PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | September, 2019

Haverford High runner Mike Donnelly is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week

The Ford senior finished in first place at the recent Abington Cross Country Invitational, posting a time of 16:16 and allowing Haverford to finish first in the boys’ race in a field of 22 teams. Last fall, Donnelly, the All-Delco Cross Country Runner of the Year, finished in 15th place at the PIAA state cross country meet and he led the Fords to their first Delco Meet team title. Off the track, Donnelly is a member of the National Business Honor Society.

Fun facts – Mike Donnelly

Favorite book: Running with the Buffaloes.

Favorite TV show: The Office.

Favorite movie: The Dark Knight.

Favorite athlete: Walter Payton.

Favorite pre-race pump-up song: Phenomenal by Eminem.

Favorite team: Eagles, Sixers.

Favorite pre-race meal: “Pasta of course.”

Family members: Parents Michael and Robyn, younger brothers Ian and Alec.

Click HERE to read the full interview.

Haverford High runner Mike Donnelly holds the first-place trophy aloft at the recent Abington Invitational.

Haverford High runner Mike Donnelly holds the first-place trophy aloft at the recent Abington Invitational.

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Wint, Haverford cuts loose and celebrates win over Penncrest

MIDDLETOWN — With a 42-0 Central League win over Penncrest Friday night, Haverford finally had something to celebrate following an 0-2 start to the season. So the Fords did. As coach Joe Gallagher addressed his victorious group, Chasen Wint grabbed a pair of pom-poms from the nearby cheerleaders and started to dance. Gallagher paused his speech to laugh before going on.

“It’s always the mood,” Wint said. “It’s always the mood, pom-poms and that. It’s good to win. It feels good.”

Haverford earned a moment of light-heartedness, especially after the Fords’ narrow 35-28 defeat to Central League titans Garnet Valley a week ago. They put that defeat in the past and rolled out to a 35-0 halftime lead against the Lions, a needed reset on their 2019 campaign.

“We play ourselves each week. We try to get better. We look at the film. We improve technically, physically and add effort,” Wint said. “That’s how we go about it. Doesn’t matter who we’re playing. We’re always playing Haverford.”

The Fords (1-2 overall, 1-1 Central League) got off to a fast start, forcing and recovering a fumble on Penncrest’s opening drive. Wint turned the takeaway into six points. He needed two rushes to get into the end zone.

It was virtually the same story on the next touchdown. Aiden O’Neill picked off Nick Chelo’s pass then four players later, Haverford found paydirt. This time, Shane Mosley completed the short drive.

The result was all but sealed with 3:25 to play in the first quarter when Wint bullied his way across the goal line for his second score of the evening.

“Come out on fire,” Wint said of the Fords’ preparation. “Set the tone for the game.”

Mosley added his second touchdown on a 17-yard scamper in the second quarter before Tommy Caruso closed the first-half scoring by returning a blocked punt 12 yards.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Haverford running back Chasen Wint (44) races past Penncrest linebacker Anthony Chelo on a 32-yard touchdown run during last year's game between the teams. (Special to the Times/ERIC HARTLINE)

Haverford running back Chasen Wint (44) races past Penncrest linebacker Anthony Chelo on a 32-yard touchdown run during last year’s game between the teams. (Special to the Times/ERIC HARTLINE)

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Just ‘Charlie being Charlie’ as Marple Newtown rolls

NEWTOWN SQUARE — Sophomore Charlie Box scored a pair of touchdowns as a runner, a TD as a receiver, and also got six points returning an interception in helping Marple Newtown to a 50-22 Central League victory over visiting Conestoga Friday night.

There are those who would call that a remarkable performance by a 10th grader. Tigers head coach Chris Gicking would not be one of those people.

“The great thing about Charlie is that he’s an exceptional worker,” Gicking said of the 5-9, 170-pound Box. “You see what he’s doing and you might be impressed, but then you just say ‘that’s Charlie being Charlie.’”

