Indiana State | Archive | March, 2006

Mike: Jay County was Indiana basketball at its finest


By Mike McGraw
Executive Director

Basketball
is a strategic, team game. Living in the age of the ESPN highlight, that is
often an easily forgettable fact. In the short run, that oversight is
understandable as the beauty of raw athleticism that basketball can display
awes us all.

In the
long run, however, it is adherence to that principle, adherence to the notion
that the talent of a single part is relevant only to the degree that it
improves the performance of the whole, that made Indiana high school basketball
the highest quality product of its kind anywhere.

It has
been the ability of special coaches to create teams that achieved far beyond
anything their individual talent could have predicted that has endeared the
game to generations of Hoosiers. We all are thrilled by a thunderous dunk, but
a well-run, half-court offense stirs a much deeper appreciation.

With that
idea in mind, I want to sing the praises of a team that lost at Conseco
Fieldhouse last Saturday. The Jay County Patriots were a shining example of
what makes basketball in this state so special. They defeated three teams with
more individual talent just to make it to the finals, then came within a couple
missed free throws and one bad offensive possession of doing the same to New Castle.

Donâ??t get
me wrong. New Castle
was a great team with a great player. The Trojans deserved the title, and I am
thrilled for Basketball Town
USA. It is a
shame that Jay County will go down as a footnote in
tournament history, though, because that team was special. Letâ??s face it. The
Patriots didnâ??t feature a single player with a chance to play college ball at
anything but the very lowest levels. In all likelihood, there was not a college
player, period, on the floor in a Jay
County uniform.

What they
did put on the floor were young men who had been drilled in the fundamentals
until they were second-nature. The Patriots featured players who knew their
roles and never attempted to distort them.

Jay County reached the finals because it was
a nightmare to play against. The Patriots controlled tempo, played defense,
only took good shots, made needed adjustments, and completely trusted each
other. That sounds like the definition of a great basketball team to me.

New Castle coach Steve Bennett told us on â??Prep Sports Weeklyâ? March 29 that
playing Jay County
was like playing Wisconsin
without a shot clock. As you might expect, he had nothing but the highest of
praise for Patriot coach Craig Teagle, and neither do I.

Teagle did
exactly what a coach is supposed to do this year. He molded a team where the
whole was so much more than the sum of the parts. The Patriot players deserve
even more credit because you canâ??t mold people who arenâ??t willing to be molded.
These kids all put the achievements of the team above any individual glory.

It only
makes the story greater when you throw in the fact that this was the first
regional title in Jay
County history, let alone
semistate or state finals appearances. The rabid support of the Patriot
community was a throwback to the glory days of â??Hoosier Hysteria.â? That was
especially true March 25 at the Fieldhouse when the Patriot faithful were
combined in noisy nirvana with the legendary New Castle following.

By all
means, pay homage to Lawrence North. The 3-peat Wildcats will, by anyoneâ??s
standards, go down as one of the four or five greatest teams in Indiana history. Just
take a moment to remember that it isnâ??t the great teams, but instead the great
accomplishments, that feed the legend of Indiana
high school basketball.

So what do you
think? Share your thoughts in our Boys Basketball forum.

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3A No. 3 New Pal posts 7-2 road win at 2A 13th-ranked Knightstown


By Adam Rouse
Staff Writer

KNIGHTSTOWN
â??? With temperatures slowly but surely creeping past 50 degrees, the diamonds of
Indiana are
beginning to be filled with the pounding of gloves and the ding! of bats.

Behind a
trio of pitchers and senior Andrew Clarkâ??s powerful stick March 29, the New
Palestine Dragons defeated host Knightstown, 7-2, to improve to 2-0 on the
young season. Class 3Aâ??s third-ranked team struck for three runs early and
never looked back as senior righthander Shane Highsmith (1-0) tossed four
scoreless innings for his first victory of the year.

The
Dragons (2-0) went to work quickly in the top of the first. After leadoff
hitter Jake Lee lined out to center for the first out, New Palestine collected
five straight hits to take a 3-0 advantage.

Junior
Chris Story blooped a single to right field and advanced to third on Clarkâ??s opposite-field double down the left-field line.
Story would score on a wild pitch from Knightstown righty Mike Guinn, but it
wouldnâ??t matter as senior Danny Collier singled up the middle to bring home
Clark and make it 2-0.

New Palestine proceeded to
load the bases after a pair of singles from senior Chris Ulrey and junior J.D.
Hill. Guinn then uncorked his second wild pitch of the inning to plate Collier,
giving the visitors a 3-0 lead.

Still with
just one out, Guinn received what pitchers want most when in a jam â??? a double
play. However, it wasnâ??t a conventional 4-6-3 or 6-4-3 ground-ball double play.
Junior Adam Gerlach lined into a 4-3 two-ball after Panther second baseman
Jordan Bearhope fielded the hot shot and threw to first to double up the
runner.

Highsmith
was able to cruise through the first inning, retiring the side in order before
running into a bit of trouble in the second.

Following
a successful sacrifice bunt by senior Dustin Cronk that moved runners up to
second and third with one out, Highsmith walked junior Jace Butler before
striking out sophomore Chad Oakes. He then got senior Kile Riggs to ground out,
ending the threat.

