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Central's Wandrey named CNI Girls Basketball Coach of the Year

By Tom "Sky" Skibosh
Sunday, Mar 30 2008, 01:12 PM

When Brookfield Central’s girls basketball coach Dan Wandrey looked behind the Lady Lancers’ bench during the girls state basketball tournament in March, he felt like it was old-home week.

Cheering the Lady Lancers on were his three older sisters — Dell, Doreen and Denise. It was not unusual for the Wandrey family to be at the state tournament since Dan and his siblings have been attending since he was in first-grade at St. Margaret Mary’s Grade School.

"My parents used to take us out of school to go watch the private school tournament at the MECCA," Wandrey recalled. "They wouldn’t have missed the games in Madison for the world this year. It was such a part of what our family was."

This season was special for the Wandreys, as Dan made it as a coach for the first time since taking over the Brookfield Central girls team in 1998. The Lady Lancers won the Greater Metro Conference (12-2) and the regional and sectional championships to go to state, where they defeated Marshfield and lost to Oshkosh West, to finish with a 19-6 record. It was only the second time in school history the girls have made it to state, the first time in 1985 when they won the title.

As a result of Central’s fine season, Wandrey walked away with the CNI All-Suburban Coach of the Year honors for this past season, the third time (2004-05, 2001-02) he has won the award since it was established in 1989-90.

A nice accomplishment for a man who said he got into coaching "when I figured out I couldn’t play."

An in-depth look at Wandrey - the man and the coach - will be in this Thursday's Brookfield NOW.

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Agree or disagree, feel free to leave a comment.

And always remember, be a hit and have a ball.

 


 

Lady Lancers deserved more credit

By Tom "Sky" Skibosh
Monday, Mar 17 2008, 10:54 AM
Despite  making it to the semifinals of the WIAA State Girls Basketball Championships March 14, the Brookfield Central girls basketball team never got the respect this team deserved this year.

Listen to what senior guard Anna Butzlaff had to say.

"When we won conference, people said the Greater Metro Conference was down this year. When we won the sectional, people said it was an easy sectional. When we beat Marshfield at state, people said they weren’t that good a team. No, we never got the credit we deserved."

The Lady Lancers finished with a 19-6 record, including a 12-2 mark in the GMC, one game ahead of pre-season co-favorite Divine Savior Holy Angels. They had winning streaks of seven, six and four games and played well to win the sectional, rallying to beat good Franklin and Muskego teams.

In our CNI Girls Basketball Poll, the Lady Lancers worked their way to third and then second after beating Franklin (14-9) and Muskego (16-5), two teams which were ranked ahead of them all year, behind No. 1 Oak Creek (21-4). Even though Oak Creek lost in the first round to the same Oshkosh West team that beat Central, while the Lady Lancers advanced, the Knights (21-4) still edged out Central for the top spot in the final poll, 28 points to 26 points, because of a better record I assume.

After the boys lost at state March 7, instead of staying to watch Saturday’s title game, they voted to come back home and go cheer the girls on.

"Coach (Mark) Adams brought the team back and supported us which I thought was a great gesture on his part. When I got here (to state) six to seven of our boys players were down there in the front row supporting us."

Then Wandrey hit on a sensitive point.

"That means a lot to our kids and we just want everyone to know we play girls basketball at Central too."

Outside of the parents, family members and friends of the girls on the team, not many students know there is a girls team. I realize when there is a conflict with the boys games the girls aren’t going to win because of the Lancers’ success. But the size of the crowd at the state tournament was embarrassing for a school Central’s size.

One of the state tournament television announcers made the comment "That the Lady Lancers don’t travel well." But they didn’t travel well to their own gym this season.

I do want to emphasize this shouldn’t reflect on the parents, family and friends who did show up. The quality was fine, but the quantity wasn’t. But don’t let this take away from an excellent season.

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See a more detailed column and state tournament coverage in Thursday's BrookfieldNOW.

Whether you agree with me or not, feel free to leave a comment.

And always be a hit and have a ball.


 

Brookfield Central, Tosa East fans disappoint

By Tom "Sky" Skibosh
Monday, Feb 4 2008, 04:47 PM

On back-to-back nights last week, I saw something that really disappointed me. And it had nothing to do with what happened on the basketball court.

