Category: Latest News

Kushner chips in as West Chester East tops Rustin to return to title game

Jack Kushner (above) has been a key starter for West Chester East all season long as a freshman. (Photo: Josh Verlin/CoBL)

By Josh Verlin

Last February, Jack Kushner sat in the stands at Temple University’s Liacouras Center, watching West Chester East play in the program’s first-ever district championship appearance. An eighth grader at Sts. Peter & Paul, Kushner was there to watch his older brother M.J. Kushner, then a senior and reserve forward on the Vikings’ squad, but he couldn’t help thinking one thing.

“I was like, ‘this is my last year to watch all these games,” he recalled. “This is the last game I can come to before I’m going to be on that court.’”

Lofty thoughts for a middle schooler. Especially lofty considering the Vikings had high hopes after their playoff run, which ultimately fell short in that District 1 5A title game (to Sun Valley) and then lost to Archbishop Ryan in the opening round of the PIAA Class 5A tournament. They returned 6-foot-9 wing Andrew Carr, a Division I recruit now signed to Delaware, talented combo guard Tym Richardson, and point guard Mike Dedda, all seniors. 

(click on this link for the full story)

Webmaster’s note: This Saturday, February 29th, Delcohoops.com will broadcast the 5A boy’s District One Championship game between Penn Wood visits W.C. East. Our broadcast begins at 2:45 PM.

Conlan, Haven complete epic turnaround with states berth

By Rich Flanagan

Chris Conlan was a member of Penncrest’s staff for the last three seasons. He can recall the success the Lions had against neighborhood rival Strath Haven on the hardwood in that time. He remembers holding the Panthers to 23 points in their first meeting of the 2018-19 season, one of several nightmarish contests those Pantehrs endured in a 3-19 campaign.

Conlan was “a Penncrest guy” growing up, but his cousins attended the Media Bowl rival, so he was going to his fair share of Panthers games. When the head coaching position at Strath Haven became available in the offseason, Conlan jumped at the opportunity. He led the team to the district playoffs in Year 1 and added another accolade to his resume Wednesday night.

Luke Edwards scored 16 points, including five in the fourth quarter, and forward Robbie Guilday added 11 points and six rebounds as Strath Haven held off Holy Ghost Prep, 54-46 in a District 1 Class 5A playback final to advance to the state playoffs for the first time since 2009.

Conlan is setting a new foundation within the Panthers program. Bringing a young team to the state tournament is a tremendous start in that effort.

(click on this link for the full story)

Beniwal, Garnet Valley bounce back to book states bid

By Bob Grotz

It only seemed like the Garnet Valley boys’ basketball team qualified for the state basketball tournament for the first time ever following its 68-53 triumph over Upper Darby in the Class 6A playbacks Tuesday night.

While the Jaguars reached the dance in 1997, 23 years is an eternity, especially contrasted with a girls’ program that has a state final and a District 1 title in its recent past.

The next step for the Jaguars (22-4), the second seed in District 1, is a state seeding game Friday against North Penn, the 24th seed. North Penn defeated Central Bucks East, 46-43. It was their third straight road victory in the playbacks.

But back to the Jaguars, who never trailed after Neel Beniwal buried the first of his four 3-pointers in the first minute.

Beniwal scored a game-high 21 points to take the scoring burden off star guard Carl Schaller, who fouled out despite taking more than he gave, the spark plug having to switch from No. 2 to 32 when his shooting wrist leaked blood in a contest with 37 fouls.

“We knew we had to win to get into states,” Beniwal said. “We all brought it today. We’ve been bringing the effort every game but we’ve been struggling to shoot. But today we were all making shots and we were all sharing the ball. It was fun.”

(click on this link for the full story)

Nealon hits seven 3’s to power Unionville past Radnor and into states

By Neil Geoghegan

It was a District 1 5A Playback game, but it meant everything to the Unionville boys’ who wanted desperately to punctuate a regular season that included a share of the Ches-Mont American basketball crown.

