STREAKS RESOURCES

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Streaks Scrapbook- How Do You Rank As Streaks Basketball Fan?




This is the ultimate test to see if you are really a Streaks basketball super-fan. I have put up 100 pictures of former Galesburg girls and boys basketball players and coaches.  This is NOT intended to be a list of the best players. I just tried to collect pictures of players from different decades- some famous and some not as famous. 
If you want to just do Streaks boys basketball, answer only the odd questions. If you can answer 42, you are a Streaks Boys Basketball Super-Fan. 

If you want to just do Streaks girls basketball, answer only the even questions. If you can answer 45, you are a Streaks Girls Basketball Super-Fan! 

If you want to do both boys and girls basketball, answer all 100 questions. If you can answer 80 of the 100, you are a Streaks Basketball Super-Fan!!

My money is on Jimmie Carr for first place, and Dave Wood for second place. Have fun- once done- in comments type in your score and type in your name!!



#1







Thursday, November 21, 2024

Friday Fotos- Galesburg Boys/Girls Top Ten Scorers




This is a look at Galesburg’s Top Ten Career Scorers in both boys and girls basketball. 




Wednesday, November 20, 2024

History 101- Galesburg Basketball Quiz


Galesburg HS has had an exciting history of boys and girls basketball. There have been some great teams and some great players thru the years. There are many wonderful Silver Streaks fans, and this is a quiz to test you knowledge. 

No cheating!! Get out a pad of paper to write your answers on, and then go to the bottom of the page when you are all done to check your answers.



Question #1- Which of the following individuals played for Coach John Thiel, and also was on Coach Thiel’s coaching staff?

A- Barry Swanson,  B- Dave Peck,  C- Gary Bruington,  D- Frank Dexter

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Old School Coaches- What's A Good Practice Look Like?



I am hoping to do this segment- "Old School Coaches" on a regular basis. I have put together a crew of retired coaches, who were highly successful in their high school coaching career. My hope is to post one question to them every two weeks. 


Bob Anderson- Williamsfield HS
Bob is retired as boys basketball coach at Williamsfield. At a school of only 89 students, in 45 years, his teams won 732 games along with numerous tourney and conference championships. His 1997 team made it to the Elite 8. 
Mike Cooper- Ottawa HS
Mike is the retired Athletic Director at Ottawa HS. He was varsity girls basketball coach for 22 years, as well as sophomore football coach for many years. He was inducted in the the IBCA HOF.

Tim Engebretson- United HS
He was varsity head football coach for many years at United HS. He also has coached basketball at different levels. His 2005 team won the Illinois State Title, and Tim is in the Illinois Football Coaches' HOF as well as the United HOF.

Greg King- Sterling HS
In his head coaching career at Sterling, his football teams went 78-28, and had 10 straight play-off appearances and 5 conference titles. In addition to his success as a football coach, he was inducted in the Illinois Athletic Director's Association HOF. 

Mark Massey- Clinton HS
Mark was the head volleyball coach at Clinton for 38 years. His teams won 818 games, and twice took second in State. He is in the Iowa Volleyball HOF and Clinton HS HOF.

Thom Sigel- Rock Falls/Rock Island HS
Thom coached basketball for 32 years. His teams won 502 games, and he has the distinction of winning the State Title at both Rock Falls and Rock Island. Thom is in the IBCA HOF.

Mike Tracey- Alleman, UTHS, Moline HS
Mike coached football at Alleman, UT, and Moline for over 20 years. By most, he is considered the premier football coach in WB6 history. His teams won 140 games, and twice finished second in State. Mike is in the Alleman HS HOF and the Illinois Football HOF. He was also selected Illinois AD of the Year. 
Greg Bennett- Lewistown
Greg coached many sports at Lewistown. He had teams go to State in girls basketball and football. He is in the Illinois Football HOF as well as being in the Illinois Basketball Hall of Fame. He is know for his commitment as a coach and his high energy level. 


My Question
If you had a chance to watch another coach's practice, what things would make you feel they ran a good practice? In other words, what are the characteristics of a good practice?

