Sunday, October 21, 2018

Amanda Porter’s late goal propels Arizona past Washington State on Senior Day

Kennedy Kieneker is in her fourth season with the Arizona Wildcats, so even when Washington State scored an equalizer in the 69th minute and threatened to spoil Senior Day, she knew not to panic.

“I was a little disappointed, but we still had (21) minutes left,” she said. “I knew we had it ... because I know our team.”

Sure enough, the Wildcats prevailed as they always seem to do on their home turf. Amanda Porter scored from distance in the 72nd minute, propelling Arizona to a 2-1 win over the Cougars on Sunday.

The Wildcats are now 8-1-2 at Mulcahy Stadium this season and 5-0 in their last five games decided by one goal.

“Once they scored, we just knew we had to get it right back,” Porter said. “We’ve gone down before (during) this season and we know how our attitude needs to change.”

Porter netted a bending, left-footed shot from 35 yards out, not unlike Jill Aguilera’s golden goal against Utah a few weeks back.

These Wildcats just have a flair for the dramatic, it seems.

“Well, we practice a lot of shooting,” Porter laughed, “sometimes it’s just luck.”

Whatever it was, it capped off a phenomenal weekend for Arizona, which was able to complete the sweep of the Washington schools. They had been winless in four straight entering the weekend and were open about how much they needed a pair of wins.

“We were kind of in a slump and these past two games kinda helped us get back on our feet,” said senior Taryn Siegele.

Siegele ignited Arizona’s offense in the 61st minute, dribbling along the left side where she sent a cross to Hannah Clifford inside the 18. Clifford’s close-range shot was deflected by the keeper, before trickling to the feet of Brynn Moga, who tapped it in for the game’s first goal.

It was Moga’s second tally in as many games. The junior was the hero Thursday night when she notched the golden goal in a double overtime win against Washington.

The crazy part: Those were her first goals ever at Arizona. How do you explain that?

“I don’t know. It just happened,” Moga shrugged. “There’s no secret. Just working hard.”

But the Cougars wasted little time countering and Maegan O’Neill snuck a shot from the right side inside the near post less than eight minutes later.

“I thought we started the game really well, the energy was good, we created some chances, didn’t put the ball in the back of the net early, and then it turned into a typical Sunday grind it out game,” said UA head coach Tony Amato. “(WSU) came back into the game a little bit and started to create a few chances, and that point we needed to grab a goal and we did. Then they answered back and credit to our team for continuing to stick at it.”

Surprisingly, the match ended in regulation, a running joke after Arizona’s previous four home games all went into double overtime.

“Usually we talk about playing 90 minutes, but we’ve just done away with that,” Amato laughed. “Let’s assume it’s going 100-something minutes and we’ll find a way to win. At that point when it was 1-1 and the game was creeping on, I thought ‘if we go into extra time we’ll be just fine.’”

But Arizona’s defense was just too solid to allow a second goal. The Wildcats finished with a 15-7 shot differential and prevented any real scoring chances after Porter’s heroics, aside from a floating corner kick that goalkeeper Lainey Burdett leaped to snag in front of the net.

“I think we have a resilient group who’s willing to grind out those things and fight in those battles and find a way to win,” Amato said. “Porter popped up with a great finish and we managed the game well down the stretch to limit their chances when were up 2-1 and killed the game off, so it’s a real credit to the team.”

As with any Pac-12 win, it was big one for the Wildcats, who improve to 10-4-2 overall and 3-3-2 in the conference.

Arizona is guaranteed to finish over .500 and continues to have an RPI inside the Top 25, meaning they are in line to make the NCAA Tournament, barring a total collapse in their last three games.

“I think we’re in good shape,” Amato said. “Today was really important and really the whole weekend. It was important to get both wins, then we push onto Oregon State on Thursday. No easy task to go on the Oregon trip and play both of those schools, so I like where are as of today, but if we go out and don’t perform well next weekend, it won’t feel that way.”

For UA’s four seniors, who have a chance to make the postseason for the third time, the win over WSU was an ideal way to complete their final regular-season homestand.

They were honored before the match, then celebrated by Amato and their teammates after it.

“It’s definitely bittersweet,” Kieneker said, holding back tears. “It’s really cool to get the win … but it’s sad because I’m going to miss this place.”

Not so fast.

If the Wildcats fare well enough down the stretch, Kieneker and the rest of the senior class will get at least one more chance to make some Mulcahy Magic.

After all, the top 32 teams host the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

“I’m going to be optimistic and say that our seniors will get to play here again,” Amato said. “I think we’ll find a way to get a few wins here down the stretch and end up back here.”

Postgame interviews



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