State Football |
Althoff rolls over Lena-Winslow, Dierre razzle dazzles to record book

Dierre Hill Jr. running in state title game
Dierre Hill Jr. evades Corbyn Lynch during first quarter action of their Class 1A state title game on Friday. Hill went on to finish the game with a record-breaking seven TDs and 518 all-purpose yards.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

NORMAL - On a snowy and frigid November afternoon at Hancock Stadium in Normal, Illinois, Althoff Catholic’s Dierre Hill Jr. delivered one of the greatest performances in IHSA state football championship history. The senior running back shattered records en route to leading the Crusaders to a commanding 57-14 victory over Lena-Winslow in the Class 1A title game. Hill’s dynamic effort capped a perfect 14-0 season for Althoff, earning the program its fourth state championship and its first since 1990.

Hill, an Oregon commit, was unstoppable despite the subfreezing conditions. The “Real-Feel” temperature hovered at 7 degrees, with a steady northeasterly wind adding to the chill. Yet Hill ran with an intensity that Lena-Winslow’s defense simply could not contain. After being tackled for a loss on Althoff’s first possession, Hill responded with a string of electrifying plays, rushing for a staggering 436 yards on 32 carries and scoring seven total touchdowns. He also added 80 receiving yards, including an 80-yard touchdown reception from sophomore quarterback Jayden Ellington.


Althoff offensive line blocking
Le-Win linemen Preston Shultz, Lucas Kempel, and Koby Kearns try to fight their way past Althoff linemen Logan Davis and Cam Golden. The Crusaders offensive unit help tally 630 yards in just 43 plays.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

"He is the best football player in the state of Illinois," Althoff head coach Austin Frazier said proudly. "He is again this year. I can't wait to see what things he will do at Oregon next year."

Hill’s seven touchdowns—a combination of six rushing and one receiving—were scored on runs of 59, 5, 65, 78, 7, and 49 yards, plus the long catch-and-run. His 436 rushing yards shattered the previous Class 1A championship record of 373 yards, and his 46 total points broke an all-class state title game record, surpassing the previous high of 36. Hill finished his senior season with 51 touchdowns, further solidifying his place in Illinois high school football lore.

"He was really shifty and a strong runner," said Lena-Winslow senior lineman Lucas Kempel. "We had a hard time bringing him down. He kind of ran all over us."


Hill runs over a Le-Win player
Crusaders' Dierre Hill Jr. runs over Panther Alec Schlichting during a play in the first quarter.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

While on the subject of Hill's ability to break tackles during the press conference, Panther head coach Ric Arand added later, "He's strong. He's shifty. He's the whole package."

Althoff’s victory was a complete team effort, but Hill’s performance was undeniably the focal point of the game. The Crusaders set a program record for most wins in a season and completed only the second undefeated campaign in school history, joining the 1990 team’s 13-0 run. With the IHSA success factor in play, Althoff’s victory also marked the end of its tenure in Class 1A, as the private school will move to Class 3A next season. Over the years, Althoff has competed in various classes, including 2A and 4A, and reached the finals in both. Notably, the Crusaders were 2A runners-up in 2012 and 4A runners-up in 2015.

While Hill and the offense dominated the headlines, Althoff’s defense delivered an equally impressive performance, holding Lena-Winslow to a season-low 14 points. The Panthers had averaged nearly 50 points per game in the postseason and entered the championship as one of the state’s most formidable offenses. However, the Crusaders’ defense rose to the occasion, limiting big plays and forcing the Panthers into difficult situations throughout the game. Drake Mosley led the defensive charge with 11 tackles, including nine solo stops. Charleston Coldon and Xavier Chapman also contributed heavily, making nine tackles each.


Bundled Althoff fans cheer for their team, braving the bitter wind and later savorying the sweet taste of victory with the team's first state title since 1990.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

"Coach Frazier has been preaching the entire year details, domination, and execution," said senior lineman Jason Dowell. "When we go out there we try to apply to apply those traits every single time. We worried about our details and try to major the minors."

Lena-Winslow, known for its punishing ground game, managed to score twice in the contest. The first came on a 4-yard run late in the first half, cutting Althoff’s lead to 28-6 after a missed extra point.

"We got behind early, but we responded. We had some series on offense where we had some thing going," Arand said. "Offensively, we did somethings. We just didn't finish. Defensively, there were times we played really well. When we didn't make a tackle, they made us pay for it."

The second was a 45-yard burst early in the second half that, combined with a successful two-point conversion, brought the Panthers within 28-14.


Panther Alec Schlichting is shoved out of bounds by Crusader Xavier Chapman. Schlichting was his team's leading rusher with 117 net yards on 22 touches.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

When it came to his effort to getting the ball down the field, Alex Schlicting said he had a couple of lanes at his disposal.