Box had a short scoring run at the end of Marple Newton’s first possession. Following the kickoff, he stepped in front of a Chris McGovern pass and had to cover only 10 yards to get into the end zone for the second time.

“Watching film, I saw how the guy would go in motion and they’d throw the bubble,” Box said. “I just read it, came up and got the ball.

“Last year, I played JV mostly in the first half of the season, but then I ended up starting in the secondary.”

Box’s third score came on a 49-yard, third-down run early in the second quarter.

Marple quarterback Joe Paoletti tossed touchdown passes to Tyler Lynch and Neo Vosschulte in the first half and had a 41-yard scoring completion with Joey Small early in the second half. Box made sure that half of Paoletti’s completed passes resulted in touchdowns when he pulled in a third-down screen pass and outdistanced the Conestoga defense on a 77-yard play in the last minute of the third quarter.

“The big guys up front deserve all the credit,” Box said, naming linemen Chris Meiklejohn, Cole Thiruselvam, Johnnie Ebert, Rick Wysocki, Joey Goodman, and Ryan Lain as those most responsible for what he accomplished, which included 93 yards rushing on 10 carries and three receptions good for 86 yards.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Marple Newtown running back Charlie Box breaks free for his third touchdown in the first half of Friday night’s 50-22 romp over Conestoga. Box scored four TDs and amassed 179 yards of total offense. (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP)

Marple Newtown running back Charlie Box breaks free for his third touchdown in the first half of Friday night’s 50-22 romp over Conestoga. Box scored four TDs and amassed 179 yards of total offense. (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP)

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Prochniak, Pio turn ‘Reunion Night’ into a retro rush for Strath Haven

NETHER PROVIDENCE — On a night Strath Haven paid tribute to its 1999 PIAA championship team, the 2019 edition faced a Ridley team it hadn’t beaten in 15 years.

Talk about pressure …

“We were fired up all day at school,” big lineman Sam Burk Jr. said. “We know this was a big week for us and it was a big night for the 1999 championship team. …”

So why not put on a show, right?

“There was a little pressure, but I think we do well under pressure,” Burk said. “That’s why we were successful tonight.”

The Panthers were not only successful. That would be a tame description of what transpired at George L. King Field Friday night. Strath Haven bested Ridley in all facets of the game en route to a 49-13 win.

It was a shellacking.

“We’re a family and we stick together, and in a big game like this, we were ready to play,” said senior linebacker John Wilson, who has been at the forefront of Haven’s domination on defense. “We wanted to get them back, too. We were winning at halftime last year and then they put a number on us in the second half. We knew that we can trust each other and we have these new coaches who know a lot about defense and have been helping us out. We knew that Ridley was a team that was beatable.”

Wilson and the Strath Haven defense held Ridley’s run-first offensive attack to 3.8 yards per carry. Any play that went east-and-west resulted in very little positive yardage. The Panthers’ best asset defensively is speed and ability to flock to the ball and gang tackle.

“It started all week just being disciplined, knowing your job and doing your job to be able to beat a team like that,” Wilson said. “One of the new philosophies … is to get two people at the ball at every time. We don’t want them to break our wall. Too many times last year we gave up a lot of big plays and it cost us. Everyone is just flying to the ball and that starts in practice. Our coaches would snap on us if we don’t. It’s our mindset.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Strath Haven’s Ibo Pio looks backs as he leaves Ridley defenders in the dust on this 21-yard touchdown play in the fourth quarter. (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP)

Strath Haven’s Ibo Pio looks backs as he leaves Ridley defenders in the dust on this 21-yard touchdown play in the fourth quarter. (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP)

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Mesaros, defense set the tone as Garnet Valley routs Lower Merion

LOWER MERION — As Mitchell Mesaros jogged off the field in the second quarter after another successful series by the Garnet Valley defense, the senior lineman looked up and saw Jaguars coach Mike Ricci standing alone near midfield with a stern look on his face.

