Fair with Haze
73°
St. Charles, IL
Fair with Haze|Forecast »

Girls basketball insider: Saints cling to UEC River lead

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Kaneland’s Sarah Grams tries to keep a ball from going out of bounds Tuesday during the Knights’ game against Morris in Maple Park. (Sandy Bressner – sbressner@shawmedia.com)

St. Charles East took St. Charles North’s best counterpunches during Saturday’s 59-55 road win, keeping its hold on the Upstate Eight Conference River Division lead by getting to the foul line and converting down the stretch.

The Saints swished 22 of 31 free throws (70.9 percent), led by a 12 for 14 effort from Amanda Hilton.

“It got pretty wild at the end, but then we kind of all knew that we just had to come together,” East senior forward Laney Deckrow said. “Calm down.”

That was easier said than done with North’s Alex Silverman finding her touch from long range.

Silverman’s deep 3-pointer with 17 seconds left brought the North Stars to within 58-55. Hilton split a pair of free throws 10 seconds later to seal the victory.


While the loss left the North Stars at 2-6 in the conference – five games behind the Saints – North felt like the game wasn’t a lost cause.


“We just came out with a lot more heart and a lot more energy,” Silverman said. “We wanted it this time, really bad.”

East won the first crosstown meeting by 15 points, and will brace for another key rematch when it visits Geneva tonight. Plenty about the Saints and Vikings has changed since East beat Geneva in overtime, 81-66, last month.

The Saints’ Paige Jordan, who matched Carly Pottle with 25 points in the first Geneva game, has left the team.

The Vikings, meanwhile, have adapted their post-heavy roster to fill out a more conventional lineup.
Geneva (5-2 UEC River) and East both will be wellrested entering the game, going at least six days week between contests. Second-place Streamwood (6-1 UEC River), idle since winning at North on Jan. 11, is slated to visit struggling Elgin on Saturday afternoon.


Knights on attack
Kaneland limited Morris to six points in Tuesday’s second half, making quick work of a one-point deficit at intermission to roll, 65-32.


The Knights’ 1-3-1 zone after halftime flustered the Redskins and then some, as Kaneland finished with 18 steals and created most of its offense off fast breaks.


“We’ve been talking about trying to get some easy baskets and some points off of our defense, which has been missing a little bit,” Knights coach Ernie Colombe said. “We weren’t doing that in stretches, and [Tuesday] we did that.”

Previous Page|1|||

Reader Poll

Do you support allowing the use of marijuana for medical purposes?

Yes
No
I have no opinion