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Even if the Lakeside Dragons don’t win another game this season, they’ve already raised the bar for the high school in terms of its boys basketball program.
With 16 wins (against but three losses), coach Rob Pisano’s Dragons have already established a school record for the most victories in a season as they head into tonight’s regular-season finale against Premier Athletic Conference foe Riverside at Lakeside Gymnasium.
Now in its ninth year since Ashtabula and Harbor were consolidated to form Lakeside in the fall of 2001, the previous benchmark for most wins by a Dragons boys squad was 15, set last winter. Previous to that season, coach Rick Binder’s back-to-back 13-8 campaigns in his two seasons at the helm (2005-06 and 2006-07) represented the high-water mark for the program.
Fifteen wins remains the best in the history of the Lakeside girls program, done by coach Rob Livingston’s 2006-07 squad.
Tourney trail mix
Speaking of the Dragons, Pisano’s squad will carry the third seed into the Division I sectional-district tournament at Euclid, with an eye toward accomplishing something for the first time in Lakeside basketball history, boys or girls — win a sectional championship.
To do so, Lakeside will need to defeat to PAC rivals — sixth-seeded North (Tuesday, 8 p.m.) and ninth-seeded Geneva (Saturday, March 6 at 6:30), which the Lakeside-North winner will meet in a sectional final.
Speaking of Round III of the Lakeside-North bout, word is there is more than a little bad blood in the water for this one.
Stay tuned.
Just a game
A small Orthodox Jewish school forfeited a consolation game in a Washington state high school basketball tournament so players could safely observe a religious fast.
Northwest Yeshivam elected to forfeit the game Thursday rather than break the “Fast of Esther,” one of five fasts on the Jewish calendar that prohibits eating or drinking anything until nightfall.
School officials said the risk to players not able to rehydrate during the game was unacceptable.
The on-court formalities were brief.
Northwest Yeshiva players, led by coach Jed Davis, shook hands with opposing players and coaches, huddled at their opponent’s free-throw line, had a quick cheer, hugged and walked off the court.
One player cried.
McCormack is the sports editor of the Star Beacon. Reach him at donmac@suite224.net.
Sports
A Don McCormack column: Dragon boys have raised the bar
- Sports
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Comforts of home
A trip home led to a meteoric improvement for Ohio State Buckeye Mallory Kreider, who destroyed her personal best in the 5,000 meters (3.1 miles) by 52 seconds Friday night during the Spire Division I Indoor Track and Field Invitational.
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Look out for Lakeside
Lakeside coach Rob Pisano has been waiting for this moment. And waiting. And waiting.
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Falcons fall
As the Jefferson Falcons’ rise to respectability under first-year coach Jeremy Huber continues, they have continuously improved on certain aspects of their game.
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A case for the offense
Forget offense versus defense. When Edgewood hosted Conneaut on Friday night, It was offense versus offense. And the Warriors won, 69-59.
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Familiar refrain for Torok & Co.
Geneva boys basketball coach Scott Torok is no Bill Murray. However, he may feel like a character in the actor’s movie “Groundhog Day.”
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Perry raids Harvey
The Perry boys can celebrate the fact they have now won twice in a row, and they deserve to do that. But along with Friday’s 66-54 win against visiting Harvey came a sight that nobody ever wants to see.
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Scholastic Statistics:
BOYS BASKETBALL
PREMIER
Lakeside 89, Madison 76
at Madison -
Scholastic Schedule:
SATURDAY, FEB. 11
Girls Basketball
n Madison at Chardon (1)
n Lakeview at Edgewood (1)
n Conneaut at Jefferson (6)
n Lakeside at Riverside (1)
n SJP at Badger (2, varsity only) -
Riverside sneaks past Edgewood
Riverside wrestling coach Scott Blank learned a good deal of what he knows from Edgewood coach Greg Stolfer as a former Warrior great. Thursday, he used a bit of that knowledge to get the better of his old coach as the Beavers bested the Warriors, 31-28, at Edgewood.
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Madison rolls past Geneva
Madison recovered from coming out on the short end of a pin in the first match of the night by taking six of the next seven matches against Geneva and capped the night with pins from their last pair of grapplers in dismantling the Eagles, 49-17.
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