A For Effort

Sullivan West Honors Its Two Seniors Before Concluding Challenging First Season In New Era; Future Looks Bright For Hard Working Lady Bulldogs; O’Neill Clinches Sectional Berth But Injury To Star Riley Raises Concerns As Tournament Looms

James I. O’Neill 37, Sullivan West 17

By RICHARD A. ROSS

rross@sportsinsightsny.com

Photos at: www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com

Seasons' end for Sullivan West but for O'Neill a ticket to the postseason (clockwise) Sullivan West seniors Stephanie Hauschild and Stephanie Smith pose with their parents as part of the Senior Night Salute to their service. Sullivan West sophomore Jordan Parsons turns a steal into two points. Newbie freshman guard Carly Grishaber earns her stripes as she reckons with O'Neill's Allyson Borce. Stephanie Hauschild passes the ball in her last game of her high school career. O'Neill's Danielle Riley scores two of her game-high 18 points.

LAKE HUNTINGTON, NY—Success is not an overnight venture. It takes time, arduous effort, repetition and perseverance through trying times to forge greatness. The history of sports can attest to this time and time again wherein individual athletes or teams that once struggled mightily went on to achieve storied milestones.

For the Sullivan West Lady Bulldogs who finished their season at 3-15, this season was not about piling up wins, it was about learning the fundamentals of the game of basketball. Under the savvy tutelage of Coach Patrick Donovan the squad which had only two seniors in Stephanie Hauschild and Stephanie Smith, had to basically start from square one as the entire 2011 Sullivan West starting cast exited last June .

While Hauschild and Smith were on that team they saw very little playing time and were suddenly thrust into the role as “experienced leaders” on a squad rife with sophomores and a freshman. It hasn’t been easy but the good news for Donovan and company is the emergence of an impressive work ethic. The team plays relentlessly for 32 minutes a night and the progress is already quite visible.

From the early struggles against Eldred and Fallsburg in the Hambletonian Tournament down in Chester in early December, the team began to evince greater poise and chemistry. Donovan firmly believes that this team will evolve over the coming years and come to look a lot like the feisty group that marketed gritty Lady Bulldog basketball over the past couple of seasons.

“These six right here remind me a lot of last year’s group.  What we try to do for them is to instill that hard work ethic and they’ve done a great job in that regard. They’ve done everything we’ve asked them to do.

What you saw on the floor the last few minutes tonight is what we have for the next two or three years,” noted Donovan referring to the players who continued to battle O’Neill after Smith and Hauschild  had left the game. Both seniors showed the emotion of reckoning with their final moments on the hardwood. Tears streamed down Smith’s face as she took to the bench.

“We knew we were going to be young this year and we knew we’d take our lumps. We said if we win four games this year it would be a good season. It’s tough that we only won three but a lot of schools are graduating a lot of talent this year and I’ve got these kids who are going to be working out and getting ready for next year,” Donovan averred.

“These girls are never going to give up. They may not outscore other teams but they work hard for every point they get.”

Donovan will be taking his team to camp at Colgate University this summer. Many of them will be playing soccer in the fall which will advance their stamina and conditioning. With a year of varsity experience under their belts, Sullivan West will set making it to sectionals next year as one of its primary goals.

For the O’Neill Lady Raiders, this game was a keyway into the Section Nine tournament. Coming in at  6-11,(2-3 OCIAA), the Lady Raiders looked to complete the season sweep over the Lady Westies and punch their ticket to the Big Dance.

The teams battled to a seven-all tie by the end of the first quarter as Sullivan West’s Sydney Sipple buried a three to knot it up. In that opening stanza O’Neill got two points apiece from Alanna Broesler and Breanna Scott and three from Danielle Riley who added a free throw to her lone bucket in the frame.

Riley was plagued by two quick fouls and her offensive production was minimal early on. But by night’s end she’d pile up 18 points and reject a bevy of Sullivan West shots with her commanding post presence.

Katie Taylor had a pair of buckets for the Westies and as noted Sipple tied it up with her trey.

O’Neill outscored Sullivan West 9-3 in the second quarter as the lone Sullivan West points came via a Jordan Parsons steal, lay up and free throw. Meanwhile the Lady Raiders got buckets from Allison Borowicz, Breanna Scott, Allyson Borce and Susie Henderson to go along with four points from Riley.

Sullivan West’s scoring woes worsened with a scoreless third quarter set against 11 more points for the Lady Raiders. Seven of those came from Riley despite her struggles from the stripe. By night’s end she’d register just two-for-seven from the line, part of O’Neill’s dismal 25% performance wrought by three-for-12 shooting from the line.

