Times Colonist

Bulldogs ready to lead the pack

- CLEVE DHEENSAW cdheensaw@timescolon­ist.com

It’s that time of year again for warm gyms on cool nights as the ritual dance of high school basketball begins anew.

It does so in Island boys’ quadruple-A with the Belmont Bulldogs given the best shot of knocking off the provincial­ly third-ranked Oak Bay Bays. The Bulldogs began their quest Tuesday night with the league opener at Mount Douglas against the host Rams.

“If we keep working together we think we can challenge,” said Belmont co-captain Lucas Gage.

The omission of coach Kevin Brown’s Belmont squad from even receiving an honourable mention in the pre-season B.C. top-10 poll surprised some. But that doesn’t concern the Bulldogs. And they should be cited soon enough, predicted Mount Douglas co-coach Chris Ball. That was attested by the Bulldogs’ 87-60 victory over the Rams on Tuesday.

“We have a veteran core in the starting lineup and good, young players off the bench,” said Bulldogs co-captain Julius Kennedy.

“We take it one week at a time right now. We just play hoops.”

And pretty well, by the looks of it.

Mount Douglas, meanwhile, answers with B.C. U-15 team player Matthew Geng. You read that right. The national chess champion is in Grade 11 but skipped a grade, so is basically a Grade 10 kid who looks to be one of the top stories in Island high school hoops.

“Our mental game and team chemistry will be the keys to our season,” said Geng.

Without injured six-foot-six Rams football left tackle Phil Grohovac, who is a candidate to play U Sports at the university gridiron level, the Rams’ approach changed drasticall­y. With Grohovac’s ample presence missing in the middle, Geng’s perimeter game becomes even more predominan­t. But this remains a team capable of springing a surprise or two under the tutelage of co-coaches Ball and Josh Clouthier. Their team should have some astute chess-like moves, quite literally. Not only is Geng a national champion but Rams teammate Jason Chow was also world chess champion at 13 in the age-group level. Nobody is going to outthink the Rams, that’s for sure.

In the Sportvicto­ria.com pre-season quadruple-A rankings, Oak Bay and Belmont are 1-2 followed by Claremont, Nanaimo, Dover Bay, Cowichan, Mount Douglas and Spectrum. In triple-A, provincial top-10 Wellington is top-ranked on the Island, followed in order by Mark Isfeld, Carihi, Vanier, Barsby, Vic High, Royal Bay, Esquimalt, Reynolds and Alberni.

Provincial­ly top-ranked Brentwood College is rated tops in an Island double-A top-five that includes Shawnigan Lake, Lambrick Park, SMUS and Gulf Islands. GNS is provincial­ly top-ranked in single-A.

The girls’ high school hoops season also opens this week, but the highlight is the annual Victoria Christmas Tournament on Friday and Saturday in gyms around the region, and featuring B.C. top-10 ranked Oak Bay, Claremont and SMUS mixing it up against powerhouse programs from around B.C. and Alberta.

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Mount Doug Rams guard Matthew Geng tries to drive past Belmont Bulldogs guard Maxwell Leeder during Lower Island senior boys’ action at Mount Doug on Tuesday.
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Mount Doug Rams guard Matthew Geng tries to drive past Belmont Bulldogs guard Maxwell Leeder during Lower Island senior boys’ action at Mount Doug on Tuesday.

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