Soccer is another game of inches. It's also a game of seconds.
As the clock wound down on Friday night at Gates-Chili, with Byron-Bergen trailing 3-2 in the Girls Soccer Class C2 championship game, a Keshequa Indians player knocked the ball out of the end of the pitch. That made the next play a corner kick. If the ball had gone out of bounds a few more inches to the left, Byron-Beren would have had a throw-in from the side of the field.
On the corner kick, Grace Diquattro struck the ball perfectly, a high, curving shot that Keshequa's keeper managed to touch but not stop as it sailed over her head.
Tie score with 21 seconds left in the regulation time.
It was Diquattro's second goal of the game.
Byron-Bergen won 4-3 on a goal by Makenzie Hagen, assisted by Diquattro, during the fifth minute of overtime.
"The defense had pushed over a lot," said Hagen after the game. "There was a big gap for me to get in, so I called for it, and Grace passed, and we were good to go."
The Indians, the #3 seed entering the tournament, were crushed, while the Bees. #4, celebrated their comeback win near the Keshequa goal.
The win was a special moment for Hagen.
"It's been a crazy experience," she said. "Our team has worked so hard through the seasons to get here and I'm just so proud of us."
The Bees struck first late in the first half on a goal by Mia Gray, with an assist by Diquattro, but Keshequa fired back within two minutes to tie the score at 1-1, which is how the half ended.
In the second half, Diquattro scored her first goal of the game to give Byron-Bergen a 2-1 lead. That goal, too, was a matter of inches, hitting the crossbar before dropping within the area of the goal to count as a score.
But once again, Keshequa answered. This time in about 20 seconds.
Then came Keshequa's third goal. With about four minutes left in the game, Ava Thayer got past the Byron-Bergen defense in space and had a fairly open shot at goal. She didn't miss.
Often in soccer, a one-goal lead is as good as a win with so little time left on the clock.
That's when those precious inches and seconds became so important, and Diquattro became the hero of the moment.
"There's always a bit of luck, right?" said Coach Wayne Hill. "We had luck to score (taking a 2-1 lead). They had luck to come right back down in 20 seconds and score on us right back. They took the lead. I mean, that corner kick was only a corner kick by like three inches. Otherwise, it was a throw, and we've been sunk. So by the grace of God, we got a corner kick. And we scored the tie, and then just the overtime was fantastic."
While it feels great to win in overtime, Hill said he also understands what it's like to be on the other side.
"I was just happy that they fought back and got the tie," Hill said. "That's the best part of overtime, winning. But you always feel horrible for the team that loses in overtime because they deserve to win too. It's a sad, gut-wrenching experience."
Byron-Bergen will next play C1's #1 seed, Holley, at Cal-Mum on either Wednesday or Thursday.
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