Game recaps, highlights from the quarterfinals of the 4A and 3A state basketball championships
Between the Class 4A and 3A boys and girls state tournaments, 60 basketball games will be played in the Tacoma Dome this weekend. The News Tribune will be at all of them, providing game recaps, interviews, stats and more.
Follow along for updates on Thursday’s quarterfinals games. This page will be updated throughout the day.
Find out what happened leading up to this point in our recap of Wednesday’s opening-round action.
CLASS 4A BOYS
NO. 1 MOUNT SI 68, NO. 15 GRAHAM-KAPOWSIN 44
Graham-Kapowsin’s spirited run came to an end at the hands of the state’s top team on Thursday evening. Mount Si outscored in Graham-Kapowsin in every quarter except the fourth, when the Wildcats had pulled most of their starters.
It was a clinical performance from start to finish, with Mount Si’s height and shooting ability overmatching the Eagles’.
“They’re a tough team,” said Graham-Kapowsin senior guard Joshua Wood, who scored 12 points in the loss. “They’re a very solid team, very disciplined. They’re able to control the game. They got on us early which really hurt us. We weren’t able to get on them early and we let them get on us early, so that was really the difference maker with all the momentum.”
Mount Si shot 47.2 percent from the field and 41.4 percent from 3-point range, while Graham-Kapowsin was held to 35.6 percent shooting from the field and 36.4 percent from 3-point range. The Eagles also turned the ball over 12 times to Mount Si’s six. Mount Si racked up 14 assists, while Graham-Kapowsin had none.
“They damn near hit every shot,” Wood said. “We could put a hand up and they just hit every shot. I feel like they just had a very, very good shooting night.”
NO. 11 OLYMPIA 60, NO. 5 TAHOMA 53
For the second day in a row, when the game was on the line in the fourth quarter, Olympia junior guard Mason Juergens took over. Tied against Tahoma with 1 minute, 25 seconds to play in the Class 4A high school boys basketball state tournament quarterfinal round on Thursday night, Juergens found himself with an open 3-pointer in the corner.
He sank it, giving Olympia the lead, and proceeded to make 5-of-6 free throws in the final minute to ice the game and send the Bears to Friday’s state semifinals at the Tacoma Dome.
“I’ve been missing from 3 this whole time at the Dome and I had to make one eventually,” Juergens said. “I was in the corner, it was my time, decided to shoot it, saw it went in and I was happy about it.”
Olympia junior guard Parker Gerrits led the Bears with 22 points and forward Andreas Engholm added 14. For Tahoma, Carson Talbert scored a team-high 18 points, while Kody Kasper added 13.
Olympia led by 10 at half, but Tahoma stormed back, outscoring Olympia 21-10 in the third quarter to take a one-point lead heading into the final period. It was a similar story to the District 3/4 tournament recently, when Tahoma beat Olympia.
“They did similar to what they did here, came out (hot) in the third quarter,” Kiley said. “I felt like we did a better job moving the ball (this time). We had very few assists in the game at our place a few weeks ago. That game catapulted us to the next level when we look back at how we were playing. We weren’t playing like we want to play. We want to move the ball, be unselfish, get the best shot. … That change, I think that’s been a big reason why we’ve ascended to where we are right now.”
NO. 3 UNION 57, NO. 4 KAMIAKIN 41
Union stifled Oregon State commit Tyler Bilodeau and the Kamiakin offense in its 4A quarterfinal game at the Tacoma Dome on Thursday afternoon, holding Kamiakin to just 41 points in a 57-41 win.
“They shot the ball really well (in the first half),” said Union guard Bryson Metz, who scored a game-high 16 points in the win. “First half, they had a lot of corner threes. I thought we adjusted to that really well and started closing out and made them drive. The rotations were really good in the second half and that led to transition points and just scoring on the other end for us.”
Union never trailed in the win and led by 18 at one point, cruising past the Braves. The Titans shot 50 percent from the field, while holding Kamiakin to 32 percent shooting.
“We’re just such a hard-fighting team,” Metz said. “We just never give up. Just an amazing coaching staff that’s always pushing us, holding us accountable and it shows on the court. It shows that we never give up, even when we’re down or they’re on a run, we just stay together.”
Union returns to the semifinal round — where it will face Curtis on Friday night — for the second consecutive season, having also advanced to the final four in 2020.
