PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | April, 2016

Softball: Garnet Valley’s Alderman clubs 10th home run

Garnet Valley third baseman Reva Alderman, who hit her 10th home run of the season Wednesday, showed she can also get it done in the field as the Jaguars outscored Merion Mercy, 11-7. (Digital First Media/Rob Dudley)

It’s surprising to see a high school softball player reach double digits in home runs over the course of a full season.

Well, Garnet Valley’s Reva Alderman only needed 11 games — just about half a season — to smack her 10th homer in 2016.

Wednesday, the All-Delco’s longball helped Garnet Valley to an 11-7 victory over Merion Mercy in nonleague action.

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Softball: Springfield’s DePietro finds redemption with walk-off home run

SPRINGFIELD >> Monday was shaping up to be a frustrating afternoon for Springfield All-Delco Tori DePietro.

She was relieved in the midst of a rough outing from the circle. It was, perhaps, her least-memorable start in four varsity seasons.

One of the top talents in the county, and a two-time All-Delco, DePietro simply couldn’t find her rhythm and Garnet Valley made her pay.

Springfield’s ace was removed in the fourth inning after allowing six runs to a scorching-hot Garnet Valley lineup. Yeah, those Jags have been pretty relentless lately, winners of six in a row.

DePietro flipped the ball to rookie Jenna Casasanto with two outs. A freshman, Casasanto was making her pitching debut against a lineup that scored 75 runs the last six games.

DePietro moved to shortstop, where Casasanto had been playing. Casasanto shut the Jaguars out the rest of the way. Springfield chipped away at a six-run deficit, and in the bottom of the seventh with two outs and runners on first and second, DePietro had her shot at redemption.

It was as though this moment was reserved for DePietro, and she didn’t disappoint. She belted a pitch from Garnet Valley’s Allison Ferrante into deep center field for a walk-off, three-run home run. DePietro’s teammates mobbed her at home plate. A 7-6 decision over their Central League foes, it was the best win of the season for the Cougars (9-2, 8-2).

On the flip side, it was a stinging defeat for the Jaguars, who were playing as well as any team in Delco over the last two weeks.

“I knew that with two outs, this would be a big at bat. I was thinking just be patient. The first pitch I liked, I swung at,” DePietro said. “I don’t think (Ferrante) was getting tired or anything. She was throwing me inside the whole game, and I was waiting for the inside pitch.

“It was exciting to win in the last at bat.”

DePietro gave props to Casasanto, who retired 11 of the 13 batters she faced.

“I’m glad she could come in and throw well because they started hitting me,” DePietro said. “I was happy that she was able to stop that. I just made sure I always had her back out there and I know she always has mind.”

 

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Tori DePietro, second from right, is mobbed after hitting a walk-off, three-run home run in the bottom of the seventh to give Springfield a 7-6 win over Garnet Valley Monday. (Digital First Media/Robert Gurecki)

Tori DePietro, second from right, is mobbed after hitting a walk-off, three-run home run in the bottom of the seventh to give Springfield a 7-6 win over Garnet Valley Monday. (Digital First Media/Robert Gurecki)

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Ice Hockey: Ridley’s Catona pushes through death of his mom to finish incredible season

RIDLEY TWP. >> It was a signature Nick Catona goal. As a young man short on words, the senior had a habit of arriving unannounced in dangerous scoring areas.

The score stood 3-3 in overtime of the 2016 Central League championship game between Ridley and Springfield. Catona helped the Green Raiders reach OT with a goal and the game-tying assist.

Standing among the rabid Cougars faithful, Tony Catona, Nick’s older brother, hit record on his phone’s camera as Nick broke down the left wall early in the extra period. Two Springfield defenders buried him in the corner, leaving the winger out of the play.

Tony’s home video captures the aftermath of that collision. Nick shows up again at the 5-second mark as he glides uncovered to the side of the net. Louder than he would ever shout, he bangs his stick on the ice three times. Michael Giampapa, the silky smooth center on Ridley’s top line, feathers a pass across the crease and Nick slams it home to trigger pandemonium.