"They had speed on their side," said the junior running back who scored the Panthers' first touchdown, describing how quickly the Althoff defensive closed holes. "I think everyone did a good job opening up lanes everything."

Despite the brief surge, Althoff responded immediately, with Hill adding three more scores along with a 45-yard TD catch from Kylin Jordan to put the game out of reach and secure the Crusaders’ state title.

For Lena-Winslow, the loss marked the end of another stellar season. The Panthers finished 13-1, reaching the Class 1A championship game for the fourth consecutive year. Lena-Winslow remains one of Illinois’ most decorated high school football programs, with six state championships since 2010, including back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022. However, the Panthers have now fallen short in the final two seasons, following a 14-0 loss to Camp Point Central in the 2022 title game.


Althoff's Jordan Wright and Lena-Winslow's Preston Shultz, both sophomore linemen whose combined mass total 527 pounds, battle at the line of scrimmage.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Six seniors on Lena-Winslow’s roster have the unique distinction of playing in a state championship game every year of their high school careers. They claimed victories in their freshman and sophomore seasons, contributing to the program’s legacy, but endured tough losses in their junior and senior years. For the first time in their championship history, the Panthers entered the game as underdogs against an Althoff team that boasted superior speed and offensive firepower. Despite their underdog status, Lena-Winslow fought hard but was unable to contain Hill’s historic effort.

The title game marked a fitting conclusion to an extraordinary season for Althoff, which not only claimed its fourth state championship but also demonstrated its dominance in a season where no opponent in Class 1A came close to matching its level of play.

"What a special year to be the only team in the state of Illinois to be undefeated," Frazier said at the beginning the postgame press conference. "With this collection of guys, I'm keenly aware of how talented we are and how athletic some of these guys are. They are very good football players.

"I'm fortunate because these guys are such great young men. They are going to be great students in college. They are going to grow up to be great husband and great fathers, and great contributors to society."


Senior Jason Dowell gets a congratulatory huge from a coach after his last high school football game.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

.::. More photos .::.



Keywords: Althoff Catholic football IHSA Class 1A championship
Dierre Hill Jr. record-breaking game Illinois high school football IHSA football championships

One for the record book, Unity nearly pulls off underdog victory over Althoff

TOLONO - Unity head football coach Scott Hamilton said Althoff Catholic (4-0) was the best team he has coached against in his career.

Hamilton told the team after the game that, having coached over 400 games, there has only been a handful in which he thought every player on the field would have to play at their absolute best to even have a chance of winning. Friday night's game against Althoff, which brought three Division I recruits to town, was one of those occasions.

The Rockets' roster (2-2) proved they were up to the task in the 53-52 loss to the Crusaders.

It was a record-breaking game for the Rockets.

Dane Eisenmenger
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks
Dane Eisenmenger looks for open receiver under pressure during the first half. A junior, he threw 548 yards, connecting 27 of the 42 attempts for seven touchdowns.

Taking advantage of Unity's overflowing stable of receivers, Unity quarterback Dane Eisenmenger, who already led the passing stats with a 455-yard game against Mt. Carmel last year, finished with a career and program best of 543 yards. Eisenmenger completed 27 of his 42 passes against the Crusaders.

Receiver Tre Hoggard amassed a program-best 266 receiving yards, breaking a 34-year-old record held by Jeff Vail, who had 219 yards during Unity's 1990 game against Schlarman.

Unity's offense also reset the mark for the most yards in a game from 639 yards to 666 yards, of which 543 were produced thanks to their stable of seven sticky-fingered receivers.

To date, Friday night's game was the highest-scoring game ever played at Hicks Field. The combined score of 105 points exceeded both Unity's 61-42 win over Pontiac in 2017 and last year's 56-46 semifinal playoff loss to Mt. Carmel.

Althoff, which lost its semifinal game to eventual 1A winners Camp Point Central in 2023, was led in scoring by 5-foot-11, 188-pound Oregon commit Dierre Hill Jr. Hill ran for 255 yards and caught four passes for 48 yards. The senior scored five touchdowns, the last on a nine-yard pass to set up the Crusaders' game-winning two-point conversion with seven seconds left in the non-conference contest.

Dierre Hill Jr. running the ball

Dierre Hill, Jr. bounce out of the backfield late in the fourth quarter. The elusive Oregon commit was hard to bring down thanks to his incredible balance and ability to change directions on a dime. The senior scored five touchdowns and 11 yards every time he touched the ball. See more Sentinel photos here.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Hill scored his first two touchdowns in the first quarter, the first on a 68-yard gallop six and a half minutes into the game and the second on a five-yard run nearly four minutes later to give Althoff a 14-0 lead.

