Cooper Noard Glenbrook South

Jeffrey Cat

Redshirt
Jan 29, 2005
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Brian James was front row at the Final of the Wheeling Holiday Tournament featuring Glenbrook South versus North game last night. Cooper Noard is an outstanding guard on the South team which is rated in top three in the state. He is committed to Cornell but there are no letters on intent in the Ivy League. He is a wonderful floor general and a great three point shooter. He played AAU with the Illinois Wolves. I honestly don’t know if he is Big Ten caliber.

Maybe Brian was out on the town watching the team he once coached. Might be interesting. Noard is a great shooter..
 

CSCatFan1

Senior
Dec 4, 2002
39,976
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Brian James was front row at the Final of the Wheeling Holiday Tournament featuring Glenbrook South versus North game last night. Cooper Noard is an outstanding guard on the South team which is rated in top three in the state. He is committed to Cornell but there are no letters on intent in the Ivy League. He is a wonderful floor general and a great three point shooter. He played AAU with the Illinois Wolves. I honestly don’t know if he is Big Ten caliber.

Maybe Brian was out on the town watching the team he once coached. Might be interesting. Noard is a great shooter..

Nice recon. Thanks for sharing.
 

Sec_112

Junior
Jun 17, 2001
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I wonder if it was a casual scouting trip for James, considering his connections to the area. That was James' third tourney of the day.

I've thought for a while Noard would be worth an 11th or 12th scholarship. He's developed some nice size. But GBS is pretty well connected with NU. Obviously, they didn't see something there.

Also, I believe one of the GBN guards is considered a prospect. Last night, couldn't have helped his status.
 

CSCatFan1

Senior
Dec 4, 2002
39,976
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Walking on in the sense that there are no athletic scholarships in the Ivy League.

Okay…that’s fine. Semantics. He’s not paying for his education at Cornell. He’s a “scholarship” athlete…not a “walk-on” in its normal sense.
 

Sec_112

Junior
Jun 17, 2001
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He originally accepted a scholarship offer at Army and changed his mind. So I assume he's getting something at Cornell.
 

Max_Power

Junior
May 29, 2001
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Let's all just celebrate that GBS beat Simeon yesterday. I never imagined that would happen. I am a proud GBS alum and so are my siblings and my three boys. Coach Ralston is a fantastic coach and teacher. He was one of my youngest's favorite teachers. Ralston taught his honors English class freshman year. We had high expectations when Ralston was hired but never dreamed he would take the program to these heights in 5 years.

GBS has had a smattering of D-1 players over the years. Brad Neimann played two seasons at DePaul before injury sidetracked his career (his son is a D-1 prospect and plays in Texas). Jack Cooley at Notre Dame. Jeff Ryan at NU. Last year we had a Martinelli as a walk on at NU who transferred to St. Thomas but has been injured (a kid from our neighborhood is also at St. Thomas but opted to play for Loyola before Ralston arrived). Nick is going to Elon and of course Cooper.

I never thought I would see GBS ranked in top 10 in the state in hoops, let alone at No. 2 where they should be today. GBS' only loss is to Glenbard West by 3 - the No. 1 team in state. Both Glenbard and Simeon are ranked nationally by Max Preps in the normal school category.

Bottomline - COACHING MATTERS!
 
Sep 15, 2006
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Let's all just celebrate that GBS beat Simeon yesterday. I never imagined that would happen. I am a proud GBS alum and so are my siblings and my three boys. Coach Ralston is a fantastic coach and teacher. He was one of my youngest's favorite teachers. Ralston taught his honors English class freshman year. We had high expectations when Ralston was hired but never dreamed he would take the program to these heights in 5 years.

GBS has had a smattering of D-1 players over the years. Brad Neimann played two seasons at DePaul before injury sidetracked his career (his son is a D-1 prospect and plays in Texas). Jack Cooley at Notre Dame. Jeff Ryan at NU. Last year we had a Martinelli as a walk on at NU who transferred to St. Thomas but has been injured (a kid from our neighborhood is also at St. Thomas but opted to play for Loyola before Ralston arrived). Nick is going to Elon and of course Cooper.

