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South Sudanese teens at center of recruiting controversy

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Hinckley-Big Rock’s Bernie Conley (left) embraces Mooseheart’s Mangisto Deng after Hinckley-Big Rock’s 58-51 victory over Mooseheart on Wednesday at Hinckley-Big Rock High School. (Kyle Bursaw — kbursaw@shawmedia.com)

BATAVIA – Four young men from war-ravaged South Sudan tower above their teachers and fellow students on the pastoral grounds of a century-old school in suburban Chicago.

Eighteen months after arriving – and just as they are beginning to feel at home – these athletes find themselves at center court in a controversy over high school sports recruiting as officials unravel exactly how they came to tiny Mooseheart High School.

The Illinois High School Association board will consider Monday whether the three basketball players and one cross-country runner are ineligible to compete for the Red Ramblers, after the coach of a rival school’s basketball team raised questions.

The administrators at Mooseheart, a small, privately funded school 35 miles west of Chicago, say they accepted the students as part of a long tradition of helping troubled and poor youth. But the executive director of IHSA, which governs the state’s interscholastic sports, determined that the school broke a prohibition on high school recruiting when it accepted the teenagers from A-HOPE, an Indiana-based foundation that paid for the athletes to come to the United States and whose founder has drawn NCAA scrutiny.

Mooseheart appealed the preliminary ruling, and a judge allowed 6-foot-7-inch Mangisto Deng, 6-feet-8-inch Makur Puou, and 7-footer Akim Nyang to play at least one more game Wednesday – a 58-51 loss to Hinckley-Big Rock, the school that raised questions. It dropped the Red Ramblers to a 3-3 record.

But the four athletes – all juniors – worry about the IHSA’s final decision, and what it will mean for their dreams of attending college on sports scholarships, earning degrees and returning to help Sudan.

In an interview with The Associated Press on Friday at one of the school’s homelike residence halls, they said sport is their ticket to that future.

“We don’t have family here. Nobody’s going to pay for our college,” said Deng, who wore an Indiana University sweatshirt and jeans. “That’s why we’re working hard in the sport so we can go to college and pay for our scholarships.”

Mooseheart’s executive director Scott Hart said the student-athletes at the Class 1A have garnered interest from a few mid-major colleges, such as Wichita State and Indiana State.

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Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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