Friday Sectionals: Blistering 1st quarter provided by Costello, Adams propels Lady Lions to B2 Semis with win over No. 6 Attica; No. 1 Fillmore, No. 3 GV/Belfast girls both advance to D1 Semis
STORY BY JOHN ANDERSON/WELLSVILLE SUN
WELLSVILLE — The Class B1 and B2 brackets for girls' basketball in Section V are as strong as they have ever been in the history of the open tournament.
The Wellsville Lions knew No. 6 Attica would be a tough foe in the quarterfinals at the Lions Den with size and quick, athletic guards and a tough full-court pressure defense.
However, the Wellsville seniors once again took over, scoring a blistering 21 points in the first quarter led by Marley Adams with a couple 3-pointers and nine points and Emily Costello with two 3's and eight points.
The early lead was all Wellsville would need in a 49-39 victory.
"I thought we played, well, we came out ready for Attica and executed," Adams said. "I thought we hit our shots and played well. They are a very good team and it was good to get ready for Livonia."
No. 3 Wellsville (16-4) will play No. 2 Livonia (16-5) at HFL on Monday at 6 p.m. In the second game, No. 1 Midlakes (16-5) plays No. Penn Yan (13-8) at 7:45 p.m. at HFL.
Jaeylnn Knapp scored 14 and shot 58% from the field with five rebounds to lead Wellsville's offense. Knapp put the game away with eight points in the second quarter as Wellsville led 31-14 at the half.
"We don't have a Big 3, it's like a 4 and 5 people on the floor who can score at anytime," Wellsville coach Michelle Alvord said.
Adams, a senior, finished with 12 points, seven rebounds, three assists and four steals while freshman McKenna Dunbar showed great touch passing for a center with four assists, five rebounds, a steal and six points.
Seniors Kaylee Coleman (three assists, two rebounds) and Jaylynn Mess (four rebounds) were a big part of the defensive domination in the first half.
“It was a slow start at first, and then Marley and Emily started to heat up with their threes. Jaelyn basically led us in the second quarter to keep it going, and then it was by committee the rest of the way," Alvord said. "Coleman did a great job on their leading scorer, she didn't have a field goal in the first half. We have a big three, but all five starters gave us a great confidence builder with the big lead to work with at the half, and maintain it.”
Costello, a senior guard, had 13 points and mixed it up inside with six rebounds, three assists and three steals.
Adams said she is concerned about Livonia's size and speed on the floor.
"(Junior forward Kylie) Buckley is good inside and (Kelsey) Stewart is a good guard," said Adams of the two Livonia stars who were able to scout Friday night as Livonia played on Thursday. "They have the size and they play good defense as a team."
Alvord felt the same way. Buckley has scored over 1,600 points in her career and is the leading scorer in Livonia's storied history. Livonia beat Wellsville in 2016 in the crossovers on the way to a state title.
“Buckley averages almost 25 a game for Livonia, so we have to key on her," Alvord said. "They have some great, strong outside help to couple with it as well. We will have our work cut out for us, but we have two days to prepare and hopefully we will be ready for the challenge. We have to handle their press, and keep our composure.”
Attica 11 3 11 14 – 39
Wellsville 21 10 19 9 – 49
ATTICA: Tori Walker 1 4-6 6, Mackenzie McLeod 1 0-0 2, Madalyn Robinson 1 0-0 2, Emily Gadd 1 2-2 4, Emily Gersitz 3 1-2 7, Chase Harding 5 1-2 14, Olivia Mercado 2 0-0 4. Totals: 14 8-12 39.
WELLSVILLE: Marley Adams 4 2-4 12, Emily Costello 5 0-1 13, Jaelyn Knapp 7 0-0 14, Sara Reitz 1 0-0 2, Kaylee Coleman 1 0-0 2, Makenna Dunbar 3 0-0 6. Totals: 21 2-5 49.
3-point goals: Attica 3 (Harding), Wellsville 5 (Costello 3, Adams 2).
Total Fouls: Attica 7, Wellsville 10. Fouled out: None.
Class D1 Quarterfinals
No. 3 Genesee Valley/Belfast 62, No. 6 South Seneca 56
BELMONT — Going into their first game of the second season, Genesee Valley/Belfast coach Jim Schneider said that they were going to have their hands full against a strong foe representing the Finger Lakes region. A foe that has been known to become a force in year’s past, no matter what bracket that landed within — the Lady Falcons of South Seneca.
