Kankakee stars EJ Hazelett, Lincoln Williams shake off the flu and dominate Waukegan
Kankakee coach Chris Pickett almost had to call the organizers of this weekend’s New Years Extravaganza shootout at Hope Academy and say his team wasn’t coming. The Kays were ravaged by the flu this week and haven’t had a full practice since knocking off Lincoln-Way Central in the Kankakee Holiday Tournament championship on Dec. 28.
Lincoln Williams and EJ Hazelett, Kankakee’s two college-bound stars, were among the sick players. Word spread around in the pregame that Williams wasn’t going to play.
But Williams, Hazelett and all the Kays’ starters played and played well. The No. 3 Kays dominated No. 13 Waukegan 86-61 on Saturday.
“Last night I thought I definitely wasn’t going to play,” Williams said. “After the championship game [on the 28th] we all went out and got sick that night. But we came out with good energy today. I’m still sick, though. I’m ready to back home.”
Williams scored 23 points with eight rebounds and Hazelett finished with 24 points and six rebounds.
“For them to come out with that performance is pretty impressive,” Pickett said. “We were worried about hydration. We were worried about fatigue. They fought through it.”
Kankakee (11-1) jumped out to a 28-9 lead. Hazelett, an Indiana State recruit, scored the first nine points for the Kays.
Hazelett grew up in Kankakee and transferred back from Indiana after his father was hired as the school’s football coach. It’s never certain what a transfer, even one signed with a Division I school, is going to bring to a team.
Over the first six weeks of the season Hazelett has proven himself as one of the top handful of seniors in the state.
“The loss [to DePaul Prep] was a wakeup call,” Hazelett said. “We have room to improve still, but we are doing our thing out there. Playing together, playing smart and playing fast. That’s how we want to play.”
The 56-49 loss to DePaul may have been a wakeup call for the Kays, but it earned them serious respect in the area. Kankakee gave the Rams all they could handle. And Hazelett, a strong and physical 6-7 senior, defended DePaul Prep’s 6-7 Toledo recruit Rashuan Porter better than anyone in the area has over the past two years.
“[Hazelett] has some physicality to him and he uses it the right way,” Pickett said. “He’s an emotional player too. That can be a gift and a curse for us. So far, it’s been good.”
The supporting cast around Hazelett and Williams is very capable. Myair Thompson scored 14 points and Kenaz Jackson added 13.
“If defenses concentrate too much on [Williams or Hazelett] someone else steps up,” Pickett said. “That makes it difficult for teams.”
Senior guard Carson Newsome led Waukegan (11-4) with 17 points and Simereon Carter added 13 points and seven rebounds.
Curie beats St. Patrick in overtime
No. 2 Curie survived and beat No. 24 St. Patrick 52-47 in overtime at Hope Academy. The Condors, didn’t score a field goal in overtime and went 9-for-15 from the free-throw line in overtime, good enough to win thanks to a pair of key steals by senior guard Saquan Commings.
Justin Oliver led the Condors (12-1) with 19 points and Mike Oliver Jr. scored 16 points.
Omar Ajanovic, a 6-7 junior, led the Shamrocks (13-2) with 15 points and senior RJ McPartlin scored 11.
