McKenzie averaged 20.1 PPG, 6.6 rebounds and 5.8 assists
He was also name to the 2nd team, all East Bay by the Contra Costa Times.
Here is a nice piece from the Martinez News Gazette....
College Park and MacKenzie Moore: One of the best kept secrets from the hardwood.
Coach Craig Battle has team rolling into DVAL play with 11-2 record.
In case you are still wrapped-up in all the football hoopla waiting for the Super Bowl and haven’t noticed…we are now officially in basketball season. Fall has turned to winter and we’ve changed the page.
Perhaps the best-kept secret in the Diablo Valley or even the Bay Area is the men’s basketball team at College Park High School. Coach Craig Battle’s squad has sprinted-out to an 11-2 record during the non-league portion of its schedule.
The Falcons have some big wins to their credit, including victories over Skyline (Oakland), Hogan (Vallejo) and Oakland Tech. Their only losses were to Campolindo and Freedom, by six and four points respectively.
The Falcons won the Jim Stephenson Invitational at Hogan-Vallejo after Christmas. They were led by a newcomer MacKenzie Moore. The junior had 37 points and 11 rebounds in a 78-74 overtime win over Hogan in the championship game. He was named the tournament Most Valuable Player. In three games, he totaled 84 points and snagged 25 rebounds.
College Park has enjoyed a real turnaround from the 2008-09 season which saw them with a ho-hum overall record of 12-14 and 5-7 in Diablo Valley Athletic League play. You can’t help but focus on the young man who is turning heads as he glides up-and-down the floor, as Moore routinely does.
Moore is a true specimen at 6’5”. He has a reported wingspan of 6’11’. He is the type of player who seems as if he could fit into any of the five traditional slots on a basketball team and excel in any of them.
He was recruited by St. Mary’s (Moraga) and signed a provided the Gaels with an early commitment on Christmas Eve. At SMC he plans on playing point guard. Looks like another solid recruit for coach Randy Bennett and his staff.
As prep sports expert Mitch Stephens pointed-out, Moore may be the most talented offensive player in the entire San Francisco-Oakland Metro area. Thus far, Moore has done little to cast any doubt in that hypothesis.
Moore has come out-of-the blocks this season and posted remarkable numbers in all aspects of the game. He is the team-leader in just about every tractable category: Look at these per game averages: 22.9 points, 5.1 assists, 6.5 rebounds, shooting 58% from 2-point and 49% overall and 3.3 steals. The Falcons are averaging 65.4 points per game. Last season, they averaged 51.6 per game.
There is no doubt Moore is one of the most exciting players from this area in a while. And DVAL coaches better go to the drug store and pick-up some headache powder. Moore is just a junior and they will have to contend with him for two-full league seasons.
