McGowens 16 Fourth Quarter Points Lead Stingers Late Comeback, Edmonton Falls to Sea Bears 102-101
Edmonton's Undefeated Road Tittle Lost as Stingers Take First Loss in Canada Life Centre

Winnipeg, seemingly, doesn’t like to make things easy on itself.
The Sea Bears blew a 16-point lead and trailed heading into Target Score Time, but came
back to earn their first-ever home victory over the Edmonton Stingers in a 102-101
thriller at Canada Life Centre on Wednesday.
It marks the third come-from-behind victory of a four-game winning streak for Winnipeg,
which is now 7-5 and into third place alone in the West following Calgary’s loss to
Brampton earlier Wednesday.
“We’ve had three outstanding comebacks. We played really well for a majority of the
game tonight, but give Edmonton credit. You could see why they’re really good on the
road and successful. They play really well together,” Sea Bears head coach Mike Taylor
said. “But again, our guys stepped up and found a way to win. And it doesn’t have to be
pretty. They just find a way to win and I’m really proud of the team.”
After controlling play for about 35 minutes, Winnipeg held a 90-83 lead as Target Score
Time came within sight. But a sudden 10-0 Stingers run turned the tables on the game
and put the Sea Bears on the ropes.
Winnipeg hung tough after the clock turned off, yet Edmonton still gave itself two
chances to put the game away with a single point after taking a 101-99 lead.
First, the Stingers’ Trey McGowens stepped out of bounds, turning the ball over.
Edmonton then intentionally fouled, ensuring the Sea Bears could not win with a three-
pointer.
But Edmonton’s strategy backfired when Justin Wright-Foreman made both attempts
before the Stingers turned the ball over a second time, this time on an errant pass by
McGowens.
Wright-Foreman drew a shooting foul on the Sea Bears’ ensuing possession, made the
first free throw, and the Sea Bears escaped with the dramatic win.
“We just had mental lapses. I think that’s our Achilles heel. Sometimes on the court ...
we don’t think, which is sometimes a good and a bad thing and we put ourselves in
tough spots sometimes,” Wright-Foreman said.
“But as you can see during [Target Score Time], all of that goes out the window. And
that’s when the real not thinking happens and we just play.”
Winnipeg’s victory, in some ways, was an encapsulation of a season which has seen the
team release reigning MVP Teddy Allen and more recently ex-NBAer Byron Mullens, a
marquee off-season signing.
After their 3-1 start to the campaign, the Sea Bears suffered a four-game losing streak –
only to respond now with four straight victories.
“We made a lot of progress in the last four games. We’re kind of using the adversity that
we’ve been through to redefine ourselves and it’s really about team,” Taylor said.
“There was a lot of tough times and we will not defend it. We had a lot of in-fighting for
that four-game stretch, but we made some strong organizational decisions. We’ve got a
team that’s really connected and together now and I just couldn’t be prouder of us.”
Wright-Foreman led the Sea Bears with 34 points to go with five assists and five
rebounds.
Centre Noah Starkey, who won the G League championship as a member of the
Oklahoma City Blue, debuted for Sea Bears and played 16 minutes off the bench, scoring
one point and adding three rebounds.
Winnipeg’s Alex Campbell connected on four triples, surpassing 200 for his career
including playoffs. The Brampton, Ont., native finished with 12 points, leaving him four
shy of 1,000 for his regular-season career.
“We come in every day and we put the work in and that’s just one example,” Wright-
Foreman said. “So we just come in, be tough every day and that’s who we are.”
Edmonton, meanwhile, falls to 9-4 and out of a first-place tie with Vancouver in the
stacked Western Conference.
McGowens paced the Stingers with 27 points and six rebounds while chipping in four
assists. But after setting the CEBL record with 10 three-pointers in his last game,
Stingers guard Elijah Miller failed to make a single one as he was held to just two points.
“We dug ourselves in a hole. We fought back hard though and we really came together,
and then it just came down to those last two turnovers at the end. Be decisive, gotta be
aggressive. We felt like we kinda over passed at the end. But we learn from it. We got a
little room, so we’ll be better,” McGowens said.
The loss marked Edmonton’s first road defeat of the season. Stingers head coach Jordan
Baker said that his team ultimately put itself into too big a rut over the first three
quarters of the game.
“Credit to our guys for showing some character and no quit, but we gotta be tighter in
the first 30 minutes to make it so we don’t have to battle back so much,” he said.
The first half featured plenty of offence as the Sea Bears made 50 per cent of their shots,
including an eight-for-17 mark from deep that was punctuated by Wright-Foreman’s
second-quarter buzzer-beater to put Winnipeg up nine at halftime.
Winnipeg increased its field-goal percentage in the second half, but was outdone by
Edmonton’s 73 per cent mark from within the arc. However, the fast-paced game also
meant plenty of turnovers, with Winnipeg coughing the ball up 17 times and Edmonton
16 times.
In the end, it was those empty possessions that cost Edmonton.
And Winnipeg, like it has so often recently, battled adversity of its own to leave with a
win.
The Stingers are back in action on Friday as Edmonton begins a three-game homestand
when it hosts Vancouver on July 5th.