Chicago Sun-Times

Tigers show they still have bite

- Mobrien@suntimes.com MICHAEL O’BRIEN | @michaelsob­rien

Joliet West’s hopes for this season were much higher than almost anyone outside the program realizes. The Tigers expected to return the core of a team that beat Simeon at the Pontiac Holiday Tournament. A few pieces were added and everyone was a year older. The state finals in Champaign were the goal.

COVID-19 hit those plans hard. It has been a challenge for every school, but there probably isn’t a team in the area that lost as much as Joliet West. Jeremy Fears Jr., a top20 nationally ranked sophomore, transferre­d to La Lumiere in Indiana back in October when the season was delayed.

Senior Trent Howland, a strong and athletic force in the post, is sitting out the season. He’s a major football recruit who has signed with Indiana. The Tigers lost a transfer to Simeon as well.

Howland was on the bench watching the game and Fears, on spring break from La Lumiere, was watching in the stands. So the old team was in the gym but not on the floor.

The program is stacked with talented young players and several of them have larger roles than expected this season, but it was seniors Ashawn Burbridge and Jaiden Lee who led the way in a 57-45 victory Tuesday against visiting Oswego East.

“We work on rebounding as a team a ton in practice and we knew that is what we had to do today,” Lee said.

Burbridge is just 6-3, but he always has had a nose for the ball and has matured into a game-changing force as a rebounder. He scored 16 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. Lee added 12 points and nine rebounds for the Tigers (7-2).

“[Burbridge] has been a double-double machine,” Joliet West coach Jeremy Kreiger said. “We knew that [Oswego East] was outrebound­ed in five of their wins this season, so we wanted to be able to dominate the paint on both sides of the floor. [Burbridge] and Jaiden Lee do an unbelievab­le job of getting second-chance opportunit­ies.”

The Tigers led by seven at halftime, opened the third quarter with two quick baskets and never looked back. They outrebound­ed

Oswego East 39-18, but turned the ball over 24 times.

“That’s a credit to Oswego East,” Kreiger said. “We haven’t faced a team with equal athleticis­m and the length and wingspans they have. Before this game we were averaging 11 turnovers a game so that was sort of an aberration.”

Patrick Robinson and Odin Lium each scored 10 for the Wolves (6-2).

“We lost a lot from last year and what we

thought we would have this year and kind of had to put it back together from the bottom,” Burbridge said. “It was great to see [Fears] give us the support and come back and watch us.”

Kreiger said he noticed several players on his team smile when Fears first walked in the gym.

“They still love each other,” Kreiger said. “As much as [Fears] is experienci­ng success out there, he misses this. He was born and raised here. His younger brother is going to be here. [Fears] spoke with them before the game. They spoke at halftime. He wants to be out there. He watches our games on the stream. So yeah, it meant a lot to the team because they miss them. They miss each other.”

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 ?? KIRSTEN STICKNEY/SUN-TIMES ?? Joliet West’s Jaiden Lee (12 points, nine rebounds) drives past an Oswego East defender on Tuesday in Joliet.
KIRSTEN STICKNEY/SUN-TIMES Joliet West’s Jaiden Lee (12 points, nine rebounds) drives past an Oswego East defender on Tuesday in Joliet.

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