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Once on the brink of closure, Dyett High School wins first ever basketball state championship

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Once on the brink of closure, Dyett High School wins first ever basketball state championship

CPS officials announced a year later that they would phase out Dyett over three years due to declining enrollment and academic performance. After former Mayor Rahm Emanuel took office in 2011, the district closed dozens of neighborhood schools and opened more charter and themed schools, such as military academies.Standing on a makeshift stage, a Dyett […]


CPS officials announced a year later that they would phase out Dyett over three years due to declining enrollment and academic performance. After former Mayor Rahm Emanuel took office in 2011, the district closed dozens of neighborhood schools and opened more charter and themed schools, such as military academies.Standing on a makeshift stage, a Dyett High School banner over his head, Jamaal Gill briefly paused his speech Friday as he looked out at the hundreds of cheering students celebrating the basketball team’s state championship — the school’s first ever.Shannon Bennett is executive director of the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization, the group that led the hunger strike and other activism alongside students, who he said approached the nonprofit for help. He also previously was an assistant coach for the basketball team. He used one word to describe this season — “magic.” Dyett is one of 20 “sustainable community schools,” a model operated in partnership by CPS and the CTU, in which community organizations provide wraparound academic, health and social support beyond the traditional school day. The mayor has indicated that the program should significantly expandBrown, a senior, remembers the practices the team spent running at Washington Park or lifting weights. Even if they couldn’t shoot hoops, because various sports at the school shared the gym, he said Gill always gave them some task to up their game. He said Gill pushed him on and off the court, from scoring more points to “handling situations like a man.” “For those people to just sit out there without food or water to keep open a school means a lot,” Gill said, referencing the 2015 hunger strike. “And the kids are very thankful, and that’s why we haven’t had many issues in our attendance. Those kids want that Dyett experience.” At the beginning of the season, Gill said he recognized that he had a “strong team,” and decided to seek out tournaments outside of the city, including one in Kentucky and another in downstate Centralia. Playing games against larger, high-quality schools helped prepare Dyett for the state run, Gill said. “Their hard work kept us alive, gave us hope,” said Aramis Brown Jr., the team’s co-captain. “I look at us as state champions like complimenting them and saying, ‘Thank you for fighting, thank you for your fight,’ because now we’re making it worth your fight.”

Dyett High School basketball players Mikai Harris, left, and Ahmari Taylor wait to be introduced during a rally celebrating their state championship win at Dyett High School in Chicago, March 21, 2025. (Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune)
Dyett High School basketball players Mikai Harris, left, and Ahmari Taylor wait to be introduced during a rally celebrating their state championship at Dyett High School in Chicago, March 21, 2025. (Audrey Richardson/Chicago Tribune)

34-day hunger strike to state championship

Then came 2015, when a group of residents, which included now-Mayor Brandon Johnson, staged a 34-day hunger strike to pressure CPS to reopen Dyett. The following school year, Dyett reopened as an arts-focused neighborhood high school, with million worth of renovations and new teachers specializing in dance, visual arts and digital media programs. To prepare for the state final, players and coaches reviewed film and spent hours poring over their strengths and weaknesses, Gill said.Dyett’s facilities and offerings are “extremely different” now compared to when he was a student, Brown noted. He’s a restorative culture practitioner with Good Lookin Out, and works in three CPS schools, including Dyett. There’s a music studio, production room and better access to tutoring programs and advanced placement programs, he said. “We’re a little powerhouse,” Bennett said. “A little school like Dyett doesn’t have the resources and recognitions and sponsorships, but goddamn it we’re representing the city right now, the heart of Chicago. Nobody would have expected this.” McKinnon said Dyett didn’t necessarily play to its full potential, but their effort kept them in the game. Dyett was the only Chicago Public League team to make the state finals this season, a responsibility McKinnon didn’t take lightly.Many of the seniors on the team — there’s 10 — have played basketball since their freshman year, and while Gill said all the kids he’s coached are special, this “group was a little different.” But after 12 people underwent a 34-day hunger strike in 2015, the pinnacle of a yearslong protest by community leaders determined to keep a neighborhood school, the district reversed its decision. The following year, Walter H. Dyett High School for the Arts opened its doors to about 150 freshmen.“We had a lot of different personalities,” Gill chuckled. “As a head coach that can become difficult at times, but for the most part these guys bonded in a special way, and things have just taken off from there.”School closures became a hot-button issue again recently amid the contentious negotiations for a new teachers union contract. The Chicago Board of Education voted unanimously last year to halt school closures until 2027. The arts focus is partly a tribute to the school’s namesake, Walter H. Dyett, a Chicago high school teacher and jazz musician who mentored famous musicians such as Nat King Cole and Dinah Washington. 

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