UNH exits American East tourney after 72-69 loss to Binghamton

The thrill of victory, the agony of defeat
Jake Falko (21 points)

(Durham NH) UNH nearly tied the game twice in the closing seconds.

But they didn’t and Binghamton escaped with a 72-69 win in the quarterfinals of the American East Tournament on Sunday afternoon.

Great crowd with plenty of things to react to.

Twelve lead changes and six ties kept the excitement going to the end.

The Bearcats took the lead for good (57-55) with 6:49 left.  The excitement thereafter was over the desperate chase the Wildcats undertook trying to win or force overtime.

Jayden Martinez (17 points)

They came close.

A tying triple by senior Nick Guadarrama with fifteen seconds left was negated by an illegal screen (Nick Johnson).

“With fifteen seconds left in the game, that’s a pretty tough call,” said UNH coach Bill Herrion afterwards, “but I’ll have to look at the film.”

The Wildcats (15-13) got another chance after Jake Falko missed the front end of a one-and-one with eleven seconds left. 

Blondeau Tchoukuiegno launched a three-pointer before the buzzer with John McGriff defending which rimmed out.

Blondeau Tchoukuiegno guarded by John McGriff

“I personally thought it was going in,” said a disappointed Blondeau afterwards.

The #6 Bearcats were improbable winners.  They had lost three straight and six of their last seven games.  The Wildcats had beaten them twice this season. 

But it didn’t matter.

“The key to the win was limiting UNH to eight offensive rebounds,” explained Bearcats coach Levell Sanders post-game.  “The other two games with us they had double-digits.”

“We also were able to cut back the number of points we gave up off of turnovers,” he added.

Coach Levell Sanders

The actual key may well have been the return of Jake Faldo to the Binghamton lineup.  The scoresheet certainly suggests it strongly with Jake totally twenty-one points.

“Jake came in and gave us a spark,” said Coach Sanders.  “He gives our team confidence just by being on the court.”

Jake has worked hard to get back on the court after missing two games.  “I was doing therapy (on his ankle) for hours a day,” Jake said. “Yesterday, I was finally able to do everything full speed.”

Ogheneyole Akuwovo (10 points)

Jake had a rough final minute of the game with a turnover and a missed free throw but the points he gave the Bearcats from long and close range were crucial.

Coach Herrion: “We did a good job of containing him (Jake Falko) in the game at Binghamton.  Coming into this one he was 19-for-70 on three’s.  Today he made four (of seven).  Many of the three’s were at the end of shot clocks.  He is a great driver and scorer to the basket.”

Coach Herrion faulted his team’s inconsistent defense and poor foul shooting for the loss.

John McGriff (8 points/6 assists)

“Our defense wasn’t good enough to win this game,” he said.  “It has been a problem for us this season off-and-on.”

The UNH foul shooting was a serious problem.  When you go 10-for-22, you’re asking for trouble.  When you lose a game by three points you know where to look back to for an explanation.

“The big thing in the loss was the missed free throws,” admitted Jayden Martinez, who missed four of them.  “You try not to let it get to you during the game.”

With the win, #6 Binghamton moves on to visit #1 Vermont in the semifinals. Good luck to them…….and they’ll need plenty!  The Catamounts will be in the semifinals for the 20th time in the last 21 seasons.  They have also won twenty of their last twenty-two games and have won the AEC championship six years in a row.  They’re good, very good.  The winner gets an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

Christian Hinckson scored Binghamton’s first nine points and never scored again.  He did take in a game-high twelve rebounds.

The UNH band

The UNH band never fails to impress me.  They can play, are timely, and are loud. 

“It was a great crowd,” said Coach Herrion.  “We would love to have them here on a nightly basis.”

Binghamton   36   36   =   72

UNH                 34   35   =   69

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Controversy in the last minute
Close game
Coach Bill Herrion
John McGriff
Marco Foster defends
Jake Falko to the rim
Blondeau Tchoukuiegno and John McGriff
Christian Hinckson (9 points/12 rebounds)
Jake Falko
Blondeau Tchoukuiegno (15 points/4 assists)
Sportsmanship
Jake Falko puts up a three

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Newburyport moves on after 57-43 win over Shepherd Hill

Emma Foley (21 points)
Clippers deny an inbounds pass

(Newburyport MA) The Clippers (19-2) advance after defeating Shepherd Hill, 57-43, in the Round of 32 on Saturday afternoon.

The #21 Rams (15-7) trailed the entire game but impressed Newburyport coach Karen Grutchfield.

“We had seen them on film,” she said, “but they were much better than we thought.”

The Rams handled the ball well and knew where to concentrate their defense.  The issue was scoring.

Aryanna Sheehan guarded by Makenna Ward

“We’ve had an issue scoring all year,” said Shepherd Hill coach Maura Hackenson afterwards. 

