Girls: For Springfield, shots don’t fall … but Comets do

Springfield co-captains Rachel Conran, left, and Alexa Abbonizio sparked the Cougars to a 29-24 win over Abington Heights Saturday and a berth in the PIAA Class 5A state semifinals against neighborhood rival Cardinal O’Hara. MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO

By Bob Grotz

There’s not much you can say about Springfield’s bruising 29-24 victory over Abington Heights in the PIAA Class 5A state quarterfinals Saturday beyond the obvious: it’s going to leave some marks.

The Cougars couldn’t make shots, and neither could the Comets.

Cougars coach Ky McNichol was running out of things to tell her girls during the timeouts.

“We just told them to keep shooting shots, they’re eventually going to fall,” McNichol said. “They never did. But they just kept grinding and grinding and playing defense and then knocking down foul shots when they needed to. And getting defensive stops when they needed to.”

There were no field goals for either team – repeat, zero … as in, nada – in the all-important final frame. Subsequently, a trip to the state semifinals opposite Cardinal O’Hara was earned via an eight-minute foul-shooting effort for the Cougars.

Beyond their defense, that’s what the Cougars do best, and they sank eight of 12 in the frame, none bigger than two swishes by co-captain Alexa Abbonizio to break a tie and give the Cougars the lead for good.

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Girls: Scott helps O’Hara take momentous state step

MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO

By Matt Smith

Cardinal O’Hara junior Sydni Scott and Bethlehem Catholic junior Kourtney Wilson go way back.

Both outstanding two-way guards for their respective teams, Scott and Wilson forged their friendship years ago in AAU basketball for the Philadelphia Belles.

After Scott helped O’Hara to a 64-55 victory Saturday in the PIAA Class 5A quarterfinal round, members of Wilson’s family met with her to offer their congratulations and say hello. The Wilson family mentioned how they consider Scott a member of their own.

Scott knew she couldn’t let her relationship with Wilson cloud her primary focus Saturday. She had a job to do.

“I was motivated to play against her, but even my coaches said, don’t make it a Kourtney and Sydni game,” said Scott, who produced 10 of her 14 points in the second half. The All-Delco player added four assists and two steals.

Wilson carried the Golden Hawks with a game-high 25 points.

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Steady freshman Kyree Womack bails out Chester in quarterfinals

Chester Crestwood

Chester freshman guard, Kyree Womack, had the hot hand at the free throw line including three that tied the score near the end of regulation as the Clippers defeated Crestwood in overtime in the PIAA Class 5A quarterfinals Friday night.

By Bob Grotz

Down three points with 10.5 seconds left in regulation and the season on the line, Chester High had upstart Crestwood High right where it wanted it Friday night.

That would be freshman Kyree Womack at the free throw line shooting three after getting fouled attempting a desperation trey in the PIAA Class 5A quarterfinal at the Clip Joint.

Now, the Clippers weren’t exactly cashing in at the free throw line on this night. They missed almost as many as they made. One look at the box score and you knew coach Keith Taylor was going to tear every last hair out of his head lamenting, if we only made just two more here, just one more here, and another here.

“He makes all of his foul shots at practice,” said Karell Watkins, who contributed 19 points, 11 rebounds, two steals and a blocked shot. “We’ve got to make foul shots before we leave practice and he always sends us home. If he makes them, we go home.”

On this night, it would be the Comets going home disappointed because of Womack, who calmly went swish, double-doink and in, and on the third shot, gently off the iron with a kiss of the backboard, tying the game. That enabled the Clippers to prevail in overtime, 58-52.

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Girls: Carroll ‘shuts down’ late, falls to Nazareth

taylor wilson

Taylor Wilson, seen here going up for a shot in a game last month, scored 12 of her team-high 14 points in the third quarter in Friday’s PIAA Class 6A quarterfinal at Nazareth Area. The Patriots, however, were shut out on the scoreboard in the fourth quarter en route to a 50-35 defeat. MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO

By Matt Smith

Archbishop Carroll had one hot quarter and three not-so-good ones Friday night.

