The “Ridgewood Live Event” started Friday. The great part about Ridgewood is that one can readily watch two games and parts of a third game from the same seat in the Ridgewood High School Gym. Ridgewood coach Chris Mroz and his staff do a tremendous job putting on this event.
Early Friday I got to see some top players—Cole Kelly and Brady Pettigrew, and teams I usually cover during the basketball season—DePaul Prep, Benet, Lincoln Park, St. Ignatius, Loyola and Mount Carmel. I wasn’t able to see Lane and St. Laurence. They play today and tomorrow.
Another reason I very much enjoy this “Live” event is that I get to talk to high school basketball observers who know far more than I do on this subject. They usually set me straight on this I thought I knew.
Key take aways—
Cole Kelly looked like great. Scoring inside and out, dropping 3’s, grabbing boards. This junior may be the best player in the state at this point. Except for maybe, Brady Pettigrew was playing on the court next to where Kelly was putting on a show. Pettigrew was playing gingerly after having recently suffered a serious injury. But playing none-the-less and playing well.
DePaul Prep had two games early in the tournament. First was Rock Island. The starting line-up that Coach Kleinschmit went with was Blake Choice, Gus Johnson (now surprises there), then sophomore Caleb Hayes on the point, junior Jacob Only on a wing and junior senior guard Josiah Payne. This can obviously change. It will be interesting to see if and how the line-up changes. Whatever the starting line-up is, we will see a great deal of Elie Ghattas and Henry Levin.
The Rams handled Rock Island. They looked in mid-season form on offence and defense. Blake Choice was scoring inside and out. Gus Johnson took a beating inside from the brutal Rock Island Rocks but scored despite the felonious aggression of the Rocks. Caleb Hayes finished his layups which is great to see in a sophomore point guard.
The Rams’ second game, an hour after the first, was against Curie. The Rams started fast opening a ten-point first half lead. In the second half, Curie went to a full court trapping press and chipped away at the lead. On the small court, Curie exceptionally physical full court trap was affective. But not effective enough, the new DePaul Prep line-up held the Condors off and won 43-40. Not that the win matters at all but what I saw was a young Rams team took all the beating that Curie could dish out and held the lead. It is very hard get ten down on a Tom Kleinschmidt team and win the game.
Benet was Benet. The new starters and the bench players filled their roles and won easily.
Loyola was Loyola. They were very athletic and active if a little rough around the edges when finishing at the rim and launching threes. Coach Livatino will get that fixed.
Loyola played Lincoln Park, another team in the coverage area. The Lions too looked a little rough around the edges but big and very physical. One knowledgeable observers thought they will struggle a little this coming season and finish in eight or ninth place in the Chicago Public League. Looks like they will have work to do to get back the CPL championship game in 26-27.
St. Ignatius looked like a well-oiled machine systematically dismantling Hillcrest 59-21. Everybody can score. Amir Tucker looks to have taken a step up even from stellar play last year. The whole team contributed. Junior Walter Ross impressed me. He can score and finish at the rim. They will be in the mix for the new Chicago Catholic League.
My old East Suburban Catholic Conference, a conference that my school St. Viator dominated for two decades by the time I was in high school some forty years ago, has now folded. The larger schools have joined the Chicago Catholic League. For basketball, the CCL will have three division this upcoming year.
Blue White Red
Benet DeLaSalle Aurora Central
Brother Rice Fenwick Carmel
DePaul Prep Joliet Catholic IC Catholic
Loyola Leo Nazareth
Marist Marmion Academy Montini
Mount Carmel Marian Catholic Providence
St. Ignatius Notre Dame Providence-St. Mel
St. Laurence St. Francis St. Francis de Sale
St. Patrick St. Viator St. Rita
The Blue is stacked with a ton of state tournament experience. It was been said by many that the Chicago Catholic League is the toughest conference in the state. The CCL Blue is even tougher with the addition of Marist, Benet and St. Patrick—the reigning 4A state champ, the runner up and a recent state 3A finalist.
Both St. Laurence and Mount Carmel are returning top players are expected to contend for a state title. Loyola is returning top players and is always tough. The eventual winner of the conference title will probably have multiple conference losses. It is any team’s title to earn.
As for the Chicago Public League, one well-known commentator who I pumped for information told me to keep an eye on Lane Tech. Their four wins at R-B did not go unnoticed. He said “Cole Christian is a stud. They are fast and they move the ball well.” He said the Champions will be at the top of the Public League with Curie, Whitney Young and Crane.
That’s what I’ve got for you.
I expect to see St. Laurence and Lane tomorrow so I will have my further impressions. More tomorrow.