Chicago Sun-Times

Phoenix rising for st. ignatius

- BY MICHAEL O’BRIEN | MOBRIEN@suntimes.com | @michaelsob­rien

CHAMPAIGN — Phoenix Gill wasn’t wearing orange and blue Friday. St. Ignatius has a maroon-and-gold color scheme. But he did have No. 13 on his back at State Farm Center, just 50 or 60 feet below where dad Kendall’s 13 hangs in the rafters.

Kendall was sitting with the other parents, wearing a St. Ignatius baseball hat and Illinois letterman’s jacket as he hung on every play in the Class 3A state semifinal game against Simeon. The Wolfpack lost, but sophomore Phoenix scored a game-high 21 points and announced himself as one of the state’s best young players.

“It was special,” Phoenix said. “But honestly, I’m pretty mad. I could have done more to help the team win. But it is a special moment for sure.”

Before the game dad reminisced about his own trip to the state finals in Champaign back at Rich Central. He led the Olympians to a second-place finish in 1986.

“I was in the same building in the same position 37 years ago when my brother and I competed,” Kendall said. “I know what he is going through.”

St. Ignatius is a fantastic academic school, but its athletics teams have achieved a new level of success the past two years. Gill was a freshman on the team that finished third in Class 3A last season. He didn’t play at state.

“Being at state two years in a row is incredible,” Kendall said. “I didn’t know that would happen when we picked St. Ignatius so that’s been really fortunate.”

Gill had a reputation last year as one of the state’s better young players. But he wasn’t a highly ranked grade-school superstar.

“I didn’t have him playing much AAU,” Kendall said. “I’m not a big believer in AAU, that’s why he only plays one or two tournament­s a year. I believe the summer is for building basketball IQ and skills.”

Kendall believes a lot of the often-injured NBA stars played too much basketball when they were young.

“The kids play way too much today,” Gill said. “Phoenix will take a month off after today. It’s not about where you are ranked now, in high school. It’s about where you finish as an adult.”

Phoenix averaged 11.1 points this season and was the Wolfpack’s second-leading scorer.

“I’m not one who looks at the rankings and all that stuff,” he said. “What people say about me, really I try to tune that out. I’m just looking to what I can do for my team and what I can do to help us win on the court.”

Gill, a 6-3 guard, clearly took a step forward on the big stage in Champaign. He already has a scholarshi­p offer from Illinois.

“He’s really grown up a lot throughout the course of the year,” St. Ignatius coach Matt Monroe said. “He’s worked extremely hard to go from a player that wasn’t on the radar with recruiting services to becoming one of the top-rated kids in his class.”

None of the area’s major stars advanced to the state finals, so Gill was one of the most intriguing players for neutral fans.

“He’s playing with a lot of confidence now,” Monroe said. “He’s been great at making decisions and he’s really matured as a player. He has a great appreciati­on for the name that goes on the back of his jersey. But he’s also his own individual.”

Kendall, a 15-year NBA veteran hasn’t been ruffling any feathers in the St. Ignatius program.

“Kendall is an all-star parent,” Monroe said. “He’s super-supportive. He is extremely gracious. He will help whenever we need him, and he has never oversteppe­d his bounds. I couldn’t ask for better parents than Kendall and his wife, Wendy.” ✶

 ?? KIRSTEN STICKNEY/SUN-TIMES ?? Kendall Gill, Phoenix’s father, believes young players would be better served by a lighter summer schedule.
KIRSTEN STICKNEY/SUN-TIMES Kendall Gill, Phoenix’s father, believes young players would be better served by a lighter summer schedule.
 ?? KIRSTEN STICKNEY/SUN-TIMES ?? St. Ignatius’ Phoenix Gill scored a game-high 21 points in a Class 3A semifinal loss to Simeon on Friday.
KIRSTEN STICKNEY/SUN-TIMES St. Ignatius’ Phoenix Gill scored a game-high 21 points in a Class 3A semifinal loss to Simeon on Friday.
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