Sunday, April 22, 2007

6-8 Duncan Lawson will be a Titan


IWUhoops.com has learned that 6-8 forward Duncan Lawson (Glenbard West H.S.) has given a verbal commitment to Ron Rose and Illinois Wesleyan. Duncan was one of the staff's top recruiting priorities this season. He was pursued heavily by Dartmouth, U. of Chicago, and Lawrence, with Princeton expressing interest late. Duncan has a chance to be a very good player at IWU.

Duncan will be a very rare commodity in Division III because of his versatility. Despite being 6-8, he was primarily a perimeter player in high school. Duncan's Glenbard West team featured 6-7 center John Shurna, one of the best juniors in the state, and 6-4 power forward Kevin Watt, who is heading to Northwestern on a football scholarship. Duncan played the wing for the Hilltoppers and became known for his uncanny ability to handle the basketball for his size, his terrific passing skills, and most notably his ability to shoot the 3.

Glenbard West finished 22-8 this year, coming within 4 points of a trip downstate. The Hilltoppers had a terrific IHSA tournament run, including wins over Glenbard East and East Aurora, before falling in the super-sectional by 3 points to Lockport at NIU.

I envision Duncan playing both the 3 and the 4 at IWU. He should get a chance to develop as an inside player while also given the freedom to step out, handle the basketball, distribute, and shoot the 3. His versatility will make him quite a weapon for Ron Rose and the Titans.
What I like best about Duncan Lawson is that he is known as a team player and a leader. Titan fans are really going to like watching him play.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Lincoln's Matt Schick picks Wesleyan


IWU has not announced it yet, but I've learned that IBCA 3rd Team all-stater Matt Schick has decided to attend Illinois Wesleyan and play for coach Ron Rose.

6-4/190 Schick, a 4-year varsity starter, averaged 13.4 ppg, 4.7 rpg, and 4.3 apg for a 33-3 Lincoln team that made it to the Class AA Elite Eight in Peoria. In the Railsplitters' Normal super-sectional win over Peoria Richwoods and U. of Illinois-bound Bill Cole, Schick led all scorers with 17 points.

Matt's impact on Lincoln basketball might be best illustrated by the fact that he is now the all-time leader in games played at the Class AA power. He played in 135 games from 2002-03 to 2006-07...more games played than greats like Brian Cook (U. of Illinois, currently L.A. Lakers), Joe Cook (Duke), Chuck Verderber (Kentucky), and Mike Thomas (Illinois Wesleyan). Schick finished his career #2 on the all-time Railsplitter assist list (410), behind only Dan Duff (Notre Dame). His 232 3-pointers made is #2, behind only Greg Alexander (Illinois State).

Matt's Lincoln teams went 109-26 (.807) with two trips to Peoria:

Freshman: 21-10
Sophomore: 31-5 (Peoria)
Junior: 24-8
Senior: 33-3 (Peoria)

In some ways, I compare Schick to former Titan Nathan Hubbard ('99). He is just one of those "do it all" kind of players that just seems to find very a way to help his team win. Like Nathan, he was a winner in high school and was extremely well coached. One of those "high basketball I.Q." type kids.

Matt will be a very solid addition to the Titan basketball program.

Friday, April 13, 2007

6-7 Edmond O'Callaghan selects IWU

The commitment of 6-7/205 F/C Edmond O'Callaghan from St. Patrick H.S. in Chicago to Illinois Wesleyan reminds this southside Irishmen of a blessing taught to me by Grandma McClowry...


May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind always be at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
May the green-clad Titans always have good post players.



Terrific news for Ron Rose and staff. O'Callaghan played on a very good St. Pat's team that featured Division I recruit Sam Maniscalco (Bradley). The Shamrocks finished 20-7 overall and 10-3 in the East Suburban Catholic, good for 2nd place behind powerhouse St. Joseph. O'Callaghan averaged 10.1 ppg and 8.3 rpg in support of Maniscalco's 20.3 ppg.
O'Callaghan made the All-East Suburban Catholic team, alongside players like Maniscalco, Evan Turner (Ohio State), Demetri McCamey (Illinois), Garrett Leffelman (Brown), and Sean Kane (Brown).

Edmond will add depth in the post for the Titans.

