Category: Oak Hill

Wheelersburg over Oak Hill

Results

TeamTOutcome
Wheelersburg56Win
Oak Hill49Loss

WHEELERSBURG —When Wheelersburg needed them the most on Tuesday night, Matthew Miller and Eli Swords sure made for a pretty good third-quarter tag team.

That’s because the junior Miller and sophomore Swords spearheaded the host Pirates’ pull-away from the Oak Hill Oaks in the third quarter, as the pair combined for all 16 of the Pirates’ points in the third period.

Then, in the fourth frame, it was junior J.J. Truitt’s turn to take a run at the Oaks, as he tallied 10 points in the stanza — and helped secure the Pirates’ important 56-49 Southern Ohio Conference Division II triumph.

That’s correct.

It was one of Wheelersburg’s biggest victories of the year.

In addition to capturing their fifth consecutive win over Oak Hill and legendary head coach Norm Persin, the Pirates — the defending division champions — pushed the Oaks from atop the SOC II standings, as Wheelersburg and Waverly now share the league lead at 10-1.

Wheelersburg, which raised its record to 14-2, also completed the season sweep of now 15-3 Oak Hill —having won the first meeting between the two 50-47 at Oak Hill back on Dec. 17.

The Oaks also entered the return bout as the fourth-ranked team in the fourth weekly Associated Press Ohio High School boys basketball Division III poll.

But while Tuesday’s triumph, in front of a boisterous crowd at Wheelersburg High School, was pivotal for the Pirates —head coach Steven Ater admitted that it’s only the latest step.

“This was a big game for us, not only for the league but also (Division III tournament) sectional seeding. Now we have two wins over them (Oaks), which I think is going to help separate some things. But, we have to make sure we don’t overlook anybody down the line, because every game is the most important game when you’re talking about trying to win a league title,” he said.

Indeed, there is a lot of basketball left to decide the SOC II championship —as the race, despite being the end of January —is still way too close to call.

Oak Hill hosts Waverly on Friday night, while Wheelersburg still must travel to Minford next Tuesday night and to Waverly next Friday night.

The Tigers, hosting Minford on Tuesday, avoided falling out of that first-place tie with Wheelersburg —as Waverly prevailed 68-63 in overtime.

For the Pirates, the second meeting with the Oaks was much different than the early Christmas miracle they pulled off in Oak Hill.

In that affair, Wheelersburg was reeling at the end of the third quarter — trailing by nine points prior to staging an epic comeback and escaping “The Nuthouse” with a massive victory.

In the third quarter on Tuesday, and after holding a 21-13 halftime advantage, the Pirates withstood nine unanswered Oaks’ points for Oak Hill’s only lead —by ending the final five minutes and 10 seconds on a 16-8 run, which included 10 unanswered points of their own for their largest advantage at 37-24.

The Oaks’ lead, in fact, lasted a mere 10 seconds.

The difference-making duo was Miller and Swords, who had combined in the first half for a mere Miller second-quarter field goal.

But the tandem tallied all 16 of the Pirates’ points in the third, as Miller made three baskets and 3-of-3 free throws — while Swords sank three field goals, including a three-pointer to make it 33-24.

Swords scored at the five-minute mark to give the hosts back the lead at 22-21, as Miller muscled seven straight points on two free throws — followed by a field goal and finally a three-point play to make it a six-point edge (30-24).

After Swords splashed his three-point goal, Miller and Swords scored another deuce apiece —for a 37-24 advantage at about the 1:10 point.

Each missed only a shot apiece in the quarter, as Miller attacked the rim —and the Oaks simply couldn’t and didn’t stop him.

Miller managed a dozen points on four field goals and 4-of-7 foul shots, while Swords scored 10 on two deuces and two treys.

Miller also dished out four assists.

“I thought Matthew Miller was really good as far as driving the basketball tonight. He got in straight lines, and went downhill. He did a great job either creating and finishing himself,” said Ater. “He got to the free-throw line a bunch too.”

Persin, whose Oaks teams are highly-regarded for being a lockdown defensive juggernaut, pinpointed the lack of stops against the Pirates’ dribble-drives.

In all three of Oak Hill’s losses, it has allowed at least 50 points —as Wooster Triway totaled 58 on the Oaks in their non-league game in Canton (Jan. 19).

