Bibb County basketball: Some rebuilding, some reloading, some payback, some title potential, and finally playing at home
By Michael A. Lough
The Sports Report
centralgasports@gmail.com
A year ago, eight of Bibb Countyâs 12 public-school basketball teams finished with a winning record, and half made the GHSA state tournament.
Five of the eight won at least a game in the postseason.
Last yearâs records
(as per GHSA website; overall and region)
Girls
Howard 6-19/2-8 (2-4A)
Central 15-14/6-6 (4-3A)
Westside 12-14/6-6 (4-3A)
Rutland 20-10/8-4 (4-3A)
Northeast 9-17/3-9 (3-AA)
Southwest 18-8/8-4 (3-AA)
Boys
Howard 16-13/5-5 (2-4A)
Central 22-6/11-1 (4-3A)
Westside 23-7/10-2 (4-3A)
Rutland 13-11/6-6 (4-3A)
Northeast 23-6/10-2 (3-AA)
Southwest 10-16/5-7 (3-AA)
Howardâs boys and Centralâs girls were two of Bibb Countyâs surprise public-school teams a year ago.
Howard went to its first region tournament championship game in program history, and won two GHSA tournament games before losing to eventual state champ Carver-Columbus.
Head coach Jay Lunce has a slew of regulars, including two of his top three scorers, Collin Tarver and Leon Pitts, back.
âThis season is going to be piggybacking hopefully off of the success we had last year,â Lunce said. âWe have nine of the 11 guys returning from last yearâs team. THe year before that, we knew that we were going to be a little weaker, so we moved these guys up â this group of seniors â and played them as sophomores.
âWe took our licks. ⊠The kids are just playing hard, playing together, theyâre very positive right now.
The Huskies are in a wide open region, with the Upson-Lee domination of the past few years likely over. Howard lost to the Knights in last yearâs region tournament title game.
Southwestâs girls had only one senior on last yearâs 18-8 team, so the Patriots have plenty of experience, including leading scorer JaâKari Moore and top rebounder Stantagious Alford, among others.
âFive years ago, we were in the Final Four,â longtime head coach Willie Goolsby said. âThe next year, we were in the Sweet 16. Then we had two years where we had to rebuild these young ladies.
âTheyâre juniors and seniors now. We expect, realistically, to get to the Final Four this year, if everything goes well. â
Centralâs girls were a surprise team, in a major rebuilding mode as well as well as breaking in a new head coach, yet the Chargers made the Region 4-AAA title game for the third straight season.
âWe couldnât ask for more from our girls,â head coach Tamara Bolston-Williams said. âIt was awesome to see them rewrite their narrative. Weâre building off that momentum.â
Centralâs boys won the region title, but got knocked out in the first round of the playoffs. It left a mark, as evidenced by the pained expression of head coach Andre Taylor when he talked about it briefly, and then was asked about it.
The Chargers went from region champs to first-round playoff victims, the first time Taylorâs has been ousted in the first round as the top seed. The Chargers had to wait to find out their first-round opponent because the region that 2-AAA was matched up with didnât have enough teams for the playoffs, and it took longer than expected to determine the at-large opponent.
âI thought we had a great game plan; when you hold a team to 45 points, you expect to win that game,â said Taylor, who lost three seniors and has six back. âI failed to prepare my guys mentally. The game plan was good, but mentally we were not prepared for the game.â
Winter break followed, and Taylor was pretty much a hermit for the entire period. And he has yet to watch tape of the game.
Two of the biggest keys to the team are back, post Quay Primas and guard Tony Card, and theyâre two of the better players in Central Georgia. Card hasnât forgotten that loss.
âI watched the film,â Card said, shaking his head. âI didnât go to the gym.â
Westsideâs Josh Grube knows the feeling. He set up a huge, big-school schedule this season so the Seminoles can do their part to keep Central from a first-round loss as top seed, because theyâre tired of Central being a top seed.
âWe have played for a region championship seven out of 11 seasons,â said Grube, starting his 12th with the Seminoles. âWeâve only won one region championship, so that means weâve lost six times.
âWeâve got to find a way to win these close games. Every year, itâs Westside and Central. We lose by three points.â
So Westside is playing ranked teams in higher classifications to toughen up physically and mentally for the region run and tournament.
âWeâre not worried about our win-loss record,â said Grube, accompanied by Jurico Campbell, Kowacie Reeves Jr, and Javian Mosley. âWe may start out the season 0-6. I do not care what our record is.
âWe want to go into the playoffs with a realistic shot, saying âwe are as prepared as possible to make a state title run.ââ
Howardâs girls are again in a rebuilding mode, with nine freshmen and sophomores on the roster. Head coach Latavia Coleman sat next to a pair of wounded Huskies, Sahâmara McCants and Mahogany Rice.
Is the former Southwest, Florida State, and WNBA standout getting on court and, well, teaching her players about physical play?
âIâve been doing that since Iâve been coaching,â she said with a smile. âMy knees are getting worse, but I still find myself out there, pushing âem around, shooting a little bit here and there.
âThey know they still canât beat me one on one.â
Rebuilding after a stellar year are Northeastâs boys, who have no returning starters back from a team that won Region 3-AA and lost in the quarterfinals to state champ Therrell.
It was an impressive year for a team that didnât have a home gym, Northeast being rebuilt.
Last yearâs postseason
Girls
Second-place Central thumped Monroe 49-23 in the first round of the playoffs but lost 50-28 to semifinalist Beach.
Rutland was fourth in 4-3A, but knocked off Cook 58-53 and Pierce County 58-50
before a quarterfinal loss to Sonoraville, 75-51.
Southwest was fourth in 3-AA, and lost 59-50 to Woodville-Tompkins in the first round.
Boys
Howard had its best season in a long time, finishing second in the Region 2-4A tournament. The Huskies then beat Baldwin 69-66 in the first round of the playoffs before losing 76-49 to eventual state champ Carver-Columbus.
Central won the Region 4-3A regular-season title but was knocked off 45-43 by Franklin County in the first round of the playoffs.
Westside finished second and topped Cook 62-49 before falling 67-53 to semifinalist Windsor Forest in the second round.
Northeast survived a tough Region 3-AA to finish first, and beat Toombs County 53-30 and Hephzibah 64-52 before losing 68-57 to eventual champ Therrell.
Southwest took third in Region 3-AA and lost 62-46 to eventual runner-up Vidalia.
âIt was one of those seasons will never forget,â head coach Kevin Grooms said. âFor the first time in 19 years of coaching, it was the first time Iâve ever spent 30 games on the road.â
He thanked Southwest, Howard, Central, Miller, and Central Georgia Tech for playing hosts to the Raiders, and their concessions and everything.
The Raiders are doing some rebuilding, but doing so in their own gym.
âThis is probably my most athletic group Iâve ever had in nine years being at Northeast,â Grooms said. âOur thing is, right now, weâre just trying to find our way on the court.â
Rutlandâs girls are unlikely to be a surprise team, with four starters back.
Veteran head coach Johnny Dixon returns most of his top scorers - replacing multi-sport standout BreAsia Davis is a key â and his top three rebounders. The Hurricanes finished second in the region during the regular season, but fourth in the tournament.
âTeams expect to get at that time a fourth-place team, but in my opinion, they were getting a first-place team,â said Dixon, whose team proceeded to win two road games in the state tournament before losing.
Robert Cotton takes over the boys team at Southwest, after a few seasons at Dodge County. And heâs made an impact on a team that had a losing record but made it to the state tournament.
âWe have a new coach,â said Tremel Jackson. âYou know, and heâs ⊠He donât play, is all I gotta say.â