"Honestly, he is the best player I've ever coached against in 33 years," Hamilton said. "There is a reason that kid is going to Oregon."

With just over two minutes left in the first quarter, Eisenmenger hit a wide-open Tre Hoggard on a 31-yard pass play, closing the scoring gap to one touchdown after the extra point by Emmerson Bailey.

Althoff responded with another touchdown courtesy of a 36-yard run from Jayden Ellington, leaving 21 seconds and a 21-7 score on the board in the east end zone.

Tre Hoggard

Unity's Tre Hoggard out runs Althoff's Lorne Green during the second half. Hoggard finished the game with 266 receiving yards and four TDs on 12 catch. He also tacked on six rushing yards on two carries to his stats on Friday.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Like two prizefighters throwing heavy hands and neither backing down, Unity put the ball in the east end zone again as time ran out. Garrett Richardson sprinted 76 yards to make the score 21-14.

Unity and Althoff continued to slug it out, both teams scoring two touchdowns in the second quarter to start the second half at 35-21.

"I give a lot of credit to our kids. We had so guys go out with cramping and few things here and there," Hamilton said, proud of how well his team played against an obviously talent program. "We had other guys step up and just kept battling. I just don't have enough great things to say about our kids, our coaches, our plan, and how the kids executed."

He add, "We just wanted to keep throwing punches at them and see what we could get."

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Emmerson Bailey celebrates after hitting his 34-yard field goal in the 4th quarter. Bailey, who contributed 10 points in the loss, also went 6-for-6 on PATs.

Hamilton and his staff made some defensive adjustments that held the Crusaders scoreless in the entire third quarter. Meanwhile, the Rocket offense delivered two passing touchdowns to end the third quarter at 35-all.

With the ball spotted around the 27-yard line and unable to pick up a first down, the Rockets called Emerson's number. The senior, who was already 3-for-3 on PATs, booted a 34-yard field goal between the uprights for the go-ahead score, 38-35.

"I'm really glad the pressure didn't get to me," Bailey said. As went out to make the kick, he said he kept his head down and tried not to look at the crowd in order to control the anxiety he was feeling as much as he could. "I didn't look up once. I just put my head down, and did what I do."

In the remaining 10 minutes and 44 seconds left in the game, the Rockets scored two more times via the Eisenmenger-Hoggard connection.

The Crusaders bookended a field goal with two touchdowns from Hill. Hill scored on a 26-yard run and on a nine-yard pass to trail Unity 52-51 with seven seconds remaining in the game. He then went on to score on the two-point conversion for Althoff's road win.


State football |
Dierre Hill, Jr. takes it to Lena-Winslow early in Class 1A title game

NORMAL - Evading Lena-Winslow's Miles Mahon and Corbyn Lynch, Althoff Catholic's Dierre Hill, Jr. runs the ball for a touchdown in the first half. The Crusaders led at the half 28-6 over the Panthers, who were last season Class 1A runner-ups.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Defying the odds, Unity falls to Althoff in nail-biter at Hicks Field

Unity's Tre Hoggard
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

TOLONO - Tre Hoggard (middle) is congratulated by teammates Michael Bromley and Brady Parr while celebrating his 52-yard TD catch in the fourth quarter in their home game against Althoff Catholic (4-0) on Friday. Along with Emmerson Bailey's PAT, Unity (2-2) took a 52-45 lead with 1:23 left in the game. The Crusaders responded with Dierre Hill scoring his fifth touchdown with seven seconds remaining on the clock, going up 53-52 for the non-conference win. More photos and our game recap coming later this week.

State football |
Hill runs over 400 yards, leads to Althoff to state football title

Lena-Winslow's Alec Schlichting tries contain Althoff's Dierre Hill Jr. during their Class 1A championship game. Hill finished, who left the Panthers dazed and dazzled, finished with game with 523 yards on 32 carries and an 80-yard pass play. He scored six TDs rushing and another on the pass play.

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Read our latest health and medical news

2024 Illinois Media Class announces boys' 2A All-State Teams


Tanner Jacob goes up for a shot around Pinckneyville's Ty Laur and Riley Bauersachs during the Spartans' Christie Clinic Shootout game in January. Jacob was the only Class 2A player from the area to be included on the Illinois Media's All-State list.

URBANA - The roster of players for the 2024 Illinois All-State boys basketball teams for Class 2A was made public on Wednesday. St. Joseph-Ogden's Tanner Jacob was the only Sentinel area player to earn a mention on the list.

The teams were picked via votes by Illinois Media, a group made up of sportswriters and broadcasters from different parts of the state. They selected five players for the first team and five players for the second team in each class. The players have received five points for a first-team vote and three points for a second-team vote.

