Oakland City Sweeps Morthland in Doubleheader

WEST FRANKFORT, Ill.- The Morthland College men and women basketball teams fell tonight to visiting Oakland City University at Max Morris Gymnasium. The Lady Patriots were defeated, 103-43, while the men fell, 90-82.
The Lady Patriots (0-8) could not keep pace with the hot shooting of OCU (11-8) who drained 13 three-pointers on the night. Six Lady Oak players scored in double-digits and leading the way was Chelsea Jones who scored 20 on the night.
morthland patriots logo

Morthland was led by Jade Vaughn who scored a team-high 17 points while Latisha Bennett chipped in 10 points and 4 assists.

The Morthland men looked for revenge after a lose to OCU earlier in the season. The Patriots trailed by 12 after the 16-minute media timeout, battling back and forth until halftime when the Patriots trailed 41-32.

Morthland (1-15) stayed in the game with timely three’s by freshman Roby Boatright and Matt Weeks who drilled nine on the night, rallying to their first lead on the night at the 7:52 mark of the second half, but Oakland City’s Mitch LeFear made 6-of-8 three-pointers on the night and many acrobatic baskets late in the half, putting the game just out of reach of the Patriots.

MC was led by Will Carmickle who had 21 points and 16 rebounds. Three other Patriots scored in double digits including Roby Boatright (15), Matt Weeks (15) and Jordan Stanton (13).

The Morthland men will be back in action on Saturday, Jan. 26 when they host Logan Chiropractic at Max Morris Gym in West Frankfort. Tip is set for 3 p.m.

Herrin’s Jones erupts for 33 points in Vols’ 95-53 win over Lewis & Clark

 

 

BY JOHN D. HOMAN

Logan Media Services

CARTERVILLE – John A. Logan College men’s basketball coach Kyle Smithpeters may have found a new weapon Wednesday night as the Volunteers crushed Lewis & Clark College on “Carterville Night” in a Region 24 match, 95-53.

In his first college start, sophomore forward Jamie Jones of Herrin unloaded for 33 points and tied a school record for most 3-pointers made in a game with nine. He now shares the record with Russell Jupiter first set in 1991. Jones did manage to set the record for consecutive triples with eight.

“I guess the extra shots in the gym are paying off,” said Jones, who was unable to suppress a smile. “On a couple of them I heard the crowd yell…I didn’t even know I made them.”

JALC sophomore forward Jamie Jones goes up for a 3-pointer Wednesday against Lewis & Clark College. Jones cut loose with nine bombs that reached their destination, tying a 21-year-old school record. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)

JALC sophomore forward Jamie Jones goes up for a 3-pointer Wednesday against Lewis & Clark College. Jones cut loose with nine bombs that reached their destination, tying a 21-year-old school record. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)

Jones said it felt like anything he shot was going to go in the basket. On one occasion, one of his long-range bombs was even tipped, but still found the mark.

“It’s a great feeling to have. I guess I made Coach look good for starting me tonight,” he joked. “The only thing better is if this had happened on Herrin Night. I guess I’ll have to make 10 threes next week.”

Smithpeters had only praise for Jones.

“Jamie’s done everything we’ve asked him to do since Day One,” he said. “He has struggled at times just because of his size and the physicality of the game, but he can shoot the basketball. We had one of our best practices of the year Tuesday and I told everybody that whoever plays well and competes hard is going to play a lot.

“And Jamie’s had a great month of January, both in practice and in the games. Tonight, everything fell into place for him and I’m very happy for him. He’s a great weapon. It’s good to have somebody on the floor who can hit shots and force the other team to guard you. When that happens, things open up inside.”

While it was Jones’ night to shine, his supporting cast was none too shabby. Freshman center Kaylen Shane scored a season-high 19 points on 8-of-12 shooting from the field and yanked down seven rebounds. Freshman forward Sondale Conner followed with 14 points, including two ferocious windmill slams and a pair of triples.

“I felt really comfortable out there tonight. We needed this one. We needed to come out and play hard and get a win,” Conner said. “Now, it’s a matter of staying focused and carrying this momentum over to the next game.”

