February 9th
at Springfield
Sleepy Eye earns its first out right tomahawk conference championship since 1988-89 and also to tie the single season win record with 20 wins in a season (2014-15).
Alicia Ibarra 18 points, 6 assists
Sarah Ibarra 13 points, 5 steals
Brianna Polesky 17 points
Josie Schieffert 14 points, 14 rebounds, 6 blocks
Brianna Polesky broke the single season team record for trhee-pointers made in a season with her third three in the first half surpassing 2012 graduate Sydney Remus at 44.
Coach’s Comments (Ryan Hulke):
The first ten minutes of the game was very slow and we had no flow as Springfield had long offensive possessions. When they run a 4-out offense with only a couple girls that are looking to score we had to stay discipline on the defensive end. We were able to do that and build a 18-7 led which then diminished with some missed shots on our end and offensive put-backs on their end.
Luckily late in the half Polesky and Sarah Ibarra hit back to back threes which gave us some flow and we went into half up 9. The second half we executed our sets very efficiently and that gained us a twenty point lead and we coasted from there.
We shot 52% from the field, 82% from the FT line (14/17) and 53% (8/15) from the three point line. Anytime we are able to shoot the ball like that we will be tough to beat.
I believe we had four girls in double figures again which is great to see and tough to stop.
Indians are now 20-2 overall and 13-0 in conference
One day after Josie Schieffert scored her 1,000th career point, Justine Gonzalez matched the feat.
Gonzalez, a senior, became the fifth player in Sleepy Eye girls basketball history to surpass the milestone when she sank the second of two free throws early in the second half at home against Springfield Feb. 10th.
Claire Krumbach, Sharisse Heiderscheidt, Sydney Remus are the others players who have surpassed the mark.
12-14-12 at SESM
Teams |
Half |
Final |
Sleepy Eye |
23 |
50 |
SESM |
32 |
68 |
Player |
Pts |
Reb |
Ast |
Stl |
Blks |
Lauren Laffen |
2 |
11 |
|||
Kabrie Weber |
|||||
Diana Villanueva |
|||||
Natalie Stevens |
|||||
Justine Gonzalez |
6 |
3 |
2 |
2 |
|
Tia Cselovzski |
1 |
||||
Jeni Kotten |
|||||
Alicia Ibarra |
2 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
|
Bethany Seifert |
5 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
|
McKayla Ahlrich |
6 |
2 |
1 |
||
Kayln Haas |
|||||
Claire Krumbach |
25 |
10 |
3 |
3 |
4 |
Kaylee Hillmer |
|||||
Josie Schieffert |
4 |
10 |
2 |
2 |
Coach’s Comments (Ryan Hulke):
Until we stop turning the ball over 25+ times a game we are not giving ourselves chances to win games. We are losing games by an average of 11 points right now and averaging 29.3 turnovers a game. If we cut those down by ten a game and score on half those possessions, it’s a whole new ball game every night. This is very possible for us as so many of these turnovers are unforced.
Tonight was probably overlooked by Claire scoring her 1000 career point; but we did some good things but just too many obvious mistakes. We allowed SESM to go on a 16-6 between the ten and five minute mark in the second half that put the game away for them.
If games were decided by effort alone, then Sleepy Eye would be playing for the state championship. Unfortunately for the Indians, the game of basketball is decided by who puts the ball in the hoop most often. Mountain Iron-Buhl scored the first 11 points of the game and never trailed in defeating the local girls 50-31 Thursday in the Class A high school girls basketball state tournament quarterfinals at Williams Arena.
The Indians struggled the entire game against the much taller and very aggressive MIB squad. SE shot just 25% in the contest, even when they got good looks (which wasn’t often) they would misfire on the shot.
The Rangers made a pair of steals then forced the Indians to turn the ball over allowing them to build a 11-0 lead just 2:20 into the game. Jessica Busch finally was able to get the Indians on the board at the 15:00 mark.
SE trailed 20-7 with just under eleven minutes to go. The Indians cut their deficit to 25-17 at the half, courtesy of four free throws and a trey by Carissa Hillmer.
