is probably the preeminent girl event in the Northeast.

Up until now, the tournament has been totally dominated by Exodus NYC but according to tournament director Anton Marchand, this year may be different.

"In the five years we've held the event, Exodus has won four times," says Marchand. "The first year was won by No Limit."

Marchand says that four teams have a legitimate chance at finally taking the crown from the defending champs. "I don't think that Exodus is experienced enough to win it."

With that being said, Marchand listed the five teams to fear but still listed Exodus first. "They are the defending champs and they are still coached by Apache Pascall. They have rising junior Briana Butler from Philly, rising senior Lisa Blair who's 6'6" and rising senior guard, Briana Sidney."

Next on Marchand's list of teams to fear is New Heights Seniors. "They've gotta good chance to win it," said Marchand. The Bronx based team is coached by Rock Rosa and touts DePaul bound Shakura Washington from Murry Bertram and Sade Jackson. New Heights also has Seton Hall commit, Kadiedra Simmons, and her twin sister Desiree Simmons who's going to L.I.U.



M. Wingate
Shakena Richardson

New Jersey's Ring City is another team to fear, according to Marchand, even though they recently suffered a tough loss to Exodus in pool play. "These girls were on different teams (last year) and understand what it takes to win," says Marchand. Coached by NBA star Ron Harper's wife, Maria Harper, Ring City has rising seniors Syessence Davis, Rutgers bound Day Day Simmons and Shakena Richardson.

Swagga Like Us, coached by the ever boisterous Lenair "Dinero" Young, is another team on Marchand's list. With an infusion of McDonald's All-Americans in Penn State bound sharpshooter Maggie Lucas from PA and Georgia bound Ronika Ransford from D.C. In addition to being one of Marchand's teams to fear, Coach Young has also prophesized a Swagga championship.

Last on the list are the Golden Girls, coached by Lauren Best. Also stacked with McD All-Americans Bria Hartley and Jennifer O'Neal who are going to UConn and Kentucky respectively, these two girls are former members Exodus NYC. The Golden Girls also have Boston commit, Shyra Brown, making for a potent team.

The playoffs start next Saturday and, according to Marchand, any one of the above five teams can take home the championship hardware.

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News and notes from Saturday's Rose Classic
5/3/10 - 09:53 PM

Coach Dinero Young Talking it over with the troops...

10:22 PM, May 1, 2010 ι By MARC RAIMONDI
 
You literally had to be there to appreciate Anton Marchand’s joke.

“I was trying to get Ronald to come, but he couldn’t make it,” the Rose Classic president and emcee said.

The Ronald in question was Ronald McDonald. And Marchand figured with all the McDonald’s All-Americans on the court in the Rose main event Saturday evening, why not ask the big man himself to come down to Brooklyn?

On one team, coach Lauren Best’s Golden Girls, was St.Michael Academy’s Jennifer O’Neill and North Babylon’s Bria Hartley. The other squad, Swagga is Back coached by Dinero Young, was a pair of out-of-towners: H.D. Woodson (D.C.) guard Ronika Ransford and Germantown Academy (Pa.) sharpshooter Maggie Lucas.

For those scoring at home, that’s Kentucky, UConn, Georgia and Penn State – in that order – being represented and about as much as star power you’re going to find in the girls game in one place. It was so big that another McDonald’s All-American – Bishop Loughlin’s Villanova-bound Jayvaughn Pinkston – was there to take it all in.

The game was everything one could hope it would be. But it was clear that Swagga ran out of gas in the end. Young’s squad was playing its third game of the day and the players just didn’t have their legs down the stretch.

Jelleah Sidney, on the other hand, did – but doesn’t she always. The St. Mike’s alum and future Syracuse forward had a massive block of Murry Bergtraum’s CeCe Dixon, followed by an acrobatic putback on the other end to give the Golden Girls a lead late in the fourth quarter. That was the momentum swing Best’s ladies needed to get it done and they won, 71-60.

Hartley finished with 19 and Sidney had 13 of her 18 points in the second half, making the same winning plays that led St. Mike’s to the 2009 New York State Federation Class AA championship. O’Neill had 13 points and Bishop Ford’s Shayra Brown had seven of her 10 points in a big fourth quarter.

For Young, Ransford had 18 points and Archbishop Molloy’s Kyra Aloizos had 16 points, clearly showing the ability to play with elite players. Murry Bergtraum’s Doris Ortega had eight points and the Golden Girls held Lucas to just six points and one 3-pointer. More on her later.

