Fansmanship Podcast Episode 217 – Chris Sylvester and Brint Wahlberg
It’s another podcast episode! Cal Poly basketball teams are at the Big...
On every glance at the Cal Poly bench, coach Faith Mimnaugh was either giving an order to her team, pumping her fist, or in what looked like a defensive stance.
When the final horn sounded Saturday afternoon at the Honda Center, Mimnaugh’s intensity turned to tears and smiles after the Mustangs came out on top of Pacific 63-49 to win the Big West Tournament Championship.
The game was one that Pacific, the regular season champs, could never quite get their arms around. Each time it looked like they had Cal Poly on their heels, the Mustangs got a bucket. Just when it seemed a Cal Poly player was trapped, the double-team would be split, or the Cal Poly player would draw a foul. It was a matter of one team matching the other’s aggression and welcoming the physicality that was sure to come.
Pacific played as hard as they could, generally kept the ball out of Molly Schlemer’s hands, and executed a good game plan. In the the final analysis, though things just didn’t go their way (the same can be said of the Cal Poly men’s team, who lost to Pacific the previous night in the tournament semifinal). Instead, in her 16th season at the helm for Cal Poly, Mimnaugh got her first Big West tournament title. Next week, Cal Poly will go to its first NCAA Tournament since the program moved to Division I.
Mimnaugh reflected after the game on what it took to get the Mustangs to this place. When she started, the coaching staff included just her and one other volunteer coach who also had a job as a sorority house mother to help pay the bills.
“To go from [a] place, where we were two people running this thing, to build the program to this level, it’s just, it’s a lot of work. More than I thought it’d take,” said Mimnaugh after the game. “I think when you’ve been doing it as long as I have and you keep dreaming and you keep pushing and kind of wondering if it was ever going to happen, that’s where the real satisfaction comes in for me.”
To get to the game Mimnaugh’s team beat UCSB in the semifinals on Friday afternoon, setting-up a rematch with Pacific. UCSB did all they could to challenge the inside presence of Molly Schlemer, but couldn’t find an answer as Schlemer, the Big West Player of the Year, scored 26 points and grabbed 9 rebounds.
In the championship game, Schlemer’s presence continued to be felt. Double and triple-teamed from the beginning, Schlemer managed only 7 points in the final but managed to gather 16 rebounds, crucial after senior Kayla Griffin went down with a season — and career — ending injury.
While Pacific shut-down Schlemer’s offense, Ariana Elegado made the Tigers pay, scoring 22 points including three 3-pointers. Seniors Caroline Reeves and Nikol Allison stepped in and each scored 10 points as Pacific dared Cal Poly to beat them with someone other than Schlemer or the injured Griffin.
Cal Poly’s defense, a much-improved part of their game this season, held Pacific to 20-61 shooting in the game (32.8%).
Last year was supposed to be the year for Cal Poly. The tournament draw seemed just right, Kristina Santiago was healthy, and all signs pointed to Cal Poly as the tournament favorite. Instead, they didn’t even make the finals, bounced in their first game by an intrepid Long Beach State squad. The loss seemed crushing for a team that was losing a player who was clearly the best in the Big West.
Enter this year’s less-heralded bunch. Last season guard Jonae Ervin led the country in Assist-Turnover Ratio, but she was injured coming into the season and there were a fair number of questions marks. Ervin eventually made it back and those question marks were answered by break-out performances.
This year’s team has played better defense and has had break-out performances by Schlemer, a junior, and Ariana Elegado, a talented sophomore guard. While Schlemer earned Tournament MVP honors (16.5 points and 12.5 rebounds per game in the tournament), Elegado also was named to the all-tournament team. It was a fitting way to cap a season where Elegado has been asked to play both point guard and off-guard and be a source of points throughout the year.
The defensive stance by coach Faith Mimnaugh broke only once all game, when senior forward Kayla Griffin, a team leader and Cal Poly’s only player to start every game this season, tore two ligaments in her knee while chasing down a loose ball. Griffin collapsed on the baseline in front of the Cal Poly bench and, while Pacific went the other way, scoring a bucket about 10 seconds later, Mimnaugh’s total attention was on the senior forward, consoling her until the referees finally blew their whistle so that medical staff could attend to Griffin.
“That’s just the type of lady Coach Faith is,” said Schlemer. “She cares about us as human beings, not just her players… . I wasn’t surprised at all. It’s just the kind of thing she does and it’s amazing.”
In a year where a team finally found their identity, a coach not caring about what was going on on the floor may have been all you need to know about this year’s Big West Tournament champs.
See more photos of the championship game and celebration on our Facebook page: www.facebook.com/fansmanship .
Some video is now also up at www.youtube.com/fansmanship.
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