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Sports

Claramente

Lighthouse Christian Academy scraped through quarter finals Wednesday against Chaffey High of Ontario. Clara Czer kept her mind clear.

By Michael Ashcraft --

To keep from panicking in tense games, Clara Czer says a keyword to herself when she goes to hit or serve. Usually, the word derives from her personal faith.

"I was really nervous," the junior says. "The only thing on my mind was Jesus, Jesus, Jesus."

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Lighthouse Christian Academy fended off a public high school 73 times larger Wednesday to advance into semi-finals, but it drew down a cardiac Game 5 in which they were trailing 6-11.

Chaffey High School from Ontario, with 3,300 students, was within four points to win. Lighthouse, population 45, needed to surmount nine points.

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"We had to really struggle in the last set," says Roxy Photenhauer. "All of us agreed it was God. We came back from that time out, and we did not let a ball drop. We really, really, really fought hard because we owed it to ourselves and the rest of our teammates."

At the end of the day, Game 5 went 18-16. (Game 5 goes to 15, but you have to win by two points.)

It was a scrappy win at Memorial Park that saw the Saints lose some of the former fine form. LCA's main hatchet-bearer Dahlia Gonzalez struggled with long hits. Squandering opportunities, serves went long. Players played through injury and sickness.

It was an agonizing game.

In Game 1, Lighthouse relapsed into a habitual poor form. Throughout the season, the Saints don't seem to hit the ground running but take a full first game to find their form. Down for the whole game, they lost 17-25.

In Game 2, after both teams staying neck-and-neck, Lighthouse pulled away to seal off a 25-21 victory.

In Game 3, Lighthouse went down 5-11 receiving Chaffey's strong serves like mortar shells.

But the girls kept their mental strength and rallied to level at 12-12. Elizabeth Foreman, LCA's tall center, was slicing up the opposition with hits that cut like a warm knife through a cheesecake.

Having come from behind, Lighthouse finished off 25-18.

Momentum was on the Saints' side.

But the Tigers pounced on their opportunities in Game 4 and pulled ahead in the middle of the game, while Lighthouse committed errors. The set ended 20-25.

Both teams were even with two wins, but Chaffey were riding high in confidence.

In Game 5, the Tigers continued to wreak havoc with its strong serves, pulling ahead 6-11 -- a mere four points from victory. But in the time out, a flush Clara rallied the troops: "There were so many times that we were all so defeated. But I was like no, it's not 15 yet."

Suddenly, Dahlia, in the serving position, rediscovered her inner HIMARS. As 200 Saints fans shouted "Do it again, Dahlia!" the sophomore aimed and took fire. The Ukrainians take out Russian tanks, Dahlia hunted Tigers.

It became 13-11.

With hearts leaping out of chests on both sides, went 14-13 and then 16-16.

Either side needed two points.

With Chaffey serving, the girls played for 27 seconds back and forth, with both sides being cautious to not make a mistake, until Chaffey hit the ball into the night and Lighthouse got the point and the serve.

Roxie served a sinking ball that forced the Tigers into a dive on the floor. The return for the Saints was easy but instead of smashing the ball, sophomore Allie Scribner played it safe and lobbed the ball over.

When Chaffey returned it, Allie set Clara for a back row hit, which is always a bit nervy but would probably be against better judgement in the last play of the game.

But Clara visualized claramente -- clearly -- the strike. She's studying Spanish, so using her name in a pun is ok. She jumped, hit a soft but sinking, impossible ball into the middle of the Tigers. The Tigers libero, the target, looked tired. She and another girl hit the wood, neither hit the ball.

Screaming Saints fans mobbed the LCA players on their side of the court. There was hugging and jubilation.

Ten years ago was the last time the Saints made it to quarter finals, and here the plucky team that compares itself to the Bible's David-vs-Goliath story advanced to semifinals.

"They were a better team," says Coach Jessica Young. "They had some very good serves. We weren't playing 100 percent. A few couldn't come to practice yesterday for different reasons. I I just really feel like God wants to be the hero."

Zeus Showed Up

Michael Ashcraft teaches journalism at the Lighthouse Christian Academy in Santa Monica.

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