PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | March, 2019

Arbogast, Penncrest rise to tall challenge in states opener

WHITEMARSH — Matt Arbogast stepped to the perimeter Friday, accepted a pass, turned toward the basket and wondered where everybody had gone.

The Penncrest forward, a key to the Lions’ continuing successful season, didn’t see a defender in his face. Or within a foot. Or two. Or three. Or anywhere.

“It was different,” Arbogast said. “So I just thought, ‘Get to the hoop.’”

Though it didn’t happen immediately, it happened enough late at Plymouth Whitemarsh for Arbogast and the Lions to punish a strangely risky Wallenpaupack defense in a 53-42 first-round victory in the PIAA Class 5A boys basketball tournament.

Determined to defend with diligence everywhere else, the Buckhorns were content to plant center Gabe Springer in the lane. That allowed Arbogast, or any one Lion at a time, to not be defended at all.

The gimmick worked only to a point. That point came in the second half when Arbogast wrestled inside for all of his nine points and help reject a late Wallenpaupack push. More, the 6-4 Arbogast made a vital steal with 3:03 left to preserve a 10-point Lions lead, then had two massive rebounds in the final 1:30 to show that he was big enough to meet the challenge to play underneath.

“I like playing against those types of kids,” Arbogast said. “The energy comes out. There was a little smack talk here and there. But that was about it.”

There was talking, and there was playing. And as for the 22-7 Lions, they will play again Tuesday against Archbishop Wood, a 52-41 first-round winner Friday over Holy Ghost Prep.

“It’s hard,” Lions coach Mike Doyle said of Wood. “It’s recruited kids. It’s not neighborhood kids. It’s a different animal. I wish the PIAA would ‘split’ them. It’s all recruited. We’re all 19063 Media. And it’s going to be a Tri-State All-Star team that we’re playing.

“Maybe we will channel a little Jimmy Lynam.”

Doyle, a former assistant coach at Saint Joseph’s, regularly hosts Lynam as a visitor at his practices. Known for running the “four to score” and upsetting DePaul in the 1981 NCAA Tournament, Lynam’s influence was evident Friday when the Lions spread the floor in a similar style to frustrate the Wallenpaupack defense.

Though the Lions opened an 11-2 lead and enjoyed a 31-14 halftime edge, the Buckhorns would inch within 35-30 on a pair of Springer third-quarter free throws. Consecutive Arbogast buckets, however, allowed Penncrest to take a 39-30 lead into the final eight minutes.

“He’s our second-leading scorer,” Doyle said. “He shoots an amazing 70 percent from the field. But everything is in the paint. Give them credit for backing up the paint. But we said, ‘No, they are going to have to play you.’ And he really, really gave us a lift when we were struggling there in the third quarter. And we really needed him. He really stepped up.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Penncrest's Matt Arbogast, seen in the Central League final against Lower Merion, scored nine second-half points Friday to pace Penncrest past Wallenpaupack, 53-42, in the first round of the PIAA Class 5A tournament. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Penncrest’s Matt Arbogast, seen in the Central League final against Lower Merion, scored nine second-half points Friday to pace Penncrest past Wallenpaupack, 53-42, in the first round of the PIAA Class 5A tournament. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Marple Newtown freshman Brosko excited about trip to states

NEWTOWN – Marple Newtown freshman Bill Brosko patiently waited outside of the athletic director’s office Tuesday for assistant coach Anthony Goodman, who was taking him to Garnet Valley High to work out with Jaguars wrestler Coltin Deery in preparation for the PIAA Class 3A wrestling championships, which begins Thursday at the Giant Center in Hershey.

The 220-pounder needed the lift because he’s not close to be being old enough to drive. In Pennsylvania, you have to be 16 to gain a learner’s permit, and 161/2 to obtain a junior driver’s license. Brosko won’t be 15 until April 11, which means if all goes well, he could be a two-time state qualifier before he is legally old enough to give anybody else a lift himself.

It isn’t unusual, however, for a freshman to make the state tournament. There are 19 ninth-graders headed to Hershey in Class 3A, including two from Delaware County. Strath Haven’s Chase Barlow (126) is the other. Most of those freshmen, however, qualified in the lower weights. Of 19 ninth-graders in Class 3A, 15 are in the four lowest eight classes, 12 at 106 and 113.

It is extremely rare for a freshman to make states in the upper weight classes.

“I think I’m the only freshman at 220,” Brosko said.

Indeed he is. Brosko is the fifth freshman to make states at 220 or 285 since the PIAA went to its current weight-class format in 2012.

“Wow, that’s amazing,” Marple Newtown coach Steve Resnick said.

Brosko’s trip to Hershey is remarkable and almost didn’t happen. He had a one-point lead on Terrance Averett of Glen Mills in the fifth-place match at the Southeast Regional last Saturday at Souderton High School when he performed a wrestling no-no. He locked his hands with three seconds to go in regulation and the move cost him a penalty point and sent the match into overtime.

“It was a **** mistake,” Brosko said. “He was strong. He was a physical wrestler. It was a close match and I couldn’t stop his double legs.”

