Beyond the Arc with Kate Harman Games of the Week: PCL Semifinals

Beyond the Arc with Kate Harman Games of the Week:  PCL Semifinals

Archbishop Wood vs. Cardinal O'Hara

By: Kate Harman

The ball went around and around.

It circled the rim on Tuesday night, after Kenzie Gardler made her way through traffic and attacked the basket.

Around and around for the Cardinal O’Hara guard until finally it fell in as the buzzer sounded.

The play only ended the third quarter of the Catholic League semifinals, but it crucially extended the Lions’ lead from five points to seven.

It was a deficit Archbishop Wood couldn’t overcome, as Gardler and fellow senior Maura Hendrixson powered O’Hara to a 39-35 win at Jefferson University.

“Last time we played them [Wood], they took me and Maura out of it,” Gardler, a Villanova recruit, said. “I think Maura had two points and I had four. So, this time it was all about being aggressive, finding the open person and if we were open to shoot it.”

Aggressive? Check.

Open to shoot? Check.

Together, Gardler and Drexel-bound Hendrixson combined for 27 points, including 17 in the second half, as the duo hit big three-pointers and knocked down free throws when it mattered most.

Hendrixson was hot early, as she

“We knew from the previous game,” Hendrixson said. “I wanted to – had to –  do something right off the bat. That way the defense could then focus on me and I could find my open teammates.”

The Lions (19-4) withstood a late comeback surge from the Vikings (17-7), as senior Katie May made some big shots late for Wood. The Northeastern recruit put up 10 fourth quarter points, including two huge three-pointers, but every time she made a play on one end, the Lions knocked down free throws on the other, to protect the lead.

“We kept our composure,” Gardler said. “We just kept each other in the game, helped each other out, told each other to be strong with the ball. We were up by four so we knew they were going to foul us at that point. Getting up in the beginning was a huge deal because we had that cushion.”

“From day one we were all about getting back to the Palestra, that was our goal,” Gardler said. “States is a huge deal for us but PCL, playoffs, playing for the city is a huge deal. Playing at Penn in front of 9000 people - it’s the best experience my whole high school career I could think of. By far.”

On Monday, Gardler, Hendrixson, and the Lions get to experience it all over again.

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Cardinal O’Hara 10 6 9 14 – 39

Archbishop Wood 8 6 4 17 – 35

CO: Maura Hendrixson 14, Kenzie Gardley 13, Siobhan Boylan 4, Stephanie Huesby 4, Kerry Paterson 2, Erin Welde 2

AW: Katie May 18, Erin Morgan 5, Kaitlyn Orihel 3, Lindsay Tretter 3, Mia Andrews 2, Bridget Archidiacono 2,  Annie Whalen 2

 

Archbishop Carroll vs. Neumann-Goretti

 

By: Kate Harman

Jabria Ingram was going to take the last shot.

The people wearing Neumann-Goretti’s black and gold knew it.

The people wearing Archbishop Carroll red and black knew it.

Both set of coaches knew it.

Her teammates and opponents knew it.

Ingram, a dynamic guard for the Saints – and the Catholic League’s Most Valuable Player – had spent the better part of Tuesday’s game against the Patriots driving to the basket, quickly shooting off the dribble, and generally causing problems for Carroll.

With her team down two points and less than 20-seconds remaining on the clock, the person Goretti wanted with the ball in her hands seemed to be a no-brainer.

And then the Hartford recruit passed it off to Tatiana Jones, who was just beyond the arc.

Swoosh.

The late game heroics from Jones catapulted the Saints over the Patriots in the Catholic League semifinals, 48-47, at Jefferson University.

Why’d she give up the ball? It was simple for Ingram.

“I trust my teammates. At the end of the day, I trust them,” Ingram, who led all players with 22 points,  said. “She was open. She had my back.”

 “What do you do?” Carroll coach, Renie Shields said. “You take away what you think they are going to do and you end up giving up something else. We had to guard the ball – we couldn’t let them get a layup.

“We knew Ingram was going to be the last shooter,” Shields explained. “But she’s such a good player she had four people on her and she found the player that was open.”

Led by the gutsy trio of Molly Masciantonio, Harlem Jennings, and Erin Sweeney, Carroll (16-7) kept it close the entire contest, earning a nine-point lead at the end of the third quarter. The majority of the game was played with just a few possessions separating the two teams but the Patriots found a way to separate itself due to sharp shooting and tough defense.

Then slowly, the Saints (15-4) made their way back, as Ingram scored 10 fourth-quarter points. In one particular 62-second sequence, Ingram scored a bucket on a drive, forced a steal on the other end, ran the floor to score another basket in transition and then knocked down two free throws to put her squad up a point.

The effort gives N-G another shot at a PCL title – something that has eluded them for the past two seasons.

“That’s all I wanted,” Ingram said. “That’s all I wanted was to get back to the Palestra. Freshman year we made it, we won. Sophomore year we made it to the Palestra, we lost. Junior year we didn’t make it – we actually lost in the semifinals on this same court. Senior year I wanted to get back. I’ve been thinking a lot about it.”

 

Archbishop Carroll 15 9 16 4 – 47

Neumann-Goretti 20 6 5 17 – 48

AC: Molly Masciantonio 15, Harlem Jennings 14, Erin Sweeney 12, Karli Dougherty 5, Ali Dreger 1

NG: Jabria Ingram 22, Tatiana Jones 14, Daijah Parmley 5, Kiara Kroger 5, Angel Ricks 2

Patriots 16-6

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