MIB hit a three pointer fifteen seconds into the second half. Their lead was back to 13 less than a minute into the half. The closest things would get again was nine points at 36-27 when McKayla Ahlrich grabbed an offensive rebound and banked it in. It was all MIB the rest of the way.
“We got some good looks, we just couldn’t finish,” said coach Ryan Hulke. “I think we were a little star struck by the atmosphere early and that put us in a hole. MIB averages 64 points offensively and we held them to 50, so I can’t fault our effort on the defensive end.”
“This experience is something these girls will never forget. From the banquet Wednesday night, to arriving on campus Thursday morning, the looks and expressions on the girl’s faces is something I personally will never forget,” added Hulke.
“It’s such a huge momentum builder for the program. I have heard from so many young kids and players now that their goal is to play at Williams Arena someday because they got to see their role models do the same and realize it is possible for Sleepy Eye to play in the State Tournament. I have already had phone calls about a couple girls joining select AAU teams from the area, and everyone is already talking about how they are going to make themselves better this offseason. I couldn’t be more excited for what’s to come!” said Hulke.
“Unfortunately we lose a group of seniors that can’t be replaced. Three out of five have been playing varsity for four or more years, and that experience and leadership is going to be terribly missed.” explained Hulke. “I came in that first week and made some changes from day one, and at first they may not have seen the big picture, but as the season went on they really started to understand why I made them and accepted it’s better for the team. I could talk about these five girls forever, but the bottom line is they will be missed on and off the court.”
The Indians finish the year with a 19-11 mark
VIEW OFFICIAL GAME STATS 20120315psgbbstats
State Girls’ Basketball Tournament
All four 2011 champions return to defend titles;
Richfield, Hopkins earn top seeds; Eight teams making first appearances
All four teams return to defend their 2011 titles: Maranatha Christian Academy of Brooklyn Park in Class A, Braham in Class AA, DeLaSalle of Minneapolis in Class AAA, and Hopkins in Class AAAA.
Coaches of the Class AAA and Class AAAA teams voted and seeded the top four teams of each class, choosing Richfield as the top seed in Class AAA and Hopkins as the top seed in Class AAAA.
Eight teams are making first appearances: Sleepy Eye, Isle, Warren-Alvarado-Oslo (as a consolidated school), Spring Grove, Zumbrota-Mazeppa, Richfield, Chisago Lakes Area of Lindstrom, and Monticello.
This is the 16th year of the four-class format and the ninth year with all games being played in Minneapolis. This is also the sixth year that the Class AAA and Class AAAA tournaments were seeded by the participating coaches.
The 2012 State Girls’ Basketball Tournament starts Wednesday, March 14, with quarterfinal games being played at Target Center and Williams Arena in Minneapolis, as well as on Thursday, March 15 at Williams Arena only. Semifinals start at Target Center on Thursday, March 15, and conclude on Friday, March 16. The championship games of all four classes will be played at Target Center on Saturday March 17. Third-place games will be played on Saturday at Concordia University in St. Paul.
Detailed statistics provided by qualified teams are available on the League’s Web site —www.MSHSL.org — as a Media Guide link under Tournaments, then Winter, then Girls’ Basketball.
Class A Preview
(Section 7) Mountain Iron-Buhl (29-1) vs. (Section 2) Sleepy Eye (19-10): Mountain-Iron Buhl is making its third overall and second consecutive appearance, with a third-place finish in 2011. Mountain Iron previously competed in the tournament in 1978; Buhl in 1977. The Rangers finished the season ranked No. 6 in the final Minnesota Basketball News (MBN) poll. Senior Dakotah Winans leads the team with 10.3 points and 4.6 assists per game. Junior Kathy Ostman averages 10.0 points and 6.3 rebounds per game. The unranked Indians of Sleepy Eye are making their first appearance at the tournament. Senior Sydney Remus, Sleepy Eye’s all-time leader in points and steals, averages 14.2 points per game. Sophomore Claire Krumbach contributes 11.9 points and 9.3 rebounds per game.
