Wilmington Basketball Team Helps City Rally in Hard Times
Seats at Hurricane basketball games are hot items
in Clinton County community.
By KYLE NAGEL, Dayton Daily
News
December 12, 2009

After finishing 21-3 and making it to the Division II regional
semifinals last season, the Wilmington High School boys
basketball team returns its top three scorers and four starters
with hopes of again piling up wins and providing a reason to
celebrate for a rebuilding community.
Photo Ty Greenlees
WILMINGTON — Jordan Berlin
kept his voice low as the Wilmington High School boys
basketball team, and even coach Mike Noszka at the bench
press, held a conditioning session in the weight room
behind him.
The Hurricane senior forward and Ashland University
recruit is a town lifer, both in residence and
basketball. He was born in Wilmington, and his father,
Tony, has coached him on youth teams and now assists
with the high school squad.
“Friday nights used to be ... you would see everybody
out,” Berlin said. “You would go bowling, go to the
movies, get something to eat. Now you do that, and it’s
almost like it’s not fun anymore because things have
changed so much in the last year.”
During that time, the unemployment rate in Wilmington
has more than quintupled to 15 percent as the town has
shed about 10,000 jobs because of air cargo company
DHL’s drastic change in operations at the city’s air
freight hub. With the area economy bearing the crushing
weight of lost jobs, the city has turned its attention
and enthusiasm to the boys basketball team, which is on
one of the best runs in Clinton County history.
After winning 21 games last season, the Hurricane began
their highly anticipated season with a sterling senior
class by beating Little Miami. To see four returning
starters, including college recruits Berlin and Miami
University signee Quinten Rollins, and a hard-working
team built on defense and discipline, Wilmington
residents are willing to come out by the thousands.
“They’re scrappers, and they fight the whole way,” said
Wilmington Mayor David Raizk, who grew up at Wilmington
College practices following around his father, Fred,
whose name now adorns the Quakers’ gym. “The community
is pulling together, and the school activities and
sports have been a catalyst for that.”
A difficult period
The city has a long history of packing high school
contests.
“It was a Norman Rockwell type of community,” said Mike
Wallace, the high school athletic director who graduated
from Wilmington in 1964. “Everybody supported the high
school 100 percent, and it was a great togetherness
feeling. It’s still a lot like that.”
Residents increased their basketball support in 2006,
when the Hurricane won their first Fort Ancient Valley
Conference Cardinal Division championship by going 17-4.
The current seniors were eighth-graders then, and
superintendent Ron Sexton already was hearing about
60-point wins by the group at league meetings.
By last season, the bad news had started. DHL was
eliminating its U.S. overnight delivery operation, which
crippled the Wilmington Air Park. The basketball team,
meanwhile, was beating Elder, Centerville, Dunbar and
others and raising an already keen community awareness.
As celebrities Jay Leno, Rachael Ray, Nick Lachey and
others reached out to help Wilmington, the basketball
team became the avenue to fight back. Tickets were hot
items, and as many as 4,000 fans followed the Hurricane
on the road during their tournament run.
Many in those stands were residents who donated time,
money or other items to help the school district stave
off the need for athletic participation fees. The
schools still provide all supplies for elementary
students, as well, and the district has made cuts
elsewhere, including four administrative and 9.5 teacher
positions.
The school system overall has been a pride point, Sexton
said. But with the basketball team, as can happen in any
community, residents have found an outlet to prove the
city is competitive.
“The worst thing that could ever happen to a community
is to become dependent,” said Sexton, a former wrestling
coach who is in his 30th year with the district. “These
folks are not doing that.”
A fighting mentality
Rollins’ grandmother, with whom he and his mother live,
was for many years a drug- and alcohol-abuse counselor.
His mother is a day-care provider.
His family has not been directly affected by the massive
job losses in Wilmington. Many on the team haven’t, he
said. But they can feel the crowds and their enthusiasm.
“I remember the games when there were empty spots in the
bleachers, but there aren’t now,” said Rollins, who also
was an All-Southwest District running back in football.
“Even when we’re on the road, even when it’s snowing, we
have just as many fans.”
Here’s what they’ll see: scoring leadership by Rollins
(14.8 points per game last season) and Berlin (14.7) and
four other seniors — Malcolm Heard, Nyles Williams,
Brandon Arehart and Kyle Blakeman — who have played
mostly together since elementary school.
Along the way, the Hurricane likely will see packed
gyms, plenty of faces and a community grateful for the
distraction and pride.
“The town is about basketball now; people look forward
to the Friday or Saturday night games,” Berlin said.
“Wilmington can hang with those bigger teams from bigger
towns now, when they couldn’t in the past. I think that
can be a big thing for people.”
Contact this reporter at (937) 225-7389 or knagel@DaytonDailyNews.com.
Story at the
Dayton Daily News
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