Indiana State | Archive | December, 2005

Host Adams Central takes team title at Super Dual Meet

Staff Report

Host Adams Central used a dominating performance in all five rounds in going undefeated at the Adams Central Super Duals.

After a 67-3 first-round smashing of Bluffton, Adams Central whipped Angola, 53-12, before knocking off Northfield, 56-9, and Fort Wayne Dwenger, 55-12. The fifth and final round brought the toughest match of the day for Adams Central, a 42-24 win over Elwood.

Elwood had the second-best record at the six-team dual meet at 4-1, while Fort Wayne Dwenger finished 3-2. Northfield went 2-3, while Bluffton was 1-4 and Angola 0-5.

The round-by-round team results:

Round 1

Fort Wayne Dwenger 59, Angola 18

Adams Central 67, Bluffton 3

Elwood 51, Northfield 15

Round 2

Fort Wayne Dwenger 55, Northfield 21

Adams Central 53, Angola 12

Elwood 63, Bluffton 15

Round 3

Elwood 38, Fort Wayne Dwenger 25

Adams Central 56, Northfield 9

Bluffton 45, Angola 35

Round 4

Northfield 35, Bluffton 30

Adams Central 55, Fort Wayne Dwenger 12

Elwood 51, Angola 21

Round 5

Fort Wayne Dwenger 51, Bluffton 21

Adams Central 42, Elwood 24

Northfield 45, Angola 32

Thanks to the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association (www.ihswca.com).

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Homestead defeats Columbus East for team title at Greenwood Holiday Super 8

Staff Report

Homestead downed Columbus East, 37-32, in the fifth and decisive dual match Dec. 29 to bring home first place at the Greenwood Holiday Super 8 Invitational.

Homestead (5-0) dominated Rounds 1 and 2 with convincing wins over Indianapolis Tech (56-12 and Muncie Central (60-21). Round 3 brought a tough test from the host Woodmen, but Homestead held on for a 40-24 win. Next was a 50-24 win over Indianapolis Scecina, setting up the showdown with Columbus East (4-1) in Round 5.

Other teams participating and their placement and record:

3rd: Indianapolis Scecina 3-2

4th: Indianapolis Tech 2-3

5th: Greenwood 3-2

6th: Shelbyville 2-3

7th: Muncie Central 1-4

8th: Indian Creek 0-5

The round-by-round team results:

Round 1

Greenwood 45, Muncie Central 33

Homestead 56, Indianapolis Tech 12

Indianapolis Scecina 36, Indian Creek 24

Columbus East 41, Shelbyville 27

Round 2

Indianapolis Tech 33, Greenwood 30

Homestead 60, Muncie Central 21

Indianapolis Scecina 42, Shelbyville 34

Columbus East 57, Indian Creek 27

Round 3

Homestead 40, Greenwood 24

Indianapolis Tech 54, Muncie Central 21

Shelbyville 46, Indian Creek 33

Columbus East 43, Indianapolis Scecina 27

Round 4

Homestead 50, Indianapolis Scecina 24

Columbus East 58, Indianapolis Tech 15

Greenwood 47, Indian Creek 38

Shelbyville 42, Muncie Central 34

Round 5

Homestead 37, Columbus East 32

Indianapolis Scecina 39, Indianapolis Tech 33

Greenwood 49, Shelbyville 24

Muncie Central 42, Indian Creek 34

Thanks to the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association (www.ihswca.com).

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Fourth-ranked Perry Meridian goes 7-0 to topple talented North Mont Holiday Duals field


North Montgomery sophomore Aaron Miller goes to work on West Vigo soph Eli Hendricks in a 103-pound match on Day 1. Photo by Jeff Luzadder

Staff Report

CRAWFORDSVILLE â??? Second-ranked Bloomington South crowned the most individual champions, but No. 4 Perry Meridian won all seven of its dual meets in capturing the overall team title Dec. 29-30 at the prestigious North Montgomery Holiday Duals.

No. 14 Carmel (5-2 in its dual meets with zero individual champions) showed its team depth in finishing second, while Bloomington South (also 5-2, but with five individual champions) took third. Carmelâ??s 36-35 victory over Bloomington South in the final round earned the Greyhound the runner-up finish.

