By Dave Burman

Chester Charter’s Sean Deshields with sports writer, Dave Burman.
By Dave Burman
Chester Charter’s Sean Deshields with sports writer, Dave Burman.
Chester High School cheerleaders saluted long-time cheerleader coach, Karen Miah, in her retirement from her day job. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)
By Pete Bannan
Give me a K!
Chester Cheerleaders called out in support of their own Thursday evening during the Penn Wood vs. Chester game as they congratulated Coach Karen Miah on her retirement from State Farm Insurance after 42 years of service. Miah has led the cheerleaders for 26 years, as well as graduating from Chester High in 1977.
(Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)
The Chester Cheerleaders with their distinctive saddle shoes and top notch cheers are shining stars even during a pandemic when few people have the chance to see them in person.
“We’ve always been the best and we work hard to be the best,” said Miah. “COVID doesn’t stop us, we just keep moving. They keep me going, that’s the blessing of it.”
In 2017, Miah was inducted into the Chester High School Hall of Fame, a first for the school.
Chester senior Karell Watkins puts back a basket in the second quarter as Penn Wood’s Sayo Kenneth, right, looks on. Watkins scored 31 as Chester went on to a 74-56 victory. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)
By Matthew DeGeorge
It isn’t often that a player can miss seven straight shots in the middle of a game and still end up with 30 points.
Then again, Karell Watkins isn’t the kind of player you find very often. By the time the Chester senior and reigning Daily Times Boys Basketball Player of the Year had ground down Penn Wood’s attempt at low-post defense Thursday night, those mid-game misses were long in the past.
Watkins finished with 31 points and 12 rebounds as the Clippers cruised to a 74-56 Del Val League victory.
“Just knowing me, I know me, if I miss a couple of buckets, I don’t dwell on it,” Watkins said. “I put it in the past and I just keep pushing. That’s just the mindset I have.”
(Click on this link for the full story and more game scores)
Kevin Miller, super sophomore 5’9 guard, led the Sabers with 15 points.
Chester Charter’s Kevin Miller with sports writer, Dave Burman.
Radnor’s Jackson Hicke goes up for one of his two baskets in overtime to lead Radnor over Springfield 47-42 at Springfield’s new gymnasium Tuesday evening. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)
By Matthew DeGeorge
When you start three sophomores, as Radnor’s boys basketball team does, the question of who gets the ball in crunch time doesn’t always follow conventional wisdom.
Yes, Radnor’s eyes go first to Lew Robinson, the senior guard who has starred in the lineup since his long-ago sophomore season. But when defenses shift to negate Robinson, and Radnor searches for volunteers, the spotlight often falls on a youngster.
In Jackson Hicke, the youngest of the young, Radnor found a willing – and hot – hand Tuesday night.
Hicke scored 20 points, including four in overtime, and grabbed eight rebounds to lead Radnor to a 47-42 win at Springfield’s brand-new gym.
(Click on this link for the full story and more game scores)
By Dave Burman
Chichester’s Josh Hankins with sports writer Dave Burman.