Prospect 52, Antioch 20 at St. Viator Thanksgiving Tournament

I made it out to the Rev. Patrick Cahill, CV, Gym on Tuesday to see Sean Connor’s Antioch Sequoits take on the Prospect Knights. Prospect is solid. Junior guard Ben Schneider is a player, #118 ranked in Illinois by Prep Hoops.

Sean’s Sequoits, the fabled mythical swamp creatures of Northern Illinois, hussle and play defense. They struggled to get shots up in the first half. They struggled to get shots to fall in the second half. I have no doubt Coach Connor will whip them into shape by the middle of the season.

I have gotten away in recent posts from commenting on the quality of the light in gyms. Not that I would write anything critical of my beloved St. Viator High School, but the current administration has very good lights in Cahill. Fr. Cahill was the athletic director when I started at St. Viator decades ago.

Lane Tech Handles Jones 60-40 in the Battle of the Bridge Opener

The Lane Tech Champions opened the season against the Jones College Prep Eagles with an impressive 60-41 victory at the 2023 Annual Battle of the Bridge Tournament.

The Champions come into the season as a ranked team, #20 in the Sun-Times Super 25, for the first time that I can remember. There are high expectations for the Champions who feature two of the top rated players in the area, senior guard Shaheed Solebo and junior foward/center Dalton Scantlebury.

I wasn’t planning a full story on this game. We will have to save that for Friday’s championship game. I also took some photos at the barnburner between the Champions and the Niles North Vikings. I will post those photos shortly.

Basketball Season is Here

Basketball is here. From now until the state finals on March 16th next year, we’ll have four and a half months of tournaments, high-profile shootouts, league play, non-conference matchups and basically just fun and excitement.

This year is a little different than most. I do most more my shooting and coverage of the DePaul Prep Rams who are coming off a 2A state championship. This is new for me. No team that I have ever regularly covered or even been a fan of has won a state championship.

What makes this really interesting is that the Rams haven’t should still be very good. Gone are Maurice Thomas and Payton Kamin. But Rob Walls and Jonas Johnson both of whom had championship experience should fill in nicely.

And the other team I cover often, the Lane Tech Champions, look to have their best season in a long time. Led by Shaheed Solebo and junior power forward Dalton Scantlebury, the Champions and their coach Nick LoGalbo are ranked #20 in the Sun-Times Super 25. The expectations are high for the Champions.

We will get an early chance to figure out the Champions. They will face good teams in Niles North and either DePaul Prep or Notre Dame in the Battle of the Bridge, the Thanksgiving tournament hosted by Lane and DePaul Prep. Maybe this will be their year to take home a win in the tournament.

The Battle of the Bridge Tournament dates back to 2014, the first season after Gordon Tech changed its name to DePaul Prep. I could only find the results of the Battle of the Bridge going back to 2018. The 8 to 18 website is offline after its purchase by another company so the old Gordon Tech records are only longer easily available.

So here we go. Enjoy. It goes by fast.

DePaul Prep Rams 72, Jones Eagles 41 to Open the Season

The high school basketball season opened this evening with the DePaul Prep Rams women’s basketball team beating up on the Jones College Prep Eagles 72-41. As games go, it was quick, an hour and twelve minutes. The running clock in fourth quarter helped but the game seemed closer than the final score.

I wasn’t able to give the game full treatment. This was a last minute addition to the schedule. I didn’t keep stats or do any interviews.

Nevertheless, I got a look at this year’s Rams. Coach Sarah Zarymbski has three sectional champions in her four years at the helm of the women’s varsity team, except there was no IHSA playoffs in the COVID year. So three sectional victories in three tries. This group has a lot to live up to. And by the looks of tonight’s game, they seem up to the task.

The two new starters, Miliah Wood and Grace Lee, will fit right in as starters. Returning seniors Charlotte Collins, fresh off a successful volleyball season, London Walker-George and Casey Galloway return and round out the starting line up.

Coach Zarymbski played the whole bench today too and there didn’t seem to be much let down. The Rams played well in all phases but only lead by ten at the half.

The Rams blew the game wide open in the third quarter with defense and scoring in transition. They pushed the lead to thirty points at the start of the fourth quarter causing a running clock in the fourth quarter and speedy conclusion to the first game.

It’s going to be a fun season. With the boys team receiving a pre-season 13th rank in the Sun-Times Super 25 rankings, DePaul Prep students, faculty, parents and supporters should be treated to some high quality basketball in what may or may not be the final year in the Tom Winiecki Gym.

Stay tuned. March will be here before one knows it.

Morgan Park Falls to St. Francis in 5A Quarterfinal

In a game marred by constant penalties, the last remaining Chicago Public League team, the Morgan Park Mustangs, fell to the St. Francis Spartans 37-14 in IHSA 5A quarterfinals Saturday.

