Storm hold on against Tigers

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Princeton’s Cole Evenson (left) and Bureau Valley’s Tommy Johnston battle for a rebound in the first quarter of Tuesday’s game at Prouty Gym. The Bureau County rivals will become conference rivals next year. (BCR photo/Mike Vaughn)
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PRINCETON – Add another chapter to the Bureau Valley and Princeton boys’ basketball rivalry.

The two teams have played in some memorable games in the past, and Tuesday night’s 54-50 victory for the Storm at Prouty Gymnasium was no exception.

After falling behind by 16 points at halftime, the Tigers clawed their way back into the game, cutting the deficit in half by the end of the third quarter, and then tying the game, at 48 apiece, on a Cole Evenson layup with 1:30 remaining.

The Storm fought off the comeback attempt by hitting enough free throws down the stretch and breaking the Tigers full-court pressure when they needed to most, getting a Tommy Johnston layup with four seconds remaining to secure the win on Princeton’s Senior Night.

“We came out with a bang in the beginning because we were pretty excited for this game,” said Storm guard Parker Neuhalfen, who had a game-high 23 points on 8 of 12 from the field. “We kind of let off and went passive in the second half and they made a run. We have to be more poised when they pressure us.”

“It felt nice winning here on their home floor on their Senior Night,” said Storm guard Bryce Hansen, who scored eight points off the bench. “The team really persevered well in the end.”

That perseverance was tested late in the game. Princeton’s full-court pressure forced the Storm into the three costly turnovers in the final two minutes of the game and in a span of 28 seconds, the Tigers got a hoop and a foul off a steal by Zach Stroud, one of two free throws after a steal by Evenson, and then Evenson’s score that tied the game at 48.

“Credit to coach (Jesse) Brandt and the Princeton boys,” said Storm coach Jason Marquis. “They ran (their press) very well, they rotated very well. We didn’t get to some critical areas against a defense like that, and that will hurt you. I thought we were available but not in crucial areas.”

Brian Lange knocked down three of four free throws on consecutive possessions for the Storm, but Stroud came right back with a drive to the hoop to cut it to 51-50 with 27 seconds remaining.

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