Sports
Mount Girls Win Semifinal Contest in Overtime, 59-52
The Mounties advance to their sixth championship game since 2004 with Wednesday's victory.
Second-seeded Rogers established a 13-point advantage March 9 at Rhode Island College’s Murray Center, but the No. 1 Mounties of Mount St. Charles Academy rallied to down the Vikings, 59-52 in overtime, to secure a date with the Prout School Crusaders in the Division II Championship Game.
MSC’s Maria Saia scored five during the extra session to secure the semifinal victory.
“My team and I really know how to pull it together,” Saia said. “Rogers was a good team, so we knew it was going to be tough, especially in the semifinals.
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“The playoffs, it’s a whole different game, but we play together and we knew that we could do it, as long as a we played hard.
“I think that’s what we focus on most—play hard, win games.”
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Nifaty Morales led Rogers to a 25-12 first-half lead with nine points before the break. She scored 14 overall, and Tia Cromwell tacked on 14 too, including eight during the second half to help the Vikings temporarily maintain their shrinking advantage.
But the Mounties would negate the deficit nonetheless, balancing the books with little time to spare. Senior guard Adriana Maurano dribbled upcourt and netted two of her 11 points from the left baseline, despite the seemingly sufficient defense of Rogers’ Sienna Benson.
“I thought Sienna was on her. The girl made a tough baseline shot [and] tied it up,” said Frank Brow, head coach of the Vikings.
Morales’ ensuing last-second half-court heave caught iron, but it was for naught, and the teams proceeded to overtime with a score of 48-48.
MSC scored the first two points, but Benson netted three from the right wing to overcome debt. However, Cromwell picked up her fifth foul shortly thereafter, and the Vikings subsequently struggled to produce points.
“Tia fouling out hurt us. She had a great game. She’s a great kid,” said Frank Brow, head coach of the Vikings.
Rogers led, 51-50, when Cromwell was forced to the sidelines, and MSC’s Taylor Messier converted twice from the charity stripe to give the Mounties a one-point edge.
Mount St. Charles scored 22 points from the line Tuesday.
“I’ve been telling them all year, ‘Free throws are going to win a game for us or lose a game for us,’ said Nina Morey, head coach of the Mounties. “Tonight, they won it for us.”
Saia responded to a free throw from Morales with the game-winning layup, and the Mounties’ senior captain went on to add three more, finishing with 16 points Tuesday and 1,001 in her career.
“It’s awesome. My name’s going to be on a banner,” Saia said. “I look at those banners all the time in practice and now my name’s going to be on there.”
Saia and the Mounties must now prepare for Saturday’s meeting with the Crusaders at the University of Rhode Island’s Ryan Center. The Prout School advanced to the Finals for the first time by defeating Johnston Wednesday.
Both MSC and the Prout School have already captured championships in 2011. The Mounties took the Division II North crown with a 17-1 league record, and the Crusaders won Division II South with a 16-2 mark. Overall, MSC was 19-1 prior to the postseason, and the Prout School was 18-4.
The Vikings end the 2010-2011 campaign with a loss that is “going to hurt for a while,” according to Brow. But, they won 14 regular season games, added two more postseason victories and nearly secured Rogers’ first berth in a title game since 1993.
“This is the greatest team I’ve ever had,” Brow said.
