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SEMIFINAL SHOWDOWN: San Antonio Cole junior guard Silas Livingston takes a jump shot over Academy senior defender Tanner Rambeau during the fifth-ranked Cougars' 59-50 win against the No. 16 Bumblebees in a Class 3A state semifinal Tuesday night at Buda Hays. Looking on for Academy are Darion Franklin (2), Chris Preddie (23), Jerry Cephus (11) and Kollin Mraz. Livingston scored a game-high 22 points as Cole (26-5), winner of 20 straight games, advanced to Friday's state championship game against No. 10 Tatum at San Antonio's Alamodome. Making their first state semifinal trip since 2002, the Region III champion Bees (22-8) had their 15-game winning streak snapped. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE

TempleBeltonSports.com

gwille2@hot.rr.com


BUDA – Jaylin McWilliams and Jerry Cephus delivered outstanding performances last Saturday afternoon in Madisonville, with the senior guards producing a combined seven 3-point baskets and 45 points to help Academy beat previously undefeated Winnie East Chambers 68-58 for the Class 3A Region III boys basketball championship.

The 16th-ranked Bumblebees didn't necessarily need both McWilliams and Cephus to play extremely well in Tuesday night's state semifinal showdown against No. 5 San Antonio Cole at Hays High School's Oran Bales Gymnasium. But at the same time. Academy couldn't afford for both of them to have a subpar game.

With Cephus and the foul-plagued McWilliams totaling only 11 points and Cole all-region junior guards Silas Livingston and Trey Blackmore scoring a combined 40 points, such a large disparity was too much for the Bees to overcome.

After McWilliams fouled out with 6:46 remaining, Academy still had a prime opportunity to win and got as close as three points during a feisty fourth quarter but never could get over the top, with Livingston's 10-point final period helping the Cougars secure a 59-50 victory that propelled them into the state championship game and ended the Bees' 15-game winning streak and stellar season.

“It was a battle of two really good teams. I think we're a good team; I think they're a really good team. They've got great players; we've got great players. So it came down to I think they executed what they needed to do a little bit better,” Academy fifth-year head coach James Holt said after emerging from the Bees' tearful postgame locker room. “But at the end of the day, our kids kept fighting. We'd get down, then we'd have a run. We showed our heart and our fight. We just didn't make the plays I guess when we needed to make them and they did, so hat's off to them. They're a great team.

"I think we still could have won with (McWilliams and Cephus) having off nights, but I think we probably would have had to play a little bit better defense and maybe get to the basket a few more times and finish. I thought we had some points that we left out there because we didn't finish at the rim at times, but part of that is (Cole's) defense."

After scoring a team-leading 16 points for District 19-3A champion Academy (22-8), junior point guard Darion Franklin credited Region IV champ Cole (26-5) – making its third straight state semifinal trip – for grabbing the game when it was there for the taking and lamented the impact that McWilliams' foul problems had on the Bees' overall play.

“We didn't execute. They wanted it more than we did. They battled for the loose balls, they made free throws, they didn't play as a one-guy team. They played all together,” said Franklin, who made a 30-foot 3-pointer at the third-quarter buzzer to trim Academy's deficit to 40-35. “I'd say it came down to defense. They've got some really good guards (Livingston and Blackmore), and they're outstanding, I'd say. We lost one of our good brothers (McWilliams), and it hurts. He plays very good defense and he's a leader.”

Franklin shared this season's District 19-3A Most Valuable Player award with McWilliams, who won it last year as a junior. Franklin and McWilliams were Texas Association of Basketball Coaches 3A All-Region III selections this season along with senior forward Tanner Rambeau.


MAN ON THE MOVE: Academy junior point guard Darion Franklin shoots a runner in the lane over San Antonio Cole defenders Adreaell Ray (4) and Elijah Sexton during the Bumblebees' 59-50 loss to the Cougars in a Class 3A state semifinal Tuesday night at Hays High School's Oran Bales Gymnasium in Buda. District 19-3A Co-MVP Franklin scored 10 of his team-high 16 points in the second half for Region III champion Academy, which got 10 points from senior forward Tanner Rambeau. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Making its fourth state semifinal appearance in program history, Academy never led Cole but never trailed by more than 10 points. The Bees got 10 points from Rambeau, nine from McWilliams and seven from reserve junior guard Chris Preddie, who received increased playing time because of McWilliams' foul trouble and performed well.

The 6-foot-3 McWilliams, Academy's leading scorer who poured in 26 points against East Chambers, kept the Bees' season alive in last Friday's regional semifinal with a buzzer-beating layup that forced overtime in a 70-69, double-OT win over No. 7 New Waverly. Against Cole, McWilliams was called for his second foul with 1:49 remaining in the first quarter, stayed in the game and incurred his third foul on a reach-in only 1:10 into the second quarter. He went to the bench but just for a few minutes before he returned.

McWilliams scored seven points in the third before picking up his fourth foul on a charging call with 1:31 left in the period, then fouled out 1:14 into the fourth when he made contact with Cole's Kelby Beckstrom on a made layup.

Holt said that allowing McWilliams to try to play with and through his foul problems was a calculated gamble that the coach believed was worth the risk against a very seasoned Cole squad that pushed its winning streak to 20 games.

