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'Small victory' for Mooseheart players

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(MCT) — The shouts that erupted from the Mooseheart basketball team's meeting room about 4 p.m. Tuesday meant welcome news: the hoop dreams of three Sudanese boys will continue for a few more days.

Kane County Judge David Akemann made that ruling in the courthouse a few miles down the road from the Batavia residential school for children from unstable backgrounds.

Last week, the executive director of the state's high school athletic governing agency decided that the three players — all 6 foot 7 inches and above — were ineligible to play basketball for the school's team. His reason was that Mooseheart purportedly had tried to induce the students to enroll for athletic purposes, a violation of the Illinois High School Association bylaws.

Mooseheart challenged the decision in court, asking Akemann to continue to allow the athletes — Mangisto Deng, Akim Nyang and Makur Puou — to play for the Red Ramblers.

"I'm happy to play tonight," Puou said after the judge's decision as he stared nervously at a bank of TV cameras and news reporters at the school.

He added that he came to the United States to play basketball and "get a good education so I can be successful and go back to help my country."

A few hours later, Puou and his teammates played Westminster Christian High School of Elgin. The Red Ramblers won the home contest 53-21.

As distracting as Monday and Tuesday had been, the team seemed energized by Tuesday's ruling.

So did the estimated 300 fans who attended the game. When Puou dunked at the end of a fast break to make it a 19-3 lead early in the game, the room exploded with cheers. He followed that with another dunk a few seconds later, and the walls seemed to throb.

During the court hearing in Geneva, Mooseheart attorney Peter Rush contended that the organization historically has brought kids from all over the world from unstable, even dangerous surroundings to the campus near the banks of the Fox River. Their athletic prowess doesn't matter, Rush said.

Mooseheart took the same approach in these teens' cases and needed to air all the details at a formal hearing with the IHSA board.

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