South Portland junior Katie Whitmore, left, freshman Maria Degifico, sophomore Ashlee Aceto, senior Molly Mawhinney and sophomore Kaleisha Towle celebrate a point during the Red Riotsâ shocking 3-0 win at Deering in Wednesday nightâs Class A state semifinal match. South Portland will face Scarborough in the state final Friday night.
Mike Strout photos.
More photos below.
PORTLANDâThere will be an upstart program playing for the Class A volleyball state title Friday evening, but it wonât be the Deering Rams protecting their home court going up against powerhouse Scarborough.
Instead, the clock remains stuck on 11:59 p.m. and Cinderella lives on as the South Portland Red Riots, in just their fifth varsity season, will take the sportâs biggest stage.
Wednesday eveningâs Class A state semifinal was expected to be yet another chapter in top-ranked Deeringâs feel-good story, but South Portland, which sat 5-5 at one juncture this fall, stole the show.
In absolutely decisive, stunning and spectacular fashion.
The Rams raced to a 17-10 lead in the first set, as senior Avery Donovan had her way at the net, producing four straight kills, but the Red Riots roared back behind the net dominance of senior Molly Mawhinney and sophomore Kaleisha Towle and pinpoint serving of junior Grace Rende to prevail, 25-22.
South Portland then appeared to seize control of the match when it went up, 23-17, in the second game, but Deering rose off the deck and pulled even on a block from Donovan. Had the Rams been able to complete the comeback, they may have righted the ship, but instead, the Red Riots got the next two points, punctuated by a Rende ace, and took a 2-0 lead.
South Portland wasnât about to let Deering breathe in the third set, scoring the first nine points behind Acetoâs serving, and extending it even further as Mawhinney had a service run of her own. The Rams were staggered and couldnât recover and the Red Riots went on to a 25-10 victory to take the match, three sets to none.
South Portland got solid performances from multiple players, improved to 10-6, ended the Ramsâ best-ever season at 14-2 and in the process, punched its ticket to the Class A state final for the first time, where it will face the second-ranked Red Storm (14-2) Friday at 7 p.m., back at Deering High School.
âIâm beyond proud of this team,â said Red Riots coach Nicole Kane. âI told the girls that if they could dig deep and fight and if we played defense first, we could play with anyone. We didnât let balls drop and we played as a team.â
Uncharted waters
While Deering has gotten plenty of attention for its meteoric rise, South Portlandâs improvement has been nearly as impressive.
Entering this season, the Red Riots had never posted a winning record or captured a postseason match, but this yearâs squad has made history, going 8-6 in the regular season and as the fifth seed in Class A, went to No. 4 Gorham, an established program, and sprung a four-set upset in Saturdayâs quarterfinal round.
The Rams, meanwhile, in just their third varsity season, started the season with a stunning upset of Scarborough and won their first dozen matches. After finally falling from the unbeaten ranks at home against Biddeford, Deering closed with a win over Brunswick and clinched the top seed in Class A. In Saturdayâs quarterfinal round, the Rams held off No. 9 Bonny Eagle in three hard-fought sets to advance.
In the regular season meeting, Sept. 12 in Portland, Deering prevailed, 25-21, 25-20, 25-9.Â
Wednesdayâs contest was the first between the schools in the postseason and it went the opposite of the regular season encounter and contrary to what was expected by the pundits, ending in just 68 minutes shocking minutes.
South Portland hinted at big things to come when it scored the matchâs first four points. The Rams roared right back with five in a row, highlighted by three kills from Donovan and an ace from junior Maddy Broda. Two more Donovan kills helped Deering open up a 9-5 lead and after the Red Riots crept within 13-10 on a kill from Mawhinney, Donovan pounded four consecutive kills for a 17-10 advantage, forcing Kane to call timeout.
And her players responded with a vengeance.
A Mawhinney kill set the tone. After South Portland got the next two points, Rams coach Larry Nichols called timeout, but it didnât help, as Mawhinney produced another kill. After Deering went up, 19-14, on a Donovan kill, a pair of blocks by Towle and an ace from Rende tied it, 19-19. Rende then served up another ace for the lead and after another Ramsâ timeout, the Red Riots got the next point as well.
