Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hilltopper­s set tempo early to advance to final

- Zac Bellman

MADISON – After standing in the wings of the Kohl Center for upward of a half hour as the longest WIAA state tournament game in history drew to a close after four overtimes, Marquette was ready to set a much different pace in its 67-60 Division 1 semifinal win over Kettle Moraine.

Senior Hilltopper­s guard Nolan Minessale exploded to the rack for a dunk on the opening possession, which set the tone for his 6-of-6 start from the field, all in the paint.

“Right before the game, we just got our guys really energized, and we wanted to set the tempo,” Minessale said.

Marquette coach Casey Kowalewski said it was evident the Lasers were trying to run his efficiently shooting squad off the three-point line, but the early success in the paint created a game of cat and mouse.

“This group all year long has been an outstandin­g shooting team, and certainly that makes Nolan’s job easier sometimes by spreading the court, and vice-versa, he draws the gravity towards him and he finds the open shooter,” Kowalewski said.

Both methods found great success for the Hilltopper­s in the first half, as Marquette took a 37-24 advantage into the break.

Kettle Moraine drew within 58-55 with a 5-0 run on a Roman Thompson three and layup from Nathan Vuillaume. Marquette answered with a 5-0 run on a Ryan Meehan three and a dunk by Minessale. The Lasers’ last gasp came on a three by Will Stuckey to pull back within 63-60 with 26 seconds left, but Marquette’s Peter McDivett converted two free throws on the ensuing possession essentiall­y sealed it.

Kettle Moraine head coach Brian Richert found plenty of positives after a season in which the Lasers set a program mark for wins (25) and advanced to state for the second straight year after no appearance­s before last season. The Lasers did so this year without two-time all-Classic 8 Conference senior guard Drew Wagner, who was recovering from shoulder surgery until the final two games of the season.

“We set the bar pretty high for the future,” said Richert, who is in his first season as the Lasers’ head coach. “These kids are amazing, their legacy here is going to be unbelievab­le, what they have accomplish­ed. Not a lot of teams can say that they went back-to-back in basketball and also won a state championsh­ip in football.”

 ?? JOVANNY HERNANDEZ / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Marquette’s Nolan Minessale dunks during the second half of the WIAA Division 1 boys basketball state semifinal game against Kettle Moraine on Friday at the Kohl Center in Madison.
JOVANNY HERNANDEZ / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Marquette’s Nolan Minessale dunks during the second half of the WIAA Division 1 boys basketball state semifinal game against Kettle Moraine on Friday at the Kohl Center in Madison.

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