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Marion Girls Basketball

Marion - Girls Basketball

Peyton’s tough choice helps fuel Marion turnaround

Two games stand out for Marion’s Dani Peyton as pivotal in the Indians’ transformation from last season’s beleaguered 6-16 team into this year’s No. 15-ranked Wamac Conference contender.

The first was the second game of the season at Solon. “We went in as definite underdogs and had one of our best defensive efforts as a team,” says the senior point guard. “We were down eight points at the half and came back and won it by six.”

The second was Dec. 13, when the Indians rode their escalating momentum to a two-point victory over previously 3A No. 1-ranked Williamsburg, running their record to 6-0.

“I felt like we had just won the state tournament,” says Peyton. “Those are two games that I’ll never forget.”

Needless to say, the state tournament has remained squarely in her sights as the Indians close out the month of January with an 11-6 overall record, 11-4 in the conference.

“We all knew this year was going to be a lot different,” says Peyton.

“Last year we had lost seniors like Morgan Paige, we had a new coach, and we were rebuilding the team. I truly believe that what we went through last year with the tough times and the losses helped us. We knew it would be a lot of fun this year as seniors, and we don’t want it to end by any means.”

This year marked a turning point for Peyton in another respect as well, as she was forced to choose between her longtime team and her beloved school.

Peyton attended tiny Cedar Valley Christian School from the fourth through 11th grades, but had played on Marion’s basketball team since eighth grade. When Cedar Valley joined the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union this year, she could no longer attend one school and play at the other.

It was an occasion for much prayer and discussion at her house, says Peyton, whose ninth-grade sister Josie is also an athlete – and best friend of Cedar Valley leading scorer Shelly Hembera. Josie also attends Marion now.

In the end, says Peyton, “I wanted something new. I wanted to be a bright light for God here at Marion and get ready to go somewhere new for college next year.”

She hasn’t once regretted her decision, she says.

“It was a lot easier than I thought it would be because I knew quite a few people from basketball. It’s definitely different going from a school with 300 kids in kindergarten through 12th grade to a school with more than that just in the high school. But the girls were great about introducing me to the teachers and other kids, and I absolutely love it here.”

At the same time, she says, her affection for her old school is undiminished. “I love Cedar Valley. I still go to church there and volunteer at the school.” She also hopes to catch a CVC girls basketball game once the regular season playing schedule ends.

Peyton’s basketball pedigree is sound, as both her parents played basketball at Northland High School in central Iowa and her dad began teaching her to dribble when she was three. She has played with some of the top local preps since she was in grade school.

In particular, she recalls her fourth-grade AAU Panthers team that won the state tournament. Her teammates included Jasmine Royster, now at Washington, and future Kennedy star Courtney Strait, among other familiar Metro names.

Peyton, who hopes to study criminal justice and play basketball at a four-year liberal arts college “not too far from home” next year, is determined to make the most of her final tour as a prep athlete.

“I know I won’t be playing professionally, so I’m taking every opportunity to play and be in the moment – not for me, but for my team and God and my family. I just love basketball.”

The 5-foot-5 team captain leads her squad in scoring at 12.1 points, but never focuses on that aspect of her game, she says.

“I’m trying to be the best leader I can be. To me the points don’t matter. I’m there to create and get my teammates open because we need to have everyone ready to step up. From the time I was little I worked on ballhandling and being able to dribble, and to me there’s nothing better than getting the tricky pass to your teammate for a basket.”

Second-year Marion Coach Brian O’Donnell says Peyton’s maturing as a player has paralleled the team’s growth this season.

“She’s a good shooter,” he says. “What’s made her better this year is that she’s improved in every other aspect of her game. She’s a much better defender, sees the floor better as a point guard, and she’s really understanding situational basketball. And that’s a microcosm of our entire team. We’re really starting to grasp things and improve overall.”

Peyton sets a good example for her teammates, he adds. “She represents the school very well as a student, a person and an athlete. She’s very upbeat and outgoing, and she works very hard.”

As the Indians approach the state tournament run, Peyton says the one area where she would like her team to keep growing is in “confidence in ourselves, trusting each other and not worrying about the outcome – confidence that we deserve to be where we are and we can do anything we work for.

