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1K Club: Uniontown’s Braxton scores 24 to reach milestone in win over AG

By Rob Burchianti 8 min read
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UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton (white jersey) poses for a photo with fans and family members after scoring his 1,000th career point against Albert Gallatin on Friday night at A.J.. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
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UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton scores his 1,000th career point on a drive to the basket against Albert Gallatin during the fourth quarter of Friday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
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UniontownĢƵ K’Adrian McLee throws down a dunk during Friday nightĢƵ game against Albert Gallatin at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
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Albert GallatinĢƵ Blake White attempts a baseline jump shot during Friday nightĢƵ game at Uniontown. White scored 22 points but the Colonials lost, 89-63.
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UniontownĢƵ Kelan Milsom hits a 3-point shot over Albert GallatinĢƵ Shymere Wilson (24) during Friday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Milsom made two 3-pointers and scored 17 points in the Red Raiders' 89-63 victory.
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Albert Gallatin coach Shea Fleenor signals to his players during Friday nightĢƵ game at Uniontown.
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Uniontown coach Rob Kezmarsky shouts instructions to his players during Friday nightĢƵ game against Albert Gallatin at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
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UniontownĢƵ Notorious Grooms shoots a 3-pointer as Albert GallatinĢƵ Tyrone Burton (35) defends during Friday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium. Grooms hit a pair of 3-pointers and scored 17 points in the Red Raiders’ 89-63 win.
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Albert GallatinĢƵ Mykel Belt (3) scores on an acrobatic drive to the basket during Friday nightĢƵ game at Uniontown. Belt scored 15 points but the Colonials lost, 89-63.
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UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton scores against Albert Gallatin during the first half of Friday nightĢƵ game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.
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Uniontown senior Jamire Braxton gets a hug from Albert Gallatin coach Shea Fleenor after Braxton scored his 1,000th career point against the Colonials on Friday night. Braxton played two years under Fleenor with the Colonials before transferring back to his former school district in Uniontown.
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UniontownĢƵ Jamire Braxton (left) poses with teammate Notorious Grooms who sports a T-shirt commemorating BraxtonĢƵ 1,000th career point which he scored during Friday nightĢƵ game against Albert Gallatin. Grooms scored his 1,000th point three weeks earlier.

There was a burst of mixed emotions on more than one front when Uniontown senior Jamire Braxton scored on a smooth drive to the basket early in the fourth quarter Friday night.

The two points put Braxton at 1,000 for his high school career and he went on to drop in a game-high 24 points in the Red Raiders’ 89-63 win over Albert Gallatin in their Section 3-AAAA boys basketball game at A.J. Everhart Memorial Gymnasium.

“I didn’t know what to do at first,” Braxton said of how he felt when he sank the shot for 1,000. “I was excited and I was nervous and then I was ready to cry.

“But it was definitely joyful.”

After being congratulated for his milestone by Uniontown coach Rob Kezmarsky, the rest of the Red Raiders coaching staff and his teammates, Braxton went over to the Colonials’ bench, escorted by Kezmarsky, and shared a hug with AG coach Shea Fleenor.

Braxton played at Albert Gallatin his freshman and sophomore seasons before transferring back to his former school district for his junior and senior years.

“For him to have enough respect to come over to me and want me to be a part of that moment with him speaks volumes about that kid,” Fleenor said. “You know you’re in the heat of battle and then the next thing you know one of your opponents is coming over and you’re hugging him. But I have a soft spot for Jamire. It was nice to share that moment with him.

“If it was going to happen I kind of like that it was against us just because of the history. Congratulations to him. I’m proud of him.”

Kezmarsky commended Braxton also.

“Jamire does a great job. We’re so proud for him and happy for him,” Kezmarsky said. “I had Jamire in sixth grade when I was his teacher at Lafayette and you could tell back then he is just a wonderful kid. He works so hard. This offseason he dedicated himself, he got his body in shape, he worked out and he continues to work out. He deserves this.

“And really I think his teammates wanted it for him just as much as he did. It just shows you the type of kids we have.”

article imageSubmitted photo

Uniontown senior Jamire Braxton (left) poses for a photo with Red Raiders coach Rob Kezmarsky while they hold a banner commemorating BraxtonĢƵ 1,000th career point which he scored against Albert Gallatin on Friday night.

Braxton became the second Uniontown player this season to notch his 1,000th career point, joining junior teammate Notorious Grooms who hit the milestone exactly three weeks earlier on the same floor in a 91-61 win over Belle Vernon.

“ItĢƵ a great accomplishment for him and he earned it,” Grooms said. “I’m really proud of him. He worked hard.

“We had a dream when we were younger, me, Jamire and Calvin (Winfrey III), how we all wanted to be on that 1,000-point scoring banner and now itĢƵ happened for two of us and Calvin will get there, too.”

Winfrey, a junior who is also on track to hit the 1,000-point mark either late this season or early in his senior year, was held out of FridayĢƵ game as he continues his recovery from a sprained ankle.

