ALBANY — A scream on a dunk jolted his teammates, and a crowd-silencing 3-pointer netted a school record. But Conner Meyer had only one thing on his mind: Winning the ball game.
“I came out here focused on getting the ‘W’ tonight. I wasn’t really worried about any records, I just wanted to win the game,” said Meyer after a 21-point performance in a 51-40 win over Albany.
Meyer’s 3-pointer with 2:16 left in the first half gave him nine in the game and set him apart from all former Black Hawk Warrior basketball players. The triple gave Meyer enough points (1,580) to pass current UW-Green Bay guard Jen Wellnitz for the most all-time in school history for either boys or girls hoops.
“The record doesn’t mean that much to me because there are so many great players to come out of this school. I have a lot of respect for everybody,” Meyer said. “I’m just a competitor and it ended up I broke a school record. It worked out pretty good for me.”
Black Hawk coach Charlie Anderson said the record is more than just Meyer’s talent, though.
“He’s worked for it. He’s put in so much time out of season (and) in season to work on his game. I’m so proud of him, and it couldn’t have happened to a nicer young man,” Anderson said. “Not only that, scoring records are great, but he’s such a good kid. You know that whatever he moves on to after high school he’ll be successful.”
I came out here focused on getting the ‘W’ tonight. I wasn’t really worried about any records, I just wanted to win the game.Black Hawk senior Conner Meyer.
A slow start to the game hampered Black Hawk. Albany (7-11, 4-6 Six Rivers East) used a zone defense to stifle the Warriors’ offense — the same defense that scored the Comets a win in first meeting of the two teams Jan. 8. Black Hawk (10-9, 8-3) went without a field goal for the first five minutes and fell behind 9-1 after a Corbin Kelley 3.
After Tyler Triem and Colby Argall knocked down 3s for Black Hawk, Meyer got in on the action with a jumper to pull within two points at 11-9. Two minutes later, the Warriors switched to a zone defense themselves, which momentarily confused the Comets. Meyer picked off a pass and raced down the court, slamming home a breakaway two-handed dunk with a ferocious scream that startled the home crowd and energized his teammates.
“I knew I had to do something to get the crowd going, so I had to slam it down. It was a good force of momentum for our team,” Meyer said.
A possession later Lucas Flanagan came in off the bench and buried a 3 to give Black Hawk its first lead of the game at 14-13. Albany would hold its final lead of the game at 19-16 with five minutes left in the first. Then Flanagan made a cut to the basket in the paint, followed by five straight points by Meyer. Black Hawk closed the half on a 9-0 run and didn’t relinquish the lead.
“It was just one of those nights where we just played together really well. We knew we needed revenge for the last time we played them, because that wasn’t a very good game for us,” Meyer said.
Albany was hit with foul trouble early on. Leading scorer Josh Dahl picked up three fouls in the first half but remained on the court. In the second half, big man Rob Schroeder picked up fouls 2-3-4 less than 90 seconds apart and had to go to the bench with his team trailing 33-30 with 14:26 left.
Meyer took over in the high post, scoring 12 points in the half and opening up the offense for his teammates.
“He did a good job going into that high post area,” Anderson said. “He was tough to defend.”
After Meyer’s 21 points, Kyle Lovelace, Argall and Flanagan each had eight. Off the bench, Flanagan sparked with a pair of 3s and two steals.
“Lucas, he’s a ball of energy out there. He plays such good defense and he’s so active. We were struggling tonight and he hit some big shots to loosen them up a bit and allow Conner and some other guys to get inside more,” Anderson said.
Kelley led Albany with 13 points, while Jamison Stauffacher had 11 points and 11 rebounds. Dahl finished with eight points and seven boards.
“I think you saw the foul trouble when Rob went to the bench. It allowed Conner Meyer to get away from us for a little while,” Albany head coach Derek Allen said.
Lucas, he’s a ball of energy out there. He plays such good defense and he’s so active. We were struggling tonight and he hit some big shots to loosen them up a bit and allow Conner and some other guys to get inside more.Black Hawk coach Charlie Anderson
While Black Hawk is seemingly out of contention for a conference title (Barneveld is 8-1 with three to play, Pecatonica is 9-2 with two games to play), the Warriors are looking ahead to the postseason.
“Time’s running out for me. Playoffs are coming up and I only have a few weeks of basketball left,” Meyer said. “We’re definitely going to works our tails off and try to make it last as long as possible.”
Albany, meanwhile, understands the seed won’t be as high as some of the other teams in the Six Rivers East, but the Comets also aren’t underestimating their talent and ability to win.
“I think we’re playing our best defense of the year right now. I’m thinking we’ll probably be on the road for that first game as a 10- or 11-seed, which means we would play a 6- or 7-seed. I think we can be competitive,” Allen said. “I think we’re playing out best basketball of the year, which is what you hope for as you’re headed into the playoffs.”