Nikola Jokic’s Lesson For Parent


Basketball season is about to tip-off. It will be exciting whether we are fans, parents, coaches, or players. It really works best if all of us “stay in our lane.” Fans cheer, coaches coach, and players play. 

There is a book that is coming out in December about the NBA MVP, Nikola Jokic. The book is “Why So Serious?” By Mike Singer. It is on my Christmas wish list. 

I heard a preview that shared a story about him as a youth playing basketball. He did something to send a message to his father. 

History 101- Basketball Quiz


It is basketball season. There are a lot of "experts" out there who know everything there is to know about basketball. This quiz is designed to determine how much you actually know about basketball. 
Some of us have a big advantage because we helped pump up the ball for that first game.

Don’t cheat- get a pad of paper out, answer the test questions, then grade your answers. After you score your test, put your number correct in the comments and also type in your name at the end of your comment.


1- When was basketball invented:

A- 1848 when Lincoln posted up Douglas at Knox College.
B- 1891
C- 1906
D- 1932

2- Where was basketball invented?
A- Springfield Massachusetts
B- Lexington Kentucky
C- Lawrence Kansas
D- Cooperstown New York

Monday, November 18, 2024

Hey Coaches & AD’s- Learn From The Best


Congratulations to Lena-Winslow, Camp Point Central, and Farmington! Their football teams have won and are going to be playing this weekend in the IHSA Semi-Finals. Anyone who follows high sports in this area of the state knows that these three schools seem to always be good in football, and most of their sports teams are good. They are winners. 

Coaching 101- Becoming More Physical


Lots of players think they are physical but it turns out they really either don’t like contact or don’t understand the level of physicalness that is needed in certain situations. 

Whether it is posting up or defending in the post, or if it is blocking out to rebound, players need to be willing to make contact. Obviously they need to learn to make the contact in such away that they don’t get called for a foul. 

This rebounding drill is one that many of you have probably done before, but it with three wrinkles that are valuable in teaching the defenders to be physical when they block out.

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Alyssa Carl- Coaching 4th in State Flag Football Team


It appears in Illinois HS's that the hottest sport is Girls Flag Football. There are some major concerns of administrators about adding the sport, while the schools struggle to get enough athletes in the sports that are already offered. A real question is whether adding another sport will mean dropping some existing sports. And there certainly would be a nightmare figuring out which sport or sports to drop.


Some critics say,"If you add another girls sport, you have to add a boys sport because of Title IX." This is absolutely, positively a false statement. Schools do NOT have to offer the same number of girls and boys sports, it is about the total opportunities for males and females.


Every school who has started Girls Flag Football this Fall raves about interest level and enthusiasm for the students, the parents, and the fans. Different people have different thoughts on why the sport seems.


To find out what is going on, I reached out to Galesburg HS grad, Alyssa Carl. Alyssa was a flag football coach at Bradley-Bourbonnais HS. First year football coach and first year team. It sounds like they had a LOT of fun on their way to finishing 4th in State.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Streaks Scrapbook- 1999 Girls 2nd in State- Part II


1999 Girls 2nd in State

33-2

(State Rank- #2)


The 1998 Streaks had lost to Loyola 59-43 in the State Elite 8. The reality was that the game was not as close as the score appeared- the Streaks were dominated. Loyola went onto win their second straight State Championship. The Ramblers returned 4 of 5 starters for 1999. They had three All-State players, who were all headed off to D1 scholarships- Laura Sobieszczyk (5’8” Loyola), Olga Gvozdenovic (6’2” Duke), and Elizabeth Fletcher (6’2” UW-Milwaukee). 

Friday, November 1, 2024

Friday Fotos- 1999 The Stork Delivered




 Register-Mail’s Prophecy- In 1998, the Streaks had no seniors. They had everyone coming back from a team that made it to the Elite 8. At the end of the 1998 season, the Register-Mail ran this story predicting the Streaks could be going back to State again soon. They were right.


Strategy- 1999- GHS’s All-Time Best Play- “Help”

 


This simple play that we ran in 1998 and 1999 produced more points and more free throws than any other play we ran in my 46 years of coaching. It was a simple action but created some nice options for some pretty good players. The play was called, “Help.” The point guard could call the play at any time by just raising her fist. 