NO. 2 CURTIS 67, NO. 8 GONZAGA PREP 55
Zoom Diallo figured the nerves might catch up to him on Thursday night. It was his first time ever playing in the Tacoma Dome, after all. Sure, he had grown up going to Curtis games, watching his older brother play for the Vikings, so he was no stranger to the venue. But watching and playing are two different things.
If he was nervous, it sure didn’t show. Diallo, Curtis’ super sophomore who is quickly becoming a highly-coveted Division-I recruiting prospect, was brilliant in his Tacoma Dome debut, pouring in 24 points on 9-of-15 shooting from the field in Curtis’ win over Gonzaga Prep in Thursday night’s quarterfinals matchup.
“It was exciting,” Diallo said. “I thought I was gonna have nerves, but I was in the locker room and I put myself in a calm state, just block out the noises and stuff. I wasn’t nervous. It was real exciting to see all the fans come watch us play, old people that coached me. It meant a lot.”
Tyce Paulsen scored 15 points for Curtis, Cinque Maxwell scored nine and Trent Williams eight. Gonzaga Prep was paced by Oregon State commit Jayden Stevens, who scored a game-high 26 points.
“I thought our guys battled (Stevens),” Kelly said. “That guy’s good. We didn’t really have an answer for him. We made him work but we were trying to keep the others from not, and I think we did a really good job of that.”
Curtis will face Union in the semifinals at 9 p.m. Friday.
CLASS 4A GIRLS
NO. 5 EASTLAKE 44, NO. 6 EMERALD RIDGE 43
Following a dismal third quarter for the Jaguars (18-7), during which the Wolves (23-3) turned an 18-17 halftime deficit into a 38-24 lead, Emerald Ridge clawed its way back into it behind senior Kali Haizlip.
“Kali, our senior leader, the heart and soul of our team just stepped up big time in the fourth,” Emerald Ridge coach Arvin Mosley Jr. said. “The girls just stepped up to the plate and brought the juice that we’ve talked about all year.”
Emerald Ridge’s captain ignited a 9-0 run for the Jaguars over the first two minutes, 22 seconds of the fourth quarter that got them back into contention. She would eventually score 10 of her game-high 19 points over the final eight minutes.
An Ava Schmidt offensive rebound and put-back interrupted the Jaguars burst with 4:07 left. But following that Eastlake basket to make it 40-33, Emerald Ridge put together a second 9-0 spurt to wrest the lead back, 42-40, on Maya Barnett’s field goal with 2:03 to play.
Another Schmidt putback with 1:06 left tied things again at 42-42. Naomi Senato made one of two free throws with 33 seconds left to put the Jaguars in front one more time, 43-42.
On the ensuing possession, the Wolves again went inside.
Tatum Wood missed a short shot for Eastlake but was fouled. Then she missed both free throws. Senato rebounded for Emerald Ridge, but was immediately tied up for a jump ball. The possession arrow favored Eastlake.
The Wolves then got two Schmidt chances at the rim, but neither shot would fall. In position for a potential rebound, the ball glanced off the hands of Jaguars junior Marecia Barnett and out of bounds under the basket.
Given yet another chance, Wood capitalized with a drive and basket at the rim off the inbound play and the 44-43 lead.
Mosley called timeout to set up a final chance for Emerald Ridge. The most likely person for the final shot though, Haizlip, was sitting on the bench after having fouled out on the play that led to Wood’s missed foul shots.
Senato’s off-balance 17-footer bounced off the left side of the rim as the buzzer sounded, sending Eastlake to the semifinals and Emerald Ridge into the consolation round.
Eastlake advances to play top-seeded Woodinville at 3:45 p.m. Friday in the semifinals, while Emerald Ridge meets Richland loser-out consolation game at 8 a.m.
NO. 1 WOODINVILLE 45, NO. 7 RICHLAND 33
The top-seeded Falcons (24-1) have all the motivation they need this weekend in the Tacoma Dome.
Two seasons ago, Woodinville was the state runner-up in the 2020 tournament, dropping its only loss of the season in the title game to Central Valley.
Three of the Falcons starters — point guard Veronica Sheffey and forwards Tatum Thompson and Brooke Beresford — also started in that game, so they’re certainly determined to make their way back for another shot at a championship.