(Section 6) Ada-Borup (26-2) vs. (Section 3) Minneota (29-1): The Cougars of Ada-Borup are making their fifth overall tournament appearance and first since winning back-to-back championships in 2008 and 2009. Ada-Borup finished the season ranked No. 9 in the final MBN poll. The school did not provide individual or team statistics. No. 7 Minneota is making its second consecutive and third overall tournament appearance. Ninth-grader Taylor Reiss leads the Vikings in scoring and rebounds, averaging 19.4 points and 10.3 boards per game. Senior Kelsey Hennen adds 9.5 points and 4.6 assists per game.
(Section 5) Isle (25-5) vs. (Section 4) Maranatha Christian Academy, Brooklyn Park (25-5): Ranked No. 10 in the final MBN poll, Isle is making its first tournament appearance. The Huskies are led by seniors Lindsey Lahr and Maya Coomes. Lahr averages 15.6 points and 5.7 assists per game. Coomes adds 14.1 points per game and shoots 45.4 percent from 3-point range. The Maranatha Mustangs look to defend their championship of 2011 in their third consecutive and overall tournament appearance. The team finished the season ranked No. 1 in the final MBN poll. Junior Onye Osemenam averages 16.3 points per game on 56 percent field goal shooting; she also pulls down 11.5 rebounds per game. Senior Alexis Long contributes 12.1 points per game. The Mustangs outscored opponents this season by an average of 31.4 points per game.
(Section 8) Spring Grove (27-3) vs. (Section 1) Warren-Alvarado-Oslo (26-4): The unranked Ponies of Warren-Alvarado-Oslo are making their first appearance under this name. Warren competed in the state tournament in 1980. Senior Sarah Durand, the team’s all-time leading scorer, paces the team with an average of 13.7 points and 9.9 rebounds per game. Junior Alexandra Erickson contributes 10.8 points and 6.2 rebounds per game; senior Angie Erickson adds 10.6 points per game. Spring Grove is appearing in the tournament for the first time. The Lions closed out the year ranked No. 4 in the final MBN poll. Senior Richell Mehus posted an all-around strong season, leading the team in scoring at 23.0 points per game and adding 8.4 rebounds, 4.9 assists and 5.2 steals, respectively. She holds the school’s career record for both scoring (1,661 points) and steals (463). Senior Taylor Elton adds 14.5 points and 4.9 assists per game.
Class A Quarterfinal Schedule — Thursday, March 15
11:00 a.m. — Mountain Iron-Buhl vs. Sleepy Eye at Williams Arena, U of M
1:00 p.m. — Ada-Borup vs. Minneota at Williams Arena, U of M
3:00 p.m. — Isle vs. Maranatha Christian Academy at Williams Arena, U of M
5:00 p.m. — Spring Grove vs. Warren-Alvarado-Oslo at Williams Arena, U of M
Class AA Preview
(Section 7) Braham (29-1) vs. (Section 2) New Richland-H-E-G (30-0): The defending champions from Braham return to make their fourth consecutive and fifth overall appearance. They were ranked No. 3 in this year’s final MBN poll. Junior Rebekah Dahlman set school records for career free throws made and career free throws attempted this year. She averages 35.5 points and 11.6 rebounds per game, and has approximately 30 Division I offers to play basketball after she graduates. Senior Kelsey Sorenson-Griffrow, who is the Bombers’ No. 3 all-time scorer in school history, averages 15.0 points and 5.7 rebounds per game. She will play basketball for the University of Minnesota-Duluth next year. The No. 2-ranked Panthers of New Richland-H-E-G are making their second appearance but first since 2004. Sophomore Carlie Wagner leads the Panthers with 28.1 points per game and is the school’s all-time leading scorer. Senior Anna Schlaak is the school’s all-time leader in rebounds and averages 10.0 per game. Schlaak will play volleyball for Concordia University in St. Paul next year.
(Section 6) Sauk Centre (25-4) vs. (Section 3) Worthington (20-7): The Mainstreeters of Sauk Centre, who were No. 6 in the final MBN poll, are making their third consecutive and overall appearance. They are looking to improve on last year’s third-place showing. Junior Macy Weller averages 15.8 points and 9.3 rebounds per game this season. Senior Kali Peschel, who will play basketball for the University of Iowa next year, adds an average of 14.1 points per game. The Worthington Trojans return to tournament action after a two-year absence. They were not ranked in the final MBN poll and are making their eighth appearance overall. Mackenzie Gerber, a senior, leads the Trojans in with 17.7 points and 9.0 rebounds per game. She also boasts 5.0 steals per game.