Mesaros did not have to be told to report to Ricci. The message was clear, without a word being spoken.

A few plays earlier, Mesaros jumped offside on a fourth-and-3 to give host Lower Merion just its second first down of the half. Even though the Aces failed to take advantage of the opportunity, Mesaros knew there would be ramifications for his momentary lapse in judgement.

“We can’t afford to make mistakes like that,” Mesaros said.

It was one of the few miscues Mesaros and linemates Alex Westburg and Evan Hrivnak made in a 58-12 Central League romp over Lower Merion Saturday. The trio spent so much time in the Lower Merion backfield that you would have thought they were playing for the home team.

With Mesaros, Westburg and Hrivnak leading the way, the Jaguars (2-1, 2-0 Central League) posted 11 tackles for loss and six quarterback sacks, forced two turnovers, scored once and held the Aces to minus-63 yards rushing and minus-16 yards of total offense.

“We rely on each other and feed off of each other,” Westburg said. “We’re in it together, and when one of us makes a play we’re all there for him. And it makes us want to go out and make a play on the next play.”

“Our job is to shoot the gaps and get in the backfield, and that’s what we did,” Mesaros said.

That explains why he was so eager on that fourth-down play in the second quarter.

“Yeah, I was ready to shoot out of a cannon,” Mesaros said. “I just have to remember to do my job, stay disciplined and move on to the next play.”

The defense shouldered the load until the offense finally found its rhythm, which took the entire first quarter. Once the Jags got the offense in gear, though, the Aces (0-3, 0-2) did not stand a chance. Garnet Valley put up 28 points in the second quarter, one on a scoop and score by Hrivnak.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley's Greg Reynolds scores in the second quarter, one of seven Jaguars to find the end zone in a 58-12 victory at Lower Merion Saturday. (PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP)

Garnet Valley’s Greg Reynolds scores in the second quarter, one of seven Jaguars to find the end zone in a 58-12 victory at Lower Merion Saturday. (PETE BANNAN — MEDIANEWS GROUP)

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Gallagher’s gallop helps Garnet survive Blair, Haverford

CONCORD — Ryan Gallagher knew who to thank Friday night.

The senior quarterback ripped off one gigantic run in the fourth quarter of Garnet Valley’s thrilling 35-28 victory over Haverford.

Gallagher set up under center and received the snap from center Lance Schwartz. Gallagher shuffled forward, found an opening and was off and running for 62 yards before being brought down at the Haverford 3-yard line. On the next play, he handed the ball off to Sam Morin, who scored the game-winning touchdown with three minutes to play.

“It all starts with the boys up front,” said Gallagher, lauding the performance of Jaguars linemen Schwartz, Blaze McDaniel, Tyler Sparks, Alex Olsen and Zac Green. “All of the blocking and opening up holes for me and the running backs … all the credit goes to the offensive line.”

That’s just how it is at Garnet Valley. The “Oneness” starts by being grateful to each other and Gallagher was quick to express his appreciation Friday night.

“Everybody on the team stepped up,” he said.

Garnet Valley needed everyone’s best effort to survive the electrifying Trey Blair and Haverford. The visiting Fords (0-2), moments before Gallagher’s back-breaking run, had battled to tie the game thanks to the work of the All-Delco Blair, who was half-man, half-amazing in just his second varsity start at quarterback.

The former all-purpose standout engineered the game-tying score, marching 80 yards on just six plays. Trailing 28-20, Blair received the snap out of the gun and sprinted 12 yards across the goal line to pull the Fords to within two. On the two-point attempt, Blair ran a bootleg and kept the ball himself until he was in the end zone to tie the score.

“Coming in, everyone who plays Haverford knows you have to defend No. 10 (Blair) and No. 3 (Shane Mosley),” Garnet Valley coach Mike Ricci said. “I thought they were really smart, they put the ball in 10’s hands. When you have a weapon like that … they used him. They put him at quarterback this year so he can have the ball every time and, boy, do they let him get the ball.