Marchand mentioned on the mic that it’s difficult to schedule and make good matchups for the 40 teams in the tournament. Well, it’s clear he and commissioner Cleon (Silk) Hyde are doing a pretty good job. Every single girl competing in the main event was committed to a Division I program.

-- The only thing more impressive Saturday than Mrs. Lucas’ chocolate chip cookies – and that’s secondhand information from my colleague Joe Staszewski – was Maggie Lucas’ 3-point shooting. She hit eight against the Exodus Falcons in the morning and canned 10 against the New England Crusaders later on to break the Rose Classic single-game record, previously set in 2006 by Basketball Results’ Christina Gugliero (nine).

That was the best shooting performance I’ve ever seen in person. Penn State has some recruiting class coming in with her and Christ the King’s Ariel Edwards.

-- The future of the St. Mike's players is still up in the air. But coach Apache Paschall said an announcement could be forthcoming this week. Unfortunately, that's all he would say.

-- Aquinas senior Sade Jackson was incredible for the New Heights Seniors. She scored 26 points against the New England Crusaders on circus layups, 3-pointers and pullup jumpers.

“She’s a killer,” Marchand said. “I don’t know what these college coaches are thinking.”

Some are finally catching on. Jackson, who didn’t have much of anything just a few weeks ago, now has interest from Manhattan and Central Connecticut State. It’s well-deserved.

“She’s too good not to be signed anywhere yet,” New Heights coach Rock Rosa said.

-- In other New Heights recruiting news, Bronx Science forward Taylor Murtaugh is headed to Trinity, an excellent academic school in Hartford, Conn. She’ll play basketball and soccer there. Murtaugh led Science to the PSAL city girls soccer title this year. Also, Murry Bergtraum’s Laray Drayton, who missed just about the entire season with a leg injury, will play at Bridgeport next year.

-- I also learned this week that Wings Academy guard Latasia Ward signed with ASA, the Division I junior college in Brooklyn. Ward led Wings to its first PSAL Class A title game this season, averaging 26.7 points per game. ASA coach Adia Revell, coming off earning NJCAA Region XV Coach of the Year honors, is very excited to have her.

mraimondi@nypost.com

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Philly Sharpshooter Breaks NY Record
5/2/10 - 02:36 PM

Maggie Lucas Picture: M Wingate

The Nike Rose Classic is to girls' basketball what the iS8/Nike Tournament is to boys' basketball.

If you want to play the best of the best, then the Brooklyn, NY event is where you must come to show n' prove. McDonald's All-American, Maggie Lucas from, Germantown Academy in Philly did just that.

Last weekend, the 5-foot-8 shooting guard played in the competitive tournament with the Swagga Like Us team coached by Lenair "Dinero" Young, who boldly predicted that his team will win this year. The Nike Rose Classic which has been dominated by a stacked Exodus NYC team since the event's inception.

Seeming to fly in talent from all over the country, including fellow McDonald's All-American Ronika Ransford from Washington, D.C., if Lucas is a sampling of the talent the Coach Young has compiled then it's clearly 'game on.' The Penn State bound senior not only scorched the nylon's but broke a tournament record in the process.



M. Wingate
Lucas with her Swagga Like Us coach and teammates

"She broke the three point record," said Nike Rose Classic founder and Director, Anton Marchand. "The record was nine 3-pointers, Maggie hit ten."

Lucas performed the feat on Saturday against the New England Crusaders en route to a victory where she netted 40 points.

Lucas also knocked down 30 points in her first game on Saturday but felt the agony of defeat in her third game where she only scored 6 points in a heartbreaking loss to the Golden Girls, a team that had their own set of New York McDonald All-American's with Kentucky bound Jennifer O'Neal and UConn commit, Bria Hartley.



M. Wingate
Lucas says that the Nike Rose Classic has been great

By all accounts, it was a knock down drag out war and a classic. Coach Young attributes Lucas's lack of production to simply being tired. "We played three games that day and she had like 23 three pointers. She was tired."

While Coach Young attributed the loss to exhaustion, Lucas took a more analytical approach saying, "We should've moved the ball around more. I know we haven't played together that much but?"

Lucas didn't actually hit 23 three pointers on Saturday but it must have seemed like an endless reign of jumpers. She did, in fact, swish an amazing 17 three pointers throughout the day, according to Marchand.