Neither team shot very well although there were plenty of attempts.  There was only one three made the entire game. The Clippers scored only five points in the final quarter, yet the Rams were only able to take three points off their deficit at the start of the quarter.

“If we don’t play good defense in the backcourt, it’s a close game at the end,” said Coach Grutchfield.

Anna Seidel on defense

But the good non-stop pressure sent the Rams into several scoring droughts that opened opportunities for the Clippers to establish separation.

SH went through a two-point, three-minute segment in the second period.  Newburyport took advantage.  The Clippers recorded twelve points and turned a 19-18 one-possession game into, 31-20, with two minutes left in the quarter.

Makenna Ward (15 pts) and Deirdre McElhinney each had four points during this successful segment.  Olivia McDonald and Emma Foley had a basket each.

Olivia McDonald

The Rams did not go away.  They made the first two baskets of the second half (Emery Mullen and Heidi Jarosz), and the visitors were quickly within seven (33-26) as things got interesting.

But then the Newburyport defense kicked in again and shut down the Rams completely for the next three minutes.

While the visitors struggled, the Clippers went on a 9-0 run and their lead rose to, 42-26, and back into something of a comfort zone.

Emma Foley defended by Heidi Jarosz (11 points)

The highlight makers for Newburyport in this good section were Olivia McDonald, Makenna Ward, and Emma Foley.  Olivia hit a jump shot and the only three of the game.  Makenna broke full-court for a layup while Emma spun into the lane for two points.

Emma (21 points) ended up with a ten-point quarter dashing Shepherd Hill’s hopes for getting closer to Newburyport.  The Clippers had a seventeen-point lead after three quarters.

“Emma (Foley) has great moves down there,” said SH coach Maura Hackenson.  “She keeps the ball really high, and we didn’t have the height to match up. We tried to front her.”

Emma often had 2-3 defenders whenever she had the ball but still found ways to supply badly needed scoring.

Shaylan Cashman looks to pass

“Emma thrives on offense,” said Coach Grutchfield.  “She needs a lot of touches.  She also did a good job of rebounding.”

The Rams from the Mid-Wach League were tough on the glass scoring on six offensive rebounds.

Newburyport’s next game will be on the road against Whitman-Hanson.

Quiet crowd at Newburyport this afternoon. 

Newburyport   15   19   18   5   =   57

Shepherd Hill   12   10   13   8   =   43

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Brela Pavoa guards Emery Mullen

The MIAA this year has arranged the tournament based on power rankings.  The North, South, Central, and West are history.  And with the new arrangement, regional games are gone.  Who around here even knew where Shepherd Hill was located?  But they were seeded #21 and the matchup was against #12 Newburyport. 

What has been interesting (to me) has been that so far the higher seeds almost always win.  This suggests that the rankings have been accurate.

I do, however, wonder about the excessive travel the new arrangement necessitates.  The Amesbury boys had to travel to western Massachusetts to play South Hadley this week on a school night.  The Frontier girls’ team (Deerfield) will be traveling to Amesbury for a 5:30PM game on a school night. 

Olivia McDonald
Heidi Jarosz gets a block
Sydney Turner
Emery Mullen guarded by Anna Seidel
Sydney Fitzgerald guarded by Emma Foley
Sydney Fitzgerald on defense
Scramble on the floor
Deirdre McElhinney on defense
Raegan Peck
Makenna Ward (15 points)
Shepherd Hill box
Newburyport box

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Pentucket downs Ursuline 64-41

Abby Dube (15 points) guards freshman Alana Hogan
Waverly Smart and Alyssa Thompson (15 points)

(West Newbury MA) “Pentucket played amazing defense,” said Ursuline coach Morgan O’Donnell afterwards.

How many times have we heard that from opposing coaches?

Pentucket (17-3) rode their full-court pressure defense to a, 64-41, win over Ursuline Academy on Friday night.

The victory moves the Sachems into the Round of 16.  Their next opponent will be either Masconomet or North Quincy.  Those teams play tomorrow (Saturday).

Ava Karol (10 points) gets a rebound

A Masco win brings another game to West Newbury.

“We have bleachers we can bring in to meet the requirements for seating,” said Pentucket coach John McNamara.

Pentucket had a house full of fans and there was plenty to cheer about.

“It was loud in here,” said Coach O’Donnell.  “This atmosphere was tough to play in.”

Audrey Conover chases a loose ball

Pentucket shut out the Bears (10-10) for the first four minutes and put up nine unanswered points.  Four different players scored for Pentucket and all of them had layups.

Abby Dube and Alyssa Thompson were the game’s top scorers with fifteen points each. 

This was a night, however, when most of the Pentucket baskets had assists attached to them and most of the baskets were inside shots.