Turnovers and penalties throttled the Mustangs in the first half. The Mustangs had a sixty-two touchdown called back. On the next play, Morgan Park QB Marcus Thaxton throw a side arm pass late down the middle of the field. A big no-no. St. Francis easily picked it off. The Spartans worked the ball down to the Morgan Park nine yard-line and scored on a quick slant to the slot receiver, senior wide receiver Ian Willis. Even so, it was 13-8 St. Francis until late in the second quarter.

Morgan Park (10-1, 7-0) came into the game as the 4 seed with a 10-1 overall record. Its only loss this year was to second ranked Mount Carmel 22-12 in week two.

The Mustangs were 7-0 in the Chicago Public Leagues’ new super-conference, the new Red Division. Before the season, CPS Sports Administration combined the top teams in the Red Division into one sixteen team super-conference. Seven other teams from the conference made the IHSA playoffs the season, Whitney Young, Kenwood, Amundsen, Lane, Simeon, Phillips and Taft. Morgan Park was the last surviving team. It was Morgan Park’s twenty-fifth appearance in the IHSA football playoffs since 1985.

St. Francis in Wheaton came into the game on a hot streak. After getting pummeled 47-0 by Loyola in early October, the Spartans have put together a four-game win streak at the right time. The Spartans come out of the Orange Division of the CCL/ESCC joint Catholic Conference in football this year. The Orange also has two other surviving playoff teams, IC Catholic Prep and Nazareth Academy.

St. Francis is no stranger to playoff football having qualified sixteen time since 1997, winning a state championship in 2005 and advancing to the 4A semifinal game last year.

The game turned late in the first half with St. Francis quarterback Alessio Milivojevic’s eleven-yard touchdown run.

“I like getting hit once or twice on a run. Then I get locked in, clicked in,” said St. Francis senior quarterback and Ball State recruit Alessio Milivojevic. It was the Milivojevic’s 11-yard touchdown run sparked his game on Saturday. Sun-Times Reporter Michael O’Brien captured a video and included it in his Twitter feed. https://twitter.com/michaelsobrien/status/1723424427335925919

After the Milivojevic’s touchdown to make the game 19-8, Morgan Park’s quarterback gave up another interception with under a minute to go. The Spartans worked their way down the short field for a twenty-two yard field goal making the half time score 22-8.

In the second half, Morgan Park scored on a quick bubble screen out to senior wide receiver and Montana recruit Chris Dorr who took it up the sideline 40 yards for the score.

But the second half was just about St. Francis and Milivojevic being able to drive the ball with the run and the pass. Morgan Park gave up two more touchdowns and fell 37-14.

St. Francis advances to play conference rival Nazareth next Saturday in the 5A semi-final. Curiously, the two other surviving 5A teams, Joliet Catholic and Providence Catholic, are also from the CCL/ESCC conference.

DePaul Prep Falls to St. Ignatius in Sectional

Preview of my story this week in Inside Publications:

The DePaul Prep girls’ varsity volleyball team fell to the St. Ignatius Wolfpack on Monday in the IHSA 3A sectional semifinal at St. Ignatius. A large crowd filled the St. Ignatius Gentile Gymnasium for the match. This high-level volleyball was action packed. The teams were never separated by more than five points in either match. The Wolfpack were just that little bit better at defending the attacks by the Rams. Ignatius topped the Rams in two sets, 25-20 and 25-22.

The Rams and their fourth-year head coach Caroline Gajzler came into the sectional fresh off their first regional since Gajzler took over the program four years ago. Gajzler, an assistant athletic director at DePaul Prep and former physical education teacher, was gracious, if not clearly disappointed after the game.

“Kudos to St. Ignatius. They played a hell of a game. They are very scrappy, in terms of defense. [St. Ignatius sophomore Skyler Greene] #10 on the right side gave us issues the entire match. Congratulations to them. On our side, we broke down in our serve and passing games. In the first set, we missed four serves and we were not passing like in our typical game,” Gajzler said.

“We started off the season inconsistent in our match play. We were having difficulty finding the court offensively. Throughout the season our attackers found consistency. Our back row found consistency. With that our confidence grew. We found a good line up that was meshing well together. And then we won some big matches. That really gave us the confidence boost,” Gajzler continued.

Rams’ “libero’ senior Charlotte Collins was a leader on the Rams squad.

“This was our best season yet. We finally clicked as a team. Everyone really wanted it this year,” Collins said after the game. Collins noted the improvement of the Rams squad from last year.

“We really found our rhythm. We learned how to play with each other and connect. Our setters connected with our hitters better. And just effort. We stepped up the game. We wanted to go farther this year and we did,” Collins said.