So in the State Tourney game vs. Loyola, when we had the ball in a tie game, we ran “Help.” We hit Megan Pacheco coming off the screen. She missed the shot but scored on the rebound. 

The next day when we played Lincoln in the semi-finals, in a tie game, we ran “Help” again. This time we got the ball to Sarah Larson. She drove baseline and was fouled with five seconds to go. She made both free throws to give us a two point win. 

Strategy- 1999 Triangle Delay (vs Loyola)


Triangle Delay-
The basic concept of this delay is to have the three players at the top exchange and pass back and forth to each other. 

This delay concept was good for us because we were putting three players in the “triangle” and three players who could all shoot free throws when the other team decided to foul. Jaque Howard (81%), Sarah Larson (78%), Megan Pacheco (75%)

Also, it was effective because the three players in the delay were not all guards. As a result, the defenders were less likely to want to switch and if they did, it would mean that a post defender might be on a guard. 

Another advantage of this delay system is whether the opponent plays man to man or goes into some trapping defenses- we are in a good alignment. We would want to go 2-1-2 vs 1-3-1 trapping defense.

1= Jaque Howard (Point Guard)

2= Michelle Flaar (Shooting Guard)

3= Megan Pacheco (Small Forward)

4= Jenny Zolper (Power Forward)

5= Sarah Larson (Post)

Coaching 101- 4 Spots Team Shooting

 


This is a simple shooting drill to provide some competition for the team. The team is divided into two “teams”- one team at one end and the other teams at the other end. Each team will have 3 basketball balls.

The ball starts in one corner. 

First ball is passed around the horn to #1 to shoot the ball.

Second ball is passed around the horn to #2 to shoot the ball.

Third ball is passed to #3 to shoot. 


Thursday, October 31, 2024

Parents & Coaches- Capture & Preserve Memories


Any of you have followed my blog, realize I have been doing research on past boys and past girls basketball teams. To do the research, I have go to our wonderful public library to look at old newspaper articles. It is an amazing experience to sit down and go through an entire season at one sitting. 

Several weeks ago when I was doing research on the 1960 team, it struck me how much I could find in the paper. There were box scores with points, free throws, rebound leaders, and fouls. While they were blurry, there pictures and I got a sense the size of Bob Coe and Bumpy Nixon. There was an article describing players being disciplined and players being injured. For people from that era- tons of memories. 

Coaching 101- Daily Dozen


Years and years ago, I attended a clinic where Sam Alford (Steve Alford’s father) of New Castle, Ind gave a talk on developing a program. One of the concepts he talked about was giving his JH coaches a set of 5 drills to do each day in practice. The idea was that the first 30-45 minutes of each JH practice “belonged” to him as the Varsity coach. 

I thought it seemed like a great concept. The person who we hired to coach any of our lower level programs (JH thru FS), they were often inexperienced in coaching and often limited in their basketball knowledge. 

Coaching 101- Practice Scrimmage Game

 


Scrimmage Game

1- 5 on 5 playing to 11 points. 

2- +3= 3 pointer, +2= 2 pointer, +1= offensive or defensive rebound

3- Defense gets steal or rebound, they break the other way.

4- Offense scores, play stops, it is make it/take it with offense going in half- court 5 vs 5 again.

5- If a team turns it over twice, game over, they lose.


6- First team to 11 points wins. 

Maine West Summer Tourneys


 The Illinois Basketball Coaches Association had been organization for boys basketball only. At the end of the 1984 season, the IBCA took in girls basketball and girls coaches. I had the opportunity to be on the first All-State Board that met at the end of the season. That meeting was the first real chance to network with coaches from the suburbs and southern Illinois. 

At that first meeting, Derril Kipp of Maine West told me that he hosted summer tourney and would like to get some downstate teams involved. We went for the first time then in the summer of 1984. That first trip, we had no school transportation and we had to get someone else to coach the team according to IHSA rules. Cessy Burga’s parents offered their station wagon and a coaching friend, Mike Jaskoski offered to coach. 