Lana Mickelson and Ava Karol

“There are no star players on the team,” said Lana Mickelson.  “We all work together.”

The Pentucket lead elevated to ten (27-17) in the second quarter after an Emma Lopata layup assisted by Audrey Conover.

The Sachems put a 12-2 run together in the third quarter, ending the run on an Abby Dube three-pointer.  The lead at that point had reached twenty (43-23) with a little under four minutes left in the third quarter.

Ava DiBurro reaches in

Both teams substituted liberally after that.

“I think our defense bothered them,” said Coach McNamara.  “It was our turnovers and quick shots on offense that kept them hanging around a bit.”

Credit Ursuline.  Despite trailing the entire game, the team from Dedham and the Catholic Conference kept plugging away in a hostile environment.

Ava DiBurro looks to pass

“Our kids came ready, and they played hard,” said Coach O’Donnell.  “That’s all I ask of them.”

Seniors Rebecca Morrill and Ava Karol paced the Bears with ten points each.

I was impressed with Ursuline freshman Alana Hogan.  Alana had seventeen points against Scituate.  Tonight, she was very good at handling the ball and continued to the basket if the opening was there.  Bright future.

The unselfish play of Pentucket was noticeable.  They executed penetrate-and-pass beautifully and ended up with many layups. 

Emma Lopata stands ready to take a charge

Senior captain Emma Lopata got two of the biggest reactions from the crowd when she drew two charges.

“Those can hurt,” she said, “and I was nervous about taking them because I had three fouls.”

Abby Dube ( three 3’s)

Abby Dube now has fifty three’s this season.

Pentucket is the #9 seed in Division 2. 

The seats were filled early and the enthusiasm for the home team was continuous.

“We love our fans,” said Emma. “It was fun playing in front of a huge crowd.”

“It was a messy game, but our team defense was pretty good,” said Ava DiBurro post-game.

Pentucket   15   16   16   17   =   64

Ursuline        7    12   10   12   =   41

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Pentucket box
Ursuline box
Bethany Cloutier
Audrey Conover in the lane
Ava DiBurro in for a layup
Lana Mickelson breaks in
Abby Dube passes
Gabby Bellacqua in the lane
Coach John McNamara
Alana Hogan
Abby Dube in front of the crowd

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Triton advances in D3 tourney with 63-34 win over Worcester Tech

Reese Renda and Sanaii Diaz
Kendall Liebert (21 points)

(Byfield MA) The smiles were nice to see.

The mask mandate was over so the smiles could actually be seen.

And there were plenty of smiles at Triton as the Vikings defeated Worcester Tech, 63-34, on Tuesday night in the preliminary round of Division 3.

The victory put a happy spin on season that had apparently ended poorly with seven straight losses.

There was plenty of contact

The Vikings 8-12 record wouldn’t get them into the playoffs but under the MIAA power ranking system the top thirty-two teams in each division qualify.

“We were at thirty-one for a while but ended up twenty-seventh,” said Triton coach Bryan Shields.

“We found out literally a couple of days ago,” said Kendall Liebert afterwards.  “We prepped for just a few days.”

Elaina Neives (7 points)

To make the pleasant surprise even better was that the Vikings ended up with a home game to start the tournament.  How?  Despite Worcester Tech’s 10-10 record the power rankings placed them south of Triton.

So while the Vikings came out happy to even be there, the Eagles were a little tight.

“My girls came out a little nervous,” said WT coach Stephanie Leveillee afterwards.  “I have a young team.”  There is only one senior.

Triton was 12-for-18 from the foul line

Separation was impossible for about 1 ½ quarters because of turnovers and missed shots by both squads.

But halfway through the second quarter, with the Vikings holding a slim, 14-13, lead, things changed drastically in Triton’s favor.

“Our game plan was to defend, defend, defend,” explained Coach Shields.  “We knew the players we needed to cover.”

Defensive perfection it was over the next five minutes of playing time stretching into the first minute of the second half. 

The visitors didn’t score a point while Triton put up sixteen straight points.

Paige Leavitt applies some defense

When that segment of terrific defense and offense ended the home team was sitting pretty with a, 30-13, lead.

Kendall Liebert (21 points) and Reese Renda (9 points) were keys in the breakaway. Both girls collected six points.  Reese had two steals that turned into layups while Kendall had one, but also scored on an offensive rebound.

Two minutes later a Molly Kimball (13 points) three-pointer boosted the Triton edge to twenty points, 37-17.

WT coach Stephanie Leveillee

Worcester Tech did not go away.  Led by Sanaii Diaz (15 points) the Eagles hung around and narrowed their deficit to 50-34. 

The final 3+ minutes saw the Vikings go on another run of points (thirteen) to close out the game.

“It feels awesome to win a tournament game,” said Reese Renda afterwards.