“Having a bond with everyone and being able to trust your teammates is just so important. If you don’t have that, everyone can be amazing on the team, but if there is no trust and support, then you can’t do anything,” Collins continued.

It was a successful season for the Rams; a 29-9 record with a thirteen-match win streak going it the St. Ignatius sectional match. With the dramatic increase in enrollment at DePaul Prep, the Rams moved up from 2A to 3A in the IHSA four level volleyball classification system. This actually helped the Rams advance through the regional finals. They did not have to face powerhouse teams like IC Catholic and Timothy Christian that defeated them in recent years.

Last weeks’ regional championship over North Grand at Prosser was a milestone for Gajzler with her first regional championship. Last year Gajzler’s Rams suffered an emotional close loss to powerhouse IC Catholic in the regional championship at DePaul. Before that was the lost COVID year with no playoffs. Before that was another close lose to powerhouse Timothy Christian in a regional final.

St. Ignatius went on to advance to the State Finals in Bloomington this coming weekend with wins in the sectional final over DeLaSalle and St. Lawrence in the Super-sectional, both teams that DePaul Prep beat in the regular season.

Amundsen Falls to Belvidere North 38-20

By Jack Lydon

 

The half time score was Belvidere North 17, Amundsen 0.

With the halftime score Belvidern North 17 and Amundsen 0, Amundsen head football coach Nick Olson said on the sideline just before the start of the second half, “Twenty-one to seventeen. Write it down, twenty-one to seventeen is the final score.”

He said it such conviction, and given the enthusiasm of his players, this reporter wasn’t sure he was wrong.

He was right about the Amundsen part, just not the Belvidere North part. The Amundsen Vikings lost to the Belvidere North 38-20 on Friday night in IHSA 6A first round playoff game.

As has been the case in recent games with the Vikings, early mistakes put them behind. Behind 7-0 after Belvidere North scored on 27-yard run around the left end by Belvidere North senior running back Joseph Brown, the Vikings were moving the ball when mishap struck.

With first and ten on their own thirty-seven, Amundsen sophomore quarterback Smith Beeson took the snap and handed the ball to the receiver in motion, except the receiver didn’t take it. Beeson dutifully continued with his fake dive up the middle. But the ball was left behind by both would be runners. No one on field seemed to notice the ball lying on the turf at midfield.  

After what felt like a prison sentence, the Belvidere North defenders noticed and jumped on the ball.

It wasn’t the end. The Vikings defense held after the turnover but they couldn’t hold on the next drive. The Blue Thunder scored a second touchdown on a two-yard quarterback sneak with 3:27 left in the first quarter. The Vikings drove the field late in the second quarter but missed a field goal try.

Getting the ball back with under a minute to go in the half, the Blue Thunder and moved into Amundsen territory for their own field goal try. Alan Perez’s 38 yarder was good making the halftime score 17-0.

The third quarter was all Belvidere who brought the score to 31-0.

The remarkable part about this whole game was that there was no quit in Amundsen at any point. Down 31-0 late in the third quarter and the game clearly out of reach, Nick Olson’s Vikings were playing with the same focus and energy they had when they off the bus.

The wind died down a little in the fourth quarter and Amundsen junior quarterback Elmir Gjeka connected on a beautiful deep ball to junior wide receiver Edwin Soto who raced up the Amundsen sideline for a 68-yard touchdown.

The Vikings were not done and added two more touchdowns bringing the final score to 38-20.

The mood of the Amundsen Vikings and their fired-up coach Nick Olson after the game was parts angry, respectful, defiant and wanting a rematch, like a boxer wanting to keep fighting after having been knocked down.

“They came out and they executed. We were just sloppy on tackling tonight. Another week of poor execution,” Olson said after the game.

“I felt really good about the week of practice. The kids really responded from the lost [to Lane] last Friday night. My fellow coaches and I had a really good game plan. Tonight came down to missed tackles and missed opportunities.”

Belvidere North made few mistakes and knew what they wanted to do—run the ball. That they did.

“They passed it a hand full of times. We knew they ran a Wing T offense. They wanted to pound the rock and run it down our throat,” Olson continued.

“We felt like we had a really good game plan to stop it. Our players were there. Their players made the plays. That’s what it came down to.”

The Vikings have a bright future. “We finished in fifth play [in the sixteen team] Red Division, just behind Lane. They thought we would just come [into the Red] and get walked on. We played a lot of Blue and White [division] football over the last ten years. We are playing against 7A and 8A schools, Taft and Lane Tech, that have almost triple our enrollment,” Olson said about moving up into the CPL Red Division.

“But we are not scared of hard work here at Amundsen. Our message in the off season is ‘close the gap.’ We know other teams are going to have more players. We know other teams are going to have better athletes. We are going to close the gap by working really hard.”

