It all starts with defense and ‘team’
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Balance. On any given night, it seems a different player has stepped
up to lead the Orange Coast College women’s basketball team to its
date tonight at 5 against Merced (30-6) at the Jenny Craig Pavilion
on the campus of the University of San Diego in the quarterfinals of
the State Tournament.
From speaking with a few of the team’s six sophomores and Coach
Mike Thornton, they all stress the “team” concept as being the
underlying, key ingredient to two postseason wins so far this year.
“We don’t have one go-to player,” said sophomore Lauren Murray,
who grabbed a team-high 10 rebounds to go with six points in OCC’s
51-49 victory over Compton in the Southern Regional final Saturday.
“We all trust in each other,” said Murray, who leads the Bucs with
29 blocks. “We have a lot more confidence this year. We played a lot
last year and got better.”
Lately, at least in the Pirates’ two postseason wins, freshman
Alisa Carrillo has stepped up her game, leading all scorers in both
wins. Against Compton, she hit two of her seven made free throws in
eight attempts, with 18 seconds left to give Coast the winning
margin.
“We’ve been doing good with last-minute plays,” Murray added.
“We’ve hit some shots to win games.”
Ironically, it was a shot with three seconds left that sunk the
Coast ship against L.A. Valley in the Southern California final last
season, giving this year’s sophomores added incentive to eclipse that
point this year.
“We were motivated after last year,” said sophomore forward
Candice Quiroz. “All the sophomores really wanted it. We realized we
needed to take it to another level. Personally, I thought we were one
of the top eight teams in the state at the beginning of the season,
which we are now. But we want to win it all.”
There have been times when it wasn’t as rosy, such as the final
week of the season.
Coast (27-7 and the No. 3 seed from the South) lost its final two
games to Saddleback and Fullerton. But it was the way they lost that
frustrated Thornton and the players.
Sophomore starting point guard Nancy Hatsushi, who leads the team
with 4.9 assists per game and is third in scoring (9.8 points per
game), took the losses to heart.
“Every team goes through downfalls, but it helped us more that we
didn’t play good in those games because we knew we would have to play
a lot better than that to go to the state playoffs,” Hatsushi said.
And play better they did, especially on the defensive end.
The Bucs, making their fourth appearance in the State Tournament
and first since the 1997-98 season, held Compton’s LaConia Hatcher,
the South Coast Conference Southern Division Player of the Year, to 2
of 16 from the field to net only five points, more than 15 below her
average.
“When she had the ball we would sag in an help so she could not
score,” said Hatsushi, who is deciding between Adams State in
Colorado and Concordia University in Irvine about where to continue
her basketball and academic career. “In the last two games, we’ve
showed great ability on defense.”
Thornton highlighted the defense provided by sophomore Liz Mendoza
and Quiroz on Hatcher, and said the thread goes deeper than that.
“Defense has carried us,” said Thornton, who recognizes the
valuable leadership role the sophomores have undertaken to help
freshmen Amy Shaw, Kirsten Von Tungeln, Jessica Estrada, Celeste
Haueter and Lauren Garnica.
“Leigh Marshall is as good a leader as I’ve ever had,” said
Thornton about the former Costa Mesa High guard (teammates with
Hatsushi). “They all wanted to advance to the State Tournament, you
could tell it was on their minds.”
Von Tungeln, averaging 16.4 minutes, has tallied 4.5 ppg with 5.6
rebounds per game. Shaw averages 3.1 points and has amassed 14 steals
coming off the bench.
Mendoza leads the team in scoring (13.3) and steals (67) and is
second to Hatsushi in assists per game (3.1). Quiroz collected five
of her 42 assists against Compton. Carrillo is second in scoring
(12.5) and rebounds (6.6), to Murray’s 6.9.
Sophomore Lindsey Galasso and Mendoza join Hatsushi on the
all-conference first-team. Galasso appeared in all 42 games for the
Bucs, averaging 6.4 points while connecting on 42 three-point shots.
Hatsushi and Quiroz both said the team spends time together off
the court, which makes for a smoother transition on the floor.
Now Coast faces Merced, which posted a 12-0 record in the Central
Valley Conference. The teams have never faced each other since Merced
began fielding a team in 1992.
What has gotten them this far and what will get them further?
“Our will and motivation have been huge factors for us to win
games,” Hatsushi said. “It all starts with our defense.”
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