Popoola twins lead Palisades to City Open Division | College News
When the horn sounded to end Friday evening’s City Section Open Division boys’ basketball closing, the first individual OJ and EJ Popoola wished to hug was their father, Chris.
Thirty years in the past, he transferred from Westchester to Palisades to help the Dolphins attain the 4A semifinals. In June, his twin sons transferred to his alma mater from a Detroit prep college with hopes of making their papa proud and lifting the city’s spirit.
Mission completed.
OJ scored 19 and EJ added 17 as the Dolphins used tenacious protection, a three-point barrage and a relentless transition assault to overwhelm Cleveland, 75-56, at L.A. Southwest College.
Jack Levey made 5 three-pointers, raising his season whole to 108, and Phil Reed had 13 factors.
“This means everything,” OJ Popoola said. “Since the first day we came here this is what we wanted to do, bring joy back to the community.”
“We’re coming back next year to defend the title,” EJ Popoola added. “My dad’s team came up short but we finished the job.”
Playing the ultimate at a impartial website was nothing new for a squad that didn’t play in its own fitness center for 42 straight video games — a span of 388 days — in the aftermath of the Palisades fire last yr.
“We accomplished two goals, winning league and City,” second-year coach Jeff Bryant said. “Now state is the third goal.”
Palisades (20-11) was in command from the start. OJ Popoola swished a three-pointer from the nook, Reed obtained a steal and scored on a layup, and Levey handed to OJ Popoola for a dunk, making it 7-0 after only 55 seconds. The Dolphins stretched the lead to 25-8 by the end of the first quarter and the margin was 19 by halftime.
Both groups misplaced in the Open Division semifinals last winter and have been the preseason favorites to play for the title. They have been awarded the top seeds in the eight-team bracket after each completed first in its league.
The Dolphins staked their declare as the best group in the City for the first time since 1969, when Palisades routed Reseda 85-57 in the ultimate at Pauley Pavilion under this system’s first coach, Jerry Marvin, to end the season 21-1 when there was only one playoff division. Leading that group was ahead Chris Marlowe, who was named MVP after netting 29 factors in the title recreation. He went on to captain the U.S. Olympic volleyball group that received the gold medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics.
Since it opened in 1961, Palisades has been the crown jewel of the City Section, claiming more than 260 titles across all sports activities (more than twice as many as the next-closest college), but this is only the third in boys’ basketball.
Palisades captured the Division I crown six years in the past under former coach Donzell Hayes, who was a teammate of Chris Popoola on the Dolphins’ 1995-96 group that fell in additional time to Crenshaw (coached by the legendary Willie West) in the 4A semifinals.
“My team was one game away but these kids completed the circle,” Chris Popoola said, then referenced a well-known Dolphins alum. “I hope Steve Kerr was watching.”
Sophomore guard Charlie Adams, who scored 24 factors in the Cavaliers’ 68-64 additional time win against Fairfax in the semifinals, was restricted to 13 — half of Bryant’s pregame plan.
Sergine Deme scored 19 factors and had 5 dunks, and TJ Wansa added 11 factors for No. 2 Cleveland (20-10), which was looking for its first championship since back-to-back 3A titles under Greg Herrick in 1981 and 1982.
No City opponent got here nearer than 15 factors against Palisades, which now waits to see what division it should play in for the state playoffs.
“We’re not done,” OJ Popoola said.
“We can compete with anyone,” EJ added.
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