PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | March, 2020

Lower Merion wrestler Hodges earns sixth-place medal at States

For Lower Merion senior 138-pounder Christian Hodges, setting the school’s all-time record in career wins earlier this season was not his primary goal.
“It felt great to accomplish, but I never really focused on my record or how many wins or losses I had,” said Hodges. “It was an accomplishment that came about in my striving to stand on the podium at States after three years of never making it out of Regionals.”
On March 7, Hodges proudly stood on the podium at the PIAA 3A state championships at Hershey’s Giant Center, proudly receiving his sixth-place medal.
Hodges, whose finished with a career won-loss record at Lower Merion of 138-29 (with 63 pins), picked up four wins at States and lost three matches in his debut at States.
“When it was time for my first match at States. I remember going from a quiet concrete tunnel with wrestlers bouncing and pacing, to walking out to see the tunnel open to a roaring arena of cheers and whistles,” said Hodges.
Hodges had a tough draw in the first round, facing eventual second-place finisher Sam Hillegas of North Hills. After losing 5-0 to Hillegas, Hodges moved into the consolation bracket and won his next four matches, all by close scores.
In the consolation bracket, Hodges defeated Zach Rozanski of Upper Perkiomen, 5-3; then edged William Morrow of North Penn, 2-1; defeated Chanz Shearer of Seneca Valley, 3-2, to clinch a state medal; then edged Chandler Ho of DuBois, 3-2.
“My best match at States was in the blood round against Shearer, because I knew what he had and what he was looking for,” said Hodges. “I just held good position, stuck to my game plan of attacking his left side with a single leg, and didn’t stop wrestling until the end.”
Winning three matches in a row by one point, Hodges stayed aggressive throughout.
“The key in those matches was to not wrestle scared,” said Hodges. “In the past I may have lost in those situations by trying to protect my lead instead of wrestling as if the match was still 0-0. My coaches have helped me by instilling the mindset that those are the moments where I thrive. When the match gets to the point where either wrestler can break, I just have to do the right things and keep pushing the pace as we’ve trained.”
In the consolation semifinals, Hodges lost to eventual fourth-place finisher John Altieri of Norwin, 5-0; then in the final match of his career, the fifth-place match, lost to Evan Gleason of Bethlehem Catholic, 4-0.
Hodges, who finished the season with a 41-6 record and 22 pins, will be heading to the United States Naval Academy in the fall, and likely major in chemistry of nuclear engineering.
Lower Merion head coach Jim Perri said, “I believe Christian’s opening match was pivotal – in a loss, he gained in himself something we all knew he had in him but he had to find out on his own. That opening match with Hillegas thrusted Christian’s confidence that was seen and evident in his next six matches wrestling with poise and confidence that we knew he was capable of. Believe me, this sport at this elite level can be brutal on mind, soul and spirit – dealing with disappointment after disappointment, questioning one’s resolve, going to dark places.
“So, watching Christian’s success at states was a long journey that was chiseled long before his States run. It was done during those lonely runs in the early a.m., long hours in countless wrestling rooms, miles upon miles of driving to tournaments throughout the country, this was only done by a young man that was exceptionally motivated – and dedicated parents [Cody and Karen] going through this with him – to not only be an elite level wrestler but an elite level student. He earned it.”
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For the first time in more than half-a-century, Lower Merion sent two wrestlers to the PIAA state tournament, and senior 160-pounder James Lledo was the second LM matman to go to Hershey this past weekend. It was his third time at States, and he won one of three matches this time, finishing with a record of 38-4 with 28 pins.
For his Lower Merion career, Lledo posted a won-loss record of 130-27, with 76 pins.
In his opening match at States, Lledo lost to Jack Blumer of Kiski Area, 9-2; then defeated Roman Moser of Methacton, 8-7; then lost to Ethan Richner of Bellefonte, 8-2.

Click HERE to read the full article.