Willam Allen- Knox Grad, GHS Teacher- Killed in WW2


 William Allen was a 1939 graduate of Knox College. While at Knox, he became a political activist. He was part of a large group of students who were unhappy with the school’s “chapels.” They felt that the chapels had become a way for the college to indoctrinate students with conservative, pro-business speakers. His activism led him to take a leadership role as the editor of the Knox Student (school newspaper). His outspoken approach caused some to label him as un-American and a Communist.  

After graduation, he taught three years in Fairview. He moved back to teach at Galesburg High School in 1942. He was an English teacher and in charge of all of the drama activities. At this time, before TV, school plays were performed almost monthly. 

Streaks Scrapbook- 1999 Girls 2nd in State- Part I

 


1999 Girls 2nd in State

33-2

(State Rank- #2)


The 1998 Streaks lost in the Elite 8 game, but had no seniors on their roster. The entire starting five returned for the 1999 season. In terms of playing time, the top 9 players on the ‘99 time were:

Jaque Howard (5’4” Jr, Pt Gd) 8.0ppg, 6.2apg

Michelle Flaar (5’7” Jr, Guard) 3.5ppg

Megan Pacheco (5’8” Jr, Forward) 11.8ppg, 5.4rpg

Whitney Snyder (5’10” Jr, Forward) 8.0ppg, 6.2rpg

Sarah Larson (5’11” Sr, Post) 22.6ppg, 8.5rpg

Jenny Zolper (5’9” Sr, Post) 2.4ppg, 3.5rpg

Rachel Bicego (5’6” So Guard) 4.0ppg

Sarah Pacheco (5’10” Soph Guard) 4.7ppg, 2.0rpg

Friday Fotos- 1999- Back Again


What A Run!-
In 1999, the Streaks were in the middle of a great run (and it wasn’t done yet).


The Last Word-
Coaches always say that your “star” sets the tone, the culture for your team. If your “star” is unselfish and hard working, your team will be unselfish and hard working. In 1999, the Streaks had many stars, but Sarah Larson was “THE STAR.” This interview with Sarah captures her focus- on the team!!


Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Strategy- 1999 Soft Man to Man Press


If we had the lead with under 10 seconds left, usually we wanted to play what we would call our “Soft MM Press.” We are wanting to just slow down the offense and make them have to take a long shot. In a dead ball situation, our initial alignment in “Soft MM Press” was to not allow any long passes, not to allow a guard to catch and go on the dribble. 

We showed pressure but backed up just 4-5 feet. With the initial show of pressure, it was our hope to force the offense to go back to the ball. We wanted the offense to have to “go back” to catch the ball. So they did not have forward momentum. 

After showing the pressure, the bounce back assured we would keep the ball in front of us. The defender on the inbounder acted as a center fielder to help on a dribble. 

If the other team has one great player that you know they want to get the ball inbounds to, I have seen teams take the inbound defender and have them face guard that good player, while the good player’s defender can stay behind. I am more cautious and preferred the have the inbounder defender in position to cover up mistakes. 


Strategy- 1999 Larson’s Three in Supersectional


We were in a battle with Machesney Park Harlem in the Supersectional at NIU’s Chick Evans FH. Late in the game, we down three with the ball. We ran a play that we called, “Carthage.” It was a play that we had stolen from Carthage, who was a very good small school. 









Old School Coaches- Talking About Parents



“Old School Coaches” are veteran coaches who look at some of the tough questions that all coaches face. In the group we have HOF coaches from football, volleyball, boys basketball, and girls basketball. The group also includes four retired athletic directors. 

In future if you have some questions that you would like addressed- put them them in the comments at the end. 



Greg King- Sterling HS
In his head coaching career at Sterling, his football teams went 78-28, and had 10 straight play-off appearances and 5 conference titles. In addition to his success as a football coach, he was inducted in the Illinois Athletic Director's Association HOF. 

Mark Massey- Clinton HS
Mark was the head volleyball coach at Clinton for 38 years. His teams won 818 games, and twice took second in State. He is in the Iowa Volleyball HOF and Clinton HS HOF.

