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C Greg Oden (All B1G, All-American, Defensive Player of the Year, Butler Assistant Coach)

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3/20/05

Oden had 20 points, 8 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 blocks in his 71-52 win vs Terre Haute South. The win pushed them into the Class 4A State Championship game.:bow: :bow:

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A head fake by Lawrence North's Greg Oden sends Terre Haute South's (left to right) Anthony McNeal, Armon Bassett and J.T. Hatfield skyward in the first half. -- Matt Kryger / The Star


lawrence north 71, terre haute south 52
Wildcats progress on 'mission'
Balanced scoring puts them 1 win from repeat state title
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By Pat McKee
<SCRIPT language=JavaScript><!--document.write(''+'pat.mckee'+'@'+'indystar.com'+'');//--></SCRIPT>[email protected]
March 19, 2005


Balanced, efficient, explosive and businesslike.

All four terms were fitting Saturday for the Lawrence North High School boys basketball team.

With Greg Oden scoring 20 points to lead four players in double figures, the defending champion and third-ranked Wildcats earned a shot at another state title with a 71-52 victory over Terre Haute South in the Class 4A semistate at Southport Fieldhouse.

"We're on a mission," said Oden, the 7-foot junior who added eight rebounds, two blocks, three assists and triggered a game-clinching burst for the Wildcats (23-2), who will face No. 2 Muncie Central (27-1) in Saturday's State Finals at Conseco Fieldhouse. "And the mission's not over."

Despite 74 percent shooting (28-of-38) and offensive balance that saw junior Mike Conley chip in 17 points, senior Brandon McPherson add 15 and senior Donald Cloutier score 11, it still took a late surge for Lawrence North to put away the Braves (22-6).

Terre Haute South, which had only senior Armon Bassett score in the first half, rallied from a 19-point third-quarter deficit to trail just 52-44 on two free throws by Anthony McNeal with 6:18 to go.

But Wildcats coach Jack Keefer then switched his team to a 1-3-1 zone defense, and Lawrence North responded with a 14-0 blitz over a 3:13 span. The burst included two Oden dunks, a Cloutier dunk, a Cloutier tip-in, a McPherson finger-roll and two Conley layups to seal the result.

Bassett topped the Braves with 29 points, 19 coming in the first half when Lawrence North took a 34-19 advantage. McNeal, who added eight points, was South's first player other than Bassett to score, 3:12 into the third quarter.

"We knew (South) would get on a run," Oden said. "They weren't a team to lay down and die, but we were able to play through it. I thought Brandon McPherson took over for part of the fourth quarter."

McPherson credited the Braves for forcing the Wildcats into some sloppy play, but he said he never doubted his team.

"They came at us hard," McPherson said. "But I knew if we stayed strong with the ball, we would be OK."

Terre Haute South coach Mike Saylor said Lawrence North just wears opponents down.

"I felt like we had a rally going and a chance," Saylor said. "But what do they have, four Division I players and one NBA player? Even when they went 1-3-1, we wanted to penetrate and kick, but we couldn't get it done."

The Wildcats' balance and 14-of-17 shooting led to the big halftime margin. They extended the margin to 42-23 on the second of Oden's four dunks midway through the third quarter before Terre Haute South began its comeback. Several fouls allowed the Braves to chip away, and eight straight free throws early in the fourth quarter prompted Keefer to switch to the zone.

"They had some fine shooters, so I wasn't sure about going to the 1-3-1," said Keefer, whose 'Cats seek to add a third title to those won in 1989 and last year. "But it worked for a couple of minutes, and we were able to get some things going."

At the end, the Lawrence North players were pleased but not euphoric. They had a simple explanation, pointing to the "mission" to which Oden had referred.

"We know what it's like to win semistate and state," Conley said. "We want to defend, and we're all business until then."

Added McPherson: "We're happy. But we know how it feels to win state, so we want more. If we win state, you'll see (emotion)."
 
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3/25/05

Lawerence North is ranked #5 in the Student Sports Fab 50.

5. Lawrence North (Indianapolis, Ind.) 23-2 (6)
The defending state Class 4A champion Wildcats advanced to next Saturday's
title game with a 71-52 romp of Terre Haute South in the semistate game.
Greg Oden, the 7-foot junior who was the Student Sports National Sophomore
of the Year, led four double figure scorers with 20 points and also had
eight rebounds. Junior Mike Conley scored 17 and Brandon McPherson 15. North will play Muncie Central (26-1) in the finals.
 