No. 5 Portage (4-3, two champions) was fourth, while No. 8 Warren Central (3-4, one champ) took fifth.

But the story, as it pretty much has been all year, was Perry Meridian. The Falcons featured four individual champions and simply blasted through the talent-laden field with its 7-0 record.

Perry established a tone of dominance early in downing opening-round foe Warren Central 42-24, then drilled Carmel by a 43-12 count. The host Charginâ?? Chargers were the next to fall at 64-6 before Portage took its lumps in the last round of Day 1 competition, 46-17. The Falcons then did away with Anderson Highland (49-12), Bloomington South (39-29), and West Vigo (67-6) on Day 2 to seal the deal.

Individually speaking, there were several matchups of note:

â?¢ 103: Warren Centralâ??s 10th-ranked sophomore Bruce Lloyd downed Perry Meridianâ??s No. 11 Jimmy Schoettle (3-2) and Anderson Highlandâ??s No. 8 Camden Eppert (3-0).

â?¢ 112: Perryâ??s fifth-ranked senior John Urich won a major decision over Portageâ??s No. 17 Troy Hill, 14-4.

â?¢ 145: Portageâ??s second-ranked (at 152) senior Chad Biddle dropped down to defeat Perryâ??s No. 3 Eric Aue (7-5 in overtime), thus avoiding a 1-2 showdown at 152 with Bloomington Southâ??s top-ranked Kurt Kinser.

â?¢ 171: Carmelâ??s unranked senior Joel Rexroth upset Perryâ??s No. 19 Craig Masengale, 5-3 in overtime.

Kinser â??? one of 13 competitors to go a perfect 7-0 over the two-day tournament â??? was named the meetâ??s outstanding wrestler.

Team results:

1. Perry Meridian 7-0

2. Carmel 5-2

3. Bloomington South 5-2

4. Portage 4-3

5. Warren Central 3-4

6. Anderson Highland 3-4

7. North Montgomery 1-6

8. West Vigo 0-7

The day-by-day and round-by-round results:

Day 1

Perry Meridian 4-0

Bloomington South 4-0

Portage 2-2

Carmel 2-2

Warren Central 2-2

North Montgomery 1-3

Anderson Highland 1-3

West Vigo 0-4

Round 1

Bloomington South 48, North Montgomery 26

Portage 71, West Vigo 6

Perry Meridian 42, Warren Central 24

Carmel 34, Anderson Highland 31

Round 2

North Montgomery 72, West Vigo 6

Perry Meridian 43, Carmel 12

Warren Central 30, Anderson Highland 27

Bloomington South 44, Portage 24

Round 3

Perry Meridian 64, North Montgomery 6

Anderson Highland 67, West Vigo 12

Bloomington South 39, Warren Central 28

Portage 37, Carmel 32

Round 4

Carmel 70, West Vigo 12

Bloomington South 37, Anderson Highland 30

Warren Central 43, North Montgomery 21

Perry Meridian 46, Portage 17

Day 2

Perry Meridian 3-0

Carmel 3-0

Bloomington South 1-2

Potage 2-1

Warren Central 1-2

Anderson Highland 2-1

North Montgomery 0-3

West Vigo 0-3

Round 5

Portage 50, North Montgomery 18

Perry Meridian 49, Anderson Highland 12

Carmel 36, Warren Central 21

Bloomington South 68, West Vigo 12

Round 6

Carmel 44, North Montgomery 12

Anderson Highland 40, Portage 28

Perry Meridian 39, Bloomington South 29

Warren Central 70, West Vigo 12

Round 7

Anderson Highland 45, North Montgomery 30

Perry Meridian 67, West Vigo 6

Portage 43, Warren Central 23

Carmel 36, Bloomington South 35

Individual champions (by school):

103 â??? Warren Central 7-0

112 â??? Bloomington South 7-0

119 â??? Bloomington South 7-0

125 â??? Portage 7-0

130 â??? Portage 7-0

135 â??? Bloomington South 7-0

140 â??? Perry Meridian 7-0

145 â??? Perry Meridian 6-1

152 â??? Bloomington South 7-0

160 â??? Bloomington South 7-0

171 â??? North Montgomery 7-0

189 â??? Perry Meridian 7-0

215 â??? Anderson Highland 7-0

275 â??? Perry Meridian 7-0

NOTE: Thanks to J.D. Minch, North Montgomery coach and secretary/treasurer of the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association (www.ihswca.com), for these results.