Thom Sigel- Rock Falls/Rock Island HS
Thom coached basketball for 32 years. His teams won 502 games, and he has the distinction of winning the State Title at both Rock Falls and Rock Island. Thom is in the IBCA HOF.

Mike Tracey- Alleman, UTHS, Moline HS
Mike coached football at Alleman, UT, and Moline for over 20 years. By most, he is considered the premier football coach in WB6 history. His teams won 140 games, and twice finished second in State. Mike is in the Alleman HS HOF and the Illinois Football HOF. He was also selected Illinois AD of the Year. 

Tom Wierzba- Farmington HS
Tom coached basketball for 38 years, coaching 26 years at Farmington. At Farmington, his teams won 7 sectionals and made 5 trips to State, including a third place and fourth place finish. For his career, his teams won 611 games. In addition, he coached softball at Farmington for 10 years- going 225-50. His softball teams won the State title twice and took fourth once. He has been inducted into both the IBCA and Greater Peoria Sports HOF's.

Bob Anderson- Williamsfield HS
Bob is retired as boys basketball coach at Williamsfield. At a school of only 89 students, in 45 years, his teams won 732 games along with numerous tourney and conference championships. His 1997 team made it to the Elite 8. 

Mike Cooper- Ottawa HS
Mike is the retired Athletic Director at Ottawa HS. He was varsity girls basketball coach for 22 years, as well as sophomore football coach for many years. He was inducted in the the IBCA HOF.

Tim Engebretson- United HS
He was varsity head football coach for many years at United HS. He also has coached basketball at different levels. His 2005 team won the Illinois State Title, and Tim is in the Illinois Football Coaches' HOF as well as the United HOF.

My Question
Obviously parents play a crucial role not only in their son/daughters sports experience but they have the ability to impact an entire sports program. What did you do to help get parents on the same page? What advice would you share with parents?

Coaching 101- Organized Pre-Practice


I always asked our players to do an organized “Prepractice” at the beginning of practice. Doing this served several purposes:

1- It concentrated on three basic skills- weak hand dribbling, finishing with weak and strong hand, and form shooting. My belief was that if our players did this before each practice it would have a cumulative impact of making them better with their weak hand, better finishing around the basket, and improve their shooting form.

Coaching 101- Stick With FS Prelims or Swith to JV Prelims

There are fewer students choosing to play both boys and girls basketball in Illinois and also nationally. Traditionally most schools have offered three levels of competition- freshman, frosh-soph, and varsity. As the number of players has decreased, in order to maintain three levels of play, schools are often having freshman players play multiple levels. A freshman may play two freshman games and two frosh-soph games per week. In the meantime, juniors are caught in a situation where they are on the bench for the varsity and not playing any games. 


Schools are looking at ways to handle this decrease in participation in HS basketball, especially in girls basketball. I did an informal survey of 12 athletic conferences to see what someone of them were doing to accommodate the decrease in numbers. It appears that one of the common threads is for more and more conferences to play JV and Varsity level competition instead of the more traditional FS and Varsity levels. 

In girls basketball, 7 conferences are now allowing schools to play freshmen, sophomores, or juniors in the prelim games- so it is a JV contest. Five of the conferences are still playing a FS game for the prelim game in girls basketball. In boys basketball, because of larger numbers, only 3 of the conferences are playing JV prelim games.

Streaks Scrapbook- 1960 Galesburg’s “New, Unnamed Gym”



In basketball terms, the 1959-1960 team is referred to as the 1960 team. So although the new school opened in the Fall of 1959 school year, I will be referring to the 1960 season. So not to confuse, the 1960 team played in 1959-1960.

In 1959-1960, Galesburg High School moved to West Fremont Street. When it first opened up, it was definitely on the edge of town. You could see more corn than homes at that time. There was no industrial arts wing, there was no learning center, and there was no foreign language wing. All of those things would come later.

There was a new gym. The Register-Mail referred to it as the “new, unnamed gym on West Fremont.” Jimmie Carr and his 1959 teammates were very disappointed that they had not gotten to play in the new gym. Jimmie described first going into the gym on Fremont St, and being struck about how “bright and light the gym was compared to Steele Gym.” 