Catona’s winner gave the Green Raiders their first Central League crown. His teammates tackled him against the glass as Tony’s camera continued to roll. On the Ridley bench, assistant Mike Cassidy fought off tears. Head coach Stephane Charbonneau lost that fight.

“I’m an very emotional person,” says the former Quebec Nordique. “I may not look it. I was crying. I’m a human, too.”

The goal-scorer induced the tears as much as the championship did. Catona lost his mother to cancer in December. Margaret “Maggie” Catona was 47 years old.

“I usually talk to the guys after every game. I let Nick speak first,” recalls Charbonneau. “He did it for his mother. That’s the first thing he said. I knew she was watching.”

Catona’s constant smile hid the emotional strife of the past two years. Maggie was diagnosed in March of 2014 and struggled in her fight against the deadly disease.

“She was a social butterfly,” remembers Tony of his step-mother. He and Nick share a father. “Wherever she was, she was the life of the party. After she was diagnosed, she didn’t want to go anywhere. It was really difficult to see.”

 

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Ridley hockey player Nick Catona balances a puck in the living room of his home. (ROBERT GURECKI – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA)

Ridley hockey player Nick Catona balances a puck in the living room of his home. (ROBERT GURECKI – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA)

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Softball: Garnet Valley’s 1-2 softball punch: Tomasetti, Alderman

Sam Tomasetti walked to the plate in the fifth inning and roped a two-run single to left field. Reva Alderman followed her in the lineup, just like she has in nearly every game since they were 9 years old.

“Outta here” the scoreboard operator for the Garnet Valley softball team said as soon as the ball made contact with Alderman’s bat. She was right: The towering fly ball sailed over the fence in left for a three-run shot. A two- to three-minute period Thursday perfectly encapsulated the contributions of the Jaguars’ two senior captains. Tomasetti is a contact hitter who almost always finds a way to get on base, while Alderman is pure power.

“There’s nobody out there that has a 1-2 punch quite like those guys,” GV coach George White said.

Through nine games, the production of Alderman and Tomasetti has been sensational. As the No. 3 hitter, Tomasetti has a .741 average, 20 hits in 27 at-bats, and an on-base percentage of .743. Eleven of her hits have gone for extra bases and she has knocked in 18 runs. Batting in the cleanup spot, Alderman has been just as great, hitting .613 with five doubles, a triple and seven home runs. She also has 25 RBIs for the Jaguars (6-3), who have won six straight.

“She’s got such a pretty swing that any kind of connection, it is going to go. She is such a strong kid.” White said. “Sam is more of a contact hitter where she sprays the ball around. Sam’s stats sneak up on you because she’ll have a double here, a triple there, a single and moves runners over.” Tomasetti hits for contact and Alderman hits for power, but the differences don’t stop there.
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Garnet Valley seniors Sam Tomasetti (right) and Reva Alderman high five before the start of an inning against Penncrest.

Garnet Valley seniors Sam Tomasetti (right) and Reva Alderman high five before the start of an inning against Penncrest.

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Baseball: Lupoli, Burba handle heavy lifting for Garnet Valley

CONCORD >> As Garnet Valley’s baseball season nears its midway point, the Jaguars’ roles are undergoing the natural definition process. When Matt Lupoli’s on the mound, for instance, he knows his job. As does Matt Burba when penciled into the nine-hole in the lineup.And when those pieces of the puzzle fall into place as manager Rudy Shiller designs, the finished product isn’t necessarily pretty, but it’s usually effective. So it was Wednesday, when three hits and four Radnor errors added up to five Garnet Valley runs and a 5-1 Central League victory.

Most of the heavy lifting was done by Lupoli. The lefty hurler tossed six outstanding innings to notch his third win of the season, scattering six hits and striking out nine. His only walk came to his last batter leading off the top of the seventh, before he gave way to Will Wesolowski. Though Wesolowski made it interesting, allowing the inherited runner to score on Martin Connor’s single, loading the bases and bringing the tying run to the dish, he retired the potential tying run with a lazy pop fly to center that sealed the win.

