Lindner helps GA edge Penn Charter

January 06, 2012

By Ted Silary

silaryt@phillynews.com

While Nick Lindner is playing basketball for Germantown Academy, his face looks like something that has been receiving daily Botox injections.

Then the buzzer sounds, and he turns into Mr. Personality. (After wins, of course.) And it's all part of a master plan.

Story continues below.

"Since last season," said Lindner, a 5-10, 165-pound junior point guard, "I have really worked on controling my emotions. Before, I'd let things get away from me and sometimes it would affect my performance.

"If something went wrong at an important time, I'd get down . . . and that [response] could even carry into the next game. If I did something nice, maybe I'd beat my chest. Since I'm a captain now, I have to be totally focused at all times. Can't let emotion get in the way."

Lindner spoke late Friday afternoon at Cabrini College and his dinner, whether a pretzel or hot dog from the concession stand or something more substantial at a nearby eatery, was going to taste mighty good.

With Lindner contributing 24 points, three assists and seven steals (counting two resulting from 5-second calls), the Patriots edged archrival Penn Charter, 69-67, in the first game of the Inter-Ac League's annual opening tripleheader, now named after former Episcopal/Malvern coach Dan Dougherty.

"I like playing the opener this way," Lindner said. "It's a nice atmosphere in a college gym and the other teams are here to see you."

What no one witnessed was a missed free throw by Lindner, who sniped 11-for-11 at the aptly named (for him) charity stripe.

The marksmanship was hardly a surprise. He entered the game shooting a shade over 90 percent.

"It's a matter of repetition," Lindner said. "Just following the same routine every time. I find it very helpful to start with a deep breath. Then I take two dribbles, think about something nice and shoot the free throw."

Would he care to define something nice?

"Just basketball stuff. Not girls, or anything," he said, laughing. "Mostly just about how we're going to win the game.

"We spend 15 minutes at every practice just practicing free throws. I really put effort into [those sessions] because I know how important they are. They do make the difference."

Lindner's approach must be rubbing off on his teammates. GA finished 22-for-25 at the line in the second half after getting only three opportunities (two makes) in the first.

1 | 2 | Next »
|
|
|
|
|