Chicago Sports

Bears’ season finale vs. Vikings set for noon Sunday at Soldier Field

The Bears will wrap their season Sunday against the Vikings, and the league announced it’ll be a noon kickoff.

The NFL left all Week 18 games with TBA start times so it could wait to see which ones had playoff implications.

The Bears were mathematically eliminated a month ago, but the playoff-bound Vikings are battling the 49ers for the No. 2 seed and home field for the first two rounds. The 49ers host the Cardinals.

The league chose Lions at Packers as its Sunday Night Football game and moved Chiefs-Raiders and Titans-Jaguars to Saturday.

The Bears have lost a franchise-worst nine consecutive games and sit at 3-13. A loss to the Vikings would give them their second-worst record ever.

The upside for them is that a loss would secure them picking no lower than second in the upcoming draft. They would jump to the No. 1 pick if they lose and the Texans beat the Colts.

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Is Justin Fields playing vs. Vikings? Bears coach Matt Eberflus opens door to sit him

Bears coach Matt Eberflus has been adamant all season that quarterback Justin Fields would keep playing if healthy, regardless of the team’s record or the games having no significance in the standings, but he acknowledged Monday that there’s a lot of gray area in whether a player is healthy — especially at this point in the season.

Eberflus didn’t give a definitive answer on whether Fields will start for the Bears in their season finale against the Vikings on Sunday. He has been playing through pain in his left, non-throwing shoulder since separating it in Week 11 against the Falcons and hurt his hip Sunday against the Lions.

When asked directly Monday whether he was considering sitting Fields against the Vikings, Eberflus said there are “ongoing conversations” about the entire roster.

“What we need to do [is] what’s the best interest for our football team going forward,” he said. “That conversation [will go] all the way through Wednesday, all the way through Friday and we’ll decide as we go.”

Following the 41-10 loss to the Lions on Sunday, Eberflus seemed steadfast on playing Fields and said, “If he’s healthy, good to go, he’s going. We’ve got to get the experience, and he’s got to play and learn and get better every single week.”

He said Monday he stood by that comment, and when pressed on whether the benchmark for “healthy” was different in this game as opposed to one with meaningful stakes, he said, “We’re gonna look at everybody on our football team and making sure that we’re doing what’s best for the Bears.”

While there’s always value to Fields playing as he develops, the Bears’ offensive line and wide receivers are depleted. Sitting Fields not only would preserve him, but help ensure the Bears pick first or second in the draft. They currently have the No. 2 slot, but could move anywhere from first to fourth in the final week.

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Bears defense vows to finish strong after 504-yard debacle

There’s not much left for the Bears’ defense to do after allowing 504 yards in a 41-10 loss to the Lions on Sunday at Ford Field. They’re last in the league in points allowed, 31st in yards per play, 29th in rushing yards per attempt and 32nd and last in passing yards per attempt.

One final game isn’t going to change any of that. They’ll be almost literally playing for pride in the season finale against the Vikings on Sunday at Soldier Field, because many of them are unlikely to return for 2023. Rookie cornerback Kyler Gordon and rookie safety Jaquan Brisker are locked in as foundation pieces. But after them, nobody else who was on the field is a sure thing for next season — at least in a primary role.

They were playing for pride Sunday and look what happened. But NFL players always have something to play for, so even after the bottom seemed to drop out against the Lions, they’ll be motivated to finish strong against the Vikings — if for any reason but to atone for an embarrassing performance Sunday.

“We’re the Monsters of the Midway — 500 yards is not what we stand by,” defensive end Trevis Gipson said. “We’re going to get back in the lab and work on what we need to work on. Fix what we need to fix.

“But the performance that we had [against the Lions], that wasn’t us. Far from us. We’re not gonna give up. We’re going to keep working and next week, we’re gonna try to keep it at five [yards] — not 500. We’re not gonna let the past few weeks roll over.”

Linebacker Nick Morrow doesn’t know what the future holds for him — he’s on a one-year contract. But that gives him plenty to play for.

“If you’re a man who wants to finish and compete, you’ll compete. If not, you’ll lay down,” Morrow said. “I think everyone stepped up and competed as best they could [against the Lions]. Obviously it didn’t go our way. But that’s football.

“I think every man has look themselves in the eye and decide how they want to finish the season. “I’m not gonna change my process. I’ll come in and do the same thing — look at tape, look at ways to improve and attack [this] week. That’s all I can do.”

Bears coach Matt Eberflus likes the effort but not the results. There’s just not much he can do about it at this point.

