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Proposal calls for high school transfers to sit out a year

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By Keith Groller

A proposal that would attempt to slow the number of transferring student-athletes by making them ineligible for a year is drawing statewide attention.

But even though many local athletic directors admit that transfers are a big issue, several say this proposal has little chance of passing in its current form.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported that the Pennsylvania State Athletic Directors Association has proposed that a student-athlete would be automatically ineligible for a year of varsity sports if they transfer after starting ninth grade. However, the transferring student can gain eligibility by meeting one of five exceptions.

•A “bona fide” move by parents, which would exclude renting an apartment in a school district just to play sports there.

•A legal change of custody by a court of common pleas.

•Closure of a school.

•A hardship case, such as bullying or harassment, that would prompt a student and his or her parents to leave a bad situation for a better one.

•A transfer to a residential public school, which means someone transferring from a private school to a public school would be eligible while a student going from a public school to a private school would not.

The PSADA proposal came out of its convention March 21-24 in Hershey, which was the same week that the state basketball championships were held at the Giant Center. It also came in the same time frame that the PIAA Board of Control announced the formation of a new competition committee that will look into a variety of issues pertaining to a level playing field.

Norwood headlines Delco All-State selections

By Mathew De George

Tyler Norwood has another line item to put on his resume.
The 2016-17 Daily Times Boys Basketball Player of the Year was voted second team all-state in Class 5A, as selected by members of the media.
Norwood averaged 23.0 points per game for District 1 champion Penncrest. The junior guard is getting a number of low Division I looks after a breakout campaign that included his 1,000th career point.
Also on the second team is All-Delco John Harrar of Strath Haven, who averaged 19.5 points per game in earning Central League MVP honors. Chester’s Jamar Sudan is on the third team in Class 5A.
Episcopal Academy’s run to a share of the Inter-Ac title yielded a pair of second team picks on the Class 4A team. Forward Nick Alikakos, who averaged 17.0 points per game, and point guard Conner Delaney (18.8 ppg) got the nod. Both were recognized as All-Delcos. Alikakos will continue his career at the United States Naval Academy, while Delaney is ticketed for Johns Hopkins.
Villanova signees Collin Gillespie of Archbishop Wood and Dhamir Cosby-Roundtree also earned all-state honors in their respective classes.
Gillespie, a 6-2 guard, was named Class 5A Player of the year after leading the Vikings (28-3) to the PIAA title in that classification. Gillespie averaged 22.7 points per game and guided Wood to 22 straight wins to close the season. Wood’s John Mosco was selected as the Class 5A Coach of the Year.
Cosby-Roudtree, a 6-8 senior forward, teamed with Class 3A Player of the Year Quade Green to lead the Saints to the PIAA crown. Cosby-Rountree averaged 16.6 points per game, while Neumann-Goretti coach Carl Arrigale was named Class 3A Coach of the Year.
The players and coaches of the year had a decidedly Eastern PA flavor. Reading’s Lonnie Walker IV and Rick Perez earned Class 6A Player and Coach of the Year honors, respectively. Daron Russell and Andre Noble of Imhotep Charter were the Player and Coach of the Year in Class 4A. Tamir Green of Constitution was the Class 2A Player of the Year, while Win Palmer of Sewickley was the Coach of the Year. Kevin Anderson from St. John Neumann in Williamsport was the Class 1A Player of the Year, while Rick Mancino of Kennedy Catholic was the Coach of the Year.

Reading’s Walker, Wood’s Gillespie highlight AP All-State Honorees

By Michael Bullock

Lonnie Walker certainly saved the best for last.

Not only for himself, mind you, but also for his school and the basketball-happy community that he happily calls home.

Capping a tremendous career, the 6-5 Walker put an exclamation point on his four-year career last month by leading the Red Knights (30-3) to their first PIAA Class 6A championship before a record crowd at Hershey’s Giant Center.

As a result of that win in the 6A final and an assortment of other individual accolades — Reading defeated Pine-Richland 64-60 in the Class 6A championship game on March 25 — Walker has been chosen the Class 6A player of the year by the panel of Pennsylvania sports writers that selected the all-state teams.