Belvidere North moves on to the second round and will face either Wauconda or Grant.

Amundsen moves on to the Prep Bowl playoffs next week.

One can find another story and photos from the game at: https://www.rrstar.com/picture-gallery/sports/2023/10/28/photos-belvidere-high-school-football-defeats-amundsen-38-20/71357151007/

DePaul Prep Wins IHSA 3A Regional with Victory over North Grand

The DePaul Prep girls’ varsity volleyball team defeated North Grand high school in the IHSA 3A Prosser Regional on Thursday evening in straight sets, 25-9 and 25-4. The Rams finish the year with a record of 27-8 and 4-2 in the GCAC, with a ten-game win streak at the end of the season.

The eleventh seed North Grand Eagle Owls, with an overall record of 8-10 and 4-5 in conference, came in a little overmatched against third seed DePaul Prep. The Rams took the match in straight sets, 25-9 and 25-4.

This was the first IHSA Regional title for Rams’ head coach Coach Gajzler in her four years at DePaul Prep.

“We took over the program four years ago. There wasn’t much built in terms of a system or a culture or a program. The past four years we have just been focused on building a program and sustainability,” said a beeming Coach Gajzler after the match.

“I remember Bobby [Hughes] telling me that it is a real testament when your first freshman become seniors and that is this group. We have had them for four years. They only know Coach Hughes and I.”

The DePaul Prep volleyball program is on its way. With fifty-four girls in the program at all levels, volleyball is emerging as a powerhouse at DePaul and in the Girls Catholic Athletic Conference.

“We are ready for the challenge of moving up from 2A to 3A. I packed our schedule this year. Our schedule was very competitive from start to finish,” said Gajzler.

“Starting with ICC, we had three crossover matches into the GCAC Red [Division]. We are the only White [Division] team that played three cross over matches into the Red. Obviously, we won two of the three with St. Laurence and DeLaSalle. That gave us the confidence going into the playoffs.”

This is the third regional title in girls’ volleyball for DePaul Prep. The previous years were 2017-18 and 2018-19. Gordon Tech won regionals in 2007-08, 2008-09, 2011-12 (my daughter Mary’s senior year) and 2013-14.

DePaul Prep has never won a sectional championship. Now is the chance. The Rams will face St. Ignatius on Monday at St. Ignatius at 7:00 p.m.

The Rams come into the Sectionals as the number 3 seed behind DeLaSalle #1 seed and St. Ignatius #2 seed. The Meteors and the Wolfpack are also GCAC members, both in the Red Division and come into the Sectional finals with records of 26-7 and 22-9 respectively. The Rams defeated DeLaSalle in three sets on October 10th. The Rams have not played the Wolfpack this season.

Lane Beats Amundsen 7-3 for Northside Bragging Rights; Both Move on to IHSA Playoffs

“We still run the north,” was the refrain of the Lane players after the game. Last Wednesday’s newspaper and television stories of the ascendence of the Amundsen football program on the Northside were on the minds of the Champions before and after the game.

The Lane Tech Champions made their case for that claim Friday evening with a victory 7-3 over a very good Amundsen Vikings squad at Lane Stadium.

This was about as close as games get. Both teams evenly matched. Both moved the ball at times. Amundsen Sophomore running back Reginald Mitchell was able run for some yards in the middle of the field. Lane junior quarterback Noah Mayra had a sixty-yard touchdown run called back on a penalty but still provided the Campions with a ton of rushing yards. Both defenses stiffened around the goal line.

 With the Vikings up 3-0, the turning point came at the 10:32 mark early in the fourth quarter with Amundsen deep in their own end. The Amundsen punter bobbled the snap and could not get the punt away. The Lane rushers tackled him at the seven-yard line where the Champions took over on downs.

 “We call it the brotherly shove,” Lane junior quarterback Noah Mayra said of the next two plays. The Champions lined up in their best imitation of the Philiadelphia Eagles now famous quarterback sneek play. Mayra carried, or was actually pushed forward from the Amundsen seven down to the two-yard line. Lining up quickly, the Champions ran the same play in from the two for the game’s only touchdown.

“We have been running that all year. We’ve gotten like four or five touchdowns on it. Two-point conversions,” continued Mayra after the game.

There was still plenty of time left for the Vikings to come back. The Vikings moved the into Lane territory but gave up an interception. The Champions gave up an interception of there own with under four minutes.

 Holding penalties plagued the Vikings as they struggled to rally for the win.

 “We must have had seven or eight holding penalties that really stalled drives. It’s hard to overcome penalties when you are playing good teams,” Amundsen head coach Nick Olson said after the game.