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No. 20 McCutcheon takes team title at Mike Fendley Hall of Fame Classic

Staff Report

McCutcheon used the strength of seven individual championships, including six in the last seven weight classes, to take the Mike Fendley Hall of Fame Classic Dec. 29 at Zionsville. Terre Haute Northâ??s Michael Borgnini, meanwhile, took home the award for most outstanding wrestler.

McCutcheon opened the classic with a first-round win over Terre Haute North, 57-20, before pounding Pike, 66-21. Round 3 was a close contest that saw McCutcheon defeat host Zionsville, 42-29, before the Mavericks rolled over Decatur Central, 75-3. Finally, Round 5 saw another dominating performance for the Mavericks as they defeated Clinton Prairie, 76-6.

Individual champions for McCutcheon were Matt Bowman at 135, Aric Hackler at 145, Levi Hackler at 152, Brandon Powell at 171, Travis Dale at 189, Rick Buckles at 215, and Colten Cohernour at 275.

Individual champions were:

103 â??? Ryan Mantel, Zionsville

112 â??? Tyler Mantel, Zionsville

119 â??? Trevor Gregory, TH North

125 â??? Graham Youngs, Zionsville

130 â??? Spencer Biddle, Zionsville

135 â??? Matt Bowman, McCutcheon

140 â??? Michael Borgnini, TH North

145 â??? Aric Hackler, McCutcheon

152 â??? Levi Hackler, McCutcheon

160 â??? Marc Davis, Zionsville

171 â??? Brandon Powell, McCutcheon

189 â??? Travis Dale, McCutcheon

215 â??? Rick Buckles, McCutcheon

275 â??? Colten Cohernour, McCutcheon

The round-by-round team results:

Round 1

Zionsville 70, Decatur Central 3

McCutcheon 57, Terre Haute North 20

Pike 42, Clinton Prairie 36

Round 2

Zionsville 42, Terre Haute North 20

McCutcheon 66, Pike 21

Clinton Prairie 46, Decatur Central 36

Round 3

McCutcheon 42, Zionsville 29

Decatur Central 57, Pike 21

Terre Haute North 66, Clinton Prairie 18

Round 4

Zionsville 72, Clinton Prairie 5

Terre Haute North 63, Pike 12

McCutcheon 75, Decatur Central 3

Round 5

Zionsville 76, Pike 3

Terra Haute North 39, Decatur Central 25

McCutcheon 76, Clinton Prairie 6

Thanks to the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association (www.ihswca.com).

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Jennings County defeats Edgewood for team title at Scottsburg's Warrior Classic

Staff Report

Jennings County took home the Warrior Classic team title Dec. 29 at Scottsburg with a 34-22 win in the championship match against Edgewood.

The victorious Panthers had the most individual winners in the tournament with five: Bobby Willis at 125, Ryan Bennett at 140, Alex Brewer at 160, Jorge Lockard at 171, and James Edwards at 215.

Columbus North claimed third place in the 10-team invitational with a win over Pike Central.

Results from Day 1:

Pool A

Jennings County 5-0

Pike Central 4-1

Southwestern 3-2

Bedford North Lawrence 1-4

Scottsburg 0-5

Pool B

Edgewood 5-0

Columbus North 4-1

Jeffersonville 3-2

Indianapolis Chatard 2-3

Greencastle 1-4

Mitchell 0-5

Individual champions were:

103 â??? Matt Mest, Edgewood 10-0

112 â??? Michael Bartlett, Southwestern 10-0

119 â??? Brandon Brawner, Southwestern 10-0

125 â??? Bobby Willis, Jennings Co. 10-0

130 â??? Michael Harmon, Southwestern 10-0

130 â??? Ethan Ott, Columbus North 10-0

135 â??? Ryan Hildinger, Columbus North 10-0

140 â??? Ryan Bennett, Jennings Co. 10-0

145 â??? Chris Pingleton, Greencastle 10-0

152 â??? Daniel Hedinger, Pike Central 9-1

160 â??? Alex Brewer, Jennings Co. 9-1

171 â??? Jorge Lockard, Jennings Co. 10-0

189 â??? Dexter Brothers, Pike Central 10-0

215 â??? James Edwards, Jennings Co. 10-0

275 â??? Chase Dunigan, Greencastle 10-0

Thanks to the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association (www.ihswca.com).