“Jaylin's in foul trouble, and we felt that for us to be successful in this game he'd have to be on the floor. So we tried in the first half to do some offense/defense subbing, but there in the fourth quarter, if you get too far down, then it won't do any good when you actually do leave him in there,” Holt said. “So we kept him in, because he's one of our best players. He's a district MVP and he does a lot for us on both ends of the floor, so we felt that we needed him out there."


Academy senior wing Jaylin McWilliams takes a 3-point shot over San Antonio Cole defender Silas Livingston during the Bumblebees' 59-50 loss to the Cougars in a Class 3A state semifinal Tuesday night at Buda Hays. McWilliams, Academy's leading scorer this season and the reigning District 19-3A MVP, was slowed by foul trouble throughout the evening and fouled out with 6:46 remaining in the fourth quarter, scoring nine points in his final game. He shared this season's 19-3A MVP award with junior teammate Darion Franklin. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



In a typical year, the University Interscholastic League conducts all of its state semifinals in San Antonio's Alamodome. However, because of factors related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the UIL required this season's semifinalists to make their own arrangements, keeping the Alamodome off-limits until the state championship games later this week.

With venues willing to host a state semifinal in short supply and restrictions on ticket sales a major sticking point, Academy and Cole scrambled and finally secured Hays on Sunday. Instead of playing in front of a potentially large crowd at the Alamodome, the Bees and the Cougars battled each other in front of a limited crowd of only approximately 225 spectators on each side of Bales Gymnasium, a standard-sized high school gym.

Academy was determined to advance to Friday afternoon's 3A state title game in its first state appearance since it won the 2A state championship in 2002, but Bees senior guard Kollin Mraz said his squad seemed uncharacteristically out of sorts against Cole.

“We were off. We weren't in pace with each other. We were too worried about the next game instead of this one,” said Mraz, who scored six points and aided Academy with numerous hustle plays. “It's nothing we haven't seen before. It was literally just us not thinking (Cole was) going to come out like that.”

Afterward, Holt expressed his disappointment that Academy's players and fans didn't get the experience of playing the state semifinal in the Alamodome, where all of the Bees' supporters likely could have bought tickets instead of having only roughly 225 fans in attendance.

“Obviously, nobody wants to play a state semifinal game at Hays High School in Buda. I mean, I'm glad they hosted us, but these kids deserved to play in front of thousands of people. But with the way that it worked out, that was something out of our control,” Holt said. “I just feel terrible for these kids that they weren't able to showcase their talent and their skill and their love of this game . . . I mean, these guys love to play basketball, and it would have been great for them to play this game – win or lose – at the dome in front of thousands of people. But with this year, that wasn't in the cards, I guess.”

Of course, Holt also was cognizant of the fact that Cole's 2019-20 team won Region IV and its state semifinal over Peaster but then never got to play Dallas Madison in the 3A championship game after the UIL suspended its state tournament following the semifinals because of emerging pandemic concerns and later decided to cancel it altogether.

“Cole knows that same feeling. They won their semifinal game (last season), so they could've been playing for the state championship in front of thousands of people,” Holt said. “It is what it is.”

Back for more this season, the Cougars will get their shot to win the 3A championship in their hometown when they take on No. 10 Tatum (25-3) at 2 p.m. Friday in the Alamodome. Region II champion Tatum beat No. 2 Brock, the Region I champ, 62-45 on Tuesday in Corsicana.

“To get back to the state final, I can't tell you how proud I am of them, because I don't know if a lot of people predicted us to be back here with the players we lost (after last season). They deserve all the credit,” said Cole head coach Noe Cantu, whose Cougars are making their eighth state tournament appearance in program history but seeking only their second championship. Hall of Fame center Shaquille O'Neal powered Cole to a perfect 1989 season for the 3A state crown.


DIFFICULT ASSIGNMENT: Academy senior guard Jerry Cephus (left) defends San Antonio Cole junior guard Trey Blackmore during the first half of the Cougars' 59-50 win over the Bumblebees in Tuesday night's Class 3A state semifinal at Buda Hays. After Blackmore scored 14 points in the first half, first-team all-district selection Cephus helped limit the 6-foot-3 guard to four points in the final two quarters. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Leading the way for these Cougars against Academy were their dynamic junior guards. The explosive, 6-3 Blackmore scored 14 of his 18 points in the first half against Academy, then the 5-10, wispy Livingston took over after halftime by scoring 15 of his game-high 22 points, including six free throws and 10 points in the fourth.

“They're confident players. We told them at the beginning of the year, 'You guys are going to have to be special.' And I remember they looked at me and were like, 'Coach, we could have done this last year,'” Cantu said. “They've had a chip on their shoulder to prove to people how good they really are.”

Said Livingston: “I feel like it's a 1-2 punch. Trey's a great scorer and the best player on our team, and I feel like I do a good job of finding Trey and I know I can score just as much as him. We go back and forth, and we've got great defense.”

After notching six playoff wins for the second straight season, Livingston and Blackmore now have the opportunity to lead Cole to its first state title in 32 years.

“It's really great to be back, but we've got one more game left and this game is already over with,” Livingston said. “Starting (Wednesday), we're back in the gym working hard and getting ready to win the state championship.”

Layups by Adreaell Ray and Blackmore staked Cole to an early 4-0 lead before Rambeau scored inside and Franklin's steal turned into a McWilliams layin for a 4-4 game. Rambeau's three close-range buckets helped Academy trail by only one at 11-10 after the first.


