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Never Forget 31-0
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2/19/06
2/19/06
Dry spell does in Columbian
By Dave Feltner, [email protected]
UPPER SANDUSKY - The way Columbian and Upper Sandusky scored points in their Jan. 13 matchup, - as if they were getting paid to do it - and the way the rematch started Friday night, the drought the Tornadoes labored through in the third quarter defies logic.
But it definitely happened, and it definitely opened the door to the Rams' 84-73 Northern Ohio League victory at The Barn.
These two teams combined for 205 points the first go-around, and Upper Sandusky's Jon Diebler and Columbian's Josh Moore set school records with 77 and 52 points, respectively.
It seemed as if the refresh icon on the record book would need another click after Moore, who matched Diebler with 35 points, poured in 17 first-quarter points while the Tornadoes built a 23-21 lead.
The frantic pace continued in the second quarter, and the Rams had a 43-39 halftime lead while Moore sat the entire period with two fouls.
Ironically, when Moore returned, the Tornadoes dug themselves a hole by scoring only four points the first six minutes of the third quarter.
By the time Brady Decker scooped in a bucket off a drive through traffic with two minutes left in the third, the Tornadoes had 59-45 deficit.
"Don't know what happened," Columbian coach Derek Lewis said. "We looked our kids in the face during [third-quarter] timeout, and they kind of had a blank look in their face. And that's not like our team. We talked about that, and I thought they did a great job responding.
"I don't know, but that's the tale of the game right there, other than Josh being in foul trouble. But our kids did a good job hanging in there. I do not know what happened in the third quarter. We got complacent, and we made turnovers we don't normally make."
Eight in the third quarter, to be exact. And the Rams were there to make the Tornadoes pay.
Diebler opened the second-half scoring with a pair of free throws - the Rams made 11-of-13 freebies in the third - and freshman Alex Falk stuck a 15-footer for a 47-39 lead.
After Decker's hoop made it 59-45, the Rams scored seven unanswered points, capped by Aaron Wetherell's 3-ball off an inbound play, to open a 21-point lead, 66-45.
A late Columbian flurry in the third, which Moore punctuated with a running 3-pointer at the buzzer, had the Tornadoes within 68-52 at the start of the fourth.
"We came out [in the third quarter] and just played tremendous man-to-man defense," Upper Sandusky coach Keith Diebler said. "We decided to junk the other stuff and try to stay solid on them, make them shoot the ball from the outside and rebound. I thought mission was accomplished."
The Tornadoes chipped away in the fourth quarter and got within 77-68 when Moore hit a pair of free throws with 2:16 left after the Rams' Kevin Brodman called a timeout his team did not have.
Columbian, though, got no closer, and Upper Sandusky had enough free-throw shooting (7 of 11) down the stretch to seal it.
Diebler finished with eight steals, six assists and six rebounds, while leading five double-figure scorers. Wetherell backed him with 15 points, and Falk and Curtis Sebenoler (eight rebounds) contributed 11 points apiece. Ian Mason finished with 11 points.
The first meeting, Diebler was the lone Ram to score in double figures.
"I think our kids have matured, are taking good shots under control, and they're open, and Jon's going to get them the basketball," coach Diebler said. "Since the first time we played Tiffin, we've become better at moving the basketball, finding the open man, and more kids are scoring.
"(Jan. 13) was one night, and I like Tiffin's team. I think coach does a great job, and they're going to be a team that's hard to beat in the tournament.
Both teams are better, and both teams really fought on this floor tonight."
Moore added eight rebounds to his team-leading scoring, and Decker finished with 21 points. Aaron Hurd had four points and nine rebounds.
"I thought it was going to get ugly," Lewis said. "But one thing I've always said is, 'Our kids aren't going to quit. They're going to fight to the very end.' I'm not going to lie: There was a time when I thought our kids could have folded the tents, and they didn't. I thought they did a great job playing to the final whistle.
"I told them, 'We're playing our best basketball right now; we just don't have the wins to show it.'"
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