On Sunday, a rejuvenated Lucas and her Swagga Like Us squad soundly whupped the Angels, 76-55, led by Lucas's 31 points. According to Marchand, Swagga Like Us is all but in the playoffs, where the competition steps up a notch.

Lucas said she's looking forward to the playoffs. Asked about her experience playing in the New York tournament thus far, Lucas responded, "It's great. I never get to play against competition like this where I'm from."




Top


News and notes from Saturday's Rose Classic
5/1/10 - 09:54 PM

10:22 PM, May 1, 2010 ι By MARC RAIMONDI

You literally had to be there to appreciate Anton Marchand’s joke.

“I was trying to get Ronald to come, but he couldn’t make it,” the Rose Classic president and emcee said.

The Ronald in question was Ronald McDonald. And Marchand figured with all the McDonald’s All-Americans on the court in the Rose main event Saturday evening, why not ask the big man himself to come down to Brooklyn?

On one team, coach Lauren Best’s Golden Girls, was St.Michael Academy’s Jennifer O’Neill and North Babylon’s Bria Hartley. The other squad, Swagga is Back coached by Dinero Young, was a pair of out-of-towners: H.D. Woodson (D.C.) guard Ronika Ransford and Germantown Academy (Pa.) sharpshooter Maggie Lucas.

For those scoring at home, that’s Kentucky, UConn, Georgia and Penn State – in that order – being represented and about as much as star power you’re going to find in the girls game in one place. It was so big that another McDonald’s All-American – Bishop Loughlin’s Villanova-bound Jayvaughn Pinkston – was there to take it all in.

The game was everything one could hope it would be. But it was clear that Swagga ran out of gas in the end. Young’s squad was playing its third game of the day and the players just didn’t have their legs down the stretch.

Jelleah Sidney, on the other hand, did – but doesn’t she always. The St. Mike’s alum and future Syracuse forward had a massive block of Murry Bergtraum’s CeCe Dixon, followed by an acrobatic putback on the other end to give the Golden Girls a lead late in the fourth quarter. That was the momentum swing Best’s ladies needed to get it done and they won, 71-60.

Hartley finished with 19 and Sidney had 13 of her 18 points in the second half, making the same winning plays that led St. Mike’s to the 2009 New York State Federation Class AA championship. O’Neill had 13 points and Bishop Ford’s Shayra Brown had seven of her 10 points in a big fourth quarter.

For Young, Ransford had 18 points and Archbishop Molloy’s Kyra Aloizos had 16 points, clearly showing the ability to play with elite players. Murry Bergtraum’s Doris Ortega had eight points and the Golden Girls held Lucas to just six points and one 3-pointer. More on her later.

Marchand mentioned on the mic that it’s difficult to schedule and make good matchups for the 40 teams in the tournament. Well, it’s clear he and commissioner Cleon (Silk) Hyde are doing a pretty good job. Every single girl competing in the main event was committed to a Division I program.

-- The only thing more impressive Saturday than Mrs. Lucas’ chocolate chip cookies – and that’s secondhand information from my colleague Joe Staszewski – was Maggie Lucas’ 3-point shooting. She hit eight against the Exodus Falcons in the morning and canned 10 against the New England Crusaders later on to break the Rose Classic single-game record, previously set in 2006 by Basketball Results’ Christina Gugliero (nine).

That was the best shooting performance I’ve ever seen in person. Penn State has some recruiting class coming in with her and Christ the King’s Ariel Edwards.

-- The future of the St. Mike's players is still up in the air. But coach Apache Paschall said an announcement could be forthcoming this week. Unfortunately, that's all he would say.

-- Aquinas senior Sade Jackson was incredible for the New Heights Seniors. She scored 26 points against the New England Crusaders on circus layups, 3-pointers and pullup jumpers.

“She’s a killer,” Marchand said. “I don’t know what these college coaches are thinking.”

Some are finally catching on. Jackson, who didn’t have much of anything just a few weeks ago, now has interest from Manhattan and Central Connecticut State. It’s well-deserved.

“She’s too good not to be signed anywhere yet,” New Heights coach Rock Rosa said.

-- In other New Heights recruiting news, Bronx Science forward Taylor Murtaugh is headed to Trinity, an excellent academic school in Hartford, Conn. She’ll play basketball and soccer there. Murtaugh led Science to the PSAL city girls soccer title this year. Also, Murry Bergtraum’s Laray Drayton, who missed just about the entire season with a leg injury, will play at Bridgeport next year.