That became evident on Friday after the Lady JagDogs started red hot in the opening half, including a first quarter where they a big lead to work with going into halftime. In the second half, a different story, as the No. 6 Lady Falcons began to chip away at their deficit, taking giant leaps forward to put the pressure on late.
The Lady Falcons would inch closer to within range of the three-seeds, but the Lady JagDogs sought some incredibly clutch help come from one of their leaders down the homestretch — Harley Proctor, as she scored a massive pair of jumpers on back-to-back transitions to essentially put the game on lock for Genesee Valley/Belfast, as they squeezed their way into the Class D1 Semifinal round with a 62-56 victory on their home floor in the Jungle.
“Our effort tonight was incredible. The first half, we came out and played our style of basketball,” said Schneider. “They full-court pressed us, and we did everything right against it. We settled back into our defense, and we did everything. I told the girls at halftime that they’re probably going to go to man-to-man, and they did. Once we got our screens where we needed them, we could go up and down the floor against them.”
The first quarter was as good of a start as any for the Lady JagDogs (16-5) out of the gate, holding South Seneca in check through the opening eight minutes behind solid stands of defense, and a balanced offense to score a 12-4 lead. The momentum shifted into the second, when the hosts saw the rise of Mary Hamer take shape, as she scored 10 of the team’s 19 points in the quarter, 14 in all in the entire first half to ignite the offense.
But the tables started to turn the opposite direction when the second half came around, as South Seneca turned up the heat on the Lady JagDogs, scoring a massive 23-point frame led by a red hot start from sharpshooter Chloe Shaulis, who sank a pair of three-pointers to key an offense that provided a 23-12 run to close the gap to five after a 31-15 deficit going into the locker room.
A run that became a sign of concern.
“It got a bit sloppy on a few of their runs. Third quarter comes, and they came out on fire,” said Schneider. “The Shaulis girl comes out with a couple of quick threes, and it hurt us right away. At that point, we started getting into some foul trouble, and it became tougher to defend the way that we like defending. South Seneca was physical tonight, and even after all that happened, we were able to battle through the adversity in the end to get this done.”
That the Lady JagDogs did in the fourth quarter.
In those last eight minutes, they went back and forth with South Seneca until the end. As the visitors in black began to cut down the deficit little by little, Genesee Valley/Belfast went on to deliver a massive punch, scoring inside baskets on back-to-back possessions that ultimately saw their advantage grow out of reach of the Lady Falcons down the homestretch, as they hosts did all that was possible to hang on in the end.
Proctor was one of three Lady JagDogs that recorded eight points to lead a balanced offensive effort, scoring all of her points in the last eight minutes of play. Helping the cause was Alicia Borden and Adison Grusendorf, who also had eight points. Leading the scoring was Hamer, who posted a game-high 21 points.
Genesee Valley/Belfast now advances into the Class D1 Semifinal round, which will begin on Monday with a road trip up to Letchworth to take on No. 2 Notre Dame-Batavia for a spot in next weekend’s Finals. For Schneider, he hopes his Lady JagDogs are up for perhaps their biggest challenge yet this season.
“I told the girls that we had to get past South Seneca, and chances are, we were going to have Notre Dame after that. We have to put on our socks in the morning just like they do on Monday. We’ll be prepared for that game, and we should be ready for the challenge it brings. Semifinal games are always a bugger to be in, but at the end of the day, someone has to go home. Hopefully we can do the right things to be that team that moves on. They’re going to bring everything they got, just like we are.”
South Seneca 4 11 23 18 – 56
Genesee Valley/Belfast 12 19 12 19 – 62
SOUTH SENECA: Ciera Babcock 7 1-3 16, Chloe Shaulis 4 0-0 14, Makenzie Snyder 0 2-2 2, Alysa Elder 4 2-3 11, Chloe Scott 1 0-2 2, Phalyn Covert 0 2-2 2, Haley Parry 3 0-0 7, Ava Utter 1 0-0 2. Totals: 20 7-12 56.
GV/BELFAST: Alicia Borden 2 4-11 8, Anna Drozdowski 2 0-4 5, Adison Grusendorf 4 0-1 8, Mary Hamer 9 3-4 21, Kaitlin Sadler 4 4-6 12, Harley Proctor 3 2-2 8. Totals: 22 12-26 62.
