Category: Latest News

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.

Delcotimes logo 2 PIAA Championship logo

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.

(click on this link for the full article)

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)

Delcotimes logo 2 PIAA Championship logo

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.

(click on this link for the full article)

Chester powers into the quarterfinals over Spring-Ford

City of Basektball logo PIAA Championship logo

By Stephen Pianovich

At halftime of a five-point game, Chester’s coaching staff pointed a statistic from the first 16 minutes.

“We were 1-for-11 from three in the first half,” said senior forward Marquis Collins. “So we basically said no more threes. Their tallest guy was only about 6-foot-6 and we knew we could get to the rim.”

That game plan was evident in a dominant second half for the Clippers, who pounded the ball inside, got most of their points from the paint and the foul line and pulled away for a 74-49 victory over Spring-Ford in a meeting of District 1 teams at Cheltenham High School. Chester advanced to the Class AAAA PIAA quarterfinals, where it will face Reading on Saturday.

After shooting just 35.4 percent from the floor in the first half – which included that lousy 1-for-11 mark from distance – Chester got much more high-percentage looks in the second half. The Clippers (23-7) went 17-for-28 from the floor over the final 16 minutes, and just five of those shots were from beyond the arc (two of which found the bottom of the basket).

After Spring-Ford was able to get back in the game thanks to the long ball before halftime, Chester had eventually bullied its way to a 15-point advantage early in the fourth quarter.

 

 

Webmaster’s note:  You can listen to this entire game by going to our Game Archives.  Just click on the logo on the left side of this page and listen to the entire game 24/7.  Our sponsors (listed on the right side of this page) pay for all broadcasting and archive costs!

(click on this link for the full article)

Harkins keeps Delco Christian in fight to the end

Delcotimes logo 2 PIAA Championship logo

By Jack McCaffery

When his basketball career is over, and that will not be before years in the college game, Wyatt Harkins plans a career in law-enforcement with hopes to someday join the FBI.

With the way he can read the clues, predict what is coming and handle a tough situation, the Delco Christian guard should be a natural.

After nearly carrying the Knights to a victory Tuesday in the second round of the PIAA Class A tournament with a fourth-quarter scoring outburst, the versatile 6-1 senior knew exactly what was coming.

“I have been box-and-one’d more times this year,” he said, “than I can even count.”

Ah-hah.

So after Harkins scored 12 fourth-quarter points to push the Knights toward fulfillment, he was hit with the usual trick defense, the game flattened, and the Knights were eliminated from the tournament with a 62-58 loss to Shenandoah Valley at Central Dauphin East High.

(click on this link for the full article)

PIAA Class AA & AAAA: Second-Round Preview (March 9)

City of Basektball logo PIAA Championship logo

By Josh Verlin

The PIAA playoff second round began on Tuesday night with the Class A and AAA brackets, and continues this evening with the AA and AAAA tournaments.

Here’s a look at all of Wednesday night’s games that involve area teams:

Chester (1-2) vs. Spring-Ford (1-5)
Where: Cheltenham HS; Wyncote
When: 7:00 PM
How they got here: Chester def. Hempfield (55-46); Spring-Ford def. Spring Grove (74-43)

Skinny: It’s a District 1 showdown for a spot in the quarterfinals as the Clippers and Rams meet for the first time this year. Chester (21-7) presents a matchup problem for any team in the state with its depth and size — no fewer than six members of the rotation stand 6-5 or taller — and Spring-Ford will need to make sure this game doesn’t get into a track meet or volleyball contest on the boards. For that, the Rams (21-7) will need strong games from the perimeter trio of Matt Gnias, Nigel Cooke and Charles Drummond, who combined for 47 points in the win over Spring-Grove, but they’ll also need a big effort from 6-6 Cameron Reid inside. Spring-Ford will have to figure out a way to slow down Chester’s big scoring wings, senior Stanley Davis and Marquis Collins, from getting loose inside, but a 3-point contest benefits the Rams.

Webmaster’s note: If you can’t make the game you can listen to it LIVE right here on Delcohoops.com.  Our broadcast will begin at 6:45. Click on the Game-of-the-Week logo on the left hand side of this page.

(click on this link for the complete preview)

McDevitt finds safety in Marsico’s shooting, ousts Carroll

Bishop McDevitt guard Alex Marsico, here defending Archbishop Carroll’s John Rigsby Tuesday night, came through with solid defense and the decisive 3-pointer in McDevitt’s 62-60 win in the PIAA Class AAA second round. (For Digital First Media/Kirk Neidermyer)

Delcotimes logo 2 PIAA Championship logo

By Matthew De George

For the first 30 minutes Tuesday night, Alex Marsico seemed destined to influence Bishop McDevitt’s PIAA Class AAA second-round game without the ball in his hands.

But when the rock found the senior guard in the final minute, he rose to the occasion.

Marsico buried the go-ahead 3-pointer with less than a minute to play, putting the Crusaders ahead for good and ending an uncharacteristically error-prone Archbishop Carroll’s season, 62-60, at Garden Spot High School.

The shot was Marsico’s only made basket of the night on just his second attempt. But when Bryce Hall drove the lane and found his progress blocked, he fed Marsico on the left wing to bury a triple in front of the McDevitt bench and put the Crusaders ahead, 56-55.

No matter how much energy he expounded defensively as Ryan Daly’s shadow, he had no problem rising and hitting.

(click on this link for the full article and video from the game)

Bishop McDevitt notches thrilling upset over Archbishop Carroll

City of Basektball logo PIAA Championship logo

By Jeff Griffith

Mike Gaffey will be the first to admit his Bishop McDevitt Crusaders had some unfinished business coming into this season.

