weekly roundup *season on the road difficult...

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WEEKLY ROUNDUP *Season on the road difficult *Players hit 50, 52 same game *Four unbeatens fall *Youth playoffs start Feb. 24 SUMMER CAMP DIRECTORY PAGES 13-16 Volume 24 Issue No. 13 February 23 2017-2018 Eastview hallmarks: team pride and smart, shut-down defense By Bruce Strand W hy is it so difficult to beat the Eastview girls? Well, their de- fensive stats give the best clues. Not only do the Lightning allow just 41.8 points per game, but they shut you down without getting into foul trouble, either. Their starters aver- age between one and two fouls per game. “Our girls are a combination of high IQ players and disciplined,” coach Molly Kasper said. “We talk and explain the game throughout every practice and every drill … You can’t always rely on your shooting or of- fense, but you can control your ef- fort and placement on defense.” Eastview is 25-0, ranked first in Class 4A since toppling the pre- season favorite, Hopkins, 66-56 on Dec. 29. They’ve vanquished four top-team teams: St. Michal-Albert- ville, Northfield, Lakeville North twice, and Hopkins. The Lightning has held everybody under 60 points except Lakeville South, whom they beat 69-64 as the Cougars shot 55 percent on 3-point- ers on Feb. 13. “The girls did no- tice,” said Kasper. They took it personally and held the next three opponents to 44, 18 and 36 points. Eastview’s leader is Megan Wals- tad, an all-state tournament pick the last two years, averaging 17 points and 9 rebounds in six state games. This year, the versatile 6-1 senior averages 15 points, shooting almost 60 percent on two’s and three’s, along with nine re- bounds and three blocks. She’s a force on both ends of the court. “We have her defend all five positions during a game,” Kasper said. “She is quick laterally, long, ac- tive, and defensive-mind- ed, so she is able to be a shut-down defender, and contest shots.” Everybody can score. Se- nior forward Mariah Ali- pate averages 9.7 points, junior guard Macy Gue- bert 9.2 points, senior for- ward Andrea Abrams 8.2 points, junior guard Emma Carptener 8.0 points and 4.8 assists, and freshman guard Cassidy Carlson 6.0 points. “We have had D1 athletes willing to shoot three to five shots in a given night, if that is what the team needs or what the best op- tion is available,” Kasper said about the team’s balance. “They have truly bought in to the mentality of not caring about the final stat line Megan Walstad, UW-Milwaukee recruit, leads the top-ranked team. Photo by Nicole Bryan Continued on Page 2

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WEEKLY ROUNDUP*Season on the road difficult

*Players hit 50, 52 same game*Four unbeatens fall

*Youth playoffs start Feb. 24 SUMMER CAMP

DIRECTORY PAGES 13-16

Volume 24 Issue No. 13 February 23 2017-2018

Eastview hallmarks: team pride and smart, shut-down defense

By Bruce Strand

Why is it so difficult to beat the Eastview girls? Well, their de-

fensive stats give the best clues.

Not only do the Lightning allow just 41.8 points per game, but they shut you down without getting into foul trouble, either. Their starters aver-age between one and two fouls per game.

“Our girls are a combination of high IQ players and disciplined,” coach Molly Kasper said. “We talk and explain the game throughout every practice and every drill … You can’t always rely on your shooting or of-fense, but you can control your ef-fort and placement on defense.”

Eastview is 25-0, ranked first in Class 4A since toppling the pre-season favorite, Hopkins, 66-56 on Dec. 29. They’ve vanquished four top-team teams: St. Michal-Albert-ville, Northfield, Lakeville North twice, and Hopkins.

The Lightning has held everybody under 60 points except Lakeville South, whom they beat 69-64 as the Cougars shot 55 percent on 3-point-ers on Feb. 13. “The girls did no-tice,” said Kasper. They took it personally and held the next three opponents to 44, 18 and 36 points.

Eastview’s leader is Megan Wals-tad, an all-state tournament pick the last two years, averaging 17 points and 9 rebounds in six state games. This year, the versatile 6-1 senior averages 15 points, shooting almost

60 percent on two’s and three’s, along with nine re-bounds and three blocks. She’s a force on both ends of the court.

“We have her defend all five positions during a game,” Kasper said. “She is quick laterally, long, ac-tive, and defensive-mind-ed, so she is able to be a shut-down defender, and contest shots.”

Everybody can score. Se-nior forward Mariah Ali-pate averages 9.7 points, junior guard Macy Gue-bert 9.2 points, senior for-ward Andrea Abrams 8.2 points, junior guard Emma Carptener 8.0 points and 4.8 assists, and freshman guard Cassidy Carlson 6.0 points.

“We have had D1 athletes willing to shoot three to five shots in a given night, if that is what the team needs or what the best op-

tion is available,” Kasper said about the team’s balance. “They have truly bought in to the mentality of not caring about the final stat line

Megan Walstad, UW-Milwaukee recruit, leads the top-ranked team.

