The Prince George Citizen

T-wolves toppled in Victoria

- Mario ANNICCHIAR­ICO Victoria Times Colonist

Katie Langdon more than earned her keep Saturday night.

The third-year University of Victoria Vikes forward turned in a gritty effort, battling UNBC Timberwolv­es’ post Vasiliki Louka down low all evening as the locals gutted out their eighth-straight victory in a 76-64 basketball win over the visitors.

Langdon finished with 10 points and 11 rebounds as the Vikes improved to 12-4, clinched their Canada West playoff spot over the weekend and now look for home-court advantage in the post-season.

Tasked with facing Louka, Langdon bore down, particular­ly in the second half, while youngsters Aleah Ashlee and Ashlyn Day were equally as determined in the win.

Amira Giannattas­io led the way offensivel­y for the Vikes with 13 points. Day, Ashlee and Kristy Gallagher all finished with 10 points apiece.

Louka had a game-high 19 points and 12 boards, but she had reached 15 and 10, respective­ly, by halftime. Maria Mongomo added 15 points and 10 rebounds for the Timberwolv­es and Madison Landry had 13 points.

“She’s a very good player, a very elite player in this league and probably one of the best post players we’ll meet,” a tired looking Langdon said of Louka afterward. “I think in the second half, we just really locked down on defence, got the boards.

“We rebounded a lot better in the second half and I think that was the big thing for us. She gave me a good battle.”

Louka and Mongomo took their turns eating up the Vikes inside in the first half, developing a 40-36 lead at the break after trailing 18-17 after the first quarter.

The biggest lead of the opening half was just five points as the Timberwolv­es led 29-24 midway through the second quarter. It was a tussle throughout until the Vikes opened it up in the dying minutes.

“They’re tough,” said Vikes coach Dani Sinclair. “Landry, Mongomo and Louka – those are starters on any team in our conference and they’re real tough.

“Katie deserves a lot of credit. In the first half, a lot of those points were put-backs. I think, in one possession, Louka had three offensive rebounds, but Katie limited her to one shot only and we brought some help to her. You know Louka is going to get her points, but we did a much better job in the second half.”

Sinclair was delighted with yet another team effort.

“We have kids who just play for the team and play hard, and Aleah is a prime example of that. She does whatever the team needs.” UVic defeated UNBC 76-70 on Friday. In men’s play, the Vikes bounced back with authority with an impressive 106-77 win over UNBC to improve to 9-7. UNBC had won 75-69 on Friday.

Justin Kinnear led the way with 29 points for UVic while Marcus MacKay paced the Twolves offence with 19 points. Volo Pluzhnikov finished with 15 and Tyrell Laing had 13 points.

The win left Victoria (9-7) in a three-way tie for sixth place, while the T-wolves (8-10) are 10th.

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