Their first goal was to exorcise their district three championship demons of a year ago; McDevitt lost the 2015 title game by just three points to Steel-High.

The Crusaders checked that one off the to-do list, earning this year’s district hardware with a dominant win over Eastern York.

The next order of business was a taller task to say the least.

“Last year, we lost with a lead in the last minute against Neumann-Goretti,” said Gaffey, the Crusaders’ head coach. “This was on our bucket list, to get a Philly team that we knew we could beat in the last minute of the game and win it.”

Instead of getting Neumann-Goretti, the defending state champions, Gaffey’s team was matched up with the Philadelphia Catholic League’s next best AAA squad, the state runners-up of a year ago, the Archbishop Carroll Patriots.

However, despite the change in opponent, McDevitt got exactly what they wanted.

A win.

Webmaster’s note:  You can listen to this entire game by going to our Game Archives.  Just click on the logo on the left side of this page and listen to the entire game 24/7.  Our sponsors (listed on the right side of this page) pay for all broadcasting and archive costs!

(click on this link for the full article)

PIAA Class A & AAA: Second-Round Preview (March 8)

City of Basektball logo PIAA Championship logo

By Josh Verlin

Bishop McDevitt (3-1) vs. Archbishop Carroll (12-3)
Where: Garden Spot HS; New Holland
When: 7:30 PM
How they got here: Bishop McDevitt def. Salisbury Twp. (75-48), Archbishop Carroll def. Holy Ghost Prep (76-27)

Skinny: Archbishop Carroll had perhaps the most impressive first-round performance of any team in the entire state, running out to a 48-9 halftime lead. Ryan Daly, a Hartford-bound senior, scored 18 points in the first eight minutes and finished with 23 despite sitting the fourth quarter; fellow senior John Rigsby added 21 for the Patriots. Last year, Carroll made it to the state final out of this same spot in the bracket, and they had to get through the District 3 champion in this exact spot, it was a fairly easy 83-54 win over Steel-High. McDevitt, powered by 30 points and 11 rebounds from 6-4 senior big man and 1,000-point scorer James Williams, had no troubles with District 11’s third seed Salisbury Twp. in its opener, but they know things will be much tougher against one of the top teams in the Catholic League. Last year, the Crusaders made it to the quarterfinals before falling at the hands of eventual champ Neumann-Goretti.

(click on this link for all the game previews)

Big 48 hours for local HS basketball teams

Delcotimes logo 2 PIAA Championship logo

By Matthew DeGeorge

12-3 Archbishop Carroll vs. 3-1 Bishop McDevitt, Garden Spot, 7:30

Last year, the Patriots encountered District 3 champ Steelton-Highspire at this stage in what seemed a daunting matchup. They steamrolled the Steamrollers by 29 points, a fate the Crusaders hope to avoid in the Class AAA second round.

Neither team broke much of a sweat in its opener. The Patriots (23-3) scored 26 points in the first quarter and permitted District One champ Holy Ghost Prep just 27 total in a 76-27 shellacking. McDevitt (21-6) toppled Salisbury Township, District 11’s third seed, 75-48.

McDevitt was powered by 1,000-point scorer James Williams, who poured in 30 points. He averages 21 per game, but McDevitt isn’t a one-man show. Guards Nick Gemmell and Tim Kater, the latter a sharp-shooting sophomore and defensive end who stands 6-foot-3 and 260 pounds, can also supply points.

Carroll possesses a pair of Division I talents in Ryan Daly and Josh Sharkey, plus John Rigsby, who scored 21 points against Holy Ghost and has scored in double figures in each of his last five outings to raise his season average to 12.2 ppg. With Miks Antoms and company, Carroll owns a decisive size advantage. McDevitt lists the 6-foot-4, 180-pound Williams as a center.

Webmaster’s note: If you can’t make the game you can listen to it LIVE right here on Delcohoops.com.  Our broadcast will begin at 7:15. Click on the Game-of-the-Week logo on the left hand side of this page.

(click on this link for a preview of the rest of the game tonight and tomorrow)

PIAA Round-Up: March 5, 2016

Tyriek Meredith (3) and Simon Gratz downed Lower Merion to advance to the second round of the PIAA Class AAAA state tournament. (Photo: Ed Cunicelli/CoBL)

City of Basektball logo PIAA Championship logo

By Jeff Griffith

Gratz downs Lower Merion in Stewart’s first states experience
When Lynard Stewart played basketball at Simon Gratz, the state playoffs weren’t something he was able to take part in; until 2005, Public League teams didn’t participate in the PIAA state tournament.

His first time experiencing states came Saturday afternoon as a part of his first year coaching at his alma mater, and it couldn’t have gone better, as Gratz took down one of the area’s most highly-regarded programs in Lower Merion, advancing in the PIAA class AAAA tournament by a final score of 63-61 in overtime.

“At times it doesn’t hit me until I get a lot of text messages saying ‘congrats,’ because to me I’m just going on coaching, trying to win the next game,” Stewart told CoBL by phone after the win. “It doesn’t hit me until people say ‘good game, well coached,’ and I start realizing, we’re doing something special.”

“To be able to be in (the state tournament) now is something special,” he added. “It’s March, and we’re still playing, I’m still practice planning, it’s exciting for me to be involved in the states.”

That first states experience was certainly a stressful one, as Stewart’s Bulldogs took the Aces into overtime. The final seconds of the extra period were a roller coaster of emotions.

(click on this link for all the updates)