Lady Raiders win battle at Brownsville
BROWNSVILLE — Aierra Jenkins’ quest for 1,000 points had to wait one more day but the Uniontown senior still poured in 23 points to lead the Lady Raiders to a 44-41 victory over host Brownsville in a non-section girls basketball battle Wednesday night.
Jenkins, who made seven 3-pointers in UniontownĢƵ win over Beth-Center on Monday, added two more from beyond the arc and played a strong all-around game against the Lady Falcons to help the Lady Raiders improve to 3-1.
Uniontown coach Dierre Jenkins, who also is AierraĢƵ dad, admitted the 1,000-point milestone was likely on her mind.
“She got off to a slow start and you could tell she was thinking about it,” coach Jenkins said. “If you watched the game Monday, she had a phenomenal game shooting the ball but she wasn’t quite the same tonight so she scored in other ways.”
There were four 1,000-point scorers or soon-to-be 1,000-point scorers involved in the game. Dierre Jenkins topped the 1,000-point milestone during his career playing under the late coach Dave Shuck at Uniontown and Brownsville senior center Skyler Gates reached 1,000 points as a junior last season. Aierra Jenkins needed only four more points to reach 1,000 going into Thursday nightĢƵ Section 4-5A opener at Albert Gallatin and Lady Falcons senior Ava Clark ended the game 130 points away from the milestone.
Clark led the way for Brownsville with 16 points and Gates dropped in 15 along with three blocked shots.
Charley Murtha followed Jenkins in scoring for Uniontown with a trio of 3-pointers for nine points.
“Battle in the 40s, I expected that,” coach Jenkins said. “The girls were a little jittery at first. Sometimes when you play a rival game the emotions get going and your game gets off a little bit.”
The momentum shifted back and forth in the first half.
Jenkins hit a 3-pointer to start the scoring and a free throw by Ambree Long gave Uniontown a 4-0 lead.
Brownsville (1-2) answered with a seven-point run on a 3-pointer by Ciara Horabik sandwiched between baskets by Clark and Gates.
A spinning drive and basket by Jenkins and consecutive 3-pointers by Murtha, the second after she came up with a steal, put the Lady Raiders back on top 12-7. UniontownĢƵ Lyric McLee added a three-point play late in the quarter which ended with the Lady Raiders up 15-10.
Brownsville regrouped and reeled off the first 10 points of the second quarter on four consecutive baskets by Clark followed by a Gates bucket for a 20-15 lead.
Jenkins nailed a late 3-pointer to pull the Lady Raiders within 22-20 at halftime.
UniontownĢƵ defense started to take its toll in third quarter by forcing a slew of turnovers to help the tide turn the Lady Raiders’ way.
“That was definitely the difference,” Brownsville coach Patty Columbia said. “ThatĢƵ probably the area of the game where we’re struggling the most right now. We worked on it in practice and I thought we did a better job against Uniontown than Chartiers-Houston (a 48-30 loss last week at BrownsvilleĢƵ Falcon Fest) but itĢƵ still not good enough. We’ve got to reduce the turnovers.
“But give Uniontown credit. I thought they played really well defensively.”
Uniontown outscored Brownsville 11-8 in the third quarter for a 31-30 lead.
“Our defense is playing really well,” coach Jenkins said. “We haven’t given up more than 50 points this year. I challenged the girls at halftime to not let them score 10 points in the third and they meet that challenge.”
Two consecutive baskets by Gates helped the Lady Falcons reclaim the lead, 34-32, early in the fourth quarter.
Uniontown took control at that point, holding Brownsville scoreless for the next five minutes during a 12-point run for a 44-36 advantage with 1:17 left.
Jenkins started the run with a pair of free throws to tie it at 34-34 and Khloey Wakefield hit a baseline jumper for her only points of the game to put the Lady Raiders ahead to stay. Long followed with a steal and a layup before Jenkins scored the next six points to cap the run.
“Aierra was the leader but we had a lot of girls play really well tonight, especially defensively,” coach Jenkins said. “Khloey, who played the whole game, Ambree, who is a freshman. Lyric played really well, too, and Charley was knocking down shots.”
Clark snapped BrownsvilleĢƵ drought by scoring with 1:06 left. Horabik made it a one-possession game with a 3-pointer in the final seconds. Knowing Brownsville was out of timeouts, Uniontown wisely didn’t inbound the ball as the clock dwindled to zeroes.
Gates fouled out with 21 seconds left and Clark ended the game with four fouls.
“This is the second game in a row where we got ourselves in a little bit of foul trouble,” said Columbia. “Overall, I was very pleased with how we played defensively but I still feel we have to be a little bit more disciplined because we don’t want to keep being in that situation at the end of the game.
“Skyler and Ava always rise to the challenge but they had to pull back a little because they both had four fouls early in the fourth quarter and that hurt us. If we don’t commit those unnecessary fouls, that doesn’t happen.”
Uniontown extended its winning streak to three in Jenkins’ first year as a head coach. He was an assistant under Rick Hauger on Laurel Highlands’ WPIAL Class 5A championship boys team in 2020.
“The girls are learning how to win,” coach Jenkins said. “We’re all still learning though. I’m still learning, they’re still learning, we’re trying to get better every game.”
Jenkins chuckled when asked about his vocal way of coaching during a game.
“I try not to,” he said. “I go into a game and I’m like I’m not going to yell so much today but it never works out that way. I got a little bit of Shuck in me. I think he comes down from heaven and gets me to yelling.”
Jenkins commended the Lady Falcons.
“They’ve got a couple great players over there,” he said. “Skyler plays well. Ava is good. We wanted to try to take those two away as much as we could and make somebody else beat us. But Brownsville played well, too. It was a really good game.”
Columbia saw plenty of positive signs in her teamĢƵ performance despite the loss.
“We improved in a lot of areas,” Columbia said. “They rallied and didn’t give up. We played a good team to try to get ready for section. That was our goal.”
Brownsville was scheduled to host Waynesburg Central in its Section 3-3A opener Thursday night.