Rick Perez, who piloted Reading to its elusive first state championship, was tagged the Class 6A coach of the year.

(click on this link for the full article and a complete list of All-State players)

 

All-Delco Boys Basketball: Norwood found his ‘happy place’ in Penncrest’s district title run

Penncrest’s Tyler Norwood, left, puts up a shot over the Upper Merion defense in the District 1 Class 5A final at Villanova Saturday. Norwood scored 26 of Penncrest’s 39 points that night in capturing a first district title since 1969. (Digital First Media/Pete Bannan)

    

By Matthew De George

As his Penncrest teammates formed the chaotic beginnings of a receiving line at the Pavilion, Tyler Norwood had just one thing on his mind.

He’d just been tugged out of the stands, choosing a different celebratory tack than his mates at the horn of the District 1 Class 5A final. While they poured into the student section at the far end of Villanova’s arena, coach Mike Doyle included, Norwood peeled off, squeezed through a gap in the media tables along the sideline and ascended 10 rows to the waiting arms of his family.

Back on the floor, as Upper Merion lamentingly awaited silver medals, Norwood did what he always does on the hardwood. He found a basketball, and in the moment of uncertainty where fans milled about waiting for an announcement of what would occur next, Norwood followed his usual compass, practicing a few underhanded layups.

“It is my happy place,” Norwood said this week. “I practice what I love to do best: Shoot. And I shoot and I shoot and I shoot.”

You get the sense Norwood would go on … if there wasn’t a basket somewhere calling his name. That Norwood scored 26 points in his team’s 39-37, come-from-behind win for the program’s first district title since 1969 didn’t tire him in the least. Instead, with a larger audience than usual, the junior guard did what he seems innately programmed to in front of a hoop.

(click on this link for the full article)

 

The All-Delco Boy’s Basketball Team

 

By Matthew De George

First Team

Tyler Norwood, Jr. G, Penncrest
Conner Delaney, Sr. G, Episcopal Academy
A.J. Hoggard, Fr. G, Arch. Carroll
Jamar Sudan, Sr. F, Chester
Nick Alikakos, Sr. F, Episcopal Academy
John Harrar, Sr. F, Strath Haven

Second Team

Ahrod Carter, Sr. G, Chester
Austin Laughlin, Jr. G, Garnet Valley
Kharon Randolph, Jr. G, Haverford School
Christian Ray, So. F, Haverford School
Pernell Ghee, Sr. F, Penn Wood
Ajiri Johnson, Jr. F, Bonner & Prendergast

(click on this link for the Third Team and Honorable Mention listings)

 

It’s been a great season – Thank you!

By Mike Mayer, Webmaster

Another season has come and gone for us here at Delcohoops.com.

Unfortunately none of the 23 high school teams we cover made it to Hershey this year but that is the unknown nature of sports. We followed all the boys’ teams (and occasionally girls’ team as well) for almost four months, over 400 games and we broadcast 20 games this year including the Central League Championship games (boys and girls). We covered the PIAA District One playoffs including the finals and got deep into the PIAA state playoffs despite snow postponements.

Over 150,000 people checked our pages during the season and more than 15,000 of you tuned into our weekly LIVE audio game broadcasts (or listened to the archived version).

By any standard it has been an outstanding year for our little project we call Delcohoops.com. The positive responses we get from players, coaches, friends and family as well as the fans make our efforts all the more worthwhile.  We know what we do is appreciated but it’s always nice to hear it from our viewers and listeners.

A big thank-you to our sponsors who are listed on the right side of this page. A special thanks to Burman Medical Supplies who steps up every year and underwrites these pages and broadcasts to guarantee that we can afford to do what we do and make sure we are able to cover the playoffs as deep as our teams compete.  Please patronize all our sponsors whenever possible.  It cost several thousand dollars to do everything we do and you reap the benefit of their generosity.

