BOYS BASKETBALL: Sequim rallies to beat Port Angeles on final shot

Sequim's Nick Faunce

Sequim's Nick Faunce

SEQUIM — Sometimes it pays to have a little faith.

With 6.3 seconds remaining and Sequim and Port Angeles knotted at 34-all, Wolves coach Greg Glasser put his trust in senior Nick Faunce and was rewarded .

Faunce knocked in his only points of the night, a rim-rattling 6-footer with 2.5 seconds to play, to give Sequim a 36-34 boys basketball win on senior night against the rival Roughriders.

“It feels good,” Faunce said. “Senior night, all I can really ask for is to get that win. All I did was make one shot.

“Coach had faith in me. We talked it out, and usually when coach has faith in me I do what he says.

“I give [credit] to him, I hadn’t made a shot all night.”

Anatomy of a game-winner

Faunce came open off a screen from Jack Shea, caught Payton Glasser’s inbound pass, drove toward the hoop and drew a foul on Port Angeles’ Luke Angevine before putting up the shot.

The winning play, which also had the Wolves’ Jackson Oliver running wide to the left for a potential lob, worked as Glasser intended.

“We felt we would get Nick coming off the screen and that’s exactly what we got,” Glasser said.

Oliver drew enough attention to momentarily delay Port Angeles from closing out on Faunce.

“You hope that [Oliver draws the defense] and you hope Payton doesn’t throw that lob, he’s done that a few times,” Glasser said.

“But we talked about going to Nick. We said six seconds is a long time and you can drive to the rim.”

After drawing contact Faunce thought he would be whistled for an offensive foul.

“I thought I was going to get a charge call,” he said.

“I looked at the ref after the whistle.”

Glasser also braced for an offensive foul.

“I kind of held my breath for a second because I was kind of blocked by our guys, and with these guys [referees] you just don’t know,” Glasser said.

Port Angeles coach Kasey Ulin praised Faunce for his big shot.

“We were looking for that backdoor play to Jackson and we covered it well,” Ulin said.

“Nick just got the ball and made an aggressive move and made a great play. It was an aggressive drive and a great finish.”

The shot capped an 8-0 Sequim run over the final 4 minutes and 30 seconds of the game.

Lambros Rogers scored on two drives to the lane to put the Riders up 34-28.

“Lambros made a couple of nice plays and got us up six,” Ulin said.

“We had a chance to put the game away right there, but you can’t let teams hang around, especially at home, especially in a rivalry game.”

The Wolves started the fourth quarter by missing their first nine shots, but timely offensive rebounding and a hustle play on loose ball kept them in the game.

Freshman Nate Despain rebounded Shea’s missed 3 and gave the ball back to him for a bucket from short range.

Oliver won a scrap with Grayson Peet for the ball at midcourt and hit a foul shot to pull Sequim with three, 34-31 with just more than two minutes to play.

Despain hit the second-biggest shot of the night with 1:29 remaining, swishing a 3 from the right wing, to tie the game at 34-all.

“They were missing, missing, missing, and all of a sudden they hit the big 3-pointer and the momentum had changed,” Ulin said.

“But we should have never been there, we had a chance to stretch our lead and we didn’t get stops or make shots.

“I have to give Sequim credit, the last four minutes or so, it looked like they wanted it a little more. We were a little timid and they made more plays down the stretch.”

The game was a back-and-forth affair from the opening tip.

Port Angeles led 10-9 after one quarter, and 22-21 at halftime on a buzzer-beating 3 by Angevine.

Angevine’s shot called to mind a 3 by Peet that beat the clock and gave the Riders the lead in the two rivals’ first meeting, a 37-31 Port Angeles win.

“Wasn’t that identical to the first game?” Glasser said.

“They hit a three to end the half and take the momentum.”

Angevine led the Riders with 12 points, and had eight rebounds and two steals.

Rogers added nine points, 11 rebounds and two blocked shots for the Riders.