Photo by Nicole Bryan

Continued on Page 2

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 2

Eastview: aiming for 7th state trip in row

Minneota boys hand arch rival RTR first loss 61-59The Minneota Vikings handed conference and sec-

tion rival Russell-Tyler-Ruthton its first loss 61-59 on Tuesday evening, with about a thousand fans jammed into the Minneota gymnasium.

Jacob Hennen, a lanky 6-foot-3 freshman, led with 23 points, 20 of them in the second half, and 11 rebounds. He hit four 3-pointers.

Minneota had three starters with three fouls each in the first half, including junior Thomas Hennen, their scor-ing leader (20 ppg), who finished with 16 points and eight rebounds, and soph center Logan Sussner, who finished with 11 points. The Vikings trailed 28-21 at the half but knocked down 41 points in the second half against a team allowing only 44 per game.

“RTR has a great defense. They use a jump trap that you don’t see very often. They have five athletes who are as good as you’ll see, ” Minneota coach Dave Bus-

selman said. “I thought we did a pretty good job against that trap in the second half.”

Thomas Hennen got loose for a six-foot jumper with 1:20 left that gave Minneota its final 61-59 margin. The Vikings missed two free shots with 12 seconds left. RTR missed a three just before the horn.

For RTR (24-1), Westin Kirk had 16 points, Garrett Kern 15, Cooper Hansen 11 and Carter Hansen 11 each.

Minneota (21-2) lost to the Knights 60-52 on Feb. 1. The RTR gymnasium was packed for that one, too. “We have a pretty young team, just one senior starter, a cou-ple sophomores and a freshman playing,” Busselman said. “That game was a good learning experience.”

RTR still won the Camden Conference South with a 15-1 record. Minneota was 14-2. Each is seeded first in their sub-section and might clash again for a state trip.

… Even our 7 to 9 players hit the open shots, and have scored consistently.”

On defense, the Lightning are not espe-cially flashy but make opponents work awfully hard to get open. They take pride in 60 to 90 second defensive pos-sessions concluded by a stop or rebound.

“We might not get a steal in the first 20 seconds, but we care about our pres-sure, our deflections, and how difficult of a shot we are giving up to the other team,” Kasper said

Walsted has signed with UW-Milwau-kee. Alipate (who missed her junior year with an ACL) is set for St. Cloud State. Guebert has verbally committed to South Dakota.

There’s nothing new about Eastview success, of course. Eastview has ad-vanced to state six consecutive years (a Class 4A record) in which they’ve had one title, one runner-up finish, three

third-places and one fourth.

In the last seven years, East-view is 192-24 overall and 13-5 in state tournaments, under coaches Melissa Gue-bert and now Kasper for the past three years.

“The success is due to the commitment our players, coaches, and community has to Eastview,” Kasper said. “AAU and summer work-outs are important, but our girls make a point to be a part of our program and team on a year-round basis.”

She said all four grades show up en masse every day for off-season team activities.

“Our student-athletes take pride in the fact they get to put an Eastview jersey on. We think it is pretty special.”

Emma Carpenter is floor leader for a very balanced attack.

Photo by Nicole Bryan

Continued from Page 1

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 3

On the road again: Minnehaha boys clip Caledonia in top-5 clash

By Bruce Strand

The Minnehaha Academy teams are grate-ful to neighboring schools for letting the

Redhawks use their gymnasiums this year.

Their announcer effusively praised St. Thomas Academy in particular for its hos-pitality Saturday, after the Redhawks played there for the third time, beating Caledonia 79-75 in a clash of Class 2A powers.

That said, the Redhawks REALLY miss home games.

“It’s awful,” coach Lance Johnson said, bluntly, about the current season of road games caused by the tragic gas-leak explo-sion on campus last August.

“Our kids can never sit down on the floor and socialize after a practice like they normally would. We always have to be out of there in two hours,” he said.

“We are always lugging all our equipment around. My truck is constantly full of stuff.”

He brightened a bit while listing this distinction earned by his team: “I’m sure nobody in history (of Minnesota prep basketball) ever won more road games than we have this year.”

Twenty of them, in fact. The No. 2 ranked, defending Class 2A champions are 20-4 after fending off No. 4 Caledonia.

The Redhawks led by seven before their best two play-ers, JaVonni Bickham and Jalen Sugg, fouled out just before and after the one-minute mark. Caledonia (18-4) surged within one point but the Redhawks stayed ahead at the free throw line, with the two clinchers coming from sophomore Siegel Howard, who totaled four points.

The Redhawks were 15-for-18 at the line with Bickman 8-for-8. Suggs scored 19 points, Bickman 13, Terry Lockett added 11 and Prince Aligbe 10.

Jalen Suggs drives against Caledonia’s Marten Morem.Bruce Strand, Minnesota Basketball New

JaVonni Bickham’s 8-for-8 free throw shooting helped the Redhaws win a close game.

Owen King poured in 27 points for Caledonia, wearing a mask to protect a recently-broken nose that sidelined him for five games. Sam Barthel added 18, including a falling-down, 25-foot three-pointer at the horn in the first half, and Noah King 13.