(Section 5) Providence Academy, Plymouth (25-4) vs. (Section 4) Minnehaha Academy, Minneapolis (20-8): Top-ranked Providence Academy returns for its second consecutive and overall appearance. The Lions placed fourth in 2011. Seniors AnnMarie Healy and Katie Nordick will both attend Ivy League schools next season; Healy will play basketball at Harvard and Nordick will compete on the track team at Dartmouth. Providence Academy did not provide individual statistics. Last year’s runners-up from Minnehaha Academy return for their fifth consecutive and seventh overall appearance. They were not ranked in this year’s final MBN poll. Junior Nicole Nipper averages 16.9 points per game, and senior Natalie Stevens grabs 6.9 rebounds per game.
(Section 8) Pequot Lakes (19-11) vs. (Section 1) Zumbrota-Mazeppa (17-11): The unranked Patriots of Pequot Lakes are making their second consecutive and fifth overall appearance at this year’s tournament. Senior Mattie Lueck paces the Patriots with 19.2 points and 7.1 rebounds per game. Zumbrota-Mazeppa, which was not ranked in the final MBN poll, is making its debut appearance. Senior Ashley Hinsch, who set single-season records in both scoring (447) and assists (122) this year, leads the Cougars with 16.0 points and 4.4 assists per game. Junior Amber Jentsch corrals 5.8 rebounds per game for Zumbrota-Mazeppa.
Class AA Quarterfinals Schedule — Wednesday, March 14
6:00 p.m. — Braham vs. New Richland-H-E-G at Target Center
8:00 p.m. — Sauk Centre vs. Worthington at Target Center
6:00 p.m. — Providence Academy vs. Minnehaha Academy at Williams Arena, U of M
8:00 p.m. — Pequot Lakes vs. Zumbrota-Mazeppa at Williams Arena, U of M
Class AAA Preview
(Section 1) Red Wing (19-10) vs. (No. 1 Seed-Section 6) Richfield (25-4): Red Wing returns for its fourth overall and second consecutive state tournament appearance. The Wingers were unranked in the final MBN poll. Junior Tesha Buck leads the team in scoring with an average of 17.6 points per game, shooting 41.7 percent from three-point range. Senior Marisa Toivonen contributes 16.7 points and 9.6 rebounds per game. No. 3-ranked Richfield, seeded No. 1 by the coaches, is making its first tournament appearance. Junior Jessica January sets the tone for the Spartans with strong all-around averages: 22.1 points, 6.54 rebounds, 6.8 assists and 4.5 steals per game. Senior Bryann Guyton leads the team in rebounds at 6.7 per game and adds 10.7 points per game. Junior Sierra Ford-Washington adds 10.5 points per game on 57.5 percent field goal shooting.
(Section 2) Hutchinson (25-3) vs. (No. 4 Seed-Section 4) Hill-Murray, Maplewood (22-7): Hutchinson is making its fifth overall appearance, returning to tournament play for the first time since 2003. Scoring leader Alissa Retterath, a senior, averages 15.8 points per game. Junior Morgan Julius is the team’s top rebounder with 6.7 boards per game. The Tigers were ranked No. 5 in the final MBN poll. Seeded No. 4 by the coaches, the Pioneers of Hill-Murray are making their third consecutive and 12th overall tournament appearance; Hill-Murray was the runner-up in 2011 and 2010. Senior Tessa Cichy leads the team in scoring (22.4 points per game), rebounds (10.5 per game) and steals (4.8 per game). Cichy has passed career milestones of 2,000 points and 1,000 rebounds. The Pioneers closed the season ranked No. 9 in the final MBN poll.
