Boys: District 1 6A: Garnet Valley gets Berndt by Central Bucks East

Kyle Berndt (above) hit seven 3-pointers as CB East got past Garnet Valley. (Photo: Jared Leveson/CoBL)

By Jared Leveson

One word can describe senior Kyle Berndt’s play style — shooter. 

The 6-foot-5 wing for Central Bucks East has hooped since kindergarten, but when Stephen Curry exploded onto the scene and revolutionized the 3-point shot a decade ago, Berndt, who was in elementary school at the time, got inspired. 

“He’s been one of my favorite players forever,” he said. “Everyone is going to say Steph Curry, when you think of a shooter. He’s the greatest to ever do it.”

He wanted to perfect the art of shooting and got to work. Berndt still shoots with his father and younger sister Natalie in the driveway or at any gym they can find, constantly working on his jump shot. 

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Boys: Chester Charter’s strategy produces a title

By Matthew DeGeorge

There wasn’t anything fancy about it. No schemes, no pressing, no tunneling the ball to find weaknesses.
What Chester Charter Scholars Academy planned to do defensively in Saturday’s District 1 Class A final was simple as can be: When Phil-Mont Christian had the ball, make it so it wouldn’t anymore.

“It’s just hard work and being there for each other,” senior guard Jayden Williams said. “Help the helper. We work hard, and we want to get steals.

“With Williams leading the way, Chester Charter forced 19 turnovers, wreaking enough havoc early to withstand the Falcons’ fourth-quarter charge and emerge with a 70-64 win at Harriton High School.

From start to finish, the Sabers (19-5) made life miserable for any Falcon holding a basketball. They forced 11 turnovers in the first half, 15 in the first three quarters. Before things went pear-shaped, the Sabers led by as many as 21. denying Phil-Mont’s primary facilitator Jack Svvider.

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Girls: Adamski, Garnet tough out a comeback victory

Garnet Valley’s Haylie Adamski, seen during a game early this season, scored 25 points Saturday in a District 1 Class 6A playback win over North Penn. PETE BANNAN – MEDIANEWS GROUP

By Matt Smith

Garnet Valley star Haylie Adamski has long ago accepted the fact that every team is focused on stopping her on the basketball court. The sophomore sensation has faced double-and triple-team coverage all season.

Adamski missed four of her first five shots in a District 1 Class 6A playback Saturday afternoon. She was unsettled as the Jags fell behind by double digits.

Moreover, Adamski recorded her third foul 51 seconds into the second period. If the 20th-seeded Jaguars wanted to overcome No. 21 North Penn and punch their ticket to the PIAA tournament, Adamski had to be on the floor and not sitting the bench with foul trouble.

“I just have to stay composed,” Adamski said. “Once I got my third foul pretty quickly in the second quarter. I had to back up on defense a little bit. But also my teammates stepped up and that is what got us going on our end. The face guarding from the other team, I am used to that. It’s been that way the whole season.”

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Boys: Radnor makes history, books district finals date

Radnor's Jackson Hicke celebrates late in the Central League final this month. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

Radnor’s Jackson Hicke celebrates late in the Central League final this month. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

By Bob Grotz

When the buzzer sounded Saturday afternoon, the crowd spilled onto the floor to celebrate a new chapter in Radnor basketball history.

The Raptors won their 26th straight game, breaking the school mark of 25-0 set in 1961. The 66-52 District 1 Class 5A semifinal win over Rustin vaults the Raptors into the district final next Saturday against Unionville at Temple University’s Liacouras Center.

The last time Radnor started this well, it won a district title with a coach who wound up having the arena named after him. Then again, the late Ellis Dwyer not only captured the District 1 Class A title in 1961, but over a 30-year span, he registered seven district pennants among 524 victories … when he wasn’t teaching mathematics.

It’s safe to say Dwyer, who hailed from Twin Oaks and played at Chester High, would have been proud of current coach Jamie Chadwin, much like the Raptors are for giving them meaning.

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Boys: Senior-led Dock Mennonite stays strong against Delco for District 1-2A championship

The Dock Mennonite boys basketball team poses with its District 1-2A championship trophy after a win over Delco Christian on Saturday at Harriton. (Photo: Owen McCue/CoBL)

By Owen McCue

In fourth grade, Nathan Lapp walked into a tryout for the Deep Run travel team and spotted a tall kid with curly blonde hair he didn’t recognize.

The kid was Hoyt Bultje, who just moved into the area from Wisconsin and is now captaining the boys basketball team at Dock with Lapp after eight years of playing hoops together. The longtime friends hope they have a few more games left together.

The Pioneers and their senior captains kept their seasons and careers alive Saturday at Harriton with a 65-55 victory over Delco Christian in the District 1-2A championship — the Pioneers’ first district title since 2020.

“Me and Nate have played together since fourth grade,” Bultje said. “We’ve had a basketball relationship for a while, which has been good. We always just seem to click well. When we came to high school, it was great to be on a team with him. I knew a couple of the other guys growing up, played in rec leagues and stuff like that. It’s great to be here right now senior year, last shot, to be with them.”

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Boys: Chi falls just shy at buzzer in attempt to rally past Unionville


By Rob Parent

Akhir Keys took an in-bounds pass with his team down three points, his packed home gym’s game clock showing 10 seconds, his mind telling him one thing — go get a tie.

Chichester’s long road to a second-half comeback against Unionville looked scripted at that point, and as Keys drove left down the sideline to avoid flailing defenders, all looked right when he pulled up for a good look, attempting another late escape act the senior guard had pulled several times already this season.

Yet Chi’s district title hopes would cruelly go in, then out with the ball.

“If I made that shot,” Keys said, “we probably would have won.”

It was the last best chance for the Eagles, who afterward would get a last-prayer launch from way out, well off the mark at the buzzer, enabling the Longhorns to hold on to a 75-72 victory Saturday in a District 1 Class 5A semifinal thriller.

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