RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

It's Official. B. J. Windhorst Is Coach Of the Year

By RON MALY

From my perspective, there's still some unfinished business pertaining to the 2015-2016 high school basketball season in our state.


B. J. Windhorst
The team champions were crowned last week on the court at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines.

What hasn't been done is the naming of the Official Coach Of the Year award.

That honor, as far as these columns and this website are concerned, goes to B. J. Windhorst of Valley High School.

In just his second season as the Tigers' coach, Windhorst directed them to the class 4-A championship.

In doing so, he accomplished something a number of other coaches at the massive high school in West Des Moines couldn't.

It was Valley's first state basketball title since Bill Harris coached the 1993 team to the championship.

In this 23-3 season, Windhorst and his players put to rest the thinking that Valley couldn't win big in basketball.

That belief has been prevalent since Gary Swenson took over the football coaching respaonsibilities at Valley, and produced five class 4-A state championships.

I kept hearing that the best athletes at Valley, for one reason or another, didn't show interest in playing basketball.


That's certainly not true now.


Indeed, most of the standout players on the Tigers' championship basketball team also played on the Valley football squad that lost to Dowling of West Des Moines in the semifinal round of the 4-A  football playoffs.


The fact that Valley has plenty of athletes who are interested in participating in successful basketball was a main reason Windhorst became interested in the coaching job after Jeff Horner left in 2014.


Horner's 2013-2014 Tigers lost to Iowa City West in the 4-A championship game.


It was Iowa City West that Windhorst's 2016 team defeated in the title game last Saturday night, 46-39.


Valley's march to the championship certainly wasn't easy.


The team withstood late-season injuries to two key starters--Carlo Marble and Peyton Long. Marble suffered a broken bone in his left wrist that was supposed to end his season, and Long underwent arthroscopic surgery on a knee.


Marble said he was told by medical people that he wouldn't be able to play after sustaining the broken wrist.


After sitting out one game, he decided to play nonetheless.


I doubt Valley could have won the championship without him.


Windhorst felt his Tigers played their best basketball of the season while winning their three state tournament games over Dowling, Pleasant Valley and Iowa City West.

Windhorst was an outstanding shooter during his playing career at Drake in the mid-1990s, and his offenses at Valley have been very good.

But so have the defenses he and valuable assistant coach Brian Frick have developed.

Indeed, the variety of suffocating-style zone defenses Valley employed in its three state tournament victories were instrumental.


The amazing thing about Windhorst is that he doesn't even teach at Valley.


After taking two of his Southeast Polk teams to the state tournament, he left coaching for three years and took an administrative sales job.


Consequently, during the basketball seasons at Valley, Windhorst juggles the time-consuming responsibilities of coaching with his other job.


My hope is that the man is getting some much-needed rest this week during spring break.