Over the
next two frames, Highsmith limited the Panthers (0-1) to just one hit, but he
but did walk a pair of batters and hit another in four innings.

The righty
received the win after allowing zero runs on two hits while striking out two.
Highsmith also walked two and hit two.

Highsmith
helped his own cause with a RBI single in the third (unearned) to increase the
Dragonsâ?? lead to 4-0. Clark then made it 5-zip
in the top of the fourth with an opposite-field home run to left field.

After
Highsmith exited following the fourth inning, Class 2A No. 13 Knightstown was able to take
advantage of a costly error by third baseman Hill.

Junior
Justin Cole came on to relieve Highsmith and promptly struck out pinch-hitter
Ross Matlock. It appeared as if the second out would be recorded easily with a
routine grounder to Hill, but the juniorâ??s throw pulled Collier off the bag,
allowing senior Tyler Roberts to reach first.

Cole got
Bearhope to ground out to short for the second out, but football hero Eric
Freeman used the extra out to belt a two-run homer to left center, cutting the
deficit to 5-2.

Knightstown
never seriously threatened the rest of the way as the Dragons added insurance
runs in the sixth and seventh innings to determine the final score.

Cole
pitched the fifth and sixth, allowing just the two unearned runs, and Story
came on to pitch a scoreless seventh.

Guinn
(0-1) suffered the loss after giving up five runs (four earned) on 8 hits in 4
1/3 innings. The righthander also hit two batters and walked two in addition to
throwing the pair of wild pitches.

Clark, the
Mississippi recruit who is considered one of
the best players in the state of Indiana
as well as the nation, went 3-for-5 with a home run and two doubles.

Collier
also collected a multi-hit game with a 2-for-3 effort, including a double and
an intentional walk.

So
what do
you think? Share your thoughts in our Baseball forum.

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Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame Classic announces 2006 lineup


Staff
Report
Newly crowned Class 2A girls basketball champion Heritage Christian and
4A runner-up South Bend Washington headline the field announced March 28 for
the four-team 2006 Hall of Fame Classic. The girls tournament will be held
Thursday, Dec. 28, at New Castle Fieldhouse.

New Castle will play Franklin Central in the opener at 10 a.m. EST, followed by South Bend Washington
vs. Heritage Christian at 11:50. The third-place game will take place at 6
p.m., with the championship game set for 7:55. Tickets will
be available this fall from participating schools.

Hereâ??s a preview of the four girls teams, courtesy of www.hoopshall.com, the official website of Indiana Basketball
Hall of Fame

New Castle
The 19-5 Trojans
rolled through the 2005-06 regular season and sectional before knocking off Class
3A No. 1-ranked and undefeated Lebanon
(the 2005 Hall of Fame Champion) in the regional semifinal. The Trojans,
however, lost to Rushville in the final. Coach Curt Bell’s top three scorers
return. The leader is 5â??6â? junior guard Corie West (18.6 ppg, 3.3 apg), who is
joined by 5â??7â? sophomore guard Madison Qualkenbush (9.8, 2.1) and 5â??9â? freshman
forward Macey Elyea (7.7 ppg, 3.7 rpg) Four other juniors contribute to the
Trojan attack: 6-foot frontliner Allison Reece (7.1 ppg, 5.4 rpg), 5â??7â? guard
Kami Clemens (6.5 ppg), 5â??6â? guard Mandy Blake (3.5 ppg, 2.7 apg), and 5â??9â?
forward Amy Melton (2 ppg). Three sophomores, meanwhile, provide depth â??? 5â??7â?
guard Kayla Jones, 5â??6â? wing Madison Thomas, and 5â??8â? forward Ashley Flynn. New Castle graduates 5â??10â?
forward Amanda Lee (6.8 ppg, 5 rpg) and 5â??6â? guard Chelsea Kiser (2 ppg).

Franklin Central

Unlike the
other three teams in this field, Franklin Central graduates its top scorer from
the 2005-06 season, 5â??6â? guard Katie Dewey (11.8 ppg), as well as four other
seniors. Coach Pam Taylor does have three juniors from her 18-8 sectional
championship campaign, however, who have the potential to excel during their
senior seasons. They are 5â??8â? point guard Nicole James (8.7 ppg, 4.3 rpg, 3.2
apg), 5â??10â? forward Katie Hacker (11 ppg, 7.7 rpg), and 5â??10â? center Jill
Taylor (6.2, 5). Hacker is the Flashes’ top rebounder and top holdover scorer.
Brittany Stafford, a 5â??7â?? sophomore forward, and Morgan Read, a 5â??10â? junior
post player, both figure to increase their input during the 2006-07 campaign.