“We’ve got to do a good job of being in our gaps in the run game,” Eberflus said after the Lions rushed for 265 yards on 39 carries (6.8 average) and two touchdowns Sunday. “In-game we’ve got to do a good job of pressuring the quarterback, staying in our coverage. If it’s match coverage or zone coverage, we’ve got to do a better job there.”

But after a season of instilling the H.I.T.S. principle, the techniques and responsibilities of playing in this defense, shouldn’t the results be better, even considering injuries and other departures this season?

“Obviously when you’re a coach, you’re always looking at execution,” Eberflus said in response. “So I’ll just go back to that. We’re looking at execution, seeing if we’re putting players in the right positions and seeing if we’re executing our technique.”

It’s not for lack of effort.

“I don’t see that,” Eberflus said. “We count loafs for every single play. We’ve always done that, and we’ll continue to do that. I don’t see that. It’s more about guys being where they’re supposed to be.”

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AP Top 25: Utah ranked for first time as South Carolina stays at No. 1 in women’s basketball poll

South Carolina finished 2022 how it started the year: No. 1 in The Associated Press Top 25 women’s basketball poll.

While the top-ranked Gamecocks cruised to a win in their lone game last week, then-No. 4 Indiana, No. 6 N.C. State and No. 7 Virginia Tech all lost as they scrambled to replace injured players.

There were 22 losses by teams in the AP top 10 this season before Jan. 1. That was tied for the most in the past 23 years before January, matching the 2014-15 season, according to ESPN. Seven of those losses came to unranked teams, tied with 1999-2000 and 2004-05 for the most ever.

The New Year didn’t start off any better for top teams as then-No. 10 UCLA lost to Oregon State.

“The most challenging week putting together my poll in my 12 years as a voter,” ESPN analyst Deb Antonelli said after all the ranked-team losses last week. “I’m looking at records, injuries, NET and my experienced eye as a basketball analyst, and it’s difficult. We wanted parity and we got it! It’s a great measurement of growth in game.”

Stanford, Ohio State, Notre Dame and UConn round out the top five teams in the poll released Monday. With the Hoosiers’ defeat, that left only five unbeaten teams, including the top-ranked Gamecocks, who were once again a unanimous choice at No. 1.

No. 3 Ohio State, No. 7 LSU, No. 8 Utah and 24th-ranked St. John’s are the other undefeated teams heading into 2023. Utah is making its first appearance in the top 10.

Indiana dropped to sixth with Virginia Tech and North Carolina State finishing off the top 10.

Duke was one of the the teams to knock off a top-10 squad last week, beating the Wolfpack. The Blue Devils entered the poll at No. 19. They are off to a 13-1 start with the lone loss coming against UConn. Kara Lawson’s team is 3-0 in conference play for the first time since 2013-14 and is off to its best in six years.

Arkansas fell out of the poll.

RISING UTES

Utah extended its season-opening winning streak to 14 games, the second longest in school history and only two victories short of the team that went 16-0 to begin the 1997-98 season.

FALLING TAR HEELS

North Carolina has lost three straight games and fallen to No. 22 in the poll after dropping contests to Florida State and Virginia Tech. The Tar Heels, who were sixth in the Top 25 two weeks ago, will try end the slide against Miami on Thursday.

THE TOP 25

1. South Carolina (28 first-place votes) 13-0

2. Stanford 14-1

3. Ohio St. 15-0

4. Notre Dame 12-1

5. UConn 11-2

6. Indiana 13-1

7. LSU 14-0

8. Utah 14-0

9. Virginia Tech 12-2

10. NC State 12-2

11. Iowa St. 9-2

12. UCLA 13-2

13. Maryland 11-3

14. Michigan 12-2

15. Arizona 12-1

16. Iowa 11-4

17. Oklahoma 11-1

18. Oregon 11-3

19. Duke 13-1

20. Gonzaga 14-2

21. Kansas 11-1

22. North Carolina 9-4

23. Baylor 10-3

24. St. John’s 13-0

25. Creighton 9-4

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Blackhawks looking to stay positive as losses mount

A few minutes after the Blackhawks’ 5-2 loss Sunday night to the Sharks, winger Patrick Kane met the media in front of his stall in the team’s quiet and mostly vacated dressing room.

About 15 feet to his left was a display honoring past Hawks glories, and Kane himself was a part of a handful of those triumphs. In the bowels of the United Center, Kane has taken part in celebrations of many of those wins with future Hall of Famers and team legends.

But on this night, Kane was grappling with another loss by the worst team in the NHL at the depths of a long and painful rebuild. Instead of being asked about a pivotal moment in a big game like he had been so many times earlier in his career, Kane fielded questions about what went wrong against San Jose, and how challenging it is for the Hawks to stay positive despite their struggles.

