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Landrie Callahan's relentlessness leads Providence to Sandburg Holiday Classic championship

Providence senior forward Landrie Callahan always makes her presence felt.

At 6-2, Callahan has a height advantage in most games. Combine her height with an insatiable desire to attack the glass, and that’s how you get a player who scored 30 points and grabbed 14 rebounds in Providence’s dominant 69-48 win over Lincoln-Way East to win the Sandburg Holiday Classic championship.

In the second quarter, Callahan hauled in three offensive rebounds on one possession before finishing with a layup. She always has her eyes on the rim, seemingly transfixed on where the ball is going to bounce.

“I always just think that if there's not a way I can get the ball, I'm always going to rebound,” said Callahan, who was named tournament MVP.

But there are layers to Callahan’s game. She’s not just a glass-cleaning forward who finishes through contact at a high rate, as shown by the three threes she hit and how easily she executed a fake DHO. Callahan went on a personal 7-0 run to begin the third quarter that showcased her full skill set — she finished a layup created by a teammate, knocked down a three and scored on an impressive drive to the basket through traffic.

Her versatility will be key for Providence (16-1) as it enters the second half of the season.

“She can board all day long,” coach Eileen Copenhaver said. “We're actually pushing her all the time to do more defensively, as far as moving [and] helping. Sometimes I have her guard somebody really small ... but to have that rim protector — her and [junior forward Taylor Healy] — have been blocking shots left and right, and it's really helping us.”

Lincoln-Way East loves to get out in transition and launch threes. They also incorporate a lot of movements in their sets, which makes it difficult for players to decipher on the fly. If Providence was late on a rotation, the Griffins would capitalize. But outside of a couple of transition threes, the Celtics really stifled the Griffins’ potent attack.

The Celtics allowed just eight points in the second quarter, which really allowed them to take control of Tuesday’s game.

“Communicating on defense is big for us,” said senior forward Eilish Raines, who scored seven points. “Being able to switch through screens and switch on players, knowing that we can play both is great.”

Providence thrived Tuesday on attacking the paint and driving to the rim against an undersized Lincoln-Way East defense that was intentional about packing the paint.

Copenhaver said the team has been coming together and playing unselfishly, which was particularly important against the Griffins. Healy scored eight points and grabbed 17 rebounds. Layken Callahan, Landrie’s sister, scored 14 points.

“[Lincoln-Way East] was a lot different than any other team we played,” Callahan said. “They came out with different defenses every single possession. Every time out, they came out with a new defense.”

But the Celtics’ ability to adjust led them to a win, and it will be particularly important come playoff time, as they will be a team to watch in Class 3A. For Callahan, who transferred from Morris, she’s monitoring the field, especially Washington (13-0), which she played against last year.

If the Celtics can continue stringing together performances like Tuesday, a deep playoff run might not be out of the question.

“I always look at [Washington], because I know they've been a good team, and they've been so underrated all year,” Callahan said. “I just love watching them, seeing how they're doing and then just seeing where we compare to them and where our strengths are at and just seeing how we can build off that.”

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