“We have a big senior class and each and every one of us is going to do anything we can to keep the journey going and get as far as we can. Wherever the journey leads us, that’s where we’ll be happy.”

 

Marion - Girls Basketball

Late turnovers doom Marion girls

MOUNT VERNON - Going just by the numbers, the Marion girls didn’t have a chance at Mount Vernon Saturday afternoon.

They didn’t manage a defensive rebound for the first six minutes of the game and spotted the Mustangs  a 13-1 lead.

The Indians were called for 21 fouls to nine for the home team; they were 2 of 6 from the foul line, while Mount Vernon was 14 of 23.

From the field, the Mustangs took 53 shots to just 35 for Marion. And they turned the ball over only seven times to 21 for their visitors.

And yet, the Class 3A 15th-ranked Indians had possession of the ball and a two-point lead (their first of the game) with two minutes to go.

They still led by one a minute later.

But three straight lost balls and four fouls later, Marion came up short 40-34 in a Wamac conference inter-divisional matchup.

It was a heart-breaking loss for a team that plays with such heart.  And especially disheartening since Coach Brian O’Donnell’s gutsy girls came from so far back, only to have it slip away at the end.

“I can’t point to any one thing,” O’Donnell said in trying to explain what happened.  “We had a slow start, but I was proud of how we bounced back. And we did a lot of things really well. Mount Vernon just had great effort.”

Particularly at the very beginning and at the finish.  The Mustangs’ slick sophomore guard Miranda Chapman opened the contest with two consecutive 3-pointers from the corner, then added five more quick points on a jump shot, a rebound tip-in and a foul shot.

Teammate Liz Skotowski (one of only two seniors on the roster) closed out a 17-6 opening quarter with a 3-point heave at the buzzer.

“They got too many loose balls and too many offensive boards,” O’Donnell said of the sluggish start.

The Indians closed the gap to three at 20-17 on back-to-back 3s by senior sparkplug leader Dani Peyton and sophomore Emi Banes, but free throws pushed Mount Vernon’s halftime lead back up to six.

Marion kept clawing, though, with Peyton taking over the offense.  She hit two 3-pointers early in the fourth quarter, and her drive with 4:20 to go put the Indians ahead for the first time at 34-32.

Employing a press seemed to  befuddle the Mustangs. They scored only one field goal in the final stanza to go along with 8 of 10 free throws.

“I thought we started to rebound a lot better,” O’Donnell said.  “We pushed the ball and knocked down some shots.”

While trying to nurse the narrow lead, though, the turnovers finally did in the Indians.

“Give Marion credit that they didn’t throw in the towel when we got off to a quick start,” said Mount Vernon Coach Bob Kintzel.  “And I thought our kids showed a lot of character by coming back after we got down. We’ve got a young  team, and I was pleased at how they reacted.”

Chapman and Peyton each led their teams in scoring with 13 points.

Mount Vernon, which has already clinched the Wamac East Division title, boosted its record to 13-4 (13-2 Wamac).  The Indians, who fell at ninth-ranked Williamsburg 62-46 Friday night, are now 11-6 (11-4 Wamac).

MARION (34): Allison Scott 3 0-0 7, Jessie Kramer 1 1-2 3, Beth Knapp 0 0-0 0, Dani Peyton 5 0-0 13, Alyssa Jones 0 0-0 0, Michalyn Mohr 0 0-0 0, Amanda Sahm 3 0-0 7, Ashlin Korf 0 0-0 0, Brooke Cole 0 0-0 0, Emi Banes 1 0-2 3, Elizabeth Deeney 0 1-2 1, Paige Perkins 0 0-0 0. Totals 13 2-6 34.

MOUNT VERNON (40): Miranda Chapman 5 1-4 13, Laura Deininger 2 4-7 8, Liz Skotowski 2 2-2 7, Hannah Wieditz 0 0-0 0, Emma Pisarik 0 5-6 5, Allison Platte 1 1-2 4, Gabby Kolker 1 1-2 3. Totals 11 14-23 40.

Halftime – Mount Vernon 23, Marion 17. 3-point goals – Marion 6 (Peyton 3, Scott, Sahm, Banes), Mount Vernon 4 (Chapman 2, Skotowski, Platte). Total fouls – Marion 21, Mount Vernon 9. Fouled out – none.