South Bend Washington

Coach Marilyn
Coddens must feel ecstatic about her Panther program. Washington finished the
2005-06 season as 4A state runner-up and was ranked No. 1 for much of the
season, completing the campaign with a glossy 25-2 record. The Panthersâ?? top
player was a phenomenal freshman, 5â??8â? guard Skylar Diggins (20.8 ppg, 4.3 rpg,
5.4 apg). Only 5â??3â? guard Paris Wright (5 ppg) graduates. Coddens returns three
players besides Diggins who figure to provide double-figure scoring next season:
6-foot junior forward Ashley Varner (9.6 ppg, 5.7 rpg), 5â??11â? junior guard
Sherice White (9.4 ppg, 3.4 rpg, 2.8 apg), and 5â??4â? sophomore guard Emily
Phillips (9.9 ppg, 5.3 apg). Three juniors who remain significantly in the mix
are 5â??9â? forward Lauren Archie (6.3 ppg, 3.6 rpg), 6â??2â? center Katie Boocher
(6.4, 6.6), and 5â??7â? guard Cheneka Anderson (4.1 ppg, 2.3 apg). And Shalana
Murray (4 ppg, 3.8 rpg) is a 5â??11â? sophomore center.

Heritage Christian

First-year
coach Rick Risinger is way ahead of schedule. His Eagles soared to a 2006 2A
state championship and finished 25-3. The championship squad graduates just two
players: 5â??7â? guard Nicole Roush and 5â??10â? center Lindsay Dixon. Risinger’s top
two scorers are freshmen â??? 5â??10â? forward Kelly Faris (11.1 ppg, 7 rpg, 4 apg)
and 5â??5â? guard Claire Freeman (10.5, 3.2, 3.1). Two more freshmen guards â??? 5â??5â?
starter Emily Anderson (7.1 ppg) and 5â??3â? reserve Alyssa Burton â??? have varsity
experience, while two juniors figure to provide leadership: 5â??9â? starting
forward Bre Jones (7.7 ppg, 4.4 rpg) and 5â??7â?? reserve forward Courtney Turner
(3.6, 3.7). 6â??1â? sophomore frontliner Kayla Skaggs (8 ppg, 3 rpg) is a
legitimate inside scoring threat and another veteran starter. Three future
prospects include 6-foot sophomore center Alicia Byrd, 5â??3â? freshman guard
Meredith Martin, and 5â??9â? freshman post player Ashlee Bellamy.

Tickets will
be made available in the late fall from participating schools. Please watch the
Hall of Fame website www.hoopshall.com for further details.

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Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame Classic announces 2006 lineup


Staff Report



Newly crowned Class 3A boys basketball champion New Castle headlines the field announced March 28 for the four-team 2006 Hall of Fame Classic. The boys tournament will be held Friday, Dec. 29, at New Castle Fieldhouse.



New Castle will play Vincennes Lincoln in the opener at 10 a.m. EST, followed by Valparaiso and Indianapolis Cathedral at 11:50. The third-place game will take place at 6 p.m., with the championship game set for 7:55. Tickets will be available this fall from participating schools.



Hereâ??s a preview of the four boys teams, courtesy of www.hoopshall.com, the official website of Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame



New Castle

Coach Steve Bennett’s 21-6 Trojans are the 2006 Class 3A state champion. The top Trojan is 6â??1â? junior point guard Zach Hahn (18.5 ppg, 3.2 rpg, 6.9 apg). Complementing Hahn is 6â??3â? sophomore forward Chase Stigall (13.7 ppg, 5.5 rpg). Hahn and Stigall are capable 3-point scorers. Both shoot 38 percent behind the arc. Another shooting threat is 5â??11â? junior guard Luke Bennett (7.8 ppg, 2 apg). Coach Bennett returns two taller Trojans who handle inside duties â??? 6â??4â? junior forward Drew Tower (4.4 ppg, 2.7 rpg) and 6â??6â? junior center Bobby Carroll (2.5, 2). Another junior forward is 5â??11â? Bryant Hazelman (3.2 ppg). New Castle graduates four seniors: 6â??4â? forward Ryan Freeburg (5.8 ppg, 4.9 rpg), 6â??5â? frontliner Matt Galyen (2, 4), 6-foot wing Ryan Stephens (2.1 ppg), and 6â??7â? center Chris Clemens.


Vincennes Lincoln

The Alices put together an outstanding 2005-06 season, finishing 18-5. Coach Steve Combs only graduates two players â??? 6â??3â? forward D.J. Smith (8.8 ppg, 3.7 rpg) and 5â??9â? guard Dean Mosher (2 ppg). With considerable firepower returning, led by 6â??3â? junior forward Craig Heinz (18.8 ppg, 4.6 rpg), Vincennes Lincoln figures to be one of the state’s top 3A teams in 2006-07. Two junior guards, 5â??11â? Coleton Oexmann (9 ppg, 3.5 apg) and 5â??10â? Garrett Oexmann (6.5, 3.1), are the backcourt catalysts. 5â??10â? sophomore guard Brad Crismore (6 ppg) also helps on the perimeter. Fortifying the frontline are 6â??2â? junior forward Jeremy Cunningham (7 ppg, 4.3 rpg) and 6â??5â? junior center Morgan Jones (4.6, 2.9). Three 6â??2â? junior wings â??? Reid Smith (3.8, 3), Justin Blinn (3.5 ppg), and Chase Trueblood â??? also contribute.

