Florence – Jaxon Prunty and Cam Scott have been friends since fifth grade and have played basketball together as teammates for Lexington High School the past two years. The seniors played their final game for the Wildcats on Friday, and they went out in a big way.
Prunty scored 23 points and Scott, the Texas signee, had 21 to lead Lexington past Byrnes 67-48 to claim the AAAAA state championship at Florence Center.
“We both were tearing up,” Prunty said when LHS head coach Elliott Pope took the All-State duo out in the final minutes of the game. “I never cried before with him, in front of him That was a great moment right there.”
“It's big, not just for me, not just for the team, but the entire community,” Scott said of Lexington winning the state title. for the first time since 2000 “We've been waiting 24 years for this one. It's beautiful to come back and get it.”
Pope said his senior duo made sure they were ready for everything they could face on Friday.
“Both guys were in the gym last night working on things they knew they could possibly get this evening,” Pope said. “That's a testament to those kids working hard and competing at a high level.”
Lexington was the favorite to win the title last season, but lost to eventual state champion Dorman in the semifinals. The Wildcats were atop the South Carolina Basketball Coaches Association AAAAA poll all season. They finished with a 28-2 record.
LHS led 29-22 at halftime even though Scott had just five points. That changed in the third quarter as Scott scored 12 of Lexington’s 17 points to help it expand the lead to 46-32 after three quarters.
“It's the first time my shot wasn't really falling,” Scott said. “The guys trusted me and just told me to keep shooting. It's basketball. It's a game of runs, it happens.
“Going out for the third quarter, it was real big for me to stay where I was at, I really just broke down my jump shot at halftime and focused on where it was at.”
“You got to love Cam,” Prunty said. “He was missing shots, but I told him to keep on shooting, just go with it.”
The Rebels, who finished the year with a 26-5 record, were never able to mount a rally in the final quarter. BHS head coach Layne Fowler said his team could never really get clicking offensively.
“We didn't shoot the ball particularly well,” Fowler said. “I thought we were playing hard, I thought we were competing like we compete. We just had some things that didn't go our way. It’s not just really that things didn’t go our way, it's plays we've been making all season.
“One, it is disappointing because you know how hard your kids worked. Two, you know you probably didn't play your best.”
Byrnes was just 18 of 59 from the floor, going just 5 of 30 from 3-point range. Senior Will Fowler, an SCBCA AAAAA All-State selection like Scott and Prunty, made 11 of those field goals on 19 attempts to finish with 25 points.
“I thought Will was a warrior keeping us in the game, especially in the first half,” Coach Fowler said of his son, who had five rebounds, three assists and two steals. “We were able to get him some good looks, and he was able to get around guys and get shots with his left hand,, and we got some good kickouts.
“The second half I thought the tide would turn our way as far as knocking down shots for us. It unfortunately never came to fruition."
Senior Kayzzin McDowell, another All-State selection, had eight points and eight rebounds. Junior Jamari Cullen had seven points.
Scott finished with a double-double by pulling down 12 rebounds. He had four assists and four steals, the final two that led to consecutive slam dunks late in the fourth quarter to bring the Lexington crowd to a frenzy.
Prunty had five rebounds and two assists to go with his 23 points. Junior Kaleb Evans had 12 points, four assists and four rebounds.
Senior Coulter Bell scored four points and grabbed 12 rebounds. The Wildcats had a distinct height advantage with the likes of Prunty and Scott, both 6-foot-6-inches tall, the 6-5 Bell and 6-8 Caleb Campbell. They outrebounded Byrnes 46-29. LHS’ length no doubt disrupted Byrnes’ offense as well.
“That's a big thing we talk about all the time,” Scott said. “We have one of the longer teams in our state, so we use our length to our advantage. It really makes things difficult, especially when they want to get to the middle and kick (out to open shooters). We got the hands, we've got the wings, and we rebounded really well tonight.”
“A couple of spots makes it hard for them to make that pass, get that read,” Pope said of his team’s defensive prowess. “Our length helped us put the seal on it a little bit, helped us get a couple of steals, a couple of deflections that put the game away.”
Coach Fowler had nothing but praise for his team.
“We sacrificed, we were tough and gritty, we were unselfish,” he said. “We did all the things necessary to be a good team. All the things necessary to be a good team, we did it. We may not pass the eye test in the layup line, but these young men gave it all they had.”
Prunty was relishing in the moment of finally grabbing that elusive state title for Lexington
“It feels amazing. I can't even put it into words right now It hasn't even sunk in that we're state champions yet. It means a lot,” he said. "This is big for the school."
All Rights Reserved | The High School Sports Report 1986-2021