Acrobatic shot by Wright gives Lady Hawks win over Lutheran

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Oregon's Emy Wright puts a shot up over a Rockford Lutheran defender. Photo by Chris Johnson
Oregon's Emy Wright puts a shot up over a Rockford Lutheran defender. Photo by Chris Johnson
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"That was like a SportsCenter highlight," supplied Oregon coach Kristy Eckardt. "Emy's so athletic and so strong, she can get in the air and get a shot off in traffic – she showed all of that in that one huge shot."

"She's a phenomenal player who made a phenomenal play when her team needed it," Rockford Lutheran coach Joni Carlson said. "That was a great shot at the end, and hats off to her and to Oregon."

But even as incredible as the tying shot was, Wright's ability to take a deep breath and calm her adrenaline rush enough to hit the ensuing free throw to put Oregon up by one was just as impressive.

"I knew it was for the lead, but we shoot pressure free throws at practice all the time," Wright said. "It felt just as great to hit that as it did when the shot went in."

The final 3.9 seconds took much longer. Oregon called a timeout following the free throw, then Lutheran's inbounds pass pinballed between Oregon's Bree Tourtillott and Lutheran's Sam Rundblade. It appeared to go off Rundblade's leg and out of bounds, but the Crusaders (6-1, 1-1) were awarded possession.

That inbounds pass from the sideline appeared to sail over everyone's head and out of bounds on the baseline, but Lutheran was again awarded the ball when officials said Oregon (5-2, 2-0) tipped it … with 3 seconds still remaining.

The inbounds pass went to 6-foot-1 freshman Abby Woollacott (17 points, 18 rebounds, 6 blocks) in the lane, and she was fouled. But she missed both free throws – the second on her second lane violation of the night – and Wright, who was fouled after taking the in-bounds pass for the Hawks, canned two more free throws with 0.4 seconds left.

"It felt like we had nine lives there at the end," Carlson said. "I don't know how we kept getting chances, but we didn't capitalize at the end and Oregon did. We didn't do what we needed to win; it shouldn't have even come down to the last seconds."

"It seemed like a lifetime," Eckardt added, "and I even said something to my assistant coaches about, 'How long can 3 seconds take?' But we did a great job stepping up and stopping them over and over."

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