McNair’s heroics send Knights back to NCISAA semis
By Andrew Schnittker
aschnittker@wilsontimes.
Star junior point guard Serenity McNair and the Greenfield School girls basketball team point-blank refused to allow their season to end in the NCISAA 2-A quarterfinals on their home court Tuesday night.
Despite trailing by eight early in the fourth quarter, despite trailing by two with seven seconds left in the game, the Knights dug deep, found a way and came up with a 60-58 overtime win over visiting Rocky Mount Academy, punching their ticket to the final four for the second year in a row.
“We are absolutely ecstatic,” McNair said. “We knew this was our last time playing on our home court. So for our seniors, and for Clara (German exchange student Clara Graf), we knew this was it — it was win or go home. We fought very, very hard. … I’m very proud of how we continued to fight the entire time, and we stuck together.”
McNair, fittingly, as the star that stirs the drink for the Greenfield offense, made the game’s two biggest plays, hitting 2-of-3 free throws to send the game to overtime after drawing a foul on a last-second 3-point shot, and then winning it in overtime with a layup with five seconds left.
“As a coach, I knew she would at least get us into overtime,” said Greenfield head coach Willie McNair, Serenity’s father. “As her dad, I was terrified. I think they were up by two with a minute or something left
in overtime, and I said, ‘Serenity, you’ve got to do it.’ We were in a good position where we had some good defensive plays. When the game’s tied with 20 seconds left, Serenity’s, in my opinion, the best guard in the state to have the ball in her hands, because she’s so quick. She made the right play and won the game for us.”
The fourth-seeded Knights (17-11) of the 2-A/3-A Coastal Plain Independents Conference led by two at halftime but trailed by eight early in the fourth quarter against the fifth-seeded Eagles (15-6) of the 1-A/2-A Coastal Independent Conference, before the Knights’ furious rally.
Serenity McNair was the Knights’ hero, and leading scorer with 22 points, but the Knight’s entire starting five played key roles. Darcy Dean came up with 12 points, six of which came in the fourth quarter and overtime, and some big offensive rebounds. Clara Graf added 11 points, senior Jeallen Holland drilled three big 3-pointers for nine points and Tori Coleman hit a pair of 3s.
Isabella Daza led the Eagles with 18 points, followed by Berkeley Miller with 12.
With the Knights down 58-56 with a minute left in overtime, Dean laid in the rebound of a McNair missed 3, and a turnover out of bounds on RAM gave the Knights the ball back with about 50 seconds left.
After GFS pulled down a pair of offensive rebounds, Willie McNair called a full timeout with 27.1 seconds left to draw up a play. Serenity McNair drove to the rim and finished with about five seconds left to put the Knights up 60-58, and a Rocky Mount turnover sealed the deal, kicking off a spirited celebration for Greenfield.
“I saw the basket, and I knew that we had to score,” Serenity McNair said. “So I just took it. I did what I did.”
Greenfield senior Jeallen Holland shoots a 3-pointer during a home win over Rocky Mount Academy in the NCISAA 2-A quarterfinals. Carl Copeland | Special to the Times
After back-to-back buckets from Jessica Proctor in the final 30 seconds gave the Eagles a 54-52 lead, McNair flew down the court and heaved up a desperation 3 at the buzzer… and drew a foul in the process.
As McNair lined up for the biggest three shot attempts of her career, she missed the second, and a chance to win the game. She quickly shook that off, however, as she still had a chance to tie it, and made good, swishing the final two shots to send proceedings to overtime.
“I knew I was going to make them,” McNair said. “I was honestly surprised when I missed. I knew I was going to knock down the last two. I spend too many nights in the gym shooting them to miss it.”
Rocky Mount pushed its lead to eight early in the fourth quarter, but the Knights responded with their season on the line, turning up their press and ripping off a 9-0 run, with a 3-pointer from Holland giving them the lead.
“I think we moved the ball well and we got to our spots,” Serenity McNair said. “Personally, I think the lead opened up for us when I was able to get to my spots, which I wasn’t taking from the beginning, hence us being down like we were. I think we worked really well as a team.”
After a slew of empty possessions for each team with the Knights up two, a pair of Greenfield turnovers allowed Proctor to breakaway down the court twice for back-to-back buckets in the game’s final 30 seconds, the second of which came with seven left, to put RMA up 54-52 ahead of McNair’s clutch free throws.
“It’s good that we learned from this game and we won the game, so that next time, if we’re in the same position, we know exactly what not to do,” Willie McNair said
The Knights took a 29-27 lead into the second half thanks to 12 second-half points from McNair, but RMA took a 43-38 advantage through the third quarter, largely thanks to winning the battle on the boards.
The victory sends the Knights into the NCISAA final four in back-to-back seasons for the first time in program history, in their first year in the 2-A ranks and in McNair’s first year as head coach.
“That was the goal, to make it to at least where we were,” Willie McNair said. “I know what’s ahead of us, but I don’t fear any team. I try to pass that along to the girls. I know what they can do. Once they tap into it, and hopefully we’ll tap into it Thursday, it’s going to be a basketball game. We’re not going to lay down, and we’re going for it. It was great to make it back to the final four, but I’m trying to go a step further.”
The Knights’ semifinal opponent will be one they’re quite familiar with: CPIC archrvial Wayne Country Day, the top overall seed in the 2-A bracket.
Greenfield will be out for both a trip to the state title game and revenge after losing to the Chargers, who beat Fayetteville Christian 58-23 Tuesday, twice in the regular season.
“We’re always fired up when it comes to them, but this has a little bit more meaning to it,” Serenity McNair said.
ROCKY MOUNT ACADEMY (58)
Daza 18, Miller 12, Davis 8, Proctor 7, Carmichael 7, Rogers 5, Wright 1.
GREENFIELD (60)
McNair 22, Dean 12, Graf 11, Holland 9, Coleman 6.
Score by quarters:
RMA 12 15 16 11 — 58
GFS 14 15 9 16 — 60