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Right at home: Falcons give Ramsey 64-50 win against alma mater

By Jim Downey 4 min read
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The Gators’ Tommy Kolencik protects the ball from BrownsvilleĢƵ Ryan Johnson (13) for a layup in the first quarter of TuesdayĢƵ non-section game at Geibel Catholic.
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Brownsville coach Rob Ramsey (left) talks with Exzavier Vargas during with Geibel Catholic on the foul line in the first quarter during TuesdayĢƵ non-section game at Geibel Catholic.
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Geibel Catholic coach Gary Tarbuk talks with his squad during a timeout in the first quarter of TuesdayĢƵ non-section home game against Brownsville.
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The Gators’ Tommy Kolencik contests a shot by BrownsvilleĢƵ Rylan Johnson (13) in the third quarter of TuesdayĢƵ non-section game at Geibel Catholic.
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Brownsville's Trent Wible challenges a shot by Geibel CatholicĢƵ Mike Miller in the first quarter of TuesdayĢƵ non-section game at Geibel Catholic.
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The Gators’ Mike Miller looks for an open teammate around BrownsvilleĢƵ Harlan Davis in the first quarter of TuesdayĢƵ non-section game at Geibel Catholic.

CONNELLSVILLE TWP. – Brownsville outscored Geibel Catholic 16-5 in the final five minutes of the first quarter Tuesday night, and the visiting Falcons carried the momentum forward for a 64-50 non-section win.

The Gators’ already short bench got shorter 45 seconds into the game when sophomore Seth Dolan left the game with an apparent wrist injury.

“Mike Miller and Seth went up for the block. They collided and one stepped on someoneĢƵ ankle on the way down, and Seth just fell. I thought nothing of it serious at the time, but …,” first-year coach Gary Tarbuk said of the play, adding, “That was a huge loss. We had one sub on the bench, so once Seth went down we had no one on the bench.”

The game was tied at 5-5 early on in the opening quarter when the Falcons opened up the game and the Gators had trouble finding the basket.

Brownsville (3-3) stepped up the pressure into the second quarter and was able to extend its lead to 40-20 at halftime.

“The press was something we wanted to work on, just to get them to turn the ball over and get easy baskets. Being the course is so small, we could use that to our advantage,” said Brownsville coach Rob Ramsey.

The Falcons added to their lead with a 20-12 advantage in the third quarter.

Ramsey wanted to work on the defense and felt the Falcons improved after halftime.

“Just play good team ball and play better defense. Actually, I don’t think we played good team defense in the first half, but the third quarter was pretty good,” said Ramsey.

The mercy rule was invoked in the fourth quarter, but the Gators simply didn’t play out the string. The home team actually made some ground during the running clock.

“I thought the kids battled. I think the kids panicked when Seth got hurt and once halftime came, I gave a little speech to them and I think they responded in the second half,” said Tarbuk. “I like how they responded. They weren’t giving up.

“They knew there was no bench and they still went at it. You saw that in the fourth quarter. If that clock would’ve stopped, it would’ve been a different game. They had momentum.

“They came together as a team.”

The Falcons’ Trent Wible shared game-scoring honors with 18 points. Harlan Davis scored 13 points and Rylan Johnson finished with 12 points.

Freshman Gary Tarbuk paced the Gators (0-5) with 18 points. Tommy Kolencik finished with 13 points and Mike Miller added 10.

Coach Gary Tarbuk learned a couple things about his squad as it prepares for FridayĢƵ road game at Carmichaels.

“Our rebounding has to improve, but we’re so undersized,” said coach Tarbuk. “I think we learned today that we can play fast.

“I’m proud of the effort, especially the second half.”

Ramsey also saw some shortcomings that need work before FridayĢƵ section home opener against Yough.

“We have to work on our transition defense. We weren’t very good. We were sprinting back as hard as we could, but we weren’t identifying who we had,” explained Ramsey. “It led to a ton of open looks for Geibel.

The non-section game was a homecoming, of sorts, for Ramsey. The 2005 graduate left as the programĢƵ second all-time leading scorer.

“When I was an assistant at Serra, they were in our section. But, itĢƵ been a long time,” said Ramsey.

Ramsey continued, “I love this place. It meant everything to me to come here. Coach Misiak, from the first day I came here, treated me like a son. I made so many friends I still have today.

“This is a special place. I probably claim two places the most, my hometown Whitsett and Geibel Catholic. Geibel changed my life.”

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