Lady Pioneers survive frantic finish in semifinals
It wasn鈥檛 pretty.
But West Greene girls basketball coach Jordan Watson knows once you get to this point it doesn鈥檛 have to be.
Watching the final six seconds with bated breath from the sideline 鈥 similar to the many fans who rose to their feet 鈥 Watson could only watch, hope and plead for none of Sewickley Academy鈥檚 shots to fall into the net.
They never did.
Watching No. 6 Sewickley Academy miss three potential game-winning shots within two feet of the basket, second-seeded West Greene created a tie-up as the clock ticked to 0:00 and escaped with a 46-45 win in a WPIAL Class A semifinal game on Feb. 25 at Canon-McMillan High School.
鈥淚t felt like 100 (shots),鈥 Watson said. 鈥淭hat last six seconds seemed to take at least one minute. It felt like the ball was in the air forever. It was nerve-racking. But we made just enough stops.鈥
The Pioneers made enough stops to make sure their district playoff run didn鈥檛 come to a complete halt.
West Greene (24-0) advanced to the Class A title game for the third consecutive year.
鈥淚 think going into the year, nobody outside of those girls in that locker room thought we鈥檇 make it back,鈥 Watson proudly said. 鈥淲e set goals, and that was a goal they all had.鈥
A return trip to Pittsburgh might not have been possible without Brooke Barner. Tied 35-35 early in the fourth quarter, Barner made a baseline three-pointer to spark a 9-2 run. The run ended with her collecting a Jersey Wise pass and converting a three-point play the old-fashioned way by making a layup with a defender draped across her back and an ensuing free throw.
鈥淯nbelievable,鈥 Watson said of Barner. 鈥淓very 50-50 game we鈥檝e had this year, Brooke has played huge. Whether it was Ellis School, Wheeling Central Catholic or whatever, she has came to play.鈥
Sewickley (14-11), facing its biggest deficit of the game, didn鈥檛 go away.
Taking advantage of Pioneers鈥 turnovers, Des Nance made three layups in less than one minute, including one off a West Greene miscue with 54 seconds left to tie the game at 45-45.
Fouled on the next possession, Wise made one of two free throws on a bad night for both teams at the line. That free throw proved to be the difference.
The Pioneers, who made 23 of 26 foul shots in a regular-season win against Sewickley, shot just 40% (6-for-15) from the foul line. The Panthers were even worse, going only 2-for-17 from the foul line.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been our new trend in the last two games,鈥 Sewickley coach Mark Gaither said of missing free throws. 鈥淲e had our chances. That last play of the game, we drew it up and did exactly what we wanted. We missed a layup, fought and got a rebound, miss another layup, got the rebound and missed again. We were that close. It stinks to be that close and not get it done.鈥
Barner, a 5-5 sophomore who made the transition to a post player at the beginning of this season, scored a game- and career-high 17 points. She also grabbed 13 rebounds.
鈥淚 never thought I鈥檇 be here,鈥 said Barner, who didn鈥檛 start as a freshman. 鈥淚t shows hard work pays off. I鈥檝e been grinding and put in the time. It鈥檚 crazy. It鈥檚 unbelievable. It鈥檚 honestly a blessing.鈥
Wise was the only other Pioneer in double figures with 15 points. She made back-to-back three-pointers 鈥 from opposite sides of the baseline 鈥 in the middle of the third quarter to put West Greene ahead 32-29. It was the first lead the Pioneers had since early in the second quarter.
Sewickley鈥檚 Bre Warner tried to go toe-to-toe with Barner inside. Warner scored 10 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. Kamryn Lightcap led Sewickley with 12 points.
鈥(Brooke) comes in every day with the right mindset,鈥 Watson said, 鈥渁n infectious personality and just plays really hard. She isn鈥檛 big, but she wants the ball more than other people. She is always in the right spot. She is one of those girls that say, 鈥榊es, Coach鈥 to everything. She doesn鈥檛 complain. She embraces it.鈥



