Iowa
Valley boys hang on for win over Ankeny in Iowa high school soccer state semifinals
Eric Foust breaks down Valley soccer’s win over Ankeny
Hear from Valley soccer’s Eric Foust after his goal pushed the Tigers past Ankeny in the Iowa high school boys soccer state semifinals.
Sixty-six seconds.
That’s how long it took for Valley to score against Ankeny in the Class 4A semifinal of the Iowa high school boys state soccer tournament on June 5.
The goal came off the foot of Eric Foust, who cut around his defender and sent a cross-box shot past the goaltender and into the left side of the net. Less than two minutes into the game, the Tigers were up 1-0.
And that one-goal lead stood until the final buzzer, marking the seventh-straight shutout for Valley’s defense and the fourth-straight for Tigers goaltender Alexander Poitan.
Top-seeded Valley defeated Ankeny, and the Tigers advanced to the June 6 state title game, where they will face reigning back-to-back champion Johnston.
“We needed that goal right away,” said head coach Aziz Haffar postgame. “And I’m so proud of Alex, and every defender that came in. We found a way to get it done. It’s amazing.”
The action leveled out after Foust’s opening goal, but Valley remained on the offensive for most of the first half. The Tigers’ best shot at another goal came on back-to-back corners late in the first half.
With just over 12 minutes before halftime, Pablo Mendez took a corner kick for the Tigers. One teammate headed the ball, then Britton Morrow directed another header toward the net. Ankeny goalie Jackson Dockendorff tapped the ball over the net to relieve the pressure.
Mendez lined up for the corner kick, again, and Dockendorff left the goal open during the resulting scrum. Colton Horn let off a shot for Valley, but Hawks’ defender Henry McMillan was in the right place at the right time and blocked the attempt.
The deflection went out of bounds, and Valley was awarded another corner. Valley missed a header attempt – with the ball soaring over and past the player’s head – and Ankeny managed to clear the ball.
After the three consecutive corners, the excitement died down.
Both teams kept each other on their toes, but Valley held onto its 1-0 lead at halftime.
That single goal proved enough to win the game, although both teams had plenty of opportunities. But there was a moment in the second half that impacted the game.
Less than five minutes into the second half, Alex Mirsky went to collect the ball at the same time that an Ankeny defender went for a tackle. The Hawks’ player took down Mirsky on the play, and the Valley senior needed to be stretchered off the field.
Haffar believes Mirsky broke his leg, he told the Des Moines Register postgame.
“Obviously, that’s emotion to go through, to be honest with you,” Haffar said. “It was very emotional. I met with the guys and I said, ‘Listen, we’re not going to retaliate, we’re going to play soccer, and we’ve got to play the game like it should be. So, I was very proud of them.”
There was no retaliation, but there was tension building between the two Central Iowa Metropolitan League (CIML) opponents.
Two players – Austin Lundberg from Ankeny and Cristian Catalan from Valley – received red cards for separate calls in the final minute and seven seconds of the match.
Under Iowa high school rules, a player who receives a red card must sit out the next game, so the Tigers will be without Catalan – who started 19-of-21 games this season, according to GoBound – for the state title game.
“We were not going to practice tomorrow, but we’re going to go through some stuff that we need to do,” Haffar said. “I’m very proud of these guys. I know somebody will step up to the plate and play the game the way they know how to do it.”
Alyssa Hertel is the college sports recruiting reporter for the Des Moines Register. Contact Alyssa at ahertel@dmreg.com or on Twitter @AlyssaHertel.
Iowa
Illini rip Big Ten rival Iowa to reach Final Four for first time in 21 years
HOUSTON — Freshman Keaton Wagler scored 25 points and Illinois ended Iowa’s underdog March Madness run by dominating in the frontcourt, beating the Hawkeyes 71-59 on Saturday to advance to the Final Four for the first time since 2005.
This will be the sixth trip to the Final Four for Illinois, which has never won a national title. The Fighting Illini will face either Duke or UConn next weekend in Indianapolis.
The much taller Illini (28-8) outrebounded Iowa 38-21 in the South Region final. David Mirkovic led the way with 12 rebounds.
Coach Brad Underwood’s emphasis on recruiting in Eastern Europe has paid off in this tournament. Tomislav Ivisic of Croatia, who stands 7-foot-1, and his 7-2 twin brother Zvonimir have shined in March.
Andrej Stojakovic, who was born in Greece but whose father is Serbian three-time NBA All-Star Peja Stojakovic, scored 17 points for third-seeded Illinois.
His famous father watched proudly as his son punched his ticket to the Final Four, and Wagler’s parents — who met when they played basketball at a junior college in Kansas — cheered wildly throughout for their son, who was named MVP of the region.
Bennett Stirtz scored 24 points for the ninth-seeded Hawkeyes (24-13), who knocked off top-seeded Florida in the second round as part of an impressive run under first-year coach Ben McCollum, a four-time Division II national champion at Northwest Missouri State.
Iowa
Rick Barnes reacts to Tennessee’s win over Iowa State
No. 6 seed Tennessee (25-11) defeated No. 2 seed Iowa State (29-8), 76-62, on Friday in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 at United Center in Chicago, Illinois.
The Vols advanced to their third consecutive Elite Eight under 11th-year head coach Rick Barnes.
“One, very humbled by it,” Barnes said. “Certainly proud of our basketball team. They worked really hard. Defensively, I thought we knew we would have to have a great effort defensively. Certainly Iowa State, outstanding. T.J. (Otzelberger), outstanding program, coach.
“This time of year is always tough when you lose a key guy like they did, and that’s part of the tournament. That’s the tough part about it, but just really proud of our guys and the effort they made and against a team that they play as hard as any team we played all year. The start of the game, I don’t think we’ve seen anything like that all year, and we were able to withstand it. Again, just really proud of the effort from our entire team. Everybody had a hand in us winning this game.”
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Iowa
Tennessee basketball vs Iowa State Sweet 16 tipoff time changed for later start
CHICAGO − Tennessee basketball’s Men’s NCAA Tournament game against Iowa State will start a little later than planned.
The Sweet 16 game between the No. 6 Vols (24-11) and No. 2 Cyclones (29-7) will now tipoff at 10:25 p.m. ET at the United Center on TBS.
The game was originally scheduled for 10:10 p.m. before the 15-minute delay. There is also the standard 30-minute break in between tournament games. Tennessee and Iowa State won’t begin until 30 minutes after the end of No. 1 Michigan (33-3) and No. 4 Alabama (29-5).
Iowa State forward Joshua Jefferson status
Iowa State’s star forward Joshua Jefferson is questionable against Tennessee basketball according to the NCAA player availability report released at 6:32 p.m.
Jefferson sprained his ankle in the opening minutes of Iowa State’s first-round game against Tennessee State. He sat for the remainder of the game and missed the Cyclones’ win over Kentucky on March 22. Iowa State didn’t need the All-Big 12 forward as it generated 20 Wildcat turnovers in its 19-point victory.
Wynton Jackson covers high school sports for Knox News. Email: wynton.jackson@knoxnews.com
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