 “I fell like we just didn’t execute tonight, poor execution on the offensive side. Football is a game of inches. We had a bad snap on a punt deep in our own territory and that was the difference. They ran two quarterback sneaks and got the easy touchdown. We kind of just gave this game away. Our defense did a really good job. Our defensive coordinator and coaches had a really good game plan. We moved the ball at times and we kept stalling out before we punched it in. We had a big drop in the endzone before halftime. It just continued to spiral down. Great play; bad play. Great play; bad play. We really have to work on our consistency. Inconsistency is what cost us tonight.”

 Olson was a little hard on himself and his team. They played very well but make no mistake, Lane came in ready.

“We have a pretty good gauge on these guys from Amundsen. We kind of know what they like to do. We kind of know how to cut off the water to the things they like to do the best. That’s what we did tonight,” said Lane head coach Dedrick Dewalt.

“We kept a corner in the box, up in the flats the whole game. It disrupted what the wanted to do. We know they are not going to through the ball down field. So we liked to take way the screens and play well against the run. They may be a little bigger than us up front but we are quicker so we just looked to beat them to the punch.

A jubilant Noah Mayra continued after the game, “We lost Antonio [Bombe] our senior running back. We have our freshman running back Sam [Boadu]. He is great but we can’t give him the ball every time. He is still developing. He is still learning. So I am trying to take it upon myself to run the ball and get the ball to my teammates. Some I should have thrown. Some I should have just given to Sam but we pulled it off.

 The game was a fitting cap to good seasons for both teams, a really exciting game for both teams with each team finishing 6-3 and earned playoff appearances.

The Vikings will face the Belvidere North “Blue Thunder”, 7-2, third place in the Northern Illinois Conference behind Hononegah and Boylan Catholic. Amundsen’s playoff opponent from last year, Harlem, came out of that same conference. Amundsen lands the thirteenth seed in the 6A northern bracket. Belvidere with the fourth seed.

The Champions on the other hand are in 8A by virtue of being one of the largest schools in the state. They will face South Elgin on Friday night in South Elgin, which I learned is its own town interestingly. Who knew? The South Elgin “Strikers” were 8-1 in the Upstate Eight Conference (which actually has 10 teams). The Champions land the 26th seed out of the 32 teams in 8A. South Elgin comes in with the seventh seed.   

DePaul Prep Football and Cross County Senior Night

Before last night’s historic beatdown of Fenwick, DePaul Prep honored its senior football players before their last regular season football game.

At halftime, DePaul honored its Cross County team seniors as well.

Here are photos from the introductions.

DePaul Prep Beats Fenwick 44-43 in Double Overtime

The biggest win in school history for DePaul Prep? It’s not Gordon Tech’s State Championship in 1980 but it sure feels like the biggest win for the new DePaul Prep Rams in ten years of being DePaul Prep.

The DePaul Prep Rams (4-4, 1-1 in CCL/ESCC Red) beat the Fenwick Friars (4-4, 1-1 in CCL/ESCC Orange) 44 to 43 in double overtime Friday night at DePaul Prep.  

In talking to some fans before the game, I asked, “How is Fenwick?’

“It’s Fenwick, but it not Fenwick Fenwick,” I was told.

 The Rams had a chance. And they believed. What’s new about this year is that they can score. They have big-play players. And they score a lot. In their last five games, they have scored 38, 28, 36, 35 and 44 points. I don’t know what Rams’ junior quarterback Fernando “JuJu” Rodriguez did over the summer but whatever it is, somebody should bottle it. His play at quarterback has improved 100%. His throws are on time and on target and the Rams are scoring.

Rams’ senior running back Titus Bautista provides the perfect counter-punch to Rodriguez big arm. Recievers Bradon Peevy, Michael Bloom and Jack West catch the ball and they are only juniors.

Even so, the Rams struggled in the first quarter playing the entire quarter in their own end. They gave up two early field goals and a touchdown falling behind 12-0. But actually it didn’t feel bad. The Rams can score quick and that they did.

On the first play of the second quarter, a perfectly executed screen pass to Bautista flipped the field position bringing the Rams from deep in their own end to the Fenwick redzone. A couple play later it was 12-7.

After having given up a field goal to the Friars with 6:14 to go in the fourth, the Rams trailed 23-29. They took over at their own 21 after Michael Bloom’s kickoff return. With third down and five on their own 26, a quick hitch from Fernandez to junior wide receiver Braden Peevy, then a lateral out to Bautista who sprinted out of the backfield and down the sideline to Fenwick’s 40 yard-line.

A fourth and five scramble by Rodriguez down to the 28-yard line kept the Rams alive. A couple plays later, another fourth down, still from the 28-yard line. This is the Rams’ shot. After coming so close against Providence, after giving late scores against Marian Catholic and being unable to score on a game ending driving, could the Rams make it happen? After years of incremental improvements and confidence building, could this be the hump the Rams get over?