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Free throws lift Anderson past Bloomington South in controversial Hall of Fame final

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Hancock County: New Pal pulls off championship sweep with double-OT win over Greenfield, 78-75

By Adam Rouse

Staff Writer

FORTVILLE â??? After watching the New Palestine boys pull off an overtime thriller over Greenfield in the nightâ??s opener, few would have thought a better game would follow with the girls Hancock County championship game Dec. 30.

They were wrong.

The female Dragons (6-5) survived two overtimes and a pair of last-second miracles from Greenfield (8-4), receiving one of their own with a second left in double OT, to claim a 78-75 victory.

New Palestineâ??s win came despite a game-high 30 points from Greenfieldâ??s Morgan Anderson.

If there was an ESPN â??Instant Classicâ? channel for girls high school basketball, this game would be replayed immediately.

Trailing 45-31 to begin the fourth quarter, the Cougars had a tall task in front of them. But after watching their boys make a 14-point comeback, anything was possible.

Anderson went to work immediately, scoring eight points in the first 3:15 of the quarter to cut the deficit to 49-45. New Palestine, however, was able to build its lead back up to 58-48 with 2:40 remaining in the game, and the body language of the Cougars began to sour.

But Greenfield kept chipping away at the lead, point by point. Two free throws from Anderson cut it to 58-50. Baskets from senior Brooke Drake and sophomore Jordan Lewis made it 58-54 at the 1:39 mark, and Anderson brought the Cougars within two with another field goal 24 seconds later.

New Pal was temporarily able to stop the bleeding with a free throw from senior Kortney Corman, but she missed the other one to continue to keep the contest a one-possession game.

Lewis was fouled on the next trip down the court and nailed both freebies to cut the deficit to 59-58 with 55.2 on the clock. Senior Michelle Parks countered with two of her own to push the Dragonsâ?? advantage back to three.

Sophomore Macey Anderson had failed to connect on her first four 3-point attempts, but the fourth was a charm as the 5â??9â? guard swished a rainbow trifecta to tie the game at 61 with 30 seconds left.

Greenfieldâ??s defense was a little too aggressive on the next possession and sent Parks back to the line, where she calmly knocked down a pair of free throws to give the lead back to New Palestine with 21 seconds to go.

The Dragons were able to get the ball back after a turnover and sent junior Katie Lyons to the line for two. Lyons missed the first but hit the second to give New Pal a 64-61 lead with 9.1 seconds remaining.

Having to take the ball the entire length of the court in under 10 seconds, Dragons coach Mark Fuson decided not to foul Morgan Anderson as she took possession. It would prove to be an error as the senior raced down the floor and launched a wide-open three from the right angle that found nothing but the bottom of the net, tying the game and sending it into overtime.

With each team in the double bonus going into the extra period, free throw shooting would prove to be critical. New Palestine built a 69-64 advantage â??? all on free throws â??? before Greenfield could muster a point.

After Morgan Anderson scored to bring the Cougars within two at 70-68 with 19 seconds to go, the drama really began. The Dragons were called for traveling on the ensuing possession right off the inbounds pass, giving Greenfield a shot to tie the game.

It was Morgan Anderson who would get the ball, and she took a tough shot against apparent contact. But no foul was whistled, and the attempt did not fall.

Junior Rachel Blackwell missed a pair of free throws for the Dragons with 7.8 seconds to give the Cougars yet another opportunity to negate the 70-68 deficit. Once again it was Morgan Anderson who asked for the ball and got it, but she was whistled for an offensive foul on her shot near the basket.

All seemed lost for Greenfield with just 1.2 seconds showing on the clock and the Dragons with the ball, but New Palestine failed to get the ball in bounds and was called for a five-second violation (and a dubiously quick one at that).

