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  • The Appleton Area’s Best High School Performances of the Week — and the One Athlete Who Stood Above Everyone

    The Appleton Area’s Best High School Performances of the Week — and the One Athlete Who Stood Above Everyone

    In high school athletics, there’s a specific type of week when the gym smells different. Earlier, the bleachers fill up. Parents quit using their phones. Even before the scoreboard indicates it, you can sense a change. Anyone familiar with Wisconsin prep basketball for a sufficient amount of time could sense the development of what transpired in Appleton over the past few days.

    When the numbers first appeared, Appleton North did something that, to be honest, sounded like a typo. In the same season, three players—Will Sweeney, Grant Hardy, and Nathan Ramos—all scored 1,000 points. Not more than a couple of years. not dispersed among graduating classes. the same time of year. It’s the kind of statistic that prompts you to double-check the source. Programs don’t produce a single 1,000-point scorer for decades. North simultaneously produced three.

    SnapshotDetails
    Spotlight ProgramAppleton North High School Boys Basketball
    Standout TrioNathan Ramos, Grant Hardy, Will Sweeney
    Historic AchievementThree 1,000-point scorers in a single season
    Top Girls PerformanceAubrie Erickson leading Appleton East past Kaukauna, 53–35
    ConferenceFox Valley Association
    Postseason RunFirst state semifinal appearance in program history
    Semifinal OpponentWisconsin Lutheran (undefeated, top-ranked Division 1)
    Coverage SourceNBC 26, WBAY TV-2 Green Bay
    RegionAppleton, Wisconsin

    It’s not just the milestone that is intriguing. It’s the chemistry that it suggests. When three guys produce at that level on average, it usually indicates that someone is deferring, frustrated, or secretly counting touches. This doesn’t appear to be the case. The team kept winning, kept moving forward, and eventually earned the program’s first trip to a state semifinal, where they faced Division 1’s undefeated, top-ranked Wisconsin Lutheran. a strong attraction. Perhaps it’s not possible. However, the story lies in getting there at all.

    Appleton East was making its own noise on the other side of town. The girls’ team defeated Kaukauna 53–35 under the leadership of Aubrie Erickson, and the margin says nearly everything. Kaukauna is a formidable foe. In a rivalry game, a gap of almost twenty points indicates a player who not only showed up but also set the tone for the entire evening. She scores without appearing to strain, which is typically an indication that someone is playing at a different pace than everyone else on the floor. However, watching the highlights reveals a calmness to her game that doesn’t quite match the box score.

    The Appleton Area's Best High School Performances of the Week — and the One Athlete Who Stood Above Everyone
    The Appleton Area’s Best High School Performances of the Week — and the One Athlete Who Stood Above Everyone

    It’s difficult to choose anything other than Appleton North’s trio if you’re looking for a performance that stands out from the others, though. Without a doubt, Erickson’s single-game stat line was superior. However, Ramos, Hardy, and Sweeney took institutional action. They redefine the program, its expectations, and what Appleton middle school students now believe is achievable. That falls under a different impact category.

    Talking to Fox Valley basketball fans gives me the impression that this North team has been quietly coming together for some time. They are guys who grew up playing together in youth leagues, ran into each other at summer AAU, and somehow ended up wearing the same uniform at the right time. When this type of alignment occurs, you usually remember the season for a long time.

    It almost doesn’t matter if North defeats Wisconsin Lutheran in the end. They already own the week. Additionally, Appleton produced three in a single breath in a sport where most schools consider themselves fortunate to produce one signature player every ten years. It’s difficult to ignore it.

  • Inside Hertswood Lower School – The Borehamwood Campus That Quietly Changed Everything

    Inside Hertswood Lower School – The Borehamwood Campus That Quietly Changed Everything

    The name Hertswood Lower School has special significance for anyone who grew up in Borehamwood in the early 2000s. It wasn’t the entire school. It was only half of it. Depending on the year and the schedule, students in Years 7, 8, and occasionally 9 would walk between two campuses, one at Cowley Hill and the other at Thrift Farm Lane, which are about 400 meters apart. Even now, there is a feeling that the split had a greater influence on a generation of students’ personalities than the curriculum ever did.

    Compromise gave rise to the school itself. In order to replace Borehamwood’s previous three-tier system with a more straightforward one, five local schools were combined in 2000: Lyndhurst, Furzehill, and Holmshill middle schools, as well as Hawksmoor and Hillside upper schools. This type of administrative decision appears neat on paper but is somewhat disorganized in reality. The lower and upper sites originated because the new institution retained two of the old footprints.

    InformationDetail
    Former NameHertswood School (Lower Site)
    Parent InstitutionHertswood Academy
    Original LocationThrift Farm Lane, Borehamwood, Hertfordshire
    Current LocationCowley Hill, Borehamwood, WD6 5LG
    EstablishedSeptember 2000
    TypeCoeducational secondary academy
    Age Range11 to 18
    HeadteacherPeter Gillett
    Student EnrolmentApproximately 1,222
    HousesCavendish, Darwin, Nuffield, Somerville
    Academy Status GrantedJanuary 2013
    Site Closure2019 (merged into single Cowley Hill campus)
    Department for Education URN138747
    Latest Ofsted InspectionFebruary 2025 — Good

    The younger years were managed at the lower site on Thrift Farm Lane. The worn pavement near the gates, the somewhat worn-out prefabs at the back, and the staff cars jammed into areas that weren’t really intended for them were just a few of the small details that made it stand out when you passed it during school hours. Instructors carried folders in their arms as they moved between the two campuses. Pupils followed suit, sometimes showing up to class a little breathless. It worked. It was successful. However, it was never refined.

    There were prosperous and challenging years. The academy was deemed “inadequate” by an Ofsted inspection in 2017, citing issues with welfare, behavior, and personal growth. This decision stung the community and, depending on who you spoke to, was either harsh or long overdue. In 2018, a monitoring visit observed that the leadership was at last bringing things back into order. The school had recovered to a Good rating overall by the time of the most recent inspection in February 2025, which is the kind of recovery that doesn’t happen by accident.

    Hertswood Lower School
    Hertswood Lower School

    The conclusion of the lower site was well-planned and subtly poignant. The academy declared in 2013 that it would move all of its operations onto Cowley Hill, with the sale of Thrift Farm Lane serving as a major source of funding for the new construction. In 2015, construction got underway. The new building opened to students in September 2019 after a few delays, which are almost always the case with public projects this size. Homes now stand where classrooms once stood after the old lower site was demolished.

    It’s difficult to ignore how infrequently former students bring up the new buildings without first bringing up the old ones. The state-of-the-art ICT, the open learning areas, and the gleaming restaurant are all impressive.

    However, if you ask anyone who was there prior to 2019, they will talk about the chilly mornings, the walks between locations, and the friends they made while they waited for a teacher to open a portacabin door. You get the impression that what actually closed in 2019 wasn’t a building when you watch this happen from the outside. It was a unique aspect of being a student in Borehamwood; it was a little chaotic, a little inconvenient, and difficult to forget.