Richie Leber calls this year’s King’s Academy girls’ varsity basketball team one of his “most gratifying.”
Leber, in his seventh season as head coach, said junior guard Cat Urso typifies the toughness of the Lions.
Urso received 15 stitches under her eye after a collision while diving for a loose ball during a win against Berean Christian on Jan. 17. She played three days later—still bruised and swollen—to help the Lions defeat Benjamin.
“Cat is the engine that drives everything,” Leber said of Urso, the team’s top scorer and assists leader. “She gutted it out. That’s our team. We don’t have a player who scores 25 points a game. We have four players who can score double figures. We have to play ugly, play defense, rebound and be physical.”
Leber was hopeful that style would remain successful heading into the district playoffs, which began yesterday.
After a dismal 2-8 start that coincided with three starters—Kathleen Wiggs, Victoria Crocetti and Morgan Jacobson—out with injuries, the Lions have won 10 of their last 14 games. They punctuated that comeback with a 64-32 win over Wellington Christian on Senior Night last Thursday.
Even though the three players returned by the third week of the season, it took some time for the King Academy ballers to regroup.
“There was a lack of chemistry [in the beginning] and re-integrating injured players is a challenge,” said Leber. “By Game 11, we were [meshing] a little better. From then on, we went 5-0 in district play and moved from a No. 6 seed to a No. 3 seed and averaged about 50 points a game.”
Leber noticed the growth of the team’s cohesiveness not only as the regular season progressed but also as the team prepared for districts.
“I don’t take anything for granted. It’s getting the maximum of what you have, what you do with what you have,” Leber said. “The chemistry is better. The girls are working hard. The girls bought into it. Early in the season there were doubts. Now, we’re sort of hitting our stride.”
One of the Lions’ goals is to win the district championship, but it doesn’t end there.
“They’re not going to be satisfied if we don’t win,” Leber said. “Our season starts in June when they’re in the weight room at 7 a.m. We have been going to a team camp in North Carolina and Georgia and we do a lot of life-long memories. They’ll remember feeding the homeless at a church in Blairsville, Ga. and a whitewater rafting trip when a tornado came through.”