“That was the fire,” said Thompson, a Boise State commit. “And then the very beginning of the season we lost our first game by over 20, and that just added to the fire. We’ve definitely been really motivated.”
Woodinville is on a 24-game winning streak since its 78-55 loss to Tumwater back in early December, and was quick to get in front of Richland (18-8) on Thursday morning in the quarterfinals.
Thompson (14 points, five rebounds, four assists), forward Jaecy Eggers (12 points, 13 rebounds) and Sheffey (10 points, eight rebounds), a San Diego commit, all reached double figures scoring, while Beresford (nine points, 10 rebounds) also made key contributions.
The Falcons built their lead as high as 18 points in the second half to set up a semifinals matchup with Eastlake on Friday afternoon. Woodinville won the only other meeting between the two programs, 68-53, last month.
Richland guard Kylee Fox (14 points, eight rebounds) was the only Bombers player to reach double figures in the loss.
Richland plays Emerald Ridge in a loser-out consolation game at 8 a.m. Friday.
NO. 3 PASCO 37, NO. 4 LAKE STEVENS 35
Taija Mackey’s shot with 48 seconds lifted the Bulldogs (23-1) past the Vikings (20-5). Close throughout, Pasco took a slim 27-26 advantage into the fourth quarter.
Almost immediately, the lead changed hands. Camille Jentzsch was fouled inside and made both free throws for Lake Stevens with 7:02 left in the game. It was the last time the Vikings would lead it.
On the ensuing possession, Mireyah Lopez buried a 3-pointer for a 30-28 Bulldogs lead. Pasco stayed in front inside the last 90 seconds.
With 1:24 to go, Cori Wilcox made the second of two free throws for Lake Stevens to tie the game one last time, 35-35. That set things up for Mackey two trips later.
The 6-foot senior took a pass as she got near the left block, banked the ball off the backboard and in with those 48 seconds left.“It was crazy,” Mackey said. “Heart racing, everybody’s trying to pressure. It was great though. It’s a crazy feeling to think that we are still here.”
The Vikings did have chances to tie or take the lead in the final moments. Mackey missed the front end of a 1-and-1 with 18 seconds left, but Chloe Pattison’s 3-pointer was short at the other end.
With 4.5 seconds remaining, Lopez also missed a front end. Wilcox rebounded and threw up the floor to a racing Pattison. She drove to the basket, and got to the rim but the buzzer sounded before the shot went up.
Mackey finished with a game-high 16 points and seven rebounds, while Mireyah Lopez had 12 points and six boards for Pasco, and Mya Groce had seven points, 11 rebounds and five assists.
Chloe Patterson scored a team-high 10 points, six rebounds and five steals for Lake Stevens, while Cori Wilcox had eight points and 10 boards.
Pasco moves on to play Sumner at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the semifinals. Lake Stevens plays the loser of that game in a loser-out contest at 10:30 a.m.
NO. 2 SUMNER 66, NO. 9 CAMAS 57
Until the Spartans (23-2) held the Papermakers (17-9) scoreless in the extra four minutes, finally taking the lead for good on two Parrott free throws with 1 minute, 21 seconds left to play, Sumner had held the lead briefly only eight previous occasions, and for a total of only 3 minutes and 38 seconds.
“Hey, at this time of year a win’s a win,’ Sumner coach Katie Hyppa said. “You’ve just gotta be on top of the scoreboard at the end. It isn’t what we prefer, but I’ll take it.”
Just to get the opportunity to lead when it ultimately counted, the Spartans needed Parrott to step into her hero moment. Sure, she put Sumner ahead for good with those two free throws in overtime.
But with six seconds left in regulation, there Parrott was standing at the free throw line with two shots in front of her and a one-point deficit staring back at her from the big scoreboard behind the rim at the Dome.
That’s when the 5-foot-9 senior’s mind returned to Thursday morning, while the Spartans watched the Auburn Trojans step to the free throw line against No. 1 and unbeaten Garfield in a 3A boys quarterfinal. The Trojans made those free throws — to tie the game at the end of regulation and to maintain a lead during overtime in their upset victory over the Bulldogs.
“During that Auburn boys game, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I would be so nervous to shoot those free throws,’ and then I ended up in the same situation,” Parrott said. “I just knew I had to make at least one to tie it up.”
