The Guardian (Charlottetown)

THE TEAM TO BEAT

UPEI the top-ranked team for AUS women’s championsh­ips in Halifax

- JASON MALLOY

UPEI top-ranked team for this weekend’s AUS women’s championsh­ips in Halifax

The UPEI Panthers have championsh­ip aspiration­s and a roster able to back up those lofty goals.

The squad enters the Atlantic University Sport women’s basketball championsh­ip in Halifax as the No. 1 seed.

The core of the team is in its third or fourth season with younger players earning key roles this season, making them deeper than in previous campaigns.

“Hopefully that experience will help us,” conference MVP Jenna Mae Ellsworth said before Tuesday’s practice. “We haven’t had success in the past, but we’re hoping to change that this year.”

UPEI is chasing its fifth conference title but first since 1992-93. The others came during a three-peat from 1986-87 to 1988-89.

The Panthers have a bye into Saturday’s 1 p.m. semifinal. They will play the winner of today’s Cape Breton-UNB contest with a chance to play for the conference banner Sunday at 1 p.m. for the first time since losing in the 2018 final to Acadia.

UPEI finished second in the regular season a year ago but lost to the Axewomen in the semifinal.

They are a different squad this time around, but some say the loss helped the team mature and be ready for this year’s quest.

“I think experience is definitely a necessity when it comes to the playoffs,” said Reese Baxendale, a third-year Panthers’ guard who made the conference’s first all-star team this year. “I’m really excited that we have had the two (or three) years under our belt. I think this year we have a really good chance.”

“We just need to focus on us and what we do,” said Ellsworth, the Charlottet­own native who was also the conference defensive player of the year. “If we play the way we’re capable of, I think, the (result) will go in our way.”

The keys to winning this weekend are simple to say, but not always easy to translate onto the court.

“Execution. Toughness. Dealing with the excitement and emotions of the moment,” said head coach Matt Gamblin said.

The Panthers are a battletest­ed team this season. UPEI went through injuries to key players during the season and the next-man-up approach has given the coaching staff an array of options to mix and match during a game.

They earned the top spot last weekend by going to St. John’s, N.L. – a tough place to play at the best of times – and sweeping a doublehead­er from third-place Memorial.

“It does speak to our toughness and the girls’ resolve,” said Gamblin, noting they played the last five games on the road.

Now the Panthers are looking to carry that momentum into the biggest weekend of the year.

Carolina Del Santo, a fourth-year centre from Barcelona,

Spain, said they want to show small universiti­es like UPEI can compete.

“People sometimes don’t think that they can do great things and we have to show that it can happen,” she said.

Del Santo and Ellsworth both said they will be back next year to complete their degrees but are focused on doing everything possible to win the championsh­ip this year.

“We really want to just show what we can do and we are determined this is our year,” Del Santo said.

And Tuesday, she said, there was a buzz around campus.

“Today I went to physio and people that I don’t even know came up to me and were like, ‘Great job being first this year and good luck for the championsh­ip’. That feels great,” she said.

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 ?? JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Lauren Fleming, a third-year forward from Sussex, N.B., and her UPEI Panthers play in Saturday’s Atlantic University Sport semifinal.
JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN Lauren Fleming, a third-year forward from Sussex, N.B., and her UPEI Panthers play in Saturday’s Atlantic University Sport semifinal.

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