(NOTE: For those readers not aware of what 'WPIAL' stands for, it's an acronym for 'Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League', which is the largest high school athletic district in the nation and has 132 participants in basketball)
All hail the kings.
As one of the most exciting decades in western Pennsylvania sports history nears its end, I deemed it appropriate to come up with my WPIAL Basketball All-Decade Team.
A lot of thought and self-debate went into this team, and while I may not exactly be Deuce Skurcenski (http://www.myspace.com/deucethestatman), I've been around the block a time or two when it comes to WPIAL basketball.
My father has been a head coach in the WPIAL for as long as I've been alive sans 2002 and 2003 thanks in large part to three spineless people that will remain anonymous. Anyway, all I did growing up was eat, sleep and breathe WPIAL basketball. I still do to this day, which is why I even went through the process of coming up with an All-Decade team.
It was just a normal way of life for me as I attended all of my dad's games, practices and off-season workouts and observed as he broke down film of upcoming opponents. I'd even tag along on scouting trips to gyms all throughout the greater Pittsburgh area as he'd attend the games of teams he'd face later in season to get a live look at what he'd be going up against as well as take notes on them from the stands.
I also played my entire basketball career in the WPIAL and faced some outstanding competition this decade, having my share of long nights against some great players. A couple of them are on this team.
So many players have come through the first decade of the new millenium in the WPIAL, and a number of them have legitimate cases to be members of the All-Decade squad. However, only five can be selected, and the five I've chosen, in my opinion, are the epitome of greatness at the high school level and have forever etched their names in WPIAL basketball lore.
All five of these players had the ability to put their respective teams on their shoulders at any given moment and showed divine leadership, character and composure while on the court. Beyond what they achieved throughout their high school careers, they've proven to be quality people off the court and all have used athletics to their advantage in becoming the successes they are today.
Enough preface though. Let's unveil this squad.
POINT GUARD - ADAM DIMICHELE (STO-ROX HIGH SCHOOL, CLASS OF 2004)
There may have been point guards throughout the decade that could put the ball through the hoop better (I.E. Blackhawk's Brandon Fuss-Cheatham), but nobody could control a game quite like Sto-Rox's Adam DiMichele.
DiMichele was best at what every coach looks for in a point guard: making his teammates better. His senior year statistics are a reflection of that: 13.8 points, 7.5 rebounds, 5 assists and 4 steals per game. With numbers like those, you don't even have to have seen DiMichele play to know something good happened when the ball was in his hands.
The most glaring number, and the anchor behind DiMichele's selection, is 105-15. That was Sto-Rox's win-loss record in DiMichele's four years, including three straight WPIAL championship game appearances from 2001-2003, winning back-to-back in 2001 and 2002, and a PIAA state championship his senior year of 2004. In that game, DiMichele closed out his illustrious career in a fitting manner, recording a double-double with 16 points and 13 rebounds in the Vikings' 62-53 win over perennial AA power Camp Hill Trinity.
Rewind a couple paragraphs back to Revis' 33-point effort against Beaver Falls in their 86-82 OT win back in December of 2003. Revis may have stolen the show that night, but a subplot from that game was the birth of a legend that could only be rivaled around western Pennsylvania by Paul Bunyon and his blue ox.
That night, Lance Jeter, a sophomore at the time, buried a shot from just beyond half-court to send the game into overtime. Nobody knew it then, but that would be the first of many memorable shots from the man who was dubbed the nickname "Sweet Jete".
The list of clutch shots Jeter hit throughout his career echo throughout the Beaver Valley today and helped create some of the WPIAL's most unforgettable games. The 2005 WPIAL AA championship game between Beaver Falls and Aliquippa is far and away, in my opinion, the greatest WPIAL championship game ever played -- regardless of classification.
In a see-saw battle that featured arguably the two best teams in the state (it's a shame we couldn't see these two teams play in Hershey for the state championship that year), the legend of Lance Jeter increased ten-fold with his performance in one night. His deep 3-pointer at the buzzer kept the Tigers' shot at winning their first WPIAL title since 1994 alive as it tied the game and sent it into overtime. Three overtimes later, the Tigers accomplished that feat when Jeter worked his magic again and banked in a 30-footer to give Beaver Falls a 79-78 win and the WPIAL championship. Jeter's legendary shots were the exclamation points on a performance that saw him carry the Tigers on his shoulders all night, as he scored a game-high 37 points.