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 4

Fergus, Marshall each tip WillmarBy Bruce Strand

The Willmar boys went 21 games without losing, then fell two nights in a row last week.

Fergus Falls toppled the Cardinals 83-82 on Nathan Rund’s three-pointer in the final sec-onds at home Thursday, Feb. 15, af-ter the Cardinals gave up the ball on a questionable five-second violation. “There was an inadvertent horn, the refs didn’t hear it, there was a five-second call, and to our kids’ credit, we capitalized on it,” Otter coach Matt Johnson told the Fergus Falls Daily Journal. Willmar missed a three-pointer and a putback before the horn.

Matthew Johnson scored 25 points, Rund 23 and Har-rison Christensen 20 for the Ottters (17-6), who rallied from 11 down. Noah Slagter scored 29, Jake Evans 15, Drey Dirksen 13 and Donald Jurek 13 for Willmar.

The next night, No. 5 Marshall (21-3) came to Willmar and beat the No. 6 Cardinals 76-62, shooting 53 per-cent, including 7-for-14 on three’s. The Tigers were led by Trey Lance with 25 points and Noah Putz with 16. Slagter had 27 for Willmar.

* * *

The Hayfield girls won a top-five clash of Class 1A teams over Goodhue 72-58 on Friday in the regular-

season finale for both teams. No. 1 ranked Lyle-Pacelli (25-1), No. 3 Hayfield (22-4) and No. 4 Goodhue (19-7) all play in Section 1A and will likely be seeded in that order. Carrie Rutledge hit 17 points, Emma Holst 16 and Elecia Brown 13 for Hayfield. Sydney Loder-meier sank 18 points and Arianna Thomforde 15 for Goodhue.

* * *

Redwood Valley boys snapped a 14-game win streak by New Richland-Hartland-Ellendale-Geneva 63-

61 Saturday in Redwood Falls. Mitch Irlbeck delivered 18 points and Cole Woodford 14 to lead the Cardinals (12-11). Brady Agrimson tallied 21 points and Benji Lundberg 20 for NRHEG (20-2).

Nathan Rund

* * *Mitchell Weber “isn’t your prototype 3-point shooter,” the Mankato Free Press noted, but the muscular 6-foot-5 St. Clair senior tossed up a high-arching 28-footer that banked through the cords with two seconds left Saturday, sending their game with Cleveland into over-time. St. Clair (15-9) went on to win 70-65 in double overtime over the Clippers (19-5). Weber logged 31 points and 15 rebounds and hit another three in OT for a 63-60 lead. Austin Plonsky sank 24 for Cleveland.

* * *

Owatonna had won 14 straight since losing to Roch-ester John Marshall 82-65 on Jan. 2. The Huskies

met the Rockets again Saturday evening and were not able to get revenge. RJM snapped that win streak 62-46 in Rochester with Matthew Hurt amassing 30 points and 17 rebounds and Eric Stai adding 18 points. The Rockets held the Huskies to a season-low 32 percent shooting and one double-digit scorer, Dalton Kubista with 12. Owatonna was playing a back-to-back, hav-ing beaten Red Wing 84-55 the night before. Kubista scored his 1,000th point in that game, in which he had just four points as Owatonna rested its starters.

* * *

The Hopkins boys (23-1) keep mowing down what-ever highly-ranked team you put in their way. The

Royals thumped No. 12 Wayzata 89-63 last Friday, their 23rd straight win. They have vanquished eight teams ranked in the top 10 in 4A, 3A, or 2A, including two number ones, DeLaSalle and Minnehaha Acad-emy, along with a pair of top-five South Dakota teams. The win streak started after an opening 86-73 loss to Cretin-Derham Hall. Against Wayzata, two long-limbed juniors led the scoring as 6-10 Zeka Nnaji laid in 23 points and 6-6 Dane Zimmer added 16.

* * *

The No. 2 Austin boys completed a season sweep of No. 3 Mankato East 73-68 Friday. Duoth Zach

sank 32 points for the Packers (21-1), who shot 12-for-22 on three-pointers. Medi Obang added 16 and Moses Issa 10. For the Cougars (18-4), Dasani Hayes netted 19 points, Jax Madson 17 and Yohana Ochan 15.

