Basketball devotees have waited all season for Wednesday, when they get to sit back and spend four days enjoying one of the most talented groups of high school players to grace the boys' state tournament stage.
Anticipation is highest for the Class 4A bracket at Target Center, which is bursting with elite teams, juicy matchups and Division I-level star power.
"I would say the matchups are as good as any tournament I can remember," said Armstrong coach Greg Miller, whose team played five of the eight teams in the field during the regular season. "There are so many good teams and great players. I know everyone is excited."
The obvious favorite is No. 1-seeded Champlin Park. The Rebels (29-0) feature the deepest starting lineup in the state, led by guard McKinley Wright, who has signed with Dayton and was named the Star Tribune Metro Player of the Year. Center Theo John (Marquette) is a shot-blocking brute in the lane and guards Brian Smith (Waldorf), Marcus Hill and D.J. Hunter can all take over portions of games when needed.
Despite the Rebels' undefeated run, the feeling is that they're not invincible. There are weaknesses that can be exploited but it would a very good team to exploit them. And this tournament has plenty of those.
"They're the favorite, but they're not the prohibitive favorite like in the other classes," said Kevin Alsteens, better known by his blog name, TC Hoop Czar. "Any of six or seven teams can win it."
Take Champlin Park's first-round opponent, unseeded Chaska. The high school league only seeds teams one through five and matches up the three unseeded teams randomly. But the Hawks are dangerous. Chaska has 6-5 senior swingman Myles Hanson, who has topped 40 points twice this season, and underrated support in guards Alex Strazzanti and Andrew Kallman, who plays more like a power forward.
"What's puzzling is that even though Champlin Park has been the best team all year, they have to face a team like Chaska in the quarterfinals," said Alex Conover of the Northstar Hoops website. "What more do they have to do?"