“We took the lead and then we couldn’t get a stop. We got up one and then before you know it, we’re down eight again. They just kept pushing the ball,” said Persin. “We told our kids they were going to push it in transition. Miller kept pushing the ball, kept pushing, kept pushing and if he didn’t find a teammate with the pass, he finished himself. It’s one of those things.”

The Oaks, which trailed anywhere from one to eight points throughout the entire first half while shooting just 5-of-18 with eight of their 12 turnovers, actually ended the tide-turning third only down seven (37-30) — thanks to three-pointers by Drew Hanning and Landon Hines in the final 35 seconds.

But Truitt took over in the fourth, scoring 10 points including eight on four made field goals —as the Pirates played with the lead and maintained it from six to 12 points, despite converting only 4-of-13 free throws in the frame.

Truitt paced the Pirates with 15 points, as his only other markers were a two and a three in the first quarter.

Ater said the Pirates “played through” Truitt all game, as they shot 50-percent (19-of-38) from inside the arc and 46-percent (22-of-48) overall.

“We kept isolating J.J. and kept getting him the ball, and he finds Eli (Swords) in the corner for a three when they tried to double-team him or he drives and finds other guys and makes plays for other people. We put the ball in his hands and went through him, even though he may not be our primary scorer,” said the coach. “That’s the type of player he is. He sets up other guys. Then in the fourth quarter, we trusted him to make plays. He was driving and taking contact and just going all night long. He is bruised and scratched and beat up right now, but you could see it in his eyes that he wants to go make plays.”

Carter McCorkle made it four Pirates in double-figure scoring, as he bagged five field goals and two made free throws towards 12 points —while also grabbing 10 rebounds and battling Oak Hill’s standout six-foot four-inch senior center Chase Hammond underneath.

McCorkle carried Wheelersburg offensively in the early stages of the first meeting, and scored nine first-half points on Tuesday night.

Like the initial matchup, McCorkle picked up a first-period personal foul —and so Ater opted to alter him defending Hammond in favor of Gage Adkins and Kenny Sanderlin.

That allowed McCorkle to avoid further foul trouble, and able to guard Hammond harder for the second half.

Hammond —after pouring in 22 points in the first meeting but only scoring four in the final two quarters —had 11 points on 5-of-11 shooting on Tuesday, and also grabbed 11 rebounds.

“Hammond is the one everybody is going to gameplan for and try and take away, and we are no different,” said Ater. “Gage (Adkins) and Kenny (Sanderlin) really played some big minutes for us defensively and on the glass and giving us some points when we needed them. Those two guarded him (Hammond) for the rest of the half and did such a fantastic job of limiting his scoring, and that allows Carter to stay out of foul trouble and fresh for the second half.”

While the Pirates held Hammond down, Hanning went off for a game-high 26 — on nine field goals including four three-pointers.

Hanning had only four points at halftime, but erupted in the second 16 minutes for 22, including four twos and three threes.

He also made 5-of-7 foul shots, including two to trim the deficit to 49-43 with 2:22 remaining — and two more to make it 54-49 with only 12 tics to go.

But the Oaks got no closer, as Truitt and Miller split a pair of double-bonus free throws in the final 10 seconds.

Persin said Hanning and Hammond — outside of Hines hitting two treys towards eight points — had little-to-no help.

The Oaks only shot 6-of-20 from three-point range, as Keaton Potter and Erik Kallner collected field goals for their only other points.

Trailing by as large as 13 late in the third, Oak Hill had just 13 shot attempts in the fourth — and committed its other four turnovers.

“We didn’t get enough help for Chase and Drew. The other kids had to step up and they didn’t,” said Persin. “We kept battling back and they were missing free throws, but we couldn’t get a bucket on the other end. It’s the way it is, and it’s just hard winning on the road, especially against when we’re playing a quality team.”

The Oaks, of course, aim to get right back in the SOC II championship chase —and can do so by defeating Waverly, which did they so on the road on Dec. 20.

“We have to take care of business at home and try to win on Friday and we’ll see what happens down the road,” said Persin. “There’s a lot of things that can happen, but we have to come back.”

The Pirates, meanwhile, move on to host Northwest on Friday night — before those critical road shows next week.

However, they had to have the sweep against the Oaks —and Ater praised them for “playing well and together”.

“Really proud of these guys and the way they played tonight,” he said. “This was the big game in front of us, and I thought we were locked in and focused.”

