YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

    Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

    To get started, first
    Prep Rally

    Statistically speaking: Minnesota team scores 165 in record-setting rout

    Prep basketball blowouts pop up nearly every week in different parts of the country with a small amount of fanfare, but one in Minnesota on Friday night turned heads because of the gaudy stats and, most notably, the final score it produced: 165-37.

    Prairie Seeds Academy boys basketball — YouTubePrairie Seeds Academy boys basketball — YouTube

    As first noted by the Minneapolis Star Tribune, Woodbury (Minn.) Prairie Seeds Academy knocked off Minneapolis (Minn.) Math & Science Academy by that astounding scoreline in Woodbury, setting a new state record for highest score in a single game in the process. The Lycans dominated from the outset and rolled to the record-setting rout.

    In fact, Prairie Seeds reportedly led by a preposterous score of 91-19 at halftime alone. The Lycans did all their damage with only seven players; the charter academy has a very small student body, numbers which are reflected in the rosters of their varsity sports teams (the varsity basketball team technically sports 10 players, so three did not play against Math & Science).

    Crunch the numbers further, and Prairie Seeds' offensive explosion is pretty remarkable. The Lycans scored approximately 5.15 points per minute, all while holding Math & Science Academy to a shade above a point per minute. That four point-per-minute scoring edge is about as significant as you'll ever see in high school basketball, if not all levels of basketball altogether.

    Yet, this wasn't exactly a one-off blowout for Prairie Seeds, either. The school has also trounced other foes by scores of 148-32 (St. Paul Preparatory Academy), 99-41 (Minneapolis Spectrum) and 91-41 (St. John Prep) in earlier games during the 2011-12 campaign.

    [ Y! News video: California school employees win lotto jackpot again ]

    Class A Prairie Seeds is clearly the class of its division in the state, and may be the most dominant program within its own division since the previous record holder for points in a game held sway. That squad -- Minneapolis (Minn.) Minnesota Transitions School -- once beat Minneapolis E.C.H.O. Charter by a score of 156-33 in 2007.

    Of course, Minnesota Transitions has also scored 100 points in a single half twice, so maybe Prairie Seeds still has something to aspire to, not that any team should want to win a game so one-sidedly. While no official complaint has been made about Friday's rout yet, a 128-point victory will tend to court some controversy.

    Want more on the best stories in high school sports? Visit RivalsHigh or connect with Prep Rally on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

    Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
    Crazy NFL kick leads to miraculous landing spot
    Dwight Howard down on prospects of trade from Magic
    Video: Team USA sprinter Allyson Felix's diet delivers a nutritional edge

    Watch Full Count!
     
    • Your Daddy  •  Shreveport, Louisiana  •  4 months ago
      Oh great, I had Minn Math and Science Academy and 127 points.
      • ScottB 4 months ago
        GREAT ONE !
      • JP 4 months ago
        Seriously, that is hysterical..... +1
      • bob 4 months ago
        Too funny
    • carlo fabio  •  Irvine, California  •  4 months ago
      math and science school losing in sports, didnt see that one coming
      • F3DDA 4 months ago
        Well clearly you didn't factor in the possible variables.
      • T-800 4 months ago
        Calculus has no benefits in basketball.
    • Lance  •  4 months ago
      Bet they'll be a different outcome when these schools meet up at the state science fair.
      • Joel 4 months ago
        That's cool, but I'd rather be Kobe Bryant than Bill Nye the Science Guy.
      • travis a 4 months ago
        u guys crack me up but yeah ill take bill gates over kobe!!
      • Vic 4 months ago
        Don't think so
        Prairie Seeds Academy is a charter school located in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, a northwest suburb of Minneapolis. PSA, as it is informally referred to, is in candidacy to become an IB World School, and is a member of the National Honor Society (NHS). PSA offers a rigorous educational program focusing on core content areas and standards mandated by the state of Minnesota in reading, writing, mathematics, science, and social studies, a heritage (native) language and culture, a multicultural arts, crafts, and music, and a responsive classroom/social curriculum, as well its renowned Soccer and Basketball athletic program
    • FredM  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 months ago
      One of these teams is playing in the wrong division
      • Johnny Lee 4 months ago
        More likely, both teams are.
      • markl 4 months ago
        No.. I am from MN. Both are in class A which is the smallest division in the state. Their enrollments are under 200 students in 9-12. MN has 4 classes, and they are in the smallest, but there is no rule that says they can't challenge a bigger school if they want to, and with that kind of success they should.
      • Joel 4 months ago
        Minnesota is so backwards. They are the Mississippi of the north.
    • ronald p  •  4 months ago
      That's alright, that's ok, you're gonna pump our gas someday. Go math and science academy
      • Charles 4 months ago
        If you're on the basketball team, you have to have decent grades :D
      • WHAT! 4 months ago
        lol...
      • why 4 months ago
        really...have you heard of jason kidd? an awesome bball player, but not the sharpest tool in the shed when it came to academics. it's amazing what a superb talent can get away with in hs and even college.
    • paris r  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  4 months ago
      at least one team in minnesota is winning games and making headlines...
    • Mario  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  4 months ago
      You know how the winning team must have been pressing hard on every inbound, I would just chuck the ball off the guys face who was 3 inchces from me. maybe he would back off next time I went to pass the ball in...
    • Steve  •  Fort Walton Beach, Florida  •  4 months ago
      That's why FL has the "Mercy Rule" in HS basketball. Once a team gets a 35 point lead in the 2nd half, (of earlier if the coaches agree), the clock runs except for time outs. As a ref, I love it, for obvious reasons!
    • Stephen  •  Gatesville, North Carolina  •  4 months ago
      Hey Woodbury Prairie Seeds.....Dematha and Oak Hill Academy called and want to play you to see if you like getting beat by over 100
    • mike  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  4 months ago
      Been there and done this one.
      Our H.S. team once lost by a score of 104-40. I personally contributed to our fine effort by fouling out with about 8 minutes to go in the FIRST half.
      We finished this nailbiter with 3 guys on the floor - everyone else had fouled out like me.