“Yeah, it’s tough,” Kane said. “Obviously we’ve been losing a lot of games and I think it wears on a lot of guys. Guys get frustrated. It’s understandable. At the same time, when we’re in positions like we are tonight, we’ve got to find a way to not give up so much so easy. It’s obviously been a problem all year for us.”

As Kane alluded to, the Hawks put themselves in a good position Sunday. Facing a lowly Sharks team in front of one of the biggest United Center crowds of the season, the Hawks jumped out to a 2-0 second-period lead but wilted.

Obviously, it wasn’t the start of a new year the Hawks wanted.

“I think we had the right attitude,” Kane said. “Guys want to win. Guys are staying positive. Especially tonight, I think we had a new outlook on things after the last year and it being a new year and trying to start off the way we wanted to. It looked like it was going right there for a while and then it wasn’t.”

While 2023 could bring significant changes for Kane and Jonathan Toews via trades to contenders and subsequent free-agent contracts with new teams, the struggles for the Hawks they’d leave behind figure to continue. Sunday was painful for the Hawks, and not just because of the loss but how it occurred.

Forward Sam Lafferty, whose goal gave the Hawks a short-lived 2-0 lead, sounded similar to Kane when asked how difficult it is to stay positive in the midst of the team’s losing.

“Yeah, it’s challenging,” Lafferty said. “A night like tonight we had momentum and then it’s gone out of nowhere. So tomorrow we just regroup. The good thing about hockey is you get to keep playing. We got a game in two days. So it’s another opportunity for us.”

The rest of the season will provide opportunities for players to produce some positives. On Sunday, there was defenseman Ian Mitchell keeping the puck in the offensive zone and finding Kane in the slot for the Hawks’ first goal of 2023. Players like Lafferty will have chances to establish themselves and carve out roles.

There will also be more learning experiences for the Hawks as they go through what could be an extremely trying season that might see their two franchise stalwarts move on. On Sunday, they saw what happens when they are too safe against players like San Jose’s Erik Karlsson and Logan Couture.

“We have to get over that, otherwise it’s going to be a long, difficult road to get out of it,” coach Luke Richardson said. “It’s up to us.”

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AP Top 25: Purdue stays at No. 1 in men’s basketball poll; Charleston ranked for 1st time in 20 years

Purdue solidified its No. 1 ranking in The Associated Press men’s college basketball poll following UConn’s first loss of the season, while No. 23 Charleston moved into the rankings for the first time in 20 years.

The Boilermakers remained No. 1 for the fourth straight week, receiving all but one first-place vote from a 61-person media panel in the poll released Monday. No. 2 Houston and No. 3 Kansas each moved up a spot, and No. 4 UConn dropped two spots after losing to Xavier, which moved up from No. 22 to No. 18. Arizona rounded out the top five.

Purdue lasted only one week after hitting No. 1 for the first time last season, but it has tightened its grip this season since moving to the top spot on Dec. 12.

The Boilermakers (13-0, 2-0 Big Ten) dominated Florida A&M 82-49 last Thursday in its first game in eight days to join No. 21 New Mexico as the nation’s only remaining undefeated Division I teams.

“Competition is going to get harder and teams are going to know what to scout,” Purdue’s Mason Gillis said. “There are going to be closer games down toward the end. We’ll find out who can play under pressure.”

UConn (14-1, 3-1 Big East) had been off to its best start since 1998 before losing 83-73 to Xavier, which has won eight straight.

CHARLESTON CHARTING

Charleston put together a solid first season under Pat Kelsey a year ago, winning 17 games. The Cougars almost have matched that already this season to enter the AP Top 25 for the first time since a one-week stint at No. 25 in 2002-03.

Charleston (14-1, 2-0 CAA) lost to then-No. 1 North Carolina in its second game and has since reeled off 13 straight wins. The Cougars outlasted Colonial Athletic Association preseason favorite Towson 76-74 in overtime on Saturday.

LOBOS RISING

New Mexico cracked the AP Top 25 for the first time in eight years last week and won both of its games.

The Lobos beat Colorado State 88-69 on Thursday in front of more than 15,000 people, the largest crowd at The Pit in seven years. They then pulled out a 76-75 win at Wyoming on Saturday for their best start since going 17-0 in 1967-68.

RISING/FALLING

No. 18 Xavier had the largest jump within the poll, climbing four spots after its win over UConn. No. 11 Virginia and No. 12 Miami were the only other teams to climb more than one spot, each moving up two.

No. 19 Baylor had the biggest drop, losing seven places after a 15-point loss to Iowa State, which went from unranked to No. 25. No. 13 Arkansas dropped four spots following a 60-57 loss at LSU.

