Saturday, February 25, 2023

Yellow Jackets Win Third Straight Regional Championship Versus Gainesville

 

Osbourn Park celebrate after their 64-29 regional championship win over Gainesville. It's their seventh win in a row and fourth over the Cardinals. 
(photo via Helen Jones)

The Osbourn Park Yellow Jackets played their third game in four nights on Friday. They'd show no signs of fatigue, winning 64-29. It was their seventh win in a row and their third regional championship in three seasons. 

Gainesville would be without their top player, junior guard Madison McKenzie. Despite her absence, the Cardinals kept things competitive in the first quarter. Senior guard Kennedy McCala would break the ice with an early basket. Osbourn Park sophomore center Alex Brown would assert herself early, answering with an offensive rebound and putback. 

Senior forward Kori Cole would steal the ball and outlet it to senior guard Alana Powell who found Brown for two and a 6-2 OP lead. 

Brown would score again off another assist by Powell, amassing Osbourn Park's first eight points with 3:28 left in the opening quarter. I caught up with her to discuss that immediate impact. 

"It felt good to give my team that push. Last time versus Gainesville I didn't have my best game. I just wanted to leave it all out on the floor. The energy of the crowd gave us the energy to win tonight," said Brown. 

That energy would be buzzing through the Osbourn Park gymnasium all night, a strong show of support right ahead of the state playoffs.

Brown would finish with 12 points, 5 rebounds and 1 steal. Osbourn Park head coach Chrissy Kelly spoke on her efforts.

"There's a lot of pressure on these kids. AB looks like she's 25, but she's still 15. It's a maturation process. She needs to know she has the support. We've gone to her a lot more and she trusts in herself because we trust her. She's able to play her game."

OP would end the first with a 12-8 lead. 

Senior Yellow Jacket guard Danielle Darfour would be fouled early in the second quarter and make her first of two free throws. OP would unfortunately commit a lane violation, nullifying her second one. Alana Powell would soon after find junior guard Angie Yann for a three-pointer, Yann's first of two from deep and one of Powell's 6 assists. 

Alana Powell sinks a free throw, going 4-4 from the charity stripe on the night. 
(photo via Helen Jones)

Powell was far from done, stealing and scoring less than 20 seconds later, adding a free throw in for good measure and a 19-10 OP lead with 6:12 left in the first half. 

She would add another steal and score, followed by a Kori Cole defensive rebound and coast-to-coast finish at the other end to increase their lead to 26-12 at the 3:45 mark. 

The Cedar District Player of the Year would continue to dominate, scoring 11 of her 21 during the second quarter. Gainesville responded with a 7-0 run to get within 11. Powell countered by capping off the half with a jumper as time expired to give her team a 34-21 lead.

Freshman guard Jayel West would look to pass to Alana Powell for three. The senior guard would draw a foul and sink all three free throws. West would then steal the ball and dish it to Danielle Darfour for two. Darfour would pickpocket a Cardinal guard and convert the basket, putting her team up 41-21 only a minute into the half. 

A scary moment occurred when Jayel West was diving for a loose ball and collided with a Gainesville player, causing a minor back injury. Osbourn Park athletic trainers, head coach Chrissy Kelly and West's mother gathered by her to check on her. She'd get helped up moments later to the delight of everyone in attendance and even return later in the game. I got a chance to check on her afterwards.

"I was a little shaken up, but I did some exercises with our trainer and felt better after."

I also inquired about where her steely resolve comes from, as she never seems frazzled by anything. 

"It comes from all the preparation and practice. I'm just am always like that naturally."

Alana Powell cuts down a piece of the net following the team's third consecutive regional championship. She'd total 21 points on 8-16 shooting, adding 6 assists, 4 steals and 3 rebounds. 
(photo via Helen Jones)

Despite the stoppage in play, Osbourn Park would remain laser-focused. They'd rack up five assists over the next five possessions with the final one being a Kori Cole assist to freshman Samia Snead. It would finish off a 20-0 run in less than four minutes. A Kennedy McCala three-pointer would end the Cardinals' scoring drought and be their only points of the quarter. 

With seconds left in the third, Samia Snead pushed the ball up the court. She dazzled fans with a wrap-around bounce pass to fellow freshman Keyarah Rainey as the buzzer sounded and OP up 56-24. 