STEPPING UP: Academy junior guard Chris Preddie (23) takes a 3-point shot over outstretched San Antonio Cole defender Adreaell Ray during the No. 16 Bumblebees' 59-50 loss to the No. 5 Cougars in a Class 3A state semifinal Tuesday night in Buda. With senior wing Jaylin McWilliams in foul trouble, Preddie came off the bench and scored seven points to help Region III champion Academy (22-8) remain close with Region IV champ Cole (26-5). (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



After McWilliams absorbed his third foul 1:10 into the second, he took a seat and was replaced by Preddie, an explosive jumper and skilled defender. He made two free throws and a hard-driving layup to cut the Bees' deficit to 21-20 midway through the second before McWilliams came back in.

“Chris Preddie came in and stepped up and made shots and played great defense,” Holt said of Preddie, voted Sixth Man of the Year in 19-3A. “That's a great thing to see, a kid who didn't play a lot last weekend (in the regional tournament) but came in and when the team needed him, he stepped up and made some steals, got some rebounds, got an and-1. That's what good teams have to have – guys step in when something's not going right.”

But Academy couldn't slow down Blackmore during the first half's closing minutes, as he made an on-the-run 8-foot shot, a fast-break layup and then drove along the right baseline before rising and hitting a 12-foot jumper to help Cole seize a 29-21 halftime advantage.

“I think he missed one shot,” Holt said about Blackmore's first-half performance. “He's a stud. He can shoot, he can drive, he has a good mid-range game. It's tough to guard a guy like that. I thought Jerry did a good job, but he was making tough shots. One of our keys was we wanted to force them to take tough shots. They did, and they made them. If they're going to make tough shots it's hard to beat them, because they play really good defense.”

Cole took its biggest lead at 33-23 on Blackmore's fast-break layup 2:25 into the third quarter, but Franklin and McWilliams responded with driving buckets before McWilliams made two free throws and drilled an open 3-pointer fro the left corner to pull Academy within 35-32 with 2:16 left, sending Academy's fans into a frenzy.

Cole then wrapped an Elijah Sexton basket and a Livingston 3-pointer around McWilliams' fourth foul, a charging call on a spin move in the lane, to go up 40-32. Franklin gave the Bees a much-needed jolt when a loose ball squirted to him and he sank a 30-foot 3 at the third-quarter buzzer for a 40-35 game.

Cole came right back to begin the fourth with layups by Livingston and Ray for a nine-point lead, but Rambeau scored inside and Mraz's behind-the-back pass set up Cephus' only basket of the night to make it 44-39, leading to a Cole timeout with 6:53 left as Academy's fans stood and cheered wildly.

However, the Bees' shot to win the game took a big hit only 7 seconds later when Beckstrom streaked in on the left side for a layup while being fouled by McWilliams, who fouled out at the 6:46 mark before Beckstrom completed the three-point play for a 47-39 lead.

“It was a big impact. He's a top dog on our team for sure, so that was a big loss,” Mraz said about Academy having to play without McWilliams for the bulk of the final quarter.

The Bees answered with Mraz's 3-pointer from the left wing before Franklin grabbed a steal, made a spinning shot in the lane while being fouled and finished the three-point play to make it 48-45 with 5:15 remaining, firing up his bench and crowd.

“We're all just some hoopers and do what we've got to do,” Mraz said. “Darion knows his job and that's to score the ball, and he's going to do that. He's just an all-around hooper.”

True to form, Livingston came right back with two free throws and a fast-break layup for a 52-45 Cole lead. Preddie then drilled a 3 from the top left to make it 52-48 with 3:49 left and Franklin stole the ball on the Cougars' next possession, but Academy's offense then went dry from the field and didn't score again until Franklin's inside basket pulled the Bees within 55-50 with 1:33 left.

Needing defensive stops and quick scores, Academy got neither. Cole used a Ray free throw and Livingston's fast-break pass for a Blackmore layup with 28 seconds remaining to seal its hard-earned victory over the Bees, who lost for the first time since Jan. 5 in overtime against 4A regional quarterfinalist Waco La Vega.

Some 15 minutes after the game ended, the teary eyes and red faces of Academy's players told the story after Holt spoke with them and consoled them in an emotional locker room. Following a painful season-ending defeat and the final game for his five seniors, including reserve forward Tyler Lambert, Holt offered a big-picture perspective.

“First off, we didn't talk about the game. That's not important right now. We just loved on the kids. We're here for relationships,” Holt said, adding that he's grateful Academy got to play 29 games (plus one win by forfeit) during this pandemic-affected season. “Obviously we want to win as many games as we can, but we want to build strong kids. We want them to learn the values you can learn in athletics. We want them to know that we love them and that we'll do anything for them to help them be a better person and succeed.

“It's hard to put things in perspective right now because of what they're feeling like, but I think as you get farther away from this moment, I think they're going to appreciate how special this was,” added Holt, whose team was 7-7 in early January before ripping off 15 straight wins. “It's going to be sad the next time we go to practice and those five guys aren't going to be there. We've been through so much together. When I first got here, these seniors were eighth-graders and they had no idea about me and I didn't know anything about them. I'd never been a head coach. We built that trust to where they trusted that I was going to try to do what's best for them, and when they trust you, they'll do anything for you. They'll play as hard as they can.”