(click on this link for the full article)

 

Walker, Red Knights bring state championship to Reading

  

By Michael Bullock

Finally …

Back in a state championship setting for the first time in 44 seasons, when a one-point reversal at Harrisburg’s Farm Show Arena spoiled a celebration, Reading’s Red Knights took the Giant Center floor Saturday night hoping to erase those lingering memories.

And with a huge crowd offering all sorts of high-decibel support throughout — many of them fittingly decked out in red — let’s just say those pulling for the Berks Countians were not disappointed when they hopped in their cars and headed for home.

Lonnie Walker (above) puts the punctuation mark on Reading’s first-ever state championship. (Photo: Mark Jordan/CoBL)

Lonnie Walker was not about to let that happen.

Not to his team.

And certainly not to those who call Reading home.

Stuffing the stat sheet in the final game of his splendid high school career, Walker scored 22 points, grabbed eight rebounds, dished out three assists and registered four steals as Reading downed Pine-Richland 64-60 in the PIAA’s Class 6A championship game before a record crowd that spent the night hooting and hollering.

“We finally did it,” a grinning Walker cracked. “This is just for the city of Reading. There’s nothing I can really explain that’s going through my head, but I finally got that ring. I finally brought that state ‘chip to the city of Reading.

(click on this link for the full article)

 

Wood finishes off dream season with state championship

  

By Josh Verlin

For anything to happen other than Archbishop Wood hoisting the PIAA Class 5A trophy at the conclusion of Friday night would mean Meadville would have managed to find a way to get one of the most confident and most consistent teams in the state off its game.

It didn’t happen.

Collin Gillespie (above) flirted with a triple-double as Archbishop Wood captured its first-ever state championship. (Photo: Josh Verlin/CoBL)

Not even for a minute.

A Vikings squad that set sky-high expectations with impressive early-season play lived up to them through the final game of the year, putting on a dominant performance against the Bulldogs, capturing the program’s first state championship with a 73-40 win.

“It’s crazy, it’s always a dream of every kid playing high school basketball, especially in Pennsylvania, to get here and win on the biggest stage there is, and we did it,” senior Matt Cerruti said afterwards. “Pretty good feeling to go out, last game for our four seniors of our career, to win the state championship, you can’t really describe that.”

“We worked hard for this all summer, all year, and it just feels good to go out on top,” senior Collin Gillespie, the Vikings’ stalwart Villanova commit, said with his typical stone-faced expression.

(click on this link for the full article)

 

Boyertown wins first state championship, 46-35, over North Allegheny

  

By Tom Nash

Her teammates were out of control.

Boyertown celebrates their victory over North Allegheny in the PIAA Class 6A girls’ basketball championship game at the Giant Center in Hershey, PA on Friday, March 24, 2017. (Mark Palczewski | Special to PA Prep Live)

The moment was just too much for them.

“Guys! We haven’t even gotten the trophy yet,” said Abby Kapp with a bright smile pointing to the shining trophy still yet to be presented at midcourt.

Behind Kapp, Boyertown overcame a slow start Friday night and claimed the program’s first PIAA Class 6A Championship with a 46-35 win over North Allegheny at the Giant Center in Hershey.

“No one could contain their excitement,” said Kapp with a laugh of the postgame celebration. “That was such a special moment.”

Similar to the postgame festivities, Kapp kept the Lady Bears level throughout the early goings of the game Friday night, scoring 10 of her team’s 14 first-half points as Boyertown took a five-point deficit into the locker rooms. North Allegheny, the District 7 champion, was hardly dominant, but looked plenty in control early on.

That all changed during the second half. Boyertown, the sixth seed out of District 1, utilized an eight-minute, 18-2 advantage between the third and fourth quarters to ultimately seal it.

The opening 16 minutes looked to be anything but the team that played its way through the district and state playoffs earlier this month. Boyertown committed 13 turnovers and shot just 4-for-18 from the field in the first half, that effort polished a bit by Kylie Webb’s 3-pointer a minute before the halftime buzzer sounded.

(click on this link for the full article)