With 4th and 10 and the game, the season and the future on the line, they stood there looking to the sideline for the play. The play clock ticked down; the Rams took the play and lined up. With Rams’ head coach Mike Passarella running down the sideline calling for a time out, the side judge blows his whistle as the Rams snap the ball.

Time out.

Back out on the field. 4th and 10 from the 28. The ball placed on the far hash mark. Senior wide receiver Michael Bloom split out to Rodriguez’s left. Junior Bradon Peevy to his right. Junior running back Nick Martinez in the slot left next to Bloom, junior Jack West in the wideside slot next to Peevy.

Will we look back on this play as the turning point for the football program, or will the losing continue?

Martinez goes in motion to wide side. Bloom launches up field and dips in toward the post, then bolts straight up the sideline past the Fenwick corner like he was standing still.

The offensive line pushes the four Fenwick pass rushers outside and Rodriguez moves up in the pocket. Fenwick’s stud defensive tackle Nate Marshall breaks back up the middle to meet JuJu and stop the pass. Rodriguez lets it fly. Bloom slows up to get the ball. He catches the game tying touchdown in the endzone just before the Fenwick corner can break up the pass.

Huge. Great call. Clutch throw. Tremendous catch. Touchdown Rams!

The game is tied. 

Of course, Fenwick gets a tremendous push up the middle and blocks the Rams extra point. Still tied with 2:03 to play.

Fenwick moves the ball into DePaul Prep territory and with two seconds on the clock, the Friars line up for a 40-yard field goal.

No good. To overtime we go all tied at 29.

Rams have it first from the 10 yard-line in the South end. They score, adding a PAT. Rams 36, Friars 29.

Now the Friars. They score adding a PAT. Double overtime. Rams 36, Friars 36.

Now the Friars have it again. They score adding the PAT. Friars 43, Rams 36.

I never doubted the Rams would score again. They had come too far. But how long could this go on? Titus Bautista around the right end on the first play. Friars 43, Rams 42.

Mike Passarella never hesitated. As soon as I looked back toward the sideline, after Bautista scored, Passarella was raising two fingers. They were going for two points to win the game.

Fenwick called a time out to talk it over.

Two-point conversion attempt from the 3. Peevy split right. Bloom split left. Three backs in the backfield with Rodriguez. Shot gun snap to Rodriguez who gets immediate pressure from his left. Peevy ducks inside into double coverage then slips back toward the sideline. Rodriguez, with a man on him, throws to Peevy breaking to the sideline. TOUCHDOWN. (2-point conversion really.) Rams win. Rams win!

The DePaul Prep Rams defeated Fenwick 44-43 drawing even on the year at 4 wins and 4 losses and chance to make the playoff with a win at DeLaSalle next Friday.

A huge win for a DePaul Prep Rams football team that hasn’t had much to celebrate in recent years. Bill Jeske didn’t know how long it has been since the Rams beat Fenwick. 20 years maybe. Former athletic director Paul Chabura confirmed that the last time DePaul Prep/Gordon Tech beat Fenwick was in 2000 in a Prep Bowl playoff.

“Final was 24-6. Scott Baum was the coach. The Rams came close a few times but that was the last win,” Chabura wrote.

The Rams have improved no doubt. The culture is back. The program is bursting at the seams. They just needed that turn the corner win.

The skies parted literally and figuratively for DePaul Prep football Friday with a huge signature Catholic League crossover win against the Fenwick Friars.

I guess we will have to see if it is the turning point it feels like.

Watch the game for yourself on You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WE0YCfXubw

DePaul Prep Volleyball Handles Latin 2-0 on Senior Night

The DePaul Prep volleyball team handled Latin in two sets at Thursday’s Senior night at DePaul Prep.

A huge crowd packed the Tom Winiecki Gym where seniors Charlotte Collins, Maeve Hudson, Haley Pitcock, Maggie Edmonds and Jessica Meier were honored and escorted into the gym by their parents before the match.

The seniors all started the game jumping out to an early lead on the Latin Romans never to look back. The Rams lead the Romans in both sets.

The Rams move on to this weekend’s Lake Forest Invitation and come home next Tuesday for a big match against GCAC rival DeLaSalle. DeSalle has the number one seed in the St. Ignatius sectional in the upcoming IHSA 3A volleyball playoffs.

Morgan Park Too Much for Amundsen; Mustangs 28, Vikings 0

So much fight in Amundsen, one would never know they trained by four touchdowns at the end.

DePaul Prep Falls to Marian Catholic 40-36.

A very exciting back-and-forth game with plenty of offense. Two very nice passes, catches and YAC by Braden Peevy. The Rams offense is coming together nicely in recent games. When the defense catches up, watch out.