HARD DRIVE: Academy senior guard Kollin Mraz (1) drives to the basket against San Antonio Cole senior defender Kelby Beckstrom during the second half of the No. 16 Bumblebees' 59-50 loss to the fifth-ranked Cougars in a Class 3A state semifinal at Buda Hays. Mraz, who helped coach James Holt's Bees go 39-1 in District 19-3A the last three seasons, scored six points in his final career game for Academy (22-8). (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Said Mraz about having played his final game for the Bees after helping them go 39-1 in district play and win nine playoff games during the last three seasons: “It really sucks. I love these coaches and I love these players. There's nowhere I'd rather be than Academy, Texas.”

As for the Bees' only starter who will return next season, Franklin said he'll greatly miss competing with his graduating teammates and already is planning to let Academy's crushing loss to Cole motivate him during the offseason.

“I'm going to have to bust my butt during the summer,” Franklin said. “I've never played without my guys, without those four. So it's hard."

BOYS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

CLASS 3A STATE SEMIFINAL


No. 5 San Antonio Cole 59,

No. 16 Academy 50

Cole 11 18 11 19 – 59

Academy 10 11 14 15 – 50

Cole (26-5) – Silas Livingston 22, Trey Blackmore 18, Adreaell Ray 9, Kelby Beckstrom 5, Elijah Sexton 4, Pierre Harris 1.

Academy (22-8) – Darion Franklin 16, Tanner Rambeau 10, Jaylin McWilliams 9, Chris Preddie 7, Kollin Mraz 6, Jerry Cephus 2.

3-point field goals – Cole 4 (Blackmore 2, Livingston 2); Academy 4 (Franklin 1, McWilliams 1, Mraz 1, Preddie 1).

Free throws – Cole 13-18; Academy 6-10.

Notes – Region III champion Academy's winning streak ends at 15 games in the program's first state semifinal game since it won the Class 2A state championship in 2002; Region IV champion Cole extends its winning streak to 20 games and advances to play No. 10-ranked, Region II champion Tatum (25-3) in the 3A state championship game at 2 p.m. Friday at San Antonio's Alamodome.

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JUST LIKE OLD TIMES: Jared Hunt is Academy ISD's athletic director, but 19 years ago he was a backup junior guard on coach Alex Remschel's Bumblebees basketball team that compiled a 33-3 record and won the Class 2A state championship with a pair of dramatic 49-48 victories over Peaster and Frankston in the state tournament at the University of Texas' Frank Erwin Center in Austin. No. 16-ranked Academy (22-7) battles No. 5 San Antonio Cole (25-5) in a 3A state semifinal at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Hays High School's Oran Bales Gymnasium in Buda. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


LITTLE RIVER-ACADEMY – Every time Jared Hunt walks into Academy High School's gym known as The Hive and heads toward his office upstairs, the district's athletic director sees two things that instantly bring back a flood of great memories.

One of them is a banner that hangs from the rafters and tells the raw-data story of the Bumblebees' 2001-02 boys basketball team: 33-3 record, Class 2A state champions.

The other thing, though, is the one that really gets the 36-year-old Hunt, a 2003 Academy graduate. It's a large, framed photograph of that squad, the first Academy team to capture a state championship: Hunt with all of his teammates, head coach Alex Remschel and assistants Tim Butler and Brian Pursche.

Hunt was a junior and a backup guard that season in his first year at Academy High School after his family moved back to Little River-Academy from Rockdale. He was not one of the Bees' leading players; in fact, he didn't play a minute in either of the Bees' two victories at the state tournament after having gotten regular playing time as a reserve throughout the season.

Ahead of Hunt was senior guard Luke Barganier, Academy's outstanding four-sport athlete who was selected most valuable player of the 2A state tournament after making the go-ahead, final-minute basket in each of the eighth-ranked Bees' 49-48 wins – against Peaster in the semifinals and Frankston in the title game. Barganier, who went on to play baseball at Temple College and then in the Houston Astros' minor league system, produced a combined 43 points and 14 rebounds in those games while playing all 64 minutes.

When Hunt looks at the photo of that successful 2002 group, it makes him think not only about the Bees' memorable journey to the state championship but also the life lessons he learned along the way that he's now trying to pass along to Academy's current student-athletes as the athletic director.

“I just think about the team itself. Luckily for me, my office is right here above the gym, and every day I walk in there's a picture of that team right above where I enter, so I just look at all the guys and the faces on there,” Hunt said Monday afternoon as Academy's current boys basketball team practiced for its 3A state semifinal against San Antonio Cole at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Hays High School in Buda. “I moved in between my sophomore and junior years, so I was a move-in that year. We grew up here but I moved back. Being a sophomore-to-junior move-in is tough, and those guys took me in.”

As a backup for the Bees' title team, Hunt learned the value of embracing the importance of his specific role and continuing to work hard regardless of how much playing time he received in a given game.

“I've only known how to work hard. I wasn't the best at something. I just knew to give your best effort and however far that takes is how far that takes you,” Hunt said. “I accepted the role that was given on that team, and for me it was that I was behind Luke Barganier. I mean, he's the MVP, a heck of a player and a heck of an athlete. But I knew every day in practice my job was to stop him. My job was to give him the best scout.

