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Schwab: Wheaton Academy's Ruggles wins Class 3A 3-point contest

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Josh Ruggles made 26 of 30 3-point shots under a statewide spotlight during the past 48 hours but he wasn’t completely satisfied with his shooting.

His marksmanship is otherworldly and, apparently, so are his standards.

The Wheaton Academy sophomore won the IHSA Class 3A state 3-point shooting contest on Friday at Carver Arena in Peoria, matching his staggering total from Thursday’s preliminary round with another 13 of 15 performance from beyond the arc.

After making his first attempt Friday and missing his second, the 6-foot, 145-pound guard drained 12 jumpers in a row before missing his last 3-pointer.

“When I missed that last one, I was pretty angry at myself because I wanted to one-up what I shot [Thursday] and get 14,” Ruggles said. “But you can’t get too angry with yourself when you go out and shoot like that.”

Not many of us can relate, Josh.

His latest swishing rampage was needed to seize the title. Ruggles went last among the four 3A finalists, and the shooter who went just before him, Chatham Glenwood’s Craig Fuchs, made 12 of 15, raising the bar ridiculously high.

But Ruggles would not be denied, setting off a celebration well beyond central Illinois.

“Oh my goodness, it was crazy,” Ruggles said. “I checked my phone afterward and it was just blowing up. I got so many text messages and so many tweets and then random people watching me in the stands coming up to me and congratulating me. It feels great.”

Ruggles spoke as he and his family hauled his plaque home to Wheaton, but he’s due back at Carver today for the King of the Hill shootout featuring the champions in each of Illinois’ four classes. Bennet Schimmelpfenning (4A, Bradley-Bourbonnais), Dayton Ince (Kewanee, 2A) and Brenden Dauphin (River Ridge, 1A) are the opposition, with none of the other three making more than 11 to win their classes Friday.

Ruggles, who shot a team-best 42 percent from 3-point land for Wheaton Academy this season (and 88 percent from the foul line), is a shootaholic, hoisting about 3,000 shots a week. Many of those come in the mini-gymnasium beneath his family’s basement, often with one of his four siblings shagging rebounds.

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