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A healing victory for Boyle, Grayslake Central

The two hours each day in the trainer's room the last couple of weeks to rehab his achy ankle were worth it for Casey Boyle.

And what was Grayslake Central's 6-foot-9 senior doing after his team's 52-47 win over visiting Huntley in the teams' Fox Valley Conference first-place positional crossover Friday night?

Going home to rehab his achy ankle.

"Got to go back to the house and ice it 20 minutes on, 20 minutes off," said Boyle, who hadn't played since suffering a grade-2 sprain of his left ankle against Crystal Lake Central on Valentine's Day. "It's been my life for the past week."

Worth it.

While the Rams' victory didn't give the FVC Fox Division champions the official conference championship, it was much-welcomed considering they had lost three of their last four games. Grayslake Central improved to 19-8, while FVC Valley champ Huntley saw its nine-game winning streak snapped and fell to 24-3.

"For my money, that's the way you would want to end the (regular) season," Rams coach Brian Moe said. "You play a great team that's well-coached in a playoff atmosphere."

Boyle, who had sat out Grayslake Central's last three games as the Rams took a conservative approach with their star pivot, had no plans on missing the game.

"That was a huge win for us," Boyle said. "I've been marking this game on our calender since the beginning of the season. I knew that we would win (the FVC Fox), and I knew Huntley was a really good team. (Nos.) 32 (Amanze Egekeze), 15 (Bryce Only) and 20 (Troy Miller) are all great players. I knew that we were going to play them at the end of the year. We really wanted this game to prove to ourselves that we can play at this level."

Miller's two 3-pointers helped Huntley take a 16-15 lead into the second quarter, and the Red Raiders still led 24-23 after the 6-6 sophomore Egekeze (12 points) sank a turnaround jumper in the lane with 2:43 left before halftime.

But Boyle kissed a 15-footer off the glass, and Danny Reed finished a 9-4 run by the hosts with a 3 to beat the buzzer, putting the Rams up 32-28.

"I thought the first half was the difference," Huntley coach Marty Manning said. "We had some guys who weren't there mentally and, in turn, we weren't there physically. (Grayslake Central) took advantage of it, especially with offensive rebounds. ... They scored 32 points in the first half. We usually give up 32 points in a game."

Only kept the Red Raiders close after halftime, scoring all of their 8 points in the third quarter, as the junior guard used his 6-foot-1 athletic frame to post up and finish at the basket.

Only finished with a game-high 16 points.

"The best trait about Bryce is he's a competitor," Manning said. "He's not one to back down. He's going to fight and prove how tough he is. If we had eight guys who played like that, it would have been a different outcome tonight."

Reed, who led Grayslake Central with 14 points, knocked down his second 3 early in the fourth to build the Rams' lead to 42-38, but Huntley stayed close. Miller (9 points, 5 assists) hit his third 3-pointer to pull the Red Raiders within 47-45 with 37 seconds left.

Grayslake Central held on as Boyle and Jordan Taylor combined to go 5 of 6 from the foul line in the final 29 seconds.

"Against a team like that, it's too late to try to turn it on the second half," Only said. "You have to be ready from the get-go."

Boyle and Taylor both finished with 10 points. Savonte McWilliams added 6 points, 9 rebounds and 5 assists. Boyle sank 4 of 4 free throws in the final 49 seconds.

"(The ankle) is about 80, 90 percent right now," said Boyle, who shot 3 of 4 from the floor. "I don't have all my explosiveness. I can't jump as high, but everything else I can pretty much do."

"He had a better chance of blowing out a knee or breaking a shin than rolling an ankle with all that tape and bracing that was on there," Moe joked. "I think that just kind of limited his mobility a little bit.

"He played a great game," Moe added. "He posted up strong, got some nice finishes inside, drew a double-team and found open guys for shots."

Grayslake North 56, CL South 49: Zack Krupp scored a game-high 18 points, including a pair of 3-pointers, and Grayslake North's boys basketball team ended the regular season with a 56-49 win over visiting Crystal Lake South in a Fox Valley Conference positional crossover Friday night.

Grayslake North (18-8), which led 46-31 after three quarters, also got 11 points from A.J. Fish. Mark Hall and Danny Mateling added 9 and 8, respectively, for the Knights.

Girls basketball

Jessica Moriarty launched Christian Liberty into statewide prominence Friday afternoon.

The freshman from the Arlington Heights school, which is in just its third year as an IHSA member, won the Class 1A 3-point competition at the girls basketball state tournament at Redbird Arena in Normal.

"I'm so excited," Moriarty said by phone after claiming the title in a shoot-off. "It feels really, really good."

Moriarty also had to make it out of a shootout in Thursday's preliminary round at Redbird to make the final four and shoot between 1A semifinals before a statewide television audience.

Moriarty and Taylor McClintock of Glasford Illini Bluffs made 6 of 15 shots Friday. Moriarty won the shoot-off and title 4-1 and advanced to be part of the Queen of the Hill competition against the winners of the other three classes at next weekend's 3A/4A tourney at Redbird.

"I wasn't super-confident at first (Thursday) but once I made it to the top four that definitely helped a lot," said Moriarty, a Schaumburg resident who started at guard this year for Christian Liberty. "It was much more nervewracking today. It was really, really exciting and definitely very nervewracking."

Moriarty said the support of her father Brad, mother Rhonda and grandmother helped ease some nerves. Teammates Vivi Barclay, Jenn West, Katelyn Garlick and Andreea Radu were also in attendance.

Christian Liberty coach Colleen Sullivan couldn't make it downstate because of a business meeting but received a call from an excited and tearful Radu with the news of Moriarty's victory.

"Isn't that cool?" said Christian Liberty athletic director Steve Rowland, who was already getting interest from students about going to Normal next weekend. "The whole school is abuzz. Everybody knows Jess and she's a gym rat who loves the basketball court.

"This is exciting for her, especially as a freshman."

Marty Maciaszek

Grayslake Central center Casey Boyle returned to lineup against Huntley on Friday after missing three games due to injury. George Leclaire | Staff Photographer
Grayslake Central's Tyler Smith shoots against a host of Huntley defenders at Grayslake Central on Friday. George Leclaire | Staff Photographer
Grayslake Central's Danny Reed shoots against Huntley defender Amanze Egekeze at Grayslake Central on Friday. George Leclaire | Staff Photographer
Grayslake Central's Savonte McWilliams battles for a rebound against Huntley defender Jake Brock at Grayslake Central on Friday. George Leclaire | Staff Photographer
Grayslake Central's Jordan Taylor shoots over a Huntley defender at Grayslake Central on Friday. George Leclaire | Staff Photographer
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