Skylights
stymie UGF
By Ryan Divish/Havre
Daily News Sports Editor/rdivish@havredailynews.com
Playing defense should not be a totally bizarre concept in basketball. In
fact, it's really simple: If you hold a team under 60 points, it's a lot easier
to outscore them.
It's a concept the Montana State University-Northern women's basketball team
has bought into in the last few weeks.
For the third straight game, the Skylights held an opponent to under 60
points, stifling the high-scoring
Northern used a stingy defense that forced the
"I really think they are starting to enjoy playing defense," said
Skylights head coach Mike Erickson. "Once they start smelling blood, they
really start putting defensive pressure on people."
However, the Skylights' defensive success was a little different from weeks
past. Northern barely used its vaunted full-court pressure and instead
ratcheted up the defensive in the half-court, extending the
"We talked all week about getting up on them in the half-court and
getting pressure on the their shooters." Erickson
said. "We did a good job of beating them to spots and not playing
catch-up."
With their defense frustrating UGF on every possession, the Skylights went
about business on offense with frightening efficiency from the outset.
Northern jumped out to a 10-0 lead as Jessi Reome and Camille Gardner sank 3-pointers early on. The
Skylights steadily built on their lead, going up 23-9 with
"We came out ready and very focused,"
Erickson said. "I think it's maturity. We had a
lot of girls come in and watch the game tape from two months ago on their own.
They are starting to understand what they need to do to be prepared."
The extra film work seemed to pay off at both ends as Northern was getting
good looks early and forcing UGF out of its offensive rhythm.
"The coaches really did a great job of scouting them," Reome said. "We watched the game tape from before and
they really broke it down. We were pretty comfortable once the game
started."
The Skylights' level of comfort showed, as they continued to get good shots
and pushed their lead to 40-26 at halftime.
"We talked all week about not digging ourselves into a hole early in
the game," said UGF head coach Roger Hatler.
"But that's exactly what we did. Give them credit. They came out and took
control right away."
The
The Skylights finally put UGF away for good midway through the second half. Heny and Reome sank 3-pointers
and Michele VanDyke scored twice inside to bump the
lead to 20.
"Everybody was contributing offensively," Reome
said. "We have been playing so unselfishly lately and tonight was just a total team effort."
Reome and Gardner finished with 15 points each to
lead the Skylights. The duo also sank a combined seven 3-pointers. For Reome, open looks haven't come often in conference season,
but she is trying to make the most of them.
"It seemed like teams always had one of their best defenders on
me," Reome said. "It's hard for me to get
open some times, because I'm not the fastest person on the court. I just have
to work a little bit harder to get open looks."
VanDyke had another solid game with 14 points and
nine rebounds, while Jaci Heny
added 13 points, five assists and a pair of 3-pointers. As a team, Northern
sank 9-13 3-pointers.
"The 3-point shooting was definitely the deciding factor," Hatler said. "They shoot 9-13 and we shoot 2-21. If
you look at the other statistics like rebounding and turnovers, they're pretty
close."
The poor shooting night was evidenced by UGF's
second- and third-leading scorers. The duo of Nichole Neill and Dana Ball
combine to average over 30 points a game. Northern limited them to 10 on 2-18
shooting from the field.
"We're a better shooting team than we showed tonight," Hatler said. "But Northern defended us tough."
Said Reome: "We're really
starting to buy into this defense thing. We're going hard and getting
after people."
Erickson knows that the defense thing must continue as the Skylights head
back out on the road for games at Montana Tech and UM-Western.
"We can't get content," he said. "There are still a lot things we need to improve on. But our girls are
starting to take on things personally. They are playing with pride and fighting
for their teammates. They have really bought into the whole team concept."
MSU-NORTHERN 72, U OF GREAT FALLS 53
U OF GREAT FALLS (9-12, 3-4)
Kim Freeman 5-13 5-9 16, Dana Ball 1-6 3-4 5, Nichole Neill 1-12 3-3 5,
Melanie Green 1-6 6-6 8, Jayla McPherson 6-12 0-0 12,
Natalie Muth 1-6 0-0 2, Francine Killeagle-Stiffarm
2-4 0-0 5, Afton Ott 0-2 0-0 0, Brittni
Forster 0-0 0-0 0. Totals: 17-62 17-22.
MSU-NORTHERN (19-6, 5-2)
Michele VanDyke 7-10 0-0 14, Megan Valgardson 3-9 1-3 7, Jaci Heny 4-9 3-4 13, Jessi Reome 5-10 2-2 15, Camille Gardner 5-10 1-2 15, Heather Riener 0-1 2-2 2, Kristie Pullin 1-3 1-2 3, DeLayne Johnston 0-2 1-2 1, Jena Heggem 0-0 2-2 2, Ashley Trulock
0-4 0-0 0. Totals: 25-58 13-19.
Halftime: MSU-N 40, UGF 26. 3-point goals: UGF 2-21 (Killeagle
1-1, Freeman 1-4, Ball 0-2, Neill 0-8, Green 0-1, McPherson 0-1, Muth 0-3), MSU-N 9-13 (Gardner 4-5, Reome
3-6, Heny 2-2). Rebounds: UGF 40 (McPherson 12),
MSU-N 40 (VanDyke 9). Assists: UGF 8 (Neill 4), MSU-N
15 (Heny 5). Turnovers: UGF 14, MSU-N 13. Fouls: UGF 21, MSU-N 20. Fouled out:
Green, Valgardson.