IN AND OUT

No. 20 Missouri is ranked for the first time since 2020-21 after returning from its holiday break to beat Kentucky by 14.

No. 24 Ohio State returned to the poll after a two-week absence following wins over Alabama A&M and Northwestern. No. 25 Iowa State is back after three unranked weeks, thanks to its win over Baylor.

Kentucky is unranked for the first time in two years, dropping out from No. 19 after its loss to Missouri. Mississippi State fell out from No. 21 following a loss to No. 7 Alabama.

North Carolina’s return to the poll didn’t last long.

The Tar Heels, the preseason No. 1, moved back into the poll at No. 25 last week after a tumultuous start to the season. North Carolina is again outside looking in, dropping out after losing to Pittsburgh.

THE TOP 25

1. Purdue (60 first-place votes) 13-0

2. Houston 14-1

3. Kansas 12-1

4. UConn (1) 14-1

5. Arizona 13-1

6. Texas 12-1

7. Alabama 11-2

8. Tennessee 11-2

9. Gonzaga 12-3

10. UCLA 13-2

11. Virginia 10-2

12. Miami 13-1

13. Arkansas 11-2

14. Wisconsin 10-2

15. Indiana 10-3

16. Duke 11-3

17. TCU 12-1

18. Xavier 12-3

19. Baylor 10-3

20. Missouri 12-1

21. New Mexico 14-0

22. Auburn 11-2

23. Coll of Charleston 14-1

24. Ohio St. 10-3

25. Iowa St.

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Chase Claypool trade not yielding promising results for Chicago Bears yet

The Chase Claypool trade isn’t working out just yet for the Chicago Bears

Sunday’s 41-10 loss to the Detroit Lions was another sour note in the Chicago Bears first year of a complete tear down as the team seemingly quit in the Motor City after jumping out to a 10-7 lead.

Chicago’s offense was stuck in reverse, managing just over 30 net passing yards and 200 net total yards while Detroit topped 500 yards. And the frustrations ensued on the sideline at least for one player.

Wide receiver Chase Claypool was reportedly visibly upset on the sideline during the game, likely from a lack of targets in the game:

Bears WR Chase Claypool was hot as he went to the sideline after that third down play. Tossed his helmet to the ground. Voiced his frustration to WR coach Tyke Tolbert. Justin Fields came over and talked to him for a minute.

Chase Claypool was finally targeted with just 2:04 left in the game but dropped a Justin Fields pass. Following the game, Fields addressed the incident on the sideline, saying it was just a competitive guy letting out some frustration.

“He was frustrated,” Fields said after the loss. “He’s a passionate player. He’s passionate about the game. But I think his emotions – he was just showing his emotions. It’s great to have emotion in the game, you just have to know how to control it. You can’t let it come out like that. At the end of the day, that’s not helping anybody. That’s not helping the team. Everybody is frustrated. We’re getting blown out. Just call it what it is. We got punched in the mouth. Everybody feels that way.”

It hasn’t been a pleasant experience for Chase Claypool in Chicago so far.

Not only has he been bothered by injuries that have cost him to miss some games, but he hasn’t produced either. Claypool has just 12 receptions on 23 targets for 111 yards and 0 touchdowns in six games played for the Bears. His best game came in Week 13 vs. Green Bay but had to leave the game early with a knee injury.

With Ryan Poles giving up a second-round pick, that will likely be No. 32 or No. 33 overall, this trade just hasn’t worked out yet for Chicago. Chase Claypool will enter the final year of his rookie deal in 2023 and the Bears are going to need to make an important decision on his future.

It might be too early to give up on him entirely as a full offseason of work in this offense could help. But right now, this is looking like a loss for Poles and it could be costly in terms of the draft capital Chicago has.

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High school basketball: Reviewing the Pontiac Holiday Tournament

By the time those holiday tournaments across the state tip off, there has been ample time to smooth out the wrinkles and work out the kinks. Crowds fill the gyms, the stakes are raised, pressure moments crop up and the brand of basketball at Christmas time evolves into something different than in the weeks leading up to it.

Here’s a look back at the 91st Pontiac Holiday Tournament.

Biggest story: Robert Smith says goodbye with a title

The relationship between Simeon and Pontiac has been well documented. So it was only fitting that coach Robert Smith, the key figure in keeping Simeon at Pontiac all these years, even through the Derrick Rose and Jabari Parker days, was given a warm and thankful sendoff from the Pontiac faithful.

More importantly for Smith, his Wolverines continue to impress and look like the No. 1 team in the state. Jalen Griffith remains a calming influence with the ball in his hands, while Miles and Wesley Rubin continue provide a presence at both ends of the floor, and Sam Lewis, the Oak Park transfer, is settling in nicely and becoming more and more impactful.