The ref raises Christian Hodges’ arm in victory, as the LM senior defeats Chanz Shearer of Seneca Valley, 3-2, to clinch a state medal at the PIAA 3A state championship. (Nate Heckenberger/For MediaNews Group)

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Springfield warms up just in time to beat Lower Dauphin

PLYMOUTH MEETING — One of the teams that took part in the PIAA Class 5A girls basketball tournament opener Saturday at Plymouth Whitemarsh High shot 25 percent from the floor and had less than 10 percent accuracy from behind the arc.

That team also did not reach double figures in scoring in any of the four periods or the one overtime period that was played. Despite those numbers, when all was said and done, that team, District 1 champion Springfield, survived with a 34-31 victory over Lower Dauphin, District 3’s eighth-place finisher.

With the win, the Cougars (22-4) advanced to a second-round matchup Wednesday night with Mechanicsburg (25-3), District 3’s No. 3 seed which rolled to a 58-17 win over Friere Charter of the Philadelphia Public League and earlier in the season claimed a 47-38 decision over Lower Dauphin.

“We didn’t shoot the ball very well, so we had to find other ways to win,” Springfield coach Ky McNichol said after her team went 9-for-35 from the floor. The Cougars were 2-for-16 in the third and fourth periods but managed to make two of the three field-goal attempts they got in overtime.

“We were down seven (entering the fourth period), and I couldn’t be prouder of the way we came back. I think they finally realized that they weren’t ready for their season to end.”

Despite missing their first five shots of the second half and getting only one third-period basket (by freshman Lexi Aaron), Springfield was outdone in futility by the Falcons, who missed their first eight shots of the fourth period and finished the second half and overtime with only 10 points scored in 20 minutes.

“We picked up our defensive intensity in the third period,” McNichol said. “And our two freshmen gave us some great minutes.”

McNichol was referencing Mia Valerio, who had an overtime basket, three rebounds and played solid defense, and Aaron, who pulled down two missed shots. Meanwhile, Carli Johnston (six rebounds, three steals), who didn’t have a field goal, made a foul shot to cut Springfield’s deficit to three points with 4:20 to play, then made a steal which led to two free throws from Jordan Postiglione (seven points, two rebounds, two steals).

With 2:10 left in the fourth period, two of the three officials called a foul on the same play, one against Springfield and the other against Lower Dauphin. Alexa Abbonizio hit two free throws for Springfield while Lower Dauphin, which had only two free throws all afternoon, wasn’t in the bonus situation and did not get an attempt foul.

Justyce Hollenbach got her only field goal to put Lower Dauphin back on top with 1:30 left, then Abbonizio countered with a driving layup. Rachel Conran and Hollenbach exchanged steals before the horn sounded and the teams prepared for overtime.

“If I wasn’t hitting shots, I had to do something to help us win,” Conran said. “There was no way this was going to be our seniors’ last game.”

Valerio scored after a steal by Alyssa Long in the first minute of the extra period.

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Alexa Abbonizio’s layup in overtime helped Springfield earn a 34-31 decision over Lower Dauphin in the first round of the PIAA Class 5A tournament.

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Orazi regains scoring touch at right time as Haverford reaches Flyers Cup semifinal

HAVERFORD — Jake Orazi felt like he was in a little bit of a slump.

It’s all relative, of course, when you have 19 goals and 46 points in 20 regular-season games. But Orazi didn’t score in either of Haverford’s Central League playoff games, including a disappointing 3-2 loss to Springfield in the final for the top-seeded Fords, or in the eight-goal rout of Central Bucks West to open the Flyers Cup.

But Orazi’s ability to get himself going Thursday, creating offense out of thin air, helped keep the Fords in gear.

Orazi scored twice and had an assist in a five-goal first period as second-seeded Haverford routed No. 10 Pennridge, 8-1, at the Skatium, advancing to the semifinals of the Flyers Cup Class AA for the first time since 2016.

“I think it’s been coming for a long time,” the junior center said. “I haven’t been able to score for a couple of games, but I got lucky a couple of times, the puck bounced our way.”Orazi made his, and the Fords’, luck on the way to a semis date with No. 3 Perk Valley, which edged No. 6 Council Rock South, 4-3, Thursday. That game will be next week at a date and time to be determined.