(Section 7) Chisago Lakes Area, Lindstrom (24-5) vs. (No. 2 Seed-Section 8) Fergus Falls (28-1): Ranked No. 8 in the final MBN poll, Chisago Lakes Area is making its first appearance in the state tournament. Senior Whitney Tinjum averages a double-double with 24.6 points and 11.0 rebounds per game for the Wildcats. She will play at Washington State University next season. Sophomore Bryanna Fernstrom contributes 14.3 points per game, plus 7.2 rebounds and 3.7 blocks per game. The Otters of Fergus Falls, seeded No. 2 by the coaches and ranked No. 2 in the final MBN poll, return to tournament competition after a four-year absence. It is their second overall appearance. The Fergus Falls offense features balanced scoring by three players averaging double figures: senior Sydney Schultz (13.6 points per game), sophomore Brianna Rasmusson (11.2), and senior Mariah Monke (10.9). Monke also leads the team in rebounds at 7.7 per game.
(Section 5) Monticello (17-12) vs. (No. 3 Seed-Section 3) DeLaSalle, Minneapolis (25-3): Unranked Monticello is making its first tournament appearance. The Magic’s leading scorers are senior Tish Jude with 13.2 points per game and sophomore Grace Sawatzke with 12.5 points per game. Senior Morgan Lindenfelser is the top rebounder for Monticello, averaging 9.1 boards per game. The Islanders of DeLaSalle are the defending Class AAA champion and are making their third consecutive and sixth overall tournament appearance. Ranked No. 1 in the final MBN poll, DeLaSalle was seeded No. 3 by the coaches. The team averages 72.3 points per game behind the double-digit scoring of four players: junior Tyseanna Johnson (17.8 points per game), junior Allina Starr (14.7), senior Mariah Adanene (14.0), and senior Mia Loyd (13.3). Loyd is the team’s top rebounder at 10.6 per game and Starr leads the Islanders in assists, averaging 8.0 per game.
The Class AAA Quarterfinal Schedule — Wednesday, March 14
10:00 a.m. — Red Wing vs. Richfield at Williams Arena, U of M
12:00 p.m. — Hutchinson vs. Hill-Murray at Williams Arena, U of M
2:00 p.m. — Chisago Lakes Area vs. Fergus Falls at Williams Arena, U of M
4:00 p.m. — Monticello vs. DeLaSalle at Williams Arena, U of M
Class AAAA Preview
(Section 1) Lakeville North (21-8) vs. (No. 1 Seed-Section 6) Hopkins (27-1): Lakeville North returns for its fourth overall and third consecutive tournament appearance. The Panthers, who placed third last year, were ranked No. 9 in the final MBN poll. Junior Taylor Stewart, who has over 800 career points and 300 career assists, averages 13.1 points per game. Senior McKenzie Hoelmenn, averaging 6.8 points and 7.0 rebounds per game, will attend Northern Illinois next year. The defending champions from Hopkins return for their second consecutive and seventh overall appearance. The Royals enter ranked No. 1 in the final MBN poll and also earned the No. 1 seed from the coaches. In addition to last year, they also won titles in 2004 and 2006. The Hopkins’ defense forces opponents into 27.4 turnovers per game and the Royals also average 17.1 steals per game. Junior Nia Coffey leads the Royals in both points (16.4) and rebounds (9.4) per game. Coffey’s older sister, senior Sydney, will play for Marist College in Poughkeepsie, New York, next season and senior Gracia Hutson will play for the University of Vermont.
(Section 8) St. Michael-Albertville (22-7) vs. (No. 4 Seed-Section 3) Eastview, Apple Valley (24-5): The Knights of St. Michael-Albertville are making their fifth overall appearance but first since 2010. They were not ranked in the final MBN poll and are in the hunt for their third championship. They won previously in 2001 and 2009. Senior Christine Thorn, who will play at the University of Minnesota-Crookston next year, leads the team with 16.4 points per game. Junior Karissa Pazen grabs 5.4 rebounds per game for the Knights. Rachel Valley, another senior, will play basketball at Bemidji State next season. Eastview returns to tournament action after a two-year absence. This is the fifth appearance for the Lightning, who finished the season ranked No. 10 in the final MBN poll. The Lightning were also seeded No. 4 by the coaches this year. Ninth-grader Madison Guebert averages 18.0 points per game, and senior Amber Mehr averages 6.1 rebounds per game. Senior Paige Palkovich will play softball at the University of Minnesota next year.
