Minnesota Pipeline once again!
5'11 SF Chaska HS
Kaylee Van Eps '21
Re: Kaylee Van Eps '21
Kaylee's high school team, Chaska, is ranked in the Top 25 in the country by ESPN.
Here is a really nice article on her from their local paper. It says she got her first Div 1 offer in 7th grade. She sounds like a fantastic young lady. Welcome to Lehigh.
https://www.swnewsmedia.com/chaska_hera ... e8df4.html
Here is a really nice article on her from their local paper. It says she got her first Div 1 offer in 7th grade. She sounds like a fantastic young lady. Welcome to Lehigh.
https://www.swnewsmedia.com/chaska_hera ... e8df4.html
Re: Kaylee Van Eps '21
Kaylee is in the final 15 for Miss Basketball in Minnesota. This is what they said
Kaylee Van Eps- Chaska H.S.
Van Eps is a swish-army knife for her Hawks team. She can be asked to guard both guards and posts. She can handle the ball under pressure from opponents. She can hit the outside shot as well as create off the bounce with smooth footwork that allows her to maneuver around defenders. She put up 11.1 points a game on average and now is hoping to help lead her team at the State Tournament.
Chaska, who is undefeated is currently in the state finals and is ranked as the #63 team in the country by Maxpreps
Kaylee Van Eps- Chaska H.S.
Van Eps is a swish-army knife for her Hawks team. She can be asked to guard both guards and posts. She can handle the ball under pressure from opponents. She can hit the outside shot as well as create off the bounce with smooth footwork that allows her to maneuver around defenders. She put up 11.1 points a game on average and now is hoping to help lead her team at the State Tournament.
Chaska, who is undefeated is currently in the state finals and is ranked as the #63 team in the country by Maxpreps
Re: Kaylee Van Eps '21
This has been a big week for Kaylee and Chaska girls basketball. It began with a state SF win over the #1 team in the country (per Maxpreps) Hopkins, breaking their 78 game winning streak and ended with the State Championship with Kaylee scoring the winning bucket with 5.2 seconds remaining.
Congratulations Kaylee!!
Congratulations Kaylee!!
Re: Kaylee Van Eps '21
Impressive week for Chaska. Caught some of the clips on Hopkins game. Wow
Re: Kaylee Van Eps '21
Chaska put the exclamation point on a dazzling postseason, and an undefeated season to boot, by topping an opponent that nearly ground those to a halt with a 45-43 victory over Rosemount in the Class 4A championship game on Friday at Target Center in downtown Minneapolis.
Out of a timeout, Chaska executed to perfection a play that allowed senior guard Kaylee Van Eps to finish with a lay-in with 5.7 seconds remaining that gave the Hawks the first girls basketball championship in program history. The Hawks (18-0) had finished as the Class AAA runner-up in 1998.
It was a fitting conclusion to a season filled with drama, twists, gut-wrenching outcomes, but most of all, a state tournament opportunity for participants.
The final-second heroics were necessary because on the other end junior forward Tayah Leenderts made a layup with 18 seconds remaining to lift Rosemount (20-4) into a 43-all tie. Rosemount, the resilient and scrappy Section 3AAAA representative, didn’t whither when down early and even led once in the final minutes. Rosemount, too, was attempting to win its first girls' basketball championship.
In an absolute dizzying sequence of events in the game’s final minutes, Rosemount chipped away at a deficit, took its first lead on a bouncing three-pointer by sophomore guard Nicole O’Neil. In a heartbeat, though, that lead became a four-point deficit as Chaska answered with power and precision, capped by a muscle lay-in from junior forward Mallory Heyer for a 41-37 Chaska advantage with 4:38 remaining. A quick trade of baskets and each team needed a timeout to refuel.
Senior guard Kelsey Willems and Van Eps led the Hawks with 11 points each and sophomore guard Kennedy Sanders had 10.
Rosemount senior forward Helen Staley had 17 points, nine rebounds and five assists as the Irish stayed with the Hawks throughout down the stretch. O’Neil finished with 13.
Out of a timeout, Chaska executed to perfection a play that allowed senior guard Kaylee Van Eps to finish with a lay-in with 5.7 seconds remaining that gave the Hawks the first girls basketball championship in program history. The Hawks (18-0) had finished as the Class AAA runner-up in 1998.
It was a fitting conclusion to a season filled with drama, twists, gut-wrenching outcomes, but most of all, a state tournament opportunity for participants.
The final-second heroics were necessary because on the other end junior forward Tayah Leenderts made a layup with 18 seconds remaining to lift Rosemount (20-4) into a 43-all tie. Rosemount, the resilient and scrappy Section 3AAAA representative, didn’t whither when down early and even led once in the final minutes. Rosemount, too, was attempting to win its first girls' basketball championship.
In an absolute dizzying sequence of events in the game’s final minutes, Rosemount chipped away at a deficit, took its first lead on a bouncing three-pointer by sophomore guard Nicole O’Neil. In a heartbeat, though, that lead became a four-point deficit as Chaska answered with power and precision, capped by a muscle lay-in from junior forward Mallory Heyer for a 41-37 Chaska advantage with 4:38 remaining. A quick trade of baskets and each team needed a timeout to refuel.
Senior guard Kelsey Willems and Van Eps led the Hawks with 11 points each and sophomore guard Kennedy Sanders had 10.
Rosemount senior forward Helen Staley had 17 points, nine rebounds and five assists as the Irish stayed with the Hawks throughout down the stretch. O’Neil finished with 13.
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