* * *

Oak Hill 4 9 17 19 — 49

Wheelersburg 10 11 16 19—56

OAK HILL 49 (15-3, 10-2 SOC II)

Keaton Potter 1 0-0 2, Erik Kallner 1 0-0 2, Drew Hanning 8 6-9 26, Luke Stewart 0 0-0 0, Noah Donley 0 0-0 0, Landon Hines 3 0-0 8, Chase Hammond 5 1-14 11, Braylon Howell 0 0-0 0; TOTALS 18 7-13 49; Three-point goals: 6 (Drew Hanning 4, Landon Hines 2)

WHEELERSBURG 56 (14-2, 10-1 SOC II)

Aaron Jolly 0 0-0 0, Matthew Miller 4 4-7 12, Eli Swords 4 0-0 10, Carter McCorkle 5 2-6 12, J.J. Truitt 5 2-5 15, Gage Adkins 0 0-0 0, Kenny Sanderlin 3 1-2 7; TOTALS 22 9-20 56; Three-point goals: 3 (Eli Swords 2, J.J. Truitt 1)

Wheelersburg

# Player PTS REB AST STL BLK
10Aaron Jolly00000
11Josh Clark00000
12Mathew Miller120000
13Eli Swords100000
14Aaron Masters00000
15Jonah Lawson00000
21Carter McCorkle120000
22JJ Truitt150000
23Gage Adkins00000
24Mason Montgomery00000
25Brayden Wilson00000
33Corey Maxie00000
35Kenny Sanderlin70000
 Total560000

Oak Hill

# Player PTS REB AST STL BLK
Braylin Howell00000
3Keaton Potter20000
5Erik Kallner20000
10Drew Hanning260000
11Landon Hines80000
15Luke Stewart00000
21Noah Donley00000
24Chase Hammond110000
32Jordan Morgan00000
44Cricket Stilner00000
 Total490000

Court

Wheelersburg

Details

Date Time League Season
January 28, 2020 7:30 pm SEO 2019-20

Oak Hill 53 Coal Grove 27

Results

TeamTOutcome
Oak Hill53Win
Coal Grove27Loss

By Pfloyd

Photos by Kent Sanborn

This one was imo the weakest game of the day NOT due to the opponents BUT the fact that Coal Grove entered this one with 4 of their first 7 players injured … EVEN with MY little mind if you play a Coach Persin TEAM you better come with ALL of your weapons, Coach Vanderhoof simply didn’t have the arsenal available to go against a very good Oak Hill TEAM … it didn’t mean the Coach ‘hoof’s troops were phoning it in – the played hard but with some players having very little varsity experience …

CG was led by senior

#
3
Name
Evan Gannon
Class
2020
Current Team
Coal Grove
Leagues
OVC, SEO
Seasons
2018-19, 2019-20
Evan Gannon’s 17 points for the game (15 by halftime) … on the other side of the court – Oak Hill …

Head Coach Coach Persin

Current Team
Oak Hill
Past Teams
Chesapeake
  Coach Persin with 757+ W’s … an Oaks TEAM which plays fundamentally sound hoops at both ends of the floor … outstanding D …

AND last but not least 6-4 “man in the middle” Chase Hammond …

#
24
Name
Chase Hammond
Class
2020
Current Team
Oak Hill
Leagues
All Time Stat Leaders, SEO, SOC2
Seasons
2018-19, 2019-20
CH is as strong a post player as you will find, probably inch for inch the BEST post player I have seen this season … strong, stronger, strongest physically AND not the least of importance is Coach Persin “teaches/has taught” Chase Hammond HOW TO PLAY in the post position – getting position/hand positions to receive the pass from the perimeter/ the footwork of a post player/ the knowledge as to how to get the defender out of position & seal him off … at the same time Coach Persin TEACHERS his perimeter people “how to feed the post !” it always amazes me at the size some teams have in the post but can’t take advantage because the players – in the post or the perimeter players – have not been taught how to play their positions to take advantage of the “physical advantage” they have … Chase Hammond is outstanding … he doesn’t TRY to do MORE than what the defender gives him, but he works to make himself available on the blocks … when he gets the ball – advantage Hammond – 26 points 8/9 from the FT line … Hammond 26 CG 29 a final … Oak Hill 53 Coal Grove 29 a final …

Pfloyd’s official UN-official Napkin Stats – Coal Grove

Scoring … Evan Gannon 17, Peyton Smith 5, Perry Kingery 2, Luke Ferguson 2, Maliachi Wheeler 2, Jarren Hicks 1
3 Pointers … 2/9 … Evan Gannon 2
FTs ….. 3/8
TOs ….. 15
PnP … 8 fgs/16 points in the paint
PnT … 0
Pbck … 2 fgs/4 points on putbacks

