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Tri-Cities teams poised to make opponents pay from three-point line

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Batavia's Micah Coffey shoots the ball during a recent practice. (Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com)

Opponents’ scouting reports on Tri-Cities area boys basketball teams figure to have a common thread this winter: Better get out on shooters.

Way out.

This promises to be an uncommonly sizzling season when it comes to three-point marksmanship for most area squads, almost all of which return their top snipers from last year and are funneling in reinforcements.

But tempting as it can be to launch from three-point land – not to mention rewarding, when the shots are falling – coaches will have to strike a balance of capitalizing on their teams’ shooting prowess without becoming too reliant on three-pointers.

That philosophical balancing act evolves from season to season, game to game, sometimes even possession to possession.

But this winter more than most, expect area teams to come out firing.

Swishing sound

St. Charles East coach Pat Woods said senior Kendall Stephens uncorked almost 10,000 shots one week this offseason. The 6-foot-4 Stephens’ picturesque shooting stroke allowed him to command attention from college recruiters early in his prep career, eventually landing him a scholarship to Purdue.

But it was point guard Dom Adduci who was East’s most efficient three-point shooter last year. As a sophomore, Adduci clicked for about 38 percent from three-point land, and as a shifty point guard, Adduci has the opportunity to immediately pick his spots to pull up in transition whenever he sees fit.

Woods contends East has several other guys who also will have the green light from three-point land, but Stephens and Adduci form a 1-2 shooting punch few teams can match, provided Stephens overcomes a preseason shoulder injury.

There is no St. Charles monopoly on thriving from three-point land, though. St. Charles North coach Tom Poulin expects the North Stars to field their best three-point shooting team in “about three years, and maybe more than that.” Leading the way is junior Alec Goetz, who last year came off the bench and occasionally blindsided defenders with range well beyond the arc despite his slight physique.

“He has a great base,” Poulin said. “He uses his legs, and he can let it go from real deep. He continues to get better and he’s just a gym rat and loves the game, so it’s a given that he’s going to continue to improve.”

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