SSNCT Ohio Roundup
Posted: Wed May 08, 2019 1:29 pm
Twenty-seven Ohio teams competed in the Traditional Public and Open divisions at the Small School National Championship Tournament in Chicago, IL. The following teams made the playoffs and finished in the top 25 of their respective divisions:
Traditional Public
Ottawa Hills 13-4 (3rd, 2nd Very Small School)
Beachwood 11-5 (T5)
Cloverleaf 6-6 (T17)
Maplewood 6-6 (T25, T10 VSS)
Evergreen 6-6 (T25, T10 VSS)
Open
Miami Valley A 14-2 (1st)
Maumee Valley 6-6 (T17)
Mazin Omer (Ottawa Hills) and Yang Yu (Beachwood) were Traditional Public All-Stars. Brooks Powalie (Cloverleaf) was a Traditional Public Rising Star. John John Groger (Miami Valley) was an Open Division All-Star. Sahir Kabir (Miami Valley) was an Open Division Rising Star.
Congratulations to Ottawa Hills on their double-trophy performance, as well as Beachwood, who made a wonderful playoff run dispatching teams like Louisiana (Missouri, home of tournament leading scorer Michael Powers) and Southwestern Piasa (IL) before running into eventual champions Glasgow A in the consolation bracket, where they took 10 tossups off the Scotties and only fell 80 points short.
Traditional Public
Ottawa Hills 13-4 (3rd, 2nd Very Small School)
Beachwood 11-5 (T5)
Cloverleaf 6-6 (T17)
Maplewood 6-6 (T25, T10 VSS)
Evergreen 6-6 (T25, T10 VSS)
Open
Miami Valley A 14-2 (1st)
Maumee Valley 6-6 (T17)
Mazin Omer (Ottawa Hills) and Yang Yu (Beachwood) were Traditional Public All-Stars. Brooks Powalie (Cloverleaf) was a Traditional Public Rising Star. John John Groger (Miami Valley) was an Open Division All-Star. Sahir Kabir (Miami Valley) was an Open Division Rising Star.
Congratulations to Ottawa Hills on their double-trophy performance, as well as Beachwood, who made a wonderful playoff run dispatching teams like Louisiana (Missouri, home of tournament leading scorer Michael Powers) and Southwestern Piasa (IL) before running into eventual champions Glasgow A in the consolation bracket, where they took 10 tossups off the Scotties and only fell 80 points short.