Walnut Hills High School
December 4, 2012
Volume CVII, Issue 4
Great expectations: New gym, new coach, new players
AUSTIN RAILEY/CHATTERBOX
SENIORS Khari Burton (#3, left) and Ricardo Hill (#14) smile before tipping off the first game of the season against Purcell Marian. The Eagles went on to win 85-36. Their next game is tonight against Glen Este in the new gym. Charlie Hatch, ‘13 Maybe our expectations are too high, but if this upcoming basketball season pans out to be anything like all of the hype, the Eagles could have a season to remember. A new state-of-the-art gym, a new coach, two new transfers and impressive preseason ranks have all muddled together for much deserved hype. Why? Despite a rocky start to last season, the Eagles went on to win a school record of 18 straight games (including postseason) and finished atop the Fort Ancient Valley Conference, after dismantling most of their opponents by an average score of 20.5 points per game. That team consisted of mostly juniors. This year Walnut has received a lot of hype from the media. The Eagles were ranked as the number one team in Ohio for division I basketball according to flyintothe-
hoop.com. The Cincinnati Enquirer’s coaches poll ranked Walnut as the number one team in the city, winning by fourteen votes. The Eagles were already going to be projected as frontrunners to take the inaugural Eastern Cincinnati Conference title, but two new transfers expanded those expectations all the way to the city, if not the state. After starting high school at Cincinnati Country Day and then Lockland, SENIOR D.J. Wingfield has returned to the school he attended for his seventh and eighth grade years. With him comes along his stats of 17.8 points per game, as well as 8.7 rebounds and 3.5 assists. His big numbers were the key to his “Division IV Player of the Year Award,” given by the Enquirer. Another addition to the Walnut basketball program is SENIOR Jordan Tyson, who is reportedly 6’8”, and transferred from St. Francis de Sales in Co-
lumbus, Ohio. Tyson brings more height to the team to coincide with SENIOR ‘Big Dog,’ Isaiah Johnson, who registered 17.3 points, 11.6 rebounds, 2.7 blocks and 1.1 assists per game last season. Johnson was the go-to man last year in the paint, and worked really well with SENIOR Kodey Jackson. As for the guards, Walnut has a quintet of SENIORS, Adam Brown, Khari Burton, Sterling Gilmore, Ricardo Hill and Stuart Holt, that each can step up and lead the team in the front court on any given offensive possession. Walnut also has generated excitement, just based on the new gymnasium alone. The venue has 1,200 seats, including a specifically designated area for the student section, the Nut House. But the most important thing, will be how well the Eagles play in their new home. Last year the team went undefeated at home, thanks to the loud
fans, and the inferno which was the old gym. Walnut is hoping to continue the success. “We just think the atmosphere for the gym for every game is going to be electric,” said first year head coach, Ricardo Hill Sr. “That should give us our home court advantage.” The road to a memorable season won’t be easy though. The Eagles have an incredibly difficult schedule, which includes Huntington Prep Academy, a team from Huntington, West Virginia who has the number one recruited junior in the nation, Andrew Wiggins. Walnut also has to play La Salle, Sycamore, Princeton and St. Xavier as part of their non-conference schedule. But if the Eagles are able to stay focused amidst all of the hype, this season has the potential to bring excitement unparalleled to any sports team, including the football team’s recent appearance
in the playoffs for the first time in the school’s history. “This should be a really special season for us,” says Gilmore. “It looks like our hard work will finally pay off. We have all the pieces to do something special with this team.” The road ahead for this team hasn’t been paved, but the team knows how great of an opportunity it faces. The last time this group of teammates played together, their junior high teams went undefeated for two consecutive seasons. With the majority of the group back for their third year of varsity experience, history could repeat itself. “All the long practices, the sprints, suicides and everything else are going to pay off this year,” Gilmore said. “I’m really excited... I think we can remain focused... on what’s been our goal since we came [to Walnut] in seventh grade, and that’s a state championship!”
All good things must come to an end: Walnut sees four December retirees
COHEN WALKER/CHATTERBOX
Lisa Faulhaber began working at Cincinnati Public Schools in 1986, and became lead secretary at Walnut Hills in 2006.
http://my.hsj.org/chatterbox
COHEN WALKER/CHATTERBOX
Since arriving at Walnut in 1994, treasurer Gail Thomas has created a scholarship for a SENIOR who will study accounting.
OLIVER OLBERDING/CHATTERBOX
“The students are the ones I’ll miss the most,” says Robert Christoph. “They’re like a huge extended family.”
Charlie Hatch and Jonah Roth, Editors-in-Chief
JOE SCHMIDLAPP/CHATTERBOX
Security guard Brenda Ryan is known and loved by many students, faculty and staff members.
The Chatterbox