advertisement

WW South starts fast, knocks off Wheaton North

As the only returning starter for his team, Luca Carbonaro is going to be asked to do a lot this winter.

On Friday night, the Wheaton Warrenville South junior was certainly up to the task. And so were his teammates.

With Carbonaro’s game-high 20 points leading the way, the Tigers nearly led from start to finish in a 53-38 DuKane Conference win over Wheaton North.

WWS (6-3, 3-1) jumped out to a 12-2 lead and never looked back and has now captured six of its last seven contests after dropping the first two games of the season.

“I thought we cleared the boards really well,” said Carbonaro, who added six assists and two steals while making four three-pointers. “Brady (Goken) did a great job on the glass. Especially toward the end, we stayed under control breaking their press and we also did a good job shooting the three; not being too indecisive, just making the right plays. And defensively, we did our thing, it was better tonight.

“This team gets better every day. It’s built in practice, that’s 80% of it. We don’t have a guy that is 6-foot-8 this year, but if we play to the best of our abilities and play together, we will be fine.”

Carbonaro hit back-to-back trifectas as the margin swelled to 18-5 in the second quarter. Wheaton North (5-4, 2-2) would get the deficit to within four in the third quarter before the Tigers closed out the period on a 12-5 run, punctuated by a Carbonaro dunk. Max O’Connell and Goken also reached double figures with 10 points apiece while Joe Preede finished with nine points.

“We focused on getting stops and then getting open shots,” O’Connell said. “We started out really well defensively, we held them to five points in that first quarter.

“We didn’t get off to a good start (losses to Rolling Meadows and Evanston at the Fenton tournament) but we’ve picked it up. We had a couple of hard practices and now we are in a groove. We have started to do what we need to do, play well defensively, play aggressively, share the ball.”

The Tigers forced 14 turnovers and held the Falcons to four made field goals in the opening half.

“We knew they would pressure us from the get-go,” said WWS long-time assistant coach Matt Stellwagen. “Their pressure is something you have to deal with or it will deal with you. To our kids’ credit, they did a nice job with that. And we count on Luca to have big games and he never lets us down.

“It’s been a little bit building of momentum here as these guys get more minutes together and figure things out.”

Hudson Parker topped Wheaton North with 12 points and three steals. Caleb Schauer had nine points, Jack Speers added eight points and Connor Speers contributed six. The Falcons used a 9-4 spurt out of halftime to close the gap to 27-23 but would get no closer.

“We’ve kind of had trouble with slow starts,” Wheaton North coach Dave Brackmann said. “Then we usually play more aggressively and get back into games and that is what happened tonight. We just couldn’t get over the hump. We were right there and then it kind of snowballed at the end. We talked about it (after the game) and I’m excited to see their response. Obviously it’s super disappointing. It’s tough to win here, you have to play well and we didn’t do a lot of things well tonight.

“We’ve been up and down. We are trying to put together complete games. At times we look like a really good team and other times we don’t. We have to be more consistent.”

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.