Indianapolis Cathedral

The 17-6 Irish won the 2006 Indianapolis City Tournament with a junior-dominated team that featured a talented junior perimeter trio of 6â??2â? guard Stephen Thomas (15.6 ppg, 5 apg), 6â??3â? wing Ryan Sterling (13.5 ppg, 3.3 rpg), and 6â??3â? guard Bradley Schaffer (7 ppg, 2.7 apg). Two 6â??3â? sophomore guards add backcourt depth: Sean Esposito (3.5 ppg) and David McMahon. Three junior forwards operate inside, including 6â??4â? football standout William Stubbs (6.6 ppg, 7.7 rpg), 6â??6â? Keenan Barlow (6, 4,), and 6â??6â? Joe Hughes (4.7, 4.5). A freshman forward who gained varsity experience is 6â??5â? Erreck Peck. Another freshman prospect is 5â??9â? guard Patrick Paligraf. Just two seniors (6â??1â? Ryan Davis and 6â??7â? Grant Walthall) graduate, and neither one started. Coach Scott Hicks led Cathedral to the 1982 Hall of Fame Classic championship as a player. Now he leads the Irish into the 2006 Classic from the bench.

Valparaiso

Veteran coach Bob Punter enjoyed the luxury of a 6â??8â? center who scored 20 ppg during a 21-3 campaign. Even better for Punter is the fact that he gets the services of junior Scott Martin (20.3 ppg, 7.2 rpg) for another season. In addition, 6â??8â? junior Robert Hummel (12.5 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 2.6 apg) will be on hand to complete one of the best 1-2 frontline punches anywhere in the state. Hummel can also play outside. Three other forwards in the mix are 6â??3â? junior Nathan Windsor (4.5 ppg, 3.2 rpg), 6â??3â? junior Kevin Meyne (2.4, 2), and 6â??6â? sophomore Joseph Vaznonis (2 ppg). Additional height comes from two junior post players, 6â??5â? Travis Allen and 6â??4â? Jackson Phelps. The only guard who will have considerable varsity experience is 6-foot junior Marcus Biggs (2 ppg). 6â??2â? sophomore guard Trent Redington could also help outside. The Vikings do graduate three seniors: 5â??11â? guard Kyle West (7.8 ppg), 6â??4â? forward Paul Coburn (7.4 ppg, 3.7 rpg), and 6-foot guard Kevin Tran (4.4 ppg).
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Floyd Central atop IHSGCA boys golf preseason poll

The Indiana High School Golf Coaches Association has
released its boys golf preseason poll for 2006, and residing in the #1 spot is Floyd
Central, which tied for fourth in last yearâ??s state finals. Defending champion Warsaw, meanwhile, is
right behind in second, with defending runner-up Noblesville third.

Hereâ??s the poll from March 27:

1. Floyd
Central
2. Warsaw
3. Noblesville
4.
Harrison (West Lafayette)
5. Michigan City
6. Maconaquah
7. Richmond
8. Bloomington South
9. Center
Grove
10. Leo
11. Valparaiso
12. Columbus North
13. Brownsburg
14. Plainfield
15. Carmel
16. Yorktown
17. Linton
18. Southridge
19. Indianapolis Cathedral
20. Roncalli
Honorable mention: Wawasee, Anderson, Princeton, North
Posey, Avon, Mt. Vernon (Posey), New Palestine, Delta, Indianapolis Chatard, Park
Tudor

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Dalton tosses impressive double as No. 7 Carmel defeats rival Hamilton SE, 89-43


By Brandon Jones
Staff Writer

CARMEL â??? Patrick Dalton had the most impressive
boys track & field performances of the day, but very few people witnessed
them in soggy, drizzly, 45-degree weather March 28.

The Carmel
senior tossed home two wins (one in the shot put, the other in the discus
throw) to help lead the seventh-ranked host Greyhounds over rival Hamilton
Southeastern in comfortable fashion, 89-43.

Dalton tossed the discus 156â??-06â? on his
third and final throw for the win. Under an hour later, he came back and
matched it with a winning 52â??-05â? in the shot put.

The meet
got off to a fast start for Carmel
as them â??Hounds took the 4 x 800 meter relay in 8:47.2. Not a fast time by any
means, but good enough to get the job done. This race was over early as Carmel split a 2:02 for
the opener then coasted the rest of the way.

Hamilton
Southeasternâ??s Justin Roeder was one of the lone bright spots for the Royals. After
trailing Carmelâ??s
Jacob Rich for the majority of the 1600 race, Roeder surged past Rich with just
over 200 meters to go, then put on the afterburners down the homestretch to
take home the win. Roederâ??s 4:27.5 bettered Richâ??s 4:29.5 by two seconds.

Roeder
returned to toy with the 3200-meter field. The senior and former state champion
led for the first five laps before Carmelâ??s
Chad Bowman took over. Roeder, looking comfortable for the most part, trailed
Bowman the rest of the way before dropping a 1:06 final lap to take home the
win in 9:52.6.

