Amid an undercurrent of emotion dating back two years, high-flying Braham showed it can win ugly, outlasting defending champion Providence Academy 49-39 to advance to Saturday's Class 2A championship game.
With once-in-a-lifetime guard Rebekah Dahlman — the leading scorer in Minnesota girls' basketball history — as their leader, Braham averaged nearly 83 points per game. Providence Academy was the polar opposite. Only three teams had scored as many as 50 points on the Lions.
"I told our kids that the first team to 50 points would win and I really believed that," Braham coach Tim Moore said.
The game held an added element of drama as the result of a meeting in the 2011 quarterfinals, won by Braham. Dahlman's aggressive style was the subject of disagreement between the teams, and both sides remembered.
"I really wanted to beat them," Dahlman said. "We beat them by a couple of points two years ago and they won the championship last year. No doubt I was looking forward to this game."
Braham charged to a 19-8 lead, courtesy of a 12-2 run. But Providence, battle-tested and senior-led, stayed patient and worked their way back thanks to guard Leah Szabla.
"Leah is very competitive," said Providence coach Ray Finley. "She brings strength and has a ruggedness at the rim."
Dahlman, to that point content in getting her teammates involved, took charge, using her quickness and explosive first step to score Braham's final eight points and keep Providence at bay. Braham led 27-25 at halftime.