I never thought I would see GBS ranked in top 10 in the state in hoops, let alone at No. 2 where they should be today. GBS' only loss is to Glenbard West by 3 - the No. 1 team in state. Both Glenbard and Simeon are ranked nationally by Max Preps in the normal school category.

Bottomline - COACHING MATTERS!
Interesting. I went to Glenbrook in 1962-62 and then to South when it opened the next year. I remember voting on the school colors, mascot, etc. We only had freshmen and sophomores our first year, so we played our sophomore games in the night slot. It was certainly a different atmosphere with the domed arena, and that is still unusual for a high school. I was actually the first student basketball manager at GBS. I had tried out for the team as a freshman, but was a short, lousy player, so I figured that was my best route to a letter. We moved to Pa. after my sophomore year, so I never got to see a varsity team there.

Glenbrook was never noted for basketball at that time. They had a decent team my freshman year with an all-league center, Denny Pietrzak. Other notables on that team included Doug Rader, who later played 3B for the Houston Astros and managed the California Angels, and Don Ohlmeyer, who became a top executive for NBC sports. I was surprised to read years later of the Glenbrook North team with Scheyer winning states, and it's interesting that South is a power this year. Times do change.
 

Sec_112

Junior
Jun 17, 2001
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Bottomline - COACHING MATTERS!
But finding and recognizing a coach that makes that difference is FAR easier said than done. The GBS history demonstrates that. The geniuses at Geneva high school (Coach Ralston's previous position) are another great example.

My favorite example that everybody uses is Coach K as their goal. I didn't know until recently that these were his records at Army before he was hired at Duke:

75-76 / 11-14
76-77 / 20-8
77-78 / 19-9
78-79 / 14-11
79-80 / 9-17

If NU brought in a coach today with that trending record, I'd be surprised if 10% of us would be loudly applauding that hire. That took a ton of insight. He was obviously not doing well with his guys ... at Army of all places.

It was also a ton of luck ... a blind faith in the Bob Knight coaching tree.

Anyhow, Coach Ralston would be the first to tell you the whole thing starts with the right players. But a strong coach makes a difference with that foundation.
 
Last edited:
Sep 15, 2006
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But finding and recognizing a coach that makes that difference is FAR easier said than done. The GBS history demonstrates that. The geniuses at Geneva high school (Coach Ralston's previous position) are another great example.

My favorite example that everybody uses is Coach K as their goal. I didn't know until recently that these were his records at Army before he was hired at Duke:

75-76 / 11-14
76-77 / 20-8
77-78 / 19-9
78-79 / 14-11
79-80 / 9-17

If NU brought in a coach today with that trending record, I'd be surprised if 10% of us would be loudly applauding that hire. That took a ton of insight. He was obviously not doing well with his guys ... at Army of all places.

It was also a ton of luck ... a blind faith in the Bob Knight coaching tree.

Anyhow, Coach Ralston would be the first to tell you the whole thing starts with the right players. But a strong coach makes a difference with that foundation.
The reason Coach K got a look was that people realized that he didn't have very talented players at Army. So the natural question was: Given the caliber of player he had at Army, now many coaches would have had records similar to his? The answer was not very many.
 

macarthur31

Sophomore
Nov 9, 2006
1,587
153
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As I review this thread, I'm reminded of the recent Athletic article that cites 15 different coaches' perspectives on the effect of the transfer portal. One of the things cited was that high major coaches may be devoting less time/resources (and offers?) on high school recruiting. The top HS'ers (i.e. 4-5 stars) are alwasy going to get attention, however do players like Cooper end up falling through the cracks?

Per that article - it seems that if Cooper is high-major material, he'll prove it by thriving at Cornell (or other mid-major) and then ultimately transferring to a high major after frosh/soph year.
 

Max_Power

Junior
May 29, 2001
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But finding and recognizing a coach that makes that difference is FAR easier said than done. The GBS history demonstrates that. The geniuses at Geneva high school (Coach Ralston's previous position) are another great example.

My favorite example that everybody uses is Coach K as their goal. I didn't know until recently that these were his records at Army before he was hired at Duke:

75-76 / 11-14
76-77 / 20-8
77-78 / 19-9
78-79 / 14-11
79-80 / 9-17

If NU brought in a coach today with that trending record, I'd be surprised if 10% of us would be loudly applauding that hire. That took a ton of insight. He was obviously not doing well with his guys ... at Army of all places.