“If that's minutes in a game, it's minutes in a game. If it's not, it's not. The thing I've learned the most about that year was teaching kids now as an athletic director how to accept your role. Not everybody can be the star. Only five people can be on the court at a time, and we saw last week at the regional tournament that sometimes minutes adjust on certain people. You may never even step foot on the court, but that doesn't mean you don't deserve any of the recognition for what's happening.”

After graduating from Texas A&M in 2009 and coaching at several high schools, Hunt served as the recruiting coordinator for head coach Chad Morris at Southern Methodist and then Arkansas before he, his wife, Krystan, and their two daughters decided to return home to Little River-Academy in 2018. He was the Bees' offensive coordinator in 2018 for then-head coach Paul Williams, and in May 2019 Hunt became Academy ISD's athletic director after former Bees head football coach Mike Nichols left for a coaching job in Navasota.

The last three basketball seasons have seen head coach James Holt's Academy boys win 77 games and three District 19-3A championships (with a 39-1 combined record) and advance to at least the Region III quarterfinals, highlighted by the Bees' current march to their first state semifinal berth since the 2002 championship team.

Hunt said that when he watches this Academy team play, it constantly reminds him of the guys he played with 19 years ago. For example, take Bees senior guard Kollin Mraz, a one-year starter who doesn't score a lot of points but seemingly does everything else, from grabbing rebounds to tracking down loose balls to passing the ball to teammates to set up scoring opportunities.

“Kollin has a motor on him and a heart and a drive that reminds me of a guy we had on that (2002) team in the starting lineup named Kiel Mitchell. And man, Kiel was energetic – on the boards, on the ground, diving around,” Hunt said. “He had a 'fro (hairstyle), so every time he took a charge it was all over the place. It reminds me of Kollin, because Kiel did not look to shoot. He looked to distribute, he looked to pass, but he was probably one of the most valuable people we had.

“Everybody needs a guy like that, and to see Kollin have success this year in basketball and in football, it's one of those special things you see as a coach of a kid just developing into something awesome.”

Just as junior point guard Darion Franklin is the only non-senior in an Academy starting lineup that includes guards Mraz, Jerry Cephus and Jaylin McWilliams and forward Tanner Rambeau, Hunt said the 2002 Bees started all seniors – Barganier, forward Mitchell, guard Brad Andersen and post Scott Mathieson – except for their point guard, junior Josh Volney. And several of the top reserves on both teams were underclassmen who filled their roles while working and waiting for opportunities to start.

“The kids see the (team) picture and they'll ask me about state, 'Hey, how many points did you score, Coach Hunt?' And I'll be the first to say, 'I didn't play one minute in the state championship tournament, but our practices in between games were very important and our preparation was key,'” Hunt said. “Like I said, I knew my role and what I needed to do and I knew what we needed as a team to achieve what we wanted to achieve.”

The season before Hunt played for Academy's state championship squad, the then-Rockdale sophomore and his parents – both Academy graduates – traveled to watch the Bees' bi-district playoff game in Giddings against Danbury, the eventual 2A state runner-up.

“I went to that game, believe it or not. Being from Academy (originally), my parents and I drove over from Rockdale to Giddings just to watch Academy play, just like all Academy fans do. They travel,” Hunt said. “I sat on the front row, and I watched them lose that game. I could see it on (the players') faces. But I could tell that it was a hump, too. It was the hump that our (current) kids had with Crockett (losing Region III quarterfinals in 2019 and 2020). That was a similarity I saw, now that I look back.

“Going into that next year, I move in, we have a good little run in football and we lost to Blanco, which ended up winning state that year – similar to Hallettsville making it all the way to state (after beating Academy in a first-round playoff football game last November). So losing to those kind of teams in football, now we carry it over into basketball.”

And Remschel, who after coaching became an Academy school administrator and now is Shiner ISD's superintendent, found a very visible way to motivate the Bees' 2001-02 team.

“When we walked into basketball, Coach Remschel had it right when you walk into the locker room, there was this big picture and it was of the Frank Erwin Center,” Hunt said of the University of Texas' arena in Austin that hosted the University Interscholastic League state basketball tournament every year before it moved to San Antonio's Alamodome. “It said, 'Make this gym our home.' The goal was that that was going to be our home court at the end of the year. He started instilling that in our head from Day 1: 'This is our goal and this is where we're going.'

“It's the same drive that our (current) kids have. When I talked to them during the summer, they were like, 'Our goal is to win state in basketball, Coach. We got a chance. We're good. We're all coming back. We're ready to go.' It was the same talk that we had 19 years ago, and we had the confidence of what we were going to do and the path it was going to take. The dedication and the heart, the open gyms, the work on your own, those are the same things our kids are doing nowadays.”

Hunt fondly recalled the large, energetic crowds – 8,950 spectators for the semifinal against Peaster, then 14,285 for the title game against Frankston – that showed up to cheer on Academy's two state tournament games in 2002 at the Erwin Center, known to many simply as “The Drum.”

Hunt also draws many parallels between the Bees' 2002 coaching staff of Remschel, Butler and Pursche – now the head coach of Academy's successful girls basketball program – and the current staff of Holt and assistants Jason Rankin and Chuck Mann.

“The similarities that I see between Coach Holt and Coach Remschel are, number one, they are some of the most prepared guys I've ever seen for a game. And that's not just them; that's also their assistants. Jason Rankin and Chuck Mann do a great job, and our team it was Tim Butler and Brian Pursche. That was Coach Pursche's first year,” Hunt said. “The preparation and knowledge we had going into a game on our opponent was incredible. We knew everything they were going to do, and so does this team.

