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Edwards, Strath Haven pull away from Phoenixville, wind up back in Media

Strath Haven’s Luke Edwards drives past Phoenixville’s Chris Weiah en route to a basket in the third quarter of a District 1 Class 5A game Wednesday night won by the Panthers 45-40.

By Matt Smith

Strath Haven’s Luke Edwards wanted to be more assertive in the second half Wednesday night. The junior guard knew he had to keep shooting and build upon a solid first half in which he scored six points.

But he knew he had to be better to ensure his team’s victory in the opening round of the District 1 Class 5A tournament.

“I just kept on thinking that I have to keep attacking, keep setting plays for the teammates,” Edwards said. “Read and react. I knew I had to get to the basket or to pull up and shoot. Just trying to react and make a play any way I can.”

Edwards made quite a few plays during a third-quarter run that changed the complexion of Haven’s battle with No. 11 Phoenixville. He poured in 10 of his game-high 18 points in the third period to help No. 6 Strath Haven to a 45-40 victory.

Dave DiPasqua interviews Haven’s Luke Edwards as Pete Fulginiti looks on after the Panthers beat Phoenixville, 45-40.

“Everyone contributes, it wasn’t just me,” Edwards said. “We look to attack holes. If one guy attacks the hole, and if my guy collapses, we look to kick out and move the ball around. That’s what we do. We’re always trying to make plays for each other.”

Despite Edwards’ 4-for-5 shooting performance in the third quarter, the Panthers weren’t in the clear yet. They led by seven points going into the final stanza, but the Phantoms (13-10) clawed back to make it a one-point game with 3:30 to go.

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Shorthanded Penncrest steps up to shut down Chichester

Penncrest’s Marquis Tomlin helped the Lions advance to the second round of the District 1 Class 5A tournament.

By Bob Grotz

Penncrest was favored to defeat Chichester in the first round of District 1 Class 5A playoffs Wednesday.

After all, the Lions were seeded third, the Eagles 14th. Nobody expected a 57-23 beatdown that looked worse than the math.

Certainly not with the Lions missing point guard Saahir Lee, out with an injury. High school starting lineups can be fragile.

The Lions (20-6) didn’t miss a beat as they turned to Marquis Tomlin to do much of the ball-handling and Aidan Carroll to make Chi’s leading scorer, Josh Hankins, wish somebody else was guarding him.

“Hankins was one of the leading scorers in the county,” Lions coach Mike Doyle said. “And Carroll just gave up himself to play him. Carroll’s a shooter and we asked him just to run around and chase (Hankins) the entire game. And it really stymied them. They had no one else to go to.

“Hankins is their facilitator, he’s their engine. When he has it going on, he’s getting everyone else involved. He couldn’t’ get the ball and nobody else was involved. That was a key.”

The Lions take on Strath Haven, the sixth seed that beat Phoenixville in the first round, Saturday in the next round at Kaufman Gymnasium. They’ve played three times, the Lions losing once, on a buzzer-beater at home. Better get there early for the preferred seating.

Webmaster’s note: The District One, 5A quarter-final this Saturday between Strath Haven and Penncrest will be audio broadcast right here on Delcohoops.com. Our broadcast begins at 6:45 PM.

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Church Farm’s defense stops Delco Christian in District 1 2A semifinal

By Bruce Adams

Church Farm, the No. 3 seed in the PIAA District 1 2A boys’ basketball tournament, had a tall order on its hands coming into Delco Christian’s gym Wednesday evening for the district semifinal.

The Griffins (10-10) faced the star senior twin towers of 6-foot-6 Jackson Piotrowski (the MVP of the Bicentennial League’s Presidents Division) and 6-foot-4 Obinna Nwobodo (first team All-BAL) anchoring a high-scoring Knights’ squad that had won the last two District 1 2A titles.

Trailing by eight points at halftime, the Griffins revved up their defense in the second half to spark a 65-44 win that put them into the district final against No. 1 Dock Mennonite (scheduled for Feb. 22 at 2 p.m. at Lower Merion High School), and locked up a PIAA 2A state tournament berth.

For No. 2 seed Delco Christian (17-9), aiming for its seventh state tourney berth in eight years, the loss meant the season was over. In the second half, Church Farm outscored the Knights, 44-15.

