After Honoring One of Its Own, Hampton Bays Boys Basketball Tops Bridgehampton in Arthur J. Jones Home Opener - 27 East

After Honoring One of Its Own, Hampton Bays Boys Basketball Tops Bridgehampton in Arthur J. Jones Home Opener

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Hampton Bays Athletic Director John Foster unveils Arthur Jones's number that will sit underneath the scoreboard already in his name.     MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays Athletic Director John Foster unveils Arthur Jones's number that will sit underneath the scoreboard already in his name. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Senior Kazmin Johnson got the scoring started early for Hampton Bays, scoring one of the game's first baskets. He finished with a game-high 29 points.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Senior Kazmin Johnson got the scoring started early for Hampton Bays, scoring one of the game's first baskets. He finished with a game-high 29 points. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays junior Danny Wilson dribbles at the top of the arch.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays junior Danny Wilson dribbles at the top of the arch. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Gianni Scotto shoots over Bridgehampton freshman Alex Davis.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Gianni Scotto shoots over Bridgehampton freshman Alex Davis. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Kazmin Johnson dribbles down the court.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Kazmin Johnson dribbles down the court. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Noah Thompson drives to the basket.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Noah Thompson drives to the basket. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Senior Bayman Kazmin Johnson attempts to land a major dunk but is instead called for a foul.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Senior Bayman Kazmin Johnson attempts to land a major dunk but is instead called for a foul. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays junior James Powers weaves his way through traffic on the court.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays junior James Powers weaves his way through traffic on the court. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Kazmin Johnson tries to drive on Bridgehampton senior Kris Vinski.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Kazmin Johnson tries to drive on Bridgehampton senior Kris Vinski. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton senior Scott Vinski finds himself covered by a pair of Baymen underneath the hoop.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton senior Scott Vinski finds himself covered by a pair of Baymen underneath the hoop. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays junior Patrick Donahue grabs a rebound.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays junior Patrick Donahue grabs a rebound. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton senior Dylan Fitzgerald grabs a rebound.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton senior Dylan Fitzgerald grabs a rebound. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton freshman Alex Davis led all starters with 17 points, 11 of which were scored in the fourth quarter.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton freshman Alex Davis led all starters with 17 points, 11 of which were scored in the fourth quarter. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Will Mendel grabs a rebound over an outstretched Bridgehampton senior Dylan Fitzgerald.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays senior Will Mendel grabs a rebound over an outstretched Bridgehampton senior Dylan Fitzgerald. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays Superintendent Lars Clemensen spoke during an opening ceremony on November 30 in which the school district honored alumnus Arthur Jones. Varsity boys basketball assistant coach Robert Sutton, left, and head coach Noah Brown hold framed throwback Arthur Jones jerseys that were given to the Jones family.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Hampton Bays Superintendent Lars Clemensen spoke during an opening ceremony on November 30 in which the school district honored alumnus Arthur Jones. Varsity boys basketball assistant coach Robert Sutton, left, and head coach Noah Brown hold framed throwback Arthur Jones jerseys that were given to the Jones family. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

The Hampton Bays School District honored alumnus Arthur Jones on November 30, retiring his number 54 jersey and giving framed replicas to his family in an opening ceremony prior to the Hampton Bays varsity boys basketball team taking on Bridgehampton.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

The Hampton Bays School District honored alumnus Arthur Jones on November 30, retiring his number 54 jersey and giving framed replicas to his family in an opening ceremony prior to the Hampton Bays varsity boys basketball team taking on Bridgehampton. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton senior Scott Vinski scored 15 points on November 30.    MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton senior Scott Vinski scored 15 points on November 30. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton's Jai Feaster scores off a left-handed layup. The freshman came off the bench on November 30 to score a team-high 19 points.   MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Bridgehampton's Jai Feaster scores off a left-handed layup. The freshman came off the bench on November 30 to score a team-high 19 points. MICHAEL O'CONNOR

Drew Budd on Dec 1, 2022

Hampton Bays boys basketball head coach Noah Brown knew of Arthur Jones — the fact that he graduated from Hampton Bays and had died in the terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. But it wasn’t until he saw a post on Instagram that contained a photo of Jones playing basketball for the Baymen circa 1982, the year he graduated, that Brown decided to dig a little deeper.

Eventually, he came to find out that Jones had turned a successful high school basketball career into a scholarship to Hamilton College, where he continued to play until he graduated in 1986. He went on to land a job with Carr Futures in the World Trade Center. Not long after his death, the Arthur J. Jones Scholarship Fund was established to honor him, and since 2002, more than $300,000 in scholarship money has been awarded to Hampton Bays graduates.

After doing his research, Brown decided to approach Hampton Bays Superintendent Lars Clemensen and Athletic Director John Foster about ways to honor Jones even further, which culminated with the opening ceremony at the season opener for the Hampton Bays boys basketball team on November 30, when the Baymen hosted Bridgehampton.