“I got to experience that Friday night after we beat New Waverly in double overtime. They scouted (unbeaten Winnie East Chambers' win over Lorena in the second Region III semifinal), and we get back to the hotel and we're in a conference room and it's me, Holt, Chuck and Jason and they had film pulled up and had a list of things that East Chambers does from already watching film. Just listening to them giving the kids the gameplan and the scouting report reminded me so much of Coach Remschel and his staff. I think that's what makes me proud as an athletic director, is we've got coaches who are preparing our kids and giving them the best chance to be successful.”

Even though Remschel departed as Academy's assistant superintendent after the 2018-19 school year to become Shiner's superintendent, Holt said Monday that he often still talks basketball with Remschel, whose oldest son, Lane, played basketball for the Bees and would have been a senior this season.

“The great thing about Coach Remschel is he loves talking basketball, so I call him all the time and text him all the time. He'll watch film on the teams we're playing and he'll give me ideas. I'll say, 'Hey, what do you think about doing this?'” said Holt, who helped Ponder win four 2A state championships and finish as state runner-up once during his 11 seasons as an assistant coach there before Academy hired him as head coach in 2016. “When he was here, I'd just walk in his office and we'd talk basketball. He's a little bit farther away now.”

From Hunt's perspective as a former Bees player whose current job is to oversee and support Academy's overall athletic program, the biggest common trait between Remschel and Holt is the effort they put into building strong relationships with the young men who play for them. For Holt this year, that's included leading the Bees through a pandemic-affected season and the winter storm that wiped out an entire week of practice going into the playoffs.

“The thing that a lot of people miss that's very important in coaching is that Holt and Remschel do a great job at relationships,” Hunt said. “They talk to kids about things other than basketball. They build these kids up and talk to them and make sure they're good. They love on them and do a great job of making the team feel like a family.

“I made a comment the other day that, 'Could you imagine having social media when we were in high school?' Kids have to juggle a whole lot more now than we did, and now let's throw on top of them a pandemic and let's throw on top of them a weeklong ice storm where they can't get into the gym. Our kids have fought through so much adversity that I'm proud for them, and I'm also proud of our coaches for handling it and getting them through some difficult times.”

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DRIVING FORCE: Junior point guard Darion Franklin has helped lead Academy to the Class 3A state semifinals by averaging 18.2 points in the Bumblebees' five playoff games on their way to winning the Region III championship. The District 19-3A MVP contender leads 16th-ranked Academy (22-7), which is riding a 15-game win streak, in 3-point baskets, assists and steals. His season scoring average of 14.6 points per game ranks second on the team behind the 15.8 of senior wing Jaylin McWilliams. The Bees battle No. 5 San Antonio Cole (25-5), making its third straight state appearance, in a state semifinal at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Hays High School's Oran Bales Gymnasium in Buda. The state championship game is scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at San Antonio's Alamodome. (File photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE

TempleBeltonSports.com

gwille2@hot.rr.com


BUDA – The four seniors who start for Academy's boys basketball team all provide major contributions for the 16th-ranked Bumblebees (22-7), the Class 3A Region III champions who have won 15 consecutive games entering their state semifinal against fifth-ranked perennial power San Antonio Cole (25-5) at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Hays High School's Oran Bales Gymnasium in Buda.

There's power forward Tanner Rambeau, the 6-foot-4, 230-pound four-year starter who gives Academy a strong inside presence and makes approximately 75 of his shots from the field.

There's smooth 6-3 wing Jaylin McWilliams, last season's District 19-3A Most Valuable Player whose natural scoring ability and skilled all-around play at both ends of the court are vital factors for the Bees.

There's 5-11 shooting guard Jerry Cephus, a lockdown 1-on-1 defender and proficient 3-point shooter who often explodes for torrid scoring streaks.

And there's 6-2 guard Kollin Mraz, an athletic, hard-nosed player whose knack for chasing down rebounds and loose balls and racking up steals and assists makes him extremely valuable even when he doesn't score much.

But as good and consistent as that senior quartet has been this season, it's not a stretch to say that the straw that stirs the proverbial drink for Academy's experienced, balanced squad is junior point guard Darion Franklin, the lone non-senior in the starting lineup.

After averaging 13.9 points per game during the regular season while leading the Bees in assists and steals, the 6-foot, 198-pound Franklin has been an even bigger force during Academy's five-game playoff march to its first state semifinal trip since it won the 2A state championship in 2002.

The two-year starter has scored 91 points (18.2 per game) in five postseason contests – making a team-best 11 3-point baskets – along with orchestrating the overall offense and playing aggressive defense.

And that's not even taking into account the emotional boost Franklin gives his Bees teammates with his confident leadership, competitive nature and playful personality.

“I mean, Darion does a ton. He's our best ball-handler, so we put a lot on his shoulders,” Academy fifth-year head coach James Holt said about Franklin, who earned first-team all-district status last season as a sophomore and is a top contender for this year's 19-3A MVP award. “If a team presses us (defensively), we pretty much put him up there by himself. We don't put three guys there. We want to get the ball in to Darion and we think he's going to make the right decision and he's going to be able to get the ball up and get us into our offense.

