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Changed Geneva girls basketball claims UEC River sweep over Batavia

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Geneva's Kelly Gordon (20) puts of a shot during the Vikings' 56-46 victory over Batavia on Friday in Batavia. (Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com)

BATAVIA – Sidney Santos the point guard whipped the ball to Abby Novak the shooting guard.

Sami Pawlak played with 10 healthy fingers.

Coach Sarah Meadows rarely explored her padded seat on the bench.

All right, so some things about the Geneva girls basketball team looked similar to the Vikings’ first meeting with Batavia this season, but there wasn’t much beyond Meadows’ fiery comportment Friday night.

The Vikings’ 56-46 Upstate Eight Conference River Division victory against the Bulldogs matched the same end result as six weeks ago. How Geneva got there was another story.

“We changed so many things,” said Santos, a 6-foot junior who opened the season as a post. “Abby’s now in our starting lineup. We have more defenses. Pressing. I bring up the ball. It’s changed so much. This half of the season, even our mentality has changed, and we’re ready to improve and show people who we are.”

Geneva (11-8, 5-2 UEC River) has known only the top of the conference heap since the UEC expanded into two divisions for the 2010-11 season. The Vikings still are a game behind St. Charles East and Streamwood in their bid for a third straight league title, with one meeting remaining with both teams.

Batavia (13-8, 4-3), which blitzed East by 25 points on the same court Tuesday, has significantly whittled its deficits against Geneva from the first two River seasons.

After losing by an average of 26.5 points the past four meetings, the Bulldogs played within four points of the Vikings on Nov. 30 before hanging tough again Friday. A pair of Hannah Frazier free throws brought Batavia to within 46-43 with 4:18 remaining.

After that, Geneva used its blend of size and quickness to control offensive rebounds and pull away.

“It’s just a huge rivalry. It’s not just a game to anyone, there’s so much more behind it. And we just can’t break the seal,” Bulldogs junior guard Liza Fruendt said. “We take away from this to practice harder, and it’s just only going to prepare us for a sectional and a regional championship.”

Fruendt had a game-high 25 points, climbing within six of 1,000 for her career.

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