Home Haddonfield News Champions: Improbably, Haddonfield pulls off comeback win over Camden

Champions: Improbably, Haddonfield pulls off comeback win over Camden

The defending Group 2 state champion Bulldawgs trailed by seven with just over a minute to play and by double digits a few minutes before that, but still prevailed to collect a second straight South Jersey Group 2 crown

Haddonfield’s Dylan Heine (34) and his Bulldawgs teammates pulled off a stunning comeback win over Camden in the South Jersey Group 2 championship game. (RYAN LAWRENCE, The Sun)

You can’t call it standing room only when there isn’t anywhere to stand, let alone sit.

Call it whatever you want. You’re lucky to get in at all, when at least a dozen dejected fans are on the other side, still unwilling to accept the trio of “sold out” signs Scotch-taped to the ticket table. One man is on his cellphone. Maybe he has a connection inside.

About two hours later, it was bedlam inside Cherry Hill East High School’s gymnasium. It was as if the fan bases from Haddonfield Memorial High School and Camden High knew this Monday night, South Jersey Group 2 sectional championship match would be an all-timer, something you absolutely could not miss, and especially not something to risk showing up late with the hopes of sneaking inside.

Sometimes a camera and a press pass are as good as Charlie Bucket’s golden ticket.

With eight seconds left, Haddonfield 6-foot-7 senior Dan Fleming took a pass from the team’s best shooter, Mike DePersia, faked an attempt to the basket, dribbled to hit left, shimmied out of the way of a defender, and let loose on a shot from behind the arc with eight seconds on the clock and his team down three.

The ball found twine, tying the game before the end of regulation. The Bulldawgs student section went berserk.

Overtime. Impossible.

“It feeds me during the game,” Fleming said of a fanbase that’s had to travel to Cherry Hill in the last two years as their own gym gets renovated. “If I’m getting tired, I know I can rely on them to pump me back up.”

On Monday, it was the other way around. Fleming and his Haddonfield teammates overcame what seemed to be an insurmountable deficit, methodically slowing down the game while turning up the decibel level inside the gym at the same time, and pulled off an improbable 69–67 win over Camden to capture their second straight sectional title.

Haddonfield, the defending Group 2 state champions, seemed to be down eight or nine points every time you looked up at the scoreboard in the second half. They prevented the deficit from reaching double digits, for the most part, but they weren’t hitting shots or showing any signs of an ability to close the gap, either.

Haddonfield’s Lewis Evans gives Dan Fleming an excited hug after the latter’s clutch, game-tying shot in the final seconds of regulation. (RYAN LAWRENCE, The Sun)

Little by little, though, the Bulldawgs made their run, despite trailing 52–38 early in the fourth quarter, or down 10 with a little more than two minutes remaining, or facing a seven-point deficit with 1:03 on the clock.

“We just said we’re going to give it everything we’ve got, it’s not going to be our last three minutes, it’s not going to be our last quarter,” Fleming said of the message the Bulldawgs relayed to each other as they began to feel the momentum slowly shifting. “We’re going to go on and win this, win the state semifinals, win the state championship and keep going in the (Tournament of Champions), too.”

But how the heck do you manage to get into that mindset when the math — too many points to make up in too little time — seems to be sending a slightly more pessimistic message?

“We just had hope,” said Fleming, who scored 16 of the Dawgs final 20 points, including the aforementioned game-tying three-pointer and a floater in lane with just under a minute in overtime that stood up as the game winner. “We just knew we could come through, honestly. I just have so much trust in these guys and they have trust in me to hit these shots. It’s just great to play on a team like this.”

The Bulldawgs student section goes berserk after Haddonfield, which trailed throughout the second half, tied the game with eight seconds in regulation. (RYAN LAWRENCE, The Sun)

Fleming found his shooting form in the latter stages of a game Camden pretty much took over in the third quarter and to begin the fourth quarter, too. But Fleming was hardly alone in Haddonfield’s comeback.

In the final minutes of regulation, DePersia knocked down free throws inside a crowded, rambunctious gym as if they were as easy of a task as tying his shoes during a timeout. And then there was Drew Gavranich’s steal, so special it deserved Johnny Most behind the mic.

The ball wouldn’t have found its way back in DePersia’s hands — and then Fleming’s hands, and then through the twine — if fellow senior Gavranich didn’t swipe an inbounds pass with his team trailing by three with less that 30 seconds to play and manage to keep his feet inbounds after gaining the crucial, game-changing possession.

“Biggest play of the night,” Fleming said. “Bigger than any of my shots.”

Without the steal, there probably isn’t a game-tying three-pointer. A shot that Fleming admits was the best of his career, edging out a regular season buzzer beater as the only other one he’d put on the same level.

“I honestly was just trying to get open, and they gave me a little bit of space,” he said. “It was just enough to hit it.”

Just as the seemingly impossible deficit was just small enough to be erased by the opportunistic Bulldawgs. The feat was even more remarkable when you consider that Haddonfield played just four games all season that were decided by single digits. And that they had won their first three postseason games by 37, 27, and 19 points, respectively.

“Being down double digits, we’re not used to it, but we always rise to the occasion no matter what we’re going through,” Fleming said.

As the hundreds of spectators spilled out of the gym, hurrying up only to wait in a long line of cars snaking their way around and eventually out of the Cherry Hill East parking lot, Fleming and his teammates found their way into the most coveted bleachers in South Jersey, held the trophy with pride, and enjoyed each other’s company, grateful their high school careers were still alive.

“No matter if you’re a starter on this team or you’re coming off the bench, we all make an impact, no matter who you are,” Fleming said. “We all show as much heart as any other guy, we’re all ready to make big plays, and that’s what we did.”

(RYAN LAWRENCE, The Sun)
Exit mobile version