Lake View Defeats Antioch 56-49 at Elgin

[Preview of this week’s Inside—Booster article.]

By Jack Lydon

Lake View basketball is on the rise. The Wildcats defeated the Antioch Sequoits 56-49 at the Elgin Holiday Tournament Friday afternoon. The Wildcats (7-5) and Sequoits (2-10) started slowly. It was 8-2 Antioch at the end of the first quarter. That did not last.

“Whenever we pressure the ball, it opens up the floor. Whenever we are low energy, we pick it up with the press,” said Lake View junior Tysean Davis, a transfer from Uplift. The Wildcats dialed up the pressure with a smothering full court press on the Sequoits early in the second quarter and scored 43 points in the second and third quarters combined for a 15-point lead at the start of the fourth.

“We knew that was going to come. We played them in the summer. They turned the heat on in the second quarter. And obviously, we handled it with more poise in the second half,” said Antioch head coach Sean Connor.

Don’t let the Sequoits record fool you. Coach Connor, a long-time sophomore coach at area powerhouse DePaul Prep, has his Sequoits in a rebuilding year but they are tough, athletic and well coached.

The Wildcats had a 15-point lead at the start of the fourth quarter which the Sequoits cut to four with about two minutes to play. However, not only can the Wildcats play defense, they can finish. Senior leader LeDarrell Goss El, himself a transfer from Perspectives, drained three free throws at the end to seal the victory of Lake View.

An impressive win for the Wildcats. Tysean Davis, credited by Coach Patterson on being the team’s best defender, lead all scorers with 25 points. The one-two punch of Tysean Davis and LeDarrell Goss El promises to make in interesting combo for the balance of the season.

“LeDarrell Goss El has been a great addition. He is leading the Red-North now in scoring. He is averaging about 19 points a game. He has a couple 28, 29-point games, but he has also had a nine-assist game,” Patterson said.

“Our goal when I got here was to move from the [Chicago Public League’s] White [division] to the Red. It took us four years to do it but we went undefeated last year in the White to advance to the Red,” Patterson added.  

Cognizant that Lake View High School is the oldest high school in the state of Illinois, having opened in 1874, and at that time with the City of Lake View was not even part of the City of Chicago, “I wanted to come to Lake View because they did not have a history of basketball excellence. I wanted to build that,” Patterson said.

The Wildcats are not just content with the move to the Red. They are right in the thick of things in CPL’s Red-North division with Lincoln Park, Whitney Young, Lane Tech, Payton, Amundsen, Northside and Taft. Despite losses to Lincoln Park and Lane, the Wildcats have the Payton, Amundsen and Whitney Young games circled on the calendar and are looking to firmly establish themselves in the Red. More than that, Coach Patterson is looking to build Lake View into a basketball school.

“I am looking forward to the second half of the season. And the Regional is in our favor. We are in 3A in the DeLaSalle Sectional. For our regional, we’ve got Schurz, King, and Hyde Park. None of those teams scare me,” Patterson said.

“It’s not like the past when we’ve had St. Ignatius, DePaul Prep. No way in the world were we gonna get past those guys but these teams, we feel like if we play like we are supposed to, we are going to be in the race. It would be the first regional championship in Lake View history.”

Amundsen Battles Harlem Coming Up Short 35-21

Preview of my piece in Inside Publications coming out Wednesday:

The Harlem high school Huskies (7-3, 6-3) defeated the Amundsen Vikings (7-3, 7-0) 35-21 at Winnemac Stadium on Saturday. Huskies’ third-year head coach, Bob Moynihan, brought his team from Machesney, Illinois, (just north of Rockford) down to Chicago, expecting to take care of business against a CPS team and get out of town.

Bob is actually a high school classmate of mine. He was a legendary defensive lineman for the St. Viator Lions a few years back—okay, a few decades back—who later played college football at Southeast Missouri State.

Speaking to Moynihan before the game, he asked me what to expect.

“Watch out for #11 [Adam Muench],” I told him. “Teams have been trying to stop him all year. And Amundsen will score. You will need to run the ball,” I added.

“That we can do,” Moynihan said. And so they did. The Huskies ran the ball effectively all day. Keeping the productive Viking offense off the field.

The Huskies opened the scoring midway through the first quarter on a rushing touchdown by sophomore running back Jahmani Muhammad.

The Vikings answered on the next drive. Amundsen’s Jamarion Hemphill ran in a 15-yard touchdown at the 4:42 mark of the first quarter. The 7-7 score at the end of the first quarter was something of an anomaly for playoff games by CPS teams this year. Amundsen put up more of a fight than other similarly situated teams. Lane, Senn, Lincoln Park, Schurz, Perspectives and Bulls Prep all suffered blowouts at the hands of suburban powerhouses.

The Vikings blocked a punt early in the second quarter but could not capitalize. The also traded interceptions. Even so the Huskies rushing attack proved effective and they put up two more rushing touchdowns making the halftime score 21-7. 

Despite giving up two more touchdowns in the third quarter, the Vikings never quit. Early in the fourth, Jamarion Hemphill burst up the middle and down the west sideline for a 50-yard touchdown.

The Vikings were not done. A second interception and lengthy return by Amundsen’s sophomore safety Edwin Soto set up a 10-yard touchdown by Adam Muench on a brilliantly executed sweep. Jamariam Hemphill followed with a two-point conversion. The Vikings were within striking distance at 35-21 with plenty of time left in the fourth.

It wasn’t to be. Moynihan and his Huskies did what they intended to do—run the ball and take time off the clock. The Huskies finally took a knee down at Amundsen’s goal line as the game ended.

Amundsen’s head coach Nick Olson was emotional after the game. Taking a long time to talk to his players and take some photos with his group of seniors, he thanked his players and coaches.   

“I always tell the boys wins and losses are a dime a dozen. I can live with losing. I am going to win some more in life; I am going to lose some more in life. It’s how you handle it. It’s just so heart breaking because these seniors are never going to suit up for this level of football again. That’s the toughest part of it. It’s over. This team will never be the same. But they are leaving a legacy. Every year after we get in the playoffs, we have gotten better. We are not getting blown out anymore. Teams have to respect us,” said Amundsen head coach Nick Olson.

“I attribute a lot of our success to the support of our administration, the full support they have in me to run the program the way I see fit,” continued Olson.

“The assistant coaches have made all the difference this year. Those are the guys behind the success this year. This is not on me; this is on the team.”

This is if for the Vikings. They will be participating in the CPS city championship playoffs.

Harlem moves on to play Grayslake North at home in the second round of the 6A playoffs.