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Our Oscar-winners take center court
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</TD></TR><TR><TD>Lawrence North junior Greg Oden (right), whose Wildcats play Saturday for the Class 4A state title, jostles with North Central's Eric Gordon in their regional matchup at Hinkle Fieldhouse. Both were considered for the North suburban area's Player of the Year honor; the 7-foot Oden got the nod. -- Matt Kryger / The Star
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>March 25, 2005

It's time to honor the best boys basketball players in northern Marion, western Boone and southern Madison counties with our Oscar Robertsons.

Hamilton County and Zionsville schools got theirs earlier this month. Now it's time to look at the rest of the North suburban area.

And the winners are . . .

Best actor (player of the year)

The nominees are: Eric Gordon, North Central; Jason Holsinger, Lapel; and Greg Oden, Lawrence North.

Oden is the best player in the country. Lawrence North is loaded with talent, but Oden sets the Wildcats apart in an area full of great teams -- defeating the Sagarin ratings' No. 3 Pike, No. 4 Arlington, No. 7 Terre Haute South and No. 8 North Central in the postseason with No. 2 Muncie Central up next. Oden has raised his level of play this season and taken the Wildcats with him.

Gordon meant as much to North Central as anyone in the state, let alone the area. Holsinger is equally valuable to Lapel, carrying the team to its first state championship game, and has meant as much to his community as anyone.

I wouldn't argue with a choice of either for player of the year, but I'll go with Oden.

Best director (coach of the year)

The nominees are: Cary Chandler, Heritage Christian; Jimmie Howell, Lapel; Jack Keefer, Lawrence North; and Doug Mitchell, North Central.

A difficult decision goes to Howell. He returned to his hometown and snapped the state's longest sectional drought at 62 years, defeated Tri-Central and Lafayette Catholic Central -- arguably two of the three best Class A teams in the state -- in the regional and has the program in the state finals for the first time in its history.

Chandler led Heritage Christian through the minefield of its postseason past to claim the program's first sectional title in its third season in the Indiana High School Athletic Association.

Keefer has molded a supremely talented group of players into the state's best team, and Mitchell led an inexperienced roster through an up-and-down season and the state's toughest schedule to a sectional title.

Short film (best player 5-10 or under)

The nominees are: David Brocker, Heritage Christian; J.R. Howell, Lapel; Ryan King, Lebanon; and Dray Mason, Bishop Chatard.

The pick is J.R. Howell. Jimmie Howell's best coaching move may have been bringing his son along with him from Brownsburg. The 5-foot-9 guard averages 14.2 points and 3.5 assists, shooting 47 percent on 3-pointers, and provided a second scoring option after Holsinger for the Bulldogs' state title run.

Performance by a cast

The nominees are: Brebeuf Jesuit, Bishop Chatard and Heritage Christian.

It's an easy choice -- Heritage Christian. Who was the team's best player? Leading scorer Jeff McIntosh? Center Jared McCowan, who played his best ball at the end of the season when it mattered most? Forward Chad Freije, who contributes in every area? Brocker, the point guard who won the team's MVP award last season?

The answer: All of them.

New star of the year

The nominees are: Eric Gordon, North Central; J.R. Howell, Lapel; Stephen Thomas, Cathedral; and Xavier Weatherford, Lawrence Central.

Gordon is the easiest pick. After fitting his game in and around senior stars A.J. Ratliff and Tony Passley last season, Gordon demonstrated he's one of the country's top high school players this season, leading the metropolitan area in scoring.

Call Star reporter Nat Newell at (317) 444-2610.

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Oden is simply the best player in the nation...period.

HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL STATE FINALS
Backcourt moves to the forefront
Lawrence North's veteran guards mature, thrive while playing in shadow of Oden.
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</TD></TR><TR><TD>7-foot center Greg Oden is the centerpiece of Lawrence North's lineup, but certainly not its only reliable weapon. -- Matt Kryger / The Star


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Boys scoreboard
<!--• Girls scoreboard
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Preps Plus

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At Conseco Fieldhouse
Tickets: Session, $10; season, $18

CLASS A
• Lapel (24-3) vs. Loogootee (21-4), 10:30 a.m.