Bob Swanson, who played for Monmouth HS, described the first visit to play Galesburg as feeling like you were “entering a palace.” 


Previously in Galesburg there were two main spectator gyms- Memorial Gym at Knox College and Steele Gym at the old GHS. Knox’s Memorial Gym was built in 1950 and held 2,750. Most accounts say that Steele held 2,600, although some claim it was 2,800. Steele the third largest HS gym in Western Illinois behind Wharton FH (7,200) and Canton’s Alice Ingersoll (3,000). Whether Steele held 2,600 or 2,800, by the late 1950’s the Galesburg community had outgrown, with people being turned away. 

The new gym on Fremont St held 3,600. But to get up to 3,600, it required some work. When the wooden bleachers were to have the seats paints, the legend is that Thiel instructed them to paint each seat about 2-4 inches smaller than standard width. This may have added somewhere around 10 more seats per row, and with 60 rows of seats, it all added up. In addition, the team benches were moved to the baselines which added approximately 50 more total seats. So to get 3,600 into the “new, unnamed gym,” they were packed in. 


The excitement of opening night was apparent. Tom Wilson later wrote a story that Coach Thiel drew names for the starting lineup the first night. Bumpy Nixon did not start but was the leading scoring. The distinction of scoring the first basket in the new gym went to Ralph Cannon- in fact he made the first two baskets as Galesburg crushed Macomb 63-42. Ironically, the 1960 team only lost two regular season games, and one of them was later at Macomb when they played short-handed. 

Right from the first game in the 1959-1960 season, there was an issue of people not being able to get into games. And this continued throughout the 1960’s. The First Tuesday program that aired in 1970 showed ticket manager, David Gunderson turning away fans. 


Even though the seating went up from 2,600 to 3,600, there appears to be immediate disappointment with the size of the gym. After fans were turned away from the first game, the Galesburg Register-Mail wrote, “Hindsight is always safer than foresight, but it appears to us that the new Galesburg Senior High School gym is already outdated as far as seating capacity goes.” 

Adding to the concerns about the gym capacity were the sizes of new gyms by Galesburg’s rivals. In 1957 Quincy (3,900), 1959 Rock Island (6,400), 1960 UTHS (5,280), and 1964 Pekin (4,100). So in the period from 1957 to 1964, Galesburg went from having the third largest gym in Western Illinois to the sixth largest gym. And in 1960, Moline and Galesburg played in front of 6,000 fans at Wharton FH.


Throughout the years, there have been multiple stories about the building of the new high school and the new gym. Like with most projects, it appears that there was a give and take on where to put the money in the new building. Most say that originally the gym was to hold over 4,000 (without painting smaller seats). The consensus is that the gym was cut back to accommodate building a larger auditorium. 


The walls at the end lines of the basketball court are much closer than in most gyms. The baseline is 79 inches from the wall. With team benches under the basket, the distance was cut down to only 44 inches. Because air vents, much of the walls were not padded. In the middle of the 1960 season, the Register Mail reported that Jeff Sandburg was injured and might be out after he ran into the “Chinese wall.” 


If they had put the walls 12 feet from the baseline which is at least what most gyms would have, that would have added 8 seats per row and with 60 rows, you would have had an additional 480 seats. 


The other popular story is that originally the GHS students were to be placed in “end zone” seats at the East end of the gym. Obviously if they had put 1,400 seats to accommodate the students, it would have been a much bigger gym. Some old times said the plan was to add that seating later but the ceiling beams were put the wrong direction so the East wall became a support wall. 

After 1970, the capacity of the gym has not been much of an issue with some sell outs in 1976, some in the 1980’s, and then in 1998. In the 1965, an “unnamed Galesburg official” had proposed to move the Galesburg vs Pekin game to Robertson FH. The Galesburg administration said no to this idea. It is easy to understand that just five years after building a new gym, they were not excited to move games. 


Athletic director, Chuck Bednar in 1965 explained the ticket process for GHS games, “With some 1250 season ticket holders, 250 seats reserved for District 205 school employees, and an allotment of 400 tickets to Pekin, it is anticipated that the remainder of the seats (some 1,400) will be taken by the students of our senior high school. Subsequently, we expect that there will not be any tickets remaining.” 