“We’re just trying to get him 100 percent,” Kezmarsky said of his starting point guard. “HeĢƵ close.”

Following Braxton in the Uniontown scoring column against AG was Grooms and Kelan Milsom with 17 points and two 3-pointers apiece and Jeremiah Hager with 15 points.

“Jeremiah does so much for us and Kelan has done a great job when we’ve asked him to come in and start like tonight and Eric Townsend gave us some quality minutes,” Kezmarsky said. “We got to get some seniors in there at the end like Nick Torbich and Marcus Hice, too, which was nice.”

The Colonials were led by Blake White with 22 points and Mykel Belt with 15 points. Albert Gallatin also got nine points from Shymere Wilson and eight points from J.J. Jackson.

“BlakeĢƵ been scoring a lot lately,” Fleenor said. “Prior to tonight he had two 25-point games and a 23-point game. HeĢƵ really been filling it up. MykelĢƵ been doing a really good job and Shymere WilsonĢƵ been playing well although he struggled a little bit tonight.”

Uniontown was coming off its first loss of the season on Tuesday when it fell to South Allegheny, 54-44, in a non-section game, thanks in large part to a one-for-17 performance from 3-point range.

“We had great practices on Wednesday and Thursday and were working really hard,” Braxton said. “We got our energy back and played better as a team.”

Kezmarsky put TuesdayĢƵ loss in perspective.

“We played a really good 4A team, South Allegheny, which beat the first-place team in their section, Avonworth, last night,” Kezmarsky pointed out. “We played Monday night against Southmoreland and had a really big section win and itĢƵ hard to play back-to-back but no excuses. ThereĢƵ a difference between exhibition games and section games to us though, and right now we’re 6-0 in the section with four to play, so we’re excited.”

Uniontown had another challenging non-section game scheduled for Saturday against Baldwin at the PBC Hall of Fame Classic at North Hills

“People were talking about Baldwin, Baldwin, Baldwin on Saturday but we were concentrating on AG,” Kezmarsky said. “ThatĢƵ a section game. We want to win that 51st section title.”

The Red Raiders (6-0, 15-1) hold a two-game lead over Belle Vernon in the section standings.

Albert Gallatin (2-4, 6-8) is in the hunt for the postseason also, sitting just one game behind Southmoreland and Elizabeth Forward who are tied for third place. The top four teams qualify for the playoffs..

“I don’t know that anybody in the section is going to beat Uniontown,” Fleenor said. “The focal point is the rest of the section. We have a leg up on Belle Vernon (AG won at home against the Leopards, 70-67, on Jan. 11). We’re still right there with a chance to make the playoffs.”

The Colonials fought hard in a first quarter that had six early lead changes. After AG grabbed a 9-8 advantage on a basket by White, the Red Raiders closed the quarter on a 14-2 run to go up 22-11.

Uniontown led 44-31 at halftime then pushed the margin up to 26, 71-45, at the end of three quarters. The Red Raiders took their biggest lead of 82-51 early in the fourth quarter after a dunk by K’Adrian McLee and BraxtonĢƵ final bucket of the night.

Fleenor reflected on BraxtonĢƵ time at AG.

“We had him for two years and that last year for us he averaged about 19 (points) and 9 (rebounds),” Fleenor said. “He had a really great year.

“No disrespect to anyone else on their team, but I think heĢƵ their best player overall. I have a lot of respect for Jamire. I think heĢƵ a very, very talented player whoĢƵ put a lot of work into his game and the results show.”

Fleenor was pleased with his own players’ effort against Uniontown.

“I thought we battled good for a while and then we kind of lost our way,” Fleenor said. “The one thing about this group all season, I don’t fault their effort ever. They play hard. They don’t give up. They battle. They don’t always make the right play but I don’t question their heart.”

Kezmarsky praised the Colonials.

“AG has improved since the last time we played them,” Kezmarsky said. “Coach Fleenor does a great job with them. They were well prepared tonight. AGĢƵ got some wonderful kids that play hard. They’re battling for a playoff spot and we wish them nothing but the best.”

The game drew another large crowd at Uniontown.

“NightĢƵ like this are good for Fayette County basketball,” Kezmarsky said.

Braxton lauded both his current coach and former coach after the game.

“I wanted to go over and thank Coach Fleenor because he helped build me into the player I am now,” Braxton said. “And the whole Uniontown coaching staff are like my fathers, I love each and every one of them, especially Coach K. He puts his time, his heart, his blood, sweat and tears, everything into us. If it wasn’t for him, we wouldn’t be here as a team.”

Braxton added an extra bit of trivia to his milestone.

“I’m the first Braxton out of my family to ever do it,” he said. “Scoring 1,000 is a big achievement for me and my family.”

Braxton, as Grooms said also after scoring his 1,000th point, is now ready to move on.

“ItĢƵ a great accomplishment but now itĢƵ time to look forward. We want to win another section and go to the Pete (Petersen Events Center, site of the WPIAL championships) and go to Hershey,” Braxton said. “ThatĢƵ what we’re all aiming for, step by step.”

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