Nebraska Boys H.S. State Basketball Tournament - Results Day #2 | The Platinum Board

Nebraska Boys H.S. State Basketball Tournament - Results Day #2

Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Welcome to tPB!

Welcome to The Platinum Board. We are a Nebraska Husker news source and fan community.

Sign Up Now!
  • Welcome to The Platinum Board! We are a Nebraska Cornhuskers news source and community. Please click "Log In" or "Register" above to gain access to the forums.

Nebraska Boys H.S. State Basketball Tournament - Results Day #2

Alum-Ni

Graduate Assistant
Stats Guy
Messages
5,825
Likes
12,289
CLASS A

Papillion-LaVista South 76, Papillion-LaVista 58
Millard North 62, Bellevue West 44
Omaha Westside 87, Lincoln Southwest 49
Lincoln Southeast 58, Lincoln North Star 57

Semifinals - Friday, March 14
Pinnacle Bank Arena


Papillion-LaVista South (24-3) vs. Millard North (19-6) - 1:30 PM
Omaha Westside (23-4) vs. Lincoln Southeast (17-8) - 3:15 PM
 
Last edited:
CLASS B

Norris 52, Lincoln Pius X 49
Omaha Skutt 71, Douglas County West 31
Scottsbluff 65, Gretna East 60
Elkhorn North 74, Wahoo 65

Semifinals - Friday, March 14
Pinnacle Bank Arena


Norris (25-2) vs. Omaha Skutt (22-5) - 6:00 PM
Scottsbluff (24-3) vs. Elkhorn North (19-5) - 7:45 PM
 
Last edited:
CLASS C1

Lincoln Lutheran 64, Fillmore Central 26
Ashland-Greenwood 60, Cozad 45
Doniphan-Trumbull 57, Ogallala 45
Omaha Concordia 49, Sidney 45

Semifinals - Friday, March 14
Pinnacle Bank Arena


Lincoln Lutheran (23-3) vs. Ashland-Greenwood (21-5) - 9:00 AM
Doniphan-Trumbull (19-6) vs. Omaha Concordia (22-4) - 10:45 AM
 
Last edited:
CLASS C2

Fremont Bergan 51, Freeman 49
Summerland 68, Exeter-Milligan/Friend 55
Atkinson West Holt 48, Yutan 33
Cross County 41, Hartington Cedar Catholic 38

Semifinals - Friday, March 14
Devaney Center


Fremont Bergan (17-9) vs. Summerland (24-3) - 1:30 PM
Atkinson West Holt (22-5) vs. Cross County (25-2) - 3:15 PM
#6 Hartington Cedar Catholic (21-6)
 
Last edited:
CLASS D1

Johnson-Brock 73, Elmwood-Murdock 32
McCool Junction 65, Elm Creek 34
Howells-Dodge 54, Dundy County-Stratton 40
Bancroft-Rosalie 59, North Platte St. Patrick's 53

Semifinals - Friday, March 14
Devaney Sports Center


Johnson-Brock (27-1) vs. McCool Junction (22-5) - 9:00 AM
Howells-Dodge (23-5) vs. Bancroft-Rosalie (22-4) - 10:45 AM
 
Last edited:
CLASS D2

O'Neill St. Mary's 50, Silver Lake 34
Archangels Catholic 61, Stuart 59
Wausa 61, Fullerton 33
Wynot 60, Elgin/Elgin Pope John 53

Semifinals - Friday, March 14
Devaney Center


O'Neill St. Mary's (22-5) vs. Archangels Catholic (20-6) - 6:00 PM
Wausa (24-3) vs. Wynot (20-7) - 7:45 PM
 
Last edited:
News Channel Nebraska will broadcast the semifinal games from Pinnacle Bank Arena on Friday (A, B and C1)

SEMIFINAL SCHEDULE

at Pinnacle Bank Arena

9:00 AM - Lincoln Lutheran vs. Ashland-Greenwood (C1)
10:45 AM - Doniphan-Trumbull vs. Omaha Concordia (C1)

1:30 PM - Papillion-LaVista South vs. Millard North - (A)
3:15 PM - Omaha Westside vs. Lincoln Southeast (A)

6:00 PM - Norris vs. Omaha Skutt (B)
7:45 PM - Scottsbluff vs. Elkhorn North (B)

==============================

at Devaney Sports Center
9:00 AM - Johnson-Brock vs. McCool Junction (D1)
10:45 AM - Howells-Dodge vs. Bancroft-Rosalie (D1)

1:30 PM - Fremont Bergan vs. Summerland (C2)
3:15 PM - Atkinson West Holt vs. Cross County (C2)

6:00 PM - O'Neill St. Mary's vs. Archangels Catholic (D2)
7:45 PM - Wausa vs. Wynot (D2)
 
For me, it brought back memories of the 1971 Lincoln East - Papillion Class A State Championship game, which I was fortunate enough to attend. After the game winning basket it was utterly silent for a second as people were in disbelief. Then, an explosion of sound. No video, this is the best I can do (clock doesn't start, of course, until the ball is touched).