Got a tip for Minnesota Basketball News about a player, team, game, coach, issue or any-thing else interesting? Send e-mail to [email protected]

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 5

Questions?? Call Pacesetter at 320-243-7460 oremail: [email protected] • Website: www.pacesettersports.netFollow our Facebook page: Pacesetter Basketball2018

M I NNESOTARegion Playoff Schedule

ALL GRADES REFER TO THE 2017-2018 SCHOOL YEAR

4B = 4th grade boys Teams may register for more than one region. 4G = 4th grade girls See back for details. Region 1 Site Date 4G, 6G, 8G, 5B, 7B, 9B RCTC (Rochester) March 24 5G, 7G, 9G, 4B, 6B, 8B RCTC (Rochester) March 25

Region 2 Site Date 5G, 7G, 9G, 4B, 6B, 8B MN State - Mankato April 21 4G, 6G, 8G, 5B, 7B, 9B MN State - Mankato April 22 Region 3 Site Date 5G, 7G, 9G, 4B, 6B, 8B Redwood Falls March 24 4G, 6G, 8G, 5B, 7B, 9B Redwood Falls March 25 Region 4 Site Date 6G, 8G, 5B *(UPDATED) Willow River April 7 5G, 7G, 4B *(UPDATED) Willow River April 8 4G, 7B, 9B Moose Lake April 7 9G, 6B, 8B Moose Lake April 8 Region 5 Site Date 4B, 6B, 8B Paynesville April 7 5B, 9B, 8G Paynesville April 8 5G, 7G, 9G Paynesville April 14 4G, 6G, 7B Paynesville April 15 Region 6 Site Date 5G, 7G, 9G, 4B, 6B, 8B Moorhead April 14 4G, 6G, 8G, 5B, 7B, 9B Moorhead April 15 Region 7 Site Date 6G Hibbing April 14 6B, 9B, 9G Hibbing April 15 4G, 8G, 5B, 7B Grand Rapids April 14 5G, 7G, 4B, 8B Grand Rapids April 15

Region 8 Site Date 4G, 6G, 8G, 5B, 7B, 9B Bemidji April 21 5G, 7G, 9G, 4B, 6B, 8B Bemidji April 22

Region Champions invited to the MN State Championship. Teams with one loss invited to the MIT.

Top two teams at STATE advance to Target Center in Minneapolis.

All grades refer to the 2017-2018 school year.“Hometown Team” guideline:

All players on a team must either be enrolled in the same school system or live or attend school in the same city, the same school district or the same tribal community. Smaller schools may combine to form one team if the combined enrollment of their high schools for grades 9-12 is 400 or fewer.

Schools that combine should be from neighboring schools.

pacesetter

Detroit Lakes5th Grade Girls

2017 Great Four-State Champs

Lake City7th Grade Girls

2017 Great Four-State Champs

Team Entry Form - Minnesota Region Playoffs

___ All players are from one school district. School district______________________________________________________ (Check one)

___ Combined team. School districts ________________________________________________________________________ Site:____________________________ Grade______ Circle: Boys or Girls Team Rating: Strong Good Fair Weak (Circle one )

Team Contact______________________________________________Team Color/Name:______________________________ (needed if two teams from same school register)

Cell #________________________________________________Alt #_______________________________________________

Mailing address__________________________________________________________________________________________ (Street) (City) (State) (Zip)

Email address____________________________________________________________________________________________ (Email address required - Confirmation will be sent via email - Please write legibly)

Alternate Contact ________________________________________ Cell # __________________________________________

Send check and this form to PACESETTER, PO BOX 222, PAYNESVILLE, MN 56362 Registration also available online at www.pacesettersports.net

$180/team per tournament

Youth Basketball State Championship REGION PLAYOFFS

Sauk Centre9th Grade Girls

2017 Great Four-State Champs

New London-Spicer8th Grade Girls

2017 Great Four-State Champs

ML/WR5th Grade Boys

2017 Great Four-State Champs

Minnesota State Championships • Maple Grove MS 4G, 6G, 5B, 8B MIT - MN Invitational June 9 4G, 6G, 5B, 8B State Championship June 10 5G, 8G, 4B, 6B MIT - MN Invitational June 16 5G, 8G, 4B, 6B State Championship June 17 7G, 9G, 7B, 9B MIT - MN Invitational June 23 7G, 9G, 7B, 9B State Championship June 24

ROADTO

TARGET CENTER!5 - state championship

Wisconsin is joining in 2018!

Minnesota won 5 of the 12

GREAT STATECHAMPIONSHIP

TITLES!

Wisconsin joining in 2018!MN - IA - ND - SD - WI

FREETimberwolves

Tickets(2018-2019 season)

All players will receive a free ticket offer!

The Minnesota State Champion and Runner-up in each grade are invited to the Great Five-State Championships in

Minneapolis.

(See back for details)

3-4 game guaranteeRegistration Deadline:

12 days before tournament

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 6

MARCH MADNESS: Pacesetter Sports 5-state youth team playoffs begin Feb. 24

The Pacesetter 5-state youth basketball playoffs will begin when teams in grades 4-9 from Iowa, Minne-

sota, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin enter qualifying tournaments in their own state. Over 1,000 teams will be playing. Iowa teams will play off in two regions, Cedar Falls/Wa-terloo (North) Feb. 24-25 and Pella (South) March 3 to advance to the state tournament in Des Moines April 7-8. Minnesota teams will play off in eight regions: Roches-ter, Mankato, Redwood Falls, Moose Lake/Willow Riv-er, Paynesville, Moorhead, Hibbing/Grand Rapids, and Bemidji, from March 24-April 22 to advance to the Min-nesota state tournaments in Maple Grove in June.

