ĢƵ

close

Still perfect: Red Raiders fight off gritty Mustangs, improve to 13-0

By Rob Burchianti 6 min read
1 / 10
UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton (34) drives to the basket as Laurel Highlands’ Sevi Vecchiolla (32) defends during Wednesday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Braxton scored a game-high 25 points in the Red Raiders’ 66-52 win.
2 / 10
UniontownĢƵ Ethan Koffler (5) takes a jump shot as UniontownĢƵ K’Adrian McLee (4) defends during Wednesday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Koffler led the Mustangs with 16 points but the Red Raiders won, 66-52.
3 / 10
UniontownĢƵ Calvin Winfrey III elevates in the lane as he scores against Laurel Highlands during Wednesday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Winfrey scored 11 points in the Red Raiders’ 66-52 win.
4 / 10
Laurel Highlands’ Aiden Black hits a 3-pointer over UniontownĢƵ Kelan Milsom just before the halftime buzzer during Wednesday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Black scored 11 points but the Red Raiders won, 66-52.
5 / 10
UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton hits one of the three 3-pointers he made during the second quarter of Wednesday nightĢƵ game against Laurel Highlands at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Braxton scored a game-high 25 points in the Red Raiders’ 66-52 victory.
6 / 10
Laurel Highlands coach John Smith talks with Jaden Ringer (13) and Aiden Black during a break in the action of Wednesday nightĢƵ game at Uniontown.
7 / 10
UniontownĢƵ K’Adrian McLee scores after grabbing an offensive rebound in the third quarter of Wednesday nightĢƵ game against Laurel Highlands at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. McLee scored 11 points in the Red Raiders’ 66-52 win.
8 / 10
UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton (34) pressures Laurel Highlands’ Luke Martin during Wednesday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
9 / 10
Uniontown coach Rob Kezmarsky signals to his players during Wednesday nightĢƵ game against Laurel Highlands at A.J.Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
10 / 10
UniontownĢƵ Kelan Milsom (right) defends Laurel Highlands’ Aiden Black during Wednesday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.

Laurel Highlands put up a gritty effort as a significant underdog and battled until the very end of its game against rival Uniontown on Wednesday night.

Still, when it was over, it was the Red Raiders claiming a 66-52 Section 3-AAAA victory inside a sellout crowd at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium to remain unbeaten on the season.

Jamire Braxton rang up a game-high 25 points as Uniontown improved to 13-0.

“I told my players before the game, they have good kids, they just haven’t had a lot of experience,” Red Raiders coach Rob Kezmarsky said of the Mustangs. “Laurel Highlands played a slow pattern basketball game. They deserve a lot of credit. They did a really good job of playing their game. Everybody thought this was going to be a mercy rule game.

“But still, we’re excited and happy for the win. The bottom line is we’re 4-0 in the section.”

It was the 120th meeting between the crosstown rivals with Uniontown increasing its series lead to 69-51.

Laurel Highlands, which fell to 0-5 in the section and 2-13 overall, came out with energy and intensity and held a 9-7 lead with just under a minute to play in the first quarter.

Uniontown put up five quick points before the frame ended on a basket and free throw by Calvin Winfrey III sandwiched around a layup by Braxton to go up 12-9, and never trailed again.

The Red Raiders rode that momentum into the second quarter. After Kelan Milsom scored, Shane Layton sank the first of his three 3-pointers in the game for LH, but Uniontown reeled off the next 10 points with four apiece coming from K’Adrian McLee and Notorious Grooms along with a steal and layup by Winfrey.

“The difference in the game was turnovers,” first-year LH coach John Smith said. “We’d have a couple turnovers and they’d go on a run. They’re fast. It doesn’t take long for them to run the scoreboard up.”

The 17-3 run put the Red Raiders ahead 24-12 and they would widen the gap to 17 points twice before Aiden Black banked in a 3-pointer just before the halftime buzzer to pull the Mustangs within 41-27.

Laurel Highlands opened the third quarter with a 7-2 run with all seven points coming from Ethan Koffler on a 3-pointer, a runner and a layup off a turnover as the visitors sliced the deficit to single digits at 43-34.

Uniontown fired back with a 9-3 burst to close the quarter with a 52-37 advantage.

The Red Raiders took their biggest lead of 63-44 on a basket by Braxton with 2:12 remaining before Kezmarsky began going deeper into his bench.

Uniontown had a trio of players hit double digits in scoring in addition to Braxton with Winfrey, McLee and Milsom each tallying 11 points. It was WinfreyĢƵ first game action since Jan. 2 as he missed time due to a sprained ankle suffered in practice.

As Winfrey returned, however, the Red Raiders were down another starter due to an ankle injury.

“We were without Jeremiah Hager tonight,” Kezmarsky pointed out. “Jeremiah does a lot for us and is a big part of our team. He should be back Monday. This was CalvinĢƵ first game back and I thought he did well.”

Kezmarsky again called on Milsom to step into the starting lineup as he did in WinfreyĢƵ absence.

“Kelan has played great,” Kezmarsky said. “He gives us some offense and he played good defense tonight.”

Smith lauded the Red Raiders while also commending his own teamĢƵ performance.

“Uniontown is a great team,” Smith said. “Coach K is doing a great job with these guys, him and Coach (Calvin) Winfrey, Coach (Ray) Robinson and Coach (Warare) Gladman. I’ve known those guys basically my whole basketball career. They’ve got a heck of a squad.

“I tried to put together a decent game plan to disrupt them a little bit today and I thought the boys did a pretty good job executing it.”

Koffler led the Mustangs with 16 points. Black wound up with 11 points, Layton totaled 10 points, six rebounds and four steals, and Sevi Vecchiolla had five points and 12 boards.

“ItĢƵ easy to come out and play hard when you’re winning games,” Smith said. “But when you’re losing a lot of games and you’re still able to come out, put your head down and keep competing and conduct yourselves like young men, that says a lot about your character and the type of people they’re going to be later on in life.

“I couldn’t be more proud of the effort.”

While it wasn’t one of UniontownĢƵ more dominant performances, Kezmarsky had no qualms with his teamĢƵ showing.

“EverythingĢƵ not going to go your way every game,” said Kezmarsky whose team is now a combined 36-6 since the beginning of last season.. “Not every shot, every layup, every foul shot, and you’re not going to control if a kid banks a shot in.

“Still, once we got a significant lead I felt we had control of the game and stayed in control the rest of the way, but give Laurel Highlands credit, they kept playing hard.”

Smith pointed out his teamĢƵ challenging schedule as part of the reason for the Mustangs’ record. Laurel Highlands’ non-section slate included Thomas Jefferson and Gateway, both ranked in the top five in Class AAAAA, as well as Franklin Regional, another Class AAAAA team with a 12-2 record.

“It kind of goes back to last year when we put the schedule together with the class that we had, trying to go after another WPIAL title,” said Smith, who was an assistant under Rick Hauger. “When me and Rick sat down we said if we put this big schedule together, because of the cycle, every two years, next year we’re going to have a brutal one.

“We’ve played some very good teams and have suffered some pretty bad losses, but the boys have never given up. And thatĢƵ been my message all year, just keep competing and as we evolve as a team and get better then we’re going to be able to be in any game. Continue to believe in one another, play defense, and take it one possession at a time.”

Laurel Highlands is back in action Friday with another non-section game against a Class AAAAA team when it travels to Latrobe.

Uniontown is off until Tuesday when it hosts South Allegheny in a non-section game.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.