Pfloyd’s official UN-official Napkin Stats – Oak Hill

Scoring … Chase Hammond 26, Drew Hanning 12, Braylin Howell 5, Landon Hines 3, Luke Stewart 3, Keaton Porter 2, Noah Donley 2
3 Pointers … 4/16 … Drew Hanning 2, Braylon Howell 1, Landon Hines 1
FTs ……… 10/11
TOs …… 7
PnP ….. 14 fgs/28 points in the paint
PnT ….. 1fg /2 points in transition
Pbck …. 1 fg/ 2 points on putback buckets

… saw some described Oak Hill as boring … I personally smile the entire game when watching teams that are fundamentally sound teams – Oak Hill … players who have been taught the basics of the game – the triple threat position, simple chest passes, bounce passes … I watch Oak Hill – the goal is perfection in the half court – movement without the ball, making the pass the first option vs the dribble … defense that emphasizes footwork, putting a body on the offensive player, keeping offensive players on the opposition from getting to the spots on the floor that they want to get to, disrupting the flow of the opposing offense … not sure how anyone can argue against Coach Persin being a “legend” court side with 757+ wins to his credit … if you coach/teach fundamentals to every single player from your best to the last man on the bench you will be a good TEAM, when that same philosophy is applied year in year out – the years when the physical talents of your players are outstanding to go along with the fundamentals THEN you have ELITE TEAMS …

 

Read more recaps from the beat here along with the all tournament team

play by play from the beast here

beast photo’s here 

Oak Hill

# Player PTS REB AST STL BLK
3Keaton Potter20000
10Drew Hanning120000
11Landon Hines30000
21Noah Donley20000
24Chase Hammond260000
Braylin Howell50000
15Luke Stewart30000
 Total530000

Coal Grove

# Player PTS REB AST STL BLK
1Perry Kingery20000
3Evan Gannon170000
5Peyton Smith50000
12Luke Ferguson20000
14Maliachi Wheeler20000
23Jarren Hicks10000
 Total290000

Court

Chesapeake

Details

Date Time League Season
January 11, 2020 12:00 pm SEO 2019-20

Burg rallies for dramatic win at Oak Hill

Results

TeamTOutcome
Oak Hill47Loss
Wheelersburg50Win

Pirates pull through against Oaks

‘Burg rallies for dramatic win at Oak Hill

By Paul Boggs

 

 

OAK HILL — You can’t quite call it a Christmas miracle, but what the Wheelersburg Pirates pulled off on Tuesday night at Oak Hill had to come close.

As the Oaks attempted to steal the Pirates’ proverbial Christmas, and earn a leg up in the early-season Southern Ohio Conference Division II championship chase, the Pirates pulled off an impressive fourth-quarter comeback — and ultimately a key victory in their quest to go back-to-back atop the SOC II.

Trailing by nine entering the final quarter, and out of sorts at that juncture after adversity all throughout, Wheelersburg stunned Oak Hill by outscoring the Oaks 14-2 in the fourth — and escaped “The Nuthouse” with an improbable but gigantic 50-47 ‘W’.

That’s correct.

With the victory, Wheelersburg — the defending division champion after Oak Hill held the title for two years — raised its record to 3-0 both ways, while the Oaks (5-1, 3-1 SOC II) are no longer undefeated.

It was also the Pirates’ fourth consecutive win over Oak Hill — which has one of the top workhorse players in Southeastern Ohio in six-foot, four-inch senior center Chase Hammond and longtime legendary head coach Norm Persin, who ranks third all-time in career coaching victories in the Buckeye State with 753.

However, for the here and now, Wheelersburg and Waverly are tied for the SOC II lead at 3-0 — with the Oaks now a game back in the loss column.

And, you have to consider this one an early Christmas present for the Pirates.

“We talk to our kids all the time about winning the moment. The moment tonight was winning each individual possession and getting each individual stop, and combine those up to that one moment to win the game. We did that,” said Wheelersburg coach Steven Ater. “In the fourth quarter, we put ourselves in position because we kept winning a few more little battles. We flipped to that 14-2 finish, and I really liked the way we came together tonight. We had a lot of great performances from a lot of different guys.”

The Pirates, prior to leading or being tied for the final two minutes and five seconds, had led only once at 14-12 at the five-and-a-half minute mark of the second quarter — after trailing 10-3 just four minutes and 53 seconds into the opening period.

