With much will, Penncrest’s Williams and Rice find a way for Penncrest

NEWTOWN SQUARE — It was a small sequence with two minutes left in a game that had been decided, but it still illustrated the unrelenting control Malcolm Williams and Isaiah Rice exerted for Penncrest Saturday.

On one end, Williams stole the ball from a Conestoga player, then dished to Rice, who was fouled. Rice hit the first free throw, missed the second, only for Williams to scoop up the rebound, get hacked and head back to the line.

Those free throws helped salt away a 54-46 win for Penncrest in the Central League semifinal at Marple Newtown, booking the second-seeded Lions (17-5) a spot in Monday night’s championship game against regular-season champion Lower Merion (7:45 at Harriton).

Penncrest’s Malcolm Williams goes up for a shot over Conestoga’s Brooks Rush during the Central League semifinal Saturday between the teams. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Rice and Williams accounted for 17 of the Lions’ 19 fourth-quarter points. On both ends of the court, whether via Williams’ varied offensive game or Rice’s court vision or their collective muzzling of Conestoga leading scorer Zach Lezanic, the pair dictated the game.

“We just knew we had to make plays,” Rice said. “The last time (against Conestoga), we went into the fourth quarter with a tie game and we ended up losing. We knew they had a really good offense, so we knew we had to play hard defense and impose our will on the game. We tried to smash the boards and really keep our tempo. They like to run and get up and down the court and score a lot of points. We’re not built to do that, so we wanted to impose our will.”

For Williams, the start wasn’t ideal. He had two points and two fouls at halftime, unable to establish an offensive rhythm. With the diversity of his game — mid-range jumpers, spin moves to the goal, the ability to corral rebounds and cash them in for points — getting going from the field isn’t as simple as jacking up shots. Less than the usual mantra of shooting his way out, Williams prefers to “tough his way” out of a slump.

“The coaches get on me when I have games like that and halves like that,” Williams said. “The last time it was even worse. They tell me to keep playing the game, you’ll get shots, relax and play defense. That’s what I did.”

Williams finished with 14 points, six rebounds and three assists. Rice tallied 16 points, one shy of a season-high, to go with four assists and four rebounds.

Such adaptability was in shorter supply on the opposite bench, where Conestoga (14-9) endured a chilly shooting performance, particularly from 3-point range. The Pioneers finished 7-for-29 from beyond the arc, though that stat was padded by hitting the final three attempts after Penncrest had stretched the lead back to double-digits and hopes for a comeback had essentially vanished.

Lezanic was saddled with three first-half fouls in a game where Conestoga was whistled for 26 infractions to just 12 for Penncrest, much to the chagrin of a fulminating Mike Troy. Lezanic headed into halftime with just two points. While he recovered with a team-high 16, including five in the third quarter to bring the Pioneers to within three of the Lions, the rising tide of his offensive game didn’t lift all Conestoga boats.

“We try to start on the defensive end, try to get a lot of energy defensively, get some good stops and hopefully get some easy buckets,” Lezanic said. “You can’t force anything, try not to get into your own head, try to just be in the game. The first half today, I got in foul trouble, so it frustrated me a little bit and it took me out of the game, but I tried not to let it affect me too much and to be supportive on the bench.”

PHOTO GALLERY: Conestoga vs. Penncrest

Despite Lezanic’s quiet opening half, the Pioneers somehow trailed by just four at halftime, whittling the spread from 12. Scott Martin came off the bench to hit a pair of 3-pointers, the team’s only connections on 11 first-half attempts, to make it 21-17 at the break.

“We felt confident in ourselves,” Lezanic said. “Playing as bad of a first half as we did today, we thought we had a chance to win this game. Scott hitting those 3s was big for us, but we couldn’t pull it out.”

But the shooting tide never turned. Lezanic was 2-for-from beyond the arc, one of the makes a lightly defended one in the final seconds. Teammate Milton Robinson was 1-for-9 from 3 (and 1-for-11 from the field), his connection likewise arriving in the final minute.

Penncrest’s Isaiah Rice drives past Conestoga’s Evan Medley for two points in the second half of Saturday’s Central League semifinal at Marple Newtown. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

“In practice, we would go over the plays over and over again, like we always do, but we had an emphasis on Lezanic and Milton,” Williams said. “And the goal was to stop them shooting 3s and drive and let’s take charges. That’s why (Lezanic) had four fouls.”

The Pioneers were a perfect 11-for-11 from the free-throw line, but it didn’t count for much. Penncrest went 22-for-39 on its trips (including 9-for-19 in a shoddy first half), but that was enough, combined with a 36-25 edge on the boards.

A Brooks Rush basket off a heady circle cut and feed from Martin got Conestoga within three at 35-32 after 3, the surge aided by two Shane Scott 3-pointers. But Rice answered with a 3-pointer on the second possession of the fourth. He added two free throws, then Williams hit a jumper before Rice drove to the glass for two. By the time Rice hit two at the line with three minutes left, Penncrest’s lead was 50-37, and another date with Lower Merion was booked.

The Lions’ recent history with the Aces is the stuff of nightmares. Last year, a Steve Payne runner off glass with 2.6 seconds left sent the Aces over the Lions in the final. Two years ago, Terell Jones hit a falling jumper from 15 feet as time expired in the semi. Just three weeks ago, Jack Forrest did the horrors with a 3-pointer with 4.9 seconds left in overtime.

With ample amounts of heartbreak in their collective memory bank, the Lions are eager for redemption.

“We’re hungry,” Williams said. “I’ve lost to them too many times. From freshman year to this year, I’m sick of it. And it’s always buzzer-beaters. It’s time to turn the page right now.”

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