CLASS 2A
• Harding (16-9) vs. Forest Park (22-4), 12:30 p.m. (approx.)

CLASS 3A
• Plymouth (22-3) vs. Washington (26-2), 6:30 p.m.

CLASS 4A
• Muncie Central (27-1) vs. Lawrence North (23-2), 8:30 p.m. (approx.)

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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>By Pat McKee
<SCRIPT language=JavaScript><!--document.write(''+'pat.mckee'+'@'+'indystar.com'+'');//--></SCRIPT>[email protected]
March 25, 2005

With standout Greg Oden in the middle, it's easy to understand how his backcourt teammates on the Lawrence North High School boys basketball team are overshadowed.

But heading into the Class 4A state title game Saturday against Muncie Central, the Wildcats' Mike Conley, Brandon McPherson and Tyler Morris are sure to be in the spotlight at Conseco Fieldhouse.

"I think our guards are great," said Oden, a 7-foot junior who leads the third-ranked defending state champions with averages of 19.7 points and 9.6 rebounds. "When people want to talk about me, I try to talk a lot about them. I know what they mean to the team."

Lawrence North coach Jack Keefer is aware of how seniors Alex Daniel (13.1 ppg), Ty Riddle (13.1) and Josiah Miller (12.9) can dominate a game for the No. 2 Bearcats (27-1). Keefer agreed they are excellent players, but he wouldn't want to trade sets of guards.

"With Greg on our team, I'm not sure people realize how good our other players are," Keefer said. "Mike and Brandon are three-year starters, and both are very capable.

"Because of Greg and Mike, Brandon takes a back seat at times, but when he's needed to step up, he will. While Tyler has become a starter only in the latter part of this season, his game has really come around."

Conley, a 6-1 junior who averages 10.9 points and 5.1 assists, said he and his teammates aren't concerned about headlines.

"The Muncie Central guards are good, and they deserve attention," Conley said. "But we're not worried about personal goals. Our focus is on the team being its best."

McPherson, a 6-1 senior who adds 9.5 points and 2.0 assists, said he thinks Lawrence North's perimeter group is better. He pointed at college choices to support his view. McPherson is going to Valparaiso, Morris is bound for Eastern Kentucky and Conley is considering several major programs. By contrast, the Muncie guards are undecided.

According to Bearcats coach Matt Fine, Daniel is getting looks mostly from the NCAA Division II level, Riddle from Division III and NAIA schools and Miller from junior colleges.

"We've got three Division I guys," McPherson said. "But I like it when people doubt us. It just makes us want to show what we can do. I also like it when people put their focus on Greg. It just opens things for us."

Conley missed six games this season with a toe injury, but all three Lawrence North guards said his absence contributed to the group's development.

"That helped a lot," said Morris, a 6-foot senior who averages 4.6 points and 2.6 assists. "That time gave me a lot of confidence and made us a stronger corps, especially with (senior) Brandon Coffer and (junior) Brandon McDonald. They also got more time.

"Then when Mike came back, everything clicked together and we're on a roll."

Added Conley, "It took a couple of games for people to step into roles when I was out, but that gave Tyler and Brandon some time to run the team. Now I don't have to bring the ball up every time. We all can play the point or the two (shooting guard). We're all comfortable in either place, and the coaches are comfortable with that, too."

Fine clearly prefers his trio: the 6-2 Daniel, a hard-nosed leader who averages 5.1 assists; the 6-foot Riddle, a dead-eye shooter who is hitting 41 percent from 3-point range (88-of-213); and the 5-11 Miller, a slashing scorer and quick defender.

Still, he respects the Lawrence North backcourt.

"Their three guards are as good as any in the state," Fine said. "It should be a classic battle of two great teams led by three guards apiece."

Call Star reporter Pat McKee at (317) 444-6182.

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That team is simply loaded.
 