In Class A, nobody will ever, ever forget Lincoln East's Scott Copple and his 20 foot shot at the buzzer to lift the Spartans to a 74-72 over Papillion and 6-10 center Mike Heck. I thought the building was going to explode at the NU Coliseum that day. It was like a bolt of lightening hit the place. What a match between East's Kent Rekeway and Papio's big Mike Heck. It was Coach Dennis Hanson's Monarchs, the kings of the 4th quarter comebacks in 1970-71, that staged a furious 2nd half rally after trailing by 13 at the break. Papio actually drianed the clock down from 41 seconds to 11 ticks before calling a time out and mapping out a play to get the ball to the 6-10 giant, Heck. As time ticked away, Monarch guard Steve Fleming had the ball in the deep corner, but as he turned along the baseline, he stepped on the on the end line and turned the ball over to Lincoln East with 2 seconds left.

Here is how the next 2 seconds played out. East's Jack Ball took it out underneath the Papillion basket. He heaved the ball the length of the court but was off target and the pass was headed out of bounds. Had it not been touched, it would have been Papillion's ball. But......East's sophomore center, Rick Samuelson leaped from inbounds into what seemed like the 3rd row to me, and flicked the ball blindly back into play. Copple came from nowhere on an all out, dead run, scooped the ball up after one bounce and in one fluid, frozen in time motion, let it fly. The ball sailed through the hoop like it had been suctioned through by a reverse tornado. BANG! History!

I can still see the shot today. How blessed was I, and all who were in attendance, to witness that. I'm relatively certain Papillion wasn't too thrilled.
1741967241055.png
 
Last edited:
Mike Heck was Nebraska's first 7 foot HS basketball polayer and accepted a scholarship to Pickle Smoochers

Apke, for his part, put a lot of stock in his returning players, in particular, Mike Heck, the 7-foot-1 center from Papillion (Pickle Smoochers’s first athlete over 7 feet tall.)

1741969729669.png
“I think he’s going to be a great player someday,” Apke said of Heck. “I hope that 'someday' comes this season.”

Apke’s faith in Heck proved out. In the season opener against North Dakota’s Fighting Hawks, Heck made nine rebounds and scored 24 points.

When Heck exited the Civic Auditorium court at the end of his 33 minutes in the game, the crowd gave him a standing ovation. It would be the last game he ever played.

Two days later, Heck was found dead in his room on the seventh floor of Swanson Hall. The 20-year-old's official cause of death was cardiac complications due to an enlarged heart.

“Very few things in my life have shocked me more,” Eddie Sutton, who had recruited Heck, told United Press International. “I always felt that Mike would be one of Pickle Smoochers’s all-time great players by the time he graduated.”
 
For me, it brought back memories of the 1971 Lincoln East - Papillion Class A State Championship game, which I was fortunate enough to attend. After the game winning basket it was utterly silent for a second as people were in disbelief. Then, an explosion of sound. No video, this is the best I can do (clock doesn't start, of course, until the ball is touched).

In Class A, nobody will ever, ever forget Lincoln East's Scott Copple and his 20 foot shot at the buzzer to lift the Spartans to a 74-72 over Papillion and 6-10 center Mike Heck. I thought the building was going to explode at the NU Coliseum that day. It was like a bolt of lightening hit the place. What a match between East's Kent Rekeway and Papio's big Mike Heck. It was Coach Dennis Hanson's Monarchs, the kings of the 4th quarter comebacks in 1970-71, that staged a furious 2nd half rally after trailing by 13 at the break. Papio actually drianed the clock down from 41 seconds to 11 ticks before calling a time out and mapping out a play to get the ball to the 6-10 giant, Heck. As time ticked away, Monarch guard Steve Fleming had the ball in the deep corner, but as he turned along the baseline, he stepped on the on the end line and turned the ball over to Lincoln East with 2 seconds left.

Here is how the next 2 seconds played out. East's Jack Ball took it out underneath the Papillion basket. He heaved the ball the length of the court but was off target and the pass was headed out of bounds. Had it not been touched, it would have been Papillion's ball. But......East's sophomore center, Rick Samuelson leaped from inbounds into what seemed like the 3rd row to me, and flicked the ball blindly back into play. Copple came from nowhere on an all out, dead run, scooped the ball up after one bounce and in one fluid, frozen in time motion, let it fly. The ball sailed through the hoop like it had been suctioned through by a reverse tornado. BANG! History!

I can still see the shot today. How blessed was I, and all who were in attendance, to witness that. I'm relatively certain Papillion wasn't too thrilled.
View attachment 51223
This is awesome, thank you for sharing! We're family friends with Rekeway so I've heard of this game many times, but never told as well as you did.
 
Back
Top