This was a game in which the enthusiasm on both teams was high and the finesse was not so high.  Plenty of contact and plenty of turnovers resulted.

Molly Kimball (13 points)

“It was really rough out there,” said Molly Kimball.

“We were both pretty hard on each other,” added Kendall. “It was a nice win for our seniors in their last home game.”

“It was fun to play in front of our home crowd and get a win,” said Coach Shields.

Coach Leveillee: “This is my first year as head coach.  To make it to the state tournament is a huge accomplishment for the team.”

The Vikings ended up 7-2 at home. 

Triton hadn’t won a game since January 21st against Lynnfield so it’s not too hard to imagine how sweet this win was for the Vikings.

Worcester Tech plays in the Colonial Athletic League.

                 Triton   8   18   16   21   =   63

Worcester Tech   8     5   12     9   =   34

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Shot block
Caitlin Frary
Liv Kiricoples shoots in the lane
Turnover about to happen
Maeve Heffernan
Reese Renda (9 points)
Michal Frimpong
Layup in a crowd
Molly Kimball and Janavia Hodge
Kendall Liebert
Sanaii Diaz

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Portsmouth Christian wins tourney opener 66-44 over Sunapee

Jason Stockbower (20 points) found lanes to layups
Rebound battle

(Dover NH) “When we’re poised on offense, we’re tough to defend,” said Portsmouth Christian coach Derek Summers post-game.

#5 PCA defeated #12 Sunapee, 66-44, in the Division IV preliminary round on Monday night.

The Lakers (9-10) got off to a nice, 9-5, lead but couldn’t hold it.

The Eagles (15-4) started hitting three’s when Sunapee zoned and found routes to the basket when the Lakers switched to man-to-man defense.

Seth Huggard (14 points)

“They certainly have shooters and drivers,” said Sunapee coach Tim Puchtler afterwards.

“We played them a month ago and had trouble with their press,” he added.  “We made adjustments and didn’t really have trouble against it today.  Our problem was after we broke the press.  We just couldn’t relax and play basketball.  We did early in the game and we had a very good four or five minutes.”

Baskets by Nick Belisle (10 points), Jacob Stoughton, and Nick Pollari keyed the Lakers good, 9-5, start after three minutes.

The Eagles reacted with a timeout and came out of it with better rebounding. They also started to put up points against whatever defense Sunapee tried.

Andrew Claus (11 points)

PCA reeled off ten straight points and took the lead for good in the process.

Consecutive three’s by Jason Stockbower (20 points) and Connor Hickey gave the Eagles the lead.  Gavin Nagy (14 points) and Seth Huggard (14 points) followed with successful drives to the basket. 

That run of points built the lead to 15-9.  A second three by Jason Stockbower raised the margin to 25-15, 2 ½ minutes into the second quarter.

Gavin Nagy (14 points)

Jason had eleven points in that decisive second period.

The PCA lead was twelve (32-20) at halftime and was elevated to twenty (42-22) two minutes into the second half.

“We expected them to fight us pretty hard and they did,” said Jason Stockbower afterwards.  “They switched up some looks on us from the first time we played them, so we had to make some adjustments.”

Andrew Claus (11 points) cut the Eagles lead to sixteen in the first minute of the final quarter but that was as close as the Lakers could get.

Scramble for control

Coach Summers: “We wanted to get out and run and make sure we kept them off the glass.  When we gave them second opportunities in the first half, we usually paid for it.”

Portsmouth Christian reached the D IV state finals last year and in 2016 and 2005.  They are still chasing their first state basketball title.

“We’re a good team and we’re looking to go far in the tournament this time,” said Jason.

Nick Belisle (10 points)

The Eagles have won eleven of their last twelve games.  The higher seeds, however, are still alive in the tournament and several of them already have wins over PCA this season.

“Every tournament game will be a battle for sure,” said Coach Summers.

PCA            17   22   16   11   =   66

Sunapee    12   10   15     7   =   44

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Erick Angwenyi and Jaden Young defend
Drew Clifford drives
Battle for control
Drew Clifford guarded by Jason Stockbower
Nick Pollari and McHale Cahill defend
Abhay Soman
Connor Hickey
Gavin Nagy drives
Portsmouth Christian Academy box
Sunapee box

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New Hampshire edges Binghamton 66-62

Marco Foster (14 points) hit consecutive three’s to give UNH separation late in the game
Coach Bill Herrion

(Durham NH) “It was a grind of a game,” said UNH coach Bill Herrion at the post-game press conference.

The Wildcats (14-12) had enough in this close/tough game to defeat Binghamton, 66-62, on Saturday afternoon at Durham.

Both teams entered the game tied at 8-8 in the American East Conference. 

Vermont stands alone at the top of the AEC with only one loss, but second place is hardly assured for anyone.