Jamie Jones (middle) gets congratulated by Carterville native Drew Bonner (left) and Du Quoin grad Connor Wheeler after Jones knocked down his eighth-straight 3-pointer. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)


Jamie Jones (middle) gets congratulated by Carterville native Drew Bonner (left) and Du Quoin grad Connor Wheeler after Jones knocked down his eighth-straight 3-pointer. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)

Freshman forward Jay Johnson was also in double figures with 11. Aaron Adeoye chipped in eight points. Julian Hernandez knocked down a trey and finished with five points.

Freshman point guard Connor Wheeler didn’t shoot once, but had a whopping nine assists with no turnovers. Stephen McCarty’s 16 points led the Trailblazers.

The Vols led 40-27 at the half and never looked back.

Smithpeters said it was important to get back on the winning track after dropping consecutive road games at Vincennes and Rend Lake.

“I’m very happy for the guys. They did this for themselves and showed what kind of team they can be,” he said. “But we have to be consistent. It can’t be one game and then take another one off.”

The Vols, now 11-6 overall, travel to Mattoon Saturday night to take on Lake Land.

“They have big guys to match us inside and quick guards. We’re going to have to come out and compete hard and keep them off the glass,” Smithpeters said. “It will be a very tough game for us, but hopefully, we’ll be ready to go.”

Northern Iowa coasts past Saluki Men’s Basketball, 58-45

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa – Northern Iowa used suffocating defense and timely 3-point shooting to coast past Southern Illinois, 58-45, on Wednesday night.

The Salukis (8-11, 1-7) were held below 50 points for the first time this season and the 45-point total was the lowest for SIU in the 51-game history of the series between the schools.

“The thing they do defensively is they make you shoot jump shots,” SIU head coach Barry Hinson said. “They’re absolutely the best. They play man-zone and they back off, make you hit jump shots, and when you don’t have a guy who can score inside, it makes you a jump-shooting team.”

Dantiel Daniels led SIU with 11 points.

Dantiel Daniels led SIU with 11 points.

Trailing by six points at halftime, Southern went more than four minutes to start the second half without scoring. That allowed the Panthers (11-9, 4-4) to run off 10 unanswered points. The final six came on 3-pointers by Marc Sonnen, who converted 5-of-8 shots from downtown and led all scorers with 15 points.

“He’s put in a ton of time for the past 18 months — a minimum 500 shots a day in the off-season,” said UNI head coach Ben Jacobson. “The confidence he’s playing with is a result of working hard.”

Northern made 8-of-15 shots from 3-point as a team, and Hinson said Sonnen’s hot shooting was no surprise.

“He just sits over there in that corner and waits,” Hinson said. “Seventy-two percent of his shots have been threes on the year. We knew it, we expected it. I’ll give up a wide-open three before I give up a dunk or a layup.”

As it has all year, Southern played small-ball, always using a lineup with four or five guards. Jacobson said it was difficult, at times, for his team to run offense against such an unusual alignment.

“You don’t practice against five guards and you don’t play against five guards except in this game,” he said. “When they have four or five guards on the floor, it changes the way you can run your offense. We were able to get a few more touches (inside) in the second half and that jump-started us.”

The Panthers led by as many as 19 points in second half, and the closest the Salukis came was 13. SIU attempted a season-low 41 shots, but that was partially by design, Hinson said.

“The pace was exactly what we wanted,” he explained. “The last two teams to come in here got beat 31 and 13. We knew that we would have to literally grind it a little bit. Mr. (Henry) Iba would have been proud of me tonight.”

Dantiel Daniels was SIU’s only double-figure scorer with 11 points. Hinson pointed out that the team’s primary big man only had one rebound, however, and Southern lost the battle of the boards, 29-22.

“Dantiel has to play a lot better for us, and I think he can,” Hinson said. “When you’re that size and you get one rebound, I think that speaks volumes with what’s going on with energy and effort. Offensively, it’s not an issue, but he’s got to come out of a game with more than one rebound.”