 

Marion - Girls Basketball

No.15 Marion girls fall at Williamsburg

WILLIAMSBURG - Paige Greiner scored 17 points Friday night as No. 9 Williamsburg topped No. 15 Marion, 62-46, in a Wamac Conference girls basketball game in Williamsburg.

Dani Peyton and Alyssa Jones scored 10 points apiece for Marion (11-5, 11-3). Mackenzie Bigbee scored 15 for Williamsburg (15-3, 12-3).

MARION (46): Scott 0 0-0 0, Sahm 2 0-0 4, Kramer 0 0-0 0, Knapp 2 0-0 6, Peyton 3 2-2 10, Banes 2 1-2 6, Jones 3 3-5 10, Perkins 1 1-1 3, Mohr 2 2-2 6. Totals 15 9-12 46.

WILLIAMSBURG (62): Lane 1 2-5 5, Greiner 5 4-4 17, Schlabaugh 3 1-3 7, Meade 0 0-2 0, Slaymaker 0 0-0 0, M. Bigbee 3 9-11 15, Huedepohl 3 2-2 8, Boland 2 1-2 6, Ritchie 0 1-2 1, O. Bigbee 2 0-0 4. Totals 18 17-32 62.

Halftime - Williamsburg 24, Marion 21. 3-point goals - Marion 6 (Knapp 2, Peyton 2, Banes 1, Jones 1), Williamsburg 5 (Greiner 3, Lane 1, Boland 1).

   

Marion - Girls Basketball

Marion girls beat Independence, 63-56

INDEPENDENCE - Beth Knapp and Emi Banes scored 15 points apiece to lead No. 12 Marion past Independence, 63-56, Tuesday night in a Wamac Conference girls basketball game.

Michalyn Mohr added eight points for Marion (11-4, 11-2).

 

MARION (63): Allison Scott 4, Amanda Sahm 6, Jessie Kramer 2, Brooke Cole 0, Beth Knapp 15, Dani Peyton 7, Emi Banes 15, Alyssa Jones 6, Michalyn Mohr 8.

INDEPENDENCE (56): Terpy 4, O’Loughlin 1, Geertsema 5, C.Ratchford 1, Gustafson 2, McCardle 10, McMillan 1, Black 4, Barker 11, K.Ratchford 17.

Halftime - Marion 37, Independence 31. 3-point goals - Marion 3 (Knapp 2, Banes).

Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 January 2012 00:12
 

Marion - Girls Basketball

Wooldridge's FTs lift CPU past No. 12 Marion

Shooting potential game-winning free throws in a half-full gym of screaming Indians is one type of pressure.

Shooting free throws in your backyard while the neighborhood boys "moon" you is another.

The latter helped Center Point-Urbana junior Jessica Wooldridge accomplish the former in the first game of Rivalry Saturday at Washington.

Wooldridge made 6 of 8 free throws in overtime and the Stormin' Pointers upset the No. 12 Marion Indians, 57-51, in a Wamac Conference girls basketball game.

"I just had to clear my mind," said Wooldridge, whose 10 points included 8 of 10 free-throw shooting. "I work on it a lot with my neighbors. In our backyard, they're always mooning me and doing dumb stuff trying to distract me. They're like my brothers."

CPU (8-5, 7-4 Wamac) won the game at the free throw line, although it first tried to give it away from there. The Stormin' Pointers, who made 25 of 36 free throws for the game, missed four charity tosses in the fourth quarter that could have put the game away. Two were on the front end of bonus opportunities. They made 8 of 11 in overtime.

"We didn't do it, but then we got a second chance at it and got it done," CPU Coach Philip Klett said.

Marion (10-4, 10-2) tied the game at 45-45 when Dani Peyton made the front end of a pair of free throws with 45.3 seconds left in regulation. After a CPU timeout she missed the second and neither team scored, forcing overtime.

Marion scored first in the extra period on Peyton's layup. CPU ran off the next seven points. Wooldridge made 1 of 2 free throws, Madie Wilkin cashed in a pair and then Wooldridge drained two more before soph Kennedy Salow's bucket pushed the Stormin Pointers' lead to 52-47 with 1:08 to play.

