Los Angeles Times

Briggs tops legend Miller’s longtime career points mark

- By Luca Evans

A perfect storm led here, to one night in Ontario in front of a small crowd, a high school girl wearing a hoodie and a dazed smile sitting an hour after the layup that wrote her name into history.

Southern California has produced some of the greatest girls’ basketball talent the world has seen. Think of Inglewood Morningsid­e’s

Lisa Leslie or Chino Don Lugo’s Diana Taurasi. The gold standard is former Riverside Poly and USC great

Cheryl Miller, who set a CIF Southern Section record for points in a career that stood for 40 years.

Until Friday night at Ontario Christian. Until fouryear senior and Washington commit Chloe Briggs grabbed a fourth-quarter rebound in a tight game against Torrance Bishop Montgomery, heard her student section chanting “Histo-ry,” and decided now was the time.

“I’m like, ‘I’m going to get a bucket,’ ” Briggs said after the game. “‘This is it.’ ”

From the left wing above the three-point arc, the lefthander dipped into her bag for a James Harden-type isolation play, hypnotical­ly crossing the ball between her legs before snatching it back in a left-right crossover, gathering herself in the lane and lofting a floater off the glass that bounced around the rim. As it dropped, coach

Matt Tumambing raised his arms in celebratio­n and called time out, Briggs’ teammates mobbing her at half court.

With that make and 42 points in a 74-70 win Saturday night, Briggs eclipsed Miller’s record of 3,446 points, pulling ahead to 3,458 points and counting.

“I don’t think anyone’s going to come close to it for a while,” Tumambing said. “I think it takes a lot of longevity, a lot of playoff games.”

And therein lies the perfect storm, the moment that’s special for not just Briggs but also high school sports in general.

She arrived at a school of 400 kids as a singularly great talent, averaging 33.8 points per game as a freshman on an Ontario Christian team that played in Division 4AA.

In today’s landscape, that player might transfer elsewhere. Briggs stayed, and for four years took her team up a playoff level each year in the Southern Section until it reached the Open Division this season.

“Before Chloe Briggs, no one knew who Ontario Christian was,” Tumambing said. “Generation­s to come are going to want to come here because of what she’s done.”

The coach has been more invested in Briggs’ record chase than she has, he acknowledg­ed, and has been tracking her progress all season. She came into Saturday’s matchup 31 points away, squarely within reach but in need of a strong game.

Briggs was trying to avoid thinking about it. They just needed a win. Yet Tumambing talked with the coaching staff about running a few extra sets for her early, and she got going with 14 points and a string of three-point plays in the first quarter.

By that point, Briggs knew.

The celebratio­n planned, Briggs said after the game, was simple: Her teammates were coming to her house to sleep over. A program cornerston­e, through and through.

“It was a special moment,” Briggs said, “that’ll be in my head forever.”

Championsh­ips on the line

Anyone paying attention to girls’ basketball in the Southern Section was waiting for Chatsworth Sierra Canyon and Etiwanda to advance to a rematch in the Open Division final next weekend. After Sierra Canyon dispatched Newport Beach Sage Hill and Etiwanda outlasted Santa Ana Mater Dei on Saturday night, they’ll meet again in a scintillat­ing private-vs.public school matchup Saturday at Honda Center.

Two other championsh­ip games of note:

▪ L.A. Marlboroug­h (22-8) is in the Southern Section Division 1 final for the first time in program history, a fact that had coach Sixx Johnson rubbing his eyes with disbelief as soon as he woke up Sunday morning. Sisters Bella and Lauren Munoz share the backcourt in support of senior center Autumn Hill , a 6foot-3 force in the middle who rejected eight shots in a semifinal win over Fullerton Rosary. The Mustangs will play Orange Lutheran for the title Friday or Saturday at Honda Center at a time to be determined Monday.

▪ In the City Section, Sun Valley Poly (22-5) advanced to the Division I final behind twins Hannah and Heart Lising. The two grew up in the Philippine­s and came to America for high school as most of their extended family remained behind; now, they’re on a journey to pursue college basketball. The Parrots play LACES in the title game on a date (Thursday-Saturday) and time to be determined Monday.

 ?? Courtesy of Matt Tumambing ?? CHLOE BRIGGS of Ontario Christian takes in the “special moment.”
Courtesy of Matt Tumambing CHLOE BRIGGS of Ontario Christian takes in the “special moment.”

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