
It was the first game of the season and it was very evident at Freeport High School on Friday night.
Both the Freeport girls basketball team and visiting Poland struggled mightily out of the gates, combining on just five points in the first seven minutes of play. By halftime both sides were in desperate need of an adjustment, but only one made it.
The Knights drove to the basket over and over again in the second half, drawing contact and converting freethrows that eventually led to a decisive 40-20 Western Maine Conference road win.
“He did a great job with his packed-in zone and forced us to play at a slower pace than we’d like to,” Freeport coach Mike Hart said of Poland coach Mike Susi. “I think he had a good gameplan. We didn’t execute on our offensive end and when we had chances to make easy shots, we happened to miss them.”
Despite mustering just 12 points in the first half, Freeport (0-1) stuck around and clawed at the Poland (1-0) lead in the third quarter. A bucket, quick steal and another bucket from Taylor Dostie forced a timeout and cut the lead to 19-16 at the 3:16 mark.
“It was a pretty close game until he started to stall off minutes on the clock and preserve that lead that he had,” Hart said of Susi. “It was a good move by him. It was certainly something that slowed the pace down for us. Hard to play from behind when you don’t have the basketball.”
After the timeout, Nathalie Theriault and Poland took over. A 5-0 run to end the frame propelled the Knights into the fourth, where their halftime plan really got going.
Constant penetrating and foul-drawing drives to the basket led to trip after trip to the free-throw line. All but three of Poland’s buckets (all from Theriault) in the frame came from the stripe and led to 16 points.
“Coach really pushed us to attack until somebody tried to pick up on us, tried to stop us,” Theriault said. “We knew we had to take care of the ball because their press was good. We had to really cherish the ball and every second we had with it.”
“They were playing two people on Nathalie (Theriault),” Susi said. “We needed to get the ball up the court. We talked about ‘catch it, attack until somebody stops you and then make the next logical pass.’”
Theriault led all scorers with 22 points and hauled in nine boards on top of two assists. She gave Freeport fits in the second half, often dribbling through double-teams and finding teammates in the paint. She sunk 10-of-12 freethrows after halftime.
“Her athleticism,” Susi said of what makes Theriault so dynamic. “And her heart. She’s the kind of kid that’s going to give you everything that she’s absolutely got. She doesn’t quit on the play, ever.”
On the other end of the floor, turnover after turnover plagued the Falcons, who never adjusted to the Poland press. “It was a “tempo thing that we weren’t able to overcome,” said Hart.
Slow start
A last-second bucket from Poland’s Jessica Steeley kept the score from being 3-2 at the end of the first quarter. Both sides turned the ball over multiple times in the backcourt and there were nine steals in the first frame alone.
“There could have been a little bit of jitters,” Susi said. “I think mostly, though, we didn’t focus. Came out a little flat in the first half. We didn’t focus on, on the offensive end, getting our eyes on the rim, playing through contact and finishing. We had a bunch of lay-ups, we just didn’t finish them.”
Freeport’s lone bucket came inside from Megan Lynch, who added a second-quarter lay-up and a hoop-and-harm play late to finish with a team-high seven points. Freshman Caroline Smith added five points off the bench and Taylor Rinaldi finished with four.
The Falcons had almost as many offensive boards as they did points in the second half.
“At the end of the day, you have to tip the hat to them. They played harder than we did,” Hart said of Poland.
Freeport converted 2-of-9 free throws, while Poland hit 19-of-31.
“We’ve got to come back in the gym tomorrow,” Hart said. “We didn’t put together a good couple weeks of practice. We’ve got to execute better tomorrow, as soon as we get into the gym.”
Poland 40,
Freeport 20
Friday at Freeport High School
Poland — 5 8 11 16 — 40
Freepor t— 2 8 6 4—20
Poland — Nathalie Theriault 5-12-22,
Katelynn Greene 0-0-0, Sarah Moody
0-3-3, Jessica Steeley 4-4-12, Morgan Brousseau 0-1-1, Katelyn 0-2-2,
Victoria Tibbetts 0-0-0, Erin Ridley 0-
0-0. Totals — 9-22-40.
Freeport — Regan Lynch 3-1-7, Ireland Hall 0-0-0, Megan Cormier 1-0-
2, Taylor Rinaldi 2-0-4, Jessie Driscoll
0-0-0, Johanna Bogue Marlow 1-0-2,
Taylor Dostie 0-0-0, Caroline Smith 2-
1-5, Hannah Spaulding 0-0-0, Lindsay Routhier 0-0-0, Catriona Gould 0-
0-0. Totals — 9-2-20.
Records — Poland 1-0, Freeport 0-1.
Up next for the Falcons — Tuesday
at home against Waynflete, 7 p.m
Comments are not available on this story. Read more about why we allow commenting on some stories and not on others.
We believe it's important to offer commenting on certain stories as a benefit to our readers. At its best, our comments sections can be a productive platform for readers to engage with our journalism, offer thoughts on coverage and issues, and drive conversation in a respectful, solutions-based way. It's a form of open discourse that can be useful to our community, public officials, journalists and others.
We do not enable comments on everything — exceptions include most crime stories, and coverage involving personal tragedy or sensitive issues that invite personal attacks instead of thoughtful discussion.
You can read more here about our commenting policy and terms of use. More information is also found on our FAQs.
Show less