Before I say anything, I want to say on the record that I think the Brookfield Central and Wauwatosa East basketball fans are among the best fans that I have had the chance to watch the past six years. Their outfits are creative and their enthusiasm is contagious. Maybe that's why I was disappointed, because the Lancer and Red Raider fans have set high standards in my eyes.

First of all, last Wednesday, the Tosa East boys team hosted Menomonee Falls in a game which was moved from Tuesday because of the cold weather. I couldn't believe what I saw. Not only was it one of the smallest crowds that I have ever been a apart of at a Tosa East boys basketball game, but one of the quietest. I actually counted 61 students in the student section.

It couldn't have been the competition, because Menomonee Falls has the ability to beat anyone in the Greater Metro Conference. In fact, the Indians led the Red Raiders at half-time the first time they played. It took a curious foul call in the final seconds to give Tosa East a chance to win the game in regulation this time around.

I know it wasn't just me, because a high-profile Tosa East official made the comment to me afterwards, "Maybe we're not the place to be any more." 

The next night, I attended the Brookfield East-Brookfield Central girls-boys doubleheader at Central. The stands were not even half full for the girls game, an important GMC battle between the unbeaten Lady Lancers and the desperate Lady Spartans, who needed and got, a huge 39-35 victory.

With two minutes - TWO minutes - left in the game, like clockwork, the color-coded blue and white Central students paraded into the gym as a group. Hello?  Where were you people for the first game? A game which was much more entertaining and more meaningful in the GMC race than the nightcap would be.

With all the cold weather and the re-scheduling of games last week, I'm going to give the students the benefit of the doubt based on their past history.

Or maybe, just maybe, they were home studying.

Agree or disagree with me, but feel free to leave a comment.

And always remember to be a hit and have a ball.


 

Exam week gives me time for a look back at last week's highlights

By Tom "Sky" Skibosh
Tuesday, Jan 22 2008, 03:07 PM

With most athletes off until later this week because of exam week, let's take a look at some highlights from the past week in Brookfield and Wauwatosa prep sports.

Wauwatosa East's 160-pounder Nick Morin became the all-time winningest wrestler in Tosa history by winning four matches last week (103-34). He surpassed Jake Benedict's 102 victories from 2001-05.

DSHA basketball coach Scott Witt felt as if his team lost the Greater Metro Conference title last Friday when the young Brookfield Central Lady Lancers beat the pre-season favorite Dashers, 45-38. "They (BC) have to lose two games and I don't think that's going to happen," Witt said. "I think it's between us and Brookfield East for second place."

The young Lancers only have two seniors in the top seven of their rotation and junior Joana Bielefeld (11.5 PPG) and sophomore Erin Lueder (12.5) are two of the GMC's top players. But that won't stop Dan Wandrey from worrying, because Central's head coach is the GMC's version of Lou Holtz.

Tosa West's Jesse Zeisse was inserted into the starting lineup for Andrea Kwak last week, when Kwak missed a practice. The results worked out great for both girls. Zeisse scored nine points in a win over Greenfield and then Kwak scored 10 in a double overtime win over Whitnall including four in the second overtime.

Brookfield Central handed Wauwatosa East a 53-51 loss on Jan. 15 and pulled into a first-place tie with the state-ranked Red Raiders. A couple things came out of this game. The key to the game was Central's discipline in their half-court offense, as the Lancers didn't fall apart after East rallied from a 10-point deficit. Central ran time off the clock in the final minutes, looking for a lay-up. Unsung hero Mitch Aprahamian was at the top of the key when he whipped a pass to Luke Duckett driving to the basket for a lay-up and the win.

The Central scoreboard had a short circuit (or something), because it went out a few minutes before the start of the second half, in the third quarter and then with two minutes left to play. When East's Tony Walls grabbed a loose ball and called time-out while flying out of bounds there was then a few seconds of controversy over whether the clock expired.

Tosa East's Hannah Weinberg-Kinsey has averaged 11.3 PPG, scoring 16, 8 and 10 points since breaking the middle finger on her shooting hand. She improved her scoring over three points per game. There is no truth to the rumor coach Rob Hamill is thinking of having the rest of his squad wear similiar splints.

After starting the season with 13 straight losses the co-op team of Wauwatosa East/West/New Berlin Eisenhower/West/Whitnall (now that's a mouthful) won their first hockey game, 6-2, over Oconomowc on Saturday.


 
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