That didn’t happen with the first shot, which hit the rim and careened badly off to the right side. Parrott’s teammates converged on their teammate at the line, encouraging her. And Parrott made the correct adjustment, making the second to tie the game at 57-57 with 6.1 seconds left.
Camas had a chance after a timeout to get off a winning shot. But Keirra Thompson’s runner in the lane bounced wide as the buzzer sounded.
Sumner moves on to play Pasco at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the semifinals, while Camas plays Lake Stevens in a loser-out game at 10:30 a.m.
CLASS 3A BOYS
NO. 5 SEATTLE PREP 55, NO. 14 EASTSIDE CATHOLIC 50
Seattle Prep guard Braeden Smith calmly and quickly dribbled the ball down the right sideline and into the right corner, planting his feet behind the 3-point line, sending his defender flying with a pump fake and knocking down a 3-pointer as time expired to end the third quarter.
It gave Seattle Prep a 36-34 lead heading into the fourth quarter of Thursday morning’s quarterfinals meeting with 3A Metro League peer Eastside Catholic in the Tacoma Dome.
More importantly, it gave Seattle Prep (21-6) all the momentum heading into the final period.
“Any bucket at that point really matters and gives you a lot of momentum,” said Smith, a Colgate commit. “It was low scoring, a lot of back-and-forth. It gave us some confidence going into the fourth.”
Seattle Prep held on late to advance to the semifinals behind Smith’s game-high 24 points — which included a four-point play in the final quarter. Christian King added 16 points and Tyler Mrus chipped in 14 in the win.
The Panthers play Auburn in the semifinals at 3:45 p.m. Friday.
“We talk about it, ‘Whatever it takes,’ ” Smith said. “Whatever it takes, we’re going to give it our best to win.”
Eastside Catholic (20-10) plays the loser of the Auburn-Garfield game in a loser-out consolation at 9 a.m. Friday.
NO. 2 AUBURN 64, NO. 1 GARFIELD 60 (OT)
It took overtime to pull it off, but Auburn (25-2) upended previously undefeated defending state champion Garfield (22-1) on Thursday afternoon to advance to Friday’s semifinals.
After rallying from what was at one point a double-digit deficit, the Trojans outlasted the Bulldogs in the extra period, eventually taking a lead they never lost with 45 seconds to play.
Guard Tyrell Nichols, who came off the bench, connected on a 3-pointer to give the Trojans their final advantage.
“I just wanted to win,” Nichols said. “I seen the opportunity so I took it. I just thought it was my time to step up.”
With under 10 seconds to go in overtime, Auburn held a 62-60 led and was in-bounding the ball under its own basket. Garfield managed to force a turnover, after which Raphiel Justice drove into the lane.
He found Auburn’s Dae’Kwon Watson there, holding his ground and drawing a charge. Watson made a pair of free throws at the other end to seal Auburn’s win.
“I just seen, he started to dribble,” Watson said. “I just took the charge, glad I got the charge.”
Earlier, Auburn guard Tre Blassingame coolly sunk two free throws with 0.8 seconds left in regulation to tie the game at 53-53 and send it to overtime.
Auburn came out hot in the opening minutes of the game, outsourcing Garfield 17-12 in the first quarter. But the Trojans cooled off, scoring just 19 combined points in the second and third quarters. Eventually, the Trojans came out of their slump, outscoring Garfield 17-11 in the fourth quarter.
“We just had to keep playing, honestly,” Blassingame said. “We respect them, they respect us. So we just had to keep doing what we do, focus on defense and know the offense will come. We’ll start making shots offensively.”
Auburn’s players had this game circled when the state brackets were released. Garfield had beat them earlier in the season, in December at a holiday tournament hosted by Auburn. Thursday’s win was sweet revenge.
“Ever since then, we just wanted our payback,” Watson said.
Watson scored a game-high 22 points for Auburn. Maleek Arington added 20 and Blassingame added 13.
For Garfield, Jaylin Stewart and former Lakes standout Kenzel Massey scored 16 apiece.
Auburn will face Seattle Prep — another 3A Metro League team — in the tournament semifinals at 3:45 p.m. Friday.
Garfield will move into the consolation bracket and face Eastside Catholic at 9 a.m.
