Published February 09, 2010 06:26 am - Dave Yost should know better than most, having been an assistant coach at Danville for the last half-dozen years, the player the Ironmen have in Mikeal Owens-Wright.
Danville junior drops 30 in victory
By Scott Dudinskie
For the Daily Item
DANVILLE -- Dave Yost should know better than most, having been an assistant coach at Danville for the last half-dozen years, the player the Ironmen have in Mikeal Owens-Wright.
Terrific athlete. Great leaper. Decent touch around the rim.
However, Southern Columbia's first-year varsity coach saw a strikingly different Owens-Wright in Monday night's Heartland crossover game.
The 6-foot-3 junior attacked the basket like an angry hornet, muscling up shots like never before against the young Tigers who were more than willing to trade bruises in the lane.
The result was a career-best 30 points for Owens-Wright -- including 12 in a pivotal third-quarter stretch -- that led Danville to a 70-59 win at the McCloskey Center.
"He went right at us. We just didn't get a body on him enough to stop him," said Yost. "And obviously, when you've got him that close, with his athleticism, he's going to eat you alive."
Owens-Wright had six baskets during a tell-tale run in which Danville score on 11 consecutive possessions to start the third quarter, leaving a 35-all halftime tie in its wake.
He scored five straight baskets at one point, all in the paint, as Yost burned one timeout after another to try to slow the momentum.
Danville's lead grew to 14 before the third quarter ended and crested at 15 late in the fourth.
"A lot of times Mikeal would make good moves and not finish. Or he'd shoot fadeaways, try to finesse a shot over the rim rather than going hard to the backboard. We get on him all the time about it," said Ironmen coach Lenny Smith. "In the second half, he went to the basket strong and finished."
Owens-Wright, who made 14 of 20 shots, also pulled a game-high 13 rebounds. Michael Rudy had 16 points and seven boards, and Ryan Reichard scored 12 as Danville (13-5) won its third straight game.
The turning point for Owens-Wright came less than a week ago at Shamokin, when he went toe-to-toe with Indians bruiser Brent Forbes and excelled, scoring 16 points in a 24-point Danville win.
"Forbes is a great competitor, and taking it to him gave me confidence," said Owens-Wright. "If I can play to a great ability with him, one of the best in the league, any other ones are not going to faze me at all."
Owens-Wright was relentless Monday, pounding the ball at basket time and again, whether the shot called for a quick move around an outstretched arm or a lead elbow through it. At one point in the fourth quarter, he turned into a pair of Tigers and forced up a shot that had no business going in but it did, the last two points of a total that dwarfed his previous best (18).
"Maybe he figured it out," said Smith. "We've always said, Man, when he puts it together he's going to be dynamite.' Well, he showed what can happen when he puts it together."