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3/27/2005

CLASS 4A: Lawrence North 63, Muncie Central 52
Wildcats stay focused, repeat as champions
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</TD></TR><TR><TD>Lawrence North coach Jack Keefer gets a hug from Brandon McPherson in the closing seconds of the game with the state title secure. -- Mike Fender / The Star


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Class 4A: Wildcats stay focused, repeat as champions
Wildcats looking forward to '06
Class 3A:
Zeller answers from halfcourt
Class 2A:
Rangers love feeling blue
Class A:
Bulldogs' defense methodical in title game
Notebook: Film crew on hand for Oden, Hoosier hysteria
Preps Plus news, school pages and more
Ask the expert: Pat McKee
Boys scoreboard

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Class 1A photo gallery
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Class 2A photo gallery
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Class 3A photo gallery
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Class 4A photo gallery

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By Pat McKee
<SCRIPT language=JavaScript><!--document.write(''+'pat.mckee'+'@'+'indystar.com'+'');//--></SCRIPT>[email protected]
March 27, 2005


It was a midweek practice, and coach Jack Keefer had a pointed message for his Lawrence North High School boys basketball team: Winning starts now and it's all about mind-set, he told them forcefully.

Led by 29 points and nine rebounds from superstar Greg Oden, the third-ranked Wildcats showed Saturday night they understood clearly with a 63-52 victory over No. 2 Muncie Central for the Class 4A championship before a crowd of 18,345 at Conseco Fieldhouse.

It was the second consecutive title and third overall for Lawrence North, which finished 24-2 and turned what was touted as a potential 'Cat fight into a one-sided affair with efficient offense and suffocating defense.

Senior Brandon McPherson contributed 11 points for the Wildcats, who also got seven from junior Mike Conley and six each from seniors Donald Cloutier and Tyler Morris.

Junior reserve Terry Jenkins topped the Bearcats (27-2) with 12 points, while senior Ty Riddle had 11.

"It was all about focus, and we had focus all week," said Conley, who played tough defense on Riddle and limited the Muncie shooter to five points through three quarters. "We never had a soft practice because we had one goal -- win state. Because of that, we took it at them from the opening tip."

Besides intensity, another big part of the plan was feeding Oden, who finished by hitting 14-of-19 shots that included five powerful dunks. The 7-foot junior helped stake his team to a 25-17 lead with nine first-half points, then added 10 points in each of the third and fourth quarters en route to a 4A title-game scoring record. That topped the 28 points by Marion's Zach Randolph in a 2000 win over Bloomington North.

"The plan was to move the ball around, and, if I was one-on-one, pass me the ball," said Oden, who also added six blocks. "But we came together as a team, and it's a great feeling."

"Nobody could really guard Greg, so it was silly not to get him the ball," said Cloutier, who was part of a high-low post attack. "We wanted to reverse the ball and then go to Greg. Once Greg touched the ball, then it was fair game for (the rest of) our shooters."

Muncie Central coach Matt Fine described Oden as terrific and praised Lawrence North for its performance. The Wildcats hit 61.5 percent (24-of-39) while limiting the Bearcats to 36.5 percent (19-of-52).

"With their guys we had to play almost a perfect game, and we didn't do that," said Fine, whose team was making the school's 23rd State Finals appearance and seeking its ninth state championship. "And with Greg, what can you do against him? We didn't rotate as quickly as we needed to. But give them credit. They executed very well."

With Oden dominating inside, the Wildcats pushed their advantage to 45-31 late in the third quarter and led by 10 entering the final period. From there, they twice pushed the lead to as many as 17 to end any doubt.

"To win the second time might be more satisfying because it's so darned hard," said Keefer, whose team won its first championship in 1989. "You have such a target on your back, but the kids met the challenge."

For the season, and for the week.

Call Star reporter Pat McKee at (317) 444-6182.