NO. 4 RAINIER BEACH 65, NO. 6 GIG HARBOR 60
Gig Harbor (23-3) dug itself out of an early hole against Rainier Beach (20-4) in Thursday’s quarterfinals at the Tacoma Dome, but couldn’t get the stops it needed in the fourth quarter, falling 65-60.
Rainier Beach led by 12 at one point early on, Gig Harbor looking somewhat overwhelmed from the tip.
“I think we were a little starry eyed, we were on our heels from the start,” said Gig Harbor coach Billy Landram. “Beach got to play yesterday, so they were a little more used to the environment. But we battled back and had our chances.”
For much of the first half, Gig Harbor forward Luke Browne was single-handedly carrying the Tides offense, knocking down shots from behind the arc. He finished with 18 points for the Tides and knocked down 4-of-9 shots from 3-point range in the loss.
“Just preparation, being prepared for the moment and coming with the right mental mindset, being ready to shoot at all times,” Browne said of his effort.
Gig Harbor outscored Rainier Beach 17-12 in the third quarter and had the game tied in the fourth, but the Vikings outscored the Tides 18-11 in the final period and shot 55.1 percent from the field in the win.
“It was tough,” Browne said. “We started a little slow but we’re a bunch of fighters. We pride ourselves on coming back from stuff like that. It was a super back and forth game and it just came down to who made a couple of shots at the end.”
Gig Harbor guard Will Landram managed to score a game-high 19 points on 8-of-11 shooting from the field, despite playing on an injured ankle.
Landram never quite looked at full strength throughout the contest and appeared to re-aggravate the injury in the fourth quarter.
Rainier Beach was led by Nahmier Robinson and Jaelin Green, who scored 15 points apiece. Myles Daymon and Josh Conerly Jr. scored 11 points each.
Rainier Beach will face Mount Spokane at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the semifinals, while Gig Harbor will face Mountlake Terrace in a loser-out consolation game at 10:30 a.m.
NO. 7 MOUNT SPOKANE 70, NO. 9 MOUNTLAKE TERRACE 45
Mount Spokane jumped all over Mountlake Terrace from the tip in its Class 3A high school boys basketball state tournament quarterfinal round game at the Tacoma Dome on Thursday afternoon, scoring at will in a 70-45 rout.
“First game of state, there’s a lot of adrenaline,” said guard Ryan Lafferty, who scored 10 points on 4-of-9 shooting from the field. “We just came out and pushed them first, so that was a big thing for us.”
Is this an underrated, underseeded squad? It sure seems that way. The Wildcats upset No. 2 Auburn — which just knocked off No. 1 Garfield earlier in the day on Thursday — last weekend in the state regional round.
“We’re a really good team and we’re going to show a lot of people,” Lafferty said. “We like being the underdog.”
Mount Spokane, the tournament’s No. 7 seed, shot 56.4 percent from the field in Thursday’s win and 40 percent from 3-point range.
The Wildcats face Rainier Beach in the semifinals at 5:30 p.m. Friday, while Mountlake Terrace plays Gig Harbor in a loser-out consolation game at 10:30 a.m.
CLASS 3A GIRLS
NO. 4 LAKE WASHINGTON 73, NO. 14 HERMISTON 40
Lake Washington (20-4) sprinted to an 18-point lead after one quarter, extended that lead to 21 points by the half and ran over upset-minded Hermiston, 73-40, in the first Class 3A quarterfinal.
“Going into state, we didn’t want them to feel a lot of pressure,” Lake Washington coach Jeff Wilson said. “We wanted to make sure, even this late in the season, that we’re still having fun. So they were excited last night, excited this morning on the drive down, more than nervous.”
Junior Ava Uusitalo made two early 3-pointers to get the outside offense started for Lake Washington. Inside, senior Elise Hani scored 10 of her 13 total points during the first 16 minutes as the Kangaroos built a 35-14 lead by the half.
Hani, Rosa Smith and Emma Boctor are the only three seniors on the team. All three played for the Lake Washington squad that experienced the magical postseason run in 2020 that landed the Kangaroos in the 3A title game against Eastside Catholic.
Though Lake Washington lost that night, their experience has proven invaluable for the current Kangs who watched that group and have dreamt of this week.
“I think Rosa and Elise and all the players who have played here before, they do a great job of communicating what’s it’s like to get here,” Wilson said. “But also when we get here, what it’s like.”
