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Thursday, April 18, 2024

Former Rockville High star shines as Wisconsin advances to Sweet 16

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A former Rockville High basketball star has been excelling as the Badgers advance to the Sweet 16. | Courtesy of Morguefile

A former Rockville High basketball star has been excelling as the Badgers advance to the Sweet 16. | Courtesy of Morguefile

Former Rockville High basketball star Ethan Happ continues to emerge as a leader on the Wisconsin basketball team, scoring 18 points during Sunday’s spectacular NCAA tournament, with a 66-63 win over Xavier. 

The redshirt freshman also grabbed seven rebounds as the No. 7 seed Badgers eliminated the No. 2 seed Musketeers in the second round of the East Regional. In Friday night’s 47-43 first-round win over Pittsburgh, Happ led the team with 15 points and nine rebounds. Wisconsin, 20-12 overall, will face No. 6 seed Notre Dame (23-11) on Friday for a spot in the Elite Eight.

Trailing by nine points with just over six minutes to play, Wisconsin finished the game with a 17-5 flurry. Guard Bronson Koenig sealed the contest with a three-point basket from the corner at the final buzzer -- his second three in 14 seconds. Koenig led the Badgers with 20 points, going six of 12 from beyond the arc.

Happ, the six-foot-nine freshman forward, has started all 34 games for Wisconsin this season, averaging 28 minutes played. He led the Big 10 in steals (1.8 per game), was sixth in rebounds (7.8), and he recorded nine double-doubles. In three post season games, he has been averaging 16.7 points and 7.7 boards.

Expectations were not the highest at the outset of the season. At the end of last year, Wisconsin lost five key players from a team that made Final Four runs in each of the past two seasons. Then, in a shocking Dec. 17 press conference, long-time head coach Bo Ryan abruptly announced his retirement. The team’s record was a lackluster 7-5 at the time, and it appeared as if the team might be headed into a rebuilding phase. 

Enter Greg Gard, interim coach.

The new coach inherited a young and inexperienced squad with only two players that averaged more than eight minutes per game over the course of the 2014-2015 campaign. Considering the fact that five teams in the conference have been ranked in the top 25 for most of the season, the outlook was grim for the Badgers. But Gard made several changes: most notably, he brought in the swing offense and over the second half of the season, the Badgers have become world-beaters.

“Coach Gard implemented some new things when he came in -- the swing (offense) was one of them, and it has been instrumental in our success,” Happ recently told Rock Island Today. “When we come down the floor, we already know what we are going to do; we are not wasting any time looking around trying to figure out what play we are going to run.” 

The strategy spreads players farther apart on the offensive side, creating more options to move the ball around, thus increasing scoring opportunities from both inside and outside. Happ, in particular, has thrived in the new system.

“When Coach Gard put in the the swing, he also put in a few individual steps for me to get the ball, which boosted my confidence -- that he wanted me to get some individual touches,” Happ said. “The swing spaces us out a lot more, so that when defenses double down on me in the post, I can kick it out. If they don’t double down on me, I have room to operate.” 

Wisconsin has gone 16-7 since Gard assumed head coaching duties.

In high school, Happ was a guard, but a sudden growth spurt transformed him into a formidable post player. Nonetheless, commentators and coaches alike are amazed by the dazzling footwork he displays against bigger men in the post. 

“That’s one of the things that I pride myself on, is being able to take my guy off the dribble from anywhere,” Happ said. “I think that’s why I’m where I’m at today, because of the transition from being a point guard and now going to the other side -- I don’t play the game as most big men do.”

But all of the attention he is getting has not made Happ forget his hometown of Milan. 

“My community has been big to me growing up: everyone from my family to my best friends to those who just follow me in basketball,” he said. “The support they have given me is unreal, and it has motivated me to keep pushing on and to keep wanting to get better. At our Iowa game, I had a hundred people from my hometown and from the Quad Cities -- it was unbelievable to see that support from my community.”

Happ has declared a major in communications, but right now his goal is to play professionally. As for his chances of a potential NBA career, he is cautiously optimistic. 

“I think it’s going to happen,” he said. “If you believe it enough and if you work towards it enough, it’s going to happen. I know I’m going to work towards it enough, and I believe in myself. I don’t know at what time, but I know that at some point in my life, I’m going to be able to make it.”

The way things look right now, it would be unwise to bet against him.

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