The Fords opened the scoring seven minutes in when Orazi tailed a Pennridge defenseman behind his own net. Orazi, with his long reach, lifted the stick, pilfered the puck and set up Alex Gattone on the doorstep to rifle home.

But the slump-buster was furnished by defenseman Nathan Radadam when he spied Orazi lurking in the slot on the power play. Even in a slump, it wasn’t a place that Orazi misses from, and that tally proved to be the game-winner. It also set the Fords up for four goals in 3:37 to take control of the game for good, Orazi bookending the streak with tallies.

Orazi added the fifth goal of the period with less than two minutes to play, a deft faceoff win forward from the dot to the right of the goalie that he flicked past Ryan Pico before most of the Rams moved.

“It’s always nice to have somebody like that that can make those plays,” senior Jagur McClelland said. “We have pretty good depth on our team, and just to have more guys like that that can pull off moves like that and score those goals is definitely going to help us.”

The depth was on display. Daniel Quartapella, despite getting robbed point-blank twice by Pico in the first period, scored twice and added two assists. Gattone had a goal and a helper. Quinn Hawley, who scored four times in the 8-0 win over C.B. West, had a goal and a primary assist on consecutive shifts. McClellan added a goal and two assists.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Haverford’s Jacob Orazi, right, carries the puck behind the net in the first period. Orazi broke out of his scoring slump to lead the Fords to an 8-1 victory over Pennridge in the Flyers Cup AA quarterfinals. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

 

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Postseason resilience has Garnet Valley back in states for first time in 23 years

CONCORD — All of the work that Garnet Valley did was 32 minutes from falling apart.

The four months of preparation, the 20 wins, the 17-game winning streak, all the various and sundry program history made along the way – a loss to Spring-Ford on Feb. 21 would’ve made it all for naught, from a states perspective. Had the Jaguars’ three-game losing streak stretched to four in that playback semifinal, the season would’ve been over.

“The 20 wins felt like a long time ago,” junior point guard Carl Schaller said this week. “The whole team, me and Chris (Coyne), we were trying to get our guys back on track, saying, ‘we won 20 games for a reason. We’ve got to go back out there and prove it.’”

Distant as it seemed, the Jaguars summoned the memory of those performances. And the result was three straight wins to carry a head of steam into the postseason, the program’s first states berth in 23 years.

Garnet Valley (23-4) takes on District 12 champion Simon Gratz (23-5) in Saturday’s PIAA Class 6A opener at Lincoln High School. Tipoff is at 5 p.m.

The states berth is the latest first in a program resurgence under coach Mike Brown. Garnet Valley basketball had fallen on hard times, enduring three straight one-win seasons from 2009-12 before Brown took over. But the Jags have made the District 1 tournament five straight seasons, equaling the number of playoff berths from the previous 19 seasons, per research provided by athletic director Seth Bruner.

The 23 wins is a program record, surpassing the 20 won by the 1996-97 District 1 Class 2A champions. This is just the third states berth for Garnet, joining those district champs and the 1994-95 team; the only states win came in 1997, a first-round victory over York Suburban.

“It’s a great opportunity,” senior forward Coyne said. “I think everyone on this team deserves to be in states. We definitely deserve to be in states. We’ve played very well this year, four losses. I think we deserve to be here.”

The line between being a 23-win team in states and a 20-win team watching the tournament from afar was thing. Garnet Valley had rampaged through the Central League with a 14-1 mark, clinching the top seed in the regular season. It carried a 17-game winning streak into the regular-season finale against Haverford.

But then came a two-point loss to the Fords in overtime (with Schaller out). Then a six-point setback in the Central League semifinal. Then an overtime upset for the second seed in the district at the hands of No. 18 Downingtown East in the second round, landing them in do-or-die playbacks.

Those games accounted for three of the Jaguars’ five lowest point outputs of the season. But the circumstances allowed for a little reflection that the sky wasn’t falling in

“I looked at it as three losses. The whole team did,” Schaller said. “But the more I looked at it, you know, we lost in overtime, we scored 30 points and probably shot 10 percent, and the other game, we lost in overtime and anything could’ve happened to make that game go right. It was just three tough losses, and we had to get back on track.”