(Section 7) Duluth East (22-5) vs. (No. 2 Seed-Section 2) Edina (25-4): The Greyhounds of Duluth East are making their 10th tournament appearance but first since 2003. The team enters tournament play unranked in the final MBN poll. Seniors Alex Freeman and Shamika Hopkins pace the Greyhounds with averages of 14.7 and 14.4 points per game, respectively, and junior Elena Lushine has 11.6 rebounds per game. Freeman will play soccer at Drake University next year. The Edina Hornets are making their ninth tournament appearance but first since 2007. They are looking for their second title, having won previously in 1988. The No. 2-seeded Hornets enter the tournament ranked No. 2 in the final MBN poll. Senior Katybeth Biewen, who is the school’s all-time leader in both steals and assists, leads Edina with an average of 17.9 points per game.
(Section 5) Osseo (24-5) vs. (No. 3 Seed-Section 4) White Bear Lake Area (23-6): The unranked Osseo Orioles return for their 13th appearance but first since 2008. They won previous titles in 1989 and 2000. This year’s squad has four players that average eight-plus points per game: senior Olivia Antilla (8.9), senior Mikayla Bailey (8.8), junior Phillis Webb (8.5), and junior Janay Morton (8.3). Webb is also the top rebounder with 3.2 per game. The Bears of White Bear Lake Area, making their sixth overall and fourth consecutive tournament appearance, placed fourth in 2011. They finished the season ranked No. 7 in the final MBN poll and were seeded No. 3 by this year’s coaches. White Bear Lake Area did not provide individual statistics.
The Class AAAA Quarterfinal Schedule — Wednesday, March 14
10:00 a.m. — Lakeville North vs. Hopkins at Target Center
12:00 p.m. — St. Michael-Albertville vs. Eastview at Target Center
2:00 p.m. — Duluth East vs. Edina at Target Center
4:00 p.m. — Osseo vs. White Bear Lake at Target Center
Celebrating 100 Years of Basketball Tournaments
To mark the 100th boys’ basketball tournament next week, the milestone is being celebrated at both the girls’ and boys’ tournaments this year. In addition to special recognition of past achievements, a number of special on-court presentations are planned. The center-spreads of both tournament programs include timelines listing significant events, as well as listings of the top coaches, players and teams, plus the best shots, finishes and games.
Perhaps the most interesting feature of the celebration is a collection of state tournament memorabilia that will be on display. Titled “A Century of Memories,” the display is sponsored by Wells Fargo, the League’s premier corporate partner. School personnel from around the state have lent trophies, uniforms, balls and the like that will be displayed at Target Center adjacent to the skyway entrance to the building. Among the items on display will be the very first trophy awarded to Fosston in 1913.
The display will be available for viewing throughout both the girls’ and boys’ tournaments.
Television and Webcast Coverage
All semifinal and championship games will be televised live by KSTC-TV Channel 45, and also streamed live and free on the Web at Prep45.com. GrandStadium is also recording all quarterfinal and third-place games for delayed viewing at Prep45.com. Live statistics of all games will also be displayed on the League website (www.MSHSL.org).
Ticket Information
Tickets will be available at Target Center and Williams Arena. Quarterfinal tickets cost $14.00 for adults and $9.00 for students. Quarterfinal wristbands, which are good at both venues on Wednesday only, are $19.00 for adults and $12.00 for students. Semifinal and championship tickets will be available at Target Center and cost $14.00 for adults and $9.00 for students per session. Third-place tickets will be available at Concordia University and cost $10.00 for adults and $7.00 for students.
A visit to any participating Wells Fargo metro location can yield you a $2 discount coupon for students 13 and younger. The discount coupons are also available for the Boys’ Basketball Tournament.
Construction Warning: I-35W / 4th Street SE Ramp Closure
The ramp from 4th Street SE to northbound 1-35W will be closed throughout the girls’ state basketball tournament. During the closure, posted detours will direct motorists north to New Brighton Boulevard in order to access northbound 1-35W. For real-time traveler information anywhere in Minnesota, please visit www.511mn.org or dial 5-1-1.
The Sleepy Eye’s girls basketball storybook season continued Friday night when they pulled off their fourth consecutive upset to earn the right to play in the Minnesota State High School Girls State Basketball Tournament.
