While the basketball season has ended for most area high
school and college players, Platte
County still has one
local player competing on the hardwood, and he’s doing it on college
basketball’s biggest stage. Ohio
University junior forward
Ivo Baltic, a 2009 Park Hill South graduate, has been a key member of a Bobcat
squad that has amassed a 29-7 record and Mid-America Conference (MAC)
conference tournament championship this season. It earned them a trip to the
NCAA Tournament where last week, as an underdog 13th seed, the
Bobcats fueled March Madness with not only an upset over the fourth seeded
Michigan Wolverines 65-60, but two days later another win over 12th
seeded South Florida 62-56. The wins propel
them towards an unlikely trip to the Sweet Sixteen and matchup against
perennial power house, number one seeded North Carolina
this Friday night in St. Louis.
“I don’t think seeding really means a lot. Our mindset was
we just wanted to advance,” Baltic said of the upsets. “In the locker room, we
have this board that says: graduate from Ohio University,
win the MAC championship (regular season and tournament), make it to the NCAA
Tournament, and advance in the tournament. These are our goals and we’ve been
able to pretty much accomplish them so far.”
Averaging 8.9 points and 5 rebounds per game this season,
it’s Baltic’s second appearance in the NCAA Tournament. In 2010, as a freshman he
played every game in a season where 14th seeded Ohio upset the third seeded Georgetown Hoyas
in the first round.
“We weren’t expected to do good things then, this year is a
little different because we’ve been pretty successful the whole season,” Baltic
said. “This year we’re in the Sweet Sixteen, which hasn’t been done since 1964
so it’s been a good year for us, but we just have to stay hungry and humble.”
It’s a scenario the Ohio University
coaching staff painted for Baltic when he was recruited out of high school and
one that stood out compared to other schools he was being pursued by at the
time. Baltic says Ohio
told him not just the positives, but also the potential negatives of college
basketball life.
“The whole coaching staff, they pretty much told me we could
do some special things with my time here,” Baltic said. “The difference was
they told me the ups and downs of what could happen instead of just the
positives.”
The former Park Hill South standout was nominated as a
McDonald’s High School All-America his senior year when he averaged 23 points
and 15 rebounds per game for the Panthers. His talent and ability is still
visible around Park Hill South in the form of plaques and recognition as he
remains the school’s all-time scoring and rebound leader. Long-time Athletic
Director John Sedler says Baltic is the best he’s ever watched.
“In my opinion, he is the best player to graduate from the Park Hill
School District,” Sedler
said. “He is a multi-skilled (hybrid)
player that is effective on the perimeter as well as in the post area.
Today’s game really fits his skills; with all of the spread sets and dribble
penetration being used he is very comfortable.”
Baltic echoes the description by calling his playing persona
as a ‘versatile big’ by being willing to play whatever role the team needs.
“I can be whatever my team needs me to be. I think that’s a
sacrifice anyone on our team is willing to make.”
Sacrifice is something Baltic is very familiar with when it
comes to basketball. ‘Basketball junkie’ and ‘gym rat’ are just two of the
words used to describe his work ethic, both past and present. At a young age,
Baltic knew basketball was his way to college.
“Growing up, my parents didn’t really have a lot of money.
We came from overseas. Just getting into college was going to be pretty hard,”
Baltic, who was born in Bosnia,
but has lived in Kansas City
since second grade, said. “I didn’t think I could just get in by academics or
money by themselves. I just worked my butt off every day. Fridays and Saturday
nights when kids were out going and stuff, I was in the gym.”
Rattling off nearly a half dozen of his former Park Hill
South coaches, Baltic gave credit and appreciation (both big and small) for the
support he’s received in the past and to this day.
“I just appreciate all the love I’ve gotten from my family,
former teammates, former coaches, and all the people who really helped me get
here,” Baltic said. “Even people like the janitors at my high school, who would
sometimes turn on the lights for me just so I could shoot in the gym. It’s just
the little things like that I’m real thankful for and blessed to have the opportunity
to be doing what I’m doing.”
Even at 21 years old and a possible professional career
ahead of him, he offers a lesson in discipline, as he commonly does with his
ability to solve a Rubik’s cube in nearly a minute, mentioning his desire to
continue playing the game after college before quickly returning to the
immediate task in front of him.
“I just want to stay around the game after I’m done here (at
school),” Baltic said. “To be honest, I’m just focused on this season and
winning. Too many times people think too much about the future and they forget
to live in the present.”
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