It was my first trip to Chicago Heights and Marian Catholic. They have a very nice field but the lights. Well that’s a whole different story. It was probably the worst of any high school that I can recall.

The Marian Catholic people were wonderful. I nice talk with former mens basketball coach Mike Taylor. It’s real loss for basketball that Coach Taylor is not coaching anymore. He elevated Marian to a powerhouse program.

DePaul Prep Defeats St. Laurence in Varsity Volleyball Match

The DePaul Prep Rams varsity volleyball team defeated St. Laurence in three sets on Thursday. Very high level volleyball and teacher appreciation night as well.

Coach Caroline Gajzler has her Rams at 14-5 with about three weeks until the IHSA state tournament and 11 matches still to play, the Rams look to finish strong. The move to 3A and into the St. Ignatius sectional for the playoffs will be a challenge for the Rams. I am getting better at shooting volleyball hopefully in time for a deep playoff run by DePaul Prep.

Wouldn’t it be great to shoot a state volleyball final! Make it happen Rams.

(And I just love the shot of Haley Pitcock is swooning. She said photos of the bench would be the best. She was totally right!)

DePaul Prep Outlasts Leo: Rams 38, Lions 14

With 38 seconds left in the first half from the Lion 45 yard-line and the score DePaul Prep 17, Leo 14, the Rams called a play they had practiced all week and that they intended to open the game with. The old “hooking ladder.” A hook by the wide out and a lateral pass to the running back out of the backfield and up the sideline to the end zone.

It worked to perfection. The finest execution of the play that I have seen in my 100 years of watching football.

Rams’ junior quarterback Fernando “JuJu” Rodriguez tossed a quick short pass, a hook, to junior wide receiver wide receiver Nicholas Hathcoat drawing up the Leo free safety. Hathcoat gathered it in, and with a Leo defender draped all over him, pitched the ball to senior running back Titus Bautista sprinting out of the backfield. Bautista grabbed the perfectly placed pitch at full speed and dashed up the sideline. No one had any chance at all to catch him.

Leo was done after that. They had nothing left for the second half. Beaten physically and mentally, the game spiraled into penalty after penalty after penalty.

Rams 38, Lions 14.

DePaul Prep improves to 2-2 on the year and will face No. 14 ranked Providence at home next Friday.

Lane Falls to Glenbrook North 29-0

The Lane Tech Champions (0-1, 0-0) opened the season with an unusual 11:00 a.m. home game against Glenbrook North Spartans (1-0, 0-0) falling short 29-0. They were just a little out of sorts from the early start. The strong wind blowing directly off Addison Street would be a factor all day.

A GBN possession midway through the second quarter would prove something of a turning point. With the Champions down 8-0 after giving up an early touchdown and a safety, GBN drove down the field running in a touchdown only to have it called back on a holding penalty.

On the next pay, another offensive holding penalty. First down and goal from the 28 for GBN. The play after that, a sack.

On second and goal from the 39, GBN got a four-yard gain on the ground.

Third and goal on the 35, the Spartans’ 6’6”, 210 pounds tight end and Northwestern commit, Patrick Schaller, got free in the middle of the field for a 27 yard catch down to the 12.

On the next play, the Spartans’ quarterback scored on a fourth down keeper around the left end from 12 yards out.

Despite having GBN backed up 2nd and goal at the 39-yard line, the Champions could not hold. It was just a kick in the head. The game was different after that.

GBN added two more scores in the second half. The Champions could not get another going on offence.

After the game, Lane Tech head coach Dedrick Dewalt was not pleased.

“It’s been a tough week. We only practiced one day this week. We just couldn’t get into rhythm. That’s still no excuse. When we did get some rhythm, we turned the ball over. High snap over the quarterback, takes us twenty yards back. Uncharacteristic mistakes that my football team normally doesn’t have,” Dewalt said.

“We put the onus on our coaches too. We’ve got to put the kids in a position to be successful. I don’t feel as a coaching staff we did that today. In addition to the kids making mistakes, we did not do our best as a coaching staff. That falls on me. The second and forty should have been a different defense called.”

Last year’s Wing T offense with its three yards and a cloud of dust ball control is mostly gone. Coming out of the huddle, the Champions fall into it at the line of scrimmage but they eventually shift out of it into a spread shotgun and at times even a pistol offence.  

“We’ve got to put some drives together and score some points,” Dewalt continued. That’s what was lacking at Lane Stadium late Saturday morning. The Champions had good runs and completed passed and moved the ball in the first half. They just couldn’t string them together into a scoring drive.

Dewalt was probably too hard on himself accepting the blame for forces out his control as coaches do. Nevertheless, the Champions have work to do. There is a core of champions there. They need to find a rhythm. Dewalt is just the conductor for such a job.  

