A rollicking overflow crowd packed the stands and rows of extra folding chairs at Haldeman Pool on Sunday for a Sixth Street Rivalry game like no other.
It was No. 1-ranked Pomona-Pitzer against No. 2 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps for the USA Water Polo Men鈥檚 Division III National Championship, and it delivered everything anyone could have expected.
The nip-and-tuck, suspense-filled game went to overtime before Pomona-Pitzer鈥檚 Ben Sasaki 鈥22 scored the winning goal with 2:33 left in the second three-minute extra period to give the Sagehens a 13-12 victory and the Div. III title. The championship set off a splashing celebration that drew some of the students in the stands into the pool too.
The game-winner was Sasaki鈥檚 fourth goal of the game after he scored a hat trick in regulation.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 about wanting the moment,鈥 he says of his clutch shot. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just that we鈥檝e all practiced really hard for when that moment comes for whoever it is. This time it was me. ... We all worked really hard so that whoever it was in that moment could take a shot and put it away.鈥
It still wasn鈥檛 over, as CMS desperately tried to come back, hitting both goal posts on one shot before finally being thwarted by goalkeeper Kellan Grant 鈥21 with one of his 17 saves鈥攕ome of them spectacular鈥攁s time began to tick down.
鈥淚 give a lot of credit to CMS,鈥 says Sagehens Coach Alex Rodriguez. 鈥淭hey deserved to win the game. I鈥檓 just glad my guys did win it.鈥
The title is the second national championship in just over two weeks for after the men鈥檚 cross country team claimed its second consecutive NCAA Div. III title on Nov. 20.
The water polo national championship isn鈥檛 an NCAA title because college sports鈥 governing body sponsors only a single-division title in water polo, meaning that the qualifying teams from Div. III used to end up opening-round losers to Div. I powerhouses. But in 2019, USA Water Polo stepped in to sponsor a Div. III title in an effort to provide meaningful postseason competition and in hopes of increasing the number of colleges that field water polo teams.
Five 'Super Seniors'
The title was especially sweet for the five Pomona-Pitzer 鈥榮uper seniors鈥欌 Keegan Coleman PZ 鈥21, leading scorer Dylan Elliott 鈥21, goalkeeper Grant, Adam Gross PZ 鈥21 and Noah Sasaki 鈥21鈥攚ho came back for a fifth season after the pandemic canceled last season. They鈥檒l graduate in December, a semester behind their original class.
鈥淰ery, very worth it,鈥 Noah Sasaki says with a grin. 鈥淲orth every single second.鈥
Elliott, another of the super seniors, was held to one goal in the title game with heavy attention from CMS defenders but he scored eight goals in the semifinal win over MIT鈥攁nd he found Ben Sasaki open in the middle with a pass for the winning goal in the title game.
His performance earned him the tournament Most Valuable Player award, but one could argue he wasn鈥檛 the only one who deserved the initials MVP. How about Most Valuable Parents Jennifer and Russell Sasaki, whose three sons combined to score nine of the Sagehens鈥 13 goals? In addition to Ben鈥檚 four goals, his twin brother Sam added a hat trick and older brother Noah scored twice.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e been doing that for three years now, since they鈥檝e all been together. Noah鈥檚 been doing it for four years.鈥 Elliott says. 鈥淚 mean, when you're in a pinch, I think if there鈥檚 one thing you can always rely on it鈥檚 the way that they work together. But to be honest, they鈥檝e also integrated the way they work together into our team. And they are all three great players. Just about anybody on this team I would trust to take a last-minute shot, but Ben making that one in the second overtime just shows the level of composure and control he has.鈥
'We Never Let Up'
Through much of the game, CMS kept taking one-goal leads before Pomona-Pitzer answered back. But the Stags jumped to a three-goal lead in the third quarter and it began to look as if they had taken control. But Pomona-Pitzer came back, taking its first lead of the game, 12-11, with 4:45 to play in the fourth quarter before CMS scored just 12 seconds later to force overtime.
鈥淲e never let up,鈥 Rodriguez says.
Nor did the fans of the Stags, who finished with a 17-12 record and were led by Christian Pang's four goals, or those of the Sagehens, whose final record is 27-8.
鈥淚 grew up in Claremont, so it was really special for me being around the two schools my entire life,鈥 says Grant, the Sagehen goalie. 鈥淚 practiced here for club, and I would never imagine having that many people on the pool deck. We were really excited to be playing CMS and to have that rivalry going, because we knew it was going to be fun ... Having the type of crowd like that? It鈥檚 a lot of fun.鈥