
The Ga Stunners are champions. They finished the tournament with a perfect 4-0 record, outscoring their opponents by an average of 30 points per game, putting together one of the most dominant runs of the event.
What made this title special was how many players showed up to contribute. The Stunners averaged 69 points per game while holding opponents to just 39, and that kind of production does not come from one or two players carrying the load. It comes from a roster that trusts each other night after night.
Ethan Moore and Trevor Henry each finished with 48 points across the four games, sharing the top spot on the scoring sheet. Right behind them was Kolbe Williams with 47 points, and Terrence Pigott added 44 more. That is four players within 4 points of each other at the top of the chart, a remarkable display of balance. Sevon Jackson chipped in 39 points over the four games, giving the Stunners a fifth consistent contributor who kept defenses from ever settling on a single target.
The depth did not stop there. Noah Phinizee scored 16 points across the tournament, and Louis Guy added 13. Every player on the roster put points on the board, and every player on the roster earned this championship.
When the honors were handed out, the committee recognized what the numbers already showed. Zaeem Mosby was named Tournament MVP, a well-earned distinction for a player who delivered when it mattered most. Ethan Moore earned an All-Tournament selection, a fitting honor for someone who matched the team's highest scoring total while helping set the tone on both ends.
Four games. Four wins. A 30-point average margin. The Ga Stunners did not just win a championship, they built something worth remembering.
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