They did just that, edging Spring-Ford in a playback semifinal, then routing Upper Darby for a third time this season to get to states before winning the ninth-place game against North Penn.

Garnet Valley’s rally involved the wherewithal they’d displayed all year. Second-leading scorer Neel Beniwal missed seven games. Max Jackowsky, who is fifth on the team in scoring but had 15 points against Spring-Ford and 17 against Upper Darby, missed nine. Schaller and Coyne also missed time late.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley’s, Chris Coyne, right, in action against Penncrest, has helped the Jaguars get back on track. Garnet Valley takes a three-game winning streak into the first round of the PIAA Class 6A playoffs.

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A first win for four Delco wrestlers at states

HERSHEY — You always remember your first win at the PIAA state wrestling tournament, which is the burn that Ryan Catka, Keito Shaw, Chase Barlow and Griffin Hollingsworth felt Thursday night at the Giant Center.

Conversely, you never forget the win you think was taken away. That’s how Upper Darby coach Bob Martin felt after Royals heavyweight Julienne Laventure was penalized a point for stalling with one second left, knotting his match, and giving Mike Miller of Plymouth Whitemarsh a chance to win in overtime on an ultimate tiebreaker.

No matter what happens the rest of the PIAA Class 3A tournament, those snapshots are forever. More on the overtime controversy in a few.

Catka wrestled one of the best matches of the night for the 10-man Delco contingent. The Sun Valley junior walked out of the Giant Center with the daily double as he prevailed in his first bout in the states.

It was an impressive decision for Catka as he twisted and turned Seth Hunsinger of Hazleton this way and that on the way to a 10-3 triumph at 195 pounds. Hunsinger was trying to survive after defeating C.B. West’s Carl DiGiorgio, 6-2, in the pigtails.

“First match and I got it out of the way,” Catka said. “I think I started off a little slow but I got into a rhythm. I just kept working him and I’m looking forward to Day 2 tomorrow.”

Winless in the states last year, Shaw of Upper Darby and Barlow of Strath Haven got on the board in solid, if not spectacular fashion.

Shaw recorded the first win of the evening for the Delco guys as he notched a 5-2 decision over Andreo Ferraina of highly regarded Nazareth at 113 pounds.

With Ferraina on the verge of scoring a third-period reverse, Shaw rolled through for an escape and one point.

Shaw’s speed and energy kept Ferraina from getting back in the match.

“Getting that first win at states is a relief,” Martin said. “Then you’re more relaxed. If you don’t get a win the pressure builds. In the second one Keito had a chance. You’ve just got to forget it and move on.”

Shaw was stymied in the next round as he was beaten, 5-0, by Julien Maldonado of Boyertown, the top seed at 113. That relegates Shaw to the consolation round Friday.

At 132 pounds, Barlow reversed Blaine Wilson of Nazareth with just 31 seconds remaining to open the tournament with a 5-4 triumph. Barlow had the lead much of the match before getting behind in the final period.

Barlow wrestled solidly in his second match, as well. Unfortunately for the sophomore, there are few people who can hang with two-time state champion Alejandro Herrera-Rondon of Seneca Valley, just a junior.

Barlow still is in the medal hunt in the consolation round Friday.

Hollingsworth rallied from a 4-2 deficit at 120 pounds to produce a 10-6 triumph over Kaemen Smith of powerful Erie Cathedral Prep.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Upper Darby’s Keito Shaw finishes off a 5-2 win against Nazareth’s Andreo Ferraina in the 113-pound preliminary match at the PIAA Class 3A wrestling championships. (Nate Heckenberger/For MediaNews Group)

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10 from Delco ready for PIAA wrestling championships

HERSHEY — The time has come for 10 Delaware County wrestlers to begin living the dream at the PIAA Class 3A state wrestling championships.

The show starts Thursday at 4 p.m. and runs through Saturday evening in the ubiquitous dungeon they call the Giant Center.