“I think it was attention to detail; we took a lot of charges in the second half,” said Church Farm head coach Jonathan Guarente. “We were able to get [Piotrowski and Nwobodo] in foul trouble, and once we did that we were able to take control of the game.”

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Radnor puts memories, Upper Moreland behind in Class 5A victory

Radnor’s Lew Robinson, seen in a regular-season game against Strath Havne, scored 17 points in a District 1 win over Upper Moreland Wednesday night. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

By Jack McCaffery

Just before Radnor was about to lose its only playoff basketball game last season, the key juniors were removed from the game.

The thinking began at that point.

It has yet to end.

So it was on the eve of what would be a 50-41 first-round victory Wednesday over visiting Upper Moreland in the PIAA District One Class 5A tournament that the Raiders’ captains would recall that scene one last time.

“We were down double digits, about a minute left, at Unionville,” Jack d’Entremont would recall. “I just remember that feeling. We said we would not go through that again. So we really used that to motivate us tonight to get the job done.”

That pregame conversation involving d’Entremont, Pat Boujoukos and Josh Savadove resonated and the Raiders responded, taking an early lead, keeping command for most of the game, holding off a tidy Upper Moreland fourth-quarter rally and earning a quarterfinal date Saturday at top-seeded West Chester East.

The rangy, 6-5 d’Entremont, who is receiving intense interest from several Division 3 programs, scored 22 points and used his length to key multiple successful Radnor defenses.

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Cold Knights in Shoebox leads to home-cooked win for Penn Wood

Penn Wood’s Jerry Flynn, shown here in a game against Chichester earlier this season, scored 16 points, including a pair of crucial buckets late, to help the Patriots get past neighboring Academy Park in a District 1 Class 5A playoff game Wednesday night. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

By Matthew DeGeorge

You can call it a District 1 game. You can add whatever classification you want. But make no mistake, what transpired between Academy Park and Penn Wood Wednesday night was first and foremost Del Val basketball.

Twice this season the teams had met, the home team winning by two each time. And through 33 turnovers, 30 fouls and dozens more hard but clean plays in the rubber match, there emerged just enough shot-making to lead the No. 7 Patriots to a 46-38 win over the Knights in the first round of the District 1 Class 5A tournament.

It’s only fitting, given the hard-nosed nature of things, that the game’s leading scorer entered halftime with just three shot attempts. Jerry Flynn came out for the third quarter not just sporting a new jersey – No. 25, after a cut on his right arm had blood-stained his usual No. 10 – but with a renewed commitment to get involved on offense.

Flynn hit all three of those attempts in the first half to stake Penn Wood to a three-point lead. But after the break, he asserted himself on more than just the offensive glass.

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District 1 5A Playoffs: Cianci’s big plays help Holy Ghost survive Marple

By Kevin Cooney

From the earliest parts of the morning on Monday until the last class on Wednesday afternoon, there was that gnawing feeling sitting in the pit of Steve Cianci’s stomach.

“I worked in school, but it was always there in the back of your mind,” the senior center for Holy Ghost Prep said. “It’s a mix of excitement and terror.”

He wasn’t the only Firebird who felt that way. From the time his team left the court on Saturday after beating The Christian Academy for the Bicentennial Athletic League title, Tony Chapman’s gut was in full churn.

“I was very concerned about the whole situation,” Chapman said. “So much emotion went into the four league games. If we had a week off, that would have been different. We played Saturday, took off Sunday and our practice on Monday was one of the poorest practices of the year. (Tuesday) was a little better, but not great. So I was really concerned.”

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CCSA, TCA book District 1 finals date, states trips

The Christian Academy and Chester Charter Scholars Academy are both bound for their first District 1 finals … and their first state tournaments.

Both teams won in the District 1 Class A semifinals Wednesday, with top-seeded TCA downing No. 4 Jenkintown, 65-46, and No. 2 CCSA handling third-seeded Phil-Mont Christian, 59-46.

TCA (23-4) bounced back from a loss in the Bicentennial championship game with its usual offensive balance: Five players had at least nine points each, led by Isaiah Mitchell’s 14 points, plus seven assists and three steals. Jourdan Green had nine points and nine rebounds, Grant Sareyka paired 12 points with six assists and four steals, and Sam Geathers chipped in 10 points. Tahmir Phillips was 6-for-8 at the line in scoring nine points. TCA led by 10 after one quarter and never looked back.

