The headline reads "Tigers run the table in back-to-back games." Would that this headline was referring to the MACA Tigers. It's in reference to our opponent. Our opponent of Saturday: Cherry. Our Tigers would have liked to be cherry-pickers but it was the Tigers of Cherry who prevailed.
The dateline of the article indicates the game was played in "Iron." That rings a faint bell with me. I've heard of "Mountain Iron-Buhl." But silly rabbit, this game was played in Perham. I had to consult an alternative source. I did a check and found there is no MN town simply named "Iron," not even on the Iron Range! So I don't know where that came from.
Strong start by MACA Tigers
For a time in the Saturday game, things looked good for the MACA version of the bengals. Indeed we were up by eight points at halftime. Thanks to the "Newsbreak" site for providing this background. The coverage reports "the Cherry Tigers boys basketball team had to dig deep." And they had to deal with potential fatigue, as this game was their third in three days. They are highly-touted in Minnesota class 'A' these days, indeed ranked No. 1! They are unbeaten. They upped their season record to 15-0 with a 78-64 win at the expense of MACA.
It was our Tigers who looked fatigued in the second half. Our halftime lead was obliterated, yes.
"The Tigers (of Cherry) dug in," the "Newsbreak" article reported.
Animated, yes
Cherry senior guard Carson Brown was quoted: "Coach was not a happy camper when he came to the locker room. It was my first time in three years I saw a clipboard flying."
Ah, the "flying clipboard." To be honest I am not amused about this. It's excessive emotion especially at the high school level IMHO.
I credit the Cherry squad for finding the tools and drive to surge so convincingly in the second half. I do not care to give credit to such a volatile coach.
Cherry outscored our bengals 40-18 in the second half. What got into them? Or, what happened to our MACA squad? Looks like Cherry went to a 1-3-1 zone defense that injected momentum. It's not normally the Cherry style.
Cherry was coming off a Thursday and Friday regimen that could have left them with dead legs or diminished focus. Let's consider: traveling more than two hours in poor road conditions Thursday that got them to their appointment for playing Little Fork/Big Falls. Outcome was 92-64 win.
The Friday appointment was to play Esko, a team known to be physical. Again the Cherry boys looked like the top-ranked team: an 82-70 win.
My, another game assignment on Saturday. Now it was our MACA Tigers' turn to square off vs. the Class 'A' juggernaut. Prospects looked terrific at halftime for us. But it's just half a game. Cherry clamped down in second half play. They roll forward with top-ranked status most intact. Congrats to them. Certainly our Tigers impressed with first half shooting. Looks like the Cherry zone got to us subsequently.
Cherry showed its resilience in last year's state tournament with three games in three days.
It catches on
The idea of throwing a clipboard may have gotten lodged in the Cherry players' minds! Because after the win, senior Noah Sandquist made a toss in the locker room. I remember the old story of Minnesota Viking Carl Eller throwing a blackboard in the locker room! You'd have to be careful disciplining Carl Eller. Oh, those Vikings of yore! Seems like almost a fairly tale to be looking back.
I once pondered with a friend about why Carl Eller seemed so intimidating as a lineman. My friend suggested it was because Eller's arms just hung down as he made a charge toward the QB or anyone holding the ball. A TV commercial got done in which QB John Brodie expressed fear of Eller when Eller was on the screen with him. They were advertising a kids' football simulation game.
In their demo, Brodie called a screen pass and Eller called a blitz! The screen pass is a perfect call vs. the blitz, so when the play was done, Eller rears up and says "I'll see you Sunday, John!" Brodie feigned being terrified.
The Cherry Tigers gave a perfect example of the sheer resilience of youth with their recent stretch of success packed into a short timespan. Plus, dealing with the winter elements. Oh to be young again! So I don't credit the clipboard-throwing. I appreciate finding the game coverage on this Wednesday morning. It's hard finding coverage of our MACA Tigers on a timely basis. I wish that could be remedied. Morris can be a pretty sleepy community.
Well, maybe the incentive could come from Chokio-Alberta. I know that community can get energized. I spent many years covering the C-A Spartans. I'll never forget it. On most mornings I see Neal Hofland at DeToy's Restaurant in Morris. Popular as he is within MACA sports circles, let's never forget what he did in C-A. I often remind him of his stock-in-trade football play: the toss-sweep. If the Tigers have a big game coming up, I'll say to him "use the toss-sweep." Memories of Jon Hallman and others.
Cherry's second half surge, impressive as it was, may have taken something out of them. Let's consider that before the game, "everybody said we could play another one on Sunday," Brown was quoted saying. "But afterwards, it was 'no, thanks.' "
Three games for Cherry in three days, two on long road trips. Not facilitating weather either. They had a three-hour bus ride to get to Perham for a 2:30 start. On the trip home after the Morris game, the bus lost its windshield wiper, it was noted on "Newsbreak." It looks like the Newsbreak coverage originated in the Mesabi Tribune. Way up north, yes.
The Cherry coach is Jordan Christianson.
Riley Asmus at the fore
The kmrs-kkok website doesn't give us much these days in the way of Tiger coverage. We're lucky to get "scores." But this morning I see they have our two top scorers from the Cherry game: Riley Asmus 15 points, Ben Tiernan 14. We also see that MACA has a 6-5 record. We do obviously continue to miss Brett Miller at the radio station.
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com