Simeon took care of business and won yet another Pontiac title in Smith’s final year on the bench.

Biggest surprise: Pontiac advances to quarterfinals

This won’t resonate much with the majority of Chicago area high school basketball fans, especially ones not connected to the Pontiac Holiday Tournament whatsoever. But Pontiac winning a game in its own tournament, particularly in a winner’s bracket game, is a big deal. Plain and simple: it’s extremely rare.

Pontiac knocked off West Aurora 60-55 on the opening night before getting throttled by both Simeon and New Trier. But that first-round win was a feel-good story for the fans of Pontiac and something those players will remember forever.

The win over West Aurora was the first time Pontiac advanced on in the championship bracket since 2006.

Simeon’s Robert Smith acknowledges the crowd after the Wolverines defeated Benet to win the Pontiac Holiday Tournament.

Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

Player of the tournament: Benet’s Brayden Fagbemi

There were bigger names and higher profile players in this tournament — even on his own Benet team — than Fagbemi. But there wasn’t a player who grabbed the attention of fans or who meant more to his team’s success than this steady, ready-for-the-moment point guard.

While Fagbemi was featured as one of the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s projected “breakout players” in the preseason, no one knew the Johns Hopkins recruit. He was a little-used point guard off the bench a year ago. But he blossomed in the offseason and was brilliant in Pontiac.

Fagbemi went for 15 points, seven assists and seven rebounds in the opening win over Oak Park. He handled the relentless pressure and traps thrown his way against Bloom and Joliet West, turning the ball over just four times while playing all 32 minutes in each game. Along with teammate Niko Abusara, he spearheaded the comeback against Simeon before the Redwings fell in the title game.

Fagbemi was as poised as they come against relentless pressure, a true floor general. He handed out 20 assists while averaging 12 points and a four-to-one assist-to-turnover ratio.

Best prospect: Joliet West’s Jeremiah Fears

From an evaluation standpoint, there just wasn’t a better college prospect in the gym at Pontiac than the sophomore from Joliet West. He made sophomore mistakes. He still has to mature physically and learn how to pick his moments.

But Fears, the younger brother of star Jeremy Fears, Jr., the Michigan State recruit, has an easy, natural smoothness that screams next level. When you add in his shooting capabilities — Fears was 9 of 17 from beyond the arc — you have a young offensive force who you wonder just how high of a level he will go over the next two seasons.

What we learned

? When Kaiden Space is healthy — the senior guard is currently out with an injury — there are four signed Division I prospects in Simeon’s starting five. But the uncommitted starter, point guard Jalen Griffith, is proving to be the key cog in Robert Smith’s No. 1 ranked team. Griffith, who was named the A.C. Williamson Award winner for his play, leadership and sportsmanship, was instrumental in delivering in key moments.

Griffith led Simeon in scoring with 15 points a game while playing with remarkable efficiency. These numbers are eye-opening when you consider Griffith is a 5-9 point guard: 16 of 24 (67%) from inside the arc and 8 of 12 (67%) from beyond.

? They didn’t reach the semifinals or finish in the top four. But the team that’s better than I thought it would be after watching them play at Pontiac is Bloom. Coach Dante Maddox has so much rangy size and length to be disruptive with, and that starts with the backcourt of Raeshom Harris and Jordan Brown.

Bloom, which won three games and finished fifth at Pontiac, has lost to three teams this season ranked in the top 10 and who are a combined 46-4 on the season. And they lost to those three teams — Benet, Hillcrest and Brother Rice — by a combined 13 points.

? New Trier continues to be a resilient, physical team that’s going to be an awfully tough out come state tournament time. That grit starts with senior Jake Feigen, a known shooter who averaged 22 points in four games at Pontiac.

? Will three straight wins and a consolation championship pump some life into an Oak Park team that came into Pontiac reeling?

The Huskies had lost four straight. But after falling to Benet for its fifth-straight loss in the first round, Oak Park went on to beat Plainfield North, Peoria Manual and West Aurora in succession to leave Pontiac on a positive note.

? The Pontiac Tournament, by all accounts, is the measuring stick for holiday tournaments across the state. This year’s tournament didn’t disappoint. But it had less depth than previous years.

Parting shot

The Robert Smith sendoff wasn’t the only one at Pontiac. The tournament also said farewell to longtime tournament manager Jim Drengwitz, who has led this tournament for the past 23 years.

Although always behind the scenes, Drengwitz has been an instrumental part of what has continued to make Pontiac a special place to be for three days each December. He’s been such an omnipresent voice for such a long time at Pontiac that he will undoubtedly be missed. He’s built relationships and organized in a way that has kept this the very best holiday tournament in the state.

