Miami Herald (Sunday)

Underdog Belen Jesuit basketball wins 1st state title

- BY ANDRE FERNANDEZ afernandez@miamiheral­d.com

LAKELAND

The “rat race” is won. Belen Jesuit basketball coach Gaston “Chachi” Rodriguez joked all season that while other teams have “horses,” his undersized roster was like a bunch of “rats” outrunning and causing mayhem for opponents on their way to victories.

“I can’t make them grow,” Rodriguez said with a laugh. “We have to play that way.”

On Saturday night, those underdog Wolverines delivered a moment Belen Jesuit had been waiting to experience for more than half a century.

Led by senior Javi Rosell’s 22 points, Belen Jesuit followed its familiar script to a convincing 49-30 victory over Daytona Beach Mainland to secure the school’s first state championsh­ip in the sport.

“This team is a special group of young men led by seven amazing seniors who have done a lot to make sure everyone feels like a part of this group,” Rodriguez said. “It was a beautiful thing to watch them this year and watching them enjoy it.”

Belen Jesuit (28-4) had won several state championsh­ips in sports such as soccer, cross-country, track and field, swimming and water polo.

But such a championsh­ip in a major sport like basketball had eluded the all-boys private Catholic school, which opened in Cuba in 1854 and moved to the United States in the early 1960s after Fidel Castro rose to power on the island.

Before this season, Belen had never even advanced past the second round of the playoffs. The

Wolverines won their first district championsh­ip in 17 seasons, which Rodriguez admitted was the only goal he set for his team at the start of the season.

“One of our guys said, ‘Coach, it might be cool to get past the regional semifinal,’ ” Rodriguez said. “We didn’t plan past that either, but each step of the way people kept saying we had a chance to do this and that. We just cared about the one game in front of us.”

The significan­ce of the moment wasn’t lost on Belen’s coaches, players and even longtime school officials like athletic director Carlos Barquin, who recently announced he would retire from that position at the end of the school year after 53 years.

Barquin shed tears of joy as he watched Belen’s players race toward their raucous fans, who took over nearly an entire side of the stands of the arena for the second consecutiv­e Wolverines’ game and even chanted “This is our house” before the final seconds expired.

“This is the best feeling in the world to do this performanc­e that might not have been as eye-catching on a box score, but nonetheles­s was vital to the team’s defensive performanc­e.

Ametepe, one of two senior starters for a predominan­tly young Riviera Prep team, totaled eight points, six rebounds and three steals. But he also stopped talented forward Christian Watts, who came in averaging 13.4 points per game. Watts scored only seven points and had six turnovers.

“[Watts] kept bumping me and trying to foul me out, but I kept my composure,” with my brothers and really my family,” Rosell said.

Rodriguez, as he has multiple times during his team’s postseason run in recent weeks, couldn’t hold back his emotions on the court as he shared hugs with players and coaches.

For Rodriguez, the victory was another exclusive place in the state history books.

Rodriguez, who also won state titles at nowdefunct Hialeah Champagnat Catholic (2000) and Miami Coral Reef (2009), became the first coach in South Florida and believed to be the first statewide to win state titles at three different schools.

“He coaches to his strengths,” guard Kevin Garcia said. “He knows what we have. We like to get gritty and ferocious and we play to those strengths. His coaching style and that flexibilit­y and trust in his players is what’s made him successful.”

And Rodriguez did it with a roster with no players taller than 6-4 or any major Division-I offers for basketball. Sophomore Bryce Fitzgerald, a safety on Belen’s football team with multiple D-I offers to play that sport, became a Ametepe said. “I knew we needed to play team ball. You don’t know how much this means to me.”

Shahbaz called Ametepe the “heart and soul” of his team for the way he carried himself during his career on and off the court. The coach nearly got emotional knowing Ametepe had played his last game in a Riviera Prep uniform.

“I’ll probably shed that tear tonight that this was the last game coaching

Joe. He’s so unselfish and doesn’t care about anything but winning,” Shahbaz that’s what led to our defensive percentage.”

Just like Riviera Prep, which also won its first state title on Saturday, it might be only the start for Mater Lakes in terms of championsh­ips since the Bears have only two seniors on their roster. vital contributo­r as he was again Saturday with 13 points including 11 of 12 free throws made.

And yet Belen made up any potential height or talent gap continuous­ly on its way to Lakeland.

The Wolverines followed it up Saturday two days after winning their semifinal against Orlando Jones with a buzzer-beater by Alejandro Lopez that conjured memories of N.C. State University’s memorable one in the 1983 men’s basketball national championsh­ip game.

Belen methodical­ly broke open a close game that was tied after one quarter, recording 13 steals and contributi­ng to 23 turnovers overall for a Mainland team that was making its first appearance at state in 25 years.

“All of us have always felt like we were kind of behind with other big basketball schools being the horses in front,” Garcia said. “We loved that and we embraced that all year and we trusted one another, diving for loose balls, causing turnovers. Being the underdogs is something we pride ourselves on and look where we are now.”

Andre C. Fernandez: @FernandezA­ndreC

said. “Joe put it on display tonight as [Watts] had a rough night and that’s because of how physical he was with him.

“If we don’t have this guy, I’m not sure we’re here right now. His motor never stops and it’s contagious. Everyone on this team takes a small piece of what he brings to the table. We lost by one point last year and he didn’t have his best game. Every single day he sent the same message that he was not going to let it happen again.”

Andre C. Fernandez: @FernandezA­ndreC

“This doesn’t even feel real to me knowing that all the work we put in has paid off,” Reid said. “I know we’ll be back again next year — I’ll make sure we are.”

Andre C. Fernandez: @FernandezA­ndreC

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Belen Jesuit players celebrate after routting Daytona Beach Mainland 49-30 for the Class 5A state championsh­ip at the RP Funding Center in Lakeland on Saturday.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Belen Jesuit players celebrate after routting Daytona Beach Mainland 49-30 for the Class 5A state championsh­ip at the RP Funding Center in Lakeland on Saturday.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Riviera Prep’s Fernando Romero (23), Dante Allen (35), Cooper Josefsberg (3) and Emi Moreno celebrate after defeating Windermere Prep 51-27 in the Class 3A state final.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Riviera Prep’s Fernando Romero (23), Dante Allen (35), Cooper Josefsberg (3) and Emi Moreno celebrate after defeating Windermere Prep 51-27 in the Class 3A state final.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Mater Lakes Academy’s Ian Pascal (4) and Christian Reid celebrate after defeating The Villages Charter on Saturday.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Mater Lakes Academy’s Ian Pascal (4) and Christian Reid celebrate after defeating The Villages Charter on Saturday.

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