Oliver topped all scorers with 14 points and added seven rebounds for Sequim.

Glasser summed up the hard-fought, but respectful nature of the rivalry game.

“No matter where we are in the league, top or bottom, it’s always fun to get together and play that game because you know its going to be a great atmosphere and a really fun game.”

“That’s one [win] that really helps make this season special for the kids.”

________

Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-452-2345, ext. 5250 or at mcarman@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in Sports

Forks’ Radly Benett, left, rebounds in front of Neah Bay’s Daniel Cumming on Thursday night in Forks.
BOYS BASKETBALL: Neah Bay handles Forks’ challenge

Sequim, Port Angeles boys fall on the road

Lonnie Archibald (2)/for Peninsula Daily News
Referee Steve Singhose watches closely as Forks’ Avery Dilley (left) and Neah Bay’ Angel Halttunen hustle for a loose ball. Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News
GIRLS BASKETBALL: Spartans, Red Devils tune up for playoffs

Greene, Moss, Johnson score 20 points apiece for Neah Bay and Forks

Emily Matthiessen/for Peninsula Daily News 
Sequim’s Jordyn Julmist is closely defended while putting up a shot attempt against Bremerton as teammate Vaeh Owens, far left, looks on during the Wolves’ win over the Knights at Rick Kaps Gymnasium on Thursday.
GIRLS BASKETBALL: Sequim shakes off slow start for senior night triumph

Roughriders top Kingston in regular season finale

Photos by Jay Cline/Peninsula College Athletics 
Peninsula’s Sam Tekeste steps through a pair of Shoreline defenders on his way to the rim during the Pirates’ 75-63 win over the Dolphins on Wednesday.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Pirate men stay alive in playoff chase

The Peninsula Pirate men controlled their contest with the… Continue reading

Peninsula’s Malia Garcia dribbles through the lane during the Pirates’ 94-9 win over Shoreline at home Wednesday.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Pirate women dominate Dolphins

By limiting the minutes of its starters, Peninsula College… Continue reading

Port Angeles boys head coach Kevin Ruble, right, and volunteer assistant Bryant Hoch watch during pregame Tuesday in Port Angeles before the Roughriders took on defending state champion Bremerton. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
BOYS PREP ROUNDUP: Defending champs Bremerton cruises past PA

Sequim, Forks, East Jefferson all victorious

GIRLS BASKETBALL: Riders, Spartans seal league titles

4th straight league championship for Forks girls

GIRLS FLAG FOOTBALL: PA, Sequim both in state tournament this weekend

In their inaugural seasons of girls flag football, both Sequim and Port… Continue reading

Sammie Sullivan of Kingston (143) leads the pack, including Tanya Woodward of Forks (638)  at the starting line of the 2025 Elwha Bridge Run, which returns Saturday. (Run the Peninsula)
RUN THE PENINSULA (Updated): Elwha Bridge Run returns Saturday

The Run the Peninsula series returns this weekend with… Continue reading

Tom Garrick celebrated a hole-in-one at Cedars at Dungeness on Jan. 28. (Cedars at Dungeness)
AREA SPORTS BRIEFS: Hole-in-one at Cedars at Dungeness and OJBR sign-ups

The Cedars at Dungeness reported its first hole-in-one of the… Continue reading

The Klahhane Gymnastics Xcel gold team of, from left, Emily Bair, Abigail Odland, Lorelei Sanders and Zayleigh McCullem finished first at the Freedom Invitational Gymnastics Meet at the Kitsap Pavilion last week. (Klahhane Gymnastics)
KLAHHANE GYMNASTICS: Xcel gold first at Freedom Invite

Klahhane Gymnastics Xcel teams delivered an outstanding weekend of competition… Continue reading

Liam Sprague, Crescent basketball.
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK: Liam Sprague, Crescent basketball

Crescent basketball player Liam Sprague finished the season with a flourish, showing… Continue reading