Brosko recovered to pin Averett with nine seconds to go in OT and become the first wrestler from Marple Newtown to qualify for states since Jason Rinaldi at 106 pounds in 2013.

“I stood up and I took him down, and I think he thought the match was over,” Brosko said. “I put him in a half (nelson) and put him on his back.”

Brosko let out a yell after his victory, but he did not realize the significance of his accomplishment until he looked at his phone on the next day.

“I saw all the text messages from people congratulating me,” Brosko said.

He did not bother to count how many messages he received.

“It was a lot,” Brosko said. “My phone blew up.”

Brosko is no stranger to state-level competition. As a fifth grader he finished third at 150 pounds in the 9-10 division at the Pennsylvania Junior Wrestling championships. Two years later, he took third at 160 in the 11-12 division.

Click HERE to read the full article.

NATE HECKENBERGER— FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Marple Newtown freshman Bill Brosko celebrates after pinning Terrance Averett of Glen Mills in overtime in the fifth-place match at 220 pounds at the PIAA Class 3A Southeast Regional. The win earned Brosko his first trip to the state championships in Hershey.

NATE HECKENBERGER— FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Marple Newtown freshman Bill Brosko celebrates after pinning Terrance Averett of Glen Mills in overtime in the fifth-place match at 220 pounds at the PIAA Class 3A Southeast Regional. The win earned Brosko his first trip to the state championships in Hershey.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Bramwell leads Ridley resurgence; Catka eyes state title defense

FRANCONIA — The days of using decades to mark time between qualifiers in the state wrestling tournament may be over for Ridley.

Tommy Bramwell finished second at 285 pounds in the Class 3A Southeast Regional Saturday at Souderton High School, earning a trip to Hershey.

Bramwell hoped for a better outcome in his bout with Coltin Deery of Garnet Valley, who recorded a 12-2 major decision to win the gold and his first regional title.

However, being the first Ridley wrestler to reach states since John Rowles finished third in the region in 1999 is anything but a consolation prize.

“It feels great to be the guy,” said Bramwell, who went 3-1 in the tournament. “I don’t think it will take that long for the next guy (to reach states). If guys come back and work hard, I think a couple of them can go next year.”

It was a memorable tournament for several Delaware County wrestlers, starting with defending state champion Hunter Catka. The Sun Valley product was named the region’s Outstanding Wrestler after winning gold for a second straight year. Catka pinned his four opponents in a combined 8 minutes, 16 seconds.

Proof, perhaps, that he’s all the way back from a broken leg.

“I’d like to think so,” Catka said. “I feel good. I was kind of feeling sick Friday and my voice was hoarse. But I feel good now. I’ve been working on my top moves, my tilts and everything on top.”

John Crawford, at 160 pounds, became Strath Haven’s first regional champion after dominating his bracket. He defeated freshman Matt Collajezzi (Council Rock South) 2-0 in the final.

“It feels good, it feels cool,” Crawford said. “I was second in the region last year. This is good.”

Panthers coach Tony Gilliano took custody of the gold medal, the bracket sheet and the Hershey’s bar won by Crawford. Then he playfully challenged his wrestler.

“You’re not getting this back until you get a medal,” Gilliano said.

Crawford has experience, having gone 1-2 in the states last year.

At 145 pounds, Brendon Stocku of Penncrest led at several stages of his consolation match but finished fourth when Nick Barnhart (Avon Grove) rallied for a 9-9 decision.

“I’d like to have won first place,” Stocku said. “But at this point states it’s the only thing I care about.”

Stocku won three straight bouts, two by fall, and survived a lateral drop – the thud of which shook the crowd – to reach the final bout.

At 113 pounds, Keito Shaw of Upper Darby defeated Garnet Valley’s Christopher Wood, 8-3, for fifth place and his first trip to states.

“In a year I’ve gone from 0-1 to states,” said Shaw, who was on the JV team last year. “I feel great. I give all credit to the coaching staff for getting me ready to wrestle.”

At 126 pounds, freshman Chase Barlow of Strath Haven won three straight decisions, and fought his way to a fifth-place finish. Fighting through the consolation round was a challenge and then some.

“It’s tough, it’s a mental game,” Barlow said. “I’m happy making it (to states).”

Elsewhere in the consolation round, 220-pounders Terrance Averett (Glen Mills) and Bill Brosko (Marple Newtown) were locked in a battle featuring several lead changes and an overtime period. Brosko prevailed in the extra session, winning by fall in 5:51.

 

Click HERE to read the full article.

Strath Haven’s John Crawford gets congratulations from coach Anthony Gilliano after winning the 160-pound regional championship Saturday. (Nate Heckenberger/For Digital First Media)

Strath Haven’s John Crawford gets congratulations from coach Anthony Gilliano after winning the 160-pound regional championship Saturday. (Nate Heckenberger/For Digital First Media)

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Garnet Valley scores early and often en route to first district title

PHILADELPHIA — Garnet Valley coach Joe Woods likes to remind his players that fast starts are very important.

The cliche is you can’t win a game in the first quarter, but you sure can lose it.