“I was thrilled that we were finally able to come up with some stops when we had to. We knew he was going to make plays, and even when we were positioned to make plays defensively, he made big plays. That’s what a great athlete like that can do. Haverford’s always a great team, we have so much respect for what they do.”

GV’s defense stood strong on Haverford’s final possession. Blair threw three straight incompletions as the Fords turned the ball over on downs. Among the standouts for Garnet Valley was defensive back Greg Reynolds, who had a key interception earlier in the fourth quarter.

“(Blair) is an amazing ballplayer,” Reynolds said. “For the most part I was just trying to stay on my feet, flip my hips and stay up short. Our defense really played hard.”

Reynolds also gained 22 yards on 11 carries. His four-yard scoring scamper 90 seconds into the third quarter gave the Jags a 21-7 advantage. GV’s potent rushing attack amassed 176 yards on 42 carries. Morin (55 yards) and Gallagher (74) led the way.

“We came out and gave it our all, did what we were supposed to do and listened to our coaches,” said Reynolds, who also gained 22 yards on 11 carries. “We prepared so hard during the week so when we got out on the field, it was like second nature to us. We just go and play ball.”

When called upon, Gallagher also threw the ball very well. Having played varsity for parts of three seasons now, Gallagher is an experienced signal caller and makes smart decisions with the ball in his hands. He was 7-for-9 for 90 yards and a pair of TDs to tight end Shane Mulholland.

“Every receiver is different, but the ones we have this year can be special,” Gallagher said. “I think you could see that tonight.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley's Sam Morin carries the ball late in the first half against Haverford. Morin had the game winning touchdown in the Jaguars' 35-28 victory. (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP

Garnet Valley’s Sam Morin carries the ball late in the first half against Haverford. Morin had the game winning touchdown in the Jaguars’ 35-28 victory. (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP

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O’Brien, Marple Newtown get a kick out of beating Aces

NEWTOWN TWP. — Everything was working so well for Marple Newtown, even the kicker threw a touchdown.

The Tigers opened Central League play Friday with a resounding 41-7 victory over Lower Merion. They are 2-0 overall. They never trailed in this one, and the result was never really in doubt. It was efficient, balanced and convincing.

“Everything clicked tonight, that’s why we did so good,” said quarterback Joe Paoletti. “That’s what (led to) the outcome.”

Marple Newtown, mostly via Paoletti, passed for 202 yards. It rushed for 196. It yielded 172 to Lower Merion (0-2, 0-1). It led 13-0 after the first quarter and 27-7 at halftime. The starters were pulled in the fourth quarter.

Things are never as easy as they appear, but this felt different. Tigers coach Chris Gicking, as a coach will do two games into the season and on Labor Day weekend, did not sing sunshine and rainbows. He knew this was a strong effort. He knew it’s not enough.

“It was a good team win, we did a lot of good things and there’s a lot of things we need to work on,” Gicking explained. “Some sloppy things we need to work to get better.”

The offensive line was most impressive, both Gicking and Paoletti said. Penalties and a lack of general crispness need to be improved. But there is time for that. A 34-point thrashing will be savored.

Paoletti threw for 184 yards and two touchdowns — an opening drive four-yard lob to Tyler Lynch and a 70-yard rollout to a wide open Neo Vosschulte shortly before halftime. Top running back Charlie Box rushed for 111 yards and two scores. The first came from two yards out late in the first quarter. The second came from 59 yards away midway through the third quarter. Brian Joslin added an eight-yard touchdown run during that second quarter onslaught.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Marple Newtown quarterback Joe Paoletti, seen in the preseason, threw for two touchdowns Friday in a win over Lower Merion. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media

Marple Newtown quarterback Joe Paoletti, seen in the preseason, threw for two touchdowns Friday in a win over Lower Merion. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media

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