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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Joe Henricksen

Basketball stars looking elsewhere

Jeremiah Fears, one of the top prospects in the Class of 2025, is headed to Sunrise Christian, a prep school in Kansas. (Allen Cunningham/Sun-Times)

Jeremiah Fears has joined what is becoming a lengthy list of high-level basketball prospects from Illinois who have left the state. 

The Joliet native, who starred for Joliet West last season as a sophomore, announced last week he is headed to Sunrise Christian, a prep school in Kansas. 

The 6-1 point guard has been the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s top-ranked prospect in the Class of 2025. Fears already has offers from Arizona, Arizona State, Georgia, Gonzaga, Illinois, Michigan, Michigan State, Missouri, Oregon, Xavier and others. 

Before returning to Joliet West for his senior year last season, Jeremy Fears Jr., Jeremiah’s older brother and a Michigan State recruit, left after his freshman year to play two years at La Lumiere in Indiana. The two teamed up last season to help the Tigers to a 28-6 record. 

The list of stars who have left the state in recent weeks includes the St. Rita tandem of James Brown and Melvin Bell. Brown, a North Carolina recruit, is headed to Link Academy in Missouri for his senior year, while Bell, another bright, young prospect in the Class of 2025, is off to La Lumiere.

The growing trend has included several highly ranked prospects in recent years. JJ Taylor and Bryce Heard left Kenwood. Taylor is headed to Memphis next year after moving from Chicago to California, while Heard is among the top 50 prospects in the country in the Class of 2025 and attends Montverde Academy in Florida. 

The biggest departure, however, was Matas Buzelis. The versatile 6-10 forward left Hinsdale Central for Sunrise Christian after his freshman year and quickly emerged as a top-five prospect in the country. He’ll be playing in the G League next season.

Stevenson finds Ambrose’s successor

The shoes are big, but Will Benson will be the one to fill them.

Benson, the veteran head coach with stops at Harvard, Marengo and Huntley, will replace Pat Ambrose at Stevenson, pending approval of the District 125 school board at its next meeting.

Ambrose, who turned the Patriots into one of the most consistent programs in the Chicago area, resigned last month as head coach. He guided Stevenson to four state finals appearances, including a Class 4A state championship in 2015. In 24 years at the school, Ambrose compiled a 505-191 record. 

Benson has spent the last nine years at Huntley. His Red Raiders have gone 86-28 in the last four seasons. That included a pair of 27-win seasons and two regional championships. Last season, Benson led Huntley to 22 wins and a regional title. 

He spent one season at Marengo, where his 2013-14 team won 20 games, and three years at Harvard before that.

Lockport hires Andrew’s Dave Wilson

Lockport, a program with a long basketball history, hasn’t won 20 games or a regional championship since 2011. 

Dave Wilson has done both at Andrew, a program with zero basketball history, since taking over as head coach at the Tinley Park school in 2014. 

Andrew always has been one of the more challenging basketball coaching jobs in the Chicago area. 

The Thunderbolts, though, often have overachieved under Wilson. He has put together six winning seasons in the last seven years in a job where there has been marginal talent. Wilson guided Andrew to a 20-win regional championship season — only the third in school history — just two years ago. 

Wilson returned just one starter from a year ago and found a way to guide the Thunderbolts to an 18-13 mark last season. 

New West Aurora coach HAS strong ties

Michael Fowler, a starter on West Aurora’s only state championship team in 2000, is returning to his alma mater. The Blackhawks will welcome back the former guard as their next head coach.  

Fowler, who was out of coaching this past year, has spent his entire coaching career at Plainfield East. He was an assistant with the Bengals from 2008 to 2017. Fowler was then named the head coach and compiled a 57-69 record in five seasons.

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