-- I also learned this week that Wings Academy guard Latasia Ward signed with ASA, the Division I junior college in Brooklyn. Ward led Wings to its first PSAL Class A title game this season, averaging 26.7 points per game. ASA coach Adia Revell, coming off earning NJCAA Region XV Coach of the Year honors, is very excited to have her.

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Observations from the Rose Classic's opening day
4/4/10 - 09:54 PM

Mike Toro

12:53 AM, April 4, 2010 ι By MARC RAIMONDI

Mike Toro was teasing Shayra Brown unmercifully. The Bishop Ford coach was going to be on the opposite sideline of his star player when his Exodus Lady Falcons faced Brown’s Golden Girls in the Rose Classic on Saturday in Brooklyn.

Toro joked with Brown that she would only score five points. The Boston College-bound guard had that in about two first-quarter possessions en route to an 18-point performance in a 59-37 victory for her team.

Brown was potent and teammates Jelleah Sidney and Lashay Taft, a Baltimore native who will join Sidney at Syracuse next year, were excellent. Coach Lauren Best’s Golden Girls have to be the favorite to win this installment of the Rose – especially considering they were without Jennifer O’Neill and Bria Hartley, who were both playing in the WBCA All-American Game in San Antonio, Texas.

But all is certainly not lost for the Falcons. Guard Aliyah Lewis, a freshman who played JV at Ford, looked like a future superstar. She scored 17 points on pullup jumpers and fearless forays to the basket.

The best part of the game, which was definitely the main event of the day, was when Ford assistant Mary Gillespie entered the gym during the first quarter. Gillespie had missed the end of the Falcons’ season with a heart ailment and this was her first game back. She said she’s been feeling better.

-- I’m getting the feeling the former St. Michael Academy players and coach Apache Paschall are going to land on their feet after the Manhattan school announced last week it’s going to close in June after 136 years. Paschall told me today that talks are going well with a school in The Bronx that he isn’t at liberty to name at this juncture. At the end of the day, regardless of how you feel about Paschall, he has seven rising seniors and they should have the right to finish their high school careers together if they so wish. I think everyone can agree that we all want what’s best for the kids.

-- Cori Coleman picked up exactly where she left off during the school season with Murry Bergtraum on Saturday. Playing for Rock Rosa’s New Heights White, the junior was brilliant in a rout of PMIC Ballers. Once just a spot-up shooter, Coleman has become so strong and a great finisher around the basket. She’s a legitimate Division I prospect. Hope the college coaches are taking notice.

-- It was nice to see ASA coach Adia Revell in action coaching the New Heights 15s on Saturday. She’s coming off earning NJCAA Region XV Coach of the Year honors in just her second year at the Downtown Brooklyn school. If there’s a better young female college head coach in the city, I haven’t met her. Revell, a graduate of St. Mike’s and Columbia’s Barnard College, is a true role model for New York City’s girls basketball players. ASA’s Denyse Moore was just named an NJCAA All-American. Revell is doing some job over there.

-- Team Marbury, featuring mostly Lincoln players, was beaten handily by Team Mike Moore, filled with Midwood girls, but that was fine with Lincoln coach Denis Nolan, who was on hand to take in the action. April is evaluation time, he said. You get the feeling that Nolan is ready for the 2010-11 season already. There’s no doubt that it’s only a matter of time before Lincoln is a PSAL force with him at the helm.

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Bria Hartley named Gatorade New York Player of the Year
3/18/10 - 09:54 PM

The Roses' very own Bria Heartly NY Gatorade Player of the year and McDonald's All-American

For the second consecutive season, North Babylon's Bria Hartley was named the Gatorade New York Girls Basketball Player of the Year. The award recognizes outstanding athletic excellence and high standards of academic achievement and exemplary character demonstrated on and off the court. Hartley is also a finalist for the Gatorade National Player of the Year.

Hartley led North Babylon to the Suffolk Class AA county championship game. She scored a Long Island playoff record 51 points in a 72-69 loss to Sachem East. The UConn-bound Hartley finished her career with 1,978 points. Hartley averaged 28.8 points, 8.3 rebounds, 7.4 assists and 5.7 steals per game and the Bulldogs went 102-15 in her five years. Hartley will play in the McDonald’s High School All-American Game and the Nike WBCA All-America Game.

