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Panthers gain rematch with Gaels for title

Palo Verde KOs Eldorado in semifinal, awaits Sunset foe Gorman in 4A final







Moses Morgan and his Palo Verde basketball teammates are one victory from erasing their biggest question mark.

And they'll get to play a familiar opponent.


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The Panthers scored the first 16 points, and Morgan finished with 23 points and 11 rebounds to carry Palo Verde to a 68-60 victory over Eldorado in the Class 4A boys state semifinals Thursday at the Orleans Arena.

The Panthers (24-5) will play Bishop Gorman (27-5) for the state championship at 8 p.m. today. Gorman beat Hug 52-37 in Thursday's late semifinal, setting up a rematch against Palo Verde. The Gaels beat the Panthers 60-55 last week in the Sunset Region championship.

"Before every game, coach (Jerome Riley) always writes 'state championship' with a question mark," Morgan said. "Now we're just one more game away, and we can erase that if we can become the state champions."

On running into Gorman again, Morgan said, "We feel like we need to come back and get our revenge."

Palo Verde advanced by blitzing the Sundevils from the start, with Morgan's 3-pointer making the score 16-0 with 2:18 left in the first quarter. Eldorado missed its first nine shots and committed five turnovers in the quarter.

"We came out with a sense of urgency today," Riley said. "We had very little room for error."

Eldorado (23-9) finally scored on Marcus Moreland's low-post basket with 1:57 left in the quarter, but by then the game was effectively over.

"We wanted to come out and make a statement and get the 'W'," said Morgan, a junior forward. "We were really anxious and hyped at the beginning. We just came out and played hard."

In contrast, Eldorado looked anxious early, and the Sundevils didn't react to the pressure as well as Palo Verde did. Eldorado shot 3-for-15 in the first quarter.

"We got too jittery and ... just the anticipation," coach Michael Uzan said. "And shots didn't fall for us right away, and it left us flat."

The Panthers converted the Sundevils' first-quarter turnovers into nine points and a 20-6 lead.

"Although we forced turnovers, unlike the last game we capitalized off them," Riley said. "We scored off those turnovers and (Eldorado's) missed shots."

After trailing 16-0, Eldorado outscored the Panthers 60-52, but the early deficit was too much. Palo Verde led 39-20 at halftime.

"It's hard to come back from 19 (points behind)," Uzan said. "We just didn't get off to a good start, and our kids got frustrated early. We just played catch-up the whole game."

Mitrell Clark and Charles White led a second-half charge by Eldorado. Clark scored 17 of his 25 points after halftime, when White had 12 of his 17. White finished with seven rebounds and six blocked shots.

The Sundevils appeared to have a chance after a Fabian Garcia basket cut the lead to 57-43 midway through the third quarter, but Morgan promptly answered with a 3-pointer for Palo Verde.

D.J. Stennis and Davion Pearson each added 12 points for the Panthers, who reached the state tournament by rallying to beat Liberty 68-63 in the play-in game Monday.

That was three days after their loss to Gorman, and tonight they'll get a chance to make up for that.

Contact Review-Journal Prep Sports Editor Damon Seiters at dseiters@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4587.

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LVRebel wrote on February 27, 2009 01:28 PM: So Peter what excuse did you use to send your kids to other schools?? The district doesn't just allow kids to go somewhere else unless they are given a reason. Besides you sending your kids somewhere else just for sports makes you just as bad as Gorman for the most part.


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LVRebel wrote on February 27, 2009 01:19 PM: So Peter what excuse did you give to get your kids the zone variance??? The district doesn't just let any kid get a zone variance to go to another school unless they have a reason why they want them to go there. Besides you having your kids go to another school just for sports is just as bad as Gorman recruiting


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Peter wrote on February 27, 2009 08:22 AM: Private schools are accountable to the NIAA just as much as public schools. Trust me, all schools recruit. Gorman gets the knock for being the only school that recruits, but alot of the better public schools are just as guilty. Plus, kids dont always play for their "zoned" schools. Alot of kids play sports at other schools because of zone variances. My three kids whom are now in college played at 3 different public schools here in Vegas, none of which we were zoned for. I couldn't afford to send my kids to Gorman, so I saw to it that they played for the better coaches in town. It wasn't hard, there were no obstacles, and the coaches were aware of what was going on. All three of my kids played on teams that consistently beat Gorman, so you just need to be creative in choosing schools for your kids. They don't have to play were they're zoned.


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Fair Competition wrote on February 27, 2009 07:27 AM: dont understand

Private schools are not accountable to NIAA recruiting rules like the public schools are. They can recruit the best athletes from anywhere in town and provide them with a scholarship to play sports. Public schools are constrained to the kids zoned for their school, although I'm guessing there's some monkey business going on in some of those as well when the same public schools go deep into the football playoffs every year...


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Roger wrote on February 27, 2009 06:58 AM: I am new to this area and I can't understand how a private school charging a pretty good chunk of change for tuition can have the best sports teams in the state...boys and girls...in every single sport...year in and year out? I mean it just defies the odds when schools with 3 times the enrollment can't complete..it's like a private medical school taking on ucla in basketball and winning almost all the time.