7 High Schools Undefeated Heading Into IHSA Finals Day 2

With four rounds under their belts, seven Northern Illinois squads remain undefeated at the 2015 IHSA Finals in Peoria. A record 146 8-person teams have entered the competition (with up to 4 alternates allowed per squad). 

Lincolnshire's Stevenson High School holds the top tiebreak after trouncing Fremd High School (Palatine) 68-0 in round four. Freshmen are playing their first three boards, with Alex Bian, James Wei and Conrad Oberhaus all posting perfect 4-0's so far.

Junior Allen Guo, Senior Philip Engstrom, Sophomore Rahul Dhiman and Sophomore Adit Ghosh are all perfect at boards four through seven. Stevenson's lone blemish was a third round loss on board eight.

Also in round four, New Trier (Winnetka) upended IMSA (Aurora) 51-17.

In the battle of the North's, Naperville North womped Niles North (Skokie) 54-15, and in the battle of the Central's, Hindsdale Central smoked Naperville Central 49.5-18.5

Hindsale Central's victory was typical of several others among the so-far undefeateds, demonstrating that depth is as important as top talent in the eight-board format:

  • Naperville Central's board one, Senior Andrew Shao, posted his team's only victory in the team loss to their neighbor to the east.

  • Glenbrook South (Glenview) upended Benet Academy (Lisle) 43-25 despite losing board two and drawing on board one.

  • Neuqua Valley pulled a similar feat against Highland Park 35.5-23.5 despite losing board one and drawing board two. (Board 4's result is unreported).

  • Evanston Township defeated Lane Tech (Chicago) 40.5-27.5 while drawing on the top two boards. 

Perennial powerhouse and defending champion Whitney Young redeemed its third round 37.5-30.5 loss to New Trier by shutting out Lemont High School 68-0. Whitney Young holds the top tiebreak among the three dozen 3.0/4 teams.

Competition continues today (February 14) at 9am with round five.

Pairings and standings can be found here. Awards are scheduled at 5pm at the Peoria Civic Center.

There are seven perfect scores on boards one through three, with eleven on board four, eight on boards five and seven, ten on board six and eight.