<TABLE rules=all width="100%" border=0 frame=box><TBODY><TR><TD>MUNCIE C.</TD><TD>Min</TD><TD>FG-A</TD><TD>FT-A</TD><TD>OR-T</TD><TD>A</TD><TD>F</TD><TD>T</TD><TD>Pts</TD></TR><TR><TD>Brown</TD><TD>23</TD><TD>1-5</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-2</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>2</TD></TR><TR><TD>Armstrong</TD><TD>20</TD><TD>4-8</TD><TD>2-4</TD><TD>1-2</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>5</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>10</TD></TR><TR><TD>Miller</TD><TD>31</TD><TD>3-16</TD><TD>3-5</TD><TD>2-3</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>10</TD></TR><TR><TD>Daniel</TD><TD>21</TD><TD>1-3</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>1-4</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>2</TD></TR><TR><TD>Riddle</TD><TD>31</TD><TD>4-9</TD><TD>1-2</TD><TD>0-1</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>11</TD></TR><TR><TD>Rush</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>1-1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>1-1</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>2</TD></TR><TR><TD>Botts</TD><TD>8</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>1-2</TD><TD>1-1</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>1</TD></TR><TR><TD>Jenkins</TD><TD>18</TD><TD>5-7</TD><TD>1-2</TD><TD>2-4</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>12</TD></TR><TR><TD>Freeman</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0-1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>Mills</TD><TD>5</TD><TD>0-2</TD><TD>2-2</TD><TD>0-1</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>2</TD></TR><TR><TD>Coatie</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>TEAM</TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD>4-5</TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD>Totals</TD><TD></TD><TD>19-52</TD><TD>10-17</TD><TD>12-24</TD><TD>8</TD><TD>17</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>52</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Three-point shooting: 4-18 (Riddle 2-5, Jenkins 1-2, Miller 1-9, Daniel 0-1, Freeman 0-1). Steals: 7 (Miller 3, Brown, Armstrong, Riddle, Jenkins). Blocked shots: None. Technical fouls: None.

<TABLE rules=all width="100%" border=0 frame=box><TBODY><TR><TD>LAWRENCE N.</TD><TD>Min</TD><TD>FG-A</TD><TD>FT-A</TD><TD>OR-T</TD><TD>A</TD><TD>F</TD><TD>T</TD><TD>Pts</TD></TR><TR><TD>Morris</TD><TD>27</TD><TD>2-4</TD><TD>0-3</TD><TD>2-9</TD><TD>6</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>6</TD></TR><TR><TD>Cloutier</TD><TD>22</TD><TD>1-1</TD><TD>4-4</TD><TD>1-7</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>6</TD></TR><TR><TD>Oden</TD><TD>30</TD><TD>14-19</TD><TD>1-3</TD><TD>3-9</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>29</TD></TR><TR><TD>McPherson</TD><TD>28</TD><TD>3-6</TD><TD>5-5</TD><TD>0-2</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>11</TD></TR><TR><TD>Conley</TD><TD>28</TD><TD>2-6</TD><TD>2-3</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>7</TD></TR><TR><TD>McDonald</TD><TD>6</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>Owens</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>Means</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>Coffer</TD><TD>5</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>Wallace</TD><TD>10</TD><TD>1-1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-3</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>2</TD></TR><TR><TD>Bobo</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0-1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD></TR><TR><TD>Stewart</TD><TD>1</TD><TD>1-1</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0-0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>0</TD><TD>2</TD></TR><TR><TD>TEAM</TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD>2-4</TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD></TD><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD>Totals</TD><TD></TD><TD>24-39</TD><TD>12-18</TD><TD>8-34</TD><TD>15</TD><TD>17</TD><TD>14</TD><TD>63</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Three-point shooting: 3-6 (Morris 2-2, Conley 1-2, Oden 0-1, McPherson 0-1). Steals: 1 (McDonald). Blocked shots: 8 (Oden 6, Conley 2). Technical fouls: None

<TABLE rules=all width="100%" border=0 frame=box><TBODY><TR><TD>Muncie Central</TD><TD>9</TD><TD>8</TD><TD>18</TD><TD>17</TD><TD>--</TD><TD>52</TD></TR><TR><TD>Lawrence North</TD><TD>12</TD><TD>13</TD><TD>20</TD><TD>18</TD><TD>--</TD><TD>63</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Officials: John Goss, Ray Tebbe, Paul Meagher. Attendance: 18,345.

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Oden finished with 29 points, 9 Rebounds and 6 Blocks. They will be tough again next year.

Here are some pics of the game...




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Yertle said:
Come on AGE LIMIT!!!! For those of you who are more in-the-know than I am, what are the odds that the NBA puts a 20 year limit before Oden enters the draft?

seems like a decent chance. however, it is going to kill a lot of programs when taken in conjunction with the ncaa's new academic standards. its going to be difficult for many programs to recruit kids that are a one and done, or two and done at best, knowing that they need a certain grad rate.
 