Christian Hinckson had a double/double for Binghamton

“I don’t spend a lot of time looking at the standings,” said Coach Herrion, “but I admit knowing that each game is big.  We’re all trying to survive.  The league has never been bunched the way it is this year.”

Evenly matched teams have trouble putting consecutive points together.  And that was the case today.

There were six lead changes, and the score was tied nine times.  Breathing room was non-existent!

Things went the Wildcats way after the last tie (50-50) with 4:19 remaining in the game.

Nick Guadarrama (16 points)

The sought-after string of consecutive offense happened as UNH scored seven straight points.

A Nick Guadarrama jump shot.  A Nick Johnson jumper (his only basket of the game, assisted by Nick Guadarrama).  And a three from Marco Foster.  The Wildcats had separation (7 points) with 1:49 remaining.

The Bearcats (11-15) stopped the run with a three, but Marco was back with another three returning the margin to seven points with fifty-four seconds left.

“Marco made two enormous three’s,” said Coach Herrion.  “He had five against NJIT and four today.  He’s a big-time shooter.”

Blondeau Tchoukulegano (13 points) guarded by John McGriff (12 points)

That last-minute three was discussed at the press conference because there was plenty of shot-clock left in what was then a four-point game.

“When you have an elite 3-point shooter you have to let them go when there’s space,” said Coach Herrion.

I asked Marco about the two shots. “It felt great to make them,” he said.  “You want to hit the big one.  You stay positive.”

Regarding the shot he took with time left on the shot clock in the last minute, he smiled and said, “I was very happy that one went in.”

Free throws late in the game

The Wildcats hit six straight free throws after Marco’s three to secure the victory.

The final regular-season game is Tuesday night at the Tsongas Arena vs UMass Lowell.

“It all comes down to playing well in March,” said Coach Herrion.  “We’re looking to get a home game in the tournament.  We’re 10-3 at home.  We’ve had a very good year here.”

Coach Herrion gave an explanation as to why, beyond Vermont, so many of the rest of the teams are so competitive.  “Teams are recruiting out of the transfer portal,” he said.  “Therefore, teams can reload quickly.  That’s why very few freshmen play.”

Christian Hinckson had a big game for Binghamton finishing with a double/double (fifteen points and fourteen rebounds).

Nick Guadarrama passes

UNH’s Nick Guadarrama had an impressive stat line: 16 points, 7-for-12 shooting, 7 rebounds, 4 assists, and 3 steals.

“Nick was terrific the whole game,” said Coach Herrion.  “He was good around the basket where we didn’t have much of an inside presence.”

Marco Foster finished with fourteen points while teammate Blondeau Tchoukulegno added thirteen points.

Binghamton lost to UNH, 69-60, two weeks ago at Binghamton. 

John McGriff

After that game, BU coach Levell Sanders cited the 13 offensive rebounds which led to 14 second-chance points as a key in the loss.

Things didn’t improve too much for the Bearcats this time around.  UNH had 11 offensive rebounds that led to 15 second-chance points.

Vermont has now won the AEC six straight years.

Today was Senior Day at UNH.  Tayler Mattos, Qon Murphy, Nick Guadarrama, and Jayden Martinez were honored.

Senior Day

Jayden had ten points today.  He needs twelve more to reach 1000 points.  Maybe at Lowell on Tuesday?

Thanks again to Mike Murphy for enabling my visit to this game.

(The pictures will enlarge.)

UNH band
Battle on the boards
Nick Guadarrama in for two
Pressure defense
UNH cheerleaders
Kellen Amos
Jayden Martinez (10 points)

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Newburyport wins Gieras Tourney 68-48 over North Andover

Newburyport Clippers win Gieras Tournament
Emma Foley (21 points)

(Danvers MA) North Andover had a five-point lead in the first half and was tied with Newburyport early in the second half.

That was the good news for the (10-9) Knights.

The Clippers (18-2) overwhelmed NA the rest of the way.

The win, at Danvers High School, gained the tournament title for Newburyport in the Ed Gieras Memorial Tournament on Wednesday night.

“This was a really satisfying win,” said Clippers coach Karen Grutchfield afterwards.  “We showed up to play against a good team.”

Jackie Rogers (13 points)

The Knights were able to hang around thanks to long-range accuracy.  Katie Robie (12 points) and freshman Sydney Rogers each had a pair of 3-pointers to keep the game close in the early going.

In the second half, the Knights lost the outside touch and couldn’t contend with a Clippers’ team that had four players in double figures.

Junior Emma Foley was the tourney MVP.  Emma thrived against single coverage around the basket.  When NA opted to send extra defensive help it opened opportunities for other Clippers.  On this night, those “other” players; Makenna Ward (17 points), Olivia McDonald (14 points), and Deirdre McElhinney, (12 points) all needed individual attention.

