All-County boys basketball: Mitchell selected as county’s best coach

Published 12:10 am Sunday, April 12, 2015

By Adam Houston

adam.houston@salisburypost.com

SALISBURY — This season was an especially trying one for the North Rowan Cavaliers. They went into the season with high expectations, without being high on experience.

North Rowan returned only one starter from the 2013-14 team that was the 2A state runner-up. Still, the Cavaliers found a way to repeat as co-champions of the Central Carolina Conference — sharing the title with Lexington again — and advance to the 2A Western Regional tournament in Winston-Salem.

“Considering the youth that we had and some of the adversity we went through, I thought it was a great year,” said North Rowan head coach Andrew Mitchell, the Rowan County Boys Basketball Coach of the Year. “I was really proud of our guys and our staff with the way they stuck together and the things they were able to accomplish based on, as I said, the things we had to go through.”

Mitchell said the 2014-15 season was one of the toughest in his career as a coach.

The Cavaliers tested themselves in the first month of the season. They battled Charlotte Ardrey Kell, the eventual 4A state runner-up, and Winston-Salem Prep, the eventual 1A state runner-up. They lost both of those games by a combined 13 points.

Then there was the Sam Moir Christmas Classic. North Rowan opened the tournament with a 61-57 loss to East Rowan. In the game, Mitchell was ejected after two quick technical fouls following a scrum for a loose ball and verbal exchange with East Rowan head coach Trey Ledbetter. The Cavaliers’ woes continued the next day in a 55-43 loss to Mooresville.

“To lose those first two games the way we did, and again, the Christmas tournament has been our biggest (problem),” Mitchell said. “I never get technical fouls, and I’ve been ejected from two Christmas tournaments. I think that was one thing that set us on the straight path.

“We all decided that no matter what we felt about the officiating or how we felt about other things, we were going to block all that stuff out and focus on good basketball and focus on being a good family. …Everything that happened was a blessing from God because after that we really pulled together and were able to get some things accomplished.”

North Rowan defeated Carson on the final day of the Sam Moir Christmas Classic by 20 points and ripped off nine wins in its next 10 games. Led by Joseph Scott and Jalen Sanders in the playoffs, North Rowan’s average margin of victory in the first three rounds of the state playoffs was 14.3 points.

“Joe is one of our better people on the team,” Mitchell said. “Anything you ask Joe to do, he is going to go 100 percent at it. He comes to practice and works hard every single day. …We weren’t surprised at the things he was able to accomplish.”

The season, however, ended with a heartbreaking loss to East Lincoln, the eventual 2A runner-up, in the Western Regional semifinal in Winston-Salem. The Mustangs were ahead 11-0 after the first four minutes of the game. The Cavaliers fought back in the second quarter, and the game was tied 30-all at halftime.

With East Lincoln ahead 65-63 in the closing seconds, Jalen Sanders missed a game-tying shot on the baseline.

Despite all the hurdles that needed clearing in the season, Mitchell considers 2014-15 a good year.

And the coach and team — with the potential to return four starters — are already talking about next season.

“It wasn’t hard to get these boys back in the gym,” Mitchell said. “They were ready the week after we lost to East Lincoln. So everybody is back in the gym and talking about next year, and the coaches are talking about it. So, we’re looking forward to another good run.”