It will be a wrestling first for much of the Delco contingent. Hunter Catka of Sun Valley, who won a title two years ago and placed third last season, Chase Barlow of Strath Haven and Upper Darby’s Keito Shaw are the contestants with state wrestling experience.

But it certainly helps Griffin Hollingsworth and Kevin Puliti of Garnet Valley to have wrestled here at the 3A dual championships in February. You won’t have to tell them where to warm up and weigh in.

“That won’t be a foreign land to them,” Jaguars coach Rocco Fantazzi said. “It will be a place they’ve been in and feel a little more comfortable in. When you go to the Giant Center for the first time it’s intimidating. It’s a big arena. There’s a lot of hype. The best of the best are there. So, hopefully because they’ve been there, they’ve had a taste of that, and they’ll want more of it.”

Dan Tobin, the coach at Interboro, planned to check into the Center Wednesday to get sophomore Domenic D’Agostino acclimated to the arena.

It’s the first time Tobin has taken a Bucs wrestler to states since Eric Thomas in 2015. It won’t be the last time as the program has been energized with youth.

“You just try to get him used to the place where he’s going to be in the big spotlight,” Tobin said. “There’s going to be about 10,000 people there with a lot of eyes on you. Dom has wrestled at big venues. He’s been to Fargo, he’s been to the War At The Shore in Wildwood. He’s been in front of big crowds. But we’re still trying to get him used to it. Sometimes we forget he’s a 15-year-old kid.”

Several of the state qualifiers from Delco have been training together through the weeks. The group includes, among others, Shane McAdams of Haverford, Strath Haven’s Chris Barlow and Gabe Federico, Keito Shaw and Julienne Laventure of Upper Darby and even James Lledo of Lower Merion.

It’s hardly a coincidence that many of the state qualifiers have been wrestling each other for weeks.

Another benefit of the Delco practice get-togethers is the camaraderie.

“I really like that aspect of it,” McAdams said. “It’s more than just wrestling. I’ve made some good friends from it. People that I’m going to know after this is over.”

When that group wasn’t practicing, they were talking about the rumblings they’d heard from other regions in the state. It seems the outsiders have little regard for District 1 wrestlers.

“The other regions are going to look at us as like the weaker group,” McAdams said. “Like we have something to prove. Us being there together practicing as the District 1 guys kind of made us feel like a team. I think we do have something to prove. But I’m just going to do what I’ve always done. I don’t really care about the rankings or the seedings. I just want to wrestle. I think a lot of the guys in our district have that same mindset.”

There is no shortage of story lines. Catka, wrestling at 285, could become the first Delco wrestler to go undefeated and win a state championship since Brian Kennerly of Upper Darby did so at 220 pounds in 2016-17.

A senior, Catka also could become the first Delco grappler to win two state titles.

Catka’s younger brother, Ryan, showed he belonged in states as he dominated the competition at 195 pounds to win the Southeast Regional.

And of course, there’s always a wrestler who gets red hot. That happened last year at the Giant Center with John Crawford, who won his first two matches in spectacular fashion at 160 pounds before morphing into a sixth-place finish.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Haverford’s Shane McAdams works on top against Owen J. Roberts’ Austin Boaman in a 5-1 win last week at the PIAA Class 3A Southeast Regional championships last weekend. McAdams qualified for the PIAA Class 3 championships for the first time in his career. (Nate Heckenberger/For MediaNews Group)

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Wrestling Haverford’s McAdams picks good time to celebrate milestone

FRANCONIA — Seven Delaware County wrestlers fought their way into the semifinals of the District 1 Class 3A Southeast Regional Friday at Souderton High.

It’s safe to say none were happier than Shane McAdams, the Haverford High senior who celebrated his 100th career victory with a 5-1 decision over Austin Boaman of Owen J. Roberts in the quarterfinal round.

All of McAdams’ attempts to keep the potential milestone out of his head went out the window as he grew the lead over his opponent. When it was over, he shared it with his family, who, judging by the creative posters, had all the confidence in the world in the 170-pounder.