Scott and Broesler added a bucket apiece as O’Neill headed into the final stanza with a 30-10 lead. The Lady Bulldogs outscored O’Neill 8-7 in the final period. A trey from freshman Carly Grishaber helped the cause. Parsons netted a bucket and a free throw and the other two points came from Taylor.

Riley was injured when her head struck the floor under the basket. After the game she showed signs of a possible concussion and was going to the hospital for further examination.

She had scored four points in the final period before exiting the game.

O’Neill coach Katelyn Kort commended Riley’s play. “She’s our big girl. She definitely handles the ball well,” said Kort who’d linger to stay with Riley after the teams had exited the gym. Concern for her player’s well being was uppermost in her mind.

O’Neill finished its regular season at 7-11  (3-3 OCIAA) , while Sullivan West concluded its campaign at 3-15 (0-6 OCIAA).

For an album of photos, visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com

 

 

Hot Off The Press

Monticello Picks Up Fourth Straight Win With Intensive Defensive Pressure Against Young  And Inexperienced Sullivan West

Monticello 60, Sullivan West 14

By RICHARD A. ROSS

rross@sportsinsightsny.com

Scenes from Monticello's commanding 60-14 win over Sullivan West, the Lady Monties' fourth in a row (clockwise) Sullivan West's Sydney Sipple scores two of her team-leading six points. Monticello junior Yadira Montes drives to the rim for two. She had 12 points in the game. Monticello freshman guard Lena Episalla brings the ball up the floor. The young dynamo scored 12 points in the game. Sullivan West's Marianne Durkin looks to pass the ball as Lena Episalla guards her closely. Monticello junior Shamira Moore scores two of her game-high 19 points. The 2011-12 Sullivan West Lady Bulldogs.

LAKE HUNTINGTON, NY—“Baby it’s cold outside,” begin the lyrics of a Christmas song, but truth be told inside the Sullivan West gym it was mighty hot as the Lady Panthers turned up the defensive heat with their press to harry young Sullivan West in a non-league game on December 14.

Sullivan West's Stephanie Smith is surrounded by a trio of pressing Panthers in Arianna Decosta (4), Yadira Montes (13) and Lena Episalla (23).

As far as she can remember, Monticello Coach Karen Atack believes it’s been at least 15 years since one of her Lady Panthers teams began a season at 4-0 But thus far with a pair of wins over Family, a demolishing of  short-handed Liberty and now this latest landslide against Sullivan West, things are looking all cheery and bright at least for the moment as the holidays draw near.

But Atack, ever the realist knows that her team which is quite young too with its three freshmen, three sophomores and five juniors to go along with just one senior is in for stormier weather against tougher opponents like Cornwall which visits Monticello on December 16. Sizing up the performance of this game she was still concerned about her team’s ability to take care of the ball. The Lady Monties had 21 turnovers, far fewer than the night before, but still way too many.  Errant passes and a lack of focus can be disastrous against tougher opponents and Atack knows that all too well.

Sullivan West was looking for its first win of the season. Coach Pat Donovan had scouted the Lady Panthers game against Liberty the night before and had a good idea about what was coming in terms of pressure on the ball. It’s one thing to go over these things in practice, but it’s only trial by fire that brings the lessons home about rotating the ball quickly around the perimeter against the helping zone that Monticello was deploying.

In the rare instances when his team executed what he had taught them, they got the sought-after open look and scored. This happened a couple of times in the late going. By then it was too little and too late to undo the damage that had led to a 22-4 first quarter Monticello lead, one that burgeoned to 40-8 by the half. It was 50-12 by the end of the third and things didn’t improve with Monticello’s 10-2 outscoring of their beleaguered hosts in the fourth quarter that resulted in the final score of 60-14.

While I narrate every play of the game into my digital recorder to provide as accurate account of the game as possible, in games like this one it proves to be unnecessary. By halftime I had lost count of the turnovers which were occurring with alarming frequency and were it not for Atack’s accounting of her teams 21 cough ups, I wouldn’t know it without spending the time listening to my play-by-play.

I wouldn’t be amiss to reckon that Sullivan West’s turnovers were at least twice as many.

Bulldog spirit! Sullivan West's Cheerleaders get set to amp it up for the supportive home crowd.

Monticello’s Shamira Moore controlled the opening tip against Sullivan West’s Sydney Sipple and sent the ball  ahead to a charging Yami Reyes as the freshman scored the game’s opener. The Monties immediately unveiled swarming pressure the likes of which Sullivan West had not seen in its prior losses against Eldred and Fallsburg.

