Zach Howell - UW-Milwaukee

Rob Yanders’ top high school player in Southwest Missouri last season, Zach Howell, is headed to UW-Milwaukee to continue his hoops career.

Springfield Catholic and Yanders Law alumni Zach Howell made his mark in Southwest Missouri and is ready for his next chapter. When asked if he was apprehensive about moving away to attend the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, he simply said: “Honestly, not really.”

“I have been wanting to start this new chapter for a while,” Howell says. “Of course, I have a bunch of relationships back home, but I am ready for something new.”

Howell has already been in Wisconsin for about a week and is enjoying the fruits of his lengthy recruitment process.

“(My recruitment) started with SIUe the summer after my sophomore year,” Howell recalls. I didn’t have much else going even through my junior season, but I just stayed focused and worked hard. I had a visit to Texas Tech but still not a lot going on. My senior season was tough. With the weird COVID year and then also the portal… there are only like 3,000 D1 spots, but I stayed patient, kept my head down, and kept working.”

Howell then visited the campus at UW Milwaukee and was offered to play D1 hoops. He knew “right away” that is where he wanted to be.

“I had a visit with Northwest Missouri State the day before,” Howell recalls. “Then I visited (UW-Milwaukee’s) campus with Rob (Yanders), played with the guys a bit, and talked with Coach (Bart) Lundy afterward. I could tell he was a good coach but also a good person. After that talk, I went back with Rob, Sly (Yanders), and my Mom, discussed everything, and we found that there was no wavering in my decision. So, I made up my mind right there.”

This summer, Zach has his game to the grindstone as always. We at The Basketball Movement know that he is a complete gym rat.

“Defense is the thing I most want to get better at, mostly on-ball,” Howell says. “Also ball-handling, shooting, finishing… I’m trying to work on all facets.”

Asked about the takeaways from high school and AAU he will use the most, Howell delivered an answer we would expect out of one of our most frequent visitors.

“What I have relied on is hard work,” Howell says. “You cannot cheat getting better. I keep my head down and stay in the gym. High school and AAU are very different. The next level is really a combo of both. There is a higher level of competition in AAU but more organization in high school. College is both but elevated.”

If any player is ready for elevated play, it is Zach Howell. He does not take his time on the hardwood for granted, has worked for what he has, and will relentlessly work to keep improving.

Off the court, he will spend his first year or so taking gen-ed courses and getting a feel for the direction his education will head. Zach is a winner, and we have no doubt he will succeed in all areas of his exciting new journey!

Zach Howell and Kyle Pock duel

In a meeting of the two top hoopers in Southwest Missouri… who came out on top?

Who you taking? In one corner is Zach Howell, a 6’5 lights-out scorer with multiple D-1 offers and the ability to carry his team through games. In the other corner, 6’7 Kyle Pock, who can shoot over anyone in the area and has a knack for hitting the big shots when it matters most.

This matchup is between two of the top teams in the area, but at its core, the anticipation comes from Howell vs. Pock.

Two of the best players around going at each other, both boasting multiple D1 offers, is a recipe for a feast among basketball fans. Rob Yanders’ rankings of the top players in Southwest Missouri had Howell number one and Pock number two going in.

Last year Pock got the best of Howell when it mattered most. So how is the rivalry looking in 2022?

Kyle Pock had a big first half or Bolivar. After being knotted at 17 after the first quarter, Coach Jack Simpson put Howell on Pock to start the second. Unphased, Pock elevated Boliver to take a nine-point lead into halftime.

Howell willed his team within reach in the fourth quarter, capping off an impressive run with a game-tying layup with 40 seconds to play. After running down the clock, Bolivar rightly trusted Pock to hit what would be the go-ahead bucket on a smooth, two-point jumper. Catholic tried to find Howell for an answer but could not get a shot, sealing their fate.

Does Southwest Missouri have a new number one hooper?

In The Basketball Movement’s updated rankings, you will still see Zach Howell’s name at the top (though there are a few other changes from our last update). Rob Yanders maintains that Howell’s skill keeps him at number one, though this head-to-head matchup absolutely narrowed the gap in his professional opinion.

“Both guys are dominant against local talent,” Rob Yanders says. “Facing another top guy from your area is something that myself and others with scouting backgrounds can use to evaluate players to see what they can do at the next level. This was an exciting game, and I hope we get another between the two.”

Area basketball fans will be left hoping for a rematch between these young stars, which could happen in the state quarterfinals should both teams secure district wins.

For more player coverage from around Southwest Missouri, you are already in the right place. The Basketball Movement Exclusive aims to be your number one source for player-focused prep hoops content. Stay tuned!