Hartley has maintained an A average and has volunteered on behalf of a local fundraising campaign for cancer research and as a math tutor in her school.

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St. Michael Academy's Jennifer O'Neill completes climb from obscurity to McDonald's All-American
3/18/10 - 09:54 PM

The Roses'

BY Mark Lelinwalla
DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER

Tuesday, February 16th 2010, 12:45 PM

 


It takes 16 steps on a steeply pitched staircase to get to the front door of Jennifer O'Neill's home on Cauldwell Ave. in the South Bronx.

In a way, the long flight parallels the budding basketball career of the St. Michael Academy senior point guard, who entered high school as an untapped reserve player with Exodus and St. Michael's and took baby steps until she got to the top.

Last year, O'Neill led the Eagles to their first state Federation title and earned a scholarship to the University of Kentucky. Last week, the 5-4 guard was named to the 2010 McDonald's All-American team.

"The kid basically worked her way from the last team on Exodus to the McDonald's game," St. Michael's assistant coach Lauren Best said. "She never stopped working."

O'Neill learned about the latest honor two weeks ago, but was still awed while watching the official announcement on ESPNU on Thursday.

Ask O'Neill and she says the accomplishment would have been impossible without the help of Jerry Powell, the renowned basketball skills trainer from North Babylon, L.I.

"It's the biggest accomplishment," she said. "Jerry told me I'd be a McDonald's All-American. I want to put 'O'Neill-Powell' on the back of my jersey to credit him."

Three years back, a short time after Powell began training O'Neill, he decided he wanted to change her life off the court as well.

He met with her mother, Maritza Robles, and floated the idea of moving O'Neill into his North Babylon home.

Robles consulted Tasha Harris, another Bronx product and former St. Michael's standout who's now at Syracuse. Powell had opened his home to her a few years earlier.

It was a tough decision for Robles, a single mother who raised O'Neill early on in Bronx and Manhattan public housing while working full-time.

"It was hard," Robles said. "I liked that he had a wife and kids. I wasn't just leaving her with Jerry; I was leaving her with him and his family."

O'Neill has been staying with Powell since, while visiting the Bronx as often as possible.

Powell struck an immediate chord with O'Neill, pushing her to expand her limits and elevate her game.

O'Neill showed flashes her sophomore year, and managed to put it all together as a junior last year, leading the Eagles to a state Federation championship and earning the 2008-09 Daily News Player of The Year award. She committed to Kentucky to cap the year.

Even Powell was suprised by O'Neill's rapid ascent.

"It's incredible," he said. "It's the fastest development . . . I haven't seen anybody get better that quick."

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Talented seniors make for an experienced squad at Rose Classic
3/17/10 - 09:55 PM

St. John's-bound Shenneika Smith hits floor for the first time in five months at Rose Classic. Brooklyn tourney runs weekends through September.

BY Mark Lelinwalla

Tuesday, April 21st 2009, 2:51 PM


You might catch an occasional rerun of "The Golden Girls," a 1980s-era sitcom about four aging women who lived together in Miami.

On many weekends this spring, you can also watch The Golden Girls at the Rose Classic basketball tournament in Brooklyn. Beginning next fall, four of them will be playing together in Queens.

St. Michael Academy's Shenneika Smith, Mary Louis' Amanda Burakoski, Notre Dame Prep's Jennifer Blanding and Nadirah McKenith, from University HS in Newark, will all be freshmen at St. John's this fall.

The four future members of Kim Barnes Arico's Red Storm play alongside Janine Davis, a St. Michael's senior who is verbally committed to George Washington, and Kennedy's Teara Shaw.

What makes the Golden Girls unique is all of their players are signed seniors, with the exception of Shaw, who is still uncommitted.

It's customary for signed seniors to forgo the club basketball circuit. The feeling is, they're already college bound and there's not much to play for. Many summer ball tournaments prohibit signed seniors from playing.

But like the IS8 tournament for boys in South Jamaica, Queens, the Rose Classic encourages signed seniors to take their place on the court.

"These girls have nothing to do but sit around once they're signed and the (school) season's over," said Anton Marchand, a co-founder of the Rose Classic, which is in its fifth year. "They would rather be playing."

That much is definitely true with the seniors who play together on the Golden Girls. Despite their looming freshman status at college, they just want to play.

"It's better than sitting at home or just working out alone," Davis said. "It's always better to play live competition and it's fun."
Burakoski agrees.