The experts say it’s tough to beat the same team three times in the same season, the #7 seeded Sleepy Eye team threw that myth right out the window. The local girls also created havoc with the section seeding by beating Section 2A South champ and #2 seeded Springfield 53-48 to win the Section 2A Championship and send an Indians girls team to the state for the first time.
Sleepy Eye entered the championship game not only playing their best ball of the season but also playing with a great deal of confidence after knocking off #2 MVL, #3 New Cathedral and #1 BLHS. Their composure showed from the tip off.
The Tigers scored the first point of the game but the Indians worked the ball well to take a 19-13 advantage by the midway point of the first half. Springfield made a run, as SE knew they would, tying the game at 19-19 with 5:14 to go. The local girls got a cold hand the rest of the way but still managed to maintain a 25-24 lead at the intermission.
Sleepy Eye slowed the pace down a bit in the second half and got great looks early but couldn’t get the ball to fall. The Tigers took their first lead since early on, 28-27, when they scored a bucket with 13:43 on the clock. That woke the Indians up. They went on a 6-0 run to go up 33-28. That lead would increase to 40-33 at the seven minute mark.
Sleepy Eye’s offense pulled the ball back at the six minute mark and patiently waited for a good shot. The Tigers took advantage of a pair of missed free throws and a charge call on Carissa Hillmer with 3:39 to go after she made a basket. Her points were erased. Springfield went down and hit a pair of free throw to go up 41-40.
Indian teams of the past would have folded, not this team. Justine Gonzalez sank two free throws at the 3:22 mark. Ten second later Jessica Busch made a steal and was fouled. Busch canned both her shots. SE 44, Springfield 41.
Another Busch steal and two more free throws, 46-41.
Springfield pulled to within three at 46-43 but again the determined Indians took charge. Gonzalez sank a shot from within the paint. Then Carissa Hillmer hit 5-8 in the final minute from the charity stripe to secure the contest.
“We were definitely prepared for what Springfield was going to do defensively,” said coach Ryan Hulke. “The nice thing about the way our schedule was set up this year, was Springfield played every team we played the game before us. So if I was going to scout an opponent it was always against Springfield.”
“They have played a triangle and two very successfully for the last month, so I was about 85% sure we were going to see it early in the game,” explained Hulke. “Luckily we are not a team with just one or two scores. Jessica Busch and Justine Gonzalez put a quick end to the triangle and two by hitting shots when left open.”
“Defensively we were pretty good once again,” added Hulke. “To hold a team like Springfield to less than 50 points is really tough; they run about three different motion offenses, 7 sets, and 6 out of bounce plays. We were prepared for most of them and how we were going to cover them and the girls made minimal mistakes while defending those sets.
“This has been our biggest benefit throughout the playoffs,” concluded Hulke. ” The girls have been at every practice mentally and they are seeing the advantage of knowing the other teams’ offenses and defenses.”
The Indians record stands at 19-10 and they will now face off against Mountain Iron-Buhl (29-1) in the quarterfinal round. Game time is 11 a.m. at Williams Arena on the campus of the University of Minnesota.
The Sleepy Eye girls basketball Cinderella story continued Monday night with a come-from-behind, 60-56, win over number one seeded BLHS to win the Section 2A North championship and the right to play for a section title.
The #7 seeded Indians have been on a roll of late, first knocking off #2 MVL on a last second shot. They followed that up with a thumping of the #3 seed New Cathedral. And now the #1 seed Mustangs are sent packing despite holding a 10-point leads in both halves of the game.
SE got off to a good start, jumping to a 20-10 lead at the 6:33 mark of the first half. BLHS then went on a 17-1 run to close out the half.
“We got out to an aggressive start but then had multiple mental mistakes,” said coach Ryan Hulke
“At our practice Saturday we talked about not taking quick shots, and how BLHS was going to gamble on reversal passes and in our last seven minutes we completely forgot about those keys and let them back in the game,” explained Hulke. “Lucky we had a 10-point lead so that we went in (at halftime) only down six (27-21).