Snead was not done impressing the OP crowd, snagging a rebound and taking it all the way with a crafty scoop layup and a 61-25 advantage. She'd also score the team's final points with a three-pointer with 1:35 left in the game. 

Osbourn Park seconds after the final buzzer sounded.
(photo via Helen Jones)

Osbourn Park head coach Chrissy Kelly gathered her thoughts after the game.

"They were down a tremendous player in Madison McKenzie, but were well-coached throughout. I'm happy it went the way it did. I'm grateful for my principal and my athletic director. They really have pushed for the student body to be here. They showed up and showed out. It made all the difference, and that's why you play for homecourt advantage."

Alana Powell spoke to that homecourt advantage as well.

"Coming in tonight and seeing all of our family and friends as we cut the nets down- just that atmosphere being at home, it really helps us want to go harder. It shows how much our school loves each other."

But with a whole week in between games, I asked Coach Kelly if there's a worry of losing focus.

"Until we know who we are playing, it's hard to lock in. But once we come back Tuesday for practice and we have more details, that's it. There's a lot we can fine-tune until then and get better at in the mean time."

The endgame is not lost on Powell as the state playoffs approach next Friday.

"I love my team and am super proud of what we did tonight. Doing this for my team, my school and my family- I want to be able to complete something that's bigger than myself."


Game Notes:

- Osbourn Park's next game Friday night will return to the pre-Covid format of having states at a neutral site which has yet to be determined.

- Alex Brown committed two fouls with 3:47 left in the first quarter, but remained in. She wouldn't be called for any other fouls the rest of the game. 

- OP's 20-0 run in the third quarter brings their streak of games with a 16+ point run to five straight. 

- The Osbourn Park defense forced 28 turnovers, including 15 steals. 

- The Yellow Jackets shot 25-48 (52%) and 4-20 (20%) from beyond the arc.

- Both teams shot 6-12 from the free throw line. 


For more on the Yellow Jackets, follow them on Twitter and Instagram


Like it? Love it? Hate it? Let me know @SeanNeutron on Twitter.

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Osbourn Park Overpowers Colgan in Regional Semifinal Win

 

Osbourn Park Chrissy Kelly convenes with her team during a timeout.
(photo via Helen Jones)

Osbourn Park and Colgan first played on December 2nd resulting in a 63-37 OP win. Things would not fare better the second time around for the visitors as Osbourn Park's second win in as many nights came in a 66-31 thrashing of the Sharks on Wednesday. 

Things got off to an admittedly slow start on Tuesday versus Woodbridge for OP. That would not be the case in the first quarter versus Colgan. Sophomore Alex Brown's opening tip went directly to Alana Powell who raced to their basket for an easy 2-0 lead mere seconds into the game. Powell would then gather a rebound and get the ball to Kori Cole who would draw a foul and drain both free throws. 

Cole would find Alex Brown on their next possession for a basket inside to increase it to 6-0 with 5:53 to go in the opening quarter. Alana Powell kept her foot on the accelerator, laying the ball in for two. She'd immediately steal the ball and score again. Colgan would be forced to call a timeout down 10-0 at the 4:58 mark. I caught up with her about her hot hand.

"We practice every day like we're preparing for the state championship. We take it to heart- that urgency, that intensity. We incorporate that into our practice and shootaround. Having that mentality and consistency really helps our energy from the jump."

Cedar District Player of the Year Alana Powell led Osbourn Park with 17 points on 7-10 shooting.
(photo via Helen Jones)

Powell's fingerprints would remain all over the game as she found Brown for a basket, then stole the ball again and scored. Colgan would finally break the drought with a free throw with 2:58 left in the quarter to make it 16-1.

Colgan junior guard Jaclyn Robinson would hit a three-pointer that helped fuel an 8-4 run to end the quarter with OP up 20-8. 

After a brief rest, Alana Powell would return to hit another basket, but the scoring duties would be lightened by junior guard Angie Yann. Senior guard Danielle Darfour found the sharpshooter for  a three-pointer at the 4:14 mark of the second quarter. Alex Brown would also link up with Yann less than a minute later for another three as OP opened up a 28-12 lead. 

