Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Norwin has come a long way

- By Sarah K. Spencer

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Norwin senior guard Magen Polczynski is about 5 feet5.

But, if you were at Norwin’s 62-30 win against Erie McDowell Feb. 2, you likely heard her height announced as5-10.

It’s an inside joke among the smaller-sized, less-experience­d team, which has won four consecutiv­e games after starting out the season 1-5, that she grows a half an inch each home game. The reality is, though, Polczynski is small and so are the Knights — but recentlyit hasn’t been holding themback.

The first two weeks of the season were a challenge for the Knights, who returned one starter from last year in Polczynski and have one player, senior Mia Nicholes, listed at 5-11. They lost four games at the North Allegheny tournament to Mt. Lebanon, North Allegheny, Chartiers Valley and Abington, with a 15-point section loss to LatrobeDec. 22. Norwin lost to Chartiers Valley and Abingtonby three points each.

“I definitely think it was frustratin­g, and it takes a toll on everyone when you’re so close every time,” said Polczynski, who averages 12.4 points and 3.3 assists per game. “But we have a good dynamic on our team. Everything we did will push us in playoffs.”

The goal wasn’t to dominate at the beginning of the year, but play their best basketball come the last stretch of theseason and playoffs.

“I think the competitio­n and strength of our schedule we played at the beginning of the year was key,” Norwin coach Brian Brozeski, in his seventh year as coach, said. “We knew it was going to be tough start… We wanted to challenge ourselves at the beginning and see what areas we needed to improve upon.”

Youth may have showed during that stretch, but Brozeski looks at it as a learning experience instead of a slump.

“We never classified it as a slump,” Brozeski said. “We knew what we were going into... There are times you’re looking at a loss and you played well but it didn’t go your way. On the flip side, there are times you won but playedlike crap.

“Everything is gearing us up to play our best basketball atthe end of the year.”

TheKnights get solid guard play and perimeter shooting from Polczynski as well as 5-7 sophomore Olivia Gribble and 5-8 junior Jess Kolesar. Gribble averages 11.6 points per game and Kolesar averages 4.8. Sophomore guard Jayla Wehner averages 10.1 pointsand 3.1 assists.

Norwin, which won backto-back WPIAL titles in 2014 and 2015, avenged its loss to Latrobe with a 58-54 win Jan. 24 and could be named the WPIAL Class 6A Section 2 champion if it beats Hempfield Friday. A loss would tie the Knights with Hempfield andpotenti­ally Latrobe.

The Knights weren’t section champions last year and are motivated for the game, as well as a postseason run, Polczynski­said.

“Thatbond that we have really helps us push each other further,”Polczynski said. “We know we can trust each other. We’re smaller, and we know that we’re the underdog, but I thinkif we push each other we cango far.”

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