We
wandered into one of Bowdoin’s postgame press conferences last weekend
a little late and a little dazed from a busy day, so forgive us if we
didn’t hear this right, but there’s a recollection of some
of the players joking of having their nerves surgically removed.
The Polar Bears have
gone through enough nerve-racking moments in the last six weeks of the
season to last an entire basketball career. Here’s a brief list
of what they’ve faced so far in trying to keep an unbeaten season
and a national championship run alive:
In
a regular season game at Williams, the first for Bowdoin after being voted
No. 1 in the nation, the Polar Bears trailed by 16 points at halftime,
by eight with four minutes, and by two in the final seconds of both regulation
and overtime.
Bowdoin
Polar Bears (29-0) How they got here: NESCAC champions for fourth straight
season. Defeated Salve Regina (h) 57-44; Southern Maine (h) 59-55;
Scranton (h) 71-58.
Top
scorers: G Lora Trenkle (13.7 ppg), F Eileen Flaherty (11.1
ppg)
Head
coach: Stefanie Pemper
When
they’re playing well: They dominate. Justine Pouravelis
is a shot-blocking, ball-denying presence in the low post. The quick-closing
trap forces teams to rush passes, helping the Polar Bears allow
only 45.5 ppg. Offensively, they tend to do best when All-American
guard Trenkle has room to make decisions to pass, drive, or shoot.
When
they’re playing poorly: They have stretches of three
to four minutes where they can't score. If Pouravelis is in foul
trouble, opposing teams aren’t as heistant to the basket.
Secret
weapon: Senior co-captain Courtney Trotta, a backup guard,
is the team's emotional leader. The first off the bench to greet
her teammates, the last to cut down the nets after the NESCAC championship,
Trotta is also charged with keeping the team loose, via such things
as the player bios on the team’s Web site.
Fun
fact: Freshman backup guard Julia Loonin, a New York city
resident, was a ballgirl/towel girl for the NYU team that won the
national championship in 1997.
Why
they will win: They have met every gut-check moment head-on
and come out on top.
Forward Justine Pouravelis
tied the score on a baseline basket just before the regulation buzzer, setting
the stage for an even more dramatic finish. As the seconds ticked down on
the second overtime, Bowdoin ran the same play for Pouravelis, but this
time, she got triple teamed and passed the ball outside to teammate Vanessa
Russell. In one quick release, Russell let go a 25-footer that went through
the net for the winning 3-point shot with 2.3 seconds remaining.
“People played
confidently (even facing the deficit),” Russell said. “At
no point did we think we were going to lose that game.”
In
the NESCAC title game, Bowdoin blew a 19-point halftime lead, then trailed
upset-minded Bates for the first four minutes of overtime and faced a
one-point deficit with two of its best post threats having fouled out.
This time, the ball found itself in the hands of Pouravelis’s backup,
sophomore Erika Nickerson, whose soft touch on a 12-footer from the right
of the lane with 50 seconds remaining was good for the triumphant basket.
“I’ll
always look at that (championship) banner with a cheshire-cat grin on
my face,” head coach Stefanie Pemper said on D3hoops.com’s
postgame coverage that day. “I don’t know how we won that
game.”
In
the Sweet 16 against No. 2 Southern Maine, Bowdoin faced an 11-point deficit
with nine minutes remaining. Senior backup Kristina Fugate hit back to
back shots to fuel a comeback after which the game was tied at 45. The
contest then turned into the equivalent of a heavyweight prizefight, with
Southern Maine scoring, and Bowdoin countering with the matching points
on each of the next three possessions, on two baskets by Pourvaelis and
a tough runner in the lane by senior co-captain Lora Trenkle. After Southern
Maine finally missed, Bowdoin grabbed the lead on two free throws by freshman
Eileen Flaherty, scored a crucial basket on a three-quarter court pass
from Pouravelis to Trenkle, and didn’t relinquish the lead until
the final buzzer.
Media members always
ask “What was going through your mind?” and that question
came up in regards to the pressure-cooker atmosphere in the latter part
of this contest. Trenkle’s answer said a lot about Bowdoin’s
approach in just three words. “This
is great.”
Less
than 24 hours later in the Elite 8, an emotionally drained Bowdoin trailed
No. 3 Scranton, 9-0 two minutes into the game. Nickerson came into the
contest and supplied instant offense. A little more than eight minutes
later, Bowdoin claimed the lead and eventually pulled away for a 13-point
win.
The Polar Bears do
not freeze in fear of the big moment. Their instincts are a reflection
of Pemper, who trusts her players to think things through. Every player
knows that she has confidence in them in the most significant moments,
such as playing for a national championship this weekend.
“Everyone has
come up big,” Russell said. “That’s one of the reasons
we’re so successful. People have the confidence to make big plays.
No one is afraid to put themselves in a position to fail.