Hermiston (17-11) made a mini run during the first minute of the third quarter, getting 3-pointers from Izzy Simmons and Katelyn Heideman that pulled the Bulldogs within 37-20 with 7:03 to go in the quarter.
They were the first two of five second-half threes for Hermiston after the Bulldogs missed all 10 of its attempts from beyond the arc in the first half. But 17 was as close as Hermiston would ever get. Lake Washington got it back over 20 by the end of the third, 52-31, then scored the first 10 points of the fourth to extend further and allow Wilson to start emptying his bench.
NO. 1 MEAD 52, NO. 7 STANWOOD 33
The Panthers (23-0) continued their unbeaten season, but needed to shake off the offensive doldrums before finally running away from the Spartans (13-6). They will play Lake Washington in a 7:15 p.m. semifinal on Friday.
Mead struggled to shoot the ball throughout the first half, making only 12 of 33 shots and only one of 10 attempts from beyond the three-point arc. The Panthers trailed this one 22-13 early in the second quarter before racheting up the defensive intensity with some full-court pressure that forced turnovers and led to a 13-3 run to end the first half.
The defense staked Mead to a 26-25 advantage at the half. The Panthers then really put the hammer down in the fourth, holding Stanwood to just a single point over the final eight minutes.
“We just keep going,” Mead sophomore Teryn Gardner said. “It’s pretty cool to be a part of a team that can go so hard so long. We just had to keep going because we knew that we would be so much better than we were showing in the first half.”
Gardner, who made just one of eight field goal attempts over the first 16 minutes, scored eight in the second half to finish with 10 points and share game-high scoring honors with teammates Olivia Moore and Haley Burns.
NO. 3 ARLINGTON 50, NO. 5 SNOHOMISH 47
The Panthers (16-5) came all the way back, erasing a 10-point deficit over the final 2:42 of the game to grab a one-point lead on the Eagles (20-2). Snohomish hit 3-pointers on four straight possessions during the 12-1 run that culminated with Addy Gallatin’s bomb with 1:02 left.
“You’ll take 2s at that point,” Arlington coach Sean Marsh said. “I did not want them to come down and make four straight wide-open threes. That was not in the defensive game-plan. But, the senior steps up and hits the two biggest free throws of her life. Then Keira Marsh, who honestly struggles at the line at times, hit two.”
The senior, the coach’s daughter Keira Marsh, was fouled with 34.6 seconds left. She stepped up and sank both for the game-winning shots. The Panthers came down with a chance to win it at the end, but threw the ball away with 14 seconds left before Marsh was fouled with 12 on the clock.
Arlington built a 26-18 lead at the half, and extended to 10 on the first possession of the third quarter. But Snohomish chipped away at the deficit, closing within five at the end of the third, 36-31.
And when Rachel Snow made a 3-pointer with 7:34 to play, the Panthers were within two, 36-34. It stayed right there for more than two minutes, until Keira Marsh drove to the basket, flipped the ball in off the backboard and was fouled.
She made the free throw then stole the ball back in the backcourt, leading to another layup by Hannah Rork with 4:57 left. The lead eventually grew back to 10, 45-35, when Kierra Reese nailed a 3-pointer at the 2:57 mark before the final Snohomish run and winning free throws.
NO. 2 GARFIELD 67, NO. 9 LAKESIDE OF SEATTLE 50
The Bulldogs (19-0) improved to 4-0 this seasons against the Lions (19-6), outscoring Lakeside in every quarter on Thursday night to close out the 3A girls tournament for the day.
Garfield gets the late semifinal on Friday, tipping off at 9 p.m. again, against Arlington.
The Lions managed to keep the quarterfinal close for at least a quarter. Garfield led it 14-12 after the first eight minutes and extended the advantage to 32-25 at the half.
As the Bulldogs remained steady, so did Lakeside, losing ground by four to six points every eight minutes. Lakeside held Garfield under 42 percent shooting overall, with the Bulldogs making 26 of 62 from the field for 41.9 percent.
Five Bulldogs scored in double figures, led by Lucille Richardson’s 13 points. That more than offset the double-double performance from Claire O’Connor for Lakeside, who finished with 22 points, 12 rebounds and six assists.
Mia Broom added 14 points for the Lions, who for the second straight night got a two-person contribution but little from anyone else.
This story was originally published March 3, 2022 at 11:03 AM.