3-point goals: SS 7 (Shaulis 3, Babcock, Elder, Scott, Parry), GVB 1 (Drozdowski).
Total Fouls: SS 26, GVB 19. Fouled out: Scott (SS).
No. 1 Fillmore 53, No. 8 Wheatland-Chili 31
FILLMORE — At the beginning of the school year, the tone was set for the Lady Eagles of Fillmore when they rewrote the school’s history books with a soccer season like no other.
The hope entering the winter season was to continuing adding to the foundation. Construction began on Friday, when Class D1’s top seed opened up for business inside The Rock against a No. 8 Wheatland-Chili team looking to give the Lady Eagles everything they could handle. Through the opening half, they would do just that.
Although the Lady Wildcats deficit was 11 at the break, the Lady Eagles brought their best offense to the table to start the second half, as they insurmountably marched their way toward victory with a big third quarter run that branched their advantage for good, as they cruised into the Class D1 Semifinal round with a 53-31 home win to eliminate the Lady Wildcats.
The Lady Eagles (21-0) had to shake things off early on in the first half against Wheatland-Chili, as they fought through a slow back-and-forth battle through each quarter to work their way toward a 23-14 lead of the Lady Wildcats right at the break, including a 14-8 lead through the opening eight.
But then, the rust was completely shaken off by the time the third quarter came around, as they conducted a 17-8 run led by a tremendous trio of Hope Russell, Jadyn Mucher and Emma Cole, helping the hosts in white and green push their lead out of reach from the Lady Wildcats, using the final eight minute period to officially punch their ticket to the Semifinal round after the weekend.
Cole would finish with a game-high 21 points to lead the Fillmore offense, pairing them with 14 rebounds to complete a double-double. Russell added in 12 points of her own to go with six steals, while Mucher collected 11 points and 10 rebounds of her own accord, completing a second double-double on the evening.
The Lady Eagles will now head North up the road on Monday for the Class D1 Semifinal round, as they prepare to face No. 5 Arkport/Canaseraga in a 7:45 p.m. tip-off at Letchworth, following the first Semifinal bout between No. 3 Genesee Valley/Belfast and No. 2 Notre Dame-Batavia.
Fillmore defeated Arkport/Canaseraga earlier this season, 52-32
Wheatland-Chili 8 6 8 9 – 31
Fillmore 14 9 17 13 – 53
WHEATLAND-CHILI: Chyene Whitcomb 2 0-0 5, Emily Parker 3 0-0 7, Jaeda Mekker 2 0-2 4, Vanessa Guerrero 1 0-0 2, Christina Schwenebraten 1 0-0 3, Jayla Haenle 1 2-2 4, Lauren Nelson 1 4-6 6. Totals: 11 6-10 31.
FILLMORE: Hope Russell 5 0-2 12, Jadyn Mucher 3 5-6 11, Emma Cole 10 1-5 21, Zoe Beardsley 2 0-0 5, Preslee Miller 0 2-2 2, Madi Geertman 0 0-2 0, Amelia Rose 0 2-2 2. Totals: 20 10-19 53.
3-point goals: W-C 3 (Whitcomb, Parker, Schwenebraten), Fillmore 2 (Russell, Beardsley).
Total Fouls: W-C 13, Fillmore 9. Fouled out: Parker (W-C).
BOYS BASKETBALL
Class C3 Quarterfinals
No. 4 York 81, No. 5 Bolivar-Richburg 70
RETSOF — The typical 5-4 matchup in any sport usually pits two fairly similar teams against one another. For Bolivar-Richburg and York in the Class C3 bracket, that would turn into a heavyweight fight of the season for the Wolverines.
Back and forth inside the squared circle that was of the hardwood on the confines of York Central School, both the Wolverines and Golden Knights delivered blow after blow, after blow. Both teams took the hits, but not one could put the other onto the ground.
But then, a sudden opening was created in the second quarter. The Golden Knights helped create that immensely after a one-point lead after the first eight minutes, as they went off on a huge run to end the half. Despite it being cut back down by the five-seeds, the No. 4 seeds garnered enough momentum to carry into the second half to outlast their opposition, as they survived the bout with an 81-70 high-scoring elimination of the Wolverines on Friday.