Top Teams Advance to Target Center in MinneapolisSouth Dakota teams will play off in state tournaments in Sioux Falls March 10 and Yankton April 7-8. Wisconsin teams will play off for the Wisconsin state championships in Ripon March 11 and March 18 and North Dakota teams will play off for the North Dakota state championships in Jamestown April 14-15. Top teams advance to Minneapolis for the Pacesetter Great Five-State Championships, where each team will play at least one game on the main Target Center floor. The Minnesota Timberwolves and Lynx are sponsoring this youth basketball playoff system for hometown teams. Further information and registration are available at www.pacesettersports.net.

Pacesetter Championship Basketball CampsSummer 2018

June 12-14 • All-Skills Camp • John Carlson • Willmar, MN June 19-21 • All-Skills Camp • John Carlson • Sauk Rapids, MN June 26-28 • Combo Camp • Paul McDonald • Cloquet, MN June 26-28 • Shooting Camp • Jeff McCarron • Okoboji, IA July 17-19 • All-Skills Camp • John Carlson, Steve Hucke & Tom Vix • Rochester, MN

July 1 (1 day) • College Prep Camp • Boys/Girls Grades 9-college freshman • St. Joseph, MN

Camps for CHAMPIONS by CHAMPIONS!

Boys & Girls Grades 6-12Sascha Hansen3-time statechampion player John Carlson3-time statechampion coach

Reg is ter

Today!

Housing available • Camp info/online registration www.pacesettersports.net

Boys & Girls • Grades 6-103 days • 28 Hours

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 7

The Pacesetter Minnesota Invitational Tournament has been one of the premier summer tournaments in the Midwest since 1991. NBA players Joel Przybilla, Mike Miller, Kris Humphries, and Nate Wohlers are a few of the many top male and female players who have played in the MIT.

The top teams from the 5-state area of Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin are invited annually. Each year 40-70 teams participate.

All teams play 5-6 games in two days. Teams play in “regional” brackets on Saturday (3-4 games) and advance to Final Four brackets based on Saturday results for Sunday (2 games).

Teams that win the prestigious MIT championships will receive individual plaques. Teams with high finishes receive medals with neck ribbons.

One of the top facilities in the area will host this event: Clemens Fieldhouse and Claire Lynch gym at The College of St. Benedict (St. Joseph).

Interested teams are encouraged to register soon to hold a spot.

Circle One: Boys Girls School _________________________________ Team Contact Person _________________________Email address (required) ________________________________________________________________Cell ___________________________________ Alternate Phone ______________________________Mailing Address _______________________________________________________________________Alternate Contact _________________________ Alternate’s Cell # _____________________________

VARSITY BOYS & GIRLS

Registration Deadline: July 13 (if not already filled)Entry Fee $280

Online Registration: www.pacesettersports.net

Contact Information: Email Jeff McCarron at [email protected]

or call Tracey at 320-243-7460

2018 PACESETTER

Saturday - Sunday, July 21-22College of St. Benedict

St. Joseph, MN (4 miles west of St. Cloud)

For Strong Teams Only!

FOR STRONG TEAMS ONLY!

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 8

Two break team records in same gameBy Bruce Strand

Star players from neigh-boring Sebeka and

Wadena-Deer Creek both broke their school career records during a game against each other that was pretty exciting in its own right last Friday night, Se-beka pulling out the win 57-54 at home.

James Clark, senior guard, sank 16 points and became Sebeka’s all-time leading scorer with his third point of the night. He passed his brother, Joey Cuperus, who scored 1,802 points in his career ending in 2010. Clark is averaging 20.4 points for the Trojans (11-11).

Noah Ross, in turn, scored 13 points and broke Wade-na-Deer Creek’s record with his with sixth point, pass-ing John Greenwald, who logged 1,317 points for Deer Creek, a record that stood since 1988. The senior guard is averaging 23 points for the Wolverines (11-13).

Both boys’ milestones were met with standing ovations

from the huge crowd gathered for the boys and girls doubleheader games, Sebeka coach Jon Lillquist reported. These schools are 15 miles apart on High-way 71. They’ve had six close games the last three seasons with Se-beka winning four.

“James is lightning quick and does things on the court that amaze you,” said Lillquist. “He’s played varsity since eighth grade and he’s evolved every year to make his game better.

He loves the game and gives it everything he has every time he steps on that court.”

Lillquist coached both Ross and Clark on an AAU team last spring.

“Noah is one of the quietest kids to be around, also one of the nicest, but he is one of the most intense competitors you will ever meet,” Lillquist said. “He’s an outstanding

James Clark of Sebeka and Noah Ross of Wade-na-Deer Creek each captured their school career

points record in a game won by Sebeka 57-54.

Hopkins jolts Wayzata from unbeaten ranks 69-38The Hopkins Royals “took that pretty personal,”

their star player told Minnesota Basketball Hub, when the Wayzata Trojans rallied to beat them 70-66 in December.