"We're getting in some good games here and for me, I get to jell early with my teammates at St. John's," Burakoski said. "This is one of the more fun (tournaments) around."

Fun indeed. Every player in the tournament, which takes place at JHS 113 on Adelphi Street in Fort Greene, gets a nickname from Marchand, who screams the moniker after every play. The Golden Girls sport some of the spicier nicknames.

There's "Buzz" (Burakoski), "Psycho" (Davis), "T-Shaw" (Shaw), "Big Love" (Blanding) and "Olive Oil" (Smith), who was shelved for the entire season with a stress fracture in her foot before returning to action earlier this month.

Although the nicknames are all fun and games, this group of seasoned veterans turns businesslike when they get on the court. Let St. Michael assistant Lauren Best, the Golden Girls coach, tell it and they're in the Rose Classic to win it.

"Sometimes with this team, as good as it is, they wait to turn it on, but I tell them that we're here to win," Best said. "We definitely want to win it all."

To do that, Best may have to get past Apache Paschall, the man she shares the bench with at St. Mike's.

Paschall coaches Exodus, a dynastic presence on the AAU scene whose squads are generously stocked with players from St. Mike's.

Best and Paschall, whose Eagles won their first-ever CHSAA state 'AA' and state Federation Class 'AA' championships last month, could find themselves seated on opposing benches with the Rose Classic championship on the line in a few months.

"We joke about it every year," Paschall said.

"It would be interesting," Best added.

Very interesting, says Davis.

"After accomplishing everything with (Paschall) this season," Davis said grinning, "it would be great to beat him."

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In the News - 2009 All - Tournament Team
3/17/10 - 09:55 PM

2009 All-Star Game Winners representing the Eastern Division.

St. John’s signee honored: NY Elite/Silver Bullets guard Eugeneia McPherson, who will play at St. John’s University in the fall, was given the Rose Classic MVP award for this spring. McPherson, who couldn’t play this weekend due to a broken nose, was surprised when tournament co-founder Anton Marchand called her name at halftime of the championship game Sunday.

“There are a lot of people who played better,” she said with a laugh.

Marchand said statistically, due to her consistency, she was a clear choice for the honor. With her, NY Elite/Silver Bullets probably would have made it past the quarterfinals Sunday. But that wasn’t the only reason she took it.

“She carries herself the right way,” Marchand said. “She’s respectful. We look for stuff like that. It’s not just her ability.”

McPherson, out of North Babylon (L.I.) HS, officially starts at St. John’s on July 6. The award, she said, was an honor because of past winners like Epiphanny Prince, Erica Morrow and China Crosby.

“Those people went on to do big things in college,” McPherson said of Prince (Rutgers) and Morrow (Syracuse). “Hopefully, I can do the same thing.”

The most improved award went to Positive Direction guard Karin Robinson, a sophomore at Mary Louis. … Brooklyn Saints forward Shanaira Styles, out of Petrides, was given the scholar-athlete award. The senior has a 99.9 grade-point average at the Staten Island school. … Exodus NYC guard Bria Hartley, Golden Girls guard Shenneika Smith, New Heights forward Porsha Postell, Swagger Like Us guard Alicia Cropper and NY Xplosion guard Kelly Robinson were named to the All-Rose Classic first team. The second team was Exodus NYC guard Jennifer O’Neill, Team Prince guard Baytania Newman, Brooklyn Saints forward Jessica Previlon, NY Xplosion forward Kyra Aloizos and Team Freckles forward Latorri Hines-Allen.

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Nike Fall Rose Classic
9/13/09 - 09:56 PM

Defending Champions Exodus NYC

NYCHOOPS.NET September 13, 2009

Rose Classic will be hosting this event at JHS 113 (R. Edmonds Learning Center) and Bishop Ford - from Saturday, September 05 2009 through Sunday, November 08 2009.The Nike Fall Rose Classic brings together many of the nation's top Club, Travel & AAU programs to compete on a highly visible stage. This tournament is by invitation only.

The Rose Classic Basketball Program is compelled to improve the quality of life for the girls of today through an educational and recreational program. Our programs will teach them the importance of academics, setting realistic career goals and encourage professional development. The administration and direct service staff at Rose Classic Basketball will use competitive basketball as a tool to teach our youth the essential life skills needed to become a productive member of society. We will teach our youngsters life skills such as teamwork, commitment, dedication and integrity and community service.

