The Arizona Republic

Alchesay pulls off another surprise run

- Theo Mackie

As he so often does this time of year, Rick Sanchez climbed a ladder, step by step, until his eyes met the net of Saturday’s 3A girls’ basketball championsh­ip game. Alchesay’s fans responded to Sanchez’s ascent with roaring applause, drawing a tip of the cap. Once that was done and he had severed the net from its rim, Sanchez raised it in his left hand, twirled it in circles and brought the crowd to its feet.

For the third time in five years, he and Alchesay were state champions. Given that the Falcons sat out the 2020-21 season due to COVID, it’s really three times in four tries. Somehow, each of those three has been more inexplicab­le than the last.

In 2019, they stormed through the 2A bracket as a No. 6 seed, winning each game by single digits. In 2022, they were a 6 seed again — this time in 3A, where they emerged from an upsetfille­d bracket by knocking off No. 12 seed Chinle in the title game.

This time, the seed beside the Falcons’ name was an 8. Again, it didn’t matter. With wins over Wickenburg, Snowflake and Window Rock, they earned a return to the state championsh­ip game. And by storming past No. 6 seed Show Low, 52-35, they earned yet another title there.

Afterward, neither Sanchez nor his players could quite explain their postseason magic. The answer, though, might lie in the thousands of Alchesay fans that surrounded them. Year after year, they caravan to wherever the Falcons are playing. On championsh­ip weekend, that means making the threehour journey down from Whiteriver and filling the 14,870-seat Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum to a near-sellout. In a sport often played in front of parents and friends in bare-bones gyms, that carries an intimidati­on factor.

“All of a sudden, some team comes in and you've got thousands of people yelling at you, you get the little shakes,” Sanchez said.

While the crowds increase nerves for Alchesay’s opponents, they give a boost to the Falcons themselves.

“It's like, when we can't stop, the crowd can't stop,” senior forward Jenieth Sanchez said. “So when we keep going, they keep going. And they keep us going as well and they push us.”

That’s certainly what happened Saturday, turning an even game on paper into a lopsided mismatch by the second quarter. At halftime, Alchesay already led, 30-18, behind 14 points from Sanchez, who finished with 18 and said afterwards, “I just felt like it was gonna be a good game. I felt it.”

By midway through the third quarter, the lead spread to 20 on a play that encapsulat­ed Alchesay’s success. The Falcons ran into traffic in the paint but kicked the ball out, moved it around the perimeter and found senior Jaylyn Nashio at the top of the arc to nail a three. In total, 12 of their 20 field goals were assisted.

“We just come together in the end,” Jenieth Sanchez said. “We just trust one another. We all know how each other play and we just all give it all our all in the end.”

From there, the afternoon was largely devoid of drama. Even when Show Low closed the deficit to 15 with four minutes left, bringing some tension into the affair, Sanchez responded by ripping through contact and finishing a lefthanded layup. As the ball fell through the hoop, she turned around, flexed and screamed as the crowd broke into their familiar chant of “Alchesay, you are the one.”

After Sanchez finished the threepoint play, Show Low never got the deficit back under 15. Once again, Alchesay was atop 3A.

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MEGAN MENDOZA/THE ?? The Alchesay High School girls basketball team poses for a photo after winning the 3A state final at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum.
REPUBLIC MEGAN MENDOZA/THE The Alchesay High School girls basketball team poses for a photo after winning the 3A state final at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

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