Terrace boys hold off Todd Beamer, advance to 3A state quarterfinals
Published 1:30 am Wednesday, February 28, 2024
TACOMA — Although it was given a scare, the Mountlake Terrace High School boys basketball team gutted out a victory over Todd Beamer.
The No. 5 Hawks overcame an 18-0 second-half run by the 13th-seeded Titans in a Class 3A Hardwood Classic round-of-12 game, falling behind by two in the fourth quarter before pulling out a 69-59 win on Wednesday at the Tacoma Dome. Terrace (22-3) advances to play No. 6 Mt. Spokane in the quarterfinal round Thursday at 12:15 p.m..
Rayshaun Connor led four Terrace players in double figures scoring with 16 points, Zaveon Jones added 14 points and nine rebounds while Jaxon Dubiel had 13 points. Gabe Towne chipped in 11 points and six boards.
Will Tellis supplied 19 points and four rebounds for the Titans (20-5) and Caleb Berry added 15 points and six boards.
After the Hawks grabbed a 37-19 lead early in the third quarter, Todd Beamer came storming back. The Titans used a 24-11 quarter and 18-0 run to send Terrace into the fourth nursing a 45-43 advantage.
“There’s nobody that’s gotten here with a false identity,” Hawks head coach Nalin Sood said. “Everybody has some substance in what they do well to get to this point. … They’re always going to hit you at some point.”
Terrace weathered the storm down the stretch, outscoring the Titans 20-11 in the last five-plus minutes.
Connor hit a trey with just over five minutes as Terrace pulled ahead 52-48. At the 2:02 mark, Towne drilled a 3 from the corner, making it 59-53. Towne then hit two free throws, putting the Hawks by eight.
“It started coming back to us once we started taking care of the ball,” Jones said. “We were taking bad shots and we weren’t playing defense. In the fourth quarter, I think we did all of that and we got the W.”
Jones went 10-for-11 from the free-throw line, including 7-for-7 in the second half as he delivered 11 points over the final two quarters.
The Hawks also overcame late foul trouble. Logan Tews fouled out late in the fourth, while Jones and Towne each finished with four fouls. Both drew their third whistle before the start of the final period.
“We were at the point where you don’t want to go too far or be too cautious,” Sood said, “especially when the game got tight, when we had to throw those guys back in there to just be on top of things. … It comes down to trusting the kids and the wisdom they have from experience.”
