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Mooseheart boys basketball sheds underdog label

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Hinckley-Big Rock’s Bernie Conley is pressured by Mooseheart’s Hameed Odenewu (right) in the second quarter Friday of the Red Ramblers’ 55-38 victory to win the IHSA Class 1A Westminster Christian Regional championship at Judson University in Elgin. (Rob Winner – rwinner@shawmedia.com)

Not only has the Mooseheart boys basketball team advanced to its first IHSA sectional ever, the Red Rambers are enough of a favorite this week that coach Ron Ahrens felt compelled to prop up tonight’s opponent, Chicagoland Jewish Academy.

Such is the bizarre world that is Mooseheart basketball, circa 2012-13.

Mooseheart tonight squares off in an IHSA Class 1A Mooseheart Sectional semifinal against Chicagoland Jewish, a school that – if possible – entered the season carrying just as little basketball cachet as Mooseheart.

Ahrens, though, was quick to point out Chicagoland Jewish’s victory during the regular season against Hope Academy, another of the sectional qualifiers this week at Mooseheart.

“That just gives them some credibility right there,” Ahrens said. “They’re a well-kept secret. They’re a very good basketball team. They’re very much like [Hinckley-Big Rock] where they’re fast, they can get up and down they have a style, they have a number of shooters, four or five shooters, that can shoot the 3 very well.”

Then again, the way that Mooseheart picked apart H-BR in Friday’s regional championship game, a reasonable facsimile to H-BR might not be the scariest prospect for the Ramblers.

Although they are juniors, South Sudanese transfer students Akim Nyang, Makur Puou and Mangisto Deng are more like freshmen from a basketball experience standpoint, Ahrens said. That notion suggests they would be capable of making vast strides during the course of the season, a theory reinforced by Friday’s 55-38 thumping of an H-BR team that defeated the Ramblers in December.

The Ramblers boast enviable size, but Mooseheart guards such as Peter Kurowski, Hameed Odenewu and Deng were a question mark entering the postseason. So far, so good for the Ramblers in the ball-handling department.

“Our goal with our guards is to quit dribbling the ball so much,” Ahrens said. “We’re not just trying to break the press because I think, honestly, Mangisto can probably handle the ball well enough to dribble through it, but our goal is to score with our press break. We’re not just trying to break the press, we’re trying to score in our press break.”

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