AUGUSTA — The best team all season was the best team in the tournament, once again.
No. 1 Forest Hills won its third straight regional title, riding 28 points from tournament MVP Mason Desjardins and 20 from Braidan Welch to a 78-38 victory over No. 2 Valley in the Class D South boys basketball final at the Augusta Civic Center on Saturday.
The undefeated Tigers (21-0) will get a chance to win their third straight state title Saturday when they take on Southern Aroostook, which beat Machias for the North title.
“It definitely doesn’t get old,” Desjardins said. “It feels good to get back here after last year, not having it. It was one of our goals, to get back here, and now we’re back in a state championship again.”
Valley (12-5), led by eighth graders Harry Lewis (nine points) and Fisher Tewksbury (eight), returned to the South final for the first time since 2016, but again couldn’t keep up with the Tigers’ intensity and pace. The Cavaliers lost both regular-season games to the Tigers by an average of 48 points.
“I couldn’t be happier with our boys,” Valley coach Mike Staples said. “When you look at the scheme of the whole season, we had a great season. We went far and above what I thought we’d do this year.”
In a sense, so did the Tigers. Forest Hills faced the prospect this season of playing without 2,000-point scorer Parker Desjardins, but quickly proved as the season progressed that the program hadn’t skipped a beat.
On Saturday, the Tigers were as dominant as ever.
“I was glad that our kids showed up ready to play,” coach Anthony Amero said. “You could see, we had really good energy from the get-go. … We were making smart decisions for us. We didn’t make a lot of turnovers early, we missed a couple of layups, that’s usually an adjustment in the Civic Center. But we got them going pretty quick.”
Forest Hills’ trademark frenzied offense and defense was effective early, piling on the points and getting the Tigers out to a quick lead. Forest Hills was able to goad the Cavaliers into trying to match its speed, and Valley committed 12 turnovers in the first quarter and 13 more in the second as the Tigers opened up leads of 18-7 after the first quarter and 42-23 at the half.
“Our whole goal was to try to slow the ball down,” Staples said. “We knew we can’t run with them on a steady basis. … But we’ve got a lot of young kids. Most of them are thoroughbreds, and they want to run.”
Forest Hills undid those plans, with Welch (seven steals) leading the relentless pressure.
“I don’t see a team that can slow you down when you have Braidan Welch on the floor,” Amero said. “I’ve been coaching 25 years in Jackman and 32 years overall, I’ve never coached a kid, boy or girl, that can motor like that kid.”
“He’s like the Energizer bunny,” Desjardins added. “He can just go, go, go. That lifts everybody up on the team.”
Welch said he knows the value of Forest Hills’s aggressive play, and how vital he is to providing it.
“My team relies on me every time down the floor,” he said. “I just push the pressure and make turnovers, turnovers, turnovers, all the time.”
Welch, who had four steals in the first quarter alone, was also the spark of the Tigers’ shooting attack. He hit three 3-pointers in the first quarter, keying a 16-2 run that took the Tigers to the end of the period, and he hit two more in the second for 17 first-half points.
“I just felt it in warm-ups,” Welch said. “I knew I could continue doing it in games, so I shot it and I was feeling good. Teammates hit me and it worked out.”
After Welch got things started, Desjardins took the lead from there. He took over in transition, notching six steals in the period alone, and scored 13 points to give him 18 at the break. He scored seven more points in the third quarter as Forest Hills mounted a 56-27 lead.
Jackman Daigle scored 15 points and Blaine Nadeau, the team’s lone freshman, added 11 for the Tigers.
“(On) our team, everybody knows their roles very well,” Desjardins said. “We’ve got the Daigles (Jackman and Cooper) down low, they set screens, they know their role. Blaine runs the floor, he plays defense hard, he gets things going. If you look from outside, you can say it’s just me. But it’s everyone on the team, everyone’s a big part of what we do.”
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