A nice addition to the IWU Class of 2011.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Travis Rosenkranz will be a Titan


IWU has not officially announced it yet, but I've learned that all-state point-guard Travis Rosenkranz from Macon Meridian H.S. has decided to attend Illinois Wesleyan. I've seen Travis play and I think is a very significant CCIW recruit. In terms of his passion for the game and how hard he plays every minute he's on the floor, he reminds me a lot of Adam Dauksas. He is just really fun to watch.

Travis was a 4-year high school starter. As a senior he averaged 24.9 points, 5.8 assists, and 4.4 steals. He shot 57% from the field, 42% from 3 and 84% from the FT line. Travis' numbers obviously have to be tempered by the fact that Class A competition is certainly not Class AA, but everytime he went up against a great team and/or a great player, he rose to the challenge...

* 36 points in the championship of the State Farm Holiday Classic @ IWU in a head-to-head matchup with point-guard Brandon Dunson (Tennessee-Chatt).

* 37 points vs Class A state champion Maroa-Forsyth in a head-to-head matchup with point-guard Robert Kreps (Illinois-Chicago recruit).


* 37 points in a Sectional final win vs Riverton, a team led by 7-0 Mike Tisdale (U. of Illinois).

* 35 points in his final high school game, a close loss in the sectional final to Monticello.


Travis finished his high school career with 1925 points scored. His final assist total of 678 is 5th in IHSA history and his 372 steals are good for 6th all-time in the state.

Travis caught a lot of eyes this season. A January 11 Chicago Sun-Times article entitled, "Players turn heads at holiday tournaments", included the following:


Recruiting analyst Joe Henricksen, the editor of City/Suburban Hoops Report, said Rosenkranz, a 6-foot senior point guard at Macon-Meridian, is ''the most underrated player in Illinois. He can play at a low-Division I school.''

Henricksen saw Rosenkranz score 37 points in an overtime loss to Bloomington Central Catholic in the Class A final of the State Farm Classic in Normal, Ill. He made a three-point shot to tie the score at the end of regulation.

''He is better than many of the heralded guards in the state, in a class with Von Steuben's Michael Horton, Peoria Richwoods' Justin Dehm [Furman], Thornton's Josh Parker [Drake], Maroa-Forsyth's Robert Kreps [UIC] and Bloomington Central Catholic's Brandon Dunson [Tennessee-Chattanooga],'' Henricksen said.

The February 5, 2007 issue of ILL. Hoops included a feature on Rosenkranz. An excerpt:


“Travis Rosenkranz is a sleeper D-I point guard prospect,” wrote the Schmidts in an e-mail. “He can certainly play at the low D-I level, and perhaps the mid-major D-I level. “He is a gym rat, tough-minded kid who wants to get better and constantly works at his game. Nothing against Robert Kreps, who is a fine player and a good get for UIC, but Rosenkranz is every bit as good, and we think that their conference head-to-head matchups over the past two years would certainly verify that. Yes, he is only 5-11, but a player who can shoot, lead the transition game, and get the ball to the right people is certainly worth a look, and we do know that several low D-I’s have him on their list.”

Right now, he has heard from Iowa State, Northern Iowa, Eastern Illinois, a few Ivy League schools and a lot of Division III schools.

“He has no Division I offers,” Blickensderfer said. “That’s amazing. Maybe that’s why those guys don’t keep their jobs long. They can’t evaluate talent. I’m not saying he can go to Illinois, Maryland or Kansas, but there’s no reason why he can’t play at an Eastern, Illinois State or Evansville.”


Travis made all of the various Class A all-state teams, such as...




Travis will be the valedictorian of his class and plans to be pre-med at Illinois Wesleyan. He is a triplet -- sister is heading to U. of Illinois and brother still undecided. Imagine having 3 kids in college at the same time....yikes.

Ron Rose and staff found a terrific player and a first-class young man in Travis Rosenkranz. I can't wait to see him take the floor as a Titan.
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Related links:

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Sean Johnson heading to IWU


All-state shooting guard Sean Johnson (6-1) from Washington H.S. has decided to attend Illinois Wesleyan. Sean will be a very good player at IWU. Here is a nice feature from the January 29 edition of ILL Hoops magazine, courtesy of publisher Scott Powers...

http://www.iwuhoops.com/sj.pdf
(pages 4-7)

This year Johnson really stepped out of the big shadow of teammate Matt Roth (being recruited by Northwestern, ISU, Bradley, SIU, and others). Johnson averaged 18.3 ppg for a team that was ranked #2 in Class AA for a large portion of the year. In his final game, he scored 35 points (20 in the 4th quarter) vs Peoria Richwoods in the sectional championship, almost leading his team back from a huge deficit. A few quotes from the March 10 Peoria Journal Star article on that game:
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Johnson scored 20 of his 35 points in the fourth quarter and left Richwoods happy he didn't get any more shots.

