Chicago Sun-Times

Former basketball standout at Evanston high school fatally shot in Rogers Park

- BY MICHAEL O’BRIEN AND EMMANUEL CAMARILLO Michael O’Brien is a Sun-Times staff reporter. Emmanuel Camarillo is a CST Wire reporter.

Former Evanston basketball standout Ryan Bost was fatally shot Monday in Rogers Park on the North Side, police said.

About 7 p.m., the 20-year- old was in the back seat of a vehicle in the 6700 block of North Newgard Avenue when someone approached and fired shots after an exchange of words, Chicago police said.

Bost was struck in the chest and taken to St. Francis Hospital in Evanston, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Area Three detectives are investigat­ing. Bost, a 2019 Evanston high school graduate, was a three-year starting guard on the basketball team. He helped the Wildkits to a second-place finish in the state his senior year and a third-place finish his junior year.

“He was a person that was always putting others before himself,” Evanston basketball coach Mike Ellis said. “He was just such a calming factor in every place we went, including practices that were heated and chaotic. And in timeouts in games when teams were going on runs against us. Everybody was pretty vocal at times and there was always Ryan there soaking it in, very stoic. And when he did speak everyone paid attention.”

In the long history of Evanston basketball, no player won more games than Bost. He teamed with fellow 2019 graduates Jaheim Holden and Lance Jones to win more than 100 games.

“Lance, Jaheim and Ryan won 110 games in four years, the most in the history of the school,” Ellis said. “And his grandfathe­r Bob Bost was a legend in the community. He was the one holdover on the coaching staff that took me under his wing to bridge the past and the future of Evanston basketball.” That trio was as close off the court as on. “That’s what sparked the chemistry we had on the court,” Holden said. “It was all that time together, everything that made us friends made us a better team. But it was about so much more than basketball.”

Holden said Bost was “one of those guys you never really caught on a bad day. He was someone that you could depend on. He’d do anything for you.”

“He smiled 24/7,” Holden said. “He could eat anything. He loved Raising Cane and Buffalo Joe’s. He’d always do silly things like dance. We just enjoyed being around each other.”

Holden said Bost attended Post University, where he had a basketball scholarshi­p, but that he left and came home in December.

Bost’s younger brother Rashawn is currently a junior on the Evanston basketball team.

“It’s challengin­g right now to try and make sure all the kids are OK,” Ellis said. “If we had in-school learning we’d be meeting and just able to be with one another and talk. We are going to do a Zoom meeting to try to bring everybody together, but a Zoom meeting doesn’t have the same influence it would in person.”

Ellis said that a large group of nearly 100 gathered outside St. Francis hospital last night when word got around that Bost had been hurt. Ellis said that Bost’s parents weren’t allowed in the hospital.

“It was tough,” Ellis said. “I don’t know if that was due to the investigat­ion or [COVID-19], but they were wearing masks.”

 ??  ?? Ryan Bost
Ryan Bost
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Evanston’s Ryan Bost (24) gets a steal against Belleville West in the 2019 Class 4A state championsh­ip game in Peoria.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Evanston’s Ryan Bost (24) gets a steal against Belleville West in the 2019 Class 4A state championsh­ip game in Peoria.

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