Category: Latest News

Boys: Heinerichs huffs, puffs … helps push his Fords past Henderson and into states

Haverford's Brian Wiener, left, and Colin Reynolds are charged up after Wiener drew a foul in the second half en route to a victory Friday night over West Chester Henderson. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group).

Haverford’s Brian Wiener, left, and Colin Reynolds are charged up after Wiener drew a foul in the second half en route to a victory Friday night over West Chester Henderson. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group).

 

By Jack McCaffery

He could have settled for a verbal outline. He had the option to pick up the passion in his pre-game speech. He might have mixed in an additional film. He might have tried it all, given the straits his Haverford High basketball team would wander into Friday night.

Fords coach Keith Heinerichs, however, took the message to another level. And that would have been him, out there Thursday, running pre-practice sprints with his players, maybe huffing, perhaps puffing, but shouting out the reality with each determined stride: Lose the next one to visiting West Chester Henderson, and it’s over.

“I was just trying to get the intensity up,” said the Fords’ coach. “I wanted to make sure they wanted it.

“It wasn’t the first time I did that,” he continued, smiling. “But it was the first in a lonnnnnnggg time.”

By the time the Fords outpaced the Warriors, 63-41, in the playback round of the PIAA District 1 Class 6A tournament, it was clear Heinerichs’ ploy didn’t hurt. Though young Henderson hung around early, the Fords gave them 32 minutes of relentless defensive pressure to improve to 18-6 and win a spot in the state tournament.

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Girls: Costly free throws doom Springfield in loss to Shanahan

Springfield's Mia Valerio is fouled by Bishop Shanahan's Samantha Blumenthal in the first half in a Class 5A game between the teams Friday night. That wouldn't be a bad strategy in the second half as the Cougars went ice cold from the line en route to a loss. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group).

Springfield’s Mia Valerio is fouled by Bishop Shanahan’s Samantha Blumenthal in the first half in a Class 5A game between the teams Friday night. That wouldn’t be a bad strategy in the second half as the Cougars went ice cold from the line en route to a loss. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group).

By Matt Smith

Caydence Oswald had taken only one shot during regulation Friday night.

In overtime, the Bishop Shanahan junior guard took another crack at the rim and delivered the biggest make of her life.

Oswald drained the go-ahead 3-pointer early in OT and the No. 4 Eagles held on to defeat top-seeded Springfield, 34-29.

“If I got in my head then, I wouldn’t have been able to make that shot,” Oswald said. “I knew I needed to make it. We were in overtime so it’s definitely a little bit stressful, but I put all of my focus on making the basket. I’m glad it went in.”

Bishop Shanahan (15-8) ended Springfield’s two-year district championship reign. The Eagles will play No. 7 Villa Maria at Temple University’s Liacouras Center next Saturday.

“Even making it this far, I’m so grateful that we were able to come here and play some good basketball,” Oswald said. “A lot of our girls, we’ve been going through so many injuries this season, and we definitely are a younger team, we only have one senior, so to be able to get this far after everything that’s happened this season…”

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Boys: Lilley, Lower Merion too much for Abington in District 1-6A quarterfinals

 

By Mike Cabrey

Demetrius Lilley and Lower Merion made it apparent very quickly the Abington boys basketball team was not going to pull off a third straight upset in the District 1-6A tournament.

The No. 23 seed Galloping Ghosts had few answers for slowing down Lilley in the first quarter, the 6-foot-9 senior racking up 10 points inside before connecting on a three to give the No. 2 Aces a 22-8 lead at end of the quarterfinal contest’s opening eight minutes.

“We came out knowing that we had to play hard,” Lilley said. “Knowing Abington was a great team so we had to come out, no slacking. Just come out and play our best.”

Lower Merion just kept rolling, taking a 30-point advantage into halftime and cruised to a 60-28 victory Friday night at Kobe Bryant Gymnasium.

“It just was rough,” Ghosts senior Derrius Lucas said. “Seeing our guys, even me, probably not as aggressive as I could of been but our shots weren’t really falling as much early. Just hard to get going.”