Midway through the second half, the officials stopped play, reviewed the in-house video and ejected SIU forward Jeff Early for committing a Flagrant 2 foul. Hinson said he didn’t see the play, but acknowledged that his senior leader may have to serve a one-game suspension after the league reviews the incident that occurred between Early and Jake Koch.

“I think there were two culprits, but the second guy gets caught,” Hinson said.

After losing its first two conference games, Northern Iowa is starting to get hot, having won four of its last six. The Panthers are certainly in contention for one of the coveted top six seeds at the conference tournament.

“We bounced back and forth for so long and our guys deserve credit for not allowing that early part of the season to distract from our preparation,” Jacobson said.

The last time SIU won at Northern Iowa was 10 years ago, nearly to the day, when Bruce Weber guided the Salukis to an overtime victory.

The Salukis have lost 12-straight MVC road games dating back to last season. It is the second-longest streak in school history behind a 15-game road losing streak in conference games from 1982-84 under head coach Allen Van Winkle.

A few rambling thoughts on the 40th Annual BIT

By Tom Wheeler

Some thoughts from a week of basketball in Benton at the 40th Invitational at Rich Herrin gymnasium. Let’s just ramble today … Congratulations to Carlyle and coach Andy Palmer as his Indians won their first BIT since 1998 when Brad Weathers tied with Curt Reed’s Foxes with a 4-1 record … Looking back the Championship game was played on Monday in the first game of the tournament when Carlyle defeated Okawville 47-40 as each team won in the next four sessions … The biggest surprise of this game was the play of two BIT all-tournament players Matt Hilmes of Carlyle and Jeremy Weeke of Okawville.  Hilmes had missed 13 Indian games with a broken hand while Weeke was thought to have a broken foot but a second opinion showed Jeremy had an extra bone in his foot and the injury was just a bad sprain. Both athletes were released Monday in time to play and play they did … Carlyle’s Tyson Boehne sat out Saturday night’s game with a sprained ankle, Tyson will play baseball at McKendree University where his dad James is head coach … McLeansboro’s Tyler Cross showed up on crutches Friday night with a broken foot and the point guard will be out for the remainder of his senior year … Rockets coach Jon Krause, Ranger’s Ron Winemiller and the Foxes Keith Welch all played in the BIT, in fact Coach Welch won the Bob Blondi Sportsmanship Award twice in 1999 and 2000 while his young brother Jake won it in 2007. Another brother Devon, who is an assistant coach to his brother, was all tournament in 00 and 01 … Devon was also honored to be named one of the top 40 players to play in the BIT and was one of the 20 all stars who returned for a nice half time ceremony … veteran basketball official Roger Grumley was honored Monday night for his service at the BIT as this is his last year to officiate, a great guy on and off the court … the only “Little Wheels” camper to make this top 40 list was Collinsville coach Doug Kirk one of Benton’s all-time leading scorers … other ex-Little Wheels who made the all-tournament team when they played besides Kirk who made it three times were, Seiger and Sayler Shurtz, Ryan Fraulini, Brett Blondi and Aaron Cantrell … Benton great Rob Dunbar was a 1974 All Star and made the ceremony, teammate that year Paul Dinkins did not make it but 1975 teammate Billy Smith was also honored, in fact Smith looked like he could still go 32 minutes … all-stars Shane Hawkins (Pinckneyville) was coaching for Marion Saturday night and couldn’t attend as was Rend Lakes Randy House(Benton) and Belleville East’s Able Schrader (Okawville) … Okawville legendary coach David Luechtefield was in attendance Friday night, he won titles in 1995,1997,1999 and 2000.  His son Jeff made the all-tournament team in 1986 and 1987 while youngest son Ryan was honored in 1993 and 1994 … The only Harlem Globetrotter to be a BIT All-star was Carlyle’s Jacob Tucker … I also had a chance to visit with a couple ex-Little Wheels campers who were assistant coaches Benton’s Jason Hobbs (Christopher) and Pinckneyville assistant Todd Thomas(Johnston City, Tommy’s son) … The top five scorers in the tournament were Carlyle’s Hilmes (95),Sesser-Valier’s Justin Kulich (75), Oakville’s Weeke (73), Carlyle’s Cody Huels (72) and Benton’s Nathanael Higgins (64), all five were all tournament selections

