Summers, bench lead depleted Midshipmen past archrival
Navy men’s basketball absorbed some tough body blows before Saturday afternoon’s showdown against archrival Army even began.
Coach Ed DeChellis learned early in the morning that backup forward Daniel Deaver would not be available due to contact tracing involving an individual not affiliated with the program.
DeChellis was writing his keys to the game on the chalkboard in the locker room when an assistant came in to report that starting swingman John Carter Jr. rolled an ankle during pregame warmups.
In addition, team captain and leading scorer Cam Davis got into foul trouble and was forced to sit on the bench for significant portions of the game.
Junior guard Greg Summers took over the leadership role offensively and several reserves provided a much-needed pickme-up as the Midshipmen overcame those personnel setbacks.
Summers notched a double-double with 17 points and 12 rebounds to lift Navy to a 69-62 victory over Army in front of 250 fans at Alumni Hall. Summers also dished off five assists and played outstanding defense on Army guard Josh Caldwell as the Midshipmen (10-1, 7-0) remained unbeaten in the Patriot League.
Sophomore guard Patrick Dorsey delivered another solid all-around effort off the bench with 13 points, eight rebounds and two steals for Navy, which led from start to finish. Sophomore forward Jaylen Walker contributed 10 points as the bench accounted for 28 in total.
Army and Navy are playing four times this season, which has never happened. It was determined that Saturday’s meeting would be the “Star” game, and afterward the Midshipmen
were presented with the Alumni Trophy that had resided in West Point for the past year.
“I’m just really, really proud of our team because other guys stepped up,” DeChellis said. “I thought our guys off the bench did an unbelievable job. Jaylen Walker, Patrick Dorsey and Austin Inge did really good things. It was a total team effort.”
After playing just seven minutes and scoring five points, Davis came through down the stretch and finished with 11 points. Junior forward Richard Njoku contributed
10 points as the Mids had five players reach double digits.
“Coach told us guys were going to have to step up, the bench was going to have to step up,” Summers said. “Guys like Jaylen Walker and Pat Dorsey stepped up and had huge games today. In the end, it paid dividends.”
Davis ranks third in the Patriot League in scoring with 18.6 points per game, while Carter (11.9 ppg) was the only other member of the team averaging double figures. Summers put the offense on his back during their absence, repeatedly slicing into the lane
to score on short jumpers or drawing fouls. He did considerable damage from the charity stripe, going 9-for-11.
“I thought Greg Summers had a monster game. He really carried us in the second half,” DeChellis said. “We tried to get him in the open floor where he could drive the basketball. He did a really good job of that, then he got to the free-throw line.”
Through nine games, Summers was averaging 6.1 points and had yet to reach double digits. The 6-foot-4, 200-pound wing broke out of his offensive slump last Sunday, scoring a career-high 21 points against American.
“The kid has really listened to what we need him to do offensively,” DeChellis said. “I thought earlier in the year he was taking too many jump shots. I think his strength is putting the ball on the floor and getting to the rim.”
Summers said afterward, “I definitely feel like I’ve found my rhythm” and vowed to “continue to be aggressive taking the ball to the basket.”
Senior guard Lonnie Grayson scored 18 points and grabbed eight rebounds to lead Army (8-4, 4-3), which was outrebounded 42-29. Senior guard Tucker Blackwell came off the bench to drain three 3-pointers in netting 13 points for the Black Knights.
“I give Navy a lot of credit for being ready to go,” Army coach Jimmy Allen said. “They were really consistent throughout the game. I thought their physicality on the glass affected us — that and their ability to get to the free throw line were ultimately the difference.”