Makenna Ward (17 points)

“We distributed the scoring pretty well,” said Coach Grutchfield.

“There are no excuses for the way we played in the second half,” said NA coach Jess Deveny post-game.

“When you don’t play well in the defensive end, it translates into not doing well in the offensive end,” she added.

The Clippers put up forty-four points in the second half.  They had consecutive point-runs of ten and eight in the third quarter and fourteen in the final quarter.

Hannah Martin (14 points)

The 26-26 tie turned into 36-26 in the third quarter and 54-34 in the last quarter. 

Most of the Newburyport baskets had assists attached to them. Their passing was good, and they also converted several offensive rebounds.

“Newburyport got hot,” said Coach Deveny.  “They were making all their shots.  They’re a great squad.  They’re in the top twenty in D2.”

Sydney Turner surrounded

North Andover is in the Merrimack Valley Conference and is used to a regular dose of tough competition.

“Every night is a battle in the MVC,” said Coach Deveny.  “If you’re not ready, this is what happens.”

“Sydney Turner was special for us tonight,” said Coach Grutchfield.  “She does all the little things and tonight she guarded their best player.”

Olivia McDonald (14 points)

Hannah Martin paced North Andover with fourteen points and was named to the all-tourney team.  Olivia McDonald did a pretty good job of defending her.  Olivia also had fourteen points including nine in the last quarter.

Makenna Ward finished with seventeen points and that earned her a spot on the all-tourney team.  Makenna had a fast-break layup (assisted by Olivia McDonald) and a three-pointer when the Clippers gained the ten-point separation in the third quarter.

North Andover defeated Reading (58-44) to reach tonight’s final.  Newburyport had a win over Danvers (59-34) to get to the championship game.

Katie Robie had four three-pointers for the Knights.

Newburyport        9   15   21   23   =   68

North Andover   10   13     7   18   =   48

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Makenna Ward
Deirdre McElhinney
Battle for a rebound
Katie Robie and Emma Foley
Jackie Rogers (13 points)
Janie Papell
Hannah Martin
Makenna Ward, Emma Foley, Hannah Martin
Newburyport box
North Andover box

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Souhegan defeats ConVal 53-51 in OT to capture DII title

Souhegan wins DII state title
Keegan Burke gave Souhegan the lead for good in OT with 2 free throws

(Durham NH) Souhegan ran away but couldn’t hide.

ConVal chased and chased finally catching the Sabers late in the third quarter.

Then the fun began!

“There were ebbs and flows, ebbs and flows after that,” said Souhegan coach Pete Pierce afterwards.

The Sabers came away with the DII title, 53-51, in overtime on Sunday afternoon at UNH.

“The difference was a couple of plays,” added Coach Pierce, “and luckily things went our way.”

Joe Gutwein (21 points)

The Cougars (18-4) had a two-point first quarter and trailed by as many as ten points in that quarter.

“ConVal is a great team, and we knew that they would go into a run,” said junior Joe Bernasconi post-game.

It took a while, but the Cougars finally tied things up (28-28) late in the third quarter after a three and a free throw from Malachi Page (11 points).

Joe Bernasconi and John McBride with the hardware

From that point on until the final thirty seconds of overtime this was a one-possession game.  Exciting and crowd pleasing?  You bet!

Three lead changes closed the third quarter while three lead changes and a tie score were the story of the fourth quarter.

The Cougar’s Joe Gutwein (21 points) put in the clutch free throws with a minute left to set up overtime.  Both teams had a possession after Joe’s free throws.  Terrific defense by Malachi Page stopped a Sabers’ drive and Austin Knight nearly ended the game with a half-court rim-out at the buzzer.

There were two more lead changes in the four-minute overtime. 

Owen Michaels

Keegan Burke’s two free throws with 1:24 remaining gave Souhegan (20-1) the lead for good. 

Key play ahead alert!  A rebound by John McBride (15 rebounds) led to an outlet pass to Nolan Colby.  Nolan looked up and saw teammate Joe Bernasconi cutting toward the basket on the other side. 

“Nolan picked his head up and gave me a perfect pass,” recalled Joe.  “He did all the work there.  I just had to make the layup.”

Joe Bernasconi layup in closing OT minute

And Joe did to put the Sabers up by three (49-46) in the last minute.

A steal by Nolan added a free-throw point and after another ConVal miss, Joe added two more freebies to extend the Souhegan lead to six points and seal the deal for the Sabers.

“This game could have gone either way,” said a disappointed Owen Michaels afterwards.  “It felt good when we came back in the fourth quarter.  I felt that we had momentum going into OT but we kind of fell apart as a team.”

Matt Canavan (19 points)

Matt Canavan (19 points) took a heavy fall in the fourth quarter on a drive to the basket.

