By Dan McGrath

Coach Jimalle Ridley struggled to keep his emotions in check as he addressed his Leo Lions, their season having just ended two wins short of a state tournament berth on Friday, March 7.

“If you had said three years ago that we’d be within one point of a sectional title  within three years, not many people would have believed you,” Ridley said.

Indeed, three years after the departure of a coach and some standout players necessitated a start-all-over rebuild, Leo found itself facing Public League campaigner Dyett in the championship game of an IHSA Class 2-A sectional that was scheduled for Julian but held at Simeon because of an unsafe playing floor at Julian.

The Eagles (24-7) eked out a 44-43 victory that sent them on to the Class 2-A Supersectional at Joliet, where another win over Bismarck-Henning/Rossville-Alvin had them Champaign-bound for a state tournament semifinal matchup with Peoria Manual. The Lions concluded a 23-12 season that has all the earmarks of a breakthrough.

Dyettt made seven of 10 fourth-quarter free throws, the last two by Rickey Coleman giving the Eagles a 44-40 lead with 13 seconds remaining. That  was just enough to withstand Ethan Jackson’s three-pointer at the buzzer.

As Dyett celebrated, Leo trudged off to a sad, somber locker room.

“I want you guys to walk out of here with your heads up,” Ridley insisted. “We came up a little short tonight, but it was a heck of a season.”

No doubt.  Leo’s victory total exceeded its combined total (21) of the previous two seasons. The Lions won a second consecutive regional championship. They were 17-6 after January 1, a sign of steady and significant improvement. They announced their return to Catholic League contention with gut-check wins over Loyola Academy and St. Ignatius when both were ranked in the Sun-Times Top 25.  They took care of Crete-Monee, Christ the King and Perspectives IIT while compiling a 20-7 nonconference record.

“Not many 2-A teams played as tough a schedule as we did,” Ridley said.

Ridley thanked seniors Dontae Bell, Stephen Barze, Emanuel Walker and Kam’ron Dove for their contributions, which were plentiful. Jackson, a junior and a big-time shooter, heads a returning cast that includes sophomores Nate Stephens, Asa Harris, Karon Shavers, Brian Kizer and Brandon Gandy Jr. There’s a stockpile of talent at the lower levels, including promising freshman Brandel Orr, with more arriving in an 80-member incoming freshman class.

“Leo basketball is back on the map, and this group will be remembered as the guys who put us there,” Ridley said. “This is just the beginning.”