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Boys: Penn Wood outlasts Spring-Ford in 2OT, earns state trip

By Zak Wolf

Elimination games aren’t complicated. Two things can happen: your team either wins or goes home, it’s that simple. In these do-or-die scenarios with everything on the line, the only thing that’s needed is for your team to have more points than your opponent and you win the game. It doesn’t matter how ugly the game is, as long as when the final buzzer sounds, your team is ahead, you survive and advance. 

Penn Wood didn’t play the prettiest basketball on Friday night against Spring-Ford, but it got the job done. The Patriots defeated the Rams 40-38 in a double overtime thriller in the District 1 6A playbacks, with the game deciding who went to states and whose season would be ended. 

The game was tightly-contested all night, with neither team leading by more than six points at any point. Penn Wood was able to squeak out a victory on Spring-Ford’s home floor to clinch their second state playoff berth in three seasons after missing out last year.

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Boys: In blink of an eye, Qadir Lowrie finds right focus for Chester

Qadir Lowrie after Chesters defeat of Marple Newtown in the PIAA-5A-D1 playoff game. Photo by Delcohoops.com

 

By Jack McCaffery

Qadir Lowrie knew the time, the situation, the stakes, the history and the responsibility midway through the third quarter of Chester High’s PIAA District 1 Class 5A playoff game against visiting Marple Newtown Wednesday.

That’s when the senior point guard did what so many other veteran Clippers backcourt stars have done in an ever-growing history: He took the game over.

“You have to have confidence going into the latter part of the game,” Lowrie said after Chester had rung up a 59-50 win over the Tigers. “And I had that confidence.”

Qadir Lowrie being interviewed by Brian Carroll after Chester’s playoff victory. Listen to his interview at the 1:42:40 mark. Photo by Delcohoops.com

Soon after Chester fell behind, 24-23, on a Matt Cantwell drive with 4:10 left in the third quarter, Lowrie would make sure the Clippers would avoid  their first postseason home defeat to a Delaware County opponent since a loss to Springfield in 1980.

Within one blast of excellence, Lowrie completed an old-fashioned three-pointer, made a steal, deposited two free throws and delivered an assist to Isaiah Freeman to give the Clippers a 35-30 lead. That control seized, Lowrie would swish all eight of his free-throw attempts in the fourth quarter, while mixing in an assist to Breilynd White with 1:35 left for a 51-43 lead, essentially tipping 16-3 Chester into the Saturday semifinals.

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Girls: Garnet Valley’s surprise postseason continues on

Ava Possenti (above) and Garnet Valley have won five straight postseason games this month. (Photo: Josh Verlin/CoBL)

 

By Josh Verlin

Three years ago was the best season in Garnet Valley girls’ basketball history. The Jaguars won 30 games, the Central League and District 1 6A titles, and made it all the way to the state championship game. 

This year’s group might not equal those feats — and certainly won’t equal the win total — but something almost equally special is happening. An unheralded squad with none of the expectations of its forerunner, with three freshmen and a sophomore in the top seven, is making plenty of noise, seemingly out of nowhere.

“This has been an improbable, unexpected season in many ways,” 19th-year head coach Joe Woods said.  “Three years ago, we were district champions, but it was kind of expected. We were (the) one-seed […] we did great, we were 30-2. 

“But this is in many ways more satisfying.”

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Boys: Wildrick’s 14 points can’t prevent Chi’s loss to Upper Moreland

A slow start was too much for Chichester to overcome Wednesday night.

Vince Wildrick scored 14 points but No. 12 Chichester fell to No. 4 Upper Moreland, 60-50, in the quarterfinals of the District 1 Class 5A tournament.

The Eagles fall into playbacks, where they visit No. 8 Sun Valley on Saturday. The winner of that game gets one of the six states berths from District 1. Chichester has already beaten Sun Valley this season, in overtime.

Led by 18 points from Matt Tiernan, the Golden Bears led 37-13 at halftime and never looked back.