In fact, Oak Hill had Wheelersburg down by nine on four occasions, including 28-19, 30-21, 43-34 and finally 45-36 at the end of the third frame — following Hammond’s first field goal of the second half after amassing 18 first-half points on a spectacular 9-of-10 shooting.

However, Hammond — and the Oaks — only amounted two more points the rest of the way, and those weren’t until only a minute and 40 seconds remained.

Meanwhile, the Pirates “pulled together” as Ater admitted — and put together a 14-point period that, truth be told, was really remarkable.

“I thought we saw a group come together after struggling to find our identity. We have a lot of new faces, mixing together for the first time. And that’s a whole lot of adversity we faced,” said the coach. “The ball started moving and we started trusting one another. I was really proud of how we came together like that, playing unselfish.”

Through the first three-and-a-half minutes, Eli Swords sank a three-pointer, J.J. Truitt split two free throws, and freshman Kenny Sanderlin scored off a Matthew Miller assist to get within 45-42.

Finally, a minute and 15 tics later, Truitt — the standout junior who had scored 18 points apiece in each of the Orange and Black’s opening two tilts — tagged the Oaks with arguably the shot of the night.

Truitt pulled up just inside the volleyball line, and from well outside the arc splashed the game-tying three-pointer.

Call it the shot heard ‘round Oak Hill, but you could hear the celebration all the way back in Wheelersburg.

“That’s just the confidence and the work J.J. has put in. He starts to step into that shot, and we all felt like it was going in,” said Ater. “For him to step through, and clear his mind and have the confidence to knock that down, just really proud of him.”

But, the Pirates weren’t done.

With 2:05 to play, the Pirates pushed in front 47-45 — only their second lead and first in 19 minutes and 25 seconds after initially leading for only 17 seconds.

Carter McCorkle made the go-ahead bucket — right underneath the rim and on a drop-off dump-off pass from Swords.

After Hammond had the game-tying basket 25 seconds later, which turned out to be the Oaks’ only points of the entire quarter, Sanderlin sank a pair of clutch free throws for a 49-47 Wheelersburg lead at the 1:06 mark.

Swords then made the Pirates’ primary defensive play — blocking the shot of Oak Hill’s Keaton Potter as he drove down the lane with 26 seconds to go.

Truitt then split a pair of free throws five seconds later, which gave the Oaks an opportunity for the tie and force overtime tied at 50 apiece.

After an Oak Hill timeout with 13.7 seconds showing, Drew Hanning had a great look for the tie off the left wing but missed, although Potter grabbed the rebound with the final seconds ticking away.

Potter raced right back to the other wing and attempted a contested three, but his trey try also didn’t fall — and Wheelersburg was the winner in unlikely fashion from just eight minutes earlier.

But while Wheelersburg’s offense produced 50 points, with Sanderlin scoring 14 on five field goals and 3-of-5 foul shots and Truitt tallying 13 on four field goals and 4-of-7 free throws, it was the Pirates’ second-half defense on Hammond that made the biggest difference.

Hammond, the Oaks’ excellent scorer and offensive rebounder, had a game-high 22 points on 11 field goals — including eight of the team’s 10 first-period points followed by 10 of the team’s 20 in the second stanza.

Hammond has a superior drop-step move when posted up, and executed it to perfection as the Pirates simply had no answer.

Ater explained that the 6-4 McCorkle started on Hammond, but he picked up a quick foul, and the Pirates played primarily Sanderlin on Hammond until the start of the second half.

With McCorkle manning Hammond, he only scored in the waning seconds of the third — followed by his and the Oaks’ only points of the fourth.

“We did a great job defensively in the second half. Carter (McCorkle) adjusted to how he was playing him (Hammond). We took Carter off him after he got that foul, saving him for the second half. I thought Kenny (Sanderlin) and Gage (Adkins) and J.J. (Truitt) all battled with him, but he got a lot of clean looks. That’s just how good of a player he can be. But Carter’s length, in the second half, certainly bothered him,” said Ater. “Give Carter credit, or we wouldn’t even have a chance in that ballgame.”

But Persin said Wheelersburg didn’t do anything different defensively in the second half as opposed to the first.