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LINK

3/29/05

Oden tops All-State team again
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Boys All-State
Girls All-State </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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Associated Press
March 28, 2005


For the second straight year, 7-footer Greg Oden led Lawrence North to the Class 4A championship, and for the second straight year he was the top vote-getter on The Associated Press All-State basketball team.

Oden, still just a junior, set a 4A championship record with 29 points in a 63-52 victory over Muncie Central on Saturday. Even though All-State voting was completed before then, a panel of sports writers put Oden at the top of a dominating front line that also includes 6-11 Luke Zeller of 3A champion Washington and 6-10 Josh McRoberts of Carmel.

"He's a talent. I don't know when we've had a talent like that come through Indiana," Lawrence North coach Jack Keefer said.

"He works hard," Keefer said of the reason for Oden's success. "He comes in every morning at 6:30 and does his job. He's very unselfish. He's just a neat kid."

Oden's Lawrence North teammate Mike Conley, also a junior, was a second-team All-State selection in the voting announced today.

Except for Oden, the first team was loaded with seniors, all Division I college recruits.

Zeller, a Notre Dame recruit who averaged 19 points and nine rebounds a game, led the Hatchets to the No. 1 ranking in Class 3A and scored the winning basket on a 3-pointer at the buzzer ending overtime in a 74-72 victory over Plymouth.

McRoberts, a Duke recruit, led Carmel to the No. 7 ranking in 4A and a 21-4 record, losing in the sectional tourney finals. Both Zeller and McRoberts were third-team All-State picks last year as juniors.

Joining them on the AP first team this season are a pair of 5-foot-11 guards, Dominic James of Richmond and Deonta Vaughn of Indianapolis Arlington.

James, who has signed to play at Marquette, led the state in scoring at 31.1 points a game for the 4A No. 9-ranked Red Devils. Vaughn, an Indiana recruit, averaged 23 points a game and led Arlington to the 4A No. 1 ranking, with its only loss to Lawrence North in the tourney sectionals.

Besides Oden and Conley, the only other underclassman on any of the AP boys teams is sophomore Eric Gordon of Indianapolis North Central, who was fourth in the state in scoring at 25.5 points a game.

Joining Conley and Gordon on the AP second team are seniors Jordan Armstrong of Muncie Central, Jason Holsinger of Class A champion Lapel and Arman Bassett of Terre Haute South, which lost to Lawrence North in the 4A semistate.

Third-team picks, all seniors, are Kyle Benge of Plymouth, the state's second-leading scorer at 27 points a game, Adam Gore of Monrovia, Adam Arnold of Bellmont, Wacey Hall of Evansville Mater Dei and Darren Cloud of Evansville Reitz.

Armstrong is a Southern Illinois recruit, Holsinger and Hall are headed to Evansville, Gore will play at Cornell and Arnold is headed to Indiana State.

James, Hall, Conley, Benge, Armstrong and Arnold all were high honorable-mention All-State picks last year.

This year's girls' All-State team also includes a flock of major college recruits, including 6-5 Amber Harris of two-time defending 4A champion North Central, a junior who has already declared for Purdue. Harris was a second-team selection last year.

Also on this year's first team are Miss Basketball Jodi Howell of Alexandria, a Purdue recruit and the state's scoring leader at 28.7 points a game; Cassie Kerns of Valparaiso, also a senior who is headed to Connecticut; Kimberly Roberson of Indianapolis Cathedral, who will play at Indiana; and Melissa Lechlitner of South Bend St. Joseph's, a junior who has declared for Notre Dame.

The girls' second team is headed by another future Boilermaker, 6-6 Ta'Shia Phillips of Indianapolis Brebeuf, a sophomore who averaged 20 points and 13 rebounds a game.

Joining her on the second team are Cincinnati recruit Kahla Roudebush of Hamilton Southeastern, Notre Dame recruit Ashley Barlow of Indianapolis Pike, Florida State recruit Mara Freshour of Brown County and junior Dee Dee Jernigan of East Chicago.

Third-team picks are Aimee Litka of St. Joseph's, Dana Beaven of Corydon, FahKara Malone of Evansville Memorial, Stefanie Gerardot of Fort Wayne Luers and Porchia Green of Arlington.

