Thursday, July 25, 2013

Game Day #11 - Thursday, July 25, 2013 Scores

37th Annual Hawaii College Basketball Summer League
NCAA Basketball

                                                                Remaining Games:      Sat 7/27
                                              Tue 7/30, Thu 8/1, Sat 8/3
                                                                Playoffs:                        Tue 8/6, Thu 8/8
                                                                Championship Game:  Sat 8/10


Solar Universe 6-2
Central Medical Clinic 5-2
National Fire Protection Co. 4-4
Clark Hatch Fitness 3-4
Wealth Strategy Partners 3-4
Grantco Pacific 1-6


Central Medical Clinic vs Wealth Strategy Partners 105-115



























National Fire Protection Co. vs Solar Universe 99-104


Thanks to the League's Sponsors!
Central Medical Clinic, Wealth Strategy Partners, National Fire Protection Co., Solar Universe

Photos of the Day



















====================================== Media =======================================

Add one more player to the list of prospective walk-ons for the Hawaii men's basketball team.

Dallas native Warren Oishi, a 6-foot-2, 215-pound guard, is hoping to become the latest addition to the Rainbow Warriors roster while he tries his hand at the College Summer League in Manoa.

He joins hopefuls Malik Fields and Wesley Armbrust in the CSL. Oishi hit three 3-pointers for nine points on Thursday night for Central Medical Clinic in a 115-105 loss to Wealth Strategy Partners.

Wealth Strategy got a lift from summer league legend Llewellyn Smalley, HPU's all-time leading scorer who is in town for a couple weeks. The 40-year-old Smalley, who was known to routinely drop 50-plus in his heyday, had 13 in his return, including a soaring alley-oop dunk to open the second half.

Read the full article in the Honolulu StarAdvertiser

Manoa summer basketball league, July 25



                                                                                     BRUCE ASATO / BASATO@STARADVERTISER.COM

Manoa summer basketball league, July 25
Llewellyn Smalley of Wealth Strategy Partners pulls up for a jumper in the Wealth Strategy Partners vs Central Medical Clinic basketball game in the 2013 College Summer League at the Manoa Recreational Center gym.

More photos by Bruce Asato at the Hawaii StarAdvertiser

Hardwood rock star
By Brian McInnis

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jul 27, 2013

The legend of Llewellyn Smalley grows by the year and the telling. There were the mano-a-mano duels with Anthony Carter. The time he dropped 58 — no, was it 60? How about when Smalley, still in the Army, walked into the gym in his early 20s with little basketball know-how and filled it up, anyway?

The question invariably arises with repeated viewings of College Summer League games: Did you see Llwellyn Smalley play? It's usually said in hushed tones and hinted at as something of a religious experience.

  Without fail, whether he was on the U.S. mainland or playing in Europe, Smalley would come back every summer to where it all started. He still considers (Tony) Sellitto and summer league director Pat Tanibe father figures.

Login for more...Honolulu Star Advertiser

The University of Hawai’i duo of Brandon Spearman and Negus Webster-Chan helped put Solar Universe in first place of the Hawai’i College Basketball Summer League by combining to score 60 points in a 104-99 victory over National Fire Protection Co. on Thursday night at Manoa Valley District Park Gym.

Spearman scored 30 points on 11-of-22 shooting, and also contributed four rebounds, two assists and two steals. Webster-Chan also scored 30, including a couple of alley-oop dunks. He also contributed six rebounds and two steals.

Webster-Chan has scored 30 or more points in three of the five games he has played in the Summer League, and is averaging 29.4 points per game.

Incoming freshman Niko Filipovich contributed five points for Solar Universe; redshirt freshman Dyrbe Enos did not score in limited action.

Read the full article in the Warrior Insider


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