For starters, each home opener for the boys basketball program, starting last week and going forward, will be known as the Arthur J. Jones Hampton Bays Boys Basketball Home Opener. Additionally, the school district retired Jones’s number, 54, honoring him with his name and number on a sign that was unveiled during last week’s ceremony underneath the main scoreboard — which was donated some years ago by the Arthur Jones Memorial Scholarship Fund. The district also presented a pair of framed replica jerseys to Jones’s family members who were in attendance at last week’s game.

“I just thought it was appropriate, that we needed to honor him,” Brown said. “I presented it to the foundation, the superintendent and the A.D., and they ran with it. I can’t take sole responsibility for it. It was a great ceremony.”

After the ceremony, the game got underway, and from the opening tip-off, it went, more or less, as expected, as the game’s first flurry of points were a microcosm of how each team plans to play this season. Hampton Bays senior Kazmin Johnson won the opening tip, and the Baymen quickly got the ball to junior Patrick Donahue, who was racing down the wing and scored on a layup for the game’s first two points. Johnson then stole the ensuing inbounds pass and laid the ball in for another two points to give the Baymen a quick 4-0 lead.

Not to be deterred, however, Bridgehampton came right back and got a pair of threes from their sharpshooting twins, seniors Scott and Kris Vinski, giving the Killer Bees a 6-4 lead. Johnson answered right back with a 6-0 run of his own to give Hampton Bays a 10-8 lead, one it wouldn’t relinquish the rest of the game in what was an 81-70 final in favor of the Baymen.

Johnson, who could have easily topped 40 points had he made a couple more of his shots, finished with a game-high 29 points. He said the opening ceremony was certainly a motivating factor for him and his teammates, and on a personal level, his family is friendly with the Jones family.

“We didn’t want to lose in front of their whole family here,” he said after the win. “We had to do it for them.”

“It’s good to get a win for Mr. Jones,” added Donahue, who, after missing most of the first half due to foul trouble, scored 14 of his 16 points in the second half.

Thanks in large part to Donahue’s play in the second half, Hampton Bays led by as many as 16 points with three minutes remaining in the game, but Bridgehampton didn’t go down quietly. Mikhail Feaster, a junior, hit a three to cut the Baymen’s lead to single digits, 76-67, with 1:09 remaining in the game, then Scott Vinski added another three not long after that. But senior Bayman Gianni Scotto made a pair of free throws, then Donahue scored the game’s final three points to stretch the lead back to double digits by the game’s final buzzer.

Bridgehampton was led by freshman Jai Feaster, who came off the bench to score 19 points. His classmate, Alex Davis, led all starters with 17, 11 of which were scored in the fourth quarter, and Scott Vinski finished with 15 points.

Bridgehampton head coach Ron White said he needs to see more consistency from his team going forward, but that overall, considering everything — which included facing a team with a sizable height advantage and being a considerably larger school — it wasn’t a bad first game.

“Defense, we fell asleep in the second half. That really hurt us,” he said. “We can’t afford that. We’re trying to play and be competitive, we have to stop falling asleep.

“We’re right there,” White added. “Shots weren’t falling in certain cases. We’re getting to the rim. We’re getting continuity in moving the ball. So, overall, I think for the first game, a rowdy crowd, ‘A’ school, we’re happy. But we understand that we could do something. We just have to keep putting it together consistently.”

Although his team came out with the victory, which is key, it was rather a mixed bag for Brown as well.

“We have three starters who are studs, Kazmin, Donahue and [Isaiah] Lattanzio, who have played for me for three years at the varsity level — we should be more composed,” he said. “At the end, we’re throwing the ball around, so I’m a little disappointed in that. Loved the fact that we fought back, battled hard. Second half took the lead. We had a size advantage. At the end day, we took care of business. So there’s mixed emotions there. We’ve been playing year round, so there shouldn’t be rust. I don’t care if it’s the first game.”

Brown said he expected to see better performances in his team’s next two games, and he did. The Baymen defeated Greenport, 80-43, at home on Friday then picked up an 88-74 victory at Mattituck the following day, to start the season 3-0.

Johnson said that even though he and his teammates have been playing together for the most part throughout the year, they still get opening-night jitters and that possibly had an effect on the game. He said they’ll clean that up going forward.

“I think we could definitely turn down the turnovers a little bit, especially at the end of the game when they were pressing us a little bit,” he said. “First half we were fine. I think we were speeding up the game a little bit when we should have been slowing it down at the end.”

To that end, Brown gave credit to Bridgehampton, which he thinks is going to be a formidable team this season.

“Bridgehampton actually gave us some matchup problems. They forced us into man,” he explained. “Scott Vinski, when he can spread the floor and hit threes, that opens it up for the guards to penetrate and dish, so they’re going to have a great season. It was a little bit of a matchup problem. It wasn’t a traditional half court set.”

To learn more about the AJJ Scholarship Fund and to support its work, visit ajjscholarshipfund.org.

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