Month: March 2016

Reading High boys basketball team loses in state semifinals

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The Reading Eagle –

James Jackson scored a game-high 32 points as top-ranked Allderdice pulled away in the second half for a 70-45 victory over Reading High in a PIAA Class AAAA semifinal tonight at Chambersburg.The Red Knights (28-4) trailed by just a point at halftime but were overwhelmed on the boards 25-14 by the Dragons (28-1) in the second half. Allderdice advances to meet Roman Catholic in the state title game Saturday at Giant Center at 7.

The Dragons used a unique diamond-and-one defense to shut down Reading scoring leader Lonnie Walker IV. He didn’t make a field goal until the fourth quarter and finished with a season-low six points on just eight shots.“I said all along, I don’t mind losing to a team that’s better than us, and they’re better than us,” said Reading coach Rick Perez.

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Roman pulls away from Plymouth Whitemarsh to advance to state title game

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By Stephen Pianovich

If Plymouth Whitemarsh was going to beat Roman Catholic on Tuesday night, it was going to need a monster game from Xzavier Malone. And for a quarter, the Colonials got that.

Malone, a senior guard, went off for nine points in the first eight minutes and Plymouth Whitemarsh led by as many as five in the first quarter. But then the Cahillites locked down on Malone, locked in offensively and imposed their will in the middle two quarters.

Roman pulled away from the District 1 champs for a 64-45 victory in the PIAA Class AAAA semifinals.

The Cahillites (28-4) will try to defend their state title against Pittsburgh powerhouse Allderdice in the Class AAAA championship game on Saturday in Hershey. Meanwhile, Plymouth Whitemarsh’s season comes to a close at 31-4 with both a SOL and District 1 title to boast.

While multiple Cahillites were tasked with helping to slow down Malone, who still finished with a game-best 21 points, chief among them was D’Andre Vilmar. The junior guard often denied Malone the ball and was one of the reasons the Colonials were limited to a combined 15 points in the second and third quarters after scoring 17 in the first.

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Allderdice becomes first ‘Burgh team in finals since ’07

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By Michael Bullock

“Yes, Coach, I’ll do whatever it is to win to get to Hershey.”

Those declarative words served as Tim Jackson’s response earlier this week when Allderdice head coach Buddy Valinsky approached the athletic 6-3 senior wing with a defensive schematic designed ostensibly to collar one particular adversary.

And when Reading’s Lonnie Walker wandered on to the floor — surrounded by thousands of screaming fans — the 6-5 junior soon found himself playing tag with Jackson as the all-or-nothing scrap between a pair of Pennsylvania’s hoops heavies played out at Chambersburg High School’s crammed Field House.

Had Walker taken a seat — even for a mere 30 seconds or so — Jackson likely would have squirmed in between several Red Knights and joined him on the bench.

Yet while the determined Jackson carried out his ever-so-important role with remarkable effectiveness, his twin brother, James, was fueling an Allderdice attack that really heated up in the second half when the Dragons’ lethal transition game enabled the Pittsburgh City League champs to break open a tight contest and pull away to a 70-45 victory in a PIAA Class AAAA semifinal-round encounter.

“We just came to play,” James Jackson said.

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Walker, Reading end Chester’s season

