|  The win improves the overall record for the Railers to 19-3, but 
			there is no time to rest on the accolades as the toughest stretch of 
			the season continues this weekend with games against Sacred 
			Heart-Griffin and Southeast, the combatants in this year's 
			Springfield City Tournament finale. Every game of the Chatham 
			tournament seemed to produce a different hero, and in the biggest 
			game of the tournament, it was the senior, Will Podbelsek, leading 
			the charge with a career-high 19 points. "I grabbed him after the game," coach Neil Alexander said, "and 
			told him that he had just played one of the best games of his 
			career. He came up big for us tonight, but there's one thing about 
			Will -- you never have to worry about the effort he'll bring. He has 
			that kind of heart." Two other Railers, Max Cook and Tyler Horchem, joined Podbelsek 
			in double figures with 11 and 10 points respectively. It did take a 
			while for the offense to get going, but as we've seen throughout 
			this season, when it's going good and going right, it's almost 
			impossible to stop. 
			 Things did not get off to the start Lincoln had hoped for in 
			trying to pay back the Crimsons for their lone CS8 loss, an overtime 
			defeat at Roy S. Anderson earlier in the season. After Payton Dugan 
			hit a 3 and Josh Peak scored on a conventional three-point play, the 
			Railers found themselves down early at 6-0. Then Cook put the 
			Railers on the board with a 3, and Podbelsek tied the game with the 
			first of his five 3-pointers on the night. After a free throw from 
			Edward Bowlby and Jacksonville's Peak going to the bench with his 
			second foul early in the first, Podbelsek continued the barrage with 
			another 3 and a shot fake from behind the arc, dribble-in and 
			pull-up jumper to extend the lead to 12-6. With Bowlby on the bench with foul trouble, Lincoln got a big 
			basket from Austin Krusz as his high arching shot just outside the 
			lane put the Railers up 14-7. In what would be a game of runs, the 
			Crimsons ran off five in a row, but Podbelsek delivered another big 
			3 to stop the run and push the lead back to five at 17-12. An area 
			the Railers were looking for in order to succeed on the offensive 
			end depended on the shooters Lincoln could put in the corners. 
			Success would force the big guys from Jacksonville to cover those 
			corners, with hopes of either tiring them out or opening up the 
			middle for some easy looks. Being mindful of the 3-point shooting of Horchem caused the 
			Crimsons to forget about his ability to go to the basket. With the 
			left side overloaded, Horchem cut to the basket from the right 
			corner, took the pass and laid it in, starting an 8-0 run. Gavin 
			Block, the tournament MVP, put in his two, or should I say three, 
			cents by connecting from long range, as did Horchem, as the Railer 
			lead grew to 25-14. Lincoln was able to take a 28-16 lead into the 
			half.  The third quarter was more of the same for Lincoln as Podbelsek 
			again struck twice from long range as the advantage grew to 34-18. A 
			basket from Block preceded a 3 from Horchem as the lead grew past 20 
			at 39-18. The last notable Railer spurt was a 6-0 run led by Bowlby's 
			reverse layup on a backdoor, steal and layup from Podbelsek, and a 
			layup by Cook that was swatted away in frustration by Jacksonville, 
			resulting in a goaltending call. Not sure many saw this one coming 
			as the scoreboard read 45-23 going into the fourth quarter. 
			 Cook continued the Railer dominance with four to start the 
			quarter as Lincoln's lead grew to its largest at 49-23. Credit must 
			be given to Jacksonville for not just giving in. The Crimsons made a 
			final push to get into the game by running off 12 of their own to 
			cut the lead to 49-35. A timeout from Alexander was needed to settle 
			everyone down. "There was the one stretch where we started gambling on defense," 
			Alexander explained. "We just needed to play defense like we had 
			been." Cook's 3 from earlier in the quarter was the only field goal for 
			the Railers in the fourth as they stepped to the line, going 7 of 9 
			to finish out the win 55-36. "Our kids are playing real well right now, and we've got a goal: 
			We are looking to get that number one seed in the regional. That is 
			important for this team," Alexander said. Along with Podbelsek's 19 and Cook and Horchem combining for 21 
			points, Block scored nine, Bowlby added three, with Krusz scoring 
			two and Adam Conrady adding a free throw at the end of the first 
			half. The Railers placed three on the all-tournament team. Along with 
			the MVP Block, Cook and Bowlby were part of the 10-man squad. 
			Depending on the night, there could have been more, but Alexander 
			said they were lucky to get three. "When you're as balanced a team as we are, we're lucky we got the 
			three we did," the coach said. "Sometimes one will cancel out the 
			other. Take a look at all-conference right now. Who from this team 
			(Lincoln) would or could you pick?" See the end of the story for extra tournament notes. Now, the Railers were able to play for the outright title 
			Saturday night by virtue of getting by Rochester on Saturday 
			morning. There were some, yours truly included, who thought the 
			possibility existed the Railers should get to an early lead, get 
			some of the starters some rest, so they could be ready for the game 
			later that evening against Jacksonville. Not everyone thought that, 
			especially those wearing the Rochester uniform. Lincoln needed a 15-0 run from late in the third into the fourth 
			to break open what had been just a four-point game to extinguish the 
			Rockets 71-52. If not for the record-tying performance of Max Cook, 
			this one could have been one of the bigger upsets at the Winter 
			Classic. The Lincoln junior tied the tournament record for 3s made 
			in a game -- seven, all in the first half -- as his 21 points helped 
			Lincoln to a 43-34 halftime lead. Yes, that was halftime. A team 
			that been allowing about 30 points a game in the month of January 
			saw that go by the board in the first half.  
