Edison moves into the lead
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Mike Sciacca, Independent
To win the 2000 Sunset League girls basketball championship,
somebody’s going to have to wrestle it away from the Edison Chargers.
Defending champion Edison established an early lead in the race for the
league crown Thursday by using a late 10-0 run to pull out a 56-52
victory over visiting Esperanza.
The showdown was like watching a prize fight as two of the league’s
favorites to the title went toe-to-toe, each taking control, each falling
behind, in what has become a fierce rivalry between the two schools in
recent years.
It wasn’t so much Edison’s 1-2 punch that did in Esperanza; rather, the
Chargers’ knockout came in the form of the three-point shot.
“We live by the three-point shot, and we die by the three-point shot and
personally, that’s how we were playing it in the fourth quarter,” Edison
Coach Dave White said. “We just kept fighting back, and our shots began
to fall.”
It looked as though Edison (12-7 overall, 3-0 in league) would die a slow
death when it missed four three-point shots on consecutive trips
downcourt, trying, in vain, it seemed, to overcome 49-46 deficit with
3:09 to play.
Bethany Blair, who scored 13 points, hit a jumper just inside the key to
give Esperanza (11-5, 2-1) its three-point cushion to cap an 8-0 run by
the Aztecs, which wiped out a 46-41 Edison lead. But after Edison’s
Michelle Zylstra hit a pair of free throws and Rachael Ziemann came up
with a steal by punching the ball away from the Aztecs’ Lindsay Helvey,
the Chargers held possession and were within 49-48 with 2:09 to play.
Rachael Ziemann turned that theft into the key basket of the night, as
she fed her identical twin, Bianca, in the corner, and the sophomore
guard hit a three-point shot to give Edison a lead it wouldn’t
relinquish.
Zylstra then came up a huge defensive stand by blocking Kristin Peters’
shot moments later, and the Chargers turned that into another
three-pointer by Bianca Ziemann and suddenly, Edison had a 54-49 lead
with 1:11 left.
“Obviously, those were the key shots of the ballgame,” White said. “We
were almost dead before that turning point but like a fighter, we just
didn’t give up. Michelle (Zylstra) had a really big shot that denied them
a chance to get closer, and then Bianca’s second three (point shot) was
the icing on the win.”
Helvey threw up an air ball from three-point range with 39 seconds left,
and the Aztecs, who had a four-game win streak snapped, were finished.
Edison then went to its spread offense and ran off 28 seconds before
Zylstra was fouled. She hit two more free throws to extend the Edison
lead to 56-49, the foul shots capping a 10-0 surge.
The sparring between the two teams began early. Edison grabbed a 19-10
lead after the first quarter of play, thanks to 3 of 11 shooting from the
floor by Esperanza. The Aztecs made up for that horrid start by scoring
the first eight points of the second period to pull to within a point,
and they grabbed their first lead of the game on two Peters free throws
with 40 seconds left in the half.
Esperanza led, 29-28, at the break, but Edison forged a tie at 31-31 on
Ashleigh Noda’s three-point shot a minute into the third quarter. The
Aztecs responded with their second 7-0 run to go up 39-32, but the
Chargers closed strongly, outscoring Esperanza, 8-0, over the final 3:09
of the quarter to take a 40-39 edge into the final period.
Again, three-point shots by Zylstra and Bianca Ziemann, brought the
Chargers back from the abyss.
“We were running out of gas at that point,” White said. “These two teams
are about as even as you can get. “It was another great game between the
teams, with each taking runs and knocking the other down. This is a big,
big win, but one game doesn’t make the league race. There’s plenty more
(games) to be played.”
But for now, White will enjoy the spoils of his team’s fifth consecutive
victory and more importantly, all but made up for a 20-point loss the
Chargers suffered against Esperanza three weeks ago in the semifinals of
the Santa Barbara Tournament.
“It’s like night and day, those two games,” he said. “I think we were
able to make up such a great difference from that game by becoming more
consistent in our play. Plus, our defensive play has really picked up.
That, and Esperanza shot the lights out (67-percent).”
Bianca Ziemann, who also hit the winning basket last Saturday in a two
overtime victory over Mater Dei, led Edison with 18 points. Zylstra
finished with 12, Rachael Ziemann had 11, and Noda, who hit three
three-point shots, also scored 11 points.
Peters, Esperanza’s lone senior, led the Aztecs with 14 points.
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