“The boys played very well. York has a pretty good team, and they went on a little run in the second quarter that branched it out,” said Wolverines coach Jeff Margeson. “We tried to work it back, but the high energy and high pace, it got away from us. I can’t explain how proud I am of these boys to give it all they had tonight. They gave this York team a run, and they’re a lot like Avoca/Prattsburgh in the fact that they have a deep bench, they all played together and they’re consistently rotating guys in and out. I felt like we had everything, but we needed that last missing part. It was a great atmosphere, and my guys never quit. They went to battle all four quarters.”
Bolivar-Richburg (13-7) gave everything they had left in the tank to provide one incredible showing through their Quarterfinal tussle with the Golden Knights, as they hung right alongside one another through a highly-competitive first quarter that saw the hosts grab the one-point lead.
With the 17-16 lead to work with going ahead, York found an opening to create some breathing room against the Wolverines, as they ran off towards a 17-4 jaunt across the majority of the frame before the visitors in black and red ended the first half with the last seven points in a row to shift the pendulum back towards the middle heading into the locker room.
“That second quarter wasn't a bad quarter, but it bounced around a bit,” said Margeson. “We got it to within four, but they were strong and deep. It wasn't like we ran out of gas, it was one of those heavyweight boxing matches. They threw a few punches, we'd get a few back at them. We did get into foul trouble, but it was by far our best game of the season.”
Within reach of the Golden Knights for the second half, the battle continued on.
York’s lead would cut across double-digit territory when the third quarter approached, as they continued to keep the game at their pace. Later on, the advantage grew to as much as 18 which would keep the Golden Knights out front for good, despite Bolivar-Richburg making one last effort in their last eight minutes of the season.
The Wolverines would go on to gain traction down the homestretch with an enormous 26-point fourth quarter as one last effort to try and pin the Golden Knights up against the wall. But the deficit would never find its way lower than 10, as the hosts in white and purple saw their arms get raised at the end of the 32-minute heavyweight fight with the corresponding baskets to answer the call.
Despite the hard-fought defeat, Bolivar-Richburg saw four of their five scorers eclipse double figures, with Landon Danaher leading the charge one last time with a team-high 20 points to go with a pair of steals. Cam MacDonell chipped in with a 16-point, 11-board double-double, while Wyatt Karnuth and Aydin Sisson followed with 13, and 12 points respectively, with Karnuth chipping in three assists and two steals along the way.
Pacing the team’s three-point game from downtown was Evan Pinney, who rounded off the offensive effort with three treys out of six in all, for nine points.
A breakout season for the Wolverines is now history, as the team concludes its 2021-22 campaign with a record of 13-7 overall. The team will lose four pivotal pieces to their puzzle on the hardwood, in Danaher, MacDonell, Karnuth and Jacopo Canepa.
Margeson says those Seniors were a humongous reason why his team provided so much success, noting that the shoes they leave behind, will be incredibly tough to fill.
“I don’t know how we will fill it next year,” he said. “These guys have made my job easy, and they made it fun. It was a great final game for them, and there’s nothing that they have to be ashamed about. I feel like a fan myself being able to watch Cam and Landon do what they do every night they play together. It’s a wish for any coach to have them. To give you an example: As we walked off, York had one of their security guards say to me that they showed amazing sportsmanship. These guys gave me so many memories to remember, and I would go to battle any day of the week for them.”
Bolivar-Richburg 16 11 17 26 – 70
York 17 17 24 23 – 81
BOLIVAR-RICHBURG: Aydin Sisson 4 3-3 12, Landon Danaher 6 7-9 20, Wyatt Karnuth 4 4-6 13, Evan Pinney 3 0-0 9, Cam MacDonell 6 4-5 16. Totals: 23 18-23 70.
YORK: Greg Jaroszek 0 2-2 2, Adam Swede 4 0-0 12, Maddox Timothy 9 3-7 23, Connor Rodwell 5 1-2 11, Tyler Brady 6 8-8 20, Jake Pangrazio 2 1-1 6, Joe Bauer 1 0-0 3. Totals: 27 19-26 81.
3-point goals: B-R 6 (Pinney 3, Sisson, Danaher, Karnuth), York 8 (Swede 4, Timothy 2, Pangrazio, Bauer).
Total Fouls: B-R 22, York 17. Fouled out: None.