"Oh, my God. Oh, my God. I don't even know what to say," Richwoods all-stater Bill Cole said. "I'm speechless."

Johnson scored on high-arching runners, breakaway layups, then closed with a trio of 3-pointers, all over defense, that made 5,000 fans utterly gasp each time.
Roy and Harv Schmidt of Illinois Prep Bullseye were on hand to scout.

"Maybe the best individual performance in a sectional final we've seen since Tom Kleinschmidt for (Chicago) Gordon Tech against (Westchester) St. Joe's (in 1991)," Roy Schmidt said.

The 6-foot-1 Johnson, who has garnered relatively little college interest, ought to, as far as Schmidt is concerned.

"I have to believe he could certainly play Division 1 somewhere at a mid-major level," Roy Schmidt said. "Missouri Valley teams, Horizon teams, the MAC (Mid-American Conference), I think they'd be crazy not to offer to this kid."
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Johnson made the 5-man Journal Star All-star team, ahead of at least one Division I recruit (Justin Dehm, Richwoods H.S. - Furman).

Johnson received significant interested from D1 Eastern Illinois and Wright State and several Missouri Valley schools talked to him about walking-on. He was also recruited pretty heavily by a number of D2 schools, including SIU-Edwardsville.

Ron Rose and staff have found a good player and impressive young man in Sean Johnson. A great start to the recruiting class!

Monday, April 09, 2007

Recruiting, Part 4

Good things are happening on the recruiting trail. Check back later this week and we'll start discussing some names.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Andrew Gilmore on the mend


Two months ago, IWU sophomore guard Andrew Gilmore couldn't sit in a car for five minutes without excruciating pain in his knees. Now he is recovering from surgery and feeling very optimistic about his future as a Titan.

Gilmore was diagnosed with patellar tendonitis, a condition caused by overuse of the knees (running, jumping, etc.) that develops over a long period of time. He started the 2006-07 season with some pain, but the condition gradually worsened throughout the year. By the final month of his sophomore campaign, Gilmore couldn't jump or cut without severe pain. Mild cases of patellar tendonitis can be cured with a combination of rest, stretching, ice, and medication, but Gilmore didn't have a mild case -- he had the most severe of cases. Part of his tendon (in each knee) was degenerative. Surgery was the only option.

On February 28 at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis, Gilmore underwent a patellar tendonectomy. It is a procedure where, in essence, the dead parts of the patellar tendon are removed and allowed to begin regenerating. The first five days after surgery Gilmore was strictly on his back and given some exercises to perform. He was then on crutches for a few days. At the 10-day mark he could walk and at about three weeks could do so pretty comfortably.

Andrew should be shooting around by June and able to begin playing competitively by August. His goal is to be at full-speed by about the time school starts and 100% in-shape and ready to go when practice begins in mid-October.

Many IWU fans don't realize that the Andrew Gilmore they saw last year was playing at about 60% and dealing with severe pain most of the CCIW season. Still, 11.4 ppg, 2.5 rpg, and 3.2 apg isn't too shabby for a first-year varsity player. Stats for a few other first-year varsity starting guards...

Chad Hutson, 1993-94 (junior): 10.8 ppg/2.8 rpg/5.3 apg
Nathan Hubbard, 1996-97 (soph): 5.7 ppg/3.5 rpg/3.4 apg
Adam Osborn, 1998-99 (junior): 11.7 ppg/3.1 rpg/3.6 apg
Laban Cross, 2000-01 (soph): 11.6 ppg/3.4 rpg/1.2 apg

Look for a healthy Andrew Gilmore to have a big junior year. For now, he just seems happy to be done with the pain. "The other night I went to a movie and could sit through the whole thing," he told me. He sounded genuinely excited. Hearing him talk, I'm excited too.