“I didn’t know what was going to happen after that,” he told me.  “I just needed a few minutes to get it together and then knock down some free throws.”

“It was a fabulous game,” said Coach Pierce.  “It was high school basketball at its best.”

The title was Souhegan’s first since 2004.

Clutch defense by Malachi Page

“This has been my dream since middle school,” said Joe Bernasconi.  “I can’t even believe it right now.  We came through so many challenges this season.”

6-7” John McBride saw limited action because of foul trouble but still gathered fifteen rebounds.  “Those fouls are what I get for being the biggest guy on the court,” he said laughing.

“I’m just so proud of this team,” John added.  “I never thought I’d really be here.”

Matt Canavan: “We knew we should win, and we were confident coming into the game.  We made the plays when we had to.”

Owen McGwire (15 points and 7 rebounds)

Coach Pierce: “We held them in check for a while and then we couldn’t hold them to anything.  What a game!”

Great crowd at Lundholm Gym.  And there was plenty to cheer about for both sides.

The only loss for Souhegan was to Lebanon on January 24th.  The Sabers finished with a seven-game winning streak.

Souhegan   10   11    9   12   11   =   53

ConVal          2   15   17    8     9    =   51

Thanks to UNH’s Doug Poole for the game stats.

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Coach Pete Pierce
Family celebration
Souhegan student section
Souhegan celebrates
Joe Bernasconi at the line in OT
Austin Knight shoots at the end of regulation
Christian Buffum rebounds
Nolan Colby (12 points and 3 steals)
Joe Bernasconi
Austin Knight
Malachi Page
Christian Buffum
John McBride looks for someone to pass to
Joe Gutwein
Nolan Colby

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Cam Keliher reaches 1000 points in Amesbury’s 63-38 win over Kipp Academy

Cam Keliher reaches 1000 points
Cam on a baseline drive

(Amesbury MA) Good things happened in the second half for Amesbury.

Cam Keliher reached 1000 points and the Amesbury defense came to life.

The Indians (12-8) finished their regular season with a win over Kipp Academy, 63-38, on Thursday night.

Now Amesbury will wait until the MIAA tournament starts on February 28th.

Rebound battle

“We’re working on finding a scrimmage somewhere during the time off,” said Coach Comeau afterwards.

Cam Keliher needed seventeen points to reach a thousand and had sixteen in the first half.

Several minutes into the second half, the AHS senior drove the left baseline and collected the point he needed.  Play was immediately stopped and plenty of pictures were taken with teammates and family.

“This is a dream come true,” said Cam afterwards.  “So many people helped me to get to this point and I want to thank them all including family, coaches, and teammates.”

Matt Welch (15 points)

“Cam’s been working for this for a long time,” said teammate/friend Matt Welch post-game.  “He been stressing about it a bit but now he’s got it.  I’m happy for him.”

The attention around Cam going for a special point total was understandably a distraction.  Instead of overwhelming the 3-13 Panthers from the get-go, the Indians gave the visitors too many chances and missed too many shots.

Halftime seemed to help.

Juan Setel-Singh (9 points)

“I let them have it at halftime,” said AHS coach Tom Comeau.  “They all knew that Cam had something happening today but that shouldn’t have affected their defensive intensity.”

After two minutes of direct talk on defensive intensity, the Indians were on the floor for eight minutes of organized shooting.

The results in both areas were noticeable in the second half.

A three by junior Juan Setal-Singh put the Panthers (3-14) within a possession (26-23) of the lead after 1 ½ minutes of second-half play.

Then the tide turned.

Rocco Kokinacis and Hakim Badmus

The Indians put nine straight unanswered points together.  Among the collection were the points that Cam needed to reach 1000.  Rocco Kokinacis had a three and a rebound basket before Cam’s historic basket.  Matt Welch (15 points) scored on a layup after it.

On defense, Amesbury activated a 2-2-1 zone defense.  The Panthers really struggled against it.

“We’ve seen a lot of 2-2-1,” said Kipp coach Brian Tobin afterwards.  “It doesn’t always bother us but today it quickly became a turnover-fest.”

Amesbury coach Tom Comeau

The score was 38-26 with a minute left in the third period.  The next 3+ minutes of playing time belonged totally to the home team.

Amesbury tallied sixteen straight points and gained permanent separation (54-26) from the team from Lynn with nearly six minutes of playing time remaining.

Matt Welch had nine points during the run of good offense and defense.

Matt Welch in for two

The Indians lead grew to thirty (61-31) several minutes later.

“Our effort was good for a half,” said Coach Tobin.  “Once we got down things snowballed.”

Coach Comeau: “The mindset was changed in the second half.  Sometimes a team needs a wakeup call.  They responded well.”

