The Mercury News

Bishop O'Dowd finds Bishop Montgomery is state title material

- By Joseph Dycus jdycus@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Bishop O'Dowd's talented guards are quick. They are gifted passers, proficient dribblers, fearless.

But for all of their positive qualities, the Dragons are not tall.

Bishop O'Dowd met its match at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento on Friday night. Bishop Montgomery-Torrance possessed all of the Oakland school's qualities, but was also superior in height and athleticis­m.

O'Dowd still gave Bishop Montgomery everything it could handle in the 52-40 CIF Division I championsh­ip loss.

The Dragons used a 21-7 second-half run to battle back from a 21-point halftime deficit, but ran out of gas down the stretch as their SoCal opponent won its first state title since 2003.

“They have such willpower,” O'Dowd coach Malik McCord said about his team. “We had a hole to dig out of, and they fought, but the ball wouldn't go in tonight.”

It took 3½ minutes for Bishop Montgomery to take control. Jordin Blackmon made a short turnaround to start the game, and then sliced through the undersized Dragons defense for a layup. On her third score, the junior outran the defense down the floor for a 6-0 advantage.

Jayla Stokes briefly gave the O'Dowd supporters something to cheer about when she canned a corner 3-pointer, but Blackmon returned with another layup to answer.

Cyriah Coleman used her size to power through the O'Dowd rebounders for another putback, and Blackmon put an exclamatio­n mark on the run by splashing a 3-pointer from the Golden 1 Center's NBA distance.

McCord called a timeout as the shot maker ran down the court.

Bishop O'Dowd trailed 24-10 after one quarter, and then things went from bad to worse as the Dragons could muster only six points in the second. The Oakland private school was 6 for 30 from the field and was outscored 20-10 in the paint.

“I have three words for tonight's game,” Bishop Montgomery coach and alum Rheina Ale said. “We. Did. That.”

Bishop O'Dowd slowly inched its way back into the game, cutting the margin to 13 when Devin Cosgriff converted a tough doubleclut­ch layup with a minute and a half left in the third quarter. On the other end, Bishop Montgomery struggled to get good looks as guard Savannah Jones spearheade­d the re-energized O'Dowd press.

Jones said the run to the state final “meant everything.”

She added, “Being with Malik for four years, you want to get there with him, and do it for him and your team. I'm lucky that I got to do it with this group right here.”

Coleman answered Cosgriff's basket with a layup. But Cosgriff got the deficit back to 13 to end the quarter when she and Jones ran a perfect 2-on-1 fastbreak to make it 41-28.

The Dragons got as close as nine points in the fourth quarter, but a flurry of missed layups doomed them.

“It was in and out, it wasn't bad misses,” McCord said after his team shot less than 30% from the field. “But that just happens. That's basketball.”

“That's life. It doesn't always go your way.”

Stokes led the O'Dowd with 11 points, and Madison Gordon had eight points and six rebounds. Jones led the team with nine boards and five assists. Blackmon paced Bishop Montgomery with 15 points.

Bishop O'Dowd's loss in the program's sixth trip to the state championsh­ip was a dismal end to an otherwise banner season for the East Bay power.

O'Dowd's sensationa­l sophomores Cosgriff, Jayla Stokes and company hit their stride after a disastrous MLK Day loss at home to No. 1 Archbishop Mitty.

The Dragons won 14 of their next 15, their only defeat coming at the hands of San Ramon Valley in the NCS semifinals.

O'Dowd, seeded second in NorCal, routed St. Francis and St. Ignatius before defeating Oak Ridge in a competitiv­e semifinal game.

Cosgriff made the game-winning shot against Carondelet in the NorCal final, a short jump shot with three seconds left that handed the Dragons a 48-47 victory.

The Dragons (24-7) entered the title game with momentum, but unlike many medieval myths, their showdown with the Knights would not have a storybook ending.

Bishop Montgomery routed O'Dowd 57-33 at a winter tournament in Arizona, and the rematch wasn't much different. But even with his players in tears after the game, McCord ended the year on an optimistic note.

“We have the talent, and now we've added to that with experience,” McCord said. “I'm extremely excited. Be on the lookout.”

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Bishop O'Dowd's teary-eyed Savannah Jones, right, hugs Kiara McCoy after a loss to Bishop Montgomery in the CIF State Division I title game.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Bishop O'Dowd's teary-eyed Savannah Jones, right, hugs Kiara McCoy after a loss to Bishop Montgomery in the CIF State Division I title game.

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