The University of the Fraser Valley women’s basketball team clawed its way back from a 20-point deficit to secure a thrilling 59-55 victory over the UNBC Timberwolves on Friday evening at the Envision Athletic Centre.
The visiting T-Wolves came out on fire, knocking down five three-pointers in the first quarter and opening a 32-12 lead less than two minutes into the second quarter.
But the Cascades engineered a slow-motion comeback, steadily chipping away at the UNBC lead. Sydney Williams swished a huge three-pointer with 34 seconds left in regulation to knot the score 55-55, and the Cascades came up huge defensively in the dying seconds and went 4-for-6 from the free throw line to provide the final margin of victory.
UFV (3-2) and UNBC (1-6) renew hostilities at 5 p.m. on Saturday at the Envision Athletic Centre.
“Everything was wrong early,” Cascades head coach Al Tuchscherer analyzed. “Our approach to tonight’s game was quite maddening, actually. Giving up 27 points in the first quarter is not what we want to do at all. I think they really came out and caught us sleeping a little bit, and knocked down a lot of shots. I looked over at (Cascades assistant coach) Tara (Burton), and we were probably 30 seconds away from pulling the starters and thinking about tomorrow night. But she told us to kind of stick in there, and we stuck in. The girls fought hard in the second half.
“With so much parity in Canada West this year, every game is so important. Every win is so important. That’s about it – you take the win, you move on to the next day, and you’ve got to be better. You’ve got to improve every day, and the team that improves the most by the end of the season is the team that’s going to be standing.”
The Cascades had a promising start – Williams opened the game with a three-pointer, and Shayna Litman followed with a jump shot to give the hosts a 5-0 lead. But the T-Wolves responded with a pair of impressive runs, 14-0 and 11-0, and found themselves up 20 after Maria Mongomo’s three-pointer early in the second quarter.
UFV, though, found some traction defensively at that point, and kept UNBC off the scoreboard for the next six minutes. The offence was slower to materialize, but the Cascades managed 10 points of their own during that stretch to cut the deficit to 32-22.
UNBC pushed the lead up to 47-31 with three minutes left in the third quarter after a Stacey Graham trey, but the Cascades kept chipping away. A 9-0 run early in the fourth quarter, capped by a Kayli Sartori layup, brought UFV back to within 49-46. Mongomo’s triple with just over two minutes left pushed the UNBC lead back to 55-50, but those would be the last points of the night for the T-Wolves.
Here’s a closer look at the play of the game for Cascades WBB – a clutch game-tying three by @sydwilliams8! @goUFV pic.twitter.com/dJmSZx8glZ
— UFV Cascades (@UFVCascades) November 26, 2016
Williams’s corner trey out of a timeout was the big offensive moment for the Cascades, knotting the score 55-55.
“When he (Tuchscherer) called the timeout and I knew we needed a three, I was like, ‘OK, I think this is coming to me,’” Williams recounted afterward. “I’ve struggled with confidence before, but when I walked out there, the entire time I was like, ‘I’m going to hit this shot, I’m going to hit this shot.’ I knew I had the team backing me up . . . I played it in my head before it happened, and it happened, and I was like, ‘Yeah.’ I’d never had that happen before, but I just had the confidence there.
“It was all slow motion . . . and it all came together.”
The Cascades got a stop on the ensuing UNBC possession, and Sartori was fouled by Mongomo and hit one of two free throws. UFV sealed the win with three straight steals in the dying seconds, and Taylor Claggett (2-for-2) and Williams (1-for-2) finished things off at the free throw line.
UFV’s Sartori and UNBC’s Mongomo tied for game-high scoring honours with 18 points apiece. Claggett (13 points, 13 rebounds) had a double-double and Litman (12 points) chipped in offensively for the hosts, who got a great defensive effort off the bench from Amelia Worrell.
Eleni Steriopolou (14 points) also scored in double figures for the T-Wolves, who went 10-for-19 from beyond the arc. UFV went just 3-of-21 from the land beyond, but made up for that by going 16-for-28 from the free throw line. UNBC was just 3-for-4 from the charity stripe.
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