"In that moment, we knew that we just had to look for each other. We've been playing together for a long time, and we knew where each other was going to be and when we were going to be there," said Delran senior guard Taylor Umbrell, who scored a game-high 21 points and was equally effective on defense.
"It was a big win. But we scouted them, we were prepared, we worked hard, and we got the win."
That win gives Delran an edge in a division, the Burlington County Patriot, that should be the toughest in South Jersey. Delran opened the season as the Inquirer's No. 4 team in South Jersey, Holy Cross (0-1) as the No. 3 team, and division favorite Willingboro as No. 2.
Last season, Holy Cross and Delran shared the division title after splitting two matchups.
"It feels nice to take our first game against such a big opponent," said junior forward Aliyah Murray, who finished with 17 points and shined in the fourth quarter when she netted six points and pulled down three rebounds. "We knew we had to finish. And I was just trying to do my best to help us get the win."
Delran had been working with a comfortable lead for much of the second half before Holy Cross went on a 9-2 run that cut the Bears' lead to one at 44-43 with 6 minutes, 35 seconds left.
For the rest of the game, it was all Delran.
The Bears denied the Lancers any chance to get back in the game thanks to their ability to force turnovers, win the battles under the basket, and score big baskets when they had to.
Center Crystal Cleveland was particularly dominant under the boards. She finished with 11 points and 13 rebounds.
"I was hoping that our experience was going to help us, and I think it did a little bit," Delran coach Pete Miles said.
Holy Cross, with a freshman, two sophomores, and two seniors in its starting five, came out shooting in the first quarter.
The team quickly jumped out to a 9-4 lead thanks to a run-and-gun spurt led by sophomore point guard Alliya Butts (18 points) and freshman forward Aliyah Jeune.