Next week Thornton Fractional South comes to Lane Stadium to face Lane. Legendary coach Bob Padjen brings his Red Wolves to Lane Stadium after having lost to Hammond Central 33-6.

DeLaSalle Defeats St. Viator in 29-23 in Season Opener

The Chicago Catholic League/East Suburban Catholic Conference reshuffled the divisions this year. DeLaSalle and Marian Catholic were moved from the Purple Division into the Red Division. I wanted to get a look at DeLaSalle who I haven’t seen in a couple years so I can see what the Red will be dealing with.

And of course I wanted to see St. Viator—the mighty mighty Lions! My beloved alma matter.

I will spare you the blow-by-blow. Let’s just say it was sloppy first half for both teams. DeLaSalle lead 14-7 at the half.

The second have was better but St. Viator’s play calling left something to be desired. In the fourth quarter the Lions started running between the tackles and finally met with some success. St. Viator scored.

St. Viator scored again but missed the extra point. 20-14 Lions.

With 9:03 left in the 4th, DeLaSalle’s talented sophomore quarterback scored on a keeper from the five. The extra point was good. 21-10 DeLaSalle.

Cooper Kmet, Cole’s younger brother, put together a nice drive for the St. Viator moving the Lions down to the DeLaSalle 23 yard line. St. Viator’s Gabe Glodz put in a 30 yard field goal with 3:28 to play to lift the Lions to a 23-21.

The Meteors had the ball and chance to will. Lewis took them down the field moving backwards and forwards. A long pass to the goal line and a keeper for the touchdown. Then a two-point conversion and the Lions fell to the Meteors 29-23.

DeLaSalle has loads of talent. The Red is well advised to take notice.

DePaul Prep Opens Volleyball Season against IC Catholic Prep

The match was basically as close as it could get. The DePaul Prep Rams fell in three sets to IC Catholic Prep by the closest of margins, 25 to 23 in the final set at DePaul Prep’s Tom Winiecki Gym.

A big crowd in DePaul Prep’s Tom Winiecki Gym welcomed the return of high level volleyball to the Northside.

Should be a great season.

Helluva August

It’s gonna be a helluva August.

I basically took July off from photos and sports writing; a much-needed break. It began to feel like a job.

I’m going to LA on August 1st for an overdue vacation, then the football season starts. I am gonna be taking photos and writing again. I am very jazzed about that.

I have wanted to go to Los Angeles for a long time. I was there in 1974 as a boy. I thought it was so cool. My dad bought a map of the stars homes and we drove around Beverly Hills. We drove past Lucille Ball’s house. When we came upon Paul Newman’s house down the street, there he was standing on the sidewalk out front in a white t-shirt drinking a Budweiser talking to a man I assumed was his neighbor.

My sister shrieked, “Paul.” She was all about Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid at that time.

He looked up, smiled and waved. My dad kept driving.

How cool was that?

Well that was 50 years ago. Paul is gone, God rest his soul. But there must be others like that to see. Matt Damon, Brad Pitt, somebody like that.

My daughter Mary is going with me. She is totally into the trip but prefers to visit the reality TV locations like Sur restaurant from Vanderpump Rules. That’s fine. Reality TV is the one thing that she doesn’t mind me being around for, and the Cubs too. We religiously watched all the 2016 playoff games together.

I have never looked forward to a vacation as much as I have this one. I just want to go to LA and look around. I want actually see the places whose names I have been hearing my whole life. The San Fernando Valley, Malibu, Compton, Sunset Strip, Hollywood Walk of Fame, Orange County, Long Beach, etc.

Then when I get back football season starts. I am looking forward to covering the area teams again. Amundsen should be good again. Lane will be good. I really enjoyed Lane coach Dedrick DeWalt’s old school double wing offense last season.

DePaul Prep will give it another try. That school has become the premier Catholic School high school on the Northside. It’s up to about 1100 students. Mary Dempsey and her team are opening a new classroom building when school starts. It’s only a matter of time before Coach Mike Passarella’s Rams move up divisions and take over the CCL/ESCC the way Tom Kleinschmidt’s basketball teams have done with multiple state final appearances and a state championship.

I am gonna get out to as many St. Viator football games as I can as well. My brother Steve is not coaching football this season and promised to come in for a game. My brother Dan, Fr. Dan Lydon, CSV, for those non-family members out there, is the president of the school so I suppose I should show them some love. There was a time when St. Viator won the ESCC every year. But that was like forty years ago now. Dan and the St. Viator staff have plans to build an on-campus stadium. That will make a big difference for the school and the football program.

Once football runs its course, we are right into basketball. The Battle of the Bridge will be here before one knows it. That’s when the real funs begins. It should be a great new high school basketball season.

Great time to be alive.