Author: delcohoops

Coatesville downs Lower Merion, 71-66, in District 1 semifinals

Theo Henry, center, of Lower Merion gets sandwiched between Dymere Miller, left, and Tione Holmes of Coatesville in the PIAA District 1 boys basketball semifinals at the Liacouras Center on Feb. 26, 2019.

Theo Henry, center, of Lower Merion gets sandwiched between Dymere Miller, left, and Tione Holmes of Coatesville in the PIAA District 1 boys basketball semifinals at the Liacouras Center on Feb. 26, 2019. CHARLES FOX / Staff Photographer

By Corey Sharp

When a team holds Coatesville’s Jhamir Brickus to 13 points entering the fourth quarter, it has to feel good about its chances. The junior guard averages 26.6 points per game.

But Coatesville showed Tuesday night that it has more than Brickus, as Dapree Bryant and John Proctor scored 20 and 18 points, respectively, in a 71-66 victory over Lower Merion in the District 1 Class 6A semifinals at the Liacouras Center.

“They picked me up,” Brickus said. “I just had to play defense and I made everyone around me better by creating space for them.”

Lower Merion played a box-and-one defense against Brickus for most of the game, and held the junior without a touch until 2 minutes, 43 seconds remained in the the first quarter. It was working, as the Aces took an early 16-4 lead. Jack Forrest led the charge with 12 first-quarter points.

“We’ve seen this before,” Coatesville coach Fred Thompson said. “We kind of got a little loud on the bench because we weren’t guarding, but we settled down and got our composure back.”

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Webmaster’s note: Delcohoops.com will be LIVE audio Internet broadcasting this Saturday’s PIAA District One 6A final boy’s basketball game.  Our broadcast will begin at 5:45.

Henry rises to stage as Abington tops Pennridge in District 1-6A semifinals

Abington’s Eric Dixon stretches for the rim as Pennridge’s John Dominic defends during their District 1-6A semifinal on Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2019. (Gene Walsh/MediaNews Group)

By Andrew Robinson

Everywhere Sean Yoder went Tuesday night, Maurice Henry matched him step-for-step.

Play any team three times and at some point, adjustments have to be made so Abington decided to make one on the defensive end. Henry knew he’d have to play at a different level all night guarding one of the best players in District 1 and it translated into his best overall game of the year.

The senior gave the No. 1 Ghosts a needed spark as they topped No. 4 Pennridge in the District 1-6A semifinals at Temple’s Liacouras Center and advanced to their third straight district title game.

“I had to play harder than I normally do and I had to step up for the team,” Henry said. “I had to sacrifice my body for the team and play as hard as I could to stay in front of him. He’s their whole team, you limit him and it’s hard for them to go.”

Not only was Henry stellar defensively, shadowing Yoder off every screen and cut and limiting the Navy recruit to 11 points, he had a terrific offensive game with 15 points. Facing yet another zone defense, the Ghosts were moving the ball around to try and stretch out Pennridge’s 2-3 but also passing up some looks.

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Webmaster’s note: Delcohoops.com will be LIVE audio Internet broadcasting this Saturday’s PIAA District One 6A final boy’s basketball game.  Our broadcast will begin at 5:45.

Delco Christian holds its nerve late for second title

Members of the Delco Christian basketball team celebrate their championship in their win over Church Farm. Photo by: Digital First Media


By Matt Smith

There was more enough time on the clock for Church Farm to tie or win the game. The 11.5 seconds were not the issue.

But Delco Christian, which prides itself on avoiding foul trouble, had pocketed its fouls for this moment, up by two with the District 1 Class 2A title at stake.

Church Farm inbounded twice. DC halted play at 8.1 and 6.0 seconds. On its next try, Church Farm attempted a shot. It didn’t go far, as freshman Ebuka Nwobodo, younger brother of Knights star junior forward Obinna, got his hand in front of a shot by Max Scott in the corner along the Church Farm bench. Ebuka, with authority, blocked the ball out of play.

Church Farm was left with 3.5 seconds left to try … something. The pass went to center Demetrius Lilley, who rushed an off-balance 3-pointer at the top of the perimeter. It was way off.

Delco Christian, the No. 2 seed, held on to capture its second straight district championship with a 54-52 victory Saturday at Harriton.