“I’ve been thinking about this since my freshman year,” McAdams said. “Once I started getting rolling on top, I was like, ‘I can do this.’ It was close. I knew he could come back. It hasn’t really sunk in. Right now, I’m just focused on getting one or two more wins to go to states. That’s been like a goal. I’m really excited about that.”

Chase Barlow set the tone in the quarterfinal round for the county grapplers with an interesting victory at 132 pounds.

Barlow got smacked in the nose hard enough to hemorrhage blood from the first period on. Eventually he was fitted with a gauze head wrap that still couldn’t stop the bleeding, or his bid to get into the semis.

Barlow defeated Zack Lewis of Quakertown, 6-3, to get within hailing distance of another trip to the states.

“It was very uncomfortable,” Barlow said with a grin. “It’s hard to breathe. It’s a nagging type of thing. Obviously, it was difficult but I’ve seen videos of guys with their face taped over their forehead. It made me feel good. Tough.”

On this night, Barlow was determined to move on no matter the adversity. You could have blindfolded the sophomore and he would have found a way.

“Zack Lewis was a tough wrestler,” Panthers coach Tony Gilliano said. “He’s a funky wrestler. They were in some weird positions. Chase had the willpower to fight through and that’s what he did. He wrestled well. The bloody nose, the wrap around the head, that’s something he’s not used to and can hinder his breathing. But he fought tough and he executed.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Haverford’s Shane McAdams smiles after winning his 100th career match, with a 5-1 decision over Owen J. Roberts’ Austin Boaman. (Nate Heckenberger – For MediaNews Group)

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Springfield freshman Valerio gets defensive when it counts

PHILADELPHIA — Mia Valerio didn’t let the bright lights of the Liacouras Center rattle her Saturday.

The Springfield freshman waited for the perfect moment to make her mark on the Cougars’ 29-27 victory over Great Valley for the District 1 Class 5A championship.

Valerio, along with classmate Lexi Aaron, was called on in the first quarter. In close games, the fearless freshmen are coach Ky McNichol’s first two players off the bench. They have earned McNichol’s trust and confidence.

Aaron grabbed two rebounds and was a steady hand on defense. Valerio tried to ignite Springfield’s struggling offense in the third quarter by driving to the basket. She was fouled on the way to the basket, then converted one of her two free-throw attempts.

It was in the fourth quarter that Valerio made a difference.

Great Valley was desperate to seize momentum away from the Cougars, who had led most of the second half. The Patriots trailed by two points when Emily DuPont came up with a steal and had a one-on-one path to the basket. Out of nowhere, Valerio swooped in and knocked the ball away from DuPont. Valerio corralled the ball near the baseline and was fouled with three minutes to go.

It was a heady, veteran move made by a youngster.

“I saw her going down and thought, this is my chance,” Valerio said. “I thought that I had to do what I can to stay in this game.”

Valerio’s hustling defensive play didn’t clinch anything for the Cougars, but who knows how the game would have turned out had she not made a play in that particular moment. Every possession was magnified in what was a low-scoring, defensive battle.

DuPont was heating up, too. She made a layup and made two free throws earlier in the quarter. Had she scored on that subsequent drive, McNichol probably would have called a timeout to regroup.

“Mia Valerio stepped up huge for us today on the defensive end of the floor,” McNichol said. “Coming in here, in a big atmosphere like this, she went out there and played really hard. We love our freshmen, they’ve bought into everything we’ve asked them to do. The older kids have taken them under their wings and have showed them what Springfield basketball is all about.”

Valerio never imagined playing at Temple University as a high school freshman. And she didn’t see herself on the court late in a close game and having one of her plays make such an impression.

“It’s crazy,” she said. “Having this opportunity as freshmen is just making us so much better in the future. It’s a lot of pressure, but I think we got it done.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Springfield’s Mia Valerio looks to shoot in the third quarter as Great Valley’s Tessa Liberatoscioli (2) defends Saturday amid a 29-27 Cougars victory over the Patriots at Liacouras Center in the District 1 Class 5A championship game. Valerio’s steal with three minutes left in the fourth quarter helped to thwart Great Valley’s comeback bid.

