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ST. CATHARINES, Ontario – You can’t make this up.

Taking advantage of a 6-inch average height advantage, the USA Men’s U18 National Team outscored Panama 45-0 over the opening 10:35 and never looked back en route to a 118-26 victory at the 2018 FIBA Americas U18 Championship on Monday.

All 12 U.S. team members scored between four and 17 points, with five in double digits in points and two more who grabbed double-digit rebounds.

“We just wanted to keep our foot on the gas and just play hard, not so much worry about our opponent as much as worry about getting better as a team,” said Armando Bacot (Trinity Episcopal School/Richmond, Va.), who shot 6-of-9 from the field and finished as the game’s top scorer with 17 points. “We’re still learning the things we need to know to keep going on in this championship.”

The USA (2-0) received 14 points from Cole Anthony (Archbishop Molloy H.S./Briarwood, N.Y.), also on 6-of-9 shooting; and Ayo Dosunmu (Morgan Park H.S./Chicago, Ill.), Trayce Jackson-Davis (Center Grove H.S./Greenwood, Ind.) and Tyrese Maxey (South Garland H.S./Dallas, Texas) each chipped in 12 points.

Jeremiah Robinson-Earl (Bishop Miege H.S./Shawnee Mission, Kan.) hauled in 13 rebounds to go with six points and five assists, and Kamaka Hepa (Jefferson H.S./Barrow, Alaska) grabbed 11 boards. Additionally, Coby White (Greenfield H.S./Goldsboro, N.C.), one of four players with eight points, dished out seven assists.

The USA U18 Men’s National Team concludes preliminary round play also-unbeaten Puerto Rico (2-0) Tuesday to determine which nation will claim Group A’s top seed for the quarterfinals. Puerto Rico defeated Dominican Republic (1-1) 108-94 earlier in the day.

“Don’t play the score, try play to win each possession. A lot of coach-speak,” said USA U18 and University of Kansas head coach Bill Self on what he stressed to his team once the game was in hand. “I thought our guys actually did a pretty decent job. I’ve never seen a score like that after one quarter. After that, they still tried to play the right way.”

After a 43-0 first quarter, Hepa got a put-back at 9:25 in the second period to give the USA its largest lead of the first half.

Panama put its first points on the board, a jumper, with 7:57 to play in the first half.

At halftime the USA’s lead was 70-8.

“A game like this allows us to work on executing plays,” said Quentin Grimes(College Park H.S./The Woodlands, Texas), who scored nine points in the victory. “We have to really focus on going out there and executing, because when we play a really good team, we want to be able to go out there and execute.”

The U.S. outscored Panama 29-9 in the third and 19-9 in the fourth.

The USA dished out an impressive 38 assists on 47 field goals, outscored the smaller Panamanian squad 70-10 in the paint and owned a 63-37 rebounding advantage. Further, the USA scored 32 points off of 27 turnovers, outscored Panama 22-4 on second-chance points, 49-2 in points in transition and 69-15 in points off the bench.

“We were just trying to go out there and get better, honestly,” said Maxey. “We were trying to work on our stuff. We’ll see some real competition tomorrow. We have Puerto Rico and they’re 2-0 as well, and we’re trying to win this pool.”

“Puerto Rico, we scrimmaged them the other day and they didn’t show us anything,” said Self. “They run a lot of stuff. They beat Dominican pretty handedly, and we struggled with the Dominican Republic last night through the fourth quarter, so it’ll be a good game. They can shoot, and hopefully we’ll pressure them out of being comfortable.”

“They have a lot of good guards and some bigs, too,” added Bacot. “But, we just know that if we play our game and we play hard, we don’t think anybody can beat us.”

In Group B, Argentina (1-1) surged past Chile (1-1) in the fourth quarter for a 76-66 win and host Canada (2-0) sailed past Ecuador (0-2) 115-75.

Senior Writer and national analyst for Blue Media and compiles the Blue Star Elite 25 national boys and girls high school basketball and football rankings during the season. Lawlor, an award-winning writer, is a voting committee member and advisor for several national high school events, including the McDonald’s All-American Games. He previously wrote for USA TODAY and ESPN.com, where he was the national preps writer, while compiling the national rankings in four sports.

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