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IHSA: Mooseheart trio eligible, school on probation

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The IHSA Board of Directors voted unanimously Monday evening that Mooseheart’s three South Sudanese boys basketball, players will remain eligible, but the program has been placed on probation, pending “review and refinement” of its admissions process and other mandatory training.

In its official statement after the decision, which was issued after a lengthy afternoon hearing at IHSA headquarters in Bloomington, the IHSA asserted that an investigation by associate executive director Kurt Gibson was “complete and appropriate,” but that the South Sudanese transfers had been “taken advantage of by [African-Hoop Opportunities Providing an Education] and people related to that organization.”

Mooseheart had initially been told that juniors Akim Nyang, Makur Puou and Mangisto Deng fulfilled their IHSA transfer requirements by sitting out last season after being referred to the school by A-HOPE. The game-changing trio – Nyang stands 7-foot-1, Puou is 6-10 and Deng is 6-7 – played in the Red Ramblers’ first four games this season before trouble hit.

IHSA executive director Marty Hickman informed Mooseheart on Nov. 29 that the organization was stripping the players of their eligibility because of inappropriate recruiting on Mooseheart’s part, but Kane County Judge David Akemann ruled last week that the players be allowed to continue competing until the IHSA’s Board of Directors met Monday to hear the school’s appeal.

Dan Klett, president of the IHSA’s 10-member Board of Directors and principal at Wauconda High School, said hearing from the students firsthand at Monday’s meeting was “by far the biggest piece” in the board’s deliberations.

“It was fairly clear from our standpoint that the students weren’t really aware of everything that was going on,” Klett said. “They were just looking for an opportunity to get to the United States to get an education so ultimately they can go back and take that education and help their own country. We just feel A-HOPE’s intent is a lot more about basketball, as their name implies. ... They’re not helping every kid. They’re not helping kids who are 5-2. They’re not helping young ladies.”

Nyang, Deng and Puou played in three additional games last week after the judge’s temporary restraining order, including Wednesday’s 58-51 loss to Hinckley-Big Rock. Hinckley-Big Rock had reached out to the IHSA early this year to raise concerns about A-HOPE.

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