In the District 1 Class 2A tournament:

DELCO CHRISTIAN 52, BRISTOL 51 » Josh Parks hit a corner 3-pointer as time expired Tuesday night, helping the third-seeded Knights score an upset and book a spot in Saturday’s District 1 final.

Parks took an inbounds pass with two seconds left, took a step behind the arc on the left wing in front of the Knights’ bench and buried his third 3-pointer of the night to see the Knights (12-13) advance. They also avenged a seven-point home loss to Bristol in late January.

Parks, DC’s 1,000-point scorer, led the way with 19 points. Josh Dell’Arciprete added 15 points and Jace Kees supplied 12. Each hit four 3-pointers. The Knights hit 11 triples against just six two-pointers.

The win moves DC into Saturday’s final against top seeded Church Farm, which disposed of Calvary Christian, 59-21. That game is 2 p.m. at Harriton on Saturday, part of a doubleheader with the 2A girls title game that pits top-seeded Delco Christian against No. 2 Sacred Heart at noon. One team makes the PIAA tournament in Class 2A. Church Farm took the regular-season meeting, 63-52, three weeks ago.

Boys: Mueller-charged momentum sends Radnor past SV

Radnor’s Cooper Mueller dribbles in the third quarter of their District 1 Class 5A playoff game against Sun Valley Wednesday evening. (PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES)

By Matthew DeGeorge

The dunk was almost the least of it from Cooper Mueller, even before he took flight from the floor at Radnor High School Wednesday night.

Countless times this season, the junior guard has jumped a passing lane or picked a pocket, turning those loose balls into easy baskets. When he jarred the ball loose in the second quarter against Sun Valley, he was well on his way to another momentum-injecting passage of play, no matter how he elected to finish it at the other end.

The dunk, and the resultant surge of electricity through the Radnor bench, was just a bonus; an extra exclamation point. Mueller’s defense keyed an early rout by the Raptors, dashing past the No. 8 Vanguards, 53-28, to book a place in the District 1 Class 5A semifinals and a first states berth for Radnor since 2006.

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Girls: Wilson’s injury serves only as motivation for Carroll

By Matt Smith

When Brooke Wilson collapsed to the floor and clutched her knee, the Conwell-Egan High School gymnasium fell silent.

Archbishop Carroll’s sophomore standout writhed in pain for several minutes in the second quarter of Tuesday’s Catholic League semifinal. When she was able to walk off under her own power, the Patriots breathed a sigh of relief and refocused. They had a job to finish.

Even so, senior forward Taylor Wilson knew the immediate impact her sister’s absence would have on the team.

“She’s a huge, huge part of our defense and we kind of had to make up for her not being there,” Taylor Wilson said. “Unfortunately, injuries are part of the game of basketball. So you kind of just have to adapt when it does happen. I think we did a good job.”

Brooke will have six days to rest and hopefully make a comeback at the Palestra next Monday. Carroll, the No. 1 seed in the tournament, advanced to the league championship with a convincing 50-35 win over fifth-seeded Neumann-Goretti Tuesday.

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Girls: O’Hara seniors top Wood, earn Palestra trip

By Rob Rose

The chant that emerged from the Cardinal O’Hara student section with 10 seconds left on the clock Tuesday night described exactly what the Lions felt.

It was really just one word, a place that despite being less than 10 miles from the school has seemed so distant to the senior class that doubt crept in if they would ever get a chance to play there.

“Palestra! Palestra! Palestra!,” the students shouted as smiles sprang onto the faces of the Lions on the court as they dribbled away the last seconds that separated seniors Maggie Doogan, Annie Welde and Sydni Scott from the a second straight PCL championship game and first trip to Philadelphia’s famous hoops facility after a 55-48 win over Archbishop Wood.

“It’s our senior year, me Annie and Syd, we all have a common goal,” Doogan said. “We’ve been playing together for four years now. We’ve played so many games, so you kind of feed off of each other’s energy and we’re really excited to get a chance to play at The Palestra.”

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