Yann would finish the game with 9 points on 3-4 shooting from beyond the arc. 

"I had been in a slump. My teammates and my coaches helped talk me through it, telling me to not put my head down. Keep shooting because it would come eventually. I was on a roll and that encouragement kept me going," said Yann. 

Chrissy Kelly discusses strategy during a pause in the game with junior guard Angie Yann. Yann would be a sparkplug off the bench for OP.
(photo via Helen Jones)

Powell would get in on the action from deep, hitting a three ninety seconds later. Yann wasn't done making an impact, as a steal of hers led to Powell finding freshman Samia Snead for a layup to increase the lead to 20 points. OP went into the half up 35-13. 

Osbourn Park's swarming defense would continue to cause problems for the Sharks. Kori Cole would score a basket then steal the ball immediately and find Alana Powell. Powell then snagged another steal herself and found Jayel West for a hoop and the harm as OP led 42-15 with 6:40 to go in the third quarter. 

A pair of free throws for Alana Powell would cap off an 11-0 OP run and give them a 46-15 lead. It was powered in part by freshman guard Keyarah Rainey's hustle. During the run she'd have a block that led to a basket, then an offensive rebound that led to her going 2-2 from the free throw line. 

Despite her sustained individual success each game, the humble Rainey was quick to defer all credit to her teammates. 

"We're just trying to get better by working hard, building off our mistakes and trying to be perfect. We were working to get to states, and I want to impact the game as best I can."

A three by Angie Yann would make it 51-17, then Colgan would finish the third quarter on a 5-0 run to make it 51-22. 

Jayel West and Danielle Darfour surround Colgan sophomore Maria Barksdale. This was just one example of their defensive pressure, resulting in 14 steals for the Yellow Jackets.
(photo via Helen Jones)

A Jayel West steal would lead to her sinking two free throws. Her four steals tied Alana Powell most on the night. Keyarah Rainey would then grab her fourth rebound and outlet the ball to Samia Snead who found freshman Jaelyn Gorham for a three-pointer. 

Chrissy Kelly would empty her bench with 2:09 to go in the game.

"I did a mass substitution early on and was managing the game, then their coach countered. It's like a chess game. We have to get the job done on defense. When our focus transitions to offense, it allows those runs by the other team. It's happening a lot and we can't have that."

One player I've noticed with even more confidence and improvement since last year is center Alex Brown. The sophomore had 6 points on a perfect 3-3 from the field, 6 rebounds and 1 block. 

"We look for the mismatch and try to capitalize. I've had a lot more help from my coaches and teammates. I'm maturing into a bigger role as a leader on the team, and I just look to stay focused."

OP qualified for the state playoffs after defeating Colgan, but their sights remain set on Friday's regional final versus Gainesville Cardinals (23-3, 10-2). It's the two teams' second game in a week. The Yellow Jackets (22-4, 11-1) are 3-0 this season against them, averaging 62 points per game an allowing 32.8 points. 

"We've got to focus on getting better on the defensive end. We have to capitalize on opportunities, possessions and collectively doing our job," said Kelly.

The game tips off at 6 pm Friday night at Osbourn Park.

For more on Osbourn Park, follow them @OPHSWBB on Twitter and Instagram


Game Notes:

-The opening scoring frenzy would be the team's fourth game in a row with a run of 16 points or more. 

- Jayel West would tie Angie Yann for second in points (9) and also added 4 steals.

- Osbourn Park finished with 11 assists, led by Alana Powell's 4. 

- Through the team's current six game winning streak, Osbourn Park is averaging 63.2 points per game and only allowing 29.3. 

- Senior Kori Cole added 8 points, 5 rebounds 1 assist and 2 steals. 

- Colgan senior guard Alana Jones took a textbook charge in the second half that would be called a block by the officials. She'd laugh off the call, but from my viewpoint shoulders were square and feet were set. 

- OP finished shooting 25-43 (58%) and 5-20 (25%) from beyond the arc. 

- The Yellow Jackets shot 11-16 (69%)  from the charity stripe to Colgan's 8-20 (40%). 


Like it? Love it? Hate it? Let me know @SeanNeutron.

Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Yellow Jackets Sink Vikings in Regional Quarterfinals



Coming off a Cedar District Championship win last Friday over Gainesville, the Osbourn Park Yellow Jackets focused their attention on the regional playoff quarterfinals versus Woodbridge at home. The Vikings would fall to OP, 72-32. 

Woodbridge guard Trinity Henderson kicked the scoring off with a three-pointer at the 6:05 mark. It would be answered with a basket from OP senior guard Alana Powell. Powell would follow that up with a steal and draw a foul trying for a layup. She'd hit one of two free throws to knot that game at 3-3. She'd find freshman guard Jayel West for a basket and the home team's first lead of the night at 5-3. 

Coming out of a Woodbridge timeout, the Vikings would take a 9-6 lead that would be countered by a Keyarah Rainey assist to sophomore center Alex Brown. A barrage of steals and baskets involving freshman Samia Snead, Keyarah Rainey would extend their lead to six at 15-9. Trinity Henderson would draw a foul on Alex Brown for a hoop and the harm, pulling her team within three points at 15-12 as the first quarter ended. 

Woodbridge would turn the ball over early in the second quarter after a five-second violation on offense. OP would hit a rhythm, capped off by a steal and score by senior guard Danielle Darfour to give her team a 23-15 lead with 6:40 left in the first half. 

A questionable blocking call on senior forward Kori Cole would allow Vikings senior center Imani Sanders to hit one of two free throws and draw the ire of the OP faithful. The Yellow Jackets worked quickly to make fans forget after an offensive rebound by Jayel West led to a three-pointer by Danielle Darfour. That was followed up by a Powell assist to Kori Cole to extend their lead to 30-19. OP would carry a 36-22 lead into the half. 

The Yellow Jackets would be up 39-24 before another Trinity Henderson three-pointer made it 39-27. Osbourn Park would snuff out any intentions Woodbridge had of coming back with a 16-0 run to extend the lead to 55-27. Their selfless play was on full display with assists from three players and scoring from eight players via baskets inside, three-pointers and free throws. The run was snapped after almost five minutes with a Trinity Henderson basket at the 43 second mark in the third quarter. 

Alana Powell would end the quarter on a high note, draining her second three-pointer in under a minute to give OP a 58-29 lead heading into the final quarter. 

Osbourn Park head coach Chrissy Kelly would give her bench a chance for most of the fourth quarter. A steal by junior guard Angie Yann would lead to a Samia Snead three-pointer off an assist from Alex Brown to make it 61-29. The Yellow Jackets used a 12-3 quarter to finish off a 36-10 half capped off by two free throws from freshman guard Jaelyn Gorham. 

Keyarah Rainey led all OP scorers with 14 points on 7-9 shooting, adding 5 rebounds, 4 assists and one steal. 

I spoke with Samia Snead following the game. She'd be the team's second highest scorer with 12 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists and one steal. 

"After the first quarter, Coach Kelly pulled us together and we started playing more for each other. We weren't focused with a different mindset, but we'd eventually play our game."

Snead would speak to where she gets her composure from as a freshman playing quality minutes in the playoffs. 

"I get it from Alana (Powell). I came into the season really immature like any other freshman. I've had conversations with her and watch what she does and I was able to build on my maturity. I'm still a freshman, but I feel like I have to be a senior on the court."

I then caught up with Alana Powell.

"I'm just happy we were able to pull it together in the end. We started off kind of slow and my teammates picked up my slack in the first half. After our talk at halftime and how encouraging my teammates were, I was able to knock down those shots in the second half."

Powell then spoke to Snead's praise of her. 

"She's grown so much and to see her thrive in big games like this is great to see. She'd been applying all the advice we've given her." 

Kori Cole only had 2 points, but her effect on the game with 5 rebounds and 7 steals more than made up for it. 

"We didn't expect the first half to go like it did. We didn't come in here cocky or anything, but we were hopeful. Our freshman really stepped up today," said Cole. 

Those freshman (Snead, Rainey and West) would combine for 36 of the team's 72 points.

Finally I talked to Chrissy Kelly to get her thoughts on the forty point win.

"I have to remember it is tournament time and there are nerves, expectations, energy and adrenaline. It can all be draining, so we started off slow. Jayel West came out as a different player today. She did a really good job."

