Thursday, 02 February 2012 21:08

Lopez leads Hemet in victory over West Valley

Written by  BOB OTTO
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HIGH SCORING MUSTANG: (left photo) Guard Sarai Ware finished with 13 points in the Mustangs 57-32 Mountain Pass League loss to the Hemet Bulldogs on Jan. 26. Ware has been averaging 19 points per game for West Valley and leads the league is scoring.  HEMET CENTER HARD TO STOP: (right photo) Hemet Bulldogs Cora Lopez, middle, proved a force around the basket as she scored 15 points and pulled down 9 rebounds in the Bulldogs 57-32 Mountain Pass League victory at Hemet High School, Jan. 26.------Photos by BOB OTTO/ For The Valley Chronicle HIGH SCORING MUSTANG: (left photo) Guard Sarai Ware finished with 13 points in the Mustangs 57-32 Mountain Pass League loss to the Hemet Bulldogs on Jan. 26. Ware has been averaging 19 points per game for West Valley and leads the league is scoring. HEMET CENTER HARD TO STOP: (right photo) Hemet Bulldogs Cora Lopez, middle, proved a force around the basket as she scored 15 points and pulled down 9 rebounds in the Bulldogs 57-32 Mountain Pass League victory at Hemet High School, Jan. 26.------Photos by BOB OTTO/ For The Valley Chronicle

The Hemet Bulldogs girls’ basketball team played the kind of game coach Andrea Ranney hoped for: solid inside with an aggressive defense. And as a result, the Bulldogs raced to a 57-32 Mountain Pass League victory over the visiting West Valley Mustangs on Jan. 26.

On the inside in the paint, Bulldogs 5’11” center Cora Lopez scored 15 points, while pulling down 9 rebounds. She was especially dominant in the first half, scoring 10 points – most from close range – as the Mustangs couldn’t stop her.

“Cora’s really solid,” Ranney said. “She’s an incredibly hard worker. She gets the rebound and gets down the court like a very quick guard. Not too many post players can do that.”

Kassie Ray with six rebounds and Brier Thomas with eight, also were key contributors in helping the Bulldogs control the boards.

Although Lopez, Ray, and Thomas did dominate the post area, Ranney said a key Mustangs post player Lauren Fischer was out with a knee injury, which made a big difference in West Valley’s game plan.

“Without her they were forced to shoot from the outside,” Ranney said. “And we only allowed them one shot; our rebounding made the difference.”

The win gives the Bulldogs a three-game win streak, improves their league record to 4-2, 13-8 overall, and keeps the Bulldogs in contention for a league title and a CIF-Southern Section playoff berth with four games left. Meanwhile, West Valley is 2-3, 10-9.

The game stayed close in the first quarter with Hemet holding a 9-8 lead at the close. But with Lopez’s eight points in the second quarter, the Bulldogs took a 22-13 lead into intermission. And they didn’t let up in the second half. Sparked by Monica Vasquez’s six points and two, three-pointers from Enid Field and Patricia Garcia (four treys, 12 points), the Bulldogs closed out the third quarter with a commanding 40-21 advantage.

Hemet also did a fine defensive job on the Mustangs high-scoring Sarai Ware. The senior guard came into the game leading the Mountain Pass in scoring with a 19 points per game average.

“The last time we played them, she scored 31,” Ranney said regarding Hemet’s 56-53 win on Jan. 10 at West Valley. “This time she got 13, so we are happy about that.”

Ware led West Valley in scoring, but she was the only Mustang to reach double figures.

Both teams finished up league play with two games this week (no score available at press time), and two the final week. Those final games could be huge in deciding the league standings and determining which teams qualify for playoffs. West Valley played at Citrus Hill on Tuesday and at Beaumont on Thursday. Hemet, meanwhile, traveled to San Jacinto on Tuesday and hosted Tahquitz on Thursday.

At this stage of the season, Ranney in her first year as varsity head coach, likes the improvement she’s seen from her team, which now has more wins this season in league play (4-2) than the previous three seasons combined (3-27).

“We are doing a better job of swinging the ball, and our defense is working well together,” she said. “We are finding a way to get it done.”

Last modified on Thursday, 02 February 2012 21:12

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