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By Peter Schnatz

Highly-touted Reading junior Lonnie Walker knew the game was in the bag the moment the ball left his fingertips and swished through the net as the third-quarter horn sounded at Temple University’s Liacouras Center Saturday afternoon.
Walker’s wicked step-back 3-pointer over the reach of Chester’s Marquis Collins was his way of telling the Clippers, “Thanks for playing.”
Sure, Chester didn’t do itself any favors in a season-ending, 73-64 defeat to the District Three champions, but Walker made a huge difference.
Turnovers, poor foul shooting and a bevy of missed opportunities in their comfort zone — the paint — led to the Clippers’ demise before a crowd of mostly Reading fans. Saturday marked the first time Chester has lost in the PIAA quarterfinal round since 1999. The Clippers are 28-3 all-time in the Elite Eight of the state tourney.
“They played smart basketball, played to their strengths,” Chester coach Larry Yarbray said. “A lot of times they got Lonnie in transition and when he wasn’t able to get uncontested looks he passed to open shooters. They took their time (and) they were real patient, plus they made foul shots. That was the difference of the game.”
Walker could feel the electricity when he sank the trey at the end of the third quarter. He left his shooting wrist hang in the air for a few moments after he extended Reading’s advantage to 12 points.
It was the highlight of a stupendous performance by Walker, who is being recruited by UCLA and Villanova, among other Division I programs.
He’ll have his pick.
“It transfers into the fourth quarter,” Walker said of the buzzer-beater. “It gets everyone pumped up. Making that 3-pointer made us feel as though we had the upper hand as of (that moment). For some reason we had the home crowd, so that helped. We just played our game and that’s the main key.

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Loss will leave Chester with something to prove

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By Peter Schnatz

When the dust settled at Temple University’s Liacouras Center Saturday afternoon, the granular aspects of a Chester season that just ended at the hands of Reading obscured the Clippers’ underlying realities.
To get to the PIAA quarterfinals is a monumental achievement. Just ask the 4,000 or so Reading fans who trekked to North Broad St. to boisterously fete their Red Knights’ 73-64 victory. For Chester to return within three wins of a state title after a barely-.500 season is the kind of accomplishment a coach lists as the first bullet point on his resume.
The mind-boggling stats that swirl around the Clippers — that Saturday was the program’s 31st state quarterfinal, that it hadn’t lost in one since 1999, a run of 11 straight wins in a do-or-die game that had gradually lost that second option — hardly dampen that.
But walking off the court for the final time, the Clippers had plenty to lament. For a program that catalogues its history like few others, the final summation of the 2015-16 bunch defies tidy categorization.
Everything seems to be couched in qualifiers. Chester had a great season … for a team that was 14-11 last year and started 2-5 this season. Chester really hit its stride … though the loss to Plymouth Whitemarsh in the District One final and Saturday’s setback, both at Liacouras, temper that praise.
Chester all-time squads fall into several classifications. Some were defined by a star player, a Jameer Nelson or a Zain Shaw. Some were team-centric through and through, one that made you marvel at how a workmanlike assembly of no-names obliterated competition and created a whole so much greater than the sum of its parts.

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Walker, Mauras power Reading downs Chester

Lonnie Walker (above) dropped 30 points in the win. (Photo: Josh Verlin/CoBL)

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By Josh Verlin

As usual, Temple’s Liacouras Center was a sea of red for a big-time basketball game.

Except it wasn’t the Owls that had fans packing the lower bowl of the 10,000-seat facility on Saturday afternoon.

It was Reading’s Red Knights that were the main draw, a PIAA Class AAAA quarterfinal matchup against fellow state high school powerhouse Chester drawing thousands of spectators to North Broad Street.

And even though the Reading players know how much they mean to the community surrounding one of the biggest schools in the state, walking out into that supportive crowd with Chester only half the distance away set the tone.

“That’s really surprising, knowing it’s all the way out in Philly,” senior guard Khary Mauras said. “We look up in the stands and see all our supporters and it’s great–but once the game starts, we just focus on what’s between the lines.”

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Chester has hands full with a Reading rematch

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By Matthew De George

Two and a half months have elapsed since Chester, in search of its customarily rigorous nonleague slate, took the inter-district trip to Reading Dec. 23.

Both teams have evolved since that 69-57 triumph by the Red Knights at the Geigle Complex. That growth portends a compelling renewal of acquaintances in Saturday’s PIAA Class AAAA quarterfinal at Temple University’s Liacouras Center at noon.

The teams that collided back in December were both undeniably talented and figured to factor into the PIAA’s March picture, Chester first needing to banish an uncharacteristically boisterous chorus of doubters after last season’s rare failure to qualify for states. But neither squad had quite figured things out yet.

While the game failed to serve as a turning point for either, that juncture lay just around the bend.

