East Troy — Junior guard Cameron Polvi and junior forward Brayden Golabowski each scored 17 points Tuesday as East Troy beat Jefferson 74-45 in Rock Valley play.
Brayden’s performance underscored his impact on the floor and added weight to his family’s complaint about limited minutes.
Brayden’s father, Shawn Golabowski, took the dispute public on social media after what he says were failed attempts to resolve the matter internally.
“Sorry, we have put you in an environment with a delusional parent coach that’s sabotaging your career so he can play and develop his son and nephew,” S “Also, sorry administration targets you constantly to make an example out of you. Keep your head up. Proud of you, buddy.” He postedthe statement before the game.
Parents Rally in Support of the Teenager
The post drew dozens of replies from parents, former players, and coaches. Many backed the Golabowskis and described similar experiences.
Collin Visser wrote, “I feel your son’s pain. My junior year I went from starting and leading the team in scoring the second half of the season to not even seeing the floor my senior year. A dad came on as an assistant coach, brought his freshman son onto the varsity squad without even trying out.”
Other commenters urged practical steps. One parent suggested AAU and showcases to get college attention, writing, “High school playing time does not always decide your future.”
Another echoed that view, saying, “If possible let high school just be fun time. Somehow you came up on my wall but from one parent to another I get you.”
Not every reply supported going public. Some warned that posting could make Brayden a target at school, or questioned whether minutes reflect more than talent.
“Wouldn’t it be a better teaching moment to show the kid that sometimes there are obstacles and we have to push past them, rather than go to social media with a victim mentality?” one commenter asked.
Shawn says the family tried internal channels first. “This is our second time through. New coach, new AD. Didn’t see it coming but it’s bad,” he wrote. He added that they gave the staff a month and five games to address the issue before posting publicly.
Tuesday’s game complicates the narrative. Brayden’s 17 points helped East Troy pull away, and the coach of the opposition praised East Troy’s defense.
Jefferson coach Clayton Morrison said after the game, “Our boys did a really good job in half court defense. If this game was only in the half-court, it would have been a tight game.”
He added, “Where they beat us was they’d get turnovers and then go in transition. Golabowski probably scored 16 of his 17 on fastbreak layups. That’s where they took us out of the game. We improved a ton in half court defense recently, and I’m proud of the guys for that, now we need to improve defending in transition.”
That kind of matchup-based thinking is what some critics say drives rotation decisions.
Still, the family’s core claim is about fairness. Commenters described a pattern in small towns where coaches and administrators stay connected across generations, and where relatives sometimes get playing time above merit.
One user put it bluntly, “There is no place for fathers and uncles to be coaching high school sports. It’s a clear conflict of interest.”
The East Troy School District has not issued a public statement about the social media post or any complaint.
No formal grievance appears in the public thread. Shawn told commenters he felt compelled to go public after internal discussions failed to change playing time decisions.
For now, Brayden will keep playing. Supporters urged him to keep grinding and consider outside exposure.
“Get on a solid AAU team and work hard. Make sure he gets the grades,” one parent advised.
Others recommended private trainers, transfer options, or a complaint to the school board if nothing changes.
This situation touches on a broader question in youth sports: how to balance building younger players with giving fair opportunities to those already producing.
For the Golabowski family, the immediate priority is clear. Shawn wrote, “Keep your head up. Proud of you, buddy.” Brayaden, on top of Basketball is also a Football Athlete.
The family says they will keep advocating for Brayden while he continues to contribute on game nights.
If no change follows, options include filing a formal grievance, transferring schools, or focusing on AAU and exposure outside the high school system.
For Brayden and kids in similar spots, the goal is the same: protect development, preserve confidence, and keep the door open for the next level.
