Los Angeles Times

Sierra Canyon claims Open championsh­ip

Fourth-quarter surge led by Stanley, Pippen helps Trailblaze­rs pull away from Sheldon.

- By Eric Sondheimer

SIERRA CANYON 75 SHELDON 62

It only figured that going into the final quarter of the final high school basketball game of the season in the toughest division in California, a tie would exist. After 14 lead changes, lots of dunks and plenty of excitement, Chatsworth Sierra Canyon and Sacramento Sheldon were deadlocked for the state Open Division championsh­ip at Golden 1 Center on Saturday night.

The final eight minutes would decide it, and has been the case for much of March, Sierra Canyon has played its best basketball when the game is on the line. With Cassius Stanley and Scotty Pippen stepping forward to take charge, the Trailblaze­rs pulled away for a 75-62 triumph.

Stanley finished with 23 points, making eight of 10 shots. Pippen had 21 points and was seven of eight on free throws. Stanley was fortunate to be on the court. Last week, he had to leave the regional final after crashing to the court after a layup.

“My shoulders and hands saved me,” he said. “I felt great. I was still dinged up. My parents instilled in me to be a warrior and there was no way I was not playing.”

Sierra Canyon (27-4) responded in the fourth quarter when Duane Washington picked up a technical with 3:50 left and fouled out. That’s when the Trailblaze­rs guard depth came through.

Dale Currie played like Steph Curry at times for Sheldon (29-6), finishing with 20 points. KJ Martin contribute­d 11 points and 13 rebounds for Sierra Canyon, which outscored the Huskies 19-6 in the fourth quarter.

Scottie Pippen of six NBA titles fame was sitting in the front row watching his son, Scotty, and getting plenty of request for selfies. Fans kept shouting to officials to not be nice to the team with celebrity parents and sons of four former NBA players.

Sheldon was countering Sierra Canyon’s dunks with its own dunks early on.

Stanley got off to a strong start in his return, driving aggressive­ly and contributi­ng 16 points to help the Trailblaze­rs take a 38-36 halftime lead.

Sierra Canyon’s willingnes­s to spread the ball and be unselfish kept the pressure on Sheldon. That trait is the biggest reason the Trailblaze­rs went from a pretender to champion over the last three months. Players learned to trust one another. As their confidence grew, the Trailblaze­rs began to win close games.

Keeping everyone together and focused was firstyear coach Andre Chevalier. He was no rookie coach, having been a head coach at Reseda Cleveland and Westlake Village Oaks Christian, among others. He went into a pressure cooker after Sierra Canyon’s disappoint­ing finish last season when the Trailblaze­rs faltered despite having Marvin Bagley III.

Somehow he got everyone to buy into his scheme, and Sierra Canyon won its first Open Division title by making it through the toughest gantlet in California. eric.sondheimer@latimes.com

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