			 Rochester was able to stay in the game with hot shooting, 
			especially from 3-point range, where they hit for more than 50 
			percent in the first half. "We told them not to let them stand and shoot because they can 
			hit shots," Alexander said. "So, what did we do? We stood there and 
			let them shoot, and we see what the result was. I was very 
			disappointed in our defense in this one." 
			[to top of second column] | 
 
			 The Rockets' first nine points came off 3s, while Lincoln built a 
			13-9 lead thanks to the long ball as well. The first two of Cook's 
			3s along with Horchem hitting put the Railers up by four. But it was 
			a short-lived lead as the Rockets got the ball inside to Matt Swaine, 
			someone the Railers did not have an answer for as he scored 20 
			points. Down 14-13, the Railers went on a run to take their first 
			double-digit lead of the day at 24-14. The run was highlighted by 
			Bowlby, who scored the last two baskets to push the Lincoln lead to 
			10. The Rockets refused to go away, and another 3 cut the game back 
			to four at 29-25 midway through the second quarter. Cue Mr. Cook. 
			The junior found a spot on the floor that he liked and he just kept 
			going there. Cook scored 12 in a row, all on 3s, as the Lincoln lead 
			expanded to 43-28. Cook's seven 3s tied the record held -- no 
			surprise to anyone -- by Matt Schick and Jordan Nelson. But the Railers did not close out the half well defensively as 
			the Rockets closed with six in a row to put the halftime score at 
			43-34.  As he has been very good at doing, Horchem hit two 3s in a row as 
			Lincoln went back up 49-35. Horchem finished with 15, all on 3s. 
			Again, it was too much Swaine for Rochester as he scored eight in 
			the quarter and the Rockets closed to within 49-45. After a pair of 
			free throws from Block, the Rockets climbed back to within four at 
			51-47. It took a while, but Lincoln finally woke up and started the 15-0 
			run that finally put the Rockets away. Bowlby started the run with a 
			basket and two free throws sandwiched around another 3 from Horchem. 
			Podbelsek also connected for his only 3 of the game, with baskets 
			from Block and Bowlby finally allowing Railer Nation to breathe a 
			sigh of relief. 
			 The record shows it to be a 19-point win, but it was not a 
			19-point game. Against a different team, this one could have ended 
			up on the wrong side of the win-loss column, but every successful 
			season has those games that could have been losses. It took about 
			three quarters for things to start clicking. Certainly a teaching 
			moment: Take anyone lightly and they can hang a loss on you. Do that 
			during state tournament play and you go home much earlier than you 
			wanted to. Cook, Bowlby and Horchem (21, 16 and 15) combined for 52 of 
			Lincoln's 71 points. Podbelsek added seven, with Block scoring six, 
			Adam Conrady five, and Joey Olden added a free throw. Now things get real interesting as this week finds both SHG and 
			Southeast on the schedule. The Railers will look to stay near the 
			top of the CS8 with Friday's game at SHG and then back home against 
			Southeast. The Spartans won the City Tournament on Saturday and will 
			come to Lincoln looking for revenge after the Railers knocked them 
			off in Springfield earlier in the season, while Lincoln has yet to 
			see a much-improved SHG squad.  By the way, check your calendars. Do you realize there are only 
			eight regular-season games left? Every year, coach Alexander 
			stresses how fast the season goes, and this one is no different. 
			Let's hope this season lasts a lot longer than anyone thought it 
			would back in November. ___ LINCOLN (71) MCook 7 0-0 21, Bowlby 7 2-2 16, Horchem 5 0-0 15, Podbelsek 2 
			2-2 7, Block 2 2-2 6, Conrady 2 1-1 5, Olden 0 1-2 1, Krusz 0 0-0 0, 
			Perry 0 0-0 0, WCook 0 0-0 0, Ebelherr 0 0-0 0, Dunovsky 0 0-0 0. 
			Team 25 8-9 71. 3-point field goals 13 (Cook 7, Horchem 5, Podbelsek). ROCHESTER (52) Swaine 20, Neal 9, Fisher 9, Zeigler 8, Dowis 3, Ferguson 3. Team 
			19 5-12 52. 3-point field goals 9 (Fisher 3, Neal 2, Zeigler 2, 
			Ferguson, Dowis) Scoring by quarters: LINCOLN 20-23-13-15 71Rochester 14-20-13-5 52
 ___ 
			 LINCOLN (55) Podbelsek 7 0-0 19, Cook 3 3-4 11, Horchem 3 2-2 10, Block 2 4-5 
			9, Bowlby 1 1-2 3, Krusz 1 0-0 2, Conrady 0 1-2 1, Olden 0 0-0 0. 
			Team 17 11-15 55. 3-point field goals 10 (Podbelsek 5, Cook 2, 
			Horchem 2, Block). JACKSONVILLE (36) Keene 10, Armstrong 7, Barlow 6, Hance 6, Peak 6, Dugan 1. Team 
			12 8-12 36. 3-point field goals 4 (Barlow 2, Keene 2). Scoring by quarters: LINCOLN 14-14-17-10 55Jacksonville 9-7-7-13 36
 ___ Other notes 
            [By JEFF BENJAMIN] 
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            Jeff Benjamin's Railer basketball articles |