Chicago Sun-Times

AND JUSTICE FALL ALL: 1-32 SEEDING

Crete-Monee’s Konecki likes change for football playoffs

- @mikeclarkp­reps MIKE CLARK

When it comes to brackets, Crete-Monee coach John Konecki is a firm believer in the bigger, the better.

So he welcomed the news last week that the IHSA will use 1-32 seeding for all classes in the football playoffs starting this fall.

Most recently, there had been 1-32 seeding for the two biggest classes — 7A and 8A — and two 1-16 brackets for the other six classes, based on a north-south geographic split.

The IHSA has been tinkering with various seeding formulas for years. At one point, it used eight-team quadrants.

“I was glad to see that go away,” said Konecki, who has guided the Warriors to a 7022 record, eight playoff berths and two state runner-up finishes in 6A since 2013. “I never thought that was the most fair for us.”

He also wasn’t a fan of the north and south brackets, partly because it was so hard to predict where the IHSA would draw the dividing line.

Ranking the qualifiers in each class 1-32 and pairing them on that basis “is a truer representa­tion as opposed to having that weird cutoff line,” Konecki said.

Crete always has been in the south bracket, but Konecki got a big surprise last fall when the Warriors drew St. Ignatius — a team he figured for sure would go north — as a first-round opponent.

“About Week 5, I get my notebook out” to start scouting potential opponents, Konecki said. “I like the part of ‘Who are we going to see?’ I’m never right.”

That’s usually a function of guessing where the line will be for the north-south split incorrectl­y. With 1-32 seeding, he expects his prediction­s to be more accurate.

Konecki at least has been sure of what class he’s scouting from year to year. Cary-Grove coach Brad Seaburg has been in four title games since 2012 — three in 6A and one in 7A — winning 6A titles in 2018 and last fall.

The new bracketing format won’t change the Trojans’ traditiona­l perch on the 7A/6A bubble. But Seaburg likes it nonetheles­s. “I think it’s good for the state,” he said. One byproduct will be fewer early-round playoff rematches of regular-season games, something Cary-Grove has seen a lot of — especially against neighborin­g power Prairie Ridge.

Now Seaburg will have to widen his net in terms of prepping for the playoffs.

“We would never have thought to scout a team like Lemont,” Seaburg said. “Great team, great program. But the odds of us playing them were low.”

Quinn’s homecoming

After stops in Kentucky, Florida, California and Louisiana, Marty Quinn is coming back home.

Quinn is the new coach at De La Salle, replacing Mike Boehm, who resigned after eight seasons.

Quinn played at Mount Carmel and Lake Forest College before embarking on a coaching career that included stops at his alma mater and Marist, high schools in California (Orange Lutheran) and Louisiana (St. John’s Catholic in Plaquemine­s) and two colleges (Ave Maria in Florida, where he was head coach, and Kentucky Wesleyan).

De La Salle principal Tom Schergen, who was at Marist during Quinn’s time there, approached him about the Meteors’ job, and the chance to return to Chicago was too good to turn down.

“Getting back to family [was important],” said Quinn, whose most recent job was in Louisiana. “My mom, my brother, nieces and nephews, cousins and a lot of friends are still in the area.”

De La Salle has had eight IHSA playoff berths overall, two since 2009. But Quinn sees similariti­es to Marist, which took off after hiring Pat Dunne in 2008.

“Everybody feels De La Salle can be a program that can take it to the next level,” he said.

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 ?? SUN-TIMES ?? Crete-Monee coach John Konecki says 1-32 seeding for all eight classes in the IHSA football playoffs is a welcome change.
SUN-TIMES Crete-Monee coach John Konecki says 1-32 seeding for all eight classes in the IHSA football playoffs is a welcome change.

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