|  Last year at Wharton Field House, it was Horchem hitting his seventh 
			3 of the night as the horn sounded to give the Railer sophomores an 
			exciting 41-38 decision over Moline. Flash forward to Saturday 
			night, when the junior made only one 3, but he saved it for the best 
			possible moment as his jumper with 3.9 seconds to go in overtime 
			rescued the Railers and made Senior Night a much happier occasion as 
			Lincoln downed Moline 49-46. A desperation 3 from Moline's Drew 
			Owens hit the backboard and front of the rim, then fell harmlessly 
			to the floor as the Railer student section mobbed the Red and 
			Green-clad victors. This one will go in the win column, certainly 
			not in the well-played one. "We were lucky," coach Neil Alexander said after game. "We did 
			just enough to win, but we were lucky. It should have never come to 
			that, up 10 or so. They are a good team, but if we play like that 
			again, it will be a short postseason for us." There is always cause for concern on Senior Night as the players 
			tend to be a little more hyped than normal. Saturday, the Railers 
			did a good job of staying composed and playing under control. 
			
			 Getting the scoring started -- where have I heard this before? -- 
			was junior Edward Bowlby. His two 3s put Lincoln up early at 6-3. In 
			almost a carbon copy of Friday night's win over SHG, an early score 
			came from the lone senior, Will Podbelsek, whose pull-up pushed the 
			Lincoln lead to 8-5. Where the similarity from last night comes in 
			is that a similar shot was Lincoln's only two-pointer of the first 
			half against the Cyclones and now against the Maroons. The next 
			field goal for Lincoln (25-4) inside the 3-point line would not come 
			until less than two minutes was left in the third quarter. After the game was tied at 8, Podbelsek and Max Cook hit 3s to 
			push the lead to six. Moline early on was proving it would not go 
			away, with physical play down low in the paint as they scored the 
			last five of the quarter to pull within one at 14-13 heading into 
			the second quarter.  Things got a little more interesting to start the second stanza 
			as Podbelsek was fouled driving to the basket. Moline's Bryan 
			Brinker was a little too proud of his accomplishments in blocking 
			the shot and fouling the senior, so much so that his taunting was 
			done in front of an official, who immediately hit him with a 
			technical foul. Lincoln struggled early from the line as "Pod" split 
			the free throws from the foul line while Gavin Block hit the first 
			of the technical foul shots only to see his consecutive streak end 
			at 19 when he missed the second. After Moline brought the game back 
			to within one, it was Bowlby for the third time from 3-point range 
			to put the score at 19-15. When Moline's Ted Wood hit his second 3 of the night to make the 
			score 19-18, the Railers went on their only real run of the night, a 
			9-0 run to drive out to a double-digit lead at 28-18. The run was 
			fueled by 3s from Cook and Podbelsek, while Cook and Bowlby combined 
			for three free throws. The Maroons (17-12) rounded out the 
			first-half scoring as Lincoln went in enjoying an eight-point lead 
			at 28-20. Everything was looking pretty good at Roy S. Anderson Gymnasium 
			as the third quarter started as Podbelsek hit a 3 from near the 
			front line on the volleyball court, giving the Railers their largest 
			lead of the night at 31-20. Moline, a team from the Western Big 6, 
			showed again that it would not go away. In fact, they decided Senior 
			Night needed a bit more drama. The Railers' defensive effort was not at its usual high level. 
			During an 11-0 run to tie the game at 31, Moline's Brian Vice 
			converted two conventional three-point plays, while Wood tied the 
			game at the 2:38 mark of the third by hitting three free throws. His 
			trip to the line was second time a Moline player had been fouled 
			shooting a 3. Lincoln was suffering through a stagnant offense and, 
			at times, a tired-looking defense. 
			
			 Alexander shared the same thoughts. "I thought we looked tired 
			out there," he said. "We've tried to cut back on some of our 
			conditioning, but we definitely did not play a full game out there." The pressure the Railer defense was able to apply got them the 
			lead back with baskets from Block and Podbelsek. After Cook hit both 
			free throws late in the quarter, it was another foul on a 3 attempt, 
			this one at the buzzer, and Moline's Derrick Stabler hit two of the 
			three to leave the Railers with only a two-point lead going into the 
			fourth at 37-35. With all the momentum turning toward the Maroons, it seemed the 
			switch was complete when Tyler Biscontine drained a 3 with 6:34 to 
			go to put Moline on the top for the first time at 38-37. A free 
			throw from Podbelsek tied the game at 38, only to see Moline go 
			inside again to stretch their lead to 42-38.  
			[to top of second column] | 
 