Bednar also outlined where “standing room” only assignments were, and where media had to go. Everyone had assigned spots. 

GHS students for games had a deadline time for picking up their tickets. At that time, any tickets not picked up were sold to the general public. In most cases, the entire north side main bleachers were all students. 

Galesburg, like other schools, when they remodeled or updated the gym, they lost seats. There is a standard width for seats, there are requirements for aisles, and the slope must be less so fewer rows. 

In the 1980’s, Galesburg replaced the original wooden bleachers. The company that made the original bleacher had gone out of business in the 1960’s, and when the bleacher broke down, parts actually had to be fabricated. The bleachers were replaced by a light metal material. Each main floor and each balcony section lost one row and lost seats to four aisles in each section. Seating capacity shrunk to 2,900. 

In the 1990’s, a new floor was put into the gym. As you enter the gym, you will see it is slightly raised. This caused the divider used in the middle of the gym for PE not to be able to come out anymore. 


In 1992, the “new, unnamed gym” became the John Thiel Gym. Thiel had coached at GHS from 1956 thru 1973 seasons. Thru the next 50 years, GHS was to have 11 coaches of boys basketball, and none as long as Thiel had coached. Thiel and Dawdie Hawkins at Pekin were two of the legendary coaches to have the gyms named for them.


In the 2010’s, the John Thiel Gym was further remodeled with a new floor and new bleachers. The gym was reduced to 49 rows (originally there were 60 rows), and had additional, wider aisles. As a result, today Thiel Gym has a capacity of 2,350. Least you think this is just a Galesburg thing, Rock Island FH originally held 6,400 and today it holds 4,200. 


While Thiel Gym probably could have sold 4,500 tickets regularly in the 1960’s, it could be argued the smaller 3,600 gym certainly provided a loud, packed, home court advantage. When full, there was a sense of everyone being right on top of you. In later years, the capacity has served GHS well. When there have been good teams in boys or girls basketball, it has given that same loud, packed atmosphere of the 1960’s. Most coaches, players, and fans would label Thiel Gym as one of the truly great high school gyms in Illinois. When Thiel is filled and the band strikes up “Hi Yo Silver,” there is no other place like it. 





Monday, October 28, 2024

Friday Fotos- Great Rivals, Great Gyms, Great Quiz

There are some great gyms in Western Illinois- I have a quiz for you about these gyms. Can you pass the test at the end!!

Canton HS








Super 7- Streaks Alums Playing College Hoops


There are 7 Streak’s alums who are playing college basketball this winter. Audree Peck (Clarke- Senior), Lauren Livingston (Dubuque-Senior), Riley Jenkins (Minnesota-Crookston- RS Soph), Juniper Schwartzman (Grinnell-Soph), Capre Ferguson (Sandburg- Soph), Kiarra Kilgore (Missouri S&T-First Yr), and Antonia Kisler (Sandburg-First Yr). 


Sides Fired- WNBA Moving Forward This Off-Season


Christie Sides was fired by the Indiana Fever. As a coach (former coach), it is difficult to come down on the side of firing coaches. That said, there is a huge difference in the big business side of pro sports. 

Early in the past season, I was very concerned that if Indiana didn’t do something about the coaching situation that the WNBA would have to step in and tell the Fever for the good of the WNBA and Caitlin Clark’s market value- get a new coach. The Fever righted the ship and played a good second half, but I think there were still questions about the direction of the team for the future. 

Right now there are 6 openings in the WNBA for coaching positions- 6 have been fired. This is a sign of several things-

Sunday, October 27, 2024

CSC With Antonia & Capre- Open Season Tue Nov 5


Carl Sandburg Women’s Basketball Team will open at home on Tuesday, November 5 at 5:30pm vs. Lincolnland. GHS grads, Capre Ferguson (Soph) and Antonia Kisler (Frosh) are playing for the Chargers. Capre and Antonia have always played with high energy. With them playing right here in Galesburg, it will be a great opportunity for Streaks fans to get to see them play!