This time the Cougars took advantage as senior Kayla Montgomery drained a jumper from the top of the key as time expired, sending the game into a second overtime.

With Greenfield holding a 75-74 lead, New Pal senior Sydney Lambert stepped to the line for two freebies with 24.1 seconds left in the second OT.

Joking with another member of the media that she would probably hit one of two to send it into triple overtime, the joke was nearly on me as Lambert did, in fact, hit one of two free throws to tie the game at 75.

Morgan Anderson missed a jumper on the next possession for Greenfield, and a long pass found two Dragons alone underneath their own basket with less than five seconds to go. It was Lambert who got a chance at redemption, and that she did as she used a shot fake before going up for the layup with around three ticks remaining. Both the shot fake and the shot were successful as Lambert hit the layup and was fouled with :00.1 showing on the clock.

After conferring with each other, the officials generously put a full second back on the clock. But it would not matter as Lambert nailed the free throw, and Greenfieldâ??s long prayer came up empty to send the Dragons home with a 78-75 county championship.

Lambert led New Palestine with 21 points, while Parks finished with 19, Lyons had 16, and senior Meagan Lawson added 12.

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Hancock County: Greenfield downs Mt. Vernon, 56-39, to reach finals

By Brandon Jones

Staff Writer

GREENFIELD â??? Arguably, the countyâ??s two best teams matched up Dec. 29 in the same half of the Hancock County tournament bracket. Thatâ??s when the host Greenfield Cougars (7-3) took on the Mt. Vernon (Fortville) Marauders (7-4) for the right to advance to Fridayâ??s championship game.

A 10-4 run to start the fourth quarter put this game to rest as Greenfield prevailed, 56-39.

Both teams entered the contest nervously, and it showed early. The teams traded turnovers, and it was not until three minutes into the game that the first points were scored. Greenfield made a living by dominating the offensive glass, but the Cougars could not take advantage as they failed to convert on many shot attempts in the gameâ??s first quarter.

Mt. Vernon was equally frustrated on the other end, taking careless jump shots that were not connecting. And they could not snag a rebound to save their lives.

The teams got on track midway through the quarter, however. The Marauders rode their talented junior-led backcourt of Jenni Tamarri and Brittany Nickerson as the two scored all of the teamâ??s 11 first-quarter points in heating up from the perimeter. After the first eight minutes of play, Mt. Vernon held an 11-8 advantage.

Greenfield showed its prowess in the contestâ??s second period. The Cougars scored the quarterâ??s first six points en route to an 8-1 run overall. However, there was another storyline emerging in the game. FOULS. Both teams racked up fouls in a hurry as the gameâ??s tempo picked up. After trading baskets with one another midway through the quarter, the Cougars finished what they had started in finishing the quarter with a 7-2 spurt to hold a 29-20 halftime advantage.

The other storyline was Cougar sophomore guard Jordan Lewis. Lewis had 12 of her teamâ??s 21 second quarter points and she was doing it in every which way possible. She scored inside and had found her touch from the outside in dominating fashion.

The Cougars continued their hot shooting from the floor in the third quarter. Senior Morgan Anderson connected on back to back three pointers to stretch the lead to as many as 13 points. The Marauders became frustrated as they had now found an answer for Lewis, but she was making plays by giving her teammates a chance. This frustration resulted in more fouls being racked up and more free throw opportunities for the opposition. However, the contest was still within reach for Mt. Vernon as they trailed 43-31 with one quarter to play.

Whatever hope Mt. Vernon had was crushed by Greenfield Central in the final quarter. The Marauders picked a bad time to go cold from the floor, but that is exactly what happened. A 10-4 run to start the quarter put the game to rest. The final score: 56-39, Greenfield.

Morgan Anderson led Greenfield with 15 points, while Jordan Lewis added 14. For Mt. Vernon, Jenni Tamarri had 19 points and was the only Marauder in double figures.

Greenfield will take on New Palestine in the championship game, while Mt. Vernon will face Eastern Hancock in the consolation.