The
individual results:

4 x 800 meter relay
1. Carmel 8:47.2
2. Hamilton Southeastern 9:08.1

110-meter hurdles
1. Jaunzemis
â??? Carmel :16.2
2. Canull
â??? Carmel :16.3
3. Montgomery
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern :16.6

100-meter dash
1. Stull â???
Carmel :11.0
2. Moon â??? Hamilton Southeastern :11.2
3. King â??? Carmel :11.2

1600 meters
1. Roeder
J. â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 4:27.5
2. Rich â??? Carmel 4:29.5
3. Shields
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 4:29.6

4 x 100 meter relay
1. Carmel 43.7
2. Hamilton
Southeastern DQ (dropped baton)

400-meter dash
1. Powers
â??? Hamilton Southeastern :52.5
2. Wolfcale
â??? Carmel :53.3
3. Ray â??? Carmel :54.8

300-meter hurdles
1. Jaunzemis
â??? Carmel :43.2
2. Montgomery
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern :43.3
3. Quigley
â??? Carmel :45.2

800 meters
1. Jones â???
Carmel 2:05.8
2. Wharton
â??? Carmel 2:06.0
3. Powers
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 2:06.4

200-meter dash
1. Moon â??? Hamilton Southeastern :22.8
2. King â??? Carmel :23.4
3. Leap-Hall
â??? Carmel :23.6

3200 meters
1. Roeder
J. â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 9:52.6
2. Bowman
â??? Carmel 9:56.0
3. Allen â???
Hamilton
Southeastern 9:58.5

4 x 400 meter relay
1. Carmel 3:32.5
2. Hamilton Southeastern 3:35.9

Discus throw
1. Dalton â??? Carmel
156â??-06â?
2. Riddle
â??? Carmel 146â??-10â?
3. Zagar â???
Hamilton
Southeastern 135â??-09â?

Shot put
1. Dalton â??? Carmel
52â??-05â?
2. Sliger
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 46â??-08â?
3. Trapkus
â??? Carmel 45â??-06â?

High jump
1. Stull â???
Carmel 6â??-0â?
2. Wagner
â??? Carmel 5â??-10â?
3. Davis â??? Carmel
5â??-10â?

Long jump
1. Leap-Hall
â??? Carmel 20â??-11.50â?
2. Gorgol
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 20â??-09â?
3. Krieg â???
Carmel 18â??-10.50â?

Pole vault
1. Graham
â??? Hamilton
Southeastern 12â??-06â?
2. Januzemis
â??? Carmel 12â??-00â?
3. Indurstrodt
â??? Hamilton Southeastern
11â??-06â?

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Carmel overtakes Valpo at top of All-Sports Trophy standings


Staff Report

The
HoosierAuthority.com 1st Annual All-Sports Trophy standings have
been updated (FINALLY!) to include team results from girls basketball and girls
swimming, and the Carmel Greyhounds have vaulted into a small lead on the
strength of their state championship in swimming.

Carmel
has amassed just over 420 points and holds a 32-point lead over former leader Valparaiso. The Penn
Kingsmen, who have been close to the top all year, sit in third.

For those
who are following the results with an eye toward class, the banner for small
schools is being carried by 3A Evansville Memorial, which is in fourth place with
311 points. The top 2A school is Heritage Christian (14th with 232
points), while Lafayette
Central Catholic is at the dead of Class A. The Knights used their championship
in girls basketball to climb to 136 points.

Interestingly,
there does not appear to be any trend geographically in the standings. The Top
10 contains teams from all over the state, although four of the 10 are located
in the Indianapolis
area.

Obviously,
the rash of winter championships contested in the last few weeks will
drastically change things, so we will be updating the standings on a weekly
basis for the next several weeks. You can view Current Standings by clicking on
the blue All-Sports Trophy link at the top of the page. And donâ??t forget to
vote for your favorite school!

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2006 Indiana All-Star girls basketball team announced


Staff Report

Indiana Miss Basketball Amber
Harris of North Central (Indianapolis)
leads a group 12 girls that comprise The Indianapolis Star 2006 Indiana
All-Star team.

Harris, the Purdue-bound 6â??5â? center, led the Panthers to back-to-back Class 4A
state titles in 2004 and 2005. All 12 of the girls have signed with Division I schools, and nine will be
playing their college ball within the stateâ??s borders in 2006 and beyond.

The All-Stars will be coached by Julie Shelton, 35, of Mt.
Vernon (Fortville), who was an
All-Star herself in 1989 at Seymour.
The 35-year-old Sheltonâ??s
assistants are Kathie Layden, who led Tri-Central to three straight Class A
championships in 2003-2005, and Todd Salkoski,
who coached Shenandoah to 2A titles in 2003 and 2005. Bowling Greenâ??s Liz Honegger will serve as
assistant to the coaches.

All three
coaches provided input for selection of the team, which features five scorers
who averaged at least 20 points per game this season, with Game Director Pat
Aikman making the final decision.

The team will report for practice in June before tackling annual
all-star foe Kentucky twice — June 17 at Bowling Green and June 24 at
Conseco
Fieldhouse — as part of the annual girls-boys doubleheader. The girls
games
will tip off at 5 p.m. EST, with the boys slated for 7:30.