Lupoli embodies what makes Garnet Valley (7-2, 6-2 Central) so dangerous. Only one of those wins this season has come courtesy of ace Mike Bechtold, saddled with a pair of tough-luck losses when matched against opponents’ top pitchers. But the ample supply of quality innings provided by arms like Lupoli and Monday’s winner Mason Miller have filled the back end of that rotation.

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Garnet Valley pitcher Matt Lupoli struck out nine and scattered six hits over six innings to earn the win as the Jaguars downed Radnor, 5-1. (Digital First Media/Anne Neborak)

Garnet Valley pitcher Matt Lupoli struck out nine and scattered six hits over six innings to earn the win as the Jaguars downed Radnor, 5-1. (Digital First Media/Anne Neborak)

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Softball: Garnet Valley in good hands with Tomasetti and Alderman

RADNOR >> Few teams in Delaware County have a one-two punch as potent as Garnet Valley’s Sam Tomasetti and Reva Alderman. Tomasetti, a senior shortstop, and Alderman, a senior third baseman, are at the forefront of the Jaguars’ midseason resurgence. Both All-Delco players, Tomasetti and Aldermen are constantly one-upping each other at the plate and in the field. With a combination of power and contact, they strike fear in the eyes of opposing pitchers in the Central League. But they’re certainly not out to show who’s better. In tandem, Tomasetti and Alderman, both of whom will play Division I softball next spring, simply are trying to make the Jags a better club.

Wednesday afternoon, they combined to hit 6 for 7 with a home run, three doubles, three RBIs, five runs scored and a walk as Garnet Valley blanked Radnor, 6-0. It was the Jags’ fifth straight victory.

“Me and Reva are both very competitive, but I think we push each other to do well,” said Tomasetti, who has been a first- or second-team All-Delco in each of her first three years. “I also want to see her do well, so even if I have a bad game … I’m not trying to do better than her. We’re both trying to help the team.”

Alderman, who spent the last two seasons as a catcher, earning All-Delco honors at that position in 2015, leads the county in homers. She hit a bomb off Radnor ace Brooke Nicander (five Ks) to the fence in left field for an RBI double. Tomasetti and Alderman, who are also teammates on the Chaos 18U Gold travel team, have never put pressure on themselves to carry the team, even when the squad skidded out of the chute with three straight losses.

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All-Delco Sam Tomasetti was a triple shy of the cycle in Garnet Valley’s 6-0 win over Radnor Wednesday.

All-Delco Sam Tomasetti was a triple shy of the cycle in Garnet Valley’s 6-0 win over Radnor Wednesday.

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Boys Lacrosse: Tierney stands tall as Haverford topples Radnor

RADNOR >> Between the posts, Danny Tierney has a short memory. But when the Haverford goalie finished celebrating a 6-4 win over Radnor Tuesday afternoon, the junior indulged himself a walk down memory lane.

The sting of his trip to Radnor as a freshman, when the Fords were blistered in a 16-1 loss, was still fresh. Last season’s bid at redemption was dashed by a broken leg that ended Tierney’s season in mid-April, the game before Radnor’s visit. So Tierney savored all 12 of the stops he made against Radnor’s injury-plagued attack Tuesday, earning the Fords’ first win over the Raiders in at least 15 years.

“This is probably our biggest (win),” Tierney said. “At first it was Marple, because they’re always a rival and a team we beat by one every year. And we always are around their level. But Radnor is a step up, and that was a big target for us.”

Radnor (4-5, 2-3 Central League) couldn’t seem to solve Tierney. It started early, with Tierney leaping to deny Jake Brown twice, then Luke Jones in rapid-fire succession in the first half. He held firm in posting goose eggs in the first and third quarters, then made five saves in the fourth, the last a dart by Jack Wilson in the final minute that rocketed off Tierney’s leg and back toward midfield. Radnor’s offensive struggles were exacerbated by injuries, with Clayton Proctor and Westy McLaughlin missing. They still outshot Haverford, 42-16, but the reigning PIAA champions struggled mightily at targeting shots on Tierney’s cage.