Rose Classic Basketball sets out to build a strong relationship with our youth and their parents to foster physical, moral and emotional growth. This relationship will make their youth basketball careers a lasting experience, which will have a positive effect on their lives. Rose Classic Basketball will be committed to providing our youth with a comprehensive program. They will be supervised and mentored by a team of young professionals. Our youth will be prepared to embrace the challenges of success with confidence and hope. We believe that in order to be successful, it will take a team approach to reach our youth and battle the negative social issues that consumes them. We are confident that Rose Classic Basketball will have a tremendous effect in the girls basketball circuit. Reaching our goals will require full dedication and team work, the same principles that produce championship basketball.


The 2009 event is comprised of 17 and under teams that have been hand picked to compete. Up to 50 of the top travel teams from across the country will be invited to compete, bringing some of the top competitors to center stage.

The Nike Fall Rose Classic also provides coaches, spectators and fans with a tremendous opportunity to scout the up-and-coming talent. Players always make their mark on the basketball circuit at tournaments such as the Nike Fall Rose Classic.

Don't miss out on watching some of the best basketball in the country!! As for the players. be there, play hard, and make your mark this season.
 

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Cropper, Swagger head to Rose Classic title game
6/6/09 - 09:55 PM

Team Prince's Jasmine Odom (r.) tries to take the ball away from Swagger's Alicia Cropper. Photo by Damion Reid

Say this about Lenair (Dinero) Young: if anything, he’s persistent.

The Swagger Like Us coach has been pestering Sachem East (L.I.) star Kristen Doherty, one of the top juniors in the state, to join his team at the Rose Classic since the bi-annual event started more than a month ago.

“He’s been asking me for like six weeks,” Doherty said.

The Boston College-bound, sweet-shooting guard finally had a free weekend and it couldn’t come at a better time for Swagger Like Us. With Team Prince clawing back from a big deficit, Doherty knocked down two clutch 3-pointers to seal a 77-70 win for her new squad Saturday in the Rose Classic semifinals at JHS 113 in Brooklyn. Swagger will meet Exodus NYC, which knocked off the Golden Girls, on Sunday in the final at 2 p.m.

“I’ve been working on that all season,” Young said. “Six weeks I’ve been on her.”

It certainly paid off. Doherty had 19 points and was 3-for-3 from beyond the arc.

“I love her game,” Swagger Like Us guard Alicia Cropper said. “I’ve never played with a shooter like her before.”

Cropper, a junior at Jefferson, led the way with 23 points. Curtis senior Victoria Macaulay, who is headed to Temple, had 12 points and Jefferson’s Takima Lucky added 10 points for Swagger Like Us.

Team Prince was down, 59-45, headed into the fourth quarter, but actually took a one-point lead with just over a minute remaining before Doherty knocked down her second big 3. South Shore sophomore Jasmine Odom had 21 points and South Shore senior Baytania Newman added 12 points.

“Part of our problem is closing out,” Swagger Like Us senior Nicole Marciniak said.

H.D. Woodson (D.C.) import Jeniece Johnson had 17 points for Team Prince. The 6-foot-6, Kentucky-bound mammoth somehow dwarfed Macaulay, who is 6-foot-4. She created all kinds of match-up problems for Swagger down low.

“She kept smiling at me like she was hungry,” Marciniak said. “I was so scared.”

Young all but guaranteed a berth in the final after Swagger’s first game on April 4. He put together an amalgamation of some of the city’s most well-known players: Cropper, Macaulay, Lucky, Marciniak, Jefferson’s Danielle Pearson, Molloy’s Marielle Duryea and Bergtraum’s Shanee Williams. Williams has since dropped off the team and Doherty and Harlem native Afreyea Tolbert, out of St. Mary’s (N.J.), joined up.

“It was the long road,” Young said. “But it feels good, because I had everybody against me.”

Young left the Exodus AAU organization this spring to coach for the Mike Flynn-run Philly Belles in Pennsylvania. On Sunday, he’ll match up with Exodus NYC, coached by program head Apache Paschall.

“When you leave something and go back,” Young said, “you always want to be better than when you left.”

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Rules and Regulations
4/3/09 - 02:21 PM

Rules and Regulations

4 8minute running time quarters the clock will stop on dead balls and free throws under 2min in the second and fourth quarter.