A year
ago, Indianaâ??s girls split the series against Kentucky, losing 72-67 on the road before winning in Indianapolis, 65-49.

The girls
2006 roster (players listed alphabetically by last name after Miss Basketball
Amber Harris, followed by school, height, scoring average, college):

  • Amber
    Harris, North Central (Indianapolis),
    6â??5â? 16.8 ppg, Purdue
  • Ashley
    Barlow, Pike, 5â??9â?, 25.1 ppg, Notre Dame
  • Dee Dee
    Jernigan, East Chicago Central, 6â??0â?, 17.3 ppg, Purdue
  • Melissa
    Lechlitner, South Bend St. Josephâ??s, 5â??6â?, 21.0 ppg, Notre Dame
  • Susan
    Lester, Pendleton Heights, 6â??1â?, 22.0 ppg, Butler
  • FahKara
    Malone, Evansville Memorial, 5â??3â?, 20.3 ppg, Purdue
  • Audrey
    McDonald, Kokomo, 5â??8â?, 14.3 ppg, Ball State
  • Maria
    Olsthoorn, Castle, 6â??2â?, 12.8 ppg, Indiana
    State
  • Courtney
    Reed, Northfield,
    5â??9â?, 19.1 ppg, Miami (OH)
  • Chanell
    Ridley, Fort Wayne Concordia Lutheran, 6â??0â?, 14.8 ppg, Miami (OH)
  • Amanda
    Stull, Rushville, 5â??9â?, 20.1 ppg, Coastal Carolina
  • Melanie
    Thornton, Carmel, 5â??11â?, 10.9 ppg, Butler
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STATE FINALS: 4A No. 1 LN makes Indiana boys history with 80-56 romp over Muncie Central


By Brandon Jones
Staff Writer


INDIANAPOLIS â??? In a fitting ending to a perfect 29-0 season and a third consecutive Class 4A state basketball championship, the top-ranked Lawrence North Wildcats disposed of the most historical program in Indiana in dominating fashion.


In a contest that was never in doubt, Lawrence North defeated the eight-time state champion Muncie Bearcats, 80-56, in front of a sellout crowd of 18,483 March 25 at Conseco Fieldhouse. Ohio State-bound seniors Greg Oden and Michael Conley did the damage, as usual, and they took turns beating the undermanned Bearcats in every facet of the game.


Conley took charge from the beginning as he scored 11 first-quarter points on perfect 5-of-5 shooting. The Wildcats used runs of six and eight consecutive points to bookend the quarter with a simply magnificent performance.


â??We felt there was no other way,â? Conley said. â??We’ve (Conley and Oden) been together too long for this to be our last night together and not win and make history. That means a lot to both of us.


â??For us to do it together, we felt there was no other way to do it.â?


The two seniors combined for 17 first-quarter points, easily outdistancing Muncie Central by themselves as Lawrence North was well on its way after the first eight minutes of action. The 24-7 advantage mirrored a big-school football score more than that of a state championship basketball affair.


If things looked bleak for Muncie Central after the opening quarter, they only got worse as the contest wore on. After a Ben Botts jumper opened the second period, LN once again picked up right where it left off as role player Damian Windham scored four consecutive points for a 28-9 advantage, including a steal and coast-to-coast layup.


A LaMarcus Coatie response at the other end drew Muncie Central back within 17, but that was as close as the ballgame would get for the rest of the evening. The Wildcats scored 22 of the final 25 points of the quarter to hold a commanding 50-24 halftime advantage.


â??Mike Conley said before the game that this was going to be our best game of the season,â? Oden said. â??He put us on his back, and we played a great first half.â?


The 26 points scored by LN in the second quarter and the 50 at halftime were the first two of nine 4A state records to fall in this game. Two others were tied.


Muncie Central, playing for pride the rest of the way, came out of the locker room and held its own at the outset of the third period as juniors Brandon Jenkins and Tom Freeman took charge.


An Oden layup was answered by a Jenkins jumper. A Brandon McDonald 3-point basket at one end was surpassed by a Freeman putback and layup at the other, and Muncie Central began looking like a team that deserved to be playing in the state finals.


But Lawrence North, and Oden in particular, took the game over and wowed the crowd once again.


The 7-foot center displayed all angles of his game in the quarterâ??s closing minutes. He scored on a rebound dunk, a floater in the lane, then finally stepped out to the perimeter to knock down a rare 15-foot jump shot.


After a media timeout with Lawrence North leading 63-36, the Wildcats ended the quarter as they often do â??? with a 9-2 spurt spearheaded by Oden and Conley. Lawrence North held an insurmountable 72-39 advantage entering the final period of play, which was a sloppy one.


Though the Wildcats had a 33-point advantage and many of the sellout crowd had now departed, LN coach Jack Keefer did not like the lethargic way his team was playing early in the final stanza. Oden and Conley had simply gotten bored, and it showed in their play as the Wildcats had gone cold from the floor.


Muncie Central showed signs of life as the Bearcats scored nine of the quarterâ??s first 11 points, and the Bearcats doubled the output of their counterparts in the final period, 17-8. The final quarter at least gave the purple-clad faithful a rare cheering opportunity in what would turn out to be another record: most lopsided victory in state finals history.


