I don't know if you can totally stop her. We contained her. We frustrated her tonight and we threw some junk defense at her and I thought that was the difference in the game.

This is a game we were really focused on. It was an embarrassing moment for me as a coach and for them as players, and they came out and played a heck of a game tonight.

We were visibly frustrated early on. We were apprehensive offensively. I am all for us making the necessary passes and getting good shots, but we do not need to make 40 passes to get that to happen.

When we were at the drawing for the tournament seeds last week, we were praying that we wouldn't have to face Meade. We didn't play well against them during the season and we knew they would be a tough team to face early in the tournament.

When good teams give you opportunities to score like that, you have to take them.

She makes so many things happen for us on the floor that I can't teach. Most kids don't see the floor, especially defensively, but she has a knack to play the passing lane and has an uncanny ability to get a hand on a pass. It seems like she is always in the right place at the right time.

You have to give them credit, their guards must have shot about 60 percent from the 15-, 17-foot range. When other teams do that and you miss your shots, you're going to lose a lot of ball games.

When I first saw her as a freshman that day, I knew she belonged. It was never a question with her. She was extremely confident.

She might not be the most skilled basketball player on the floor, but she makes up for it with her athleticism. She's usually the best all-around athlete on the floor. If I were going to make a poster for South River basketball, she would definitely be on it.