Class D2 Quarterfinals
No. 6 Jasper-Troupsburg 58, No. 3 Belfast 35
BELFAST — It was a Class D2 Quarterfinal that saw the Bulldogs of Belfast continuing to fight their way back from against No. 6 Jasper-Troupsburg. They would get as close as five points, but the No. 3 seeds soon saw that deficit turn into an avalanche, as the Wildcats found a wave to ride on until the end to provide the upset win over the road on Friday, recording the 58-35 victory.
Stats and a complete box score were not made available to report upon publication.
Belfast concludes their 2021-22 campaign with a record of 12-8 overall, and Allegany County’s Division II title outright. The Bulldogs will graduate four Seniors at the end of the school year in Matt Weaver, Anthony Logue, Max Miller and Jacob Buchholz.
No. 4 Romulus 67, No. 5 Friendship/Scio 30
ROMULUS — Right in the first eight minutes, the Romulus Warriors delivered a first punch of epic proportions. The No. 4 seeds wasted no time striking, delivering an early knockout with a first quarter run that set the tone in a half that never looked back on, cruising their way towards triumph with a 67-30 home victory over No. 5 Friendship/Scio on Friday.
“We got off to a bad start, and that didn’t really help things,” said Friendship/Scio co-coach Dillon McFall. “A lot of guys out on the floor with little to no Sectional experience, it showed. But on a positive note, we played much better in the second half, and it didn’t come in garbage time either.”
Romulus made their presence known immediately, striking while the iron was scorching hot with a first quarter run that saw them never let up from the gas pedal. The run would add further damage in the second quarter, where they recorded a 40-6 halftime lead under their complete command.
But Friendship/Scio (11-10) made up for lost time with two of their best quarters of the night in the second half, including an outscoring of the Warriors in the last eight minutes. The offense was fueled by Ethan Davenport, who tallied a team-high 10 points. Brenden Loucks chipped in with nine points, while Taylor Moore had five.
The season is over for Friendship/Scio, as they wrap up their campaign with a record of 11-10 overall — a winning season for the combined program’s inaugural season on the hardwood. In reflection, McFall says that despite the loss to the Warriors, it does not define who they are as a team after battling a year full of highs and lows.
“As for the season, it’s going to be easy for the guys and everyone that’s involved to look at tonight as a loss,” he said. “But as for the bigger picture, it two schools that were low on numbers, and it ended up with a winning season in our first year together. We had our ups and downs through the year, but the kids kept fighting and the guys improved throughout the year. This last game doesn’t really definite how we were all season.”
Friendship/Scio 2 4 12 12 – 30
Romulus 18 22 16 11 – 67
FRIENDSHIP/SCIO: Jacob Golden 2 0-2 4, Brenden Loucks 4 1-3 9, Ethan Davenport 4 0-0 10, Taylor Moore 2 0-0 5, Gabbin Benhassine 2 0-0 4. Totals: 13 1-5 30.
ROMULUS: Mike Kaufman 1 0-0 2, Connor Franklin 6 0-0 18, Felix Flores 2 0-0 5, Zach Butler 11 0-1 22, Ben Jessop 4 0-0 8, Henry Morse 5 0-2 10, Jordan VanDoran 1 0-2 2. Totals: 30 0-5 67.
3-point goals: F/S 3 (Davenport 2, Moore), Romulus 7 (Franklin 6, Flores)
Total Fouls: F/S 9, Romulus 11. Fouled out: None.
No. 2 Elba 67, No. 7 Andover/Whitesville 30
ELBA — Like Romulus and their fast start against Friendship/Scio, second-seeded Elba would go on to provide the same exact response right out of the gate against No. 7 Andover/Whitesville, as they posted dominant stands of offense and defense to create a first half run that gave complete command of what was a 67-30 home victory in Class D2 Quarterfinals action on Friday.
The Lancers used a balanced effort through a first quarter that saw them hold Andover/Whitesville (8-14) to just one shot from the field, setting the tone with an 11-2 start that was later refueled before the end of the half. In the second quarter, the hosts went beyond the arc with four of their eight total three-pointers to push their lead out permanently with a 31-10 advantage at the break.
The momentum would remain with Elba for the majority of the contest, but the Andover/Whitesville offense started to find a rhythm in the second half, led by CJ Estep, who tallied half of his team-high 13 points in the last 16 minutes of play. Helping further the cause was Luke Erdmann, who sank a pair of three-pointers for six points, while Cormac Brown had four points.