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High school basketball: Reviewing York’s Jack Tosh Holiday Tournament

By the time those holiday tournaments across the state tip off, there has been ample time to smooth out the wrinkles and work out the kinks. Crowds fill the gyms, the stakes are raised, pressure moments crop up and the brand of basketball at Christmas time evolves into something different than in the weeks leading up to it.

Here’s a look back at York’s Jack Tosh Holiday Tournament.

Biggest story: Rolling Meadows rolls to title

There weren’t exactly doubts creeping in regarding Rolling Meadows. But there has been a patient wait in validating their high ranking and status as an elite team.

The lone loss on the season came to New Trier in a weird one: a near-empty gym at the South Elgin Shootout, second leading scorer Tsvet Sotirov out with an injury, and New Trier’s Ian Brown going bonkers with an epic three-point barrage (12 of 14 from three).

The Mustangs entered York with a sparkling 11-1 record, but it was still a team that needed to go out and prove themselves with r?sum?-building wins.

Behind the play of star Cameron Christie, coach Kevin Katovich’s team more than impressed at York. Rolling Meadows, which had the most difficult road to a title of any top team at York, won five games in five days. That included wins over St. Patrick, Glenbrook South, Bolingbrook and Lyons — all by double figures.

They were dominant. The Mustangs showed multiple ingredients for high-level success and showcased firepower beyond Christie, the Minnesota recruit.

The jack-of-all-trades, rugged Foster Ogbonna, remained a force in all the important facets beyond scoring. There is the elite shooting and floor spacing Sotirov provides. There is the matchup problem for opponents with skilled big man Mark Nikolich-Wilson.

And then there is the combination of endless length and size to go with outstanding perimeter shooting. Rolling Meadows made a whopping 49 three-pointers in the five wins, shooting an impressive 43 percent from beyond the arc, while starting five players who are 6-4, 6-6, 6-6, 6-7 and 6-8.

Biggest surprise: Lyons

Was it a shock Lyons played for a championship at York? No. The Lions were ranked and came into the tournament with a 7-0 record.

But each step of the way in reaching the title game at York, Lyons won over more and more fans. That included a lopsided semifinal win over top 10 team St. Ignatius.

The senior-dominated Lions play with cohesion. Coach Tom Sloan has a group that moves the ball and is openly unselfish in how it plays. Yes, there is talent — 6-6 Niklas Polonowski is a Division I talent headed to Penn — but it’s also a quintessential sum that is better than its parts team. That’s why the Lions will be a threat against any team it faces in the regular season and come state tournament time.

Polonowski, Jackson Niego, Connor Carroll and Graham Smith are all capable double-figure scorers.

Player of the tournament: Cameron Christie

There isn’t much the 6-6 guard from Rolling Meadows can’t do at the high school level. With his skill, size and versatility, Christie is as impactful as any player in the state. He showcased it all en route to a tournament MVP performance.

Christie averaged 26.4 points and 7.4 rebounds while making 21 three-pointers (47 percent from three) in tournament play.

Best prospect: Cameron Christie

Again, this is a no-brainer — before the tournament was played and after it: Christie’s ceiling as a prospect in limitless.

Christie, who remains vastly underrated nationally, doesn’t just get “high school points.” He scores the ball in a way that translates to the next level. The mid-range, pull-up jumper is a thing of beauty and is one of the biggest weapons in high school basketball. He brings the versatility of playing on the ball as a point guard but one who can shoot the three and get to the rim and to the free-throw line.

What we learned

? The breakout performance in the tournament came from Palatine’s Connor May. The 6-5 junior was on a roll in the first two games, scoring 36 and 30 points. May ended up averaging 26.2 points in four tournament games and has put himself on the map with the stellar start to his junior year.

? Riverside-Brookfield big man Stefan Cicic is coming along. He’s become more comfortable in his new surroundings since transferring in from Notre Dame and is gaining confidence by the week. The 6-10 junior had his moments, scoring 24 points and dishing out four assists in one game while recording a double-double in another with 13 points and 11 rebounds. He added 22 points in a win over Palatine to close out tournament play.

? St. Laurence bounced back nicely from a lopsided loss to York in the first round. The Vikings are now 12-5 heading into the new year following a consolation championship.

When you consider the youth of this team, this type of success, no matter how you get it (four wins in a consolation bracket), should do wonders for a team loaded with sophomores. Led by sophomores Jacob Rice and Emmanuel Mosley, Jr., who averaged 15.4 and 12.8 points in the tournament, respectively, there is a strong foundation for coach Byron Burt.