A service fault and another Deering point made it 21-21, but a Towle kill put South Portland on top. A kill by Rams senior Divine MâBambi tied the score, 22-22, but on the next pivotal point, Deering hit the ball out of bounds, Aceto followed with a block and Mawhinney ended the set with a kill and the Red Riots had the jump by virtue of a 25-22 victory.
âWeâve done that all season,â Kane said. âWe were down against Gorham too and fought back and won. Weâre used to it. The girls donât give up. This is the time they canât give up. We stayed focused, played our game and came back and won it.â
In that first game, Aceto had seven aces and five service points, Mawhinney added six kills and Rende served six points, which counteracted Donovanâs 10 kills and Brodaâs 10 assists and seven service points.
The second set was tied 1-1, 2-2, 3-3 and 4-4, but a Mawhinney kill sparked a 4-0 run for an 8-4 South Portland lead. A kill from senior Dianne Dervis and an ace from MâBambi were countered by two more Red Riots points for a 10-6 lead. The Rams crept back within two points at 12-10 and 13-11, but Towle had a pair of kills, freshman Maria Degifico served an ace, then served two more points for an 18-12 lead, forcing Nichols to call timeout.Â
It didnât pay immediate dividends, as South Portland pushed the lead to 20-13, but Deering found its groove, pulling within 21-17. The Red Riots werenât fazed and went back up, 23-17, but the Rams rattled off six straight points, highlighted by kills from Donovan and MâBambi and a pair of blocks from Donovan, to tie the set, 23-23.
With not only the game, but perhaps irreversible momentum hanging in the balance, South Portland rose off the deck and found a way to prevail.
After a communication breakdown prevented Deering from returning the ball, the Red Riots got an ace from Rende and took a commanding 2-0 lead by virtue of a 25-23 second set victory.
The difference in the pivotal game was 10 assists from Aceto, five service points from Degifico and nine kills from Mawhinney, who has inserted herself in the discussion of the stateâs most devastating hitters.
âAshlee did a great job setting and I just aimed for the deep corners,â Mawhinney said. âWe knew Deering was a very good defensive team and we had to step it up.â
âItâs amazing to play with Molly,â Aceto said. âI love her. She always kills it.â
âMolly is a go-to player,â Kane added. âIâm glad we can really showcase her.â
Deering went into the third set hoping to keep the match alive and gain momentum, but it didnât take long for South Portland to squash those aspirations.
Aceto stepped to the service line to start the game and by the time she was done, the lead was 9-0. A block from Rende got things started, Mawhinney had two kills and a block, Towle added a kill and Aceto had two aces along the way.Â
âI started picking spots and put it where they werenât,â Aceto said.
âServing has been huge,â Kane said. âWe work on that a ton. We have six solid servers. Thereâs no one who goes behind the line that I get nervous about.â
A kill from Donovan got Deering on the board, but the next four points went to the Red Riots to create an insurmountable lead. The Rams tried to claw back, drawing within 14-5, but a Mawhinney kill and another point made it 16-5. Deering got within nine, 16-7, on a kill from sophomore Rachel Pardi, but a block from Towle, a Mawhinney kill and a Towle kill made the score 20-7. The Rams crept within 21-9, but Mawhinney and senior Shannon Murphy had kills to draw the visitors closer. After a service fault gave Deering its final point, South Portland brought the curtain down with a kill from Mawhinney and at 7:12 p.m., after the Rams couldnât get the ball over the net, the Red Riots had a 25-10 third set victory and a 3-0 match triumph.
âIt was awesome,â Aceto said. âWe brought our âAâ game and brought so much intensity.â
âWe were fired up and ready to go and we wanted to make history,â said Mawhinney. âWe trust each other to get the ball up, get it down and be where we need to be and do what we need to do.â
âIt was a great team effort out there,â Kane added. âOur biggest battle is not making mistakes. We eliminated those and that was big for us. Our close matches got us here and we used it to our advantage. I knew if we played our game with the momentum we had, we could win it in three (sets). We have the offense and the defense, I have full faith in my girls. Closing out the last game like that, Iâm beyond proud.â
Mawhinney turned heads with 22 kills. She also had five service points and a pair of blocks.Â
âWe knew weâd take hits from her, but what was equally impressive was Molly having power hits from the back row,â Nichols said. âIt was an impressive performance from her in every area. She played like a college hitter.â
Towle had eight kills and three blocks.