“But he's also the type of point guard that when he needs to score, he can score. When he needs to set it up, he can set people up. And then on the defensive end, he's led us in steals the whole year. I think he's averaging over four steals a game, and he's a real ball-hawk. He really finds the ball, he's got great hands and he's got really good instincts on defense. He sees the play before the guy makes the pass, and that leads to a lot of steals.”

Rambeau was the 19-3A MVP as a sophomore in 2019, when Franklin earned a late-season promotion to varsity for a 25-win Bees team that grabbed the first of three straight district championships and reached the Region III quarterfinals. Rambeau said Franklin has made large strides since the point guard helped drive Academy to a 30-7 record and another regional quarterfinal trek a season ago.

“He improved a lot since last year, surprisingly. He's just so intense. He likes to get loud, and he's out there. It helps us with momentum and the energy of the team,” Rambeau said about Franklin, who's also a standout linebacker and running back in football and a starting infielder in baseball. “I think Darion's a jack of all trades. He can pass, score, shoot, he can play defense. I don't think he has any real weaknesses in his game.”

Franklin, who's helped Academy go 26-0 in district play the last two seasons, said it's been easy for him to mesh and play with the four older starters along with the Bees' other senior, reserve forward Tyler Lambert.

“I feel like they all trust me,” Franklin said during practice Monday afternoon. “I feel like a broken record, but we've been playing together since we were younger. They know my abilities and I know all of theirs, and we just like to have fun.”

Asked about next season, when he'll be Academy's only returning starter, Franklin looked out at his teammates on the court, smiled and said, “It's going to be quiet. No Jerry, no annoying Jaylin, no Kollin who gets mad at everything, no Tanner instigating.”


CORNER POCKET: Academy junior point guard Darion Franklin (2) fires a 3-point shot over Franklin defender Hayden Helton during the 16th-ranked Bumblebees' 69-47 win over the No. 17 Lions in a Class 3A Region III quarterfinal Feb. 27 in Lorena. Academy players looking on are seniors Kollin Mraz (1), Tanner Rambeau (25) and Jerry Cephus. The 6-foot, 198-pound Franklin, a two-year starter and an All-District 19-3A first-team selection as a sophomore, has made 11 3-pointers during five playoff wins and delivered a team-high 24 points in Academy's 70-69, double-overtime victory against No. 7 New Waverly in a regional semifinal last Friday in Madisonville. The Bees (22-7) battle No. 5 San Antonio Cole (25-5) in a state semifinal at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Hays High School in Buda. (File photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



During the playoffs, Franklin scored 18 points against Teague, 21 against Scurry-Rosser and 17 against No. 17 Franklin as Academy finally advanced past the third round for the first time since its 2002 state title.

Then in last weekend's Region III tournament in Madisonville, Franklin scored 24 points Friday night as the Bees rallied to defeat No. 7 New Waverly 70-69 in double overtime, snapping the Bulldogs' 26-game winning streak. Recovering well after that grueling classic, he contributed 11 points in Saturday afternoon's regional final as Academy beat No. 11 Winnie East Chambers 68-58, which came in with a 27-0 record.

“It's just exciting, man. It's a dream come true, is all I can say. It's crazy how we built to this from 6 years old to now, playing together. It's crazy,” Franklin said. “I feel that we wanted it more. We were the underdogs coming in. The poll (on Twitter) said East Chambers (had a) 59 percent (chance to win the four-team regional tournament), and that kind of sparked us. We wanted the game more. We wanted to win. We wanted to come here.”

Said Rambeau about Academy finally achieving its long-term goal of advancing to state, and what comes next: “It's really a cool thing. Ever since we were little, this has been the goal. I still don't think the job is done. We're not satisfied.”

To extend their season beyond Tuesday night, Franklin and Academy must find a way to get past a tradition-rich Cole program that's accustomed to competing at this stage of the state playoffs. Head coach Noe Cantu's Cougars were Region IV finalists in 2018, then reached the 2019 state semifinals before losing to eventual champion Dallas Madison.

Cole got back to state a year ago and beat Peaster 58-44 in a semifinal at San Antonio's Alamodome, but the 33-6 Cougars never got the opportunity to avenge their season-ending 2019 loss. Because of uncertainty surrounding the rapidly growing COVID-19 pandemic, the University Interscholastic League suspended its state tournament last March 12, and the 3A state championship showdown between Cole and Madison never happened.

“We're very excited, because we didn't get to play our championship game last year due to COVID. So we're extra excited because we get to this year, and hopefully we go farther than we did last year,” Cole junior guard Trey Blackmore told San Antonio's KSAT 12 News said after the Cougars beat No. 25 Santa Rosa 67-48 on Saturday to win their third straight Region IV crown and push their winning streak to 19 games.

Cole began this season at No. 1 in the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches 3A state rankings, even after 7-foot junior center Vince Iwuchukwu – a four-star recruit – transferred to a school in Indiana. Before the Cougars went 14-0 in District 26-3A, they recorded victories against two 6A opponents, two 5A foes and two 4A squads.

All five of Cole's defeats occurred within a 17-day span in December and included losses to 6A opponents San Antonio Johnson, San Antonio Wagner and Converse Judson and a setback against 4A No. 1-ranked Dallas Oak Cliff Faith Family Academy. The Cougars' only loss to a fellow 3A team was 66-59 against Corpus Christi London, which Cole avenged by edging No. 4 London 50-48 in overtime in a regional semifinal last Friday after Cole had led by 10 points in the fourth quarter.