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Sun Valley holds on to beat Unionville, reach Class 5A semis

By Steve Moore

The Sun Valley lead over Unionville, which was 11 points at halftime, had been cut down to one. 

The large Unionville crowd was making the bleachers shake, and a lesser team would not have been excused it it succumbed to the pressure.

But Sun Valley has proven this season that it is far from a “lesser team.”

Vinny DeAngelo took a feed from Dom Valente and buried a three, for three of his game high 34 points, in a stellar performance that also included five rebounds and four assists, as the Vanguards held on and defeated the Indians, 60-46, Saturday night in the quarterfinal round of the District 1 Class 5A playoffs.

The win puts Sun Valley (17-7) into Wednesday night’s semifinal against Pottsgrove at Norristown High School at 5:30 p.m. The win also puts Sun Valley into the PIAA Class 5A playoffs for the second year in a row. Unionville will travel to Holy Ghost Prep in the playback round Wednesday at 7 p.m. A win there would secure a state berth, while a loss would end Unionville’s season.

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Carroll’s double-overtime shot helps Penncrest move on

Penncrest’s Aidan Carroll, right, shoots in the third quarter of the Central League final as Lower Merion’s Steve Payne defends. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

By Harry Chaykun

The Penncrest coaches and fans will be talking for a long time about the shot Aidan Carroll made against West Chester Rustin in the second overtime period of the District 1 Class 5A boys basketball quarterfinals at Kaufman Gymnasium Saturday night.Carroll made the first shot he attempted in the game, then didn’t connect again until 1:56 remained in the second extra period. The 3-pointer put the two-time defending district champion Lions ahead to stay as Penncrest prevailed, 58-49, and earned a semifinal matchup with No. 1 West Chester East at Norristown High Wednesday night.

“Things kind of just happened,” Carroll said. “I try to get to open spaces and be confident and keep shooting. They came back on us, but everybody had to stick with the game plan and stay confident.”

Penncrest (20-6) took an eight-point lead into the fourth period before freshman IV Pettit, who shared scoring honors with senior Jake Nelson for the Knights (16-8) with 14 points, came up with eight points to get his team even at the end of regulation. Two free throws by the Lions’ Isaiah Rice with 1:00 on the clock were the last points scored before overtime.

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Ray rallies Fords to seal perfect season with PAISAA title

Haverford School’s Jameer Nelson Jr., here trying to get a shot up against Phelps School’s Derrell Jones in Friday’s PAISAA semifinal, scored 17 points Saturday to lead the Fords to a 67-62 win over Westtown School and their first PAISAA championship. (Owen McCue/Digital First Media)

By Matthew DeGeorge

Trailing for nearly the entire 32 minutes of regulation in the PAISAA boys basketball championship final against tall and talented Westtown, Haverford School came back for a 67-62 overtime win in its final test of the season Saturday evening in front of a packed house at Jefferson University.

The win completes a 28-0 season for the Fords, their first PAISAA title to add to consecutive Inter-Ac crowns.

Westtown relied on solid rebounding and the offensive talents of Jalen Gaffney (27 points) to forge a 34-27 lead at halftime. Late in the third quarter, the Moose still enjoyed a 45-35 advantage.

But the Fords slowly came back, as La Salle University-bound Christian Ray began to take over. When Ray grabbed back-to-back offensive rebounds and scored on a putback to cut Westtown’s lead to 52-50, there were four minutes left. Jameer Nelson’s end-to-end drive and free throw made it 54-53 with 3:03 left.

Twenty one seconds later, another putback by Ray gave the Fords a 55-54 lead — their first lead since early in the first period.

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Carr uses height to East’s advantage on both ends of court defeats Penn Wood

By Matthew DeGeorge

Having a 6-foot-9 center on your roster is a luxury at a public high school, the product of geographic fortune. Getting the most out of such length on the court is earned, through game-planning and practice.

West Chester East center Andrew Carr showed both sides of that Saturday night. He did the tall guy stuff that added up to 18 points and 11 rebounds. But Carr’s place as the keystone in the Vikings’ zone defense spelled the difference, getting the top-seeded Vikings into the state tournament via a 57-46 win over No. 8 Penn Wood in the District 1 Class 5A quarterfinals Saturday.

