From the start of the 2016-17 season through the end of the 2018-19 season, the Cherry boys basketball team was not making headlines. The Tigers had an overall record of 4-69 over those three seasons.
They went
16-12 in 2019-20, the first year under head coach Jordan Christianson, then
12-7 in the Covid-shortened 2020-21 season. This season has been special, with
the Tigers reaching the state tournament for the first time in 25 years.
They were
defeated by the defending Class 1A state champions from Hayfield 72-61 in
Friday’s semifinals at Williams Arena, but that did little to diminish the
pride felt by the team and its Iron Range community. They will take a record of
27-5 into Saturday’s third-place game against New Life Academy.
“I’m
very, very proud of our guys,” Christianson said. “Everyone in that locker room
should be proud of what they have accomplished this year. We're always too
small, always too young. And these guys just scrapped all year.”
The
Tigers are exceedingly young and exceptionally talented. Sophomore Isaac Asuma
has been a breakout star of the state tournament, scoring 31 points in a 68-57
quarterfinal win over Nevis and 36 against Hayfield.
“We
knew he was going to get his points,” said Hayfield coach Chris Pack. “Our goal
was to keep him between 15 to 25 and that obviously didn't work.”
A
turnaround like what Cherry has done goes beyond talented athletes. Christianson
said the Tigers’ sudden rise has a lot to do with commitment. He was sitting next
to Asuma and senior Sam Serna as he spoke after the game.
“The
formula is these guys bought in,” he said. “I didn't give them any magic potion
or anything like that. These guys really took it upon themselves, especially
these two right here. They came to everything in the summer, everything we had
in the fall, everything we had in the mornings. They put in the work. That's
what these guys did.”
Having
the experience of winning the state title last year is a key component for
Hayfield, which will meet Belgrade-Brooten-Elrosa
in Saturday’s 11 a.m. championship game.
“It's
so valuable to have these guys who were in it last year,” Pack said. “Cherry’s
young and they’ll probably be back. The experience you get in a situation like
this, even though it was at Target Center last year, just the environment and
the big game. There's no substitute for it.”
The 2022
tournament is much different than the 2021 version, which was held with limited
crowds due to the pandemic.
“Coming
off last season, where minimum fans were allowed to come, having a huge crowd
like Hayfield always has, it's just great to have,” said Vikings senior Easton
Fritcher. “It makes you play better. You score a bucket and all of a sudden you
can't hear anything. There's no better feeling than hearing the Viking roar. I
know it's going to be even bigger at the next game.”
Belgrade-Brooten-Elrosa
Edges New Life
Sophomore
Luke Dingmann of Belgrade-Brooten-Elrosa made two free throws with 15 seconds
to play, putting the Jaguars ahead of New Life Academy 55-53 on Friday. B-B-E’s
defense didn’t allow New Life to get a shot off before time expired, moving the
Jaguars to the championship game.
“It
was everything that a kid would dream of,” said B-B-E coach Chris Anderson. “You
want to be in a state tournament. It's a dream come true. You want to go to the
free throw line. Dream come true. And you want to knock ‘em down. That’s a
dream come true. These young men lived a dream, and it feels like it. It’s like
a blur for me.”
First-year
New Life coach Robbie Whitney was playing college basketball at Bethel
University two seasons ago and was an assistant at St. Francis High School, his
alma mater, last season. To have his team take a 28-4 record into the
third-place game is quite an accomplishment. The Eagles had not been to state
since 2004
“I’m
just super grateful for the opportunity to play in a game like that,” he said. “That's
what you live for. Obviously you want to come out on top but those are the
games that you'll remember forever, in an arena like this, with a team like
this, coming down to a one-possession game. I couldn't ask for anything more
than that.
“They
were two really good teams, we both made our runs and they just happened to
make one more play. So I'm just super grateful and super lucky to be able to
coach guys like this.”
--In
Friday night’s Class 2A semifinals, Minneapolis North met Morris Area/Chokio-Alberta,
followed by Caledonia vs. Annandale.
Morris
Area/Chokio-Alberta coach Mark Torgerson is retiring from coaching and teaching
after this season and this school year. He has been a math teacher since 1981
and has been the Tigers head basketball coach since 1988. This is the fourth
time he has led a team to state; the best finish was second place in 1994 and
the Tigers also advanced to state in 2004 and 2021.
--Cherry didn’t
have a band at Friday’s game because their band was on a trip to Florida. The Hayfield
baseball team is leaving for Florida early Sunday morning, and nine Vikings basketball
players are also on the baseball team.
--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of
Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn
and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts.
Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org
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