Author: delcohoops

GIRLS: Knouse’s drive helps Archbishop Wood fend off Radnor in PIAA-5A opener

By GLQ Share

When the going got tough, Emily Knouse got going.

Specifically, the Archbishop Wood junior got going downhill toward the rim to start the fourth quarter of Saturday’s state playoff opener with Radnor. The Raptors had been physical, scrappy and resilient all afternoon and Knouse knew it was time to change the tune.

Wood’s strong fourth quarter powered the three-time defending champions to a 55-43 win over Radnor in the first round of the PIAA 5A tournament.

“My shots weren’t falling as much as I’d like them to be and Coach Mike (McDonald) told me ‘she’s chasing you over (screens) so have space, go ahead and rip,’” Knouse said. “I had to be strong, if you’re strong enough then you’ll get finishes.”

Radnor, the sixth seed out of District 1, knew it had nothing to lose and played like it. The Raptors scored the game’s first eight points, were within four at the half and still had the deficit below double digits going to the fourth.

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PIAA Class 5A Girls Basketball: Knouse provides spark as Wood holds off Radnor upset attempt

Radnor's Kate Gallagher, center, drives down the lane in 2023 game against Ridley. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

Radnor’s Kate Gallagher, center, drives down the lane in 2023 game against Ridley. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

By Andrew Robinson

When the going got tough, Emily Knouse got going Saturday.

Specifically, the Archbishop Wood junior got going downhill toward the rim to start the fourth quarter of a state playoff opener with Radnor. The Raptors had been physical, scrappy and resilient all afternoon, and Knouse knew it was time to change the tune.

Wood’s strong fourth quarter powered the three-time defending champions to a 55-43 win in the first round of the PIAA 5A tournament.

“My shots weren’t falling as much as I’d like them to be and Coach Mike (McDonald) told me ‘she’s chasing you over (screens) so have space, go ahead and rip,’” Knouse said. “I had to be strong, if you’re strong enough then you’ll get finishes.”

Radnor, the sixth seed out of District 1, knew it had nothing to lose and played like it. The Raptors scored the game’s first eight points, were within four at the half and still had the deficit below double digits going to the fourth.

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Boys: PIAA 6A: Chris Dolan leads Springfield (Delco) to first state tournament win since 2007

Springfield (Delco) junior Chris Dolan had 13 points and three assists Saturday in the PIAA Class 6A first round against Lincoln. (Photo: Jared Leveson/CoBL)

Jared Leveson 

Chris Dolan didn’t have any Wheaties or “Mike’s Secret Stuff” before Springfield (Delco) boys basketball’s PIAA Class 6A first-round state playoff game at Abraham Lincoln High School. 

The usually reluctant shooter just stayed ready for his opportunities and made the most of them. 

In Springfield’s first state tournament game since 2017, the 6-foot-4 junior let it rip early, scoring its first eight points. Dolan’s spurt set the tone for the Cougars and propelled them to a dominant 59-43 win over Lincoln on Saturday afternoon.

“I was open for all of them,” Dolan said about his hot hand. “When you have other guys who score as much as we do, it opens up a lot, and that always helps.” 

The Division 1-AA football prospect at wide receiver and safety finished with 13 points on 5-of-6 shooting and three assists. Still, he was proud of his effort on the glass and defensive end. Dolan racked up six rebounds and two steals.

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Boys: PIAA 6A: Garnet Valley’s season ends at hands of Central York

Quinn O’Hara (above) had 11 points in Garnet Valley’s first-round loss. (Photo: Josh Verlin/CoBL)

By Josh Verlin

There was no state playoff miracle this time around for Garnet Valley. 

The Jaguars went toe-to-toe with Central York in a PIAA 6A first-round matchup, acquitting themselves well against one of the best teams from central Pennsylvania for the second straight season. But unlike last year, when a buzzer-beating 3-pointer got the Jaguars into the second round, it was the Panthers who closed strong for a 69-60 win on Saturday afternoon.

t’s the third straight year that the season ended in the state tournament for Garnet Valley (19-10), which made a run to the District 1 6A championship game for the first time since 1997. That’s a far cry from a decade ago, when the program was still on the upswing from three consecutive one-win seasons.

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PIAA Class 6A Girls Basketball: Haverford has an easy time forgetting last year

Haverford's Natalie Wright led the Fords to a first-round PIAA Class 6A game against Dobbins on Friday. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group).

Haverford’s Natalie Wright led the Fords to a first-round PIAA Class 6A game against Dobbins on Friday. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group).

By Matthew DeGeorge

A year ago, Haverford’s dream season ended in a flash. Twenty-seven wins, then a loss in the District 1 Class 6A final and a first-round states setback, and a season that had marauded through the its first three months evaporated.

The Fords didn’t need a reminder Friday of what can happen when you start a tournament slow. Instead, the group this week let the ghosts of the past lie and focused on the task at hand.

“I think we’re just focusing on this year,” said forward Natalie Wright, after contributing 18 points to a 66-28 elimination of Murrell Dobbins in the first round of the PIAA Class 6A tournament. “New people, new team, just moving forward. … Losing a game like that, you’ve just got to get back up. You can’t have that hanging over you, as the games go on, years go on. You’ve got to get up and give it everything.”

Haverford left nothing to chance in this game against the District 12 opponent at Archbishop Ryan High. The Fords scored 24 of the game’s first 26 points and stretched the lead to 35 late in the first half against an undermanned Dobbins squad. Like any other game, Lauren Pellicane’s team identified the matchups and exploited them – in this case, a marked height advantage that led to a 36-19 edge on the boards and length to find passing lanes off their ball movement.