? The host school, York, also had a sneaky solid tournament, improving its record to 8-8 with a 3-1 Jack Tosh record. It was yet another West Suburban Silver Conference team that enjoyed a successful holidays.

York beat St. Laurence, the eventual consolation champ, by 20 in the opening round. After losing to Bolingbrook by 10, the Dukes bounced back to beat both Conant and St. Patrick.

Keep an eye on junior guard AJ Levine. He was steady and consistent throughout tournament play while averaging 18.2 points.

Parting shot

This tournament continues to step up its game. The organization is top-notch, the promotion is excellent, and the hospitality is real. This has grown in a way where it’s easy to now say it’s one of the top two or three tournaments in state.

It’s not the fault of the tournament that it’s had two dominant teams — Glenbard West last year, Rolling Meadows this year — that have prevented any real drama from unfolding the past two years. But those teams have also had POY contenders for fans to enjoy.

The tournament continues to offer something different than any other tournament: the grind of having to win five games in five days. Winning five straight at any point in the season is never easy. Doing it on consecutive days with no practice and minimal prep? Impressive.

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High school basketball: Reviewing the Proviso West Holiday Tournament

By the time those holiday tournaments across the state tip off, there has been ample time to smooth out the wrinkles and work out the kinks. Crowds fill the gyms, the stakes are raised, pressure moments crop up and the brand of basketball at Christmas time evolves into something different than in the weeks leading up to it.

Here’s a look back at the Proviso West Holiday Tournament.

Biggest story: Young beats two top five teams for title

Despite the name recognition Young brings to any game, event or tournament it plays in, the Dolphins can often be the forgotten power in the Chicago area.

That’s because the schedule coach Tyrone Slaughter puts together includes a boatload of top out-of-state opponents. As a result, the Dolphins become an out of sight, out of mind team at various points of the season. And it’s a rugged slate that often leads to some losses — but of the team and season-building variety.

Young headed into the Proviso West Holiday Tournament with four losses, including one to tournament favorite Kenwood and to three out-of-state foes. The biggest in-state win? Probably over Rockford Auburn?

However, three of those four losses were by a combined four points. And it is Young, after all, a program that has continually won big games over the years.

Although it’s been a quiet banter, there were mentions of Young being a team with something to prove this holiday season. The Dolphins didn’t disappoint and took care of business.

A sweep over both St. Rita and Kenwood maybe shouldn’t be a surprise, but it’s certainly the biggest story.

Biggest surprise: St. Rita loses showdown, drops another

The heavily-hyped, highly-ranked St. Rita team, boasting three high-major prospects in the junior class, came to Proviso West still in need of a statement win. Following losses to Simeon and Joliet West early in the season, the opportunity presented itself with a semifinal showdown with Young.

Big stage, bright lights, large crowd, top-tier opponent. … Pffft.

The Mustangs dug a big hole, fought back, but fell short in a 68-66 defeat to Young. That was also with the “Big Three,” Morez Johnson, Nojus Indrusaitis and James Brown, scoring 20, 18 and 15 points, respectively.

And say what you will about third-place games, but they still matter. They still count. At times they can be a challenge to get up for, particularly after a tough semifinal loss. But it’s also a test for top teams to show some resiliency, pride and competitiveness, particularly in teams in need of wins and some momentum.

St. Rita’s loss to what should have been an overmatched Proviso East team in the third-place game was a missed opportunity.

Player of the tournament: Young’s Daniel Johnson

Young was expected to be very good this year; the Dolphins entered the season ranked among the top five teams in the preseason. But with the loss of Division I talents like Xavier Amos and AJ Casey from last year’s team, there were some question marks.

The reason the Dolphins have made the jump from very good to state and city contenders is Daniel Johnson, the top uncommitted senior prospect in the state. The tournament MVP was outstanding at Proviso West, especially in the big semifinal win over St. Rita when the 6-6 Johnson hit four big threes and went for 25 points and six rebounds.

Johnson averaged 21.5 points and seven rebounds in the four tournament wins. Plus, he shot 40% from three (9 of 22) and 77%from the line (13 of 17).

Best Prospect: St. Rita’s Morez Johnson

In a tournament featuring three teams with a ridiculous amount of Division I talent, St. Rita’s Johnson stood out. The physical attributes as a prospect are eye-popping. Strong, and athletic, the 6-8 Johnson has a college-ready body already.

But he also finished the four games averaging 19.8 points and 13.3 rebounds.

If Johnson can improve his free-throw shooting and cut down on the turnovers, the Illinois commit can take another big step forward with his production.