East (20-5) advances to next Wednesday’s semis at Norristown High to face two-time reigning champion Penncrest, which took down No. 5 Rustin in overtime, 58-49. The Vikings also clinched their first states berth since 2002.

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Cold second half proves costly for Chester against hot Forrest, Lower Merion

Lower Merion’s Jack Forrest, right, lofts a 3-pointer over Chester’s Michael Smith in the Aces’ 67-59 District 1 Class 6A quarterfinal victory over Chester. Forrest made seven triples and finished with a game-high 31 points. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

By Matthew DeGeorge

On the long walk from the Chester bench to its locker room, up a flight of stairs and around two corners far from the Kobe Bryant Gymnasium, the Clippers had plenty of time to ponder Friday night.

One was the gamesmanship at Lower Merion’s fortress of a gym, long trek included. There were calls Chester felt it didn’t get, including the image of Aces coach Gregg Downer sprinting out of his coaching box and into Keith Taylor’s to call a timeout on the eighth second of a would-be backcourt in the final minute.

But after watching the Aces exult en masse on the court after a 67-59 win in the District 1 Class 6A quarterfinals, the reality had time to crystallize for the Clippers. They simply didn’t make enough shots. And Lower Merion’s Jack Forrest simply didn’t miss enough.

Delco Times boy’s basketball reporter, Matt DeGeorge, was our halftime interview. His interview starts at 44:35 on our game archive below.

Click on this icon for the complete Box Scores for this game!

“It was very upsetting,” Chester senior forward Rahmaad DeJarnette said. “We usually make those types of shots, and when it comes down to that, we have a lot of clutch players that make that shot. It just didn’t fall, so it was very upsetting.”

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Webmaster’s note: The PIAA quarter-final 6A District One game between Chester and Lower Merion was our Game-of-the-Week and can be heard in its entirety below or on our Archived Broadcasts link listed in the menu at the top of our page.

Lower Merion holds off Chester behind Jack Forrest’s 31 points in PIAA District 1 Class 6A quarterfinals.

Photo by CHARLES FOX / Staff Photographer

By Corey Sharp

Chester went into Lower Merion on fire, having won 14 straight games.

That streak ended as the Clippers gave the Aces everything they could handle, but No. 3 seed Lower Merion prevailed with a 67-59 victory over Chester in the PIAA District 1 Class 6A quarterfinals on Friday night.

Chester had Lower Merion on its heels after a 7-0 run cut the lead to one with two minutes left in the game. Darryl Taylor made two clutch free throws to give Lower Merion a 62-59 lead, and the Aces shot 5-for-6 from the line the rest of the way.

“It was kind of like a heavyweight fight,” Lower Merion coach Gregg Downer said. “Chester is very known for their flurries [of runs]. We made our free throws and got a couple of critical stops.”

After the Aces took a 39-37 lead at intermission, Forrest delivered 15 of the team’s 28 points in the second half.

Click on this icon for the complete Box Scores for this game!

“We always have to be aware of him going too many stretches without the ball,” Downer said. “I think we force-fed him the ball a little late, which was good, and he came up big.”

(click on this link for the full story)

Webmaster’s note: The PIAA quarter-final 6A District One game between Chester and Lower Merion was our Game-of-the-Week and can be heard in its entirety below or on our Archived Broadcasts link listed in the menu at the top of our page.

 

Haverford School’s Ray, Nelson earn one more game together in PAISAA final

Photo by Owen McCue – MediaNews Group

By Owen McCue

It won’t be too long until Jameer Nelson Jr. and Christian Ray are rivals, not teammates.

After this season, Ray is headed to La Salle, while Nelson will take a prep year before joining him in the Big 5 at St. Joe’s, where his father starred.

With an 84-58 victory over Phelps School Friday in the Pennsylvania Independent Schools Athletic Association semifinals at Montgomery County Community College, in which Ray and Nelson combined for 48 points, the two friends postponed the rivalry for at least one more game.

 The Fords (27-0) will play Westtown School Saturday at Jefferson University for the PAISAA title. They lost in the final last year, and rectifying that is the final jewel in a crown that includes the last two outright Inter-Ac titles.“Jameer’s going to be my rival soon,” said Ray, who led the Fords with 28 points. “I’m always at his house. We’re always together. It’s going to be hard playing for the last time. We’re going to have one last ride together. We’re going to have fun. All the seniors included.”

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