Going in style: Mikes send Williams off with emotional 64-57 OT win over C-H
CARMICHAELS — Don Williams couldn’t have written a better script to cap his career.
The longtime Carmichaels boys basketball coach, who recently decided to step down after 44 years, walked over to the bench once last time last Friday night for a Section 2-AA game against Chartiers-Houston.
His players sent him off in style as the Mikes rallied from a 10-point deficit in the fourth period and defeated the Bucs in overtime, 64-57, in front of a large, noisy crowd at Carmichaels Area Senior High School.
Carmichaels trailed by 13 at halftime and was still down eight with three minutes left before closing the fourth period on an 8-0 run. The Mikes’ Al Cree made two free throws with 13.1 seconds left to pull the hosts within two, and, after a Chartiers-Houston turnover, Carmichaels’ Matt Barrish was fouled and sank two free throws with seven seconds remaining to tie it, 55-55.
The Bucs badly missed a halfcourt shot in the finals seconds, sending the game into overtime, where the Mikes dominated, outscoring C-H 9-2.
“It means a lot to go out this way,” Williams said. “ThatĢƵ been my whole career, teams never quit, they always play with a lot of heart and a lot of desire and it showed tonight.
“They didn’t give up, and thereĢƵ the results.”
While Williams and his assistant coach of 28 years Tim Jones celebrated ending their careers in style, the loss was a bitter pill to swallow for the Bucs (5-7, 10-11), who needed to win to qualify for the WPIAL playoffs.
“When you’re up four with 15 seconds to go, you’re supposed to win,” Chartiers-Houston coach Eugene Briggs said. “There was a lot of emotion in here, but we were in control the whole game. They played hard and did a good job coming back, but we didn’t keep our composure.
“If you lose this game, you don’t belong in the playoffs anyway.”
The Bucs scored the gameĢƵ first seven points and led 15-7 after one period, 42-32 after three periods and never trailed until Carmichaels’ Garrett Ponick scored the first basket in overtime.
Chris Barrish then made one of two free throws and Cree grabbed the rebound of the miss and scored to put Carmichaels (4-8, 11-10) up 60-55 with 2:15 left in OT.
Matt Barrish made two foul shots with 1:28 left and one of two with 28 seconds left to salt the game away.
After the final seconds ticked off the clock, Williams and Jones embraced, flashing huge smiles.
“Timmy is not only a good coach, heĢƵ a great person and friend,” Williams said.
“We’ve been in this situation so many times over the years,” Jones said. “We battled all year long in a conference that we were undersized in, and we always hung in there as much as we could.
“We just had faith in the kids and they kept working at it and working at it and we got it down there where we could strike at the end, and we did.”
Cree scored a game-high 21 points for the Mikes. Dylan Wilson followed with 16, and Chris Barrish and Matt Barrish each added 11.
Christian Berry and Evan Simpson led Chartiers-Houston with 17 and 16 points, respectively, and Austin Arnold chipped in with 11.
The Bucs seemed to be in control when Berry made a layup for a 55-47 lead with three minutes left but they wouldn’t score again until Alijah Vaden sank a meaningless shot in the final seconds of overtime, breaking a drought of almost seven minutes.
“I felt the momentum shift our way,” Williams said. “They lost a couple kids (to fouls) including their ballhandler (Arnold), so we just kept putting pressure on them and they got a little bit tentative and I think thatĢƵ what brought us back into the game.
“We just turned it up a little bit defensively.”
Williams commended Jones for that.
“Timmy draws up all the defenses so I just let him go,” he said.
Wilson started the Mikes’ late comeback in the fourth period when he sank one of two foul shots and then hit a driving basket with two minutes left to make it 55-50.
Cree pulled Carmichaels within four when he made one of two foul shots with 38 seconds left, then made his crucial pair with 13 seconds left. C-H successfully threw a long pass on the inbounds play but a traveling call gave the Mikes the ball back and Williams called timeout with 10 seconds left to set the stage for Barrish.
“I drew the play up for him to shoot it, thatĢƵ how confident I was in him,” Williams said. “He got fouled and I felt good with him at the line.”
Barrish, who, along with Jacob Hair and Ponick, was honored in senior night ceremonies before the game, put that and the pressure of Williams’ final game all behind him when he stepped to the line with seven seconds left.
“I was just thinking make the shot, honestly,” Barrish said. “Don’t miss it. I’ve been practicing all year for this. Every day I work hard in practice and shoot free throws, and focus on making them, not missing them. And I made them tonight.”
The Mikes completely controlled the extra frame.
“ItĢƵ a fairytale story,” Barrish said. “We were down 10 in the fourth quarter and we just kept battling. Point by point, possession by possession, we came back.
“To send out Coach Williams on a win like this … itĢƵ crazy.”
Jones agreed.
“You couldn’t have wrote a better script for it the way it turned out,” Jones said. “It was kind of funny, though, itĢƵ like they didn’t want to get rid of us, we had to go to overtime, four more minutes to finish it.
“I thought that was a nice way to go out. The fans, the chants and everything, it was so loud, back like the old days a little bit.”
Williams ends his career with 512 victories, seven section titles and 21 playoff appearances.
“ItĢƵ bittersweet,” Williams said. “They say you know when itĢƵ time to go and itĢƵ time for me to go. But what a way to end it. Unbelievable. The kids played their hearts out.
“Right now I’m just excited about the win. It hasn’t sunk in yet that that was it. ThatĢƵ my last game.”
