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District 1 swimming: Though essentially alone, Marple Newtown’s Thomas wins a silver

PHILADELPHIA — When Williams Thomas saw that his seed time would land him in only the second-fastest heat of the 100 breaststroke at the District 1 Swimming and Diving Championships, he knew he’d have to race himself.

If the Marple Newtown senior wanted to fulfill his goals of getting on the podium and qualifying for states, he’d have to do it without the benefit of pace-setters and leave his competition behind. It all fell into place even better than Thomas anticipated.

Thomas blitzed his heat, then watched as only one swimmer in the final heat touched in a time faster than his, earning a silver medal at La Salle University’s Kirk Natatorium.

Being a spectator for the final heat paid off, even if it was uncomfortable.

“It’s nerve-racking because you know if a certain number of them beat you, you’re not going to place well,” Thomas said. “But my time held up, so it worked out well. … You just kind of pray and you want them to do good, obviously, but you hope that what you did is good enough to stand up to them.”

Thomas won his heat, the sixth of seven, by a comfortable margin in 57.61 seconds, dropping 1.69 ticks off his entry time. That left Thomas to wait and hope.

In the final heat, Pennridge’s Joseph Hong broke away from the field early and won in 56.99 seconds. But when the crowd behind him touched, no one was quicker than Thomas. The second-fastest of the final heat was Garnet Valley’s Aidan Zipf, who fell .01 behind Thomas to garner the bronze medal.

“Me and him (Zipf) are always dead next to each other, and this is the first time I’ve ever beaten him,” Thomas said. “So he’s probably going to come back even harder at states, and so I’ve got to be ready for him.”

States looks likely, with 59.20 required for the last at-large berth last year. Thomas just missed that, going 59.81 at districts as a junior to finish 17th.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Marple Newtown’s Williams Thomas poses with his silver medal from the 100-yard breaststroke at the District 1 Swimming and Diving Championships Friday

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PIAA Swimming: Garnet Valley finds mostly luck in state psychs release

When the psych sheets for the PIAA Swimming and Diving Championships come out every year, some schools will have a brush or two with the cut line for the last at-large.

Garnet Valley pitched a tent and camped out there.

But for the final score, in four instances that the Jaguars hovered near the cut line for the 24th and final at-large, twice it fell Garnet Valley’s way.

In all, 11 Delco schools will be represented at the state meet. The Class 3A championships are March 11-12, with the 2A meet to follow March 13-14 at Bucknell. The top eight in each event are chosen based on the winners of select district meets. The other 24 berths are given to the fastest times state-wide.

Back to Garnet Valley and its hopscotching of the final at-large line. Things didn’t work out for Matthew Hurford, who is the first alternate in the 200 freestyle, his time of 1:43.78 from districts missing the cut by .23. The final at-large was 1.04 seconds faster this year than in 2019, to Hurford’s detriment. The Jaguars’ boys 200 free relay is also the first alternate, .36 behind Seneca Valley for the 24th spot.

But Hurford made it into states in the 500 free, getting the 18th seed. And the boys 400 free relay landed 17th.

The Garnet Valley girls relays lived a charmed life – they earned the 23rd at-large in both the 200 free relay and 400 free relay, one of 17 and 16 District 1 schools, respectively, to get to Bucknell. Amy Townend also snuck a surprising at-large to states in the 500 free, getting the 17th at-large after dropping more than four seconds at districts.

The Radnor boys medley relay got some at-large luck by finishing 22nd and getting to states. But Mia Yancey of Strath Haven is the first alternate in the girls 200 free, finishing .37 back of the last states trip.

In Class 2A, the Cardinal O’Hara boys 200 free relay is the first alternate, .19 seconds behind Holy Ghost Prep. And the Lions’ Henry Schueren is the second alternate in the 100 breaststroke, .48 seconds shy.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley’s Amy Townend, seen in a meet against Conestoga, earned an at-large berth to states in the 500 freestyle Sunday. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

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