Jeter would come back to put the dagger in Aliquippa again during that 2005 season, this time in the PIAA West Region Final. His two free throws with 5 seconds remaining propelled Beaver Falls to a 58-57 win and advanced them to the AA State Championship. In that game, a huge second half by Jeter and a 3-pointer at the third-quarter buzzer sparked a 16-0 BF run and helped push the Tigers to a 71-59 triumph over York Catholic, giving Beaver Falls their third state championship in school history.
Jeter's style of play didn't exactly reflect his nickname. He wasn't flashy with the basketball, had a suspect jumpshot (and still does haha :-) ) and used brut strength to power his way to the basket. But you clearly can't knock its effectiveness. Jeter finished his memorable career at Beaver Falls 13th on the all-time WPIAL scoring list with an astounding 2,243 points and was the Associated Press' Pennsylvania Class AA Player of the Year in 2005, along with being the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Male High School Athlete of the Year in 2006.
More impressive than his knack for hitting the big shot and all the awards and accolades he received was how Jeter handled all of that attention.
Jeter's high school coach, Doug Biega, was quoted as saying that Jeter was the most humble kid he's ever been around. After having the opportunity to get to know Lance very well over the last year or so, I agree with Biega 100 percent. For everything that he's accomplished so far through athletics, it couldn't happen to a better person. If somebody got a full scholarship to play football at a Big East school (Cincinnati) and followed that up by transferring to Polk Community College to fulfill his love for basketball and still get recruited by a number of Division I schools, that person could tend to get a little cocky, and maybe rightly so. But not Jeter. He represents everything that's good about the sport of basketball. Young kids all around Beaver Falls don't want to be like Lebron: they want to be like Lance. Any time I'd go pick him up in downtown Beaver Falls to play basketball over the summer, a number of people would stop and wave at him, or we'd hear the occassional "WHAT UP, JETE?!" yelled at my car as we drove by. His reaction? A simple smile and a wave. Business as usual, just like he is on the court.
FORWARD - BEN MCCAULEY (YOUGH HIGH SCHOOL, CLASS OF 2005)
Simply put, Ben McCauley didn't get much love playing at Yough in the little-known town of Herminie, but the kid could flat-out play.
I remember the first and only time seeing McCauley play during his high school career. It was his senior year at the Blackhawk Christmas tournament against Jeter's Beaver Falls team that won the state championship. I was anxious to see him play because I had heard schools such as N.C. State, Xavier, Pitt and even Duke were showing interest in the 6'8'' forward. What I saw that day impressed me beyond my initial expectations.
A player like McCauley makes coaching basketball very simple at the high school level. Considering how poor of a supporting cast McCauley had, it made everything he did on the court all the more remarkable. All throughout his career, McCauley saw Box-1's, double teams, traps, etc. yet still managed to be a scoring machine in his four years, totaling 2,284 career points.
In his senior season, McCauley was a man among boys, averaging 28.8 points and 16.5 rebounds per game en route to leading Yough to a 20-9 record and an appearance in the WPIAL Class AAA championship game, the school's first ever appearance in a WPIAL title game as well as the first year EVER Yough won a WPIAL playoff game. And to say McCauley carried the Cougars throughout the playoffs would be an understatement. McCauley averaged 33 points per game in the playoffs, coming just 15 points shy of the all-time points record in a WPIAL postseason. Penn Hills' Drew Schifino still holds that honor after scoring 147 points in four games (36.8 average) as he led the Indians to a AAAA championship in 2000.
McCauley has proven his mettle at the college level as well. He's been a three-year starter at N.C. State in the always powerful ACC with his best season being his sophomore year in 2007, where he averaged 14.4 points and 6.9 rebounds per game and garnered Honorable Mention All-ACC honors while starting in all 36 of the Wolfpack's games.
