No. 1 NRHEG will battle for section title

Published 12:39 am Friday, March 14, 2014

With a trip to the state tournament on the line, the NRHEG girls’ basketball team has a distinct advantage over its opponent on paper.

The Panthers (27-0 overall, 8-0 Gopher Conference) will play Norwood Young America (21-5, 12-2 Minnesota River Conference) in the Section 2AA finals at 8 p.m. tonight at Minnesota State, Mankato.

Paige Overgaard of NRHEG shoots over a defender on March 6 during the Subsection 2AA semifinals against Tri-City United at Mankato East High School. NRHEG won 87-34. — Micah Bader/Albert Lea Tribune

Paige Overgaard of NRHEG shoots over a defender on March 6 during the Subsection 2AA semifinals against Tri-City United at Mankato East High School. NRHEG won 87-34. — Micah Bader/Albert Lea Tribune

The overall record is far from the only statistic in NRHEG’s favor. The Panthers average more than 20 points per game more than the Raiders. NRHEG also holds its opponents to 10 fewer points per contest.

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The Raiders have a slight edge in experience this season in games decided by 10 points or fewer. Norwood Young America has been in that situation 11 times this season and was 9-2.

NRHEG obliterated most of its opponents — winning by an average of more than 40 points per game — and was 2-0 in games decided by 10 points or fewer. Both of those games were against ranked opponents: The No. 1 Class AA Panthers beat No. 2 Kenyon-Wanamingo 67-60 at home on Jan. 9 in their closest game of the season, and they beat No. 5 Class AAA Minneapolis Washburn 87-77 at home nine days later. Minneapolis Washburn moved to a larger class this season after NRHEG eliminated the Millers 69-60 last year in the Class AA state semifinals.

Minneapolis Washburn qualified for the state tournament Thursday with a 74-67 win over Holy Family Catholic.

One of NRHEG’s closest calls this year was Monday against Waterville-Elysian-Morristown in the section semifinals, despite winning by more than 10 points.

The Panthers won 45-34 but were held to their lowest point total of the season. The previous scoring low was 64 points against Blooming Prairie.

Waterville-Elysian-Morristown played keep-away with NRHEG, and after seeing the Buccaneers’ success, Panthers head coach John Schultz said he plans to see Norwood Young America mimic Waterville-Elysian-Morristown’s strategy.

“We are preparing as if we’re playing WEM,” Schultz said. “We have to get that squared away first. What Norwood Young America does doesn’t hurt us. We would have a normal game plan, but we think they’ll use some WEM stuff.”

However, it wasn’t solely the Bucanneers’ defense that led to NRHEG’s low scoring output. Schultz told the Tribune after the game that his team had an off-night shooting. The Panthers hope to get back to the pinpoint accuracy that won them 57 straight games dating back to Dec. 21 of 2012.

Schultz, who surpassed 200 career head coaching victories, said he never coached against the Raiders.

Norwood Young America has the advantage of experience in close games this season, but NRHEG has the advantage in postseason experience.

The Panthers are the defending Class AA state champions, and they finished third at the state tournament two years ago.

However, NRHEG isn’t looking that far ahead.

“The girls aren’t thinking about the state tournament right now,” Schultz said. “They’re thinking Norwood Young America right now.”

The Panthers are led by two players who will play for the Minnesota Gophers next season: Carlie Wagner and Jade Schultz. Wagner scored more than 2,000 career points. Jade has more than 1,000 career points and rebounds.

 

Panthers, Raiders battle in finals

Who: NRHEG (27-0) vs. Norwood Young America (21-5)

What: Girls’ basketball: Section 2AA finals

When: 8 p.m. tonight

Where: Minnesota State, Mankato University

NRHEG production:  79.8 points per game, gives up 39.1 ppg

NYA production: 58.5 ppg, gives up 49.2 ppg