Kelly would use a variety of lineups throughout the game, constantly keeping Woodbridge on their heels. 

"The hardest part of coaching is finding that right chemistry. When you go to the bench, you don't know. You're hoping all the practice has prepared them for that moment and to be a gamechanger. We use different mixtures of players with our various styles of defense."

The Yellow Jackets (21-4, 11-1) don't have too much time to celebrate, as they host the Colgan Sharks (16-9, 8-4) Wednesday at 6 PM in the regional semi-finals. 

Game Notes:


- OP had 4 double-digit scorers: Keyarah Rainey (14), Samia Snead (12), Alana Powell (11) and Jayel West (10). 

- Osbourn Park shot 25-48 (52%) from the field and 5-15 (33%) from three-point land. They'd shoot 17-24 (71%) from the free throw line.

- The Yellow Jackets finished the game with 32 rebounds (11 offensive), 14 assists and 18 steals. 

- Alex Brown had 9 points, 6 rebounds and one assist. She also had two blocks, both early in the first quarter. 

- Sophomore Julia Mathews made the most of her minutes with 6 points and drew a crucial charge late in the game. 


For more on Osbourn Park girl's basketball, follow them on Twitter at @OPHSWBB and on Instagram at @OPHSWBB










Friday, February 17, 2023

Osbourn Park Downs Gainesville to Repeat as Cedar District Champions

Osbourn Park defended their Cedar District champion crown Friday night at home in a 52-42 win over Gainesville. 
(photo via Koshala Myers Cole)

The Osbourn Park Yellow Jackets (20-4, 14-1) followed up Wednesday's dominant win over Freedom (South Riding)  with an impressive 52-42 victory against the Gainesville Cardinals (21-3, 10-3). Despite the double digit win, the Cardinals made the hosts earn it in every sense of the word. It was OP's third win against Gainesville this season. 

Gainesville broke the ice with a three-pointer from star guard Madison McKenzie. OP would answer with senior Kori Cole's 1-2 from the free throw line and senior Alana Powell's steal and score to knot things at 3 early. 

The game would remain tight at 5-5 when Osbourn Park's swarming defensive pressure caused Cedar District Coach of the Year Daniel Nemerow to call a timeout with 4:58 left in the first quarter. The passionate home crowd would be lively all game as an unofficial sixth man on the floor at all times. 

Coming out of the timeout, the Cardinals turned it over and Kori Cole converted it into two points. A few offensive fouls and a turnover later, Gainesville ended the first quarter down 11-6. 

Freshman phenom Samia Snead kicked things off for OP in the second quarter with a three-pointer to put her team up 14-6. She'd finish the game with 9 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist and 2 steals. 

The Cardinals would answer a few minutes later with a three from senior guard Kennedy McCalla to narrow the lead to 16-11. A barrage of Yellow Jacket baskets from Cole, Powell, junior Angie Yann and freshman Keyarah Rainey over the final 4:20 of the first half would put their team up 28-11. 

Gainesville would use an 8-0 run of their own in the third quarter to get within 11 points at 30-19. Osbourn Park answered with a quick 4-0 run when Alana Powell found AB for two and Keyarah Rainey snagged an offensive rebound and putback. Freshman guard Jayel West got in on the action with a three-pointer which was immediately countered by the Cardinals with a hoop and harm from Madison McKenzie. The visitors used a 17-12 quarter to gain ground on OP. 

Senior forward Kori Cole (middle) recorded a double-double with 10 points, 10 rebounds, 4 steals and 3 assists. 
(photo via Helen Jones)

McKenzie was far from done, knocking down a pair of free throws to start the fourth and driving for a basket. Despite outscoring Osbourn Park 14-12 in the final quarter, the closest the Cardinals would get would be within nine points. 

As the final buzzer sounded, Osbourn Park embraced each other and were presented with the Cedar District Championship trophy as fans cheered on. I was able to catch up with Kori Cole after the game to discuss her intense effort and effect on the game. 

"I just really wanted to win. It just comes out as emotion for me. There were some calls that didn't go our way, and that was frustrating. Gainesville is the one team you have to go all out for. You have to grind from the beginning to finish."