Herrin beats WF for 3rd place in tourney

By BRUCE A. FASOL

The Herrin Tigers won the third place game of the 2013 West Frankfort Mid-Winter Classic, Saturday night. The final score was Herrin 54 and West Frankfort 36. Both teams were spectators to the four overtime win by Eldorado over Johnston City 101-100, with the game delayed 58 minutes until a decision was reached in that 5th place contest.
The Redbirds came out of the locker room determined to avenge an earlier loss at Herrin by a huge margin. The ‘Birds played well early, and Herrin was just as determined not to let the home team stay close.  By halftime the Tigers held a substantial, but not insurmountable, 10-point  lead at intermission. In the second half, more problems with Herrin pressure forced the Redbirds into numerous turnovers.
For the game, the Redbirds committed 19 turnovers. That was three less than the first meeting between the two at Herrin earlier in the season. The Redbirds had 10 turnovers in quarters three and four. Herrin gradually added to their lead and won by double digits.
One of the biggest statistics of the game was rebounding where the Tigers owned the boards winning 29-11.
The Redbirds were led by the 11 points of sophomore Christian Dunning. He was the only West Frankfort player in double figures. Just missing with 9 each were Zack Fort and Trent Easley.
Herrin was led by Justin Lukens and his 20 points.
West Frankfort sophomore Braxston Koehl was named to the All-Tournament team. The Redbirds are idle this week until they resume Ohio Division play at Massac County on Friday night.

Chester tops Christopher Bearcats

STAFF REPORT

In a regular season, non-tournament game Friday night, the Chester Yellowjackets knocked off the Christopher Bearcats 61-51.

The second quarter proved to be the difference as the Yellowjackets had a 20-11 advantage in the stanza. That coupled with a 2-point advantage ( 17-15 after one quarter ) proved to be enough for the win.

Panthers blow out Red Devils at BIT

STAFF REPORT
With their long win streak of 41 games at the Benton Invitational Tournament snapped earlier in the week, what was left for Pinckneyville to focus on?  More wins, of course is the answer. The Panthers were crisp and focussed Friday night as they dismantled the Sesser-Valier Red Devils 53-29.
In doing so they accomplished a rare feat in that they held their opponents scoreless after one quarter of play. Pinckneyville led 13-0 after one quarter. The second quarter saw the Red Devils erase the zero, but could add only 5 points thru the first 16 minutes of the game. The game itself was effectively over at half time.
Pinckneyville was led in scoring by Dylan Hardin’s 15 points.

Rockets outlast Rangers at BIT

STAFF REPORT

The Okawville Rockets continue to open eyes this week, during the Benton Invitational Tournament. The success of the Rockets may come as a surprise to some.  But the fact that they were led by potential All-State candidate Jeremy Weeke should not catch anyone by surprise. Weeke turned in a double-double Friday night leading his team to a convincing 49-37 win over the host Benton Rangers.

Still, Ron Winemiller’s Rangers battled back at one point in the second half to be down by just a half dozen. However, Weeke gave them little chance to get closer. He scored 20 points in the game and pulled down 23 rebounds for a dominating performance at both ends of Rich Herrin Gymnasium.

Okawville took the home crowd out of the game early. after one quarter the Rockets led 15-4. Of the 15 points scored, Weeke had 7 of them, and 8 rebounds. That set the tone individually, and for the game, in Okawville’s favor. Benton trailed 30-18 at half. The Rangers made up a half dozen of theose points in the third quarter. However, the Rockets caught a second wind to cruise to the victory.

Benton was led in scoring by Nathaniel Higgins and 13 points, Sheeks and Ward added 10 apiece.

The BIT continues with both an afternoon and evening session in today’s final day of action.

Carterville wins over WF at MWC

The West Frankfort Redbirds and Carterville Lions faced off Friday night for a spot in the MidWinter Classic title game.

The West Frankfort Redbirds and Carterville Lions faced off Friday night for a spot in the MidWinter Classic title game.

By BRUCE A. FASOL

Christian Dunning shoots from the lane in the second quarter.

Christian Dunning shoots from the lane in the second quarter.

