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Wheeling Park Basketball Star Alex Vargo Named 1st Team All-State

Park Teammate King Is 2nd Team

Photo by Cody Tomer Wheeling Park’s Alex Vargo was named first team all-state by the West Virginia Sports Writers Association.

Following a stellar sophomore campaign during the 2017-18, season, Alex Vargo picked up where he left off. Vargo, kicked off his junior year with an impressive with a double-double (28 points, 15 rebounds) against Martins Ferry in the Sam Andy Classic. With the help of a solid cast, Vargo and the Patriots punched their ticket to the Class 5A OVAC championship game and claimed a Region One, Section One Title.

Vargo was the leading scorer (18.9 ppg) and rebounder (9.2) for a Patriots team that faced a grueling schedule that included nine games against West Virginia Class AAA state tournament teams, plus two other Class AAA top-10 opponents and games against strong Ohio and Pennsylvania teams.

With such an impressive performance, Vargo was named first team all-state in Class AAA by the West Virginia Sports Writers Association.

Teammate Keondre’ King (17.7 ppg, 5.2 rpg and 59 3s) was named second team all-state.

Most every team competing in this year’s boys Class AAA state basketball tournament featured balanced scoring, with multiple players averaging 10 or more points.

In fact, the teams playing in the championship game at the Charleston Coliseum — Martinsburg (four) and University (three) — sported a total of seven players carrying double-figure averages.

But not George Washington. The defending champion Patriots, for many reasons, had to rely on senior guard Bunky Brown. And he didn’t let them down.

Brown carried the team’s scoring load and lofty expectations on his shoulders much of the season, averaging 26.4 points and nearly eight rebounds, as he led GW (20-6) to a No. 3 state ranking and a return trip to the state tournament, where it lost to Cabell Midland 64-62 in overtime in the quarterfinals. For his efforts, Brown has been chosen as the first-team captain on the Class AAA all-state team.

He is joined on the first team by Parkersburg South senior guard Seth Fallon, Martinsburg senior guard Grant Harman, Spring Valley senior wing C.J. Meredith, University junior guard Kaden Metheny, Woodrow Wilson senior guard Bryce Radford and Morgantown senior guard Cam Selders.

Brown was expected to rely on talented sophomore guard Mason Pinkett as his running mate this season, but Pinkett was limited to nine appearances and eight starts by two injuries to the same knee, the second of which resulted in a torn ACL in early February. That subtracted his 15.1 ppg scoring average and ended up placing the bulk of the offense on Brown. He didn’t disappoint, averaging 21 points in games when Pinkett started, and 28 in games he didn’t. GW’s next-high scoring average this season belonged to Gus Eddy (8.1).

“He just kept adjusting,” GW coach Rick Greene said of Brown, “which is a great quality for a winner to have, just kept clicking people off. Obviously, the other kids did a great job, and you didn’t know who the second scorer was going to be — it was a different kid on a different night. But you knew who the top scorer was going to be.

“When you were scouting us, you were scouting pure Bunky. It’s not, ‘I’ve got to take care of Mason, and take care of Bunky.’ Everything’s going to Bunky, and then you deal with the other kids if they were having a good day.”

In George Washington’s four postseason games — three against top-10 AAA teams — Brown had 30, 33, 31 and 27 points. That included 31 points and seven rebounds in a Region 3 co-final win at Woodrow Wilson.

“Coming down the stretch, he wasn’t going to be denied,” Greene said. “He was going to get us back to the state tournament and see what happens there. That stretch run was pure senior. He did everything humanly possible to get us there. I just don’t think there are very many kids who can do that. It speaks to his competitiveness and his will to win.”

Brown also improved his 3-point shooting to sink a career-best 59 from long distance and made 70 percent at the free-throw line, where he had a staggering 222 attempts. He wound up as the program’s all-time leading scorer with 1,594 points.

After inheriting a leadership role from the four senior starters GW lost from the previous season’s title team, Brown felt like he handled things well in the locker room.

“I think I did pretty good,” he said. “Losing Mason hurt us a lot, but it was a good run with the guys. They were young, but they stepped up and we got back to the state tournament. They might make it back next year.

“Honestly, there’s no regrets with GW. Even though we didn’t win a state championship this year, I still love the team and I still love Coach Greene. It was a good run, a good four years.”

Here are capsule looks at the rest of the first-team players:

Fallon — A three-year starter at point guard, he helped the Patriots get back to the state tournament with his all-around play. The son of coach Mike Fallon, he averaged 13.4 points, 6.7 assists, 5.6 rebounds and 1.9 steals and shot 83 percent at the foul line (59 of 71).

Harman — His savvy play guided the Bulldogs to the state championship game for a second straight year, where they lost to University 51-45, their first setback after going 27-0. He led a balanced attack in scoring at 10.6 points per game, along with 2.3 assists and a team-high 64 steals.

Meredith — He finished second to Brown in scoring in the Mountain State Athletic Conference at 23 points per game, and also averaged 7.5 rebounds and 2.6 assists. Meredith raised his scoring average a full nine points per game from a 14.0 ppg mark as a sophomore.

Metheny — As a super-quick point guard, he was one of the big keys to University’s first-ever state title, averaging 23.5 points and 6.1 assists during the season. In the Hawks’ three-game state tournament run, Metheny averaged 20 points, five assists and five steals.

Radford — One of the top pure shooters in the state, he racked up 50 points against First Love Christian (Pa.) and 45 against Bluefield, two of the top single-game efforts for any West Virginia player this season. He averaged 21.7 points and sank 76 3-pointers for the Flying Eagles.

Selders — At 15.7 points per game, he was the top scorer this season for a Mohigans team that beat University in the sectional finals en route to reaching the state tournament. In the quarterfinals, Selders had 12 points, seven rebounds and three assists in a loss to Capital.

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