Andover/Whitesville’s season is officially over, as they wrap up a 2021-22 campaign with a record of 8-14 overall. The team will graduate eight Seniors at the end of the year between the two schools in Erdmann, Brown, Dylan Acor, Spencer Mattison, Jayden Dix, Justin Waters, Richie York and Tyler Hackett.
Andover/Whitesville 2 8 10 10 – 30
Elba 11 20 20 16 – 67
ANDOVER/WHITESVILLE: Cormac Brown 2 0-0 4, CJ Estep 6 1-2 13, Justin Waters 1 1-5 3, Luke Erdmann 2 0-0 6, Colton Calladine 1 0-0 2, Spencer Mattison 1 0-0 2. Totals: 13 2-7 30.
ELBA: Jake Walczak 1 1-2 3, CJ Gottler 4 1-4 12, Nate Esten 3 0-0 8, Caeden Muehlig 0 1-2 1, Jake Engle 1 0-0 3, Zach Marsceill 3 2-2 10, Angelo Penna 5 4-7 14, Connor Scott 0 2-4 2, Mike Long 6 2-2 14. Totals: 23 13-23 67.
3-point goals: A/W 2 (Erdmann), Elba 8 (Gottler 3, Esten 2, Marsceill 2, Engle).
Total Fouls: A/W 18, Elba 13. Fouled out: Mattison (A/W).
No. 1 Notre Dame-Batavia 79, No. 8 Houghton Academy 31
BATAVIA — In their Sectional debut on Friday, the Irish of Notre Dame-Batavia went on to prove why they are Class D2’s top-seed in front of a packed audience on their home floor, as they connected with all facets of their game.
From a smoking hot three-point game to a dominant defensive effort, the Irish made a statement in the first eight minutes and didn’t look back on their 79-31 win over No. 8 Houghton Academy.
The Irish wasted no time shattering the ice in the first eight minutes of play, as they posted the first of three consecutive quarters where the offense recorded at least 20 points, as they provided a full-scale sprint toward a 26-5 run of Houghton Academy (5-13) that automatically saw them put the hammer down, ultimately for good in a tone-setting statement.
Notre Dame-Batavia went on to knock down 14 three-pointers in all to pace their offense, with Ryan Fitzpatrick leading the way with six in his game-high 18-point performance.
The Panthers were led by Malachi DeGolyer, who tallied three of the team’s six three-pointers to put toward a team-high 12 points. Hugo Huang added in 10 points of his own, while James Adenuga had seven.
The 2021-22 campaign is over for Houghton Academy, as they wrap up with a record of 5-13 overall. The Panthers will graduate three Seniors at the end of the year in DeGolyer, Huang and Chris Habecker.
“We have three Seniors, and they played key roles for our team this year,” said Houghton coach Jeff Prentice. “They made a lot of progress, especially after not playing at all last year because of COVID. They didn’t have that base of experience, plus having a new coach. Having all of those things stacked up against them, they did a pretty good job overcoming that adversity. They all had their fair share of moments.”
Houghton Academy 5 10 7 9 – 31
Notre Dame-Batavia 26 24 21 8 – 79
HOUGHTON ACADEMY: Malachi DeGolyer 4 1-2 12, James Adenuga 3 0-1 7, Chris Habecker 1 0-0 2, Hugo Huang 2 4-6 10. Totals: 10 5-9 31.
NOTRE DAME-BATAVIA: Jordan Welker 6 0-0 14, Ryan Fitzpatrick 6 0-0 18, Jay Antinore 1 1-1 3, Hayden Groff 1 0-0 2, Bryce Berry 3 0-0 7, Jaden Sherwood 1 0-0 3, Jimmy Fanara 2 0-0 5, Cody Henry 5 1-2 11, Maverick Hall 1 0-0 2, Colin McCulley 4 0-0 11, George Woodruff 1 1-2 3. Totals: 31 3-5 79.
3-point goals: HA 6 (DeGolyer 3, Huang 2, Adenuga), ND-B 14 (Fitzpatrick 6, McCulley 3, Welker 2, Berry, Sherwood, Fanara).
Total Fouls: HA 6, ND-B 12. Fouled out: None.