McIntee’s shots lead to victory
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Justin McIntee has been in this position before.
All three years he has participated in the Newport Harbor High
alumni basketball tournament, his team has come out on top.
McIntee, who took a leave of absence from the tournament the past
two years, was back in form Saturday, scoring a team-high 15 points
to lead his alumni squad to a 43-37 championship-game victory at
Newport Harbor.
It was a performance for the ages, as McIntee’s squad -- comprised
mainly of graduates from the 1990s (two from 1988) -- helped dethrone
the defending champions, comprised of four 2003 graduates, one from
2004 and another from 1973.
It was new school versus newer school.
“This is the only time we all get to hang out together,” said
McIntee, who played basketball for Vanguard University from
1996-1998. “It’s fun to get together and play ball. I don’t know how
many times we have left [to win].”
The top-seeded team of McIntee (class of 1992), Eddie Martinez
(1990), Craig DeBusk (1990), Mike Bassler (1988), Erik Drageset
(1988) and Eric Vallely (1994) battled their way through the
eight-team tournament and into the final before dispatching the
youngsters in convincing fashion.
And the opposing middle presence of 6-foot-8 Jamie Diefenbach and
6-8 George Fedorovtsev didn’t slow the winners in the slightest, as
they held a lead the entire game and at one point widened it to a
15-point margin.
McIntee had his 15 points on 7-of-12 shooting and grabbed four
rebounds during the 20-minute contest.
“This is just going to make these [younger] guys try harder next
year,” said McIntee, 30, who is currently associate director of donor
relations at Vanguard. “The young guys are tough.”
Tournament Director Jamie Holmes (1973) was the lone player from
his team who didn’t graduate this decade.
“Everyone seemed to have a blast,” said Holmes, who scored four
points in the final. “It’s good to get out here and have fun and get
a little testosterone flowing.”
In its fifth year of existence, the tournament is held as a
fundraiser for the school’s booster club. Each team is required to
pay a $25 entry fee.
Holmes, who has put on the tournament in all five years of its
existence, was pleased with Saturday’s turnout, but winning the final
would have been even better.
“I would have loved it,” he said. “You know what, though, I got a
good workout and it’s fun seeing a bunch of guys that played [at
Newport Harbor] that I’ve never met before.”
But McIntee and Co. were relentless.
McIntee scored the first seven points for his team and the winners
jumped out to a quick 20-10 lead eight minutes into the contest.
Diefenbach pulled the opposers to within striking distance,
hitting a layup with 4:22 left to push the team within a 33-26
margin. But the winners held on as McIntee and DeBusk made two key
shots with less than three minutes remaining.
Diefenbach finished with a game-high 17 points -- including two
dunks -- to lead his team.
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