Their opponent in Saturday’s final (noon, Lower Merion) is the Sabers, who rode 15 points, five rebounds and four assists from Breon Showell to top Phil-Mont. Sean DeShields added 12 points as the Sabers (17-6) won their first playoff game in the school’s three-year varsity existence.

CCSA also beat TCA, 61-56, on Jan. 8.

Webmaster’s note: The District One, 1A Championship this Saturday between The Christian Academy and Chester Charter Scholars will be audio broadcast right here on Delcohoops.com. Our broadcast begins at 11:45 AM.

Berry’s bombs help Chester stop streaking Haverford in its tracks

Chester’s Karell Watkins, looking a big fired up here in a playoff game last year against Plymouth Whitemarsh, helped lead a second-half Clippers comeback Tuesday en route to a win over Academy Park. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

By Matthew DeGeorge

Faheem Berry knew pretty early Tuesday night that it could be a good night for him and his team.

As in so many games Chester has played, Haverford’s scouting report was to first hit the Clippers with a zone defense. It’s fundamental basketball: Compress the space, divert the drivers, deny post entry, force Chester to prove it can shoot over you, instead of what it wants to do, which is drive right by you.

Delco Time’s sports writer Matthew DeGeorge being interviewed at half-time at the Haverford vs Chester game. Photo by: Delcohoops/Mike Mayer

That would leave opportunities on the perimeter, the poison most opponents pick against a team averaging just three made 3-pointers per game this season.

So up stepped Berry, in the lineup because of an injury to point guard Fareed Burton. And down went five 3-pointers and Haverford’s 11-game winning streak.

Berry scored a career-high 16 points, going 5-for-9 from 3-point range, to lead fourth-seeded Chester to a 64-44 win in the second round of the District 1 Class 6A tournament.

Faheem Berry interviewed by Dave Burman after Chester’s win and Berry’s 16 point effort including 5 3-point shots. Photo by: Delcohoops/Mike Mayer

“I feel like (Steph) Curry, you know how Curry gets open?,” Berry said. “That’s how I was feeling today. I just was shooting and I was like, ‘I’m hot, keep getting me the ball.’ I was feeding them, they were feeding me, and we played as a team.”

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District 1 6A playoffs: Karell Watkins scores 1,000th point as No. 4 Chester rolls past Haverford

Karell Watkins being interviewed by Dave Burman earlier in the year. Photo by: Delcohoops/Mike Mayer

By Mitchell Gladstone

It’s been a few years since they’ve updated the list of 1,000-point scorers inside Fred Pickett Jr. Gymnasium.

But the last one was a biggie — Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, now with the Brooklyn Nets, joined the club in 2013. A few others have joined him since, but their names haven’t yet made it up.

Now, whenever Chester gets around to updating the list of an already impressive group, Karell Watkins will become a permanent part of Clipper history.

Watkins scored his 1,000th career point just before halftime Tuesday as Chester pulled away from Haverford for a 64-44 win, clinching a spot in the Class 6A state playoffs and yet another trip to the District 1 quarterfinals.

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Schaller hits 30, but Garnet Valley upset by East

Garnet Valley’s Carl Schaller, right, goes up for a layup ahead of the defense of Downingtown East’s Jayden Brown Tuesday. Schaller scored 30 points but the Jags fell, 55-50, in overtime. (Mikey Reeves/For MediaNews Group)


By Bob Grotz

No one shows up on game days at Garnet Valley sooner than Carl Schaller, who gets started so early he brings his own basketball because the others are still under lock and key.

Schaller also was one of the last players to leave Tuesday, the second-seeded Jaguars upset, 55-50, in overtime by 18th seeded Downingtown East in the second round of the District One Class 6A playoffs.

The junior guard scored 30 points on an assortment of crowd-pleasing drives to the basket. The Jaguars (20-3), however, needed 36.
Schaller and the seniors stuck around to reinforce what coach Mike Brown told them about completing the season on a high note.

“We’ve still got playbacks,” Schaller said. “As a team we’ve just got to stay confident. The losses that we’ve had have been close games. We’ve got to stick together. We’ve got to make it to states. We’ve just got to win two games.”

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