Carterville Lions Coach Scott Burzynski admitted after the game that teams that shoot 33 percent from the field rarely win games.

He also admitted that when his team did, they were fortunate enough to still win. However, the head coach did quickly credit his players for making the plays at the end of the game to have a chance to win. Carterville parlayed a Lucas Hunter corner shot to a win over the West Frankfort Redbirds 47-45.

The win propelled the Lions to Saturday night’s title game against Goreville. Both the Lions and Blackcats won their respective pools. The two teams played earlier with Goreville winning.

The West Frankfort Redbirds established their game plan early, and took advantage of Carterville’s cold shooting from the field.
After one quarter the Redbirds led 9-2. However, as ineffective as they were shooting the basketball in the first quarter, the Lions were as exact in the second frame. In fact, both teams simply traded places. It was the Redbirds who struggled with their first basket of the second frame coming at the 4:02 mark. That was a Christian Dunning turn around shot in the lane. At the half, Carterville led 18-15.
The third quarter belonged to the Redbirds. A pair of 3-point shots from sophomore Braxston Koehl and sophomore Dunning paced the home team. A third shot was mistakenly announced as a Redbird 3-pointer, but changed at the scorers table to the 2-point shot the referees had called on the floor. After three quarters,the ‘Birds  led 34-29.
Carterville's Lucas Hunter takes the game-winning shot from the corner.

Carterville’s Lucas Hunter takes the game-winning shot from the corner.

The fourth quarter  saw both teams turn in big plays, one after the other.  Carterville started their run early when they were down by seven points. Matt Galik and Blake Watson drained 3-point shots in the fourth quarter’s first four minutes. Galik’s trey pulled the Lions to within two points with 3:20 left in the game. At that time,the score 41-39.

The game was tied at 42 as the clock hit 1:30 remaining. Carterville’s comeback was aided by some key Redbird turnovers late in the game. A tie up on a rebound gave the Lions the ball underneath their own goal with the possession arrow favoring them. With :53 seconds left, Lucas Hunter hit a free throw to tie the game at 45.
That set the scene for the Lions receiving the winning shot from the left corner by Hunter.
As the ball exited the basket, the clock showed a tenth of a second. Officials informed the scorers bench that time had been officially called with 2.1 seconds left in the game. The Redbirds inbounded at the far end of the floor and manuevered to the top of the opponents key before Koehl tossed up a heave toward the goal. It was slightly off to the left, and there would be no Redbird miracle win this night.
Scoring for the Redbirds: Koehl 18, Dunning 17, Easley 5, Williams 2, Keller 1,  Fort 1, Maller 1.
Carterville was led by the 13 of Blake Watson.
With the loss, the Redbirds fall to 6-11 for the season. It snapped the first two win streak of the year for Dan Dewerff’s squad. West Frankfort will play for Third Place tonight against Herrin, in the 7 p.m. game of the MWC.

 

Sesser-Valier takes MWC championship

By Bruce A. Fasol

Rick Metcalf has always been known as a good basketball coach. He was a college assistant at Murray State University. As head boys varsity basketball coach at Sesser-Valier and Vienna he also achieved much success.

Some of that success came when he coached the Red Devil boys team to West Frankfort Mid-Winter Classic basketball titles in the 90’s. Now, Metcalf has become the answer to a trivia question. He is the first person to coach boys and girls teams to MWC titles.

The Lady Red Devils knocked off Herrin 61-54 Thursday night to win the 2013 crown. But, it was not easily accomplished. Sesser-Valier had to dig themselves out of a 15 point hole in the very first quarter. But, they didn’t panic and slowly cut the Lady Tiger lead. Rachel Marlo flipped the “on” switch in the second quarter scoring 15 points by herself in the frame to lead the come back. They not only caught the Tigers but passed them in that memorable frame. Marlo hit two 3-point shots in the final half minute to give Sesser-Valier a bucket lead at the break.

In the second half, Herrin fought back but could come no closer than 5 points. Abby Horn put the team on her back scoring 8 straight points at one juncture of the fourth quarter. However, SV held off the Lady Tigers for the championship.

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