The 6-3 Blackmore and 5-10 Silas Livingston – both junior guards – scored 16 points apiece in the Cougars' regional final romp over Santa Rosa. Senior Elijah Sexton, a 6-3 center, is Cole's premier interior player.

“They're a good team and they've been to the state tournament the past couple years,” Rambeau said about Cole, which is making its eighth state appearance in program history. “They do have a big, athletic player and they have really good guards.”

Said Holt: “(Livingston and Blackmore) are really good. Both of them can shoot and drive. They've got a guy who's awesome on the boards and they've got a little bit of size, so they're a complete team in my opinion.”

Cole's biggest claim to fame is that it's the alma mater of Shaquille O'Neal, the physically dominant center who powered the unbeaten Cougars to the 3A state championship in 1989 and went on to become a larger-than-life NBA superstar and a member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.


BIG-GAME PREPARATION: Academy junior point guard Darion Franklin (left), senior forward Tanner Rambeau, senior wing Jaylin McWilliams, senior forward Tyler Lambert and senior guard Jerry Cephus practice shooting on Monday afternoon as the Region III champion Bumblebees (22-7) get ready to play Region IV champion San Antonio Cole (25-5) in a Class 3A state semifinal at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Hays High School's Oran Bales Gymnasium in Buda. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Similar to how Academy felt entering its high-stakes battles with New Waverly and East Chambers last weekend, Franklin said the Bees are focused on playing their style of game and their best basketball more than adjusting to contend with how Cole plays, although the Cougars' talent and pedigree certainly warrant much respect.

“I haven't really watched them on film, but I'm never going to underestimate a team that's in the Final Four,” Franklin said. “But at the end of the day, I'll take all of my guys over theirs any day.”

Rambeau said Academy's desire made the difference in winning the regional tournament.

“I feel like we just wanted it so badly,” he said. “We came out there and did whatever it took to win the games.”

In a normal year, the Academy-Cole state semifinal would be played in the Alamodome's cavernous confines. But because of COVID-19-related factors, the UIL mandated that semifinal opponents make their own arrangements. Academy athletic director Jared Hunt said it was difficult to find a suitable facility that was willing to host the Academy-Cole duel on short notice, but on Sunday the schools were able to secure Hays High School, an 87-mile drive from Academy and a 56-mile trek from Cole.

Hunt said that because of COVID-19 guidelines that require strict social distancing, attendance at Oran Bales Gymnasium will be limited to 455 total spectators, which is approximately 25 percent of capacity. Tickets for the side of Academy, the designated home team, sold out within a few minutes of becoming available online at noon Monday.

“Usually the state semifinal game is always set up at the Alamodome and you're good to go, but when the UIL told us a few months ago what it was going to be (due to COVID-19), we knew it was going to difficult (to make venue arrangements) for the regionals and the state semis,” said Hunt, who was a backup junior guard on Academy's 33-3 team that won the 2A state championship in 2002. “We looked all in the Austin and Round Rock area and Georgetown, and we landed on a couple but then we had some hiccups with that over the weekend.

“Williamson County and Travis County have some of the stricter rules on capacities. We made sure that the families of our players and our coaches (received tickets). We're going to be close to 25 percent capacity. It's not ideal, it's not what we wanted, it's not what we thought we were going to be getting. It's none of that, but I told Coach Holt and the players, 'It is what it is. It's a gym with 10-foot goals and your family's going to be there. Let's win, punch our ticket (to the state final) and people can come.'”

The Academy-Cole winner will advance to the 3A state championship game at 2 p.m. Friday at the Alamodome. Tuesday's other state semifinal pits No. 2 Brock (29-3) of Region I against No. 10 Tatum (24-3) of Region II at 7 p.m. at Corsicana High School. Brock beat Academy 63-51 on Nov. 24 in Cleburne, though the Bees were without McWilliams at that point of the season. Tatum knocked out No. 1 Madison 61-54 in a regional final Saturday.

Although playing the state semifinal at the Alamodome might have been perceived as an advantage for Cole based on its proximity and recent state tournament experience, Academy doesn't necessarily think that playing at Hays – a standard-sized high school gym at essentially a neutral location – will give the Bees any edge.

“I don't think either of us has an advantage pertaining to where the game is. I think they're just as ready to play as we are, and we have to do whatever it takes to win,” Rambeau said. “It's no big deal. It's still going to be a basketball game. Somebody's going to end up winning and somebody's going to end up losing.”

Holt was a part of five state tournament teams during his 11 seasons as an assistant coach at then-2A Ponder, which was the runner-up in 2006 and captured three consecutive championships from 2008-10 before adding a fourth crown in 2014, all at the University of Texas' Frank Erwin Center in Austin.

Holt said he's much more focused on helping Academy's players earn their first state championship ring than he is concerned about adding a fifth title ring to his personal collection, which is packed away somewhere. And for his Bees to get past Cole's stellar squad and make it to Friday afternoon's state final in San Antonio, Holt said they'll stick to the winning formula that's worked well enough to get them this far.

“We've got to play really good defense. To win at this level, you've got to be a really good defensive team,” Holt said. “Offensively, we've got to take care of the ball and get good shots. I think if we do those things, we'll put ourselves in position to be successful.”

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