The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Dartmouth wins Christmas Classic

Spartans defeat host Three Oaks Axemen in tournament final

- BY JASON SIMMONDS jpsports@journalpio­neer.com Twitter.com/JpsportsJa­son www.facebook.com/ jason.simmonds.180

The Dartmouth High Spartans capped an undefeated weekend in Summerside on an impressive note.

The Spartans overcame an early deficit to defeat the host Three Oaks Axemen 117-80 in Saturday afternoon’s championsh­ip game of the 24th edition of the Christmas Classic basketball tournament, sponsored by Holland College.

“We knew they were going to be strong,” said Axemen head coach Faro Halupa. “It’s what we need. Every time you play you want to be pushed, and they pushed us for sure.

“I thought that we responded pretty well. The game was closer than the score indicated. We really fought, we weren’t scared and we didn’t give up, and that’s all you can ask for in a game when you are playing another really strong team.”

Dartmouth concluded the three-day, eight-team tournament, which attracted senior AAA boys-calibre entries from P.E.I., New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, at 4-0 (won-lost). Three Oaks went 3-1.

Early lead

The Axemen jumped out to an early 14-6 lead that had a big crowd at the Three Oaks Senior High School gymnasium into the game early. However, the Spartans rebounded to outscore the Axemen 22-8 over the final four minutes of the opening quarter to take a 28-22 lead.

“We started off slow, but called a timeout, regrouped and came back out and finished strong,” said Spartans’ five-foot-10 guard Kyrie Thompson, who poured in a game-high 32 points and was named the tournament’s most valuable player. “We made a couple of switches on defence, we talked on defence and good defence leads to offence.”

Scoring

Jonah Mosher (26), Chris Johnston (16) and Ben Harrington

(16) also had big games offensivel­y for Dartmouth, which opened up a 59-37 lead at halftime.

Ethan Boyd’s 21 points led the Axemen, who received 20 from Ben MacDougall and 15 from Logan Cameron.

Halupa added the Axemen learned lots of lessons against the Spartans.

“The pressure you see from a team like that, you don’t see from a team on P.E.I. for 40 minutes,” explained Halupa, who added the Spartans play a lot more physical style than the Axemen are accustomed to on P.E.I. “It’s nice to see things like that for the entire time.

“It’s nice to see teams you can learn lessons from just by the way they play, and you can take some things from them and try to incorporat­e that into your game. The end goal is provincial­s, and games like this just help us build to be a better team for that . . . You don’t want easy games; easy

games aren’t how you get better.”

Thompson, who was competing in his first Christmas Classic, said one thing the Spartans wanted to do early in the final was to take the boisterous crowd out of the game.

“It was a good tournament and a good atmosphere in the gym for the championsh­ip game,” said Thompson, a 15-year-old Grade 9 student from Dartmouth, N.S. “I like the way it was run.”

 ?? JASON SIMMONDS/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? The Dartmouth High Spartans’ Kyrie Thompson drives to the basket for a lay-up during first-half action in the championsh­ip game of the 24th edition of the Three Oaks Senior High School Christmas Classic in Summerside on Saturday afternoon.
JASON SIMMONDS/JOURNAL PIONEER The Dartmouth High Spartans’ Kyrie Thompson drives to the basket for a lay-up during first-half action in the championsh­ip game of the 24th edition of the Three Oaks Senior High School Christmas Classic in Summerside on Saturday afternoon.

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