What we learned

? The good news for St. Rita, which now has four in-state losses, is that all of their goals are still in front of them. A Catholic League title is within reach. Winning the program’s first-ever sectional is still attainable. And time is on their side to mount some momentum.

? If a team is unable to control the tempo against Kenwood, good luck to you. With their speed, athleticism and depth, when coach Mike Irvin’s team is running full-throttle, pedal to the metal, it can turn into a nightmare for opponents trying to match it. Just ask Proviso East. The Pirates were down 35-5 just eight minutes into its semifinal matchup with Kenwood.

? The tournament produced big-time games featuring big-time talent, but this proud, tradition-rich tournament remains extremely top heavy.

A tournament that once prided itself on featuring the best opening-round games of any 16-team tournament in the state, just isn’t the same. The top four teams in the tournament, Young, Kenwood, St. Rita and Proviso East, won their opening round games by 36, 84, 57 and 26 points, respectively.

? A couple of young players really opened eyes, one who already had some name recognition and another who didn’t.

Kenwood sophomore Aleks Alston is the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s No. 3 ranked prospect in the Class of 2025 and will likely move to No. 2.

Forget about the championship game for a moment — Alston was held scoreless in 16 minutes. Over the first three games of the tournament? Wow. In three Kenwood wins Alston averaged 17.6 points while shooting a dazzling 17 of 29 from the three-point line.

Then there is Proviso West freshman Rajan Roberts, a much lesser-known prospect who was named to the all-tournament team after averaging 17.3 points, 4.7 rebounds and 2.6 assists. He also banged home eight three-pointers in what was a breakout performance from a young player who has been putting up numbers all year.

? Fenwick has been a sneaky competitive team all season. That’s a great sign for a team that is a sophomore-dominated one, including Damion Porter, Jr. But it was a junior, 6-6 Darshan Thomas, who continues to catch the Hoops Report’s eye. Thomas averaged 13 points and eight rebounds as the Friars went 2-2 at Proviso West.

Parting shot

It’s difficult to get too amped up about an individual 65-point offensive explosion when a team is leading by 32 points after one quarter and heads into the half up 80-23.

Darrin “Dai Dai” Ames’ 65 points broke the Proviso West Holiday Tournament scoring record. But it also raised some eyebrows beyond the record-breaking number.

Ames is an extremely talented player, one of the elite stars in the state. But playing 27 out of 32 minutes in a 122-48 rout over undermanned Southland does taint the single-game Proviso West Holiday Tournament scoring record he broke.

It’s a record with historical significance, both because of it being a premier tournament that’s going into its seventh decade and the circumstances surrounding how the record was set. It’s almost become a sacred record in our state history.

Let’s reminisce.

Glenbrook North’s Jon Scheyer’s is an iconic player in state history. And perhaps his most iconic moment was breaking the Proviso West Holiday Tournament scoring record in 2005. His memorable 52-point outburst was voted as the No. 1 moment in tournament history in the 50-year celebration of the tournament a decade ago.

His 52-point explosion came a day after scoring 41 points in an opening round win.

The performance was part of folklore and one I was lucky enough to witness in person. Scheyer, now the head coach at Duke, gained national notoriety when he, amazingly, scored 21 points in 75 seconds.

His future coach, Mike Krzyzewski, was in attendance, as were close to 4,000 fans in a packed Proviso West gym. Glenbrook North was the defending state champ, unbeaten, riding a 35-game win streak and ranked No. 1 in the state when Scheyer’s Spartans were trailing the host, Proviso West, 71-58 with 1:24 to play — and Scheyer had just 31 points.

Scheyer’s incredible heroics began with the crowd standing and roaring, Scheyer drained ridiculous threes — one from 30 feet, another from 25 and then the ridiculous lean-in three he shot left-handed as he was double-teamed. He made pull-up jumpers with hands in his face, stole the ball, converted a three-point play and a four-point play in an ultimate will-to-win moment.

And then the poor official who ended it all in the closing seconds. With Glenbrook North down three and the ball in Scheyer’s hands, a phantom offensive push-off foul was called, sending Scheyer to the bench with his fifth foul and ending any hope of a dream-like ending for the ages.

That’s the record that was broke last week at Proviso West.

How mind-boggling was Scheyer’s Proviso West Tournament performance in 2005? He scored 134 points, averaging 44.6 points a game, in just the first three games he played while being so sick he was in the hospital the morning of the fifth-place game. After receiving IV fluids he came back to play minimal minutes and scored just six points in the final game.

Those six points did push Scheyer past Deerfield’s Ryan Hogan for the most points scored in tournament history. The good news is Scheyer still holds the single tournament scoring record of 140 points, leaving a legacy at Proviso West that still exists.

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