“Chase (Hammond) made the same moves he made all night, but in the fourth quarter he just doesn’t finish them. They kept switching men on him, but it was just about him not finishing. He made some good moves around the basket, but look how many shots rolled around the rim and wouldn’t fall for him. We get to the rim a couple of times, and we don’t make them,” he said. “We played the game hard for three quarters, and we played it hard for the fourth, we just didn’t finish things.”

Fouls and foul shooting also impacted the Oaks, which only go about seven-deep, as Oak Hill had foul trouble all throughout.

In the first half, Potter, Noah Donley and Landon Hines had three fouls apiece, as Potter — on a double-technical situation with Truitt that stemmed from a loose-ball battle with 2:26 remaining in the third quarter — played the final 10:26 with four personals.

Wheelersburg benefited from attempting 18 free throws and making 11, while Oak Hill had only eight attempts and connected on four.

Three of those misses, in fact, were crucial front ends of the one-and-one bonus situation — in the final three-and-a-half minutes.

Hammond missed his before Truitt tied it at 45-45, as Potter and Hanning had their misses on the possessions prior to the Pirates seizing the 47-45 lead.

“You have to make your free throws. Let’s say if we split those three free throws, that’s three points, and we probably win the game somewhere along the line,” said Persin.

Hanning, on four field goals and 4-of-6 free throws including three third-period baskets and 2-of-3 foul shots, had a dozen for the Oaks.

Luke Stewart sank two triples as part of the 20-point second stanza, while Potter posted five in the 15-point third on a deuce and a trey.

Donley dropped in a field goal in the second quarter.

Persin said the Oaks’ opportunity at a key conference victory simply got away, but that it is indeed a long season, especially in the SOC II.

Oak Hill has a chance to rebound on Friday night when it travels to Waverly.

“We go to Waverly on Friday and let’s see what we do there. We can bounce back and get one on the road. This is a long season in the league. There’s a lot of good teams in our league, so I don’t think anybody is going to walk through it undefeated,” said Persin. “So we shall see.”

Miller added eight Pirate points on two field goals and 4-of-6 first-half foul shots, which kept the Pirates within striking distance at halftime trailing 30-25.

Swords scored seven on three field goals, McCorkle mustered six on three baskets, and Gage Adkins added a bucket in the third frame.

Ater explained that every Pirate point of the 50 was necessary — in being able to pull off what was close to a Christmas miracle on Tuesday night.

“We traded punches with them for a half, but we were able to deliver the last one in the fourth. It was just our guys’ heart and resolve to simply not lose this game,” he said. “At different points throughout the night, we could have just folded it up, said good job by Oak Hill and gone on home. But our guys had a lot more spirit and fight in them tonight and I am really proud of them.”

Wheelersburg will return to the road, and will return to SOC II action, on Friday night at winless Northwest.

* * *

Wheelersburg 7 18 11 14— 50

Oak Hill 10 20 15 2— 47

WHEELERSBURG 50 (3-0, 3-0 SOC II)

Aaron Jolly 0 0-0 0, Matthew Miller 2 4-6 8, Eli Swords 3 0-0 7, Aaron Masters 0 0-0 0, Carter McCorkle 3 0-0 6, J.J. Truitt 4 4-7 13, Gage Adkins 1 0-0 2, Kenny Sanderlin 5 3-5 14; TOTALS 18 11-18 50; Three-point goals: 3 (Eli Swords, J.J. Truitt and Kenny Sanderlin 1 apiece)

OAK HILL 47 (5-1, 3-1 SOC II)

Keaton Potter 2 0-1 5, Drew Hanning 4 4-6 12, Luke Stewart 2 0-0 6, Noah Donley 1 0-0 2, Landon Hines 0 0-0 0 Chase Hammond 11 0-1 22, Jordan Morgan 0 0-0 0; TOTALS 20 4-8 47; Three-point goals: 3 (Luke Stewart 2, Keaton Potter 1)

Oak Hill

# Player PTS REB AST STL BLK
3Keaton Potter50000
10Drew Hanning120000
11Landon Hines00000
15Luke Stewart60000
21Noah Donley20000
24Chase Hammond220000
32Jordan Morgan00000
 Total470000

Wheelersburg

# Player PTS REB AST STL BLK
10Aaron Jolly00000
12Mathew Miller80000
13Eli Swords70000
14Aaron Masters00000
21Carter McCorkle60000
22JJ Truitt130000
23Gage Adkins20000
35Kenny Sanderlin140000
 Total500000

Court

Oak Hill

Details

Date Time League Season
December 17, 2019 7:30 pm SEO 2019-20