Phillips, Litka, Malone, Jernigan, Lechlitner, Kerns and Gerardot were all high honorable-mention picks a year ago.

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SCOUT.COM

3/30/05

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Midwest No. 1 Lawrence North was led by Greg Oden

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Final Regional Basketball Rankings
By Jon Mahoney
Date: Mar 29, 2005

Find out who finished as the Top 10 high school basketball teams in the East, Southeast, Midwest, Southwest and West in our final 2004-05 regional basketball rankings.
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No. 1 Lawrence North captured its second straight state title with a 63-52 over Muncie Central (Muncie, Ind.) in the Class 4A state championship. Junior center Greg Oden led the way with 29 points and nine rebounds.
 
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Cold Pizza

Greg Oden was just on Cold Pizza being interviewed and he was showing no indication that he wanted to leave early. He said he wants to go to college to improve his game so when he does go to the NBA he would be the best player h can be. Basically saying if the money is there now its going to be there later. He also stated that Indiana Univeristy is probably in the lead as of right now. So I guess its a good thing he wants to go to college but not a good thing for us that Indiana is in the lead. I guess we will see.


The Mongoose
 
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SCOUT.COM$

4/7/05

Gatorade announced yesterday that Greg Oden of Lawrence North (Indianapolis, Ind.) has earned the 2005 Gatorade National Boys’ Basketball Player of the Year.

:bow: :bow: :bow: :bow: :bow: :bow: :bow: :bow:

LINK

Oden matches James instead of seeing him
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</TD></TR><TR><TD>Lawrence North's Greg Oden (above) joins LeBron James as the only high school juniors to win the Gatorade award. -- Mike Fender / The Star
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By Pat McKee
<SCRIPT language=JavaScript><!--document.write(''+'pat.mckee'+'@'+'indystar.com'+'');//--></SCRIPT>[email protected]
April 7, 2005


The honors keep coming for Lawrence North High School basketball standout Greg Oden.

A 7-foot junior who led the Wildcats to a second consecutive Class 4A state championship, Oden will be recognized as the Gatorade National Boys Basketball Player of the Year during a presentation at his school today.

"I had no idea I would win," said Oden, who was informed of his selection Wednesday evening at a surprise gathering at his home arranged by his mother, Zoe.

"Although I knew I was in the running, I had forgotten all about it. I thought somebody else already had won."

Oden, who had considered attending Wednesday's Indiana Pacers-Cleveland Cavaliers game at Conseco Fieldhouse to watch 20-year-old Cavaliers star LeBron James, said his mother nixed those plans earlier in the week. He again sought permission to go to the game earlier Wednesday.

"I walked in and told her this was my last chance to see LeBron," said Oden, 17, who was greeted by about 30 family members, teammates and other friends when he arrived home about 7:30 p.m. "But she told me I had a dinner, so I said, 'OK.'

"What I don't know is how everyone held this from me. Everybody knew, and not one person told me. I don't think I could have kept this secret, not something big like this."

Oden is just the second junior to receive the Gatorade award, which began in the 1985-86 school year. The other was James, from Akron (Ohio) St. Vincent-St. Mary, in 2002.

"He should just keep doing what he's doing," James said after the Cavaliers fell to the Pacers 98-77.

"I've heard of him. I have not seen him play yet, but I've heard he's a great player. As long as you've got good guys around you, that will help you a lot."

Pacers forward Fred Jones, who attended Lawrence North games this season, wasn't surprised by the award.

"I definitely expect to see him in the league someday soon," Jones said. "He's a great player right now, as you can tell. He and LeBron; LeBron's great company. To be the only two juniors to be named that is an honor."

Oden, who averaged 20 points, 9.6 rebounds and 3.7 blocks in a 24-2 season, last week was named national co-Player of the Year by Parade magazine. He and Carmel senior Josh McRoberts are among 10 finalists for the Naismith Trophy as national player of the year. That winner will be named Friday.

Oden joins Damon Bailey of Bedford North Lawrence (1990) and Jared Jeffries of Bloomington North (2000) as Indiana players to win Gatorade's boys basketball national award.
 
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Scout $

4/7/05

From SchoolSports.com...Greg has been named the 2005 Gatorade National Boys’ Basketball Player of the Year. He is only the second junior to win the award (you can guess who the other was...and he won it again during his senior year).
 
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