Ultimately, the inconsistency on offense resulted in a season-ending loss in the PIAA Class 6A quarterfinal round at Nazareth Area.

The Patriots were shut out in the final stanza and dropped a 50-35 decision to the District 11 champion Blue Eagles (17-1).

Carroll seemed to get a late start in pregame warm-ups. There were roughly 12 minutes left on the pre-game clock before the Patriots rushed out onto the floor to get their work in, while Nazareth had spent the last 15-plus minutes in shootaround.

Not to make any excuses for the Patriots, who were forced to move up to the highest classification in the state this year, but they were cold in the early going.

Karli Dougherty, one of Carroll’s senior leaders, said the Patriots were ready to go, but perhaps they were feeling the pressure of playing an excellent team that had the home advantage.

“We were really prepared, but we were nervous,” said Dougherty, who produced four points, six rebounds, three assists and two steals. “We were a little bit nervous like anyone would be. I mean, we’re going in states, so who wouldn’t be a little bit nervous? If you lose, you’re done. Yeah, we definitely did have a slow start, but we definitely turned it around.”

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Chester wins PIAA quarterfinal in overtime

By Terry Thomas

The Chester Clippers (13-1) needed an additional 4 minutes of play to earn a trip to the Semi-finals with a come from behind 58-52 win over the Crestwood Comets (17-2).Chester will host the Semi-finals game against District-12 Champion, Archbishop Ryan on Monday, March 22nd with a 7:00 pm tip-off.

The Clippers were out of character in the first quarter, it took a put-back basket by Isaiah Freeman with 35 seconds remaining to end their drought. Between the turnovers and the missed shots, Chester found themselves trailing 2-9 at the end of the quarter. Yes, that’s Chester with only two points in the quarter. The Clippers did however do a good job protecting the three-point line by not allowing any in the quarter.
The Clippers continued with their defensive plan of protecting the three-point line and began to find their mark offensively in the second quarter. Karell stole and pass resulting in a trey by Fareed Burton Jr to get the Clippers closer at 14-17 with 1:35 on the clock. Chester missed on their next three shot attempts and entered intermission trailing 15-21.
The third quarter had the Chester faithful energized with the standard Clippers run. They race out with a 13-1 run taking a 28-22 lead at the 2:06 mark capped with two free-throws from Jameel Burton Jr. A steal and lay-up by Fareed tied the score at 22 with 5 minutes to go. The Clippers went scoreless over the final 2+ minutes and the Comets responded with a 7-0 run to recapture the lead at the end of the quarter. Chester – 28, Crestwood – 29.

Lilley’s big game leads Lower Merion past Abington, back to District 1 summit

The Lower Merion boys basketball team celebrates with the District 1 trophy after winning the 6A title over Abington Friday, March 19, 2021. (Andrew Robinson – MediaNews Group)

By Andrew Robinson

Demetrius Lilley hit his first shot Friday night and the rest of his Lower Merion teammates didn’t miss much after that.

The No. 9 Aces’ standout junior big man was an impact player on both ends as he and Lower Merion caught fire early and never cooled off against No. 14 Abington. Once the Aces got going, the Ghosts simply couldn’t keep up in their quest for a fifth District 1 title in the last five years.

Lilley poured in 31 as Lower Merion topped Abington 62-41 to capture the 6A boys’ basketball title, the program’s first since Kobe Bryant was a senior in 1996.

“I was so excited, it’s amazing. We worked really hard for this,” Lilley said. “We weren’t ready to go home.

“I was just taking everything in flow, but I have to say, that basket did look pretty big to me.”

Lower Merion’s last four district title game appearances between 1996 and Friday had ended in losses but the Aces also didn’t have Lilley for any of them. The 6-foot-9 junior showcased the full depth of his abilities, scoring almost as many points as the Ghosts had as a team, shooting 13-of-16 from the floor, blocking and altering shots and hitting the glass for seven rebounds.

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