Reading would lose its next outing against Maryland’s Clinton Christian, compounding losses to Coatesville and Archbishop Wood two weeks earlier. Since, the Red Knights (27-3) have rattled off 22 straight wins. Only twice in that streak — against Conestoga, then Carlisle in the District 3 tournament — has an opponent gotten within single digits, both in overtime contests. The next nearest scrape was an 11-point triumph over Central York in the District 3 final.

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Big-name matchups highlight Saturday’s quarterfinals

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By Josh Verlin

When the PIAA Class AAAA quarterfinal locations were announced, Bensalem HS didn’t seem to be the best fit to host Reading vs. Chester.

First there was the location, in Chester’s home District 1–though Bensalem is certainly nowhere near Chester.

On top of that, Bensalem’s gym didn’t seem quite big enough to hold a game between the District 1 runner-up Clippers and District 3 champion Red Knights, whose two fanbases are amongst the largest and most devoted in the state.

So within three hours of the original announcement, the venue was moved to Temple’s Liacouras Center, whose 10,000 seats could be filled with the Chester and Reading faithful on Saturday at noon.

“I’d like to thank the PIAA for making that accommodation and really acknowledging both of our followings and our communities,” Reading head coach Rick Perez said. “This gives everybody a fair chance with the least stress possible to enjoy the game, not only the people from the Reading and Chester community but people who just enjoy watching basketball.

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Sudan, Chester power past Spring-Ford

Chester’s Dymon Colbert (30) drives to the basket under pressure from Spring-Ford’s Danny Zack in the second round of the PIAA Class AAAA tournament Wednesday.

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By Matt Smith

This was the Chester team people are used to seeing every March.

The Clippers masqueraded as something other than an unstoppable locomotive out to destroy everything in its way for long enough Wednesday and, perhaps to some extent, in earlier postseason battles. For the Clippers to improve upon their record wins in PIAA title games, they needed to embrace who they are. What the Clippers are not is a finesse team.

The real Chester team stood up Wednesday.

Led by 6-foot-6 forward Jamar Sudan’s 15-point, 10-rebound effort, Chester claimed a convincing, 74-49 victory over undersized Spring-Ford in a PIAA Class AAAA Tournament second-round game at Cheltenham High.

The Clippers will play District Three champion Reading in their 31st trip to the PIAA quarterfinals Saturday at a time and location to be determined. Reading downed District 11’s Emmaus, 71-54.

While the score doesn’t indicate it, the Rams (21-8) didn’t make things easy for the Clippers (22-8), particularly in the first half.

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Ridley’s ‘good era’ ends in tough loss to Parkland

Ridley’s Brett Foster, center, splits the defense of Parkland’s Devante Cross, right, and Kyle Stout Wednesday. The Trojans claimed a 54-50 win in the second round of the PIAA Tournament. (Digital First Media/John Strickler)

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By Matthew De George

With Parkland faltering at the line, Ridley got a look to tie, but Liam Thompson’s effort from the left corner rimmed out, allowing the Trojans to survive and advance to the quarterfinals against District 12 champion Roman Catholic, a 60-41 winner over Central Bucks West.

As Snyder alluded to afterward, the matchups were just too tilted in Parkland’s favor. Kyle Stout, bound for Lafayette, scored 10 of his team-best 18 points in the third quarter, stretching the lead as wide as six. He and Sam Iorio, a junior with several Division I offers who supplied 15 points, did the damage early. The two 6-foot-6 twins each corralled nine rebounds, part of Parkland’s 35-28 edge on the glass, including 12-6 on offensive boards.

“It’s very tough, because in our rotations, we had to rotate over to the 3-point shooter, and a couple of times we were late,” Thompson said. “Just having that outside shooting along with their height, it’s tough to guard.”

But Ridley adjusted, closing out more resolutely and holding that duo to just one point in the final quarter. Enter Kenny Yeboah, who was quiet offensively but operated the high-low game adeptly, kicking out to shooters when Ridley doubled in the post.

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