âWe took advantage when Molly didnât have a blocker on her and we knew we had to feed her and it was the same with Kaleisha and we did that,â Kane said. âWhen they keyed in on Molly and Kaleisha, we set our other girls and they put the ball away as well.â
Aceto was invaluable as a setter, producing 24 assists, while adding 20 service points.
Degifico finished with nine service points and Rende added seven.
Agony
Deering was led by 13 kills from Donovan, 18 assists and eight service points from Broda and nine service points from Dervis.
âIâm so proud of the kids,â Nichols said. âThey worked hard, but give all the credit to South Portland. They kept the ball in play. We didnât take care of the ball and a lot of that was adrenaline. They took it to us and we had errors and losing that first game was huge. If we took the second set, it would have been interesting, but again, we didnât take care of the ball and they did. They did just what youâre supposed to do in the third set.â
The Rams were this yearâs âit teamâ from Opening Night right up until Wednesday and while the seasonâs end was bitter, it will long be remembered fondly.
âI wish weâd played better, but itâs been a magical year for this club,â Nichols said.Â
Deering will lose Dervis, Donovan, MâBambi and Kristal Gonzalez to graduation.
âIâll miss (the seniors),â Nichols said. âAvery was just learning how to play three years ago, but she became the anchor of this season. I canât say enough about Dianne. In terms of volleyball, she can only help a team. I feel lucky to have had her. Divine got better and better every year. Kristal Gonzalez was a defensive star.â
The Rams wonât be able to sneak up on anyone in 2018, but they wonât need to.
âWe have other kids coming back who have seen what volleyball was like,â Nichols said. âWe can only learn and get better.â
The big stage
For the Red Riots, meanwhile, the unthinkable is now three sets from reality.
South Portland will return to Deering High School Friday evening to play for an improbable Class A state championship, but that title wonât come without an epic struggle against one of the stateâs most dominant programs.
The Red Riots lost in straight sets to visiting Scarborough Oct. 17 (8-25, 11-25, 16-25) and will be decided underdogs as the Red Storm are surging and will be playing in their third straight state final (Scarborough beat Greely to win it all in 2015 and lost to the Rangers last fall).
South Portland embraces the challenge.
âItâs awesome to play for a state championship,â Aceto said. âIt will be amazing to play against Scarborough. Weâll prepare the same way we prepared for Deering. Weâll come out our hardest and bring the intensity.â
âI never thought weâd come this far,â said Mawhinney. âIâm so proud of my team. We realized weâre a very good defensive team and when weâre on, weâre on. We have to come out with the same energy and attitude we had today and trust each other and believe in each other. We like the underdog role.â
âWe know if we can play with the intensity we had tonight, we can play with (Scarborough),â Kane added. âIâm so excited for the girls. Iâd love to be out on the court with them, I couldnât be happier to get them here.â
Sports Editor Michael Hoffer can be reached at mhoffer@theforecaster.net. Follow him on Twitter: @foresportsÂ
South Portland sophomore Ashlee Aceto sets the ball. Aceto had 24 assists and 20 service points in the win.
Deering senior Avery Donovan goes up for a kill as South Portland freshman Maria Degifico, left, and junior Grace Rende defend.
South Portland sophomore Kaleisha Towle produces a kill as Deering sophomore Rachel Pardi defends.
Deering senior Dianne Dervis prepares a serve.
South Portland junior Grace Rende, left, and senior Molly Mawhinney block the shot of Deering senior Avery Donovan.
Deering junior Elizabeth Sevigny dives to save the ball.
Deering senior Divine MâBambi goes up for a kill as South Portland junior Grace Rende, left, and senior Shannon Murphy defend.
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