The media members voting for this year's team include: Derek Bayne, WREX-TV Rockford; Josh Brown, Robinson Daily News; Jeremy Chawgo, Breese Journal; Kevin Chlum, LaSalle News-Tribune; Michael Clark, Chicago Sun-Times/Lansing News/SBLive; Jimmy Dean, WGGH radio Marion; Adam Duvall, Peoria Journal Star; Kevin Hieronymus, Bureau County Republican; Paul Hines, Mount Vernon Sentinel; John Homan, Southerm Illinoisan; Brian Hoxsey, Ottawa Times; Fred Kroner, Mahomet Daily; Randy List, Centralia Morning Sentinel; Jim Mattson, WEEK-TV Peoria/Bloomington; Dennis Mathes, Jacksonville Journal-Courier; Erich Murphy, Pontiac Daily Leader; Zach Piatt, Champaign News-Gazette; Randy Reinhardt, Bloomington Pantagraph; Matt Trowbridge, Rockford Register-Star; Matt Schuckman, Muddy River Sports; Mason Schweizer, Kankakee Daily Journal; Greg Shashack, Alton Telegraph; Steve Tappa, MC22-TV Quad Cities/QCSportsNet/Illinois Media All-State chair; Alex Wallner, Effingham Daily News; Bill Welt, Springfield State Journal-Register; Matthew Wheaton, Wheat on the Prairie; and Matt Wilson, Carlyle Union Banner.

Below are the all-staters for Class 2A.

FIRST TEAM

NAME, SCHOOL (HT., YR., POS.) POINTS
Docker Tedeschi, Benton (6-6, Jr., PF) 100
Ryan Tucker, Byron (6-3, Sr., G) 99
Calvin "CJ" Worsham, Chicago Christ the King (6-7, Sr., F) 88
Adyn McGinley, Beecher (6-0, Sr., G) 86
EJ Horton, Chicago Phillips (6-2, Jr., G) 85


SECOND TEAM

NAME, SCHOOL (HT., YR., POS.) POINTS
Dietrich Richardson, Peoria Manual (6-7, Jr., PG) 81
Al Brooks Jr., Chicago Noble Hansberry (6-7, Jr., F) 80
Ryan Mbouombouo, Chicago Latin (6-3, Sr., SF) 59
Paxton Giertz, Seneca (6-0, Jr., PG) 51
Christian Cummings, Rockford Christian (5-10, Jr., SG) 46


HONORABLE MENTION:
(28 TOTAL; IN ORDER OF POINTS)

Jonah Funk, El Paso-Gridley (6-9, Jr., C) 41; Sam Donald, Columbia (6-8, Jr., G) 39; Noah LaPorte, Princeton (6-6, Jr., F) 37; Christian Bentancur, Woodstock Marian Central (6-5, Sr., F) 36; Brady Clark, Kewanee (6-3, Sr., G) 33; Jake Willems, Riverdale (6-5, Sr., G) 31; Tyler Heffren, Eureka (6-4, Sr., G/F) 29; Vontez Dent, Rockford Lutheran (6-4, Sr., G/F) 28; Isaac Hosman, Massac County (6-0, Sr., G) 28; Mason Shubert, Breese Central (6-3, Sr., PG) 24; Bryant Jenkins, Lawrenceville (6-3, Sr., SF) 22; Dion Doyle, Macomb (6-5, Sr., F) 17; Braden Kline, Alton Marquette (6-3, Sr., G) 16; Brady Ruestman, Minonk Fieldcrest (6-6, Sr., G) 15; Owen Treat, Vienna (6-2, Sr., G) 14; Ian Brantley, Piasa Southwestern (6-7, Jr., F) 10; Sebastian Hill, Macon Meridian (6-3, Sr., G) 10; TJ Seals, Johnson (6-5, Jr.) 10; Tyler Curl, Fairbury Prairie Central (6-2, Sr., G) 9; AJ Keith, Pinckneyville (6-4, Jr., SG) 9; Cameron Ande, Harrisburg (6-3, Sr., SG) 8; Landon Bull, Rockridge (6-4, Jr., F) 8; Amari Edwards, Chicago Phillips (5-9, Jr., G) 6; Garrett Gaddis, Teutopolis (Sr., G) 6; Dierre Hill, Belleville Althoff (6-0, Jr., PG/SG) 6; Tanner Jacob, St. Joseph-Ogden (6-2, Sr., G) 6; Seth Macke, Trenton Wesclin (6-6, Sr., SF) 6; Zane Schrage, Breese Central (6-5, Sr., F) 6.



More Sentinel Stories



Photo Galleries


2025 Illinois Marathon Photo Gallery
A couple of runners found themselves in the wrong race at this year's Illinois Marathon. Over 60 photos from the race that you should see.

Photos: Sentinel/Clark Brooks