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Geneva boys basketball upends first-place Larkin

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The Royals remained in the hunt and twice cut Geneva's lead to one point during the final minute, but each time, the Vikings responded by sinking a pair of free throws, with Cook and Navigato taking turns restoring the Vikings' lead to three points.

Geneva was mostly successful making it a half-court game against the transition-proficient Royals, putting the Vikings in position to pull the upset.

"They execute better than we do on a nightly basis, but I think it was even two or three times what it should have been," Larkin coach Deryn Carter said. "We know we've got to get better in the half court in execution, and tonight showed it."

The Royals were at a personnel disadvantage because senior guard Quentin Ruff, one of the team's top scorers, did not play in the first half and also sat the first couple minutes of the third quarter for violating team rules. Ruff, who was sizzling from the perimeter in Friday's Larkin win against Streamwood, couldn't find his stroke once he was inserted, missing all eight of his shots from the field, seven of which came from 3-point land.

"It's tough to put a kid in who's used to playing all the time and not play a whole half, and then play in the second half," Carter said. "What he did didn't warrant a full game [suspension] so it was kind of a catch-22. But we trust him. He missed some shots that he usually makes, but that happens."

Slashing junior Kendale McCullum scored a team-high 24 points for Larkin.

Navigato scored 19 points and had seven rebounds for Geneva, which overcame a quiet night from usually productive big man Connor Chapman.

Cook (11 points, 6 for 6 from the foul line in the fourth quarter), Trimble (eight points, nine rebounds) and Parrilli (eight points) also were big factors in the Vikings bouncing back from their lopsided loss to Batavia on Jan. 11.

To go from a 22-point loss at Batavia to a victory at Larkin is an unlikely trajectory. Or, as Ralston might put it, a big step forward.


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