Girls basketball: Alter wins D-II district title; Carroll, Tipp fall

Archbishop Alter's Maddie Moodie goes to the hoop during a 55-41 win over Summit Country Day Silver Knights in their Division II District final basketball game Friday, Feb. 24, 2023 at Mason Middle School. NICK GRAHAM/STAFF

Credit: Nick Graham

Credit: Nick Graham

Archbishop Alter's Maddie Moodie goes to the hoop during a 55-41 win over Summit Country Day Silver Knights in their Division II District final basketball game Friday, Feb. 24, 2023 at Mason Middle School. NICK GRAHAM/STAFF

MASON — The Division II girls basketball tripleheader at Mason on Friday was like a red carpet awards show for local teams,

Two 2022 state champions. Three teams that finished in the top 10 of the final Associated Press Division II statewide poll. Regional regulars all over the court.

Alter, the defending Division II state champion and the No. 1 team in the Division II statewide poll, dispatched third-seeded Summit Country Day, 54-41, to earn a berth in the regional semifinals against Badin. That game is scheduled to be played on Tuesday at Springfield High School. Tipoff is set for 8 p.m.

The regional final is set for Friday at 7 p.m.

Badin jumped out to leads of 12-0 and 20-3 on the way to a 53-39 win over Greater Catholic League Co-Ed Division-rival Carroll. The win was the Rams’ third of the season over the Patriots after sweeping the two-game regular-season series.

Carroll went into the game with a four-game winning streak and wins in seven of its last eight games before finishing 15-11.

The Knights, who improved to 23-3 with their eighth straight win, and Rams split their two regular-season games with each team winning on the other’s home floor after Alter knocked Badin out of last season’s tournament in the regional finals.

Archbishop Alter Knights celebrate their 55-41 win over Summit Country Day Silver Knights in their Division II District final basketball game Friday, Feb. 24, 2023 at Mason Middle School. NICK GRAHAM/STAFF

Credit: Nick Graham

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Credit: Nick Graham

In the third game of the night, Purcell Marian rushed out to a 14-0 lead on the way to a 55-20 win over Tippecanoe. The top-seeded Cavaliers, who won last season’s Division III state championship and are ranked fifth in the AP Division II poll, improved to 23-2 and will take a 13-game winning streak into a 6 p.m. semifinal against a Central District team.

The sixth-seeded Red Devils saw their four-game winning streak snapped and finish 18-8.

In the tripleheader’s opener, Alter weathered a drought of field goals that lasted almost eight minutes bridging the first and second quarters to pull away for the win over Summit Country Day. Sophomore forward Maddie Moody overcame foul trouble to lead the Knights with 14 points, starting with the conventional three-point play with 3:07 left in the second quarter that started the comeback from the Silver Knights game-high 11-point lead.

Alter, which edged Summit Country Day, 45-44, on Dec. 21, ended the half on an 11-2 run.

“We were able to get Maddie on the floor,” Knights’ coach Christina Hart said. “She does a lot for us. We made some shots and that helped us relax.”

“We were going offense-defense because I got into foul trouble,” the 6-foot-1 Moody said. “They were smart about it.”

Moody admitted that she and her teammates had mixed feelings about the deficit.

“We were frustrated, but we also knew we had to stay positive and be there for each other,” Moody said.

Junior Hannah Mayse scored 13 points and junior guard-forward Riley Smith added 10 for the Knights, who took the lead for good with 1:52 left in the third quarter on a layup by 6-1 forward Mekhia Shipp, Alter’s only senior. They ended the game on a 16-5 run and forced 16 turnovers.

Summit Country Day, which competes in the Miami Valley Conference, saw a seven-game winning streak snapped and finishes 19-6.

The game was delayed briefly by a lighting problem with 5:34 left in the  third quarter.

The Patriots clawed back to cut Badin’s lead to 26-20 in the second quarter of the middle game before Badin pulled away.

“We start three freshmen,” Carroll coach Cecilia Grosselin said. “I don’t think they were ready for the environment.”

“I’m proud that we got this far,” she added. “At the beginning of the season, I wasn’t thinking about reaching a district final. I couldn’t be more proud. We also told them were proud of the way they came back.”

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