SAUK
CENTRE – On Feb. 24, Scott Bergman was explaining during a phone call how it
would feel the next time the Sauk Centre girls basketball team he coaches lost
a home game. He said, “Our mentality is if a team comes to our place
and beats us, they’re going to have to earn it. Then you tip your hat and go on
to the next game.”
The hat has been tipped, the next game is coming up and
the Sauk Centre Mainstreeters – past and present -- can look back with pride at
one of the most remarkable streaks for any team anywhere.
The Menahga Lady Braves made the 90-minute drive south
to Sauk Centre for a Saturday night game that had been scheduled only three
days earlier amidst a season and schedules that have been disrupted by the
Covid-19 virus. And the visitors did no what visitors had done since Jan. 8,
2013: they beat the Mainstreeters in their own gym.
On that day in 2013, Osakis won 49-40. Ten days later
Sauk Centre defeated visiting Melrose 73-47 and absolutely not one soul knew
what had been started.
The Mainstreeters simply kept winning home games. Year
after year, nobody came to town and won. As the teams tipped off Saturday
night, the streak was 99 consecutive home victories over more than eight years and
triple figures was on the horizon.
Sauk Centre has held the state record since the streak reached 77. Rochester Lourdes won 76 home games in a row between January 1989 and December 1996, followed by Braham with 74 from January 2009 to January 2015. The boys basketball state record for consecutive home wins is 85 by Braham from Feb. 2009 to Feb. 2016. (Boys and girls state basketball records can be found here: http://www.info-link.net/~mattnet/)
When Bergman was commenting
about tipping the hat to whoever came to town and won, the next home game was scheduled
for March 2 vs. BOLD. But the Warriors had to cancel due to virus issues and
Bergman (also the school’s athletic director) began looking for another
opponent. Menahga, having also lost an opponent in the same week, agreed.
Before everything was
locked in, Lady Braves coach Cody Pulju asked some of his players if they wanted
to go to Sauk Centre. He himself wasn’t sure.
“I
honestly didn't want to really come here tonight because I know what Sauk
Center is about,” he said after Saturday’s game. “Wednesday night I sent a text
message to four of our leaders on our team. I said, ‘What do you guys want to
do?’ I told them I didn’t want to take an opportunity away from them and they
said they're all in, they wanted to come here.”
Menahga
played in the Class 1A state tournament in 2018 and 2019, so they know about success.
The Lady Braves on the bench and a small cluster of fans cheered mightily
throughout the game, in which Menahga never trailed.
It
was Parents Night for the Mainstreeters, with players presenting moms and dads
with gift bags in a sweet pregame ceremony. Senior Michaela Dammann was also
recognized for recently reaching the 1,000-point milestone.
The
gym was built in 1964 and has all the classic charm you would expect. Fifteen rows
of seats on either side of the court, the school colors of maroon and white on
the seats and walls. A banner lists the school’s team state champs: Baseball in
1982, boys golf in 1983, 1986, 1987, 1988, and girls basketball in 2018. The
Streeters have gone to state in girls basketball nine times since 2010, winning
the Class 2A crown in 2018; they also were at state last year when the tournament
was shut down after two days because of the virus.
When
the game began the Lady Braves played what can be termed Octopus Defense; each
defender appeared to have eight arms that constantly swatted at the ball
whether it was being held, dribbled or passed. Lela Peterson, a 5-foot-7 junior
guard, was particularly troublesome to Sauk’s offense while the Braves disrupted
the Mainstreeters for the entire 36 minutes, holding them to their lowest point
total of the season and 19 points below their average output.
Menahga
led 42-37 with 1:51 remaining. As the teams came out of timeout huddles, a group
of Streeter students chanted, “Here We Go Streeters! Here We Go!” But where was
no place to go because the Lady Braves proved adept at killing the clock.
And
that’s how the streak ended. A few minutes after 8 o’clock on a lovely central
Minnesota Saturday night, the visitors did what no visitors had done for about
as long as most folks could remember.
The
previous night, the Streeters had lost in overtime at Belgrade-Brooten-Elrosa
for their first loss of the season after 13 wins. But there were no excuses to
be found.
“That’s
a good team,” Bergman said of the Lady Braves (10-3). “You know, we had a tough
one last night, too. Playing back to back, we like to think it gets you ready
for playoffs but it went the wrong way for us both nights. But you’ve got to
turn the page and hopefully get better.”
The
Mainstreeters were going to spend some more time together Saturday night,
enjoying pizza and each other’s company and reflecting on what has been
accomplished.
“We’ll
kind of hang out for a bit and make sure they're OK because, you know, it was a
tough, tough couple nights,” said Bergman. “But man, it's not time to feel
sorry for ourselves because we got Albany coming in on Monday.”
Yes,
Albany is coming to town. The Huskies are 14-1 and a big rival for the
Mainstreeters.
As always, the next challenge awaits.
--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org
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