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Brea Rallies, Wins Tournament

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Chelsea Trotter called it the worst first half she has ever played, but she converted a drive with 6.8 seconds remaining in the game that helped provide Brea Olinda with a 50-47 come-from-behind victory Saturday over Palos Verdes Peninsula to win the 19th Ladycat Classic.

Brea, ranked No. 1 in Orange County, is 5-0. Peninsula, with four starters back from last year’s Southern Section Division I-AA champion, is 3-1.

“I told the kids before the game, and it turned to be prophetic, that we would win by 25 because we dictate tempo, or it would be a two-point game we could win or lose at the buzzer if they dictate tempo and we don’t execute.”

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The latter is what happened as Peninsula held a 45-41 lead with less than three minutes remaining. Brea made five of seven free throws, and Trotter drove the lane for the big basket, giving the Ladycats a 48-47 lead.

“I thought we were going to lose,” said Trotter, the tournament’s most valuable player who finished with a game-high 15--10 in the second half. She also had 11 rebounds. “It was really frustrating. I didn’t want to leave knowing my team might lose because I played so terribly.”

Trotter was fouled on the play but missed the free throw, and Jeri Costello was whistled for fouling Peninsula’s Kimberly York.

York, a 75% free-throw shooter, missed and Kate Ides grabbed the rebound.

Davidson (10 points, three steals) made two free throws with two seconds left, and Peninsula’s Lauryn Morita’s half-court shot bounced off the rim at the buzzer. Morita (13 points) made three three-pointers.

Brea committed 19 turnovers, 14 in the first half, several by Trotter. Brea had the game’s biggest lead, 37-31, going into the fourth quarter.

Jackie Lord scored 10 points for Brea.

Peninsula shot only 14 of 48 from the field, but was 12 of 17 from the three-point arc. Brea, when it didn’t turn the ball over, made 18 of 40 shots.

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“We needed this,” said Davidson, pointing to next week’s national Tournament of Champions in Santa Barbara. “It’s important our poise is tested. If it isn’t, we can get caught off guard.

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