Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

FOUR-TIFIED

Archbishop Wood makes history with fourth straight state title, ninth overall

- By Andrew Robinson

The number four holds a lot of significan­ce for Ava Renninger. She’s the fourth of four siblings, the reason she wears No. 4 on her Archbishop Wood uniform and the meaning behind the small Roman numeral IV tattoo on her right bicep. Saturday night, it also held significan­ce of the prize in her final high school basketball game.

Renninger and the Vikings made history, defeating Cathedral Prep 37-27 in the Class 5A final for their fourth straight PIAA title and the program’s ninth overall, the most in state history.

“It’s kind of ironic it lined up that way,” Renninger said. “I didn’t know it was going to be history or a four-peat but it just happened to work out that way. It’s pretty cool.

“I guess it was meant to be.” The Vikings became the first team since Allentown Central Catholic from 2001-04 to quadpeat as state champions. Their ninth overall title moved them past Bishop Guilfoyle and North Catholic for first all-time in PIAA history.

Wood’s victory was the team’s most impressive of this latest state title run. Not only did the Vikings have to defeat the District 10 champion, they had to do it giving up a significan­t amount of size to a front line featuring 6-foot Jayden McBride (Georgetown) and 6-foot-2 Addie Biel plus a talented point guard in Lena Walz (St. Bonaventur­e).

Through some combinatio­n of the Ramblers’ size and the jitters that come with that first quarter in the Giant Center, Wood didn’t look like Wood through eight minutes. The Vikings fell behind 7-0 and usually steady finishers like Alexa Windish and Lauren Greer missed looks around the rim.

“I, unfortunat­ely, am our biggest player and their biggest players were a lot bigger, a lot more physical,” Wood junior Emily Knouse said. “I think the biggest thing for me was I recognized I didn’t have to go to the basket every time and have my stuff swatted into the stands, I could play my usual game and knock a few threes down, which I did.”

Knouse put in another yeoman’s effort, the St. Joe’s recruit scoring a game-high 12 and ripping eight rebounds while sizing up on the defensive end. Knouse gave Wood a pair of leads in the second quarter, then hit the game-tying three in the third that kicked off the Vikings’ goahead 8-0 run.

She and Renninger settled in and played confidentl­y, as expected from two of the team’s captains. Once they got their teammates to follow suit, it all turned around for the Vikings.

Coach Mike McDonald’s halftime message was simple enough. For as poorly as

Wood had played offensivel­y, it was a 16-16 game.

“Once we figured out what we needed to do, we were fortunate enough it was still a close game, if we locked down on defense then our shots were going to fall,” Renninger said. “Once we got momentum on defense, got a few stops, we were going to be able to pick it up.”

Greer was a bit frustrated at halftime. The senior had been pouring her all into defending McBride but her shot had betrayed her a bit, the co-captain 0-of-3 from three in the first half.

Renninger, ever the point guard, found Greer at half and told her teammate to keep shooting. She, Greer and Windish hadn’t stayed every day after practice and done all those shooting reps to lose confidence now and Renninger let Greer know the ball would be coming her way.

So it was, Renninger finding Greer at the top of the key, following a Wood offensive rebound and Greer nailing the go-ahead triple, then scoring off a back cut and dish from Makayla Finnegan to cap an 8-0 turnaround run.

“We put the history side apart but I was hit by it in the line for medals, definitely shedding a few tears,” Greer, who played her final game, said. “That was because we put in so much work to get here and it feels so rewarding we can leave with a triple crown getting the PCL, district and states.

“There’s so much to be happy and thankful for.”

McDonald called Greer’s three a key moment in the game. It forced the 6-foot-2 Biel out of the lane and put enough space in the Ramblers’ defense to ease some of Wood’s scoring trouble.

Greer has opted not to play in college, saying she’ll be attending St. Joe’s and focusing on her academic pursuits. She

 ?? ANDREW ROBINSON — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? The Archbishop Wood girls basketball team takes a photo with the PIAA championsh­ip trophy and a giant bar of chocolate after its 37-27win over Cathedral Prep in the Class 5A final on Saturday, March 23, 2024 at Giant Center in Hershey.
ANDREW ROBINSON — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP The Archbishop Wood girls basketball team takes a photo with the PIAA championsh­ip trophy and a giant bar of chocolate after its 37-27win over Cathedral Prep in the Class 5A final on Saturday, March 23, 2024 at Giant Center in Hershey.

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