Feb. 10, 2015 Boys Basketball Nottingham's Dorian Johnson goes up for a shot surrounded by three Spartans during tonight's game at The Galaxy (Photo by Wes "The Media Mogul" Kirkpatrick). Feb. 10, 2015 Basketball Nottingham continues to come together in blowout win over Steinert By Tony Piscotta Fish4scores.com Feb. 10: Watching Nottingham’s boys’ basketball team pull away from Steinert in the second half of tonight's 79-51 win, it would be hard to imagine that this is the same Northstars team that lost its first three games. Junior Tyquier “Shady Brook” Billingsley, who led a balanced Nottingham attack with 23 points, feels the Northstars are finally finding their identity. "We all had to find our roles," he said. "We found our roles. It started to pick up a little bit. Then we had a downfall because everyone wasn't getting along. Then we started to pick it back up. We look to stay as a family, as a team going into the tournament. Without that you're not going to win." It would be hard to disagree with that. If the Northstars (10-7) are a family it seemed that even the most distant cousins were getting involved tonight. Twelve different players had points and those who didn't either chipped in with steals, rebounds, assists or just tight defense. "That's what we've been practicing all year," said senior James Jenkins, who scored all six of his points in the second quarter when Nottingham stretched it's 17-8 first quarter lead to 16 at the break. Nottingham went into the locker room up 34-18 after a nice dish from Cliff Joseph to Nekayle Whitaker in the closing seconds. Jenkins also had two steals, five rebounds and a blocked shot. "We decided to play together as a team because in the beginning of the year everyone was trying to be selfish and it would be one-on-ones and stuff," said Jenkins. "Now we're learning how to play together and actually build on things and be a family at the end." Neither team shot particularly well in the first half, with the normally reliable Joseph hitting just one of six field goal attempts. On the other side of things Steinert (2-for-14) was just 7-for-26, including 0-for-6 on 3-pointers. "We were battling there in the beginning. We just started missing shots," said Steinert head coach Dave Perry. "We just couldn't convert. We were shooting everything up in the air and it wasn't going in." In a prelude of things to come Billingsley opened the second half with a 3-pointer off a feed from Bam Johnson. A basket by Chris LaBelle off a feed from Stephen Loney cut the Nottingham lead to 37-20 but The Shady Brook Show was just beginning. Billingsley would make three more 3pointers in the third and score 16 of his 23 points as the Stars stretched the Cartier Bowman comes down with a rebound against Steinert's Patrick Carr (12) and Garrett Mazur (Photo by Amanda lead to 59-31 and essentially sealed away the win. Joseph, after making just Ruch/amandaruchphotography@gmail.com). one field goal before the half would score seven of his 13 points in the third. "Not this year," said Billingsley, when asked if he'd had a quarter like that before. "That was the first time this year. It felt good. It felt great. If I see my team having a bad night I try everything in my power to bring us up. Whether it's a defensive stop, a quick three, a pass for a fast break. I'll do anything." With the big lead Nottingham coach Chris “The Baron” Raba had the chance to get some of his more inexperienced players onto the court in the fourth and they responded — with freshman Cartier Bowman scoring all 13 of his points in the last quarter. According to Jenkins that has been the key to the Stars' success of late. "That's the best part of this team if one person is struggling then another person knows that he has to step up," said Jenkins. "It's not just one guy it's everybody. Cliff's been on a roll. He's down and then another guy steps up and that's how it is. You've just to keep moving." From the Steinert side of things juniors Garret Mazur (18 points, 11 rebounds) and Patrick Carr (nine points, three rebounds, one block) battled all night but were simply overmatched with the consistent intensity of the Stars. "They're some very tough players," said Jenkins. "I credit both of them. I know that we just play hard and give them all we've got. Coach just wanted us to front guys and stuff." The real key was the defensive pressure all over the floor by the Stars, whether it was Johnson, Joseph, Billingsley or pesky sophomore Javade PearsonMackson. The Nottingham pressure defense made life troublesome for whoever tried to bring the ball up the floor for the Spartans. . "It's just pressure," said Jenkins. "Defense, defense, defense. If you speed the game up it's going to make people think quicker." Bryan Renda dribbles upcourt against Nottingham's Cliff Joseph (Photo by Wes "We try to teach that every day," "The Media Mogul" Kirkpatrick). said Perry, when asked about dealing with the pressure. "Coach (Joe) Radice and I we work on it and work on it. I don't think they get the concept of it. Every team knows that we're weak handling the ball and they put that pressure on us. Hopefully over the summer we can get better and work on that." At the same time the former Nottingham coach admits that the Stars could have something special this season. "They're a very athletic team," said Perry. "They hustle. They go for the loose balls. They box out. They look to tip the ball. They do the intangibles." Jenkins feels that those things will be what leads to any post-season success the Stars enjoy. "I believe we're where we need to be," said Jenkins, when asked about the upcoming Mercer County and Central Jersey Group III tournaments. "This is as hard as I've seen us play right now."
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