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DDN
3/26/06
3/26/06
Mayo's 34 give NCH title No. 2
By Kyle Nagel
Dayton Daily News
COLUMBUS | When the game ended, minutes after the starting players from both teams had been taken out, O.J. Mayo walked slowly among his teammates holding up two fingers.
It signaled the second of a possible three state championships for one of the most talked-about and debated teams in Ohio high school basketball history.
North College Hill, which features Mayo, the near-consensus top junior in the country, and fellow junior phenom Bill Walker, overwhelmed Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph, 90-73, in the Division III state final on Saturday at the Schottenstein Center.
It was the first title repeat since — you guessed it — LeBron James led Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary to titles in 2002 and '03.
Only now, the bigger-than-life player is Mayo, a 6-foot-6 guard that many say would be the top player selected in the 2007 NBA Draft if he were eligible. He scored 34 points and added eight rebounds and seven assists as his legs cramped throughout.
"I still have some symptoms of pneumonia," Mayo said. "And, I was dehydrated."
You couldn't tell by his play, which caused the 16,024 in the crowd to hold their breath each time he gripped the ball. He sank plenty of shots, but he also helped Walker score 22 points (to go with 10 rebounds) and senior Andre Evans go 9-for-9 from the floor for 24 points.
"That's how we play," said NCH coach Jamie Mahaffey, "as a team."
Mayo scored 12 of NCH's first 18 points as the Trojans (26-1) built an 18-8 lead five minutes into the game. After trailing 47-30 at halftime, VASJ cut the deficit to 56-45 with 3:35 left in the third quarter, but three technical fouls against VASJ in 14 seconds — two of which led to the early exit of junior Maurice Haynes — allowed NCH to extend its lead to 19 points (64-45) and take firm control.
David Lighty, a VASJ senior guard headed to Ohio State, had 20 points and eight rebounds.
"I'm proud of my team that we battled and didn't give up," said senior Darryl Ruston, who had 20 points for VASJ. "They've got good players, but so do we."
Contact Kyle Nagel at 225-7389.
COMMENTARY
Tom Archdeacon: North College Hill collects titles, but not admiration
By Tom Archdeacon
COLUMBUS | They were the most despised team at the state tournament.
If that wasn't the case when North College Hill came to Columbus Thursday, it certainly was Saturday when they left here with their second straight Division III state title and the boos of many in the Schottenstein Center crowd of 16,024.
"The kids have had a rough year," NCH coach Jamie Mahaffey said after his Trojans outmuscled Cleveland Villa Angela -St. Joseph, 90-73. "We had a lot of stuff, a lot of pressure on us. I don't know if you'd say haters, whatever...but we had a lot."
With a team led by O.J. Mayo and Bill Walker —two out-of-state transfers who Villa Angela-St Joe coach Dave Wojciechowski said would be "the first and fifth picks" in the upcoming NBA draft were there no age limit — NCH has been on the magazine covers and under the microscope all season.
Although Mayo and Walker are two of the most phenomenal prep talents ever to play in the state, the more the Schott crowd watched the Trojans, the more they turned against them.
It was bad enough at game's end that for the first time all tournament, the referees — who removed Villa Angela-St. Joe center Maurice Haynes from the game with two technicals after calling another on Wojciechowski — left the floor from the opposite side of the arena and under guard to avoid the angry Vikings crowd.
The Haynes expulsion came after he and Walker tangled on a rebound and then Mayo stepped in and — according to Vikings' star David Lighty — "pushed" Haynes.
That's how it looked to many on press row and in the stands as well. And by the time NCH was awarded its championship trophy by a representative of the Ohio High School Athletic Association, most of the crowd had left.
As the NCH team celebrated with its trophy held high after the ceremony, an OHSAA official looked at them, shook his head and walked off.
I'm not sure what he was thinking, but if I had to guess it was the carpet-bag nature of the crown, which came not just on the talents of Mayo and Walker but — for much of the year — 6-foot-11 Keenan Ellis, who came in from Indianapolis.
Ellis was kicked off the team for unspecified reasons in February. Mayo missed the state semifinal Thursday for reasons the school wouldn't reveal either.
He was back in the line-up Saturday —scoring 34 points — and afterward claimed he'd missed his first three classes Wednesday.
The guy who three years ago could leave Huntington W.Va. and find NCH — a little known school outside Cincinnati that had won just two of 20 games the season prior — couldn't find third-period algebra the day before state.
He and Walker were ushered to NCH by Dwaine Barnes, his AAU coach, who once told the Dayton Daily News he was looking for a place where they knew success was due to the kid, not the program:
"The way I see it, the kid makes the high school, not the high school makes the kid."
Barnes initially passed himself off as Mayo's grandfather to some in the press and even talked about their family relationship.
It wasn't true.
NCH — which has gone 74-3 since Mayo joined the team —emphasizes no laws have been broken.
It does admit the addition of top talent has been lucrative. Reebok — which sponsors the AAU team of Mayo and Walker — bought NCH something like $10,000 worth of warm- ups and uniforms.
School revenue from basketball is way up and last May the school passed a $564,000 funding levy for the first time since 1989.
So the program is flush and all but unbeatable.
It's just not universally loved.
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