But this night belonged to the other â??Cats. With the win, LN becomes just the third school in Indiana history to win three straight state championships, joining Franklin and â??The Wonder Fiveâ? in 1920-22 and the Jay Edwards/Lyndon Jones-led Marion Giants in 1985-87.


â??For these guys to be remembered up there with Oscar (Robertson) and all the other 3-peat teams â?¦ I donâ??t think that was our target,â? Keefer said. â??Our target was to win the state championship.


Fittingly, Oden and Conley filled up the stat sheet. The big man finished his final high school career with 26 points and 11 rebounds in just 28 minutes of action. The point guard, on the other hand, totaled 21 points to go with seven rebounds. Windham and Qadr Owen also scored in double digits with 10 points apiece.


Icing on the cake? Oden was awarded the Arthur L. Trester Mental Attitude Award, which goes to the senior player that most exhibits top performance in the areas of mental attitude, scholarship, leadership, and athletic ability.


A dream ending to an illustrious high school career indeed.


â??It has been a great journey with all the seniors,â? Oden said. â??We just had a lot of fun this year. I really think it is going to take some time before we get put in the â??greatâ?? category.


â??Right now, we are just going to enjoy a state championship.â?


Keefer, meanwhile, was busy dodging questions of what he will do next year without his two senior leaders.


“It’s just wonderful â??? they have worked for that,â? Keefer said. â??I know people are going to say he’s 7-foot and Mike’s this and Mike’s that. But I’m telling you, there a lot of 7-footers that aren’t very good. Greg has worked and worked and worked.


â??He’s done a wonderful job of getting himself in a position to be successful, and Mike’s done the same thing.”


Botts paced Muncie Central (20-6) with 20 points, while Freeman added 12 and Terry Jenkins had 11. The Bearcats shot just 38 percent (21 of 55) and were hamstrung by a combined 5-for-23 effort from their backcourt duo of the Jenkinses.


â??Youâ??ve got to give Lawrence North credit â??? they came out ready to play and on a mission,â? Fine said. â??I donâ??t think if we played our best game of the century, we couldâ??ve beaten them tonight.


â??Our players never gave up. Thatâ??s the type of kids that we have here. I am proud of them.â?


Keefer, reflecting upon the first undefeated season by a 4A champ since Pike in 2003, felt the Wildcats was be unable to run the table in 2006.


â??I thought we would kind of stumble somewhere along the way,â? Keefer said. â??I canâ??t say we have played a bad game this year.


â??I think every game we have played we have had moments where we didnâ??t compete, but as a group this team has competed every night out for 29 in a row.â?


Nine Class 4A records set, two tied

Hereâ??s a look at the 11 4A finals records either set or tied in the game, all of them but one a team record:


  • Most points: LN, 80 (79, North Central (Indianapolis) vs. Elkhart Central, 1999)
  • Most points in a half: LN, 50 (45, Elkhart Central (2nd half) vs. North Central, 1999)
  • Most points in a quarter: LN (2nd quarter), 26 (24, Elkhart Central (4th quarter) vs. North Central, 1999)
  • Largest margin of victory: LN, 24 (21, LN vs. Columbia City (21), 2004)
  • Most field goals made: LN, 33 (28, Elkhart Central vs. North Central, 1999)
  • Most combined field goals made: 54 (53, Elkhart Central vs. North Central, 1999)
  • Highest combined field goal percentage: .474 (.473, LN (24-39) vs. Muncie Central (19-52), 2005)
  • Most combined 3-point field goals made: 15 (13, Bloomington North (10) vs. Marion (3), 2000)
  • Most 3-point field goal attempts: Muncie Central, 22 (22, Bloomington North vs. Marion, 2000)
  • Most assists: LN, 16 (15, LN vs. Muncie Central, 2005, and Pike vs. DeKalb, 2003)
  • Most assists (individual): 7, Qadr Owen, LN (7, Adam Liddell, DeKalb, vs. Pike, 2003)

Lawrence Northâ??s Oden wins Trester Award

Lawrence North senior center Greg Oden is the 2005-06 Boys Basketball Class 4A recipient of the Arthur L. Trester Mental Attitude Award as selected by members of the IHSAA Board of Directors.


Oden is the 2006 Naismith Award winner as the best high school player in the nation after leading coach Jack Keeferâ??s team to its third consecutive state championship and 45 straight wins. The two-time National Player of the Year helped the Wildcats to a perfect 29-0 season, and they should become the first team from the state to be ranked first nationally.


In the classroom, Oden has a 3.62 cumulative grade point average.


â??Greg is simply the best student leader we have in our building,â? said Lawrence North Principal Lynn L. Lupold. â??The commitment to excellence that Greg demonstrates on the court is mirrored in the classroom. Greg is consistently an ambassador for our school, our state, and our country.â?


The award is named in honor of Trester, the IHSAAâ??s first commissioner who served from 1929-44. Indiana Farm Bureau Insurance, IHSAAâ??s corporate partner, presented a $1,000 check to Lawrence North High School in the name of Greg Oden.