It was also a ton of luck ... a blind faith in the Bob Knight coaching tree.

Anyhow, Coach Ralston would be the first to tell you the whole thing starts with the right players. But a strong coach makes a difference with that foundation.
GBS does not recruit.
 
Dec 24, 2010
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GBS alum from the 80s and I've been excited by the team's successes this year. I wasn't sports minded in high school - I spent most of my time in the apple orchard, and I can't recall any of our teams being particularly good at anything.
 

DaCat

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
25,505
1,899
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GBS' only loss is to Glenbard West by 3 - the No. 1 team in state. Both Glenbard and Simeon are ranked nationally by Max Preps in the normal school category.
I just saw that Glenbard West is 21 in the country in the latest ESPN poll.
 

Catreporter

Senior
Sep 4, 2007
4,957
437
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I'm thrilled for GBS. Broadcast their games for several years in the late 60s from that Domed arena. They had a pretty good center in Mike Reeves who starred there at the time, but they never did much in the state tournament which was such a great event then (not so much now with the class structure). Reeves went to Northwestern and so did Dan Ivankovich some 20 years later. He was derailed by injuries but became a prominent doctor.
 

NUCat320

Senior
Dec 4, 2005
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I'm thrilled for GBS. Broadcast their games for several years in the late 60s from that Domed arena. They had a pretty good center in Mike Reeves who starred there at the time, but they never did much in the state tournament which was such a great event then (not so much now with the class structure). Reeves went to Northwestern and so did Dan Ivankovich some 20 years later. He was derailed by injuries but became a prominent doctor.
The TitanDome :)
Late 90s for me.

Kurt Anderson at TE and, perhaps (?), PF.
 
May 29, 2001
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He originally accepted a scholarship offer at Army and changed his mind. So I assume he's getting something at Cornell.

Cornell's coach told my son's AAU coach that they have trouble recruiting players from middle-class families, but they have a lot of financial assistance for lower-income families. I'm pretty sure I met Noard's dad at one of the UA events, and just a wild guess but I don't believe the family falls into that category.
 

Purple Pile Driver

All-Conference
May 14, 2014
27,132
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Cornell's coach told my son's AAU coach that they have trouble recruiting players from middle-class families, but they have a lot of financial assistance for lower-income families. I'm pretty sure I met Noard's dad at one of the UA events, and just a wild guess but I don't believe the family falls into that category.
I don’t have to meet his dad to know it’s very unlikely a family at GBS falls in the lower income family category.
 

PURPLECAT88

Senior
Feb 4, 2003
7,682
739
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I don’t have to meet his dad to know it’s very unlikely a family at GBS falls in the lower income family category.
It's not exactly likely, but there are some lower income areas of Glenview, primarily recent immigrants. I don't know anything about the Noards situation.
 

Sec_112

Junior
Jun 17, 2001
6,600
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63
27 in the sectional win last night. And a tough game! New Trier was allowed to beat the hell out of the kid.

I think Noard is kind of underrated, and will do well at the next level. My guess is he's going to be a hell of a mid-major player. I wish NU could have found 12th spot for him, but they have enough of those guys.

BTW, NU in general was quite represented at the sectional last night. Taphorn, Kip Kirkpatrick (proud NT Dad) and Rick Falk, a GBS regular. I'm sure I missed a couple.
 

xxxbobxxx

Sophomore
Mar 12, 2005
10,806
163
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27 in the sectional win last night. And a tough game! New Trier was allowed to beat the hell out of the kid.

I think Noard is kind of underrated, and will do well at the next level. My guess is he's going to be a hell of a mid-major player. I wish NU could have found 12th spot for him, but they have enough of those guys.

BTW, NU in general was quite represented at the sectional last night. Taphorn, Kip Kirkpatrick (proud NT Dad) and Rick Falk, a GBS regular. I'm sure I missed a couple.
Willing to bet not all schollies will be used next year. In fact, would wager real money there will be more than one empty schollie - excluding gifts to walk ons.