The Indians did it with a forceful 62-43 victory over visiting Radnor on Wednesday, and it propels Unionville to its first PIAA Tournament berth in 14 years.

“We are trying to stay in the micro, and when it’s all over we will take a step back and look at it,” said Indians’ head coach Chris Cowles. “It’s a great accomplishment for these guys and they deserve it. It guarantees us another week of practice, so that’s big.”

Four days after a lackluster 11-point loss to West Chester Rustin in the quarterfinals, fourth-seeded Unionville (18-7 overall) bounced back impressively. The Indians will host No. 6 Strath Haven (17-9) on Friday in the district’s fifth-sixth contest.

“We learned from Saturday (against Rustin) just to be ourselves and stay in the moment,” said junior Sean Nealon, who poured in a game-high 23 points that included a long-range shooting exhibition.

“We were so disappointed in all aspects with what happened Saturday,” Cowles added. “We weren’t ourselves. So to come out and do what we normally do was good to see.”

(click on this link for the full story)

Methacton’s first district final is one to remember

Chester’s Karell Watkins steals an in-bounds Methacton pass in the first quarter Tuesday night at the Liacouras Center. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

By Matthew DeGeorge

Erik Timko admitted that there were some nerves when he took the court at the Liacouras Center Tuesday night. But somewhere between the tipoff of the District 1 Class 6A semifinal and when he and teammate Brett Eberly chest-bumped after Timko splashed home a 3-pointer at the third-quarter buzzer, he’d loosened up pretty well.

Tuesday was just another game, Methacton would’ve said in the pregame huddle. But no less an authority than dominant senior center Jeff Woodward would admit it wasn’t entirely truthful.

Pete Fulginiti shares some game impressions with Jeff Woodward on Methacton’s victory over Chester in the D1-6A semi-final game. Photo by: Delcohoops/Mike Mayer

“We made sure we got here and got the experience of being down here so it’s not like we’re just playing a game here,” Woodward said. “Obviously we know our mindset is it’s just another game, but we all know it’s not just another game. It’s got a lot more meaning. It’s a beautiful arena, it’s really, really nice, and I think it’s a great experience.”

The game they put together, the top-seeded Warriors pasting No. 4 Chester, 81-54, in the program’s first District 1 semifinal, was extraordinary. It was also the latest first in a long line of them for a golden generation of Methacton basketball. And it was emblematic of the PIAA system that, despite the many shortcomings of its expansion to six classes, has led to an uptick in once-in-program-history moments like what Methacton shared.

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(click on this link for the full story)

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Chester goes flat, then splat in bowing to Woodward, Methacton

Chester’s Akeem Taylor, left, is shut down by Methacton’s Jeff Woodward in the second half of the District 1 Class 6A semifinal at the Liacouras Center Tuesday. Methacton handled the Clippers, 81-54. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

By Owen McCue

The disparity between the accomplishments of the Methacton and Chester boys basketball programs entering Tuesday night’s District 1 Class 6A semifinal game was quite large.

On one side was a Chester program making its 48th trip to the District 1 Final Four, including 38 wins in the semifinal round. On the other was a Methacton program making its first trip to the District 1 semifinals.

As it has done to many others this high school basketball season, top-seeded Methacton showed that this year it appears to be the team in a class of its own in District 1.

From the middle of the third quarter on, the top-seeded Warriors rolled past the fourth-seeded Clippers for an 81-54 win, their third straight district victory by 20-or-more points, and earning a chance to play third-seeded Cheltenham (a 77-60-winner of seventh-seeded Bensalem) in Saturday’s District 1 championship back at Temple at 7 p.m.

“We talked about how they have a really, really long history as a program, but their guys are in the same situation as us,” said Methacton senior Jeff Woodward, who finished with 20 points and 20 rebounds. “None of their guys had been down here yet and none of us have been down here.

(click on this link for the full story)

Webmaster’s note: Missed the game? Listen to the entire game on our archive file listed below. Go to our Broadcast Archives page for all game archives.

