The girls knew from the start of the season that today’s match would be the biggest challenge. They faced Shannon Forest in the regular season and in the championship last year, and while they won both matches, they went to three sets, and each match was a real battle.
Today, when I arrived, I glanced at the scoreboard and saw our girls were down 15-10. Other than a few moments at the beginning of this or that set, it’s about the only time they’ve been behind, and certainly the only time they’d been that far behind that far into the game. They would pull back within two points or so and then lose another two points.
I didn’t think their undefeated streak would win — I thought they’d win the final two sets if they lost the first one. They just weren’t playing 100%. And to their credit, their opponents were making phenomenal saves. They didn’t have as many heavy hitters as we do, but they took most of the serves and many of the hits and converted them. Still, I thought the girls’ perfect season (and by that, I mean not a single set lost) might end this afternoon. In the end, though, they came back to win it 25-22.
The second set started off with our girls jumping into an early, big lead of 7-1. With a lead like that, which they maintained for most of the game (at one point it was 20-12), I thought it was a done deal. The girls of Shannon Forest had other plans, though. One thing everyone has to give those SF girls is that they never give up. Down eight points, with our girls lacking only 5 points to victory while they had to double their score and then some, they still fought for every ball. And they started clawing back. And soon it was 21-17. And I thought, “They might do to our girls what our girls just did to them.” But it seemed impossible: our girls are good. They can take the hits, pop them up to the setter, who sets up one of three frontline hitters, who can then almost always hit well and often hit with incredible power and speed.
With every point, the home team scored, the home crowd erupted. The SF girls danced and screamed with each point as they pulled it back to 23-22. I could understand their joy: the Langston girls were the big dogs, so to speak. They’d rolled through the season last year and took the championship. They were doing the same this year. To take them down, to take one set — I’ve been in that position. Not in sports but in academic bowl competitions. In the final match of the year, our team took down an until-then undefeated team.
Just one point down.
But it was not to be. They made a couple of errors, and we had a good hit or two, and it was all over. Our perfect season is still perfect, with one more match tomorrow night.
In the championship tournament, though, Shannon Forest will likely meet our girls again. And they will remember how they began that first set. And they will be out for revenge.
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