“Our only loss this year, to Villa Maria, was a Saturday afternoon after a Friday night game and we weren’t ready to play. We got down 11-0 and we lost by 11,” Woods said Saturday. “So, I’ve been preaching all year: you lose games in the first quarter, are you going to let it happen? Good teams are going to jump you. We want to jump teams.”

The Jaguars won the program’s first District 1 championship Saturday at Temple University’s Liacouras Center, 63-53, over Neshaminy. Twenty of the first 23 points were scored by Garnet Valley.

That’s how you start a game.

“It’s what we’ve been looking for all season, and pretty much the whole four years here,” senior forward Emily McAteer said.

Senior guard Jill Nagy said there’s more to come. They aren’t satisfied with a Class 6A district title. They have their sights set on states.

“It’s unreal,” she said.  “But we’re not done yet.”

This game had the makings of a blowout. A laugher. A real snoozefest.

Top-seeded Garnet Valley led the entire way and dominated most of the time, especially at the beginning. How about nine straight points to begin the night? How about an 8-for-12 shooting performance in the first quarter? And how about McAteer getting seven points and senior Brianne Borcky dishing three assists in the opening eight minutes?

For almost two quarters, the opponent, No. 2 Neshaminy, resembled a wandering extra from an episode of the Walking Dead. The Indians shot a woeful 1-for-15 from the field before Olivia Scotti made a layup with 4:55 left in the second period to cut GV’s lead to 20-5.

To Neshaminy’s credit, it would eventually kick off the dust and make things semi-interesting. Because – cliche alert – basketball is a game of runs.

“And now it’s a game of momentum and things happen,” Woods said. “I know they were going to come back, I was expecting it. They’re a great team with great shooters.”

But overcoming such a large deficit to a team with as much talent and experience as Garnet Valley (26-1) was a steep hill to climb.

The Jags came out ready to roll and were on top  of their game.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley players celebrate after clinching the District 1 Class 6 championship by defeating Neshaminy Saturday afternoon at the Liacouras Center. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Garnet Valley players celebrate after clinching the District 1 Class 6 championship by defeating Neshaminy Saturday afternoon at the Liacouras Center. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Deery sets Garnet Valley season record for pins

FRANCONIA — The night belonged to Garnet Valley sophomore Coltin Deery, the relentless 285-pounder who broke an eight-year-old single season school record for pins.

Deery won by fall in 2:39 in the first round of the 3A Southeast Regional tournament at Souderton High, and in the quarterfinals knocked off previously undefeated John Klewin (Bensalem) in a svelte 1:33.

That gives Deery 28 pins on the season, besting the mark set in 2011 by 215-pounder Matt Idelsson, a state medalist who wrestled at Columbia.

It also moves Deery, who was upset in the District 1 West competition last weekend, within one pin — or decision — of reaching the states.

“It’s because of these guys right here,” Deery said motioning toward the coaching staff headed by Rocco Fantazzi. “They really pushed me in the room and it helps. It’s awesome. It feels really good. Last week just happened. I couldn’t do anything about it except get better this week. And I think I showed it.”

The pin was vintage Deery, who attacked, took his shots and put the first blemish on Klewin’s 33-0 record.

“It’s hard, and it’s really hard to do that with our schedule,” Rocco Fantazzi said. “To do that, you’ve got to be healthy and get through a whole season and two, you’ve got to beat guys that are better than you. He’s put the time in and he deserves it. He and Matt were similar in that they know how to take advantage of scoring points and going for the big move and getting the fall.”

It was an interesting evening for Delaware County wrestlers, who before they hit the mat were told that the Saturday competition would be pushed back to 10:30 a.m. due to concerns over the weather. It’s possible that starting time could be moved again, per a District 1 official.

That won’t bother defending state champion Hunter Catka, who took less time wrestling than looking at the bout board to see which mat he was slated to wrestle on. Catka won both of his matches by fall, the first one in just 34 seconds. The legs look fresh.

“My main goal was just moving my feet,” said Catka, 10-0 on the season. “Moving my feet and heavy hand fighting and stop whatever they do. Stop the shots. Last year I had a whole season under my belt. This season, this is kind of my first tournament under my belt. People say you didn’t wrestle all season long. I say yeah, but I’ve been training hard the last few weeks. And that makes up for it.”

Catka will face Marple Newtown freshman Bill Brosko, a running back and linebacker on the Tigers’ football team, in the semifinals.

Brosko opened the meet with a decision and then defeated Davis Lee of Pennsbury, 13-4 in the quarterfinals.

“It’s pretty cool being a freshman and doing this,” Brosko said. “It was unexpected. I just used what I wrestle with. Be more aggressive. I didn’t play passive. I stood my ground.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley's Coltin Deery, left, celebrates after pinning Upper Darby's Pat Kerwood in the heavyweight match Wednesday. Deery's win helped fuel a 55-15 win for the Jags. (Digital First MEdia/Pete Bannan

Garnet Valley’s Coltin Deery, left, celebrates after pinning Upper Darby’s Pat Kerwood in the heavyweight match Wednesday. Deery’s win helped fuel a 55-15 win for the Jags. (Digital First MEdia/Pete Bannan

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Alerts