Michalyn Mohr's rebound putback of a missed shot with 52 seconds left pulled Marion within 52-49. Wooldridge made 3 of 4 free throws down the stretch to help spring the upset.

"We knew during the game we missed some shots," Wooldridge said. "We just kept pulling each other back up and kept pushing through it. We knew we wanted it more and that it would come out our way in the end."

Marion Coach Brian O'Donnell said he could tell from the beginning of the game that his girls were in for a battle.

"I felt from the opening tip they were more ready to play than we were," O'Donnell said. "I feel we got outhustled. We didn't make the plays that it took to win and they did. They deserve the credit. They outplayed us and they made the plays when they needed to."

Klett said his players were chomping at the bit to play after having games postponed by weather twice earlier in the week.

"They were anxious to play because we hadn't played since last Friday," Klett said. "I was kind of worried because we couldn't practice yesterday because of weather and we lost a day earlier in the week. But the girls were hungry to play."

CPU led 17-14 after one quarter and 32-28 at halftime, relying on the 3-point shooting of senior Haley Gauley, who had four treys in the first half, five for the game and finished with a team-high 15 points.

"We have to adjust, when a girl catches fire like that, and we just didn't adjust," O'Donnell said.

Jessie Kramer's rebound putback of a missed shot gave Marion a 40-39 lead heading into the fourth quarter.

The lead changed hands three times before CPU built a 45-42 lead. Amanda Sahm's layup and Peyton's free throw tied the game and sent it to overtime.

Although Marion outscored CPU by 11 points from the field, O'Donell said he thought Marion's offense never was in sync. The Indians shot 30.5 percent. Peyton had a game-high 18 points, but was the only Marion player to score in double figures.

"I thought we were very stagnant on offense," he said. "We didn't get the ball reversed. We didn't really attack the 1-3-1. I think our posts never really got themselves involved tonight."

Post players Mohr and Alyssa Jones had four points apiece.

CPU also had a poor shooting night, connecting on 28.9 percent of its shots. The Stormin' Pointers were 2 of 15 in the second half, but made 8 of 14 free throws to stay in the game.

Marion was whistled for 27 fouls, CPU 17. The Stormin' Pointers outscored the Indians 25-8 from the free throw line.

"We could have done a better job on defense, I'll put it that way," said O'Donnell, who was tagged with a technical foul in the first half.

The teams meet again Jan. 31 at Marion.

 

MARION (51): Jessie Kramer 4-6 0-0 8, Alyssa Jones 2-9 0-1 4, Allison Scott 0-7 0-0 0, Beth Knapp 3-8 0-0 9, Dani Peyton 5-15 5-7 18, Amanda Sahm 3-9 1-2 8, Brooke Cole 0-0 0-0 0, Emi Banes 0-4 0-0 0, Michalyn Mohr 1-1 2-2 4. Totals 18-59 8-12 51.

CENTER POINT-URBANA (57): Kennedy Salow 2-12 0-2 4, Carlie Wilhelmi 1-2 6-9 8, Madie Wilkin 2-9 7-9 12, Shannon Stone 1-2 2-3 4, Haley Gauley 5-10 0-0 15, Paige Wilkin 0-3 2-2 2, Allison Twedt 1-2 0-1 2, Jessica Wooldridge 1-5 8-10 10. Totals 13-45 25-36 57.

Halftime - Center Point-Urbana 32, Marion 28. End of regulation - Marion 45, Center Point-Urbana 45. 3-point goals - Marion 7-19 (Knapp 3-7, Peyton 3-8, Sahm 1-2, Scott 0-1, Banes 0-1), CPU 6-21 (Gauley 5-9, M.Wilkin 1-6, Stone 0-1, P.Wilkin 0-1, Twedt 0-1, Wooldridge 0-1, Salow 0-2). Rebounds - Marion 45 (Mohr 9), CPU 38 (Wilhelmi, Wooldridge 6). Team fouls - Marion 27, CPU 17. Fouled out - Jones, Peyton, Stone. Technical foul - Marion Coach O'Donnell.

Last Updated on Saturday, 21 January 2012 17:07
   
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