			 Of Lincoln's 14 field goals on the night, 11 came from behind the 
			arc and, other than the game-winner from Horchem, there were none 
			bigger than Bowlby's that cut the lead to one and Block's that tied 
			the game at 44 after Moline had scored again. Moline went back on 
			top 46-44, but a drive to the basket by Block resulted in two more 
			free throws, and after he made them both to tie the game at 46 at 
			the 1:04 point of the fourth, things were setting up for a 
			nail-biting finish. I'm not a coach and have never professed to be, but the use of 
			timeouts by the Moline coach was quite baffling. Using three 
			timeouts in the span of 30 seconds, the Maroons had the ball to end 
			regulation, but with all the timeouts that were called, their 
			last-second shot to win it fell way short. I would like to think 
			after that many timeouts there would be a better look than what they 
			got. Heading into overtime for the fifth time in the season, going 2-2 
			in the first four, the Railers were able to win the tip, but a 
			missed shot resulted in a quick free-throw attempt for Moline as 
			Stabler was fouled on a rebound. The Maroon senior helped out the 
			Railers by missing the front end of the one-and-one as well as 
			Bowlby being fouled on the rebound and getting his own chance to 
			strike first in the extra session. But Bowlby, a 77 percent 
			free-throw shooter entering the night, missed as well, and about 30 
			seconds into overtime, both teams were struggling to put points on 
			the board. As Lincoln tried to run out the clock with under 50 seconds to 
			go, Bowlby's pass on the sidelines was stolen by Stabler, setting up 
			Moline's final look at the basket. All Moline was waiting for was a 
			chance to win it at the buzzer, and Lincoln's defense needed a stop. 
			With Owens and Biscontine playing catch near the timeline, it was 
			the quick hands of Cook that got the steal. The junior took the ball 
			down the sideline, under the basket and pitched it out to a 
			wide-open Horchem, who drained the 3 as the crowd went wild.  
			 With 3.9 seconds to go, Moline took their final timeout after 
			getting the ball to half-court and only .9 seconds running off the 
			clock. Their inbounds pass was to Owens, who let one go from about 
			40 feet, and whatever you want to call it -- luck, kharma, the 
			ghosts of Roy S. Anderson Gymnasium -- the ball did everything but 
			go in as the Railers prevailed on Senior Night 49-46. There is something so fitting about Podbelsek leading the way on 
			Senior Night with 15 points. By the way, the two uniform numbers 
			that Podbelsek has worn in his Railer career are 14 and 1, which 
			adds up to 15, his points in his final appearance in front of the 
			home crowd. Man, I have got to get a hobby if I'm starting to think 
			of stuff like that. Bowlby's 14 points were next on the scoring column, with Cook 
			adding nine and Block scoring eight. Oh yeah, last but certainly not 
			least, Horchem had a 3-pointer -- you know, the game-winner. So, it has come down to this. One final regular-season game and 
			then it's win or go home. Friday night will be as tough a game as 
			the Railers have played all season as they travel to Lanphier with 
			an opportunity to clinch at least a share of the CS8 title on the 
			line. It would be a huge boost of support to turn Lober-Nika 
			Gymnasium into Railer Nation Annex South.  And don't think Tyler Horchem was the only villain in the eyes of 
			the Moline fans. Payton Ebelherr's 3-pointer in the final seconds 
			capped off a mad comeback as the sophomores prevailed in the night's 
			opening contest 45-42. ___ LINCOLN (49) Podbelsek 5 2-4 15, Bowlby 4 2-3 14, Cook 2 3-4 9, Block 2 3-4 8, 
			Horchem 1 0-0 3, Olden 0 0-0 0, Krusz 0 0-0 0. Team 14 10-15 49. 
			3-point field goals 11 (Bowlby 4, Podbelsek 3, Cook 2, Horchem, 
			Block). MOLINE (46) Vice 17, Wood 11, Biscontine 8, Stabler 6, Owens 2, Larson 2. 
			Team 16 10-15 46. 3-point field goals 4 (Biscontine 2, Wood 2). Scoring by quarters: MHS 13-7-15-11-0 46LCHS 14-14-9-9-3 49
 
            [By JEFF BENJAMIN] 
            Railer-related information:
			www.railerbasketball.com 
            Jeff Benjamin's Railer basketball articles 
            
			 |