      Once interesting contrast back then versus now was the opposing coach came over to our coach late in the game and asked if our coach wanted to "call it a game". As I recall, only being behind about 40 or 50 points at the time, and probably having 3-4 guys on the floor, our coach told him to "F^%$ off". After the game, the coach threatened to make us walk home because of the "p&^% poor" effort.
      In today's world, everyone on our team would have gotten a trophy and been extended an offer of counseling...

      Thanks for dredging up the memories with this one......
    • Joey G  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  4 months ago
      The math and science team loses badly in basketball game then goes home to open acceptance letters to the best universities in the world, which will later turn into the best jobs in the world. Now, who won?
    • Jon  •  Lemoore, California  •  4 months ago
      I recall blowouts just like this one causing the winning teams to be scorned and labeled poor sports. What makes this different?
    • JOEK  •  San Diego, California  •  4 months ago
      was a better game then LSU-Alabama
    • King James  •  Newport, Minnesota  •  4 months ago
      I was at this game. Prairie Seeds showed no class. They were pressing Math and Science the entire time (even when up by over 100) and called a time out with a minute left so the clock would stop while they were shooting free throws just so they could get the record.
    • Susan  •  Massillon, Ohio  •  4 months ago
      Were the three players that didn't play traditional starters or bench players? If they were bench players then this is ridiculous. I recently went to a game where it was extremely lopsided teams playing each other. The winning team didn't play their bench and applied a press the entire time and basically thugged the other girls. It got old real quick. I believe that there are games in which if putting in a player jeopardizes a win then don't do it but if you are up by more than 25 points put in some less experienced players and layoff the press. A win is a win whether it is 1 point ot 100.
    • H.Busch  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 months ago
      Did it go into overtime ?
    • Emily!  •  4 months ago
      As a alumni of the Math and Science Academy, I can say that we don't really take sports too seriously. We know we kinda suck, and have a good enough attitude to just play for fun and laugh off the loses. And yea, like all the commenters on here assume, we do have superior academics. When I went there, the average ACT score was 8 points above the national average. So at the end of the day, losing a basketball game doesn't really matter when we are getting acceptance letters and academic scholarships to great colleges.
    • Rob  •  4 months ago
      Bet the scores would be a lot different if they were playing teams other than math and science academies and charter schools. Why not play some real competition?
    • Chris  •  Marshfield, Wisconsin  •  4 months ago
      Obviously, Minnesota Math was grotesquely outclassed--they're probably brainiacs, not jocks. They will have their day to shine in the REAL world, and maybe even a bit of revenge when one of these Woodbury jocks comes looking for a job and finds a Minnesota Math grad sitting in the hiring seat! But Woodbury obviously has NO class! Running up the score on a hopelessly outclassed opponant is shameful--even cruel. They have NOTHING to be proud of.
    • John  •  Vinita, Oklahoma  •  4 months ago
      What is the winning team coach teaching his players about life? How to make enemies and embarass your fellow competitors? As a parent, I'd chew his $@# if my son was on his team. Winning is important but developing character is the real goal.

    Yahoo! Sports Authors