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PIAA GIRLS’ BASKETBALL: Cardinal O’Hara overwhelms Upper Dublin in first round

Cardinal O’Hara coach Chrissie Doogan talks to her team in a timeout during the first round of the PIAA Class 6A playoffs at Cardinal O’Hara High School on Friday, March 8, 2024. (MediaNews Group)

Cardinal O’Hara coach Chrissie Doogan talks to her team in a timeout during the first round of the PIAA Class 6A playoffs at Cardinal O’Hara High School on Friday, March 8, 2024. (MediaNews Group)

By Christiaan DeFranco

Like they had journeyed to an unfamiliar land only to lose their keys and wallet and phone, the Upper Dublin Cardinals, over and over again, were left disoriented by Cardinal O’Hara’s swarming defense.

The O’Hara Lions, runners-up from District 12, repeatedly picked Upper Dublin’s pockets — generating 16 turnovers in the first half — and ran away with a 48-19 victory in the opening round of the PIAA Class 6A playoffs Friday night.

The Lions’ primary target coming into the game was UD senior Amy Ngo, a Holy Family recruit, who took over at point guard when her younger sister Megan went down with an ACL injury last month.

“We knew Amy was a great player, so we figured if we got the ball out of her hands, we could double and trap everyone else,” said O’Hara senior Carly Coleman, who scored a game-high 20 points. “Meg (Rullo) started the game with a couple steals. From then on, we just took off. We were all energized.”

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PIAA Boys Basketball: Davis helps Carroll play spoiler at Big Spring

Carroll's Darrell Davis helped the Patriots to a win over Big Spring in the opening round of the PIAA Class 5A tournament Friday. (Pete Bannan - The Associated Press)

Carroll’s Darrell Davis helped the Patriots to a win over Big Spring in the opening round of the PIAA Class 5A tournament Friday. (Pete Bannan – The Associated Press)

By Matthew DeGeorge

Archbishop Carroll spoiled the states party that Big Spring had waited decades for.

The Patriots, the fourth seed from District 12, scored a 66-59 win over the District 3 runner-up, which was making its first appearance in the state tournament before a packed house in Newville.

Darrell Davis scored 23 points. Ian Williams added 17 for Carroll (18-8).

Aidan Sallie led Big Spring (19-7) with 23 points.

PIAA Class 6A Girls Basketball: Carroll win over Henderson makes season more special for McFillins

Archbishop Carroll's Maddie McFillin, pictured, and sisters Felicity and Abigail helped Carroll win its opening game in the PIAA Class 6A tournament Friday. (Pete Bannan - The Associated Press)

Archbishop Carroll’s Maddie McFillin, pictured, and sisters Felicity and Abigail helped Carroll win its opening game in the PIAA Class 6A tournament Friday. (Pete Bannan – The Associated Press)

By Matt Smith

Archbishop Carroll sisters Felicity, Maddie and Abigail McFillin have played major roles on the team during the 2023-24 season.

Until now they’ve all lacked experience in the PIAA tournament. First-year starters Felicity (senior) and Maddie (junior) were on the Carroll team that took home the Class 6A championship a year ago, but they did not play a lot of minutes. Abigail is a freshman.

“We are going to remember this season for a long time,” said Maddie, the junior. “We are always together so we don’t always think about it when people bring it up. But we are going to look back when we’re older and say, ‘Do you remember that one time when we were all together?’”

If Carroll goes on to win another PIAA championship, the McFillin sisters will never forget this season, not in a million years. And because they’re important parts of the team, that makes this year’s run in states extra special.

Archbishop Carroll began its Class 6A title defense Friday with a convincing 58-37 win over West Chester Henderson. The Patriots (18-9) will play a second-round game Tuesday.

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Boys: Chichester senior Carlton Gordy III learns to calm the storm inside

From left are Chichester coach Clyde Jones, Chichester senior Carlton Gordy III and Chrisisy Swiggett, Gordy’s grandmother. (Photo: Joseph Santoliquito/CoBL)

By Joseph Santoliquito

A storm always seemed to be swirling somewhere. Carlton Gordy III could never quite understand why. Anything would set him off. Anything would send him into a brooding, quick-trigger rage throwing everything he could get his hands on.

He found solace on a basketball court. The cacophony of bouncing balls and squeaking sneakers had a way of easing an inner wrath he could not comprehend until recently.

The why? The how? The why me?  

The questions used to plague the gifted Chichester 6-foot-3 All-Del-Val League senior guard. He carries the thick, talented bloodlines of his grandfather, former Chester great Carlton “Silk” Gordy Sr. He never knew his father, Carlton Gordy Jr., another Chester hoops alum who played with Jameer Nelson, lost through an unforgivable act that Carlton III has reached into his deep reservoir to forgive.

This year, Carlton III finished his first varsity season as a starter with a team-high average of 15.4 points a game, after scoring 339 points, including dropping 23 in a last-second 47-46 loss at Chester. He is getting looks from Cheyney and Neumann University.  

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PIAA Preview ’23-24: Boys 6A Bracket Breakdown

Chester and Jalen Harris, above, have some potential to make a run. (Photo: Mark Jordan/CoBL)

By Josh Verlin

The PIAA 6A field is always stacked, 32 of the best big-school programs in the state battling it out over five rounds to lift a giant chocolate bar on March 23 in Hershey.

Here’s a look at the boys’ side of the 6A field, including contenders, dark horses, and all the star players to watch:

Chester (District 1-4, 20-4)
The Clippers have had a big bounce-back this season after missing out on the district playoffs entirely a year ago, getting to the semifinals this year after capturing the Del-Val League title. Head coach Keith Taylor has a deep and assertive group led by 6-5 forward Dominic Toy, senior wing Dante Atkinson, sophomore twins Daron and Jalen Harris and more.

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