5 fouls

3 fulls and 2 30sec timeouts

Open Roster (you may bring a new player at anytime in this tournament)

Technical Fouls on coaches are $20 cash to be played immediately to the scorers table, tech must be paid in order for the game to continue. (NO EXCEPTIONS)

Forfeit- If Silk is not contacted which mean you either spoke to him on the phone or via email by preceeding thursday at 6pm there will be a $70 fee that must be paid before you play another game.

 

 

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Rose Classic Student Athlete Development Series
4/1/09 - 02:21 PM

Coaches Reminder!!!!

To recieve your uniforms you must submit a payment in full by CASH, CHECK, OR MONEY ORDER NO EXCEPTIONS

The Teams who MUST attending the seminars are

Topic is Money Matters

Session I 1pm
Team#7(defenders stone)
Team#10(baseline 2)

Session II 215pm
Team#16(Team Pince 2)
Team#14(Brooklyn Exodus)

We will notify you before the session where to meet

 

IF YOU DO NOT ATTEND THESE SEMINARS AS A TEAM YOU WILL NOT ELIGIBLE FOR THE PLAYOFFS!!!!!!

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Elite 8 Battle at Rose Classic
10/26/08 - 02:40 PM

Shenneka Smith

The Nike Rose Classic is slowly becoming the iS8/Nike tournament of girl's basketball in the North East. Forty top teams and hundreds of players competed weekly with the goal of participating in the playoffs and ultimately obtaining the coveted championship trophy. On Sunday, the quarterfinals took place and the Elite 8 battled in four games at JHS 113 in Brooklyn, NY.

Exodus NYC sends the Wave crashing down

In the opening game of the Nike Rose Elite 8, the Lady Wave of Thomas Jefferson HS came back from a 15-4 deficit on the Exodus NYC to take the lead, 31-28 late in the third quarter.

Exodus would however regain their lead and ultimately win, 43-40. Shenneka Smith was high scorer for Exodus NYC with 27 points while Alicia Cropper led the Lady Wave with 13 points.
 

M. Wingate
Lauren Mincy & Nadeira McKenneth

John's World duo crushes Team Prince (2)

In the second game, Newark NJ's Johns World Basketball against No Limit/Team Prince (2) of Brooklyn, NY, with recent St. John's commit, Nadeira McKenneth, ended up a blow-out.

The NJ team took a 12 point lead into the locker room at half-time led by the impressive junior Lauren Mincy and never looked back. Team Prince (2) simply could not defend against Johns Worlds dynamic duo and would go on to lose, 61-38.



M. Wingate
Stephanie Dolson

Mincy led all scores with 28 points followed by McKenneth with 15 points. Jasmine Odom led Team Prince (2) with 26 points.


Lady Ballers out do No Limit in 2OT

The third contest was hyped to be a classic between No Limit/Team Prince (1) versus Lady Ballers NYC and did not disappoint. A very physical game throughout, the lead would swing back and forth. There would also be a battle in the paint as St. John's bound Jennifer Blanding of Team Prince (1) went up against 6-foot-5, Stephanie Dolson.

Going into the final quarter, the Lady Ballers had a 2 point lead but would extend it to 10 points with 3:47 remaining in the game. Star Breedlove would nail a jumper at the 40 seconds mark to knock the lead to one point and Bey Bey Newman would tie the game twice from the line taking the game into the first of two overtimes. With 1:04 Dee Dee Simmons fouled out for causing an awkward 5-4 match-up in favor of the No Limit who was still down 68-67.



M. Wingate
China Crosby

The Lady Ballers would still eek out a 76-73 victory. Cee Cee Dixon led the Lady Ballers with 20 points with Dolson pulling 8 rebounds along with 8 key points. Breedlove dropped 23 points for No Limit/Team Prince (1).


Gazelles knock Angels from Sky

NY Gazelles from Harlem would play the NY Angels from Long Island in the closer. Sophomore, Martina Ellerbe put in work for the Gazelles as did UVA commit, China Crosby at the point while South Carolina bound Ieasia Walker was Crosby's counterpart for the Angels.

The Harlem squad held a slight 2 point lead at the half which would carry well into the third quarter. Crosby began to heat up and extended the Gazelles lead to 10 points to start the final quarter. Key buckets by Walker and Seton Hall bound Terry Green would cut the Gazelles lead too 2 points with 55 seconds remaining. The Gazelles would go on to win 59-53.

Ellerbe led the Gazelles with 19 points with multiple assists from Crosby while Walker led the Angels with 15 points.

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