Woodward, Timko power Methacton into title game

Jeff Woodward (above) had 20 points and dominated on the glass in Methacton’s district semifinal win over Chester. (Photo: Mark Jordan/CoBL)

By Kevin Callahan

Midway through the third quarter, with his team up five points, Jeff Woodward chased a long rebound off his hand, and as the ball was going out of bounds, he lunged, smacking the ball ahead to a teammate.

Then, he hustled down the floor and worked his way down low to get the ball. He was fouled. He made both.

But what made the hustle play even more impressive was that Woodward is 6-foot-10. And, the senior center is already signed with Colgate University.

So, when the best player on the court, who already has a Division I scholarship, is playing the hardest, well, the trickle down effect is contagious … and how a team plays for a championship.

“There’s no other way to play,” Woodward said afterwards, drenched in sweat.

(click on this link for the full story)

Webmaster’s note: Missed the game? Listen to the entire game on our archive file listed below. Go to our Broadcast Archives page for all game archives.

Girls: Springfield finally conquers Mount to get to district final

Springfield guard Alyssa Long drives past a pair of Mount St. Joseph’s defenders Tuesday night. Long had nine points and five steals in a 52-42 win for the Cougars in the District 1 Class 5A semifinals. (Mikey Reeves/For MediaNews Group)

By Matt Smith

Springfield never forgot what it was like to lose to Mount St. Joseph in the District 1 Class 5A tournament.

Excuse the Cougars for holding a grudge.

“The last two years they bounced us out of the playoffs,” senior point guard Alyssa Long said. “It was nice to get them back.”

When Long and the other Springfield seniors were freshmen, they defeated Mount St. Joseph at Villanova University for the District 1 championship. It was the first district championship in Springfield girls basketball history.

But that was so long ago.

All that matters now is that the 2019-20 Cougars are about to play for another district championship. They will do so after conquering the Mount, 52-42, in the semifinals Tuesday night at Harriton.

“For the underclassmen, they have never beaten Mount, they have always been knocked out by them,” said Long, who produced nine points and five steals. “We really wanted to change that story and we didn’t want to get knocked out by them again. We came, we were ready to go in the locker room, and I think getting out to a quick start told us that we’re a new team this year … and it was going to be a different story.”

(click on this link for the full story)

Carroll tops Bartram for third in Class 4A

John Camden, Anquan Hill and Amiri Stewart combined for 45 points to lead Archbishop Carroll to a 72-58 triumph over Bartram in the District 12 Class 4A third-place game Tuesday night.

Camden hit four 3-pointers to finish with a team-high 16 points. The 6-8 junior added 15 points and Stewart 14 for the Patriots (16-9). Dean Coleman-Newsome added 10 of his 13 in the first half.

Carroll takes on the second-place team from District 11 in the opening round of the PIAA tournament on Friday March 6 at a site and time to be determined.

Beniwal, Garnet Valley bounce back to book states bid

By Bob Grotz

It only seemed like the Garnet Valley boys’ basketball team qualified for the state basketball tournament for the first time ever following its 68-53 triumph over Upper Darby in the Class 6A playbacks Tuesday night.

While the Jaguars reached the dance in 1997, 23 years is an eternity, especially contrasted with a girls’ program that has a state final and a District 1 title in its recent past.

The next step for the Jaguars (22-4), the second seed in District 1, is a state seeding game Friday against North Penn, the 24th seed. North Penn defeated Central Bucks East, 46-43. It was their third straight road victory in the playbacks.

But back to the Jaguars, who never trailed after Neel Beniwal buried the first of his four 3-pointers in the first minute.

Beniwal scored a game-high 21 points to take the scoring burden off star guard Carl Schaller, who fouled out despite taking more than he gave, the spark plug having to switch from No. 2 to 32 when his shooting wrist leaked blood in a contest with 37 fouls.

“We knew we had to win to get into states,” Beniwal said. “We all brought it today. We’ve been bringing the effort every game but we’ve been struggling to shoot. But today we were all making shots and we were all sharing the ball. It was fun.”

(click on this link for the full story)