FORWARD - TERRELLE PRYOR (JEANNETTE HIGH SCHOOL, CLASS OF 2008)
So many athletes are said to have the proverbial "total package". Well, try this on for size:
- 6'6'', 235 pounds
- 4.3 40-yard dash
- 36'' vertical leap
- 4,238 rushing yards/4,340 passing yards in football
- 2,285 career points in basketball
That, my friends, is the total package. But why am I bothering explaining it in words when you can see it in action for yourself in a 17-second clip? (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbDotbP-qwg)
Much like his All-Decade teammate Revis, Terrelle Pryor is better known for what he does on the gridiron, and for good reason. As a true freshman this year at Ohio State he led the Buckeyes to a 10-3 record and an appearance in the Fiesta Bowl. But those around western Pennsylvania know just how truly gifted Pryor was on the basketball court, making him one of the most prolific athletes in WPIAL history.
Pryor was nothing short of an icon throughout his career, particularly his senior year. Fans would flock towards him following both football and basketball games and have him autograph everything from footballs to Terrelle Pryor figurines that sports memorabilia stores already had made. That's how big-time Pryor was.
While his big-time talent at quarterback anchored Jeannette's run to the AA state championship and a 16-0 record his senior year, his versatility on the basketball court did virtually the same thing. Jeannette ripped through the WPIAL AA playoffs Pryor's senior year, and he had perhaps the most dominant performance in WPIAL championship game history, scorching Beaver Falls for 39 points, 24 rebounds and 10 blocked shots. Pryor would ride the wave from that performance all the way through the state playoffs and help the Jayhawks earn their first ever state basketball championship with a 76-72 overtime win over Philadelphia Strawberry Mansion.
Pryor may have been blessed with tremendous athletic ability, but a strong work ethic and the will to win was the main reason behind all of his success.
"All I cared about was winning," Pryor said to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette after being named Male Athlete of the Year in 2008. "The winning means more than any of the individual things I got."

I'll give you Pryor and Revis, and even McCauley, but in no way, shape or form does Lance Jeter and especially Adam DiMichele belong on this list. It's actually obscene that Ryan Evanochko and Brandon Fuss-Cheatham could be left off this list. I would take both of them over DiMichele or Jeter, and that's just for starters. I know the Pittsburgh City League does its own thing, but you are leaving some major studs off this list. This is almost like the Jim Equels column he did last year on the All-County football team. Where are Chris' comments? I want to hear what he has to say.
ReplyDeleteWhat about baldwins start center david sedlock. He has to at least be considered
ReplyDeleteAs someone who played basketball in the WPIAL in the early part of the decade, I agree that while it is almost impossible to name a top 5, you probably have to put Brandon Fuss-Cheatham on the list. Ryan Evanochko was good but probably not at the level of the others on the list. There are so many others to consider but Drew Schifino and Daren Tielsch definitely come to mind.
ReplyDeleteBryant McCallister, Herb Pope, Schifino, Akida McClain are all better than Demichle, Jeter and Pryor in my opinion. And just as good as Revis or Mcauley.
ReplyDeleteJeter?! I agree with Grando. What about Brandon Fuss Cheatham and Ryan Evanochko. Blackhawk could possibly take up most of this top 5.
ReplyDeleteFuss was all state as a freshman. All 4 years of his career. 2 State titles, 1 state title runner up, 3 wpial titles. Obviously 4 sections. over 2500 points. Just cause no one could beat em' doesnt mean you gotta cheatam off this list.
ReplyDeleteJula just because you didnt get no PT as a Cougar doesnt mean you gotta hate on Blackhawk buddy. Brandon Fuss-Cheatham is one of the best player in wpial history. Period. He could do it all and led Blackhawk in the glory days in the early 2000's. Your salty because you couldnt make it in the best program in PA so your taking it out on the school. WE ARE BLACKHAWK
ReplyDeleteDante Calabria anyone??? He was the BEST Cougar of them all.
ReplyDeletei personally think this was the best team to put together. how can anyone hate on jeter who by far was probably the most clutch player in this decade, and dimichele, like he said cant no one control a game from the point like he did on high school level. he was like a white rondo giving you assist, steals, blocks, and rebounbs more imporantly. great team! name another 5 that can ball wit em cats
ReplyDeletesorry not to mention, pryor who could have guard any position on the court and have the advantage every single time.
ReplyDeleteWhat about Schifino, Lovelace, Cheatam, McLain...the only relevant top 5 basketball player on this list from HS is Revis....Ionadi(04) was better than Dimichle!
ReplyDelete