[Congressional Record Volume 149, Number 43 (Tuesday, March 18, 2003)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E502-E503]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THE MATIGNON HIGH SCHOOL BOYS' BASKETBALL TEAM
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HON. MICHAEL E. CAPUANO
of massachusetts
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, March 18, 2003
Mr. CAPUANO. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to recognize the Matignon
Warriors boys' basketball team. On Monday, March 10, 2003, the Warriors
defeated the Southeastern Regional Hawks to win the MIAA Division 4
state championship by a score of 78-55. Matignon High School, which is
located in North Cambridge, is a cornerstone of the community, and I am
proud to honor the members and coaches of the boys' championship
basketball team.
I want to take the time to recognize the individuals who make up the
state champs, and extend my congratulations on an incredible season:
Alex Aiello, Shelby Berleus, Greg Case, Ralph Fevrier, Jimmy Guerrier,
Jeff Lerebour, John McMahon, Chris Neil, John Nicoloro, Chris
O'Callaghan, Ricky Prosper, AJ Urquhart, Justin Veri, Frank Whitney,
Head Coach Joel Burke, Assistant Coaches Ed O'Callaghan, Sean
O'Callaghan, Terry Mathews and Mel Story.
I am also including a copy of an article which appeared in the
Cambridge Chronicle on March 12, 2003.
Warriors Win Div. 4 State Championship
(By Jamie Pote)
The last time the Matignon boys basketball team played at
the FleetCenter, coach Joel Burke said the excitement of
taking the fabled parquet floor caused his team to lose
focus.
Monday afternoon, the Warriors' focus was impeccable.
Matignon stormed out to a 27-point halftime lead and coasted
to a 78-55 victory over Southeastern Regional to capture the
Division 4 state title (there are no Div. 4 teams outside
Eastern Mass.).
``In 1997 we were just happy to be here,'' said Burke,
whose team lost to Avon that year. ``We were too busy taking
pictures and we seemed to have lost our focus. That was my
big concern heading into this game--we had to be ready.
``And for sure, we were ready for this game.''
Led by seniors John McMahon (29 points) and Chris Neil (19
points), Matignon (21-4) outplayed the Hawks in nearly every
facet of the game, including a 20-9 edge in rebounds in the
first half.
``We thought if we held them to just one shot that we would
be able to keep the game close,'' Burke said. ``We had no
idea that this would happen. The court is so big and we just
moved the ball all over to the open spots and hit a lot of
easy baskets.''
In Friday's sectional final, Matignon picked apart
Minuteman Tech's 2-2-1 zone defense and led by 39 points at
halftime. Southeastern played much of the same defense
yesterday and Matignon again picked it apart with baskets in
transition. The Warriors also relied on their outside
shooting by hitting eight 3-pointers in the game, with seven
of those treys coming before halftime.
``When we play on the bigger courts, it's just easier for
us to score on transition,'' Neil said. ``It means that we're
the team
[[Page E503]]
that's most in shape. We're a running team and no one can
catch us when they try those gimmick zone defenses, the 2-2-1
or the 1-2-2. We just skip right over that and score so many
easy baskets.''
Neil set the tone right away for Matignon when he buried a
3-pointer from the right elbow just 30 seconds into the game.
Southeastern stayed close over the next few minutes, trailing
10-9, and that's when Matignon blew the game wide open. The
Warriors went on a 16-0 run, including three baskets by
junior Jimmy Guerrier (12 points).
``We were just getting a lot of great looks,'' said Burke,
whose team led 47-20 at the half. ``And the ball was falling
in the basket. That's a good team over there and I think some
of their early shots that didn't go in just took them out of
their game.''
Matignon opened the second half with an 11-4 run, sparked
by a 3-pointer and layup by Neil and a pair of baskets from
McMahon.
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