Memorable Moments: March 20 vs. Alaska-Anchorage and March 21 vs. Bentley
March 23, 2012
The 2011-12 Ashland women’s basketball season has been one to remember. The team has won 33 straight games and will play for the national championship 8 p.m. tonight in San Antonio. Over the last three weeks, the Eagles hosted and won the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and NCAA Midwest Regional tournaments for the first time ever.
These are games that should be savored and remembered by everyone in the Ashland community. Remember the great plays. Remember the high fives. Remember the milestones. Most of all, savor the moments that have made this team so much fun to watch.
There were so many big moments that led to Ashland’s 71-51 victory over Alaska-Anchorage Tuesday in the Elite Eight in San Antonio.
After a back-and-forth, Kaci Finfrock came in and drained a 3-pointer with 9:50 left in the first half that sparked a 14-5 AU run going into halftime. After the Eagles had their lead cut to three (43-40 with 11:50 remaining), Lindsay Tenyak hit a huge “3” to push it back to six. That sparked a 19-2 run that put the game out of reach.
Tenyak finished five of six from deep and had 17 points. Jena Stutzman finished six of 11 from the field and led the team with 18 points. Kari Daugherty had 14 points and 13 rebounds for her 16th straight double-double.
To be honest, I had to look every single bit of that information up. Like most of Eagle Nation, I spent the game huddled in front of a computer screen, relying on an on-again-off-again internet connection to watch.
I may not remember some of the moments from the game, but I will always remember what happened following it. After jokingly suggesting throughout the game that we should hop in the car and drive to San Antonio for the Final Four, photographer Dan Shade, managing editor Justine Ackerman and I did exactly that.
The 20-hour trip in Justine’s white Ford Fusion (nicknamed “Peeta”) included five stops for gas and food (Columbus, Louisville, Ky., Memphis, Tenn., just across the Texas border and Waco) and very little sleep for any of us. We made it safely, rolling into San Antonio around 3:30 p.m., three-and-a-half hours before tipoff. After checking into our hotel and showering, we made our way to Bill Geehey Arena for the Final Four game against Bentley.
We were glad to be there, but there was no “glad to be there” mentality on the floor for the Eagles. They began the game by playing ferocious defense and making shots from everywhere, which have been two staples during their 33-game winning streak.
Ashley Dorner opened the scoring by draining an 18-foot jump shot from the top of the key, Stutzman drove to the hole to make it 4-0 and before the Falcons knew what had hit them they were down 15-2 just over four minutes into the game.
Stutzman got off to a particularly fast start. Following her layup in the opening minutes, she drove in for another to make it 8-2, grabbed a rebound and threw a perfect long-range chest pass to Tenyak for a layup and drained two 3-pointers, one from the left wing and the other from the left corner.
Ten points. One super assist. All in just over seven minutes of play that were enough to say that the Eagles were not satisfied with just a trip to the Elite Eight or the Final Four.
Of course, the Falcons made their runs and Ashland needed the stellar play of Daugherty, a huge “3” by Stutzman going into halftime and big plays from the rest of the team on both ends of the floor to survive, but there was simply no denying the Eagles a trip to the national championship Wednesday night.
The win also meant that Dan, Justine and I did not have to pack up and leave Thursday morning. As we instead sat down to a Mexican lunch on San Antonio’s famed Riverwalk, life could not have been much sweeter.
A mariachi band was playing in the background; we were eating some of the best Mexican food any of us had ever had while sitting in the warm Texas sun; fellow staffers Tyler Remmel and Glenn Battishill informed us that they had successfully sent the paper off to be printed; we had an entire day in front of us to explore one of the most beautiful cities in the world; most importantly, we were less than 48 hours from covering our school as it competes in the Division II women’s basketball national championship.
Taking off to San Antonio on a whim may have been a rash decision, but it was rationalized in that moment. In fact, at this point I feel like it would have been irrational to not see this team’s run to the end, no matter what lengths (1400 miles) we had to go to.