Lightning strikes in quarters
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Chris Yemma
It came down to a show of desire in Saturday night’s CIF Southern
Section Division IV-A quarterfinal girls volleyball match -- and it
could have gone either way.
After the score teetered back and forth in the fifth game, Sage’s
Kelsey Lawler served up an ace and Cat Dailey nailed a kill to win
the last game and give the Lightning a 26-24, 25-17, 14-25, 19-25,
19-17 win over visiting Chadwick.
Each team desired it, but Sage (17-6) made it happen and will
advance to the semifinals Tuesday against top-seeded Western
Christian with the site to be determined by a coin flip.
“The last match we won I thought was the biggest win for me and
the team,” Sage Coach Dan Thomassen said. “That was until this one.
The girls have gotten so much better and they’ve been working so
hard.”
The Lightning entered the match as underdogs, with fourth-seeded
Chadwick at 16-5. But Sage came out on its home floor unintimidated
and took the first two games behind the leadership of juniors Dailey
and Vista Murphy, along with rising star Haywood Wright.
Sage even took the second game with relative ease, taking a 13-2
lead and winning by eight. But it wasn’t going to be that easy for
the Lightning, as Chadwick (16-6) rallied and took the next two to
force a fifth game.
“Chadwick really improved [the last three games], but we stopped
passing like we should have,” Thomassen said.
And so it came down to the fifth and final game. With Sage down,
16-15, Dailey tipped it over to tie it. On a double-hit call, Sage
went down, 17-16. Dailey then smashed a kill to tie it, 17-17. And
then Lawler stepped in, served her ace, Dailey wound up her swing,
and Sage sent the Dolphins packing.
“I was so excited, I couldn’t even believe it,” Dailey said. “I
never dreamed we’d get this far.”
Said Lawler about her ace: “I couldn’t even see it when I hit it,
but it felt so good to bring the team back up.”
Dailey finished with 19 kills, five blocks and three aces, while
Murphy had 15 kills, five aces and 11 digs. Haywood had 10 kills for
the Lightning.
After Saturday’s match, Thomassen said he had no idea the team
would make it this far when the season started.
But now that he has seen his girls improve, he has a different
outlook.
“The girls are getting smarter every match,” he said. “If we work
hard enough, this team can beat anyone.”
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