With Apache in mind, Nazareth beats Moore for return trip to Albany
12/11/12 - 02:25 PM

 

By JOSEPH STASZEWSKI
Last Updated: 4:55 AM, March 11, 2012
Posted: 3:27 AM, March 11, 2012

It was no time for a letdown and Ron Kelley made sure his Nazareth team knew it.

The co-coach got off the bench to start the fourth quarter with his team up 11 after three quarters and starting to surge and continuously yelled, “Let’s get it done! Let’s get done!” as he walked down the sideline.

It brought much of the school’s fans to their feet at Christ the King. One of late coach Apache Paschall’s goals was within reach.

“It inspired us,” junior guard Sadie Edwards said. “It motivated us. I think we came out in the beginning of the fourth quarter just ready to stick a fork in them and just end it.”

Nationally ranked Nazareth continued a 20-0 run over the third and fourth quarters, including 3-pointers from Edwards, Brianna Butler and Destini Feagin, to secure the school's second straight CHSAA Class AA state girls basketball title.

The Lady Kingmen beat Moore Catholic, 68-46, in the title game Saturday in Middle Village and advance to Albany to defend their state Federation crown in two weeks. They will be joined by their boys team, which rallied to win the CHSAA Class B state crown earlier in the day in a year where the school announced it will close in June.

“It was do or die,” Kelley said. “And they brought it.”

His words and the win completed a week of preparation and refocusing for Nazareth (18-3), which lost to Bishop Ford late in the year and was knocked off by Christ the King in the Brooklyn/Queens semifinals. Kelley said he and fellow coach Lauren Best showed the team a video of Paschall, who died in January from cardiac arrest, talking about how much he loved his players. They wanted to remind them of how proud he would be of them.

“He wanted us to win,” sophomore Bianca Cuevas said. “It means a lot for him. It does mean a lot for us.”

Added Kelley: “When we win games like this and we win championships. I always think about him first.”

Edwards led all scorers with 21 points, Cuevas had 19 and the Syracuse-bound Butler added 11 points. Jamie O’Hare tallied 17 points and Christina Rubin had 13 for Archdiocesan champion Moore Catholic (22-6). Gabriella Rubin and Taylor Robertson each chipped in eight. Kelley applauded the play of Feagin on O’Hare, who hit a 3 to cut the Nazareth lead to 40-34 with 2:53 left in the third.

But by the time the Lady Kingsmen’s run was over it was 60-34 with 5:13 remaining in the fourth. The usually hot-shooting Mavericks were held without a field goal until an O’Hare three-point play with 2:48 remaining in the game. Moore had a great run to the final, upsetting Bishop Ford and beating Archbishop Molloy in Briarwood in the semifinals. Mavericks coach Rich Postiglione said he felt Nazareth wore his team down a bit and is really tough to beat when they shoot well from the perimeter.

“I feel bad for our kids,” he said. “I’m proud of our kids, but I’m happy for [Nazareth]. Some of these kids are going on a second school closing. They have had a very difficult year with their coach.”

Playing for Paschall and completing the mission he put forth when the year began has been a rallying cry all season, especially this week and soon enough in Albany. It’s a journey the players believe he is taking with them still.

“We know that he is somewhere looking down on us,” Edwards said. “He’s going to be proud of us. I think winning this game and winning this season for him, that’s everything that he would ever want and everything that we want.”

jstaszewski@nypost.com

 

 

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Nazareth Vs. Bergtraum 2011 NY State Federation Championship
3/30/11 - 02:19 PM

Nazareth Vs Bergtraum NY State Federation Championship Streaming Video.
To view the Game in sections please click here!

 

 

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Naz coach breaks down after tumultuous year ends with Federation title
3/29/11 - 04:25 PM

Nazareth coach Apache Paschall hugs Taylor Ford in joy after winning the state Federation championship. Photo:An Rong Xu

ALBANY – Apache Paschall left his team’s celebration, wandered slowly over to the end of the bench and sat down. All alone, while the Lady Kingsmen hugged and clapped and cheered, the Nazareth coach bowed his head and cried.

When the players, who had just completed a 60-54 win over Murry Bergtraum in the New York State Federation Class AA championship game Sunday at the Times Union Center, saw Paschall, they were taken aback.

Most of them had never seen him tears in his eyes quite like that.

“He never tells us how he feels,” Naz junior point guard Darius Faulk said. “He always goes into some zone. He just looks. Stares. No emotions. He never shows emotions unless he’s mad.”


Paschall couldn’t contain himself Sunday afternoon. The thoughts of what had transpired over the last 365 days had flooded his mind. Almost one year ago to the day, St. Michael Academy announced it would close, leaving Paschall and his players without a school and a basketball program. It took months and countless trials and tribulations to find Nazareth.

The East Flatbush, Brooklyn school welcomed the former Eagles with open arms. But it was hardly smooth sailing from there. Early in the season, a published report chronicling Paschall’s recruiting exploits landed him in hot water with his new league, CHSAA Brooklyn/Queens Division I. The investigation took almost the entire season and the coach is now close to being cleared.

Days after the investigation story broke, Paschall was hospitalized with congestive heart failure, an affliction that he is still battling and will continue to battle. Add in smaller stuff, like Syracuse-bound star Tiffany Jones being jumped on the subway, and it has been an extremely long year for the coach and his girls.

“People don’t realize how hard it was to just keep it together, keep these kids together against all odds and just get to this point,” Paschall said. “All of us could have cracked at any time and we really, really stuck together as a family from Tiffany getting jumped, to my heart problems, to the investigation – everything.”

This Federation title, Paschall said, was much sweeter than the one he won two years ago at St. Mike’s. So when he left his assistant coaches to be by himself at the end of the bench, he reflected on all that has occurred and what this accomplishment means.

“It was relief and joy,” he said. “I’m tired. I enjoy being with the kids. They needed it. The school needed it. And I needed it. I needed this for myself. I needed it. It made everything worth it.”

Assistant coach Lauren Best wasn’t surprised Paschall broke down. But senior Taylor Ford was, but she knows everything was beginning to wear on the tough guy from the streets of the Lower East Side.

“Somebody is always talking about you, sooner or later you’re gonna break,” Ford said. “He doesn’t really break. But today I think it showed that he does have feelings, too.”

All of those came out at once. He thought of the CHSAA Brooklyn/Queens Division I regular-season and diocesan crowns, two titles owned by Christ the King over the last three decades. He thought about beating CK again two weeks in the CHSAA Class AA state championship. He couldn’t help but to be in awe of Sunday’s game, how his team that didn’t have a school last year got Nazareth its first-ever girls state Federation crown.

“One day these kids are gonna look back and they’re gonna reflect on that, that we did something that will probably never be done again,” Paschall said. “And it was great, man. It was great.”

mraimondi@nypost.com

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