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SAC: FW Luers pulls away from FW South in semis, 59-51

By Colin Altevogt

Contributing Writer

FORT WAYNE â??? With their star stuck on the bench in foul trouble for the majority of the second quarter, the Fort Wayne Luers Knights showed that they could be OK without sophomore MarKee Martin.

When she entered the lineup at the start of the third quarter, the Class 3A No. 16 Knights proved to be great with her. The result was a 59-51 win over Fort Wayne South in semifinal action at the Summit Athletic Conference Tournament.

Saddled with two fouls early, Martin temporarily handed point guard duties to teammate Natalie Henry. Henry proved to be a worthy substitute as she led the Knights against the pressing full-court defense of Fort Wayne South.

In the first half, Amanda and Megan Pedro picked up the scoring slack created by Martinâ??s absence. The Sisters Pedro combined for 13 points in the first two quarters.

With the score tied and thirty seconds on the clock, Henry hit two free throws and nailed a long two as time expired to give her team a slight edge at halftime, 29-27.

Martin returned after intermission with a vengeance. The sophomore scored on the first possession of the second half and added 13 more in the quarter while Luers bulked its lead to 11, 50-39.

While Luers was taking control, the Archersâ?? sharpshooters went cold. Shots outside the arc were off and South even had troubled from the line, going 9-18 for the game.

With the help of their star, the Knights gradually pulled away from the top-seeded Archers. Megan Pedro dished the ball off to freshman center Mary Hathaway, pushing the Luers lead to 45-36.

A minute later, Martin stole an inbounds pass and took it the distance to give the Knights their first double digit lead. South Sideâ??s Zaquanna Braden hit a three on the other end, but Martin answered with a trey of her own.

It was the final nail in the Archersâ?? coffin. The lead never dipped below ten until a meaningless last-second three to make the game 59-51.

For South, it was the second loss this season to Luers. The Knights defeated the Archers on Dec. 9, 62-53. The victory advances Luers, the two-time defending tourney champ, to its fourth straight SAC winter tournament title game.

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SAC: Dwenger disposes of darkhorse Northrop, 43-37, in semis

By Colin Altevogt

Contributing Writer

FORT WAYNE â??? Fort Wayne Northrop center Faith Sherrill hit a pair of free throws, making the game 2-0 in the opening minute. It would be the Bruinsâ?? only lead of the contest.

With the offense working a patient inside-out scheme, Fort Wayne Dwenger easily disposed of Northrop in the second semifinal game in the Summit Athletic Conference Tournament, 43-37.

Northrop had advanced by defeating tournament favorite Harding in double overtime, 71-69, while Dwenger had downed sixth-seeded Elmhurst, 61-39.

Dwenger forward Emily Mayers led the Saints with 13 points, nine of those coming in the first half. Mayers, who went five for nine from the free throw line, was dominant on the offensive post, receiving passes and laying the ball in with ease.

The Saints executed their game plan of limiting Sherrillâ??s touches. With coach Dave Scudder continuously instructing his players to keep the Northrop star out of the lane, Dwenger doubled, tripled, and in some cases even quadrupled down on Sherrill.

Despite the constant attention, Sherrill still put up 16 points, and kept the Bruins in the game whenever Dwenger threatened to run away with it. She grabbed rebounds like Charles Barkley and often kicked the ball out to point guard Kiera Gray when swallowed up in a sea of navy jerseys.

Gray, who dropped 27 in the double overtime upset of Harding, put up 15 with the majority of those coming at crucial times. The 5â??8â? junior scored eight points in the third quarter, including two crucial jumpers toward the end of the period when the Dwenger lead reached nine.

When Northrop cut the lead to three points, bench player Mallorie Schon nailed to shots, the first a step behind the arc and the second a long two, giving the Saints some breathing room.

Dwenger, though, could not close out the game from the line, going two for seven in the final two minutes of the game. The Saint lead was just four points after Katie Coonan missed a pair from the stripe.

Northrop, however, was unable to take advantage of its opponentâ??s misfortunes. The Bruins didnâ??t secure the rebound off the second miss and Leah Roth converted a lay-up off the board.

Down by six and needing a quick score, Gray threw up a three that missed everything and that was all she wrote. Dwenger advanced to the championship game by the score of 43-37.

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