Matt Welch: “I’ve played AAU with him for eight years.  He’s just a great kid to play with.  He’s a good friend and a teammate.  He’s like a brother to me.”

Amesbury   11   14   17   21   =   63

Kipp               9      8     9   12   =   38

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Last home game
Scramble on the floor
Henry O’Neill in for a layup
Chasing a loose ball
Nick Marden on the glass
Christian Encarnacion
Cam Keliher guarding Jaythean Im
More defense
Trosky Pena
Nick Marden surrounded
Matt Heidt defends
1000-point scorers (Cam Keliher and Avery Hallinan)
Kipp Academy box
Amesbury box

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Bow wins DII state semis 42-26 over Pembroke

The Bow half-court defense was tight most of the game
Alex Larrabee (16 points)

(Kingston NH) “We never got into a flow,” said Pembroke coach Steve Langevin afterwards.

Bow did and they advanced to the DII finals on Sunday night at UNH with a 42-26 win on Wednesday night at Sanborn High School.

The Spartans (17-3) struggled shooting all night long. 

The Falcons (19-2) took the lead from the get-go and never trailed.

“We’ve been averaging in the 40’s but we could never get a run going tonight,” said Coach Langevin.

Cierra Hill and Annelise Dexter double-team Madison Speckman

Bow’s shooting wasn’t great but comparatively it was more than enough.

Bow’s Alex Larrabee (16 points) and Jess Chamberlain (11 points) led all scorers.

Undefeated Hanover (19-0) will be Bow’s opponent in the title game.  Hanover overwhelmed the Spartans, 50-28, in December. 

The Falcons have certainly improved since then.  “Bow is playing much more to their strengths than they were earlier in the year,” said Coach Langevin.  “They’re now setting up (Jess) Chamberlain and (Alex) Larrabee for those little jumpers.  They drive and kick to them.”

Rebound battle

The Falcons also lost to Pembroke in December but played tonight as if that loss was a distant memory.

“We played some good defense tonight and couldn’t throw it in the ocean for a while,” explained Bow coach Phil Davis post-game.  “But our defense enabled us to hang around.”

“Our half-court defense was what changed the game today,” Coach Davis added.  “We knew who their scorers were, and we knew we had to shut them down.  We face-guarded Ashley Stephens and Annelise Dexter the whole game.”

Battle for control

Bow scored the first five points and moved their lead to double figures (16-6) three minutes into the second quarter when Jess Chamberlain converted a rebound.

In the third quarter, junior Alex Larrabee increased the Falcons margin to fifteen (28-13) with an inside spin move and two free throws.

The Spartans finally showed some offensive life in the final quarter.  A three from Taylor Renna and two free throws (Ashley Stephens – 10 points) cut the Bow lead to nine points (30-21) with 5 ½ minutes left.

But Bow followed with a long possession (There’s no shot clock) that ended with senior Madison Speckman finding an open lane to a layup.  The Falcons lead was now double figures again and Pembroke couldn’t get closer the rest of the way.

Taylor Renna made two 3’s

“We broke their press very well,” said Coach Langevin, “and we held them down with our defense, but we couldn’t get our offense going.”

“We’ve prided ourselves on our defense the entire season,” said Jess Chamberlain.  “We know that if our offense isn’t clicking our defense will always be there.”

“We were well prepared for this game,” said junior Lyndsey LaPerle afterwards.  “I think we tired them with our press.  We didn’t give space.  We were always up on them and trying to force turnovers.”

Bella LaPerle (8 points)

“We had great energy tonight,” added Bella LaPerle.  “We wanted to start strong, and we did and got our momentum going.”

Coach Davis: “Syd Roberge is a force to be reckoned with on the defensive end.  She can shut down anyone.  She did a good job on Ashley Stephens tonight.  It’s just effort.  She’s a taller version of the LaPerles’”

Coach Langevin: “One of the hardest things is meeting with a team just after they’ve played, and lost, their last game.  I told the girls that they made themselves relevant this year.  Our seniors were 8-37 their first two seasons.  Bow was expected to be here, we weren’t.  But we did make it to the state semifinals.”

Britney Hill

The last time I saw these two teams playing was in the DII soccer title game in November at Exeter.  Bow got that game into OT in the last minute and then won the game in overtime.

           Bow   9   11   8   14   =   42

Pembroke    3     6   7   10   =   26

(The pictures will enlarge.)

Bow box
Pembroke box
Bow celebrating begins
Bella to Lyndsey
Syd Roberge and Ashley Stephens
Madison Speckman guarded by Cierra Hill
Shot blocker over her shoulder
Ashley Stephens goes under and up
Cierra Hill
Lyndsey LaPerle
Bella LaPerle
Kaitlin Arenella and Jess Chamberlain
Alex Larrabee

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