Paige Bueckers and the Royals (22-3) got their opportunity for a payback last Friday and demolished the previ-ously-unbeaten Trojans 69-38 on their Senior Night at home.

Wayzata’s Kallie Theisen, Annika Stewart and Jenna Johnson — all at least 6-foot-1 — entered the game

averaging a combined 35 points per game. This time, the trio had 14 total, due mostly to Hopkins’ relentless pressure on the Trojan guards.

Bueckers, 5-foot-11 sophomore point guard regarded as the state’s top college prospect, led with 28 points. She has missed some time with an ankle injury but looked full-speed against Wayzata. Raena Suggs added 14 points and Dlayla Chakolis 12.

Along with honoring the team’s four seniors, the Roy-als recognized coach Brian Cosgriff for recently notch-ing his 500th victory at Hopkins.Paige

Bueckers

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 9

Shootout: High scorers had 52 & 50 By Bruce Strand

Two players scored 50 points in one Minnesota high school boys game

last week — and yes, it has happened before, once.

Jayden Heisler of Mahnomen-Waubun poured in 50 points to lead a 110-91 win over Red Lake, but wasn’t even the game high scorer. Kendall Whitefeather countered with 52 points for the Warriors on Feb. 12 in Mahn-omen.

“We could’ve had a six-second shot clock, and it wouldn’t have gone off,” quipped John Clark, Mahn-omen-Waubun coach, in the Grand Forks Herald’s ac-count of the game by Tom Miller.

Clark checked with state prep basketball historian Matt Pederson to see if this was a first. Not quite. In 2013, Lakeview Christian’s Anders Broman outscored Deer River’s Noah Kaczor 58 to 54, leading a 112-107 win. Oddly, that game also took place on Feb. 12.

“I have seen kids heat up in games before, but I’ve never seen two kids go back and forth and make every-

thing,” Clark told the Herald.Heisler, 5-foot-9 junior guard, was 17-for-30 from the field, 11-for-19 on three’s and 5-for-9 at the line.

Heisler is averaging 16 points for the Thunderbirds (12-8) and his previ-ous high was 26 points. “That’s a big jump,” Heisler said. “I never thought I could score 50.”

This is the first year of a Mahnomen-Waubun pairing. Clark said the Mahnomen’s record was 47 points by Brandon White, while Waubun’s was

46 by Jon Syverson.

Whitefeather, a 5-foot-9 senior guard — who also scored his 1,000th career point in the game — shot 19-for-37 from the field, 11-for-24 on three’s, and 3-for-6 at the line.

“It was pretty intense,” Whitefeather told the Herald. “It was an important game. It was a loud and packed gym. I’m proud of what I did as an individual. I’ve never done anything like that.” Whitefeather averages 24 points for Red Lake (10-11)

Jayden Heisler sank 50 points for Mahnomen-

Wabun. Kendall Whitefeath-er had 52 for Red Lake.

Pacesetter Championship Basketball CampsSummer 2018

June 12-14 • All-Skills Camp • John Carlson • Willmar, MN June 19-21 • All-Skills Camp • John Carlson • Sauk Rapids, MN June 26-28 • Combo Camp • Paul McDonald • Cloquet, MN June 26-28 • Shooting Camp • Jeff McCarron • Okoboji, IA July 17-19 • All-Skills Camp • John Carlson, Steve Hucke & Tom Vix • Rochester, MN

July 1 (1 day) • College Prep Camp • Boys/Girls Grades 9-college freshman • St. Joseph, MN

Camps for CHAMPIONS by CHAMPIONS!

Boys & Girls Grades 6-12Sascha Hansen3-time statechampion player John Carlson3-time statechampion coach

Reg is ter

Today!

Housing available • Camp info/online registration www.pacesettersports.net

Boys & Girls • Grades 6-103 days • 28 Hours

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 10

List of unbeaten teams reduced from 8 to 4

Four of the eight teams who were still unbeaten last week were handed their first losses in the last few

days.

The Perham Yellowjackets are now the lone unbeaten boys team in Minnesota with a 23-0 record.

Falling from the unbean ranks were Willmar, Russell-Tyler-Ruthton, and North Woods. (See stories elsewhere in this issue).

Three girls teams remain unscathed -- Eastview (25-0), Sauk Centre (25-0) and Menahga (24-0). Wayzata was handed its first loss by Hopkins.

Cretin-Derham Hall tops Iowa state champion

Minnesota’s top-ranked boys team, Cretin-Der-ham Hall, added an Iowa power to its list for

conquests, beating Iowa City West 71-60 on Saturday in Iowa City. West is the defending state champion in Class 4A (largest class in Iowa), The Des Moines Register ranks them first among all schools. Daniel Oturu scored 21 points and Sy Chatman 20 for Cretin-Derham Hall (20-1) in its 18th straight victory. Ser-bian Sims tallied 20 and Patrick McCaffrey 19 for the West. Oturu and McCaffrey are future Big Ten rivals. Oturu has signed with Minnesota. McCaffrey, a ju-nior, has committed to Iowa, where he’ll play for his father, Fran McCaffrey, and with his brother, Connor.