That caused trouble in getting the ball up the floor or completing passes. Monticello grabbed a bevy of those passes which they converted into quick transition points. The score mounted quickly and despite a couple of time outs and reminders, The Lady Bulldogs continued to succumb to the pressure. On the defensive end of the floor, they had difficulty stopping points in the paint as the Lady Monties passed the ball to open shooters who slashed through the lane to score or draw fouls.

Shamira Moore had a game-high 19 points despite having to spend a good portion of the second quarter and part of the third on the bench by dint of the three quick fouls she picked up with her at times over-the-top enthusiasm. As Atack pointed out, you have to front the person in possession of the ball. It’s when you arrive late that fouls accrue. It’s a big lesson for the talented junior who is the team’s sparkplug. She can’t help them if she’s on the bench.

Senior Zequia Revell also had two early fouls but she was able to tone things down and stay out of serious foul trouble.

Monticello got balanced scoring to accrue its 22 first quarter points. Freshman standout Lena Episalla led the way with eight points. Her sister plays for Burke and she’ll be guarding her when the Lady Panthers encounter the Lady Eagles on February 3. Moore had six points in the stanza, while Yami Reyes and junior Arianna Decosta each posted four. Sullivan West’s four points came via a bucket from Sydney Sipple and a pair of made free throws from Katie Taylor.

The Lady Monties continued to pour it on in the second quarter with a flurry of 18 points, nine of which came from junior Yadira Montes including a swishing trey. Decosta provide her team’s only other three-pointer and Episalla had four more. Speaking of four, that’s how many points Sullivan West could manage again as Sipple and Krysten Herbert each scored a bucket.

Monticello freshman Yamilersy (Yami) Reyes scores two of her six points on the night.

It was four again in the third quarter with baskets by Sipple and Taylor, hardly enough to compensate for the huge Monticello margin which only got larger in the third frame as Moore returned to the floor to net five of her team’s ten points in the quarter to go along with three from Montes and two from Quasia Walker.

Moore saved her best for last though as she poured in eight in the final period. Junior Amber Grobusch scored her first bucket of the season and in fact her career as the newbie got in some valuable minutes in the fourth quarter.

Moore was three-for six from the line, far better than the night before, though the team as a whole still  needs work from the stripe. They were a combined six-for15 for 40percent. Sullivan West was two-for-six for 33.3%.

Monticello (4-0) hosts Cornwall on December 16, while Sullivan West (0-3) takes its show on the road to Port Jervis on December 20 in search of its first win. Donovan will scout Port Jervis at Liberty’s home opener on December 15.

In addition to Moore’s 19, Monticello got 12 points from Episalla and Montes.

Atack summed things up thusly: “We’ve been working very, very hard on our press and it’s come a long way. Our passing is becoming better but still we have Cornwall on Friday and they just spanked Burke,” she noted, referencing the fact that her team is in for a far more significant challenge.

“Tonight everybody had an opportunity to play. We’re starting to see some good things and executing to get the ball inside,” she added. Asked about the early foul trouble for Moore, Atack responded, “She is a small center. She has to learn to defend from the front and not try to come from behind.”  Asked about Episalla’s fine play which followed a great performance the night before, Atack said, “She’s a freshman but doesn’t play like one.”

Yadira Montes had missed the first couple of games but as Atack noted, she’s made some drastic improvement. “I’m happy with tonight but I still realize we haven’t played a strong team yet. My goal is to shock some people. We have to learn to take better care of the ball. We’re still a very young team.”

For Sullivan West's young team, it's all about learning amidst the crucible of tough games like this. Here Hayley Puerscher brings the ball up the floor as part of that process.

Youth is the byword when it comes to Sullivan West as well as Donovan is quick to note. “We try to do what we can in practice. We knew what they were going to throw at us but it hasn’t transferred over yet,” he observed.  That said, the Lady Bulldogs never gave up trying.

“Our kids never stopped showing great hustle. They were out there going at it for the full 32 minutes. We’re young. This is a long term process. There are five sophomores and one freshman with four returners who never saw much time last year. It’s a new process for all ten players,” he added.

Donovan knows that the kind of pressure exerted by Monticello is a foreshadowing of what to expect from league rivals like Burke and O’Neill. “That’s just the nature of the beast.” Donovan credited his girls for their relentless hustle as they continued to dive for loose balls etc. “They’re not basketball players yet. They’re still learning how to play the game. We’re teaching them things that are brand new to them. It was great to see tonight that we had a couple of kids boxing out.

The game’s outcome was in stark contrast to bygone years when Sullivan West dominated Monticello. That’s the way it is. As is noted in Ecclesiastes, “To everything there is a season.” Monticello players and their coach hope that this will be their season to shine, while Sullivan West hopes it will be there’s to learn and get better so that their time will come sooner rather than later.

For an album of photos, visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com