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Lewis County 65 Ashland 52
#1
Final from Vanceburg. Great win for the Lions to start the season.
#2
Is this a surprising score to you fans in the 16th?
#3
Cover3 Wrote:Is this a surprising score to you fans in the 16th?

Very surprising to me and I'm a Lewis homer. Lewis just graduated their second all-time leading scorer and two other 3-year starters in the backcourt and accompany that with their best post player missing the season from a knee injury sustained in football. Not to mention Ashland has the best player in the region in Nick Miller according to all of the preseason rankings. Was anybody at this one that can give a game report?
#4
Ashland Blazer (0-1) -- Cha.Villers 3, Roberts 6, Chr.Villers 18, Bradley 2, Copley 4, Knipp 4, Miller 12, Lucas 3.

LEWIS CO (1-0) -- Davis 11, Duncan 9, Walker 10, Parks 2, Lemaster 1, Parker 7, Kelly 3, McCann 11, Keibler 11.
#5
Ashland could go to the hallways and field a team as good as the one on the floor.
#6
washed up Wrote:Ashland could go to the hallways and field a team as good as the one on the floor.

That's alittle harsh.
#7
Maybe so, how about there are a handful of really athletic kids with some basketball skills at Ashland that dont play basketball anymore.
#8
washed up Wrote:Maybe so, how about there are a handful of really athletic kids with some basketball skills at Ashland that dont play basketball anymore.

Ok, Now why are they not playing?
#9
I would not dare to guess, you would have to ask them.
#10
washed up Wrote:I would not dare to guess, you would have to ask them.

And I wouldn't know who to ask, cause mine doesn't go there. The Dixon left maybe there is something there too.
#11
washed up Wrote:Ashland could go to the hallways and field a team as good as the one on the floor.

Not the halls on Blazer Blvd. Maybe the halls at Huntington Prep.
#12
I think Baker, Prince, Woods, and OBrian and I am not sure of a 5th would be competitive in a interschool game.
#13
washed up Wrote:I think Baker, Prince, Woods, and OBrian and I am not sure of a 5th would be competitive in a interschool game.

Isnt Brown there as well.
#14
washed up Wrote:I think Baker, Prince, Woods, and OBrian and I am not sure of a 5th would be competitive in a interschool game.
shawn Gilliam could be your 5th
#15
Welcome Wrote:Isnt Brown there as well.
kurtlen brown? is he at blazer?
#16
scrappy coco Wrote:kurtlen brown? is he at blazer?

I heard that. He was at Fairview, back to Huntington High & now Ashland.
#17
washed up Wrote:I think Baker, Prince, Woods, and OBrian and I am not sure of a 5th would be competitive in a interschool game.

If so, Biggs better contact them. Losing badly to Lewis County, a middle of the region team at best, indicates that the cupboard needs restocking.
#18
I dont think Brown is at Ashland, but I have been hearing those rumors.
#19
VANCEBURG Lewis County junior center Jacob Kiebler was “thrown to the wolves,” as he said coach Joe Hampton put it, in Tuesday night’s season opener against Ashland.

Hampton or Kiebler could have been referring to junior big man Jeremy McCann, too.

Both ends of the inside duo survived that test. Each posted double-doubles in their most significant varsity action yet, helping the host Lions snap a 10-year, 11-game losing streak to the Tomcats, 65-52.

“Honestly, we didn’t know how the two bigs were gonna work together,” Hampton said. “A big key for us, we felt like, is how quickly those two guys matured, because we said if they came in and make that adjustment from JV to varsity quickly and come in and make plays, I feel like our team has a chance to be pretty good, because we’ve got some quick guards.”

McCann notched 11 points and 10 rebounds, while Kiebler collected 11 points and 11 boards off the bench.

“I thought it was a really good experience for us,” McCann said. “This is our first year starting and everything.”

Jordan Davis had 11 points and Trenton Walker scored 10 to join them in double figures.

Ashland’s Christian Villers led all scorers with 18 points. Nick Miller notched 12 points and 10 boards for the Tomcats.

Lewis County junior guard Jake Parker went down due to injury in the second quarter. That was what spurred the Lions to use McCann and Kiebler together.

"We’ve got some size for the first time across the board like that,” Hampton said. “I think this is probably the biggest team we’ve had.”

Kiebler, listed at 6-foot-8, is 3 inches taller than the tallest Tomcat, Dallas Knipp, who checks in at 6-5. McCann is 6-4.

Combine that with the fact that three Ashland players who coach Buddy Biggs bemusedly used air quotes to describe as what passes for the Tomcats’ “big men” fouled out, and you see how Ashland had trouble handling Lewis County inside late.

“Our bigs aren’t as big as their bigs, but three of our bigs fouled out, and that’s part of the maturation process,” Biggs said. “We’re a very, very young basketball team. They have to learn to play aggressively without fouling.”

Lewis County (1-0) nearly matched its point total from the first three quarters in the fourth period alone. Ashland (0-1) led a plodding game, 36-34, after three quarters before the Lions racked up 31 in the fourth frame.

Lewis County scored the first 10 points of the final stanza and led the rest of the way. McCann hit two charity tosses to tie the score at the 7:47 mark, and Davis splashed in back-to-back 3-pointers before Kiebler canned two more free throws.

“You’ve got a team that’s kind of young that hasn’t had all this varsity experience,” Hampton said, “and that’s kind of the point where we got settled down a little bit and not be so tight, and loosened us up.”

The Lions relied on defense as well. Villers had 10 points at intermission, but was 1-for-9 from the field in the second half, though he did hit 6 of 7 at the foul line during that time.

“(Lewis County) went to the triangle-and-two the whole second half, and it stagnated our offense,” Biggs said. “My hat’s off to coach Hampton and his staff. We tried to adjust as best we could ... and we just didn’t do a good enough job executing.”

Aside from Miller and Villers, Ashland’s roster is populated with unknown quantities at the varsity level. As such, Biggs expects to see a whole lot more of the same sort of defensive scheme.

"Until other guys step up and prove they can score too, I’d say we’ll see this on a nightly basis,” the coach said.
The win is Lewis County’s first against Ashland since Nov. 30, 2004, and only the second in program history. The teams opened the season against each other for the seventh straight year.


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