 

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Haverford High School goalie Danny Tierney makes one of his 12 saves as Radnor’s Kyler Albany closes in during the Fords’ 6-4 win Tuesday. (Digital First Media/Robert J. Gurecki)

Haverford High School goalie Danny Tierney makes one of his 12 saves as Radnor’s Kyler Albany closes in during the Fords’ 6-4 win Tuesday. (Digital First Media/Robert J. Gurecki)

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Lower Merion’s Matt Chen is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week

The junior captain of the Lower Merion boys’ tennis team captured the Central League singles championship earlier this month, defeating Conestoga’s Nicholas Ruth in the semifinals, then Strath Haven’s Xandy Hammitt in the championship finals. Last spring, he played second singles on Lower Merion’s PIAA state championship team, and and clinched the Aces’ wins in both the state quarterfinal and the championship final.

 

Fun facts – Matt Chen

Favorite athlete: Roger Federer.

Favorite pre-match pump-up song: Panda by Desiigner.

Favorite pre-match meal: Bananas.

Favorite color: Blue.

 

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Lower Merion's Matt Chen

Lower Merion’s Matt Chen

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Conestoga’s Monica Borzillo is Main Line Girls Athlete of the Week

The senior attacker recently recorded her 100th career assist, which is a school record. As of Monday April 18, she has 97 career goals. Last spring, she was voted the co-MVP of attack for the Central League champions, tallying 52 goals and dishing out 58 assists while compiling a .600 shooting percentage. The University of Cincinnati-bound All-Central League pick also caused 13 turnovers last spring for the Pioneers, who advanced to the PIAA state championship final.

Fun facts – Monica Borzillo

Favorite book: The Hunger Games.

Favorite TV show: How I Met Your Mother.

Favorite movie: “The Sound of Music – our family actually visited Salzburg, Austria and toured the area a few years ago.”

Favorite athlete: Lionel Messi.

Favorite pre-game pump-up song: “Burn” by Meek Mill.

Favorite team: Philadelphia Eagles!

Favorite place to visit: Italy.

Favorite pre-game meal: Chicken broccoli pasta from Bravissimo.

Person you most admire, and why: My Dad has played the biggest role in my career from start to finish. We are very close.

Favorite color: Blue.

Born: Oct. 6, 1997 in Bryn Mawr.

Family members: parents Joe and Karen, older sister Jackie.

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Conestoga's Monica Borzillo

Conestoga’s Monica Borzillo

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Girls Lacrosse: Conestoga “holds the rope” in win over Great Valley

EAST WHITELAND >> The first test of the season didn’t seem to bother Monica Borzillo nor her Conestoga teammates. The Pioneers have played in plenty of big games before and won their fair share of them. Saturday morning’s affair against nonleague rival Great Valley was no different.
Borzillo had three goals and three assists as Conestoga used a dominant first half to pull away for a 13-6 win over Great Valley, but the win wasn’t her primary focus. Going into the contest, Borzillo was in charge of “holding the rope,” which has been a rallying cry for the Pioneers throughout the season since they lost 2015 leading scorer Scottie Growney to a season-ending injury.
“If one teammate is doing bad, the others pick them up and ‘hold the rope’,” Borzillo said. “You’re in charge of bring them back up. Everyone today played a role in that.”
Conestoga (6-0) didn’t have to hold the rope too long against the Patriots thanks to a fast start that gave the Pioneers a lead they would never relinquish. Borzillo, Sondra Dickey and Liz Scott each scored to give Conestoga a 3-0 lead with 18:02 left in the first half. Dickey and Scott’s goals came within a 29-second span in the first five minutes of the game that sparked the Pioneers’ offensive output throughout the morning.
“Once the first goal went in, that was motivation to get another one,” Borzillo said. “We have so many scorers on this team that can pick each other up throughout the game. If we’re not scoring, we preach to ‘get it (the ball) back.’

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