Alana Powell was coming off a 22 point performance versus Freedom (South Riding). Despite only scoring 4 points against Gainesville, she found ways to stay involved with 5 rebounds, 5 assists and a steal. 

"We preach 'playing for each other'. If I'm off, someone else picks up the slack. Balanced scoring like we had tonight is when we seem to have our best games. It shows a lot how everyone on this team cares about our success."

Samia Snead (far left) is one of Osbourn Park's impact freshmen. She finished with 9 points, 2 rebounds, 2 steals and 1 assist Friday night. 
(photo via Helen Jones)

I also asked Powell about what it's like facing such a tough team three times in one season. 

"As you play the teams over and over, it gets a little bit harder. I have a lot of respect for their coach (Daniel Nemerow) who won Coach of the Year. They're a great team. Having competition like that is really fun and games like this are highly anticipated since it's the top two seeds in the district."

Despite the accolade of repeating as District champs, head coach Chrissy Kelly reiterated there's plenty to improve on before regionals.

"We have to be better. An alarming statistic which has been a huge issue for us is going 14-31 in layups. We missed wide open layups. If the other team is making those on the other end, it's a huge concern from a momentum-shifting perspective. You work so hard to get opportunities and when you don't execute them- you leave doors open. With Gainesville, you can't leave them open."

I asked coach about the team's balanced scoring effort. 

"We've been working on understanding your responsibility. It's not going to be one person. It's going to be a collective effort. Our freshmen Samia Snead, Jayel West and Keyarah Rainey bring so much. If we can continue to get that contribution on top of making our layups, I think we're a pretty good team."

We pivoted to what needs to happen between now and Tuesday's home regional playoff game versus Woodbridge (10-13, 9-3) who come in having won five of their last six games.

"Get better. When we didn't do our job on defense after missed layups, we got stuck in our emotions from the missed layup. We can enjoy the moment now- but the stage only gets bigger."

Alana Powell and Kori Cole look to set the tone in practices leading up to Tuesday.

"We're going to work hard on Saturday, go over offense and defense and do what it takes to win," said Cole.

"We're going to try to clean up the little things. Being able to get this win with the performance we had, it's only up from here and pick up where we left off," Powell reiterated. 


Game Notes

- Freshman Keyarah Rainey joined Kori Cole as the team's other double-digit scorer with 10 points, 3 rebounds (all offensive) and 3 steals. 

- Sophomore center Alex Brown finished with 9 points and 4 rebounds (three offensive).

- OP left points at the charity stripe, shooting 9-17. 

This was the second game in a row OP closed the half on a 17-0 run. 

- This is the third game in a row the Yellow Jackets beat a team named after a bird. (Eagles, Eagles, Cardinals).

- Osbourn Park finished the game shooting 19-46 (41%) and 5-13 (38%) from beyond the arc. 

- Gainesville had a slight edge in the turnover department with 10 to OP's 12. 

- The Yellow Jackets grabbed 28 rebounds (10 offensive), had 11 assists and 13 steals.



 








Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Yellow Jackets Soar Past Eagles in District Semifinals

The Osbourn Park girls came out of the gates with a convincing 58-26 win after almost two weeks since their last game. 
(photo via Helen Jones)

After wrapping up an 18-4 season on February 3rd with a 64-30 win over the Osbourn Eagles, the lady Yellow Jackets clipped another set of wings with a resounding 58-26 win over Freedom (South Riding) in the Cedar District playoff semi-finals. 

Osbourn Park would jump out to a 6-2 lead early, thanks to baskets by seniors Alana Powell and Kori Cole. Cole would get an early steal and assist, too. 

Freedom would keep it close at 6-4 with a basket at the 3:57 mark of the first quarter. Powell would sink another basket, while freshman dynamo Keyarah Rainey would record a steal and finish at the other end to put OP up 12-4 with 2:58 left in the first quarter. They'd finish the quarter up 14-8. 

If anyone thought rust would be an issue for Osbourn Park, they dispelled any notions with an absolutely dominating second quarter. Rainey found sophomore center Alex Brown for two early in the quarter. Brown and Powell would use the free throw line to increase the lead as well, sinking three of four shots and doubling up Freedom at 18-9. After two more Powell baskets (one off of a steal), Freedom would be forced to call a timeout with 2:32 left in the first half. 