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 11

Class 4A 1. Eastview 25-0 2. Hopkins 22-3 3. Centennial 22-3 4. Lakeville North 20-5 5. St. Michael- Albertville 22-3 6. Wayzata 23-2 7. Maple Grove 20-5 8. Champlin Park 21-4 9. Cretin- Derham Hall 18-510. Roseville 18-7

11. Moorhead 16-912. Mpls. South 21-313. Minnetonka 15-1014. Park-Cottage Grove 18-7 15. Park Center 15-916. Eden Prairie 15-1017. Apple Valley 14-1118. Farmington 17-819. Anoka 16-920. Stillwater 15-10

MBBN Girls Top 20 Class 3A 1. Robbinsdale Cooper 23-2 2. Holy Angels 21-4 3. Mahtomedi 21-2 4. DeLaSalle 15-6 5. Northfield 22-3 6. Willmar 22-2 7. Grand Rapids 18-7 8. Hutchinson 19-6 9. Alexandria 21-410. Waseca 23-3

11. Fergus Falls 18-712. New Ulm 18-613. Hill-Murray 16-914. Mankato West 18-715. Red Wing 18-616. St. Paul Como Park 16-817. Hermantown 21-418. Waconia 17-819. Benilde-St. Margaret’s 17-820. Chisago Lakes 14-11

Class 2A 1. Sauk Centre 25-0 2. Minnehaha Academy 17-6 3. Maranatha Christian 21-4 4. Roseau 20-5 5. Rush City 20-1 6. Holy Family Catholic 18-6 7. Norwood-Young America 22-3 8. Stewartville 21-5 9. Eden Valley- Watkins 23-310. Rochester Lourdes 18-8

11. Dilworth-Glyndon- Felton 21-412. East Grand Forks 21-513. Watertown- Mayer 20-614. New London- Spicer 19-615. Byron 15-1016. St. Peter 18-717. Barnesville 19-518. Tracy-Milroy- Balaton 25-219. St. Cloud Cathedral 19-620. Proctor 18-6

Class 1A 1. Lyle-Pacelli 25-1 2. Mountain Iron-Buhl 23-2 3. Hayfield 22-4 4. Goodhue 19-7 5. Menahga 24-0 6. Ada-Borup/Norman County West 21-2 7. Minneota 21-4 8. Lac qui Parle Valley 24-3 9. Grand Meadow 21-510. Bigfork 22-3

11. Stephen- Argyle 22-312. Red Lake 23-313. Belgrade-Brooten- Elrosa 19-614. Mayer Lutheran 17-815. Wabasso 19-316. Parkers Prairie 21-217. BOLD 21-5 18. Sleepy Eye 21-419. Southwest MN Christian 21-320. Heritage Christian 16-9

Amber Conniff of Caledonia works against Terra Rhoades of Minnehaha Academy, which won 70-46.Bruce Strand, Minnesota Basketball News

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 12

Class 4A 1. Cretin-Derham Hall 21-1 2. Hopkins 23-1 3. Lakeville North 20-3 4. Apple Valley 19-4 5. East Ridge 18-5 6. Rochester John Marshall 21-2 7. Park Center 19-4 8. Champlin Park 18-5 9. Osseo 18-510. North St. Paul 19-4 11. Tartan 20-412. Wayzata 14-813. Maple Grove 17-614. Eden Prairie 17-615. Prior Lake 18-516. Edina 15-817. Owatonna 18-518. Blaine 16-719. Chaska 17-620. Woodbury 14-9

MBBN boys Top 20 Class 3A 1. DeLaSalle 18-4 2. Austin 22-1 3. Mankato East 19-4 4. Marshall 22-3 5. Orono 18-5 6. Columbia Heights 16-5 7. St. Thomas Academy 14-9 8. Willmar 22-2 9. Mahtomedi 17-610. Northfield 15-7

11. Minneapolis Roosevelt 14-812. Waseca 21-313. Fergus Falls 17-614. Sauk Rapids- Rice 16-715. Fridley 12-816. St. Paul Johnson 18-417. Totino-Grace 11-1218. Monticello 17-618. Robbinsdale Cooper 15-620. Delano 14-9

Class 2A 1. Minneapolis North 18-5 2. Minnehaha Academy 20-4 3. Perham 23-0 4. Caledonia 18-4 5. Brooklyn Center 17-7 6. Holy Family Catholic 15-7 7. Lake City 20-3 8. Melrose 21-2 9. Breck 14-810. St. Charles 21-3

11. Eden Vallley- Watkins 20-212. Annandale 17-613. St. Cloud Cathedral 17-414. Esko 19-415. Virginia 18-416. Byron 18-617. Maple Lake 18-518. Jordan 20-519. New Richland- Hartland-Ellen- dale-Geneva 21-2 20. Kimball 18-4

