Kirby powers Geneva past St. Charles East
Some dogs score and rebound rather than bark and bite.
Geneva 6-foot-5 junior Hudson Kirby is one of them.
Behind his big effort against St. Charles East on Friday night, the Vikings ran past the Saints 53-37 in DuKane Conference action.
Kirby scored 17 points and pulled down 15 rebounds while Jack Hatton scored 20 points as the Vikings spoiled senior night in St. Charles.
“He’s just the dog,” Hatton said of his junior teammate. “He’s always on the boards. Even when all four of us aren’t, he’s down there, he’s there getting three, four offensive rebounds (he had seven total) and getting hacked and still finishing at the rim. He’s just a dog.”
He also led a defensive effort that surrendered just five points in both the second and third quarters.
“And he’s blocking shots too,” Geneva coach Scott Hennig said. “We ask him to do so much. I think he’s been outstanding all year. I think the thing that’s so impressive is his playmaking ability. People see the points, the rebounds and blocks, but it’s like having a point guard at 6-5 out there.
“He does all those little things, and probably one of the things that I’m most proud of him with is he’s receptive to coaching. He’s open to being coached, constructive criticism, he just wants to get better. He wants us to win and wants to get better and that’s rare for a 16-year-old kid. It’s a credit to him.”
Geneva (15-12, 6-7) trailed 12-11 after one quarter as the Saints rode the energy of the night’s festivities and early three-pointers from their jakes as seniors Jake Vrankovich and Jake Greenspan) connected.
“We got off to a great start and I’ve never had to second guess their effort,” Saints coach Rob Klemm said. “I love our guys, I love our seniors, I just wish we could’ve gotten the job done for them tonight. Thankfully they get another chance. We’re hosting regionals.”
St. Charles East (8-19, 1-12) was led by juniors Brad Monkemeyer (10 points) and Gavin Szerlong (7 points).
Szerlong’s 3-pointer early in the second quarter gave the Saints a 15-12 advantage, but the Vikings answered with 14 straight points, including a peculiar sequence where Hatton scored five points in less than 10 seconds.
Kirby followed Hatton’s personal 5-0 run with a brilliant tip-in of his own miss with 1:03 left in the first half that made it 26-15.
“I missed a free throw and he (Kirby) got the board, of course, and I think I went downhill and got in and scored and then Dave (Turner) got a steal. I thought he was going to lay it up but he didn’t and I scored there, and they called a timeout and from there we just kind of pulled away.”
Geneva crushed the Saints in the rebound battle, 39-20, primarily because of Kirby.
“He did a great job,” Klemm said. “He’s a leading contributor. They just dominated us on the boards today. He was a big piece to that and he does a great job attacking and finishing around the rim. He played a great game.”
As great of a game as he played, Kirby was disappointed with how the Vikings started, but not how they finished in picking up their fourth straight win while handing the Saints their fifth straight defeat.
“We just didn’t have enough energy in the beginning, but once we figured that out we were all over the boards scoring and getting in transition,” Kirby said. “I thought it was just a good team win.”
Call it winning gritty or gritty winning.
“A huge part of the winning streak is grit,” Kirby said. “We want to be the grittiest team and get all the 50/50s. That’s what (taking) that charge was about (with 3:00 left in the third quarter and leading 35-20). I knew I would have a harder time blocking the shot even though I like to block shots.”
Dave Turner added five points and six rebounds, and Brady Kafka scored a basket and collected seven rebounds.
“(Kafka) loves to hustle and that’s what we need,” Kirby said. “We need someone like that.”
Hennig, who lives in St. Charles, knew the Saints would play them tough.
“I love the community of St. Charles and they have a lot of pride here,” he said. “Rob’s (Klemm) doing a nice job. His kids are playing hard. They’re battling some injuries, too, but St. Charles East, they’re competitors. They work hard. They’re active on the glass, they’re physical defensively. We knew coming in here that this was going to be a difficult game. It’s a credit to what they’re doing.”