Oden is the son of Zoe Oden.


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Preview (Part 5): Colin's early look at the field events


By Colin Altevogt
Staff Writer

Just as our Brandon
Jones has been doing 2006 previews on the boys side, so it
shall be with the girls. Following is a preview of the stateâ??s most-talented
relay teams from Colin Altevogt â?¦

Field
events are like the behind-the-scenes of track & field. With competition
mainly taking place inside the track, and thus away from where the spectatorâ??s
attention goes, they can be easy to forget about. But with five events making
up nearly one-third of the scored finals, state championships can be won and
lost inside the oval, especially in a year as tightly contested as this one
will be in the team standings.

Pole vault
Homesteadâ??s Katie Veith made a valiant
return to competition last year after fracturing her leg and being forced to
the sideline. The 2004 state champion came back to place runner-up, losing on
jumps to Fort Wayne Northropâ??s Brianna Neumann, a former gymnast. Look for
Veith to turn into one of the nationâ??s best vaulters this year while shattering
the state record she shares.

After that,
things should get interesting. With coaches still searching for girls, and most
athletes still just starting on the poles, anything could happen. Carrollâ??s
Abby Kimball has the unenviable task of facing Veith in every postseason meet,
so sheâ??ll be seeing red from conference to state.

And Columbus Northâ??s Charli Reed
should be interesting to watch. After no-heighting at state two years ago, she
vaulted nearly two feet higher at the state finals than she did in the
sectional and regional last season.

Colinâ??s
Top 5:
1. Katie
Veith – Homestead
2. Abby
Kimball – Carroll (Fort Wayne)
3. Kristen
Mendez – Portage
4. Lindsay
Johnston – Penn
5. Charli
Reed – Columbus
North

Long jump
The top
five returners from last year, four of whom were sophomores, were within
four-and-a-half inches of each other at last yearâ??s state finals. That should
equal great jumping over the next couple seasons.

Leah Eber
of Columbia City should be the early season
favorite. Eber, last yearâ??s runner-up, jumped 18â??8â? at the regional, a distance
that would have won the state championship had she been able to repeat it in Bloomington. She should
be challenged by fellow juniors Jaryn Hamilton of Franklin Central, Chelsy
Kimes of Munster,
and Kimberly Lienhoop of LaPorte. Expect to see Kylie Hutson, a two-time medalist,
in the mix.

And keep
an eye out for junior Mary Bell of Gary West. Bell was 17th at last yearâ??s state championship
but eclipsed the 18-foot mark at the regional, beating some of the stateâ??s
best.

Colinâ??s
Top 5:
1. Leah
Eber – Columbia City
2. Jaryn
Hamilton – Franklin Central
3. Chelsy
Kimes – Munster
4. Kylie
Hutson – Terre Haute
North
5.
Kimberly Lienhoop – LaPorte

High jump
Two-time
state champion Kayla Tucker has graduated, but Emily Breslin of Indianapolis
Cathedral â??? the girl who lost to Tucker on jumps last year â??? returns. Lake Centralâ??s
Jessica Genovese and Griffithâ??s
Kristen Mathews both cleared 5â??8â?? earlier in the tournament and figure to be in
the mix.

Columbia
Cityâ??s Ashley Rhoades,
who has placed fourth the past two years, should challenge, as will Evie
Lehman, a sophomore her placed third in her first year of high school track
last season.

Colinâ??s
Top 5:
1. Emily
Breslin â??? Indianapolis
Cathedral
2. Jessica
Genovese – Lake Central
3. Ashley
Rhoades – Columbia
City
4. Kristen
Mathews – Griffith
5. Evie
Lehman – Adams Central

Discus
Bloomington
North sophomore Rachel Deloney, last yearâ??s lone freshman individual state
champion, looks to become a four-time state champion. She should have no
problem accomplishing that this year. What happens past that, however, should
be interesting.

The top
four last season, including Deloney, return. Eight inches separated second from
fourth. Keep an eye on Jeffersonvilleâ??s
Sabrina Johnson, whose regional toss of 140â??5â? would have placed second in the
state meet.

Colinâ??s
Top 5:
1. Rachel
Deloney â??? Bloomington
North
2. Heather
Roush – Southern Wells
3. Lindsey
Cook – Borden
4.
Courtney Kusmicz – Frankfort
5. Sabrina
Johnson – Jeffersonville

Shot put
With six
of last yearâ??s top 10 shot putters graduating, the event should see new faces
at the top this year. Fort Wayne Northropâ??s Faith Sherrill, who placed third
last year, is a step ahead of the rest of the field. Ten points from a victory
in the shot would go a long way in the Bruinsâ?? quest for a seventh straight
team championship.

But Bloomington
Northâ??s Rachel Deloney may be looking to sweep the throws after the discus.

Colinâ??s
Top 5:
1. Faith
Sherrill â??? Fort Wayne
Northrop
2. Felisha
Johnson â??? Indianapolis
Scecina
3. Julie
Breivogel – Boonville
4. Rachel
Deloney â??? Bloomington
North
5. Carolyn
Maynard â??? Valparaiso

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