Class 1A 1. Springfield 23-1 2. North Woods 22-1 3. Russell-Tyler- Ruthton 24-1 4. Cass Lake- Bena 24-1 5. Minneota 21-2 6. Mayer Lutheran 21-3 7. Hinckley- Finlayson 21-3 8. Westbrook- Walnut Grove 21-3 9. Hancock 20-210. BOLD 19-5

11. Norman County East-Ulen- Hitterdal 20-212. Parkers Prairie 19-213. Wrenshall 19-214. Nevis 20-315. St. Clair 19-516. Sacred Heart 20-417. Ada-Borup 16-418. Cleveland 19-519. Dawson-Boyd 18-520. New Ulm Cathedral 20-5

Caledonia players high-five with Sam Barthels (25) after he sank a falling-down, 25-foot 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer against Minnehaha Academy, which won 79-75. Bruce Strand, MN Basketball News

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 13

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 14

NIKE GIRLS BASKETBALL CAMPSUW-PARKSIDE IN KENOSHA, WIDIRECTED BY JACOB YORG, HEAD WOMEN’S COACH AT UW-PARKSIDE JUNE 24-27 (AGES 10-18):DAY (9AM-4PM): $295EXTENDED DAY (9AM-9PM): $395OVERNIGHT: $495

HIGHLIGHTS:– Daily emphasis on fundamental development, team play and basketball IQ – Focus on strength and conditioning, shooting technique and positional work – Receive a Nike Basketball Camp t-shirt, workbook, wristband and more

FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO REGISTER: 1.800.NIKE.CAMP (645-3226) | USSportsCamps.com/basketball

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 15

2018 Camp DatesOVERNIGHT DATES

June 10-13 6th-8th grade overnightJune 17-20 6th-8th grade overnightJune 24-27 9th-12th grade overnight

DAY DATESJune 25-27 3rd-5th grade (1-4 p.m.)

College of Saint Benedict37 S. College Ave.St. Joseph, MN 56374-2099

320-363-5301www.csbblazers.com

College of Saint Benedict Sports Camps

@csbbasketball

Contact Tracey at [email protected] about placing your camp ad here.

Pacesetter Newsletter Minnesota Basketball News February 23 Page 16

“All-Skills Championship Basketball Camp”

Sauk Rapids-Rice High School Player Fee: $220 Sauk Rapids, MN *If housing is needed, contact Pacesetter: Tues.-Thurs. June 19-21 [email protected] 320-243-7460

Name ____________________________________________________________ Grade in 2018-2019 _________________ Circle Gender: M F School _______________________________________________________ Email Address ___________________________________________________ Parent Cell # _______________________________________________ Player Cell # _______________________________________________________

Mailing Address _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Street City State Zip

Circle T-Shirt Size: Youth: S M LG Adult: S M LG XL

Parent/Guardian_______________________________________ __________________________________________________ ____________ * My child has permission to participate in Pacesetter camps with the understanding that neither the facility host nor Pacesetter Sports will be held liable for any injury incurred at the camp. I also understand that any photos taken may be used for promotional use by Pacesetter and mailing and email address provided may be used by Pacesetter to send information to our family.

Send this form with $220 check to: Sauk Rapids Rec., 901 1st St South, Sauk Rapids, MN 56379 Registration also available online www.saukrapidsriceonline.org Click on Sauk Rapids Recreation

All-Skills Championship Basketball CampQuestions? Email [email protected]

or call 320-243-7460

SKILLS: Shooting form • Jump shooting (age appropriate) • shooting off dribble and pass • ball handling against pressure: crossovers, between legs, behind back, re verse pivot, hesitation move • penetrating lane • sharp passing • passing to post • passing on fastbreak • filling lanes • reading defenses in half court & full court • foot work: cutting to basket w/o ball, reverse pivoting, setting screen-roll or go • boxing out • offensive rebounding • breaking to wing • backdoor cut • one-on-one facing moves: touch & go, touch & cross, touch & shoot, dribble & pop, ball fake & go • post moves: 9 options • denying wing break • denying lane cuts • denying post positions • ball pressure in full court • embracing hard work and 100% effort • embracing good sportsmanship • being a team player • 1-on- 1 • 2-on-2 • 3-on-3 • 5-on-5

PACESETTER SPORTSPRESENTS

For players entering grades 6-10

To be the BEST,Learn from the BEST!

28-hour camp • 3 daysChampionship skills/drills

Sauk Rapids-Rice High SchoolSauk Rapids, MN

Tuesday-ThursdayJune 19-21

Player Fee: $220 - 28 hours, includes 5 meals & 7 snacks

2 Nights Housing (optional) Additional $80 (includes breakfast) Contact the Pacesetter office for housing: [email protected] • 320-243-7460

Use form below or register online@ www.saukrapidsriceonline.org

“ The BEST Camps in Minnesota!”

John Carlson

MN Coach of the Year • Litchfield

3-time state champion • 00’ 02’ 04’

Great teacher and FUN!

REQUIRED! Confirmations will be sent via email.

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320-243-7460 • [email protected] • Facebook/Twitter/Instagram: Pacesetter Basketball