Out of the timeout, freshman point guard Samia Snead would snag a steal and dish to Brown for a bucket. Junior guard Angie Yann got involved on defense with a steal of her own and an assist to Rainey to put OP up 28-9 with 1:50 to go in the second quarter. 

Yann would look to score from deep with a beautiful, high-arcing three-pointer, but a three second violation would nullify it. Not to be deterred, Keyarah Rainey would continue to fill up the stat sheet with two more steals, an assist and layup as OP went into the half up 33-9. They finished the final 6:20 of the half on a 17-0 run, and only allowed a single point for the entire quarter. 

Rainey would finish with a remarkably balanced box score: 6 points, 7 rebounds (all offensive), 5 assists and an absurd 8 steals.

The third quarter would play a bit tighter, as Osbourn Park finished with a 12-9 advantage. After an Eagle basket, OP would go on an 8-0 run which included a jumper by Alana Powell and a three-pointer assisted by Kori Cole. Rainey would crash the offensive glass and find - who else- Alana Powell for a hoop and harm as the home team went up 41-11 and would finish up 45-18 after three quarters. 

Sophomore Julia Matthews got in on the fun with a basket at the 6:43 mark of the final quarter. Alex Brown would link up with Alana Powell for another and-one. Moments later, Powell's final basket came off another steal, putting OP up 52-20. The Cedar District Player of the Year would finish the game 9-14, (1-2 from three) with 22 points, 3 rebounds and 2 steals. She'd also go 3-4 from the charity stripe. I caught up with her after the game. 



Cedar District Player of the Year Alana Powell led all scorers with 22 points on 9-14 shooting.
(photo via Helen Jones)

"I feel really good. We had a slow start with it being the first game of the playoffs. Nerves are expected. We adjusted very well. Having a freshman like Samia on the floor with me being able to take the ball-handling pressure off me creates opportunities for me."

Powell mentioned winning the Cedar District Player of the Year was in part due to her close friendship with former Yellow Jacket Hailey Kellogg who won the award last year and is now playing at Christopher Newport University

"I just tried to follow in her footsteps and grind all year. But we haven't done much yet in the playoffs as a team. That chip on our shoulder every day is what keeps me and my teammates going."

That chip on the shoulder most definitely comes from head coach Chrissy Kelly who never lets her team rest on its laurels or become complacent. 

"I'm proud of my girls. They really worked hard, and give everything every single day. Any coach is looking for that level of perfection- but we have to fall in love with imperfection. In the imperfection that occurs is their ability to be molded into being as close to perfect as possible. You get caught up in the moment sometimes and forget they want it, too and are doing everything in their power to get there. They settled down after the nerves in the first quarter and did a lot of great things. I love that all my kids get to play."



Osbourn Park's Cedar District semi-final win puts them on a collision course with Gainesville (21-2, 10-2) at home on Friday at 6 pm. 
(photo via Helen Jones)


Coach Kelly and I would then discuss freshman Keyarah Rainey's versatility on the floor.

"I'm glad she plays for us," Kelly said with a smile.

"She's another freshman who missed the first ten games of the season and continues to grow. That's what I love about her. Her stat line is such an unselfish stat line. She understands it. What you need in that moment, she can get you. I'm glad we have her for three more years."

Up next for Osbourn Park (19-4, 12-1) are the Gainesville Cardinals (21-2, 10-2) at home Friday at 6 pm. Gainesville's only two losses are against Osbourn Park (56-50 and 37-33). 

The Cardinals come into the matchup averaging 59.5 points per game and giving up 32.1. Osbourn Park's totals are close at 56.7 and 30.9.

"They are very good. They're talented and athletic at every position. They are a well-coached team. Everything about them is what makes them hard to beat. We have to play from this point forward pretty close-to-perfect games. We need to keep our focus high with practice tomorrow and carry it into Friday."

Alana Powell echoed that sentiment. 

"They're very skilled and well-coached. We aren't looking past them. We just need to get back at it tomorrow and grind in practice."

For more on the Osbourn Park girl's team, follow them on Twitter at @OPHSWBB and Instagram @OPHSWBB