Sleepy Eye got the first basket of the second half but the Mustangs continued to dominate with their inside game, building another 10-point lead.
“We talked at halftime about trapping their ball screens to make (Jessica) Kalenberg get rid of the ball. Well we trapped but got no help on the roll for the first 10 minutes of the second half, and we were still down 10,” explained Hulke.
The Indians finally got things cranking.
“We continued to trap the ball screen but we finally got help from our other girls and that took BLH out of anything they tried to do,” said Hulke. “And then Sydney Remus and Claire Krumbach took over.
Remus hit back to back threes. Krumbach rolled in a pair of shots. Remus hit another off the inbounds pass.
Justine Gonzalez tied up the game at the 5:22 mark. BLHS would hit a shot to tie it back up with 5:08. That would be the last time the Mustangs played with a lead.
Krumbach grabbed an offensive board and put it in, 49-49. Remus made a steal and laid it in, 51-49.
With more than three minutes to play Hulke made the decision to pull the ball out and force the Mustangs to foul. Carissa Hillmer hit one of two. Remus added two more from the charity stripe. The score stood 54-49 with 1:23 to go.
BLHS hit a quick shot, 54-51, and called time out.
Krumbach was quickly fouled. She made one of two. The Indians led 55-51.
Hillmer and Krumbach closed things out from the free throw line, 60-52.
The Mustangs sank a shot at the buzzer to make the final 60-54.
“This group has battled for five straight games and refuses to lose right now,” said Hulke. “This is such a great experience for these girls, and I have been telling them every day to soak it all in because it could be a once and a lifetime experience.”
The Indians move their record to 18-10 and will now face Springfield for the Section 2A championship which will be played Friday at Gustavus College in St. Peter.
The Sleepy Eye girls basketball team pulled off a miracle Tuesday night to beat MVL 50-48 in the opening round of the Section 2A tournament.
The contest was close throughout with neither team leading by more than six points at any time. Down the stretch the Indians committed three consecutive free throws to allowed the Chargers to go up 46-42.
Sydney Remus pulled off a steal, laid the ball in and was fouled. With the free throw the scored stood 46-45. With 45 second to play Remus then canned a three pointer to give SE a two-point advantage. MVL tied things up with a pair from the charity stripe with 33 second to play.
The Indians wanted to go for the last shot but got a bit anxious and fired much too early. It was off target. Now it was the Chargers who wound the clock, hoping for a last second win. Carissa Hillmer put that thought to rest when she made a steal with 3.3 seconds to play. Sleepy Eye set up a play on their end of the court but the ball went off Remus’s hands into an MVL players paws. Instead of hanging onto the ball, she attempted to make a pass to a teammate. Instead the ball went right into the hands of Jessica Busch who was standing in the paint just inside the free throw line. Busch immediately got a shot off, the buzzer sounded as the ball swished.
“Obviously we got a little lucky on the last play. But the girls deserve so much credit for battling all night,” said an excited Ryan Hulke. “I really thought it was over when we went down four with 2:30 to play and just gave them the ball after another turnover. But then our seniors stepped up big time recording 3 steals in MVL’s last four possessions.”
“I could talk about each girl and the great things all of them did Tuesday to earn that victory,” said Hulke, “but I really comes down to our seniors taking pride and earning earning that win. ”
“Finally this group of seniors gets out of the first round of playoffs. This was such a huge win for them, it really means so much to beat a team we lost to twice, but yet competed with twice until the end,” continued Hulke. “They knew they could win this game, and they battled all night to earn it.”
“Now Friday- it’s a complete opposite of Tuesday. New Ulm runs a flex offense with only a couple sets, and minimal out of bounce plays. They have some personal tendencies we have noticed on film, but nothing like MVL. Tuesday we wanted to slow the game down, but Friday we need to make it a 94 foot game. New Ulm is so long and athletic that we need to make sure we rebound, use our speed, and not give them easy opportunities with turnovers,” said Hulke about their upcoming battle Friday night at New Ulm Cathedral. “The girls have never played in a game like this before. It’s going to be so loud in that little gym, communication will be a problem. We had a great fan base Tuesday and it’s only going to grow Friday night so we need to make sure we are communicating with another with set calls and match ups.”