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Dropping hot potato

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After falling behind by nine points in the second quarter, Seneca rallied against Lisle only to fall to the Lady Lions 44-41 in the Interstate Eight Conference game. (Herald Photo by Lisa Pesavento — lpesavento@morrisdailyherald.com)

SENECA — For a while in the first half of Monday's Interstate Eight Conference girls basketball game it looked like the fourth quarter would be anti-dramatic. After all Lisle was asserting itself as the consensus No. 1 seed in the league over hosting Seneca by chiseling out a nine-point lead with 5:53 to go before halftime.

However, a time out by Lady Irish coach Barb Beck seemed to get things turned around and because of it there was meaningful basketball to be played in the final minutes. When it was all said and done in the final I-8 game before the league tournament though, Lisle had managed to escape with a 44-41 victory when Irish guard Chelsie McCormick's heave ho from halfcourt fell short at the final horn.

Beck said the biggest difference between the early part of the game and the remainder was her team's patience on offense.

"They need to be patient on offense. Sometimes they treat the basketball like a hot potato," she said. "We're trying to find out who wants the ball and who is going to make the shots when we need them to so that we can be ready for the postseason."

Seneca opened the game 2-of-7 from the floor in falling behind 10-4. That lead then ballooned to 15-6 before Beck's timeout.

"We weren't being patient on offense and we also made a lot of turnovers," Seneca junior Danielle Hauch said. "I think a lot of it was our mistakes because we weren't being patient."

The Irish finished the quarter by making 5-of-7 from the floor before halftime to get the Lions lead down to 20-17.

"We started passing the ball and we scored," Hauch said. "That helped out. We played smart."

Beck said that Lisle's press was also part of the issue.

"You have to credit them and their press," Beck said. "It gave us fits. We weren't handling it smartly and because of it we were throwing a lot of balls away."

Seneca tied the game at 23-all mostly by playing its own trademark defense.

"The kids play hard on defense. I know I'm going to get that every night," Beck said. "But offensively we have to be more patient."

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