PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | November, 2021

Conestoga’s Charlie Smith is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week

The senior goalie, a first team All-Central League boys’ soccer selection this fall, allowed zero goals in league play, just two goals in 19 contests (for a 0.105 goals-against-per-game average, the lowest GAA of any starting Conestoga keeper in the history of the school), and surrendered zero goals in eight district and state playoff games as the Pioneers captured the PIAA 4A state championship. For the season, he posted 17 shutouts. Off the pitch at Conestoga, Smith is a member of Stoga Footy, a club that focuses on bringing people together who like playing soccer, playing virtual soccer, and watching soccer, and SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions).

Fun facts – Charlie Smith

Favorite book: Hatchet.

Favorite TV show: Breaking Bad.

Favorite movie: Interstellar.

Favorite athlete: Lionel Messi.

Favorite team: Bayern Munich.

Favorite place to visit: Avalon, N.J.

Favorite pre-game meal: Ham and cheese hoagie

Person I most admire: Iker Casillas.

Family members: parents Jonathan and Kristin, older brothers Luke and Will.

Click HERE to read the full interview.

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District 1 Class 5A Championship: Sam Milligan answers Clancy’s call, Haven wins a title

WESTTOWN >> Sometimes wanting something with every fiber of your body and playing like your life depended on it does not get it done.

A valiant effort by the West Chester Rustin football team fell short Friday night as visiting Strath Haven quarterback Sam Milligan rolled right and got into the end zone for a successful two-point conversion for a thrilling 34-33 double-overtime victory to capture the District 1 Class 5A title.

West Chester Rustin (11-2) looked like it had the game won in regulation when Dayshawn Jacobs capped off a six-minute fourth period drive with a two-yard run to make it a 19-19 game with 16 seconds left in the fourth period. The Panthers (13-1) then jumped offside twice on the extra point try with the ball going through the uprights twice successfully. But, the referees blew both plays dead and on the third attempt the snap was bobbled and the game was tied 19-19 at the end of four periods.

“The first offside was accidental but the second one was intentional,” West Chester Rustin head coach Mike St. Clair said. “And the refs should have done the right thing and swallowed the whistle. It was a bush league thing to do and our kids deserved better tonight.”

Both teams ran their Wing T offense to perfection as the Panthers got out to a 19-13 lead after three periods after taking a 13-6 halftime advantage. But the Golden Knights, behind Jacobs, who rushed for 190 yards and three touchdowns, methodically ran the ball down the field in the fourth period behind their big offensive line. With a 4th-and-3 at the Panthers’ 21-yard line, Rustin quarterback Kolbe Freney hit Mike Lighthill with a perfect pass down to the Strath Haven 5. Two plays later Jacobs cracked over from the left side and it was a 19-19 game with 16 seconds to play and the extra point drama began and the teams went to overtime tied at 19-19.

In overtime with both teams’ possessions beginning at the 10, Strath Haven got the ball first and scored on its first play as Milligan hurdled the left side for a 26-19 Panther lead after the extra point kick. On the Golden Knights first play, Jacobs scored from 10 yards out and the Golden Knights called timeout to go for the two-point conversion. But a false start call on Rustin forced them to kick the extra point and after one overtime it was a 26-26 game.

“Losing like this really hurts but I will have a bond with these guys the rest of my life,” Freney said. “And we did not get some calls tonight but we left it all out on the field and that is all you can ask.”

Now, double overtime began and the Golden Knights again scored on their first play as Jacobs juked his way for a 10-yard touchdown and it was a 33-26 West Chester Rustin lead after the extra point. Strath Haven worked the ball to the Golden Knights’ 1 on three running plays, setting up a 4th-and-goal at the 1-yard line. Chase Barlow, who led the Panthers with 110 yard rushing, cracked over the right side and barely got in the end zone and now it was decision time for Strath Haven.

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Rustin players react after Strath Haven quarterback Sam Mulligan scored the

winning point in the District 1 3A District title game to defeat West Chester Rustin

34-33 in overtime Friday evening (PETE BANNAN – MNG

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Mills makes more history as Ridley tops Interboro on Turkey Day

GLENOLDEN — Tahir “Tubby” Mills might need a new nickname after Ridley’s 34-22 victory over Interboro on Thanksgiving.

The senior running back can be called simply, the greatest.

Mills ran for 112 yards Thursday and finished the season with 2,521 yards, the most in Delco history, surpassing Isaiah Bruce of Upper Darby’s output of 2,450 yards in 2015.

The humble Mills might also start going by the name Hollywood. A half hour after the Green Raiders’ victory, he was still on the field, signing autographs for the throng of young fans he gained during his historic 2021 season for a resurgent Ridley program. Mills put his John Hancock on jerseys and footballs for young boys who treated him like a local hero.

Had he been practicing his signature?

“I learned it a couple weeks ago,” he said. “I put ‘T-Mills #4.’”

Ridley (12-2) didn’t win a Central League championship and fell a game short of playing for a District 1 Class 6A title, but the team left a big impression on its football community. In 10 years or so, those same kids asking for autographs could be the next great generation of Green Raiders.

“It’s definitely a great feeling,” said senior quarterback John Heller, who completed 21 of 29 passes for 268 yards and a pair of touchdowns. He joined an exclusive class of Delco quarterbacks with 2,000-plus yards in a season, ending the year with 2,197 yards and 26 TDs.

“Just having the little kids around, they come up to you and stuff, is something cool,” Heller continued. “And I think it just gives them the Ridley spirit. Hopefully it will make them want to play football more and know what it takes to be a Ridley football player.”

Mills tied the county’s rushing record with 41 yards on Ridley’s first series. The 11-play drive chewed nearly six minutes of clock and ended when Mills rumbled three yards across the goal line. A six-yard gain on Ridley’s next drive gave him the record.

“All I worried about was getting the win,” Mills said.

Interboro showed plenty of fire in the first half. Junior running back Abu Kamara went for 116 yards on 18 carries, including a 41-yard run to the house in the first quarter. Kamara’s added the two-point conversion run to give the Bucs (3-9) an 8-7 lead.

“That’s what Bucs football is all about. Play hard, play tough,” Kamara said. “We’re always low on numbers, but it never matters to us. We’ll always play with a lot of heart and whatever the outcome is, it’s just what it is. But we fought today.”

Kamara and Mills posed together for pictures after the game. The two are old friends who played youth ball together.

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Ridley’s Tahir Mills runs for a first down in the third quarter against Interboro Thursday. Mills set the single-season Delco rushing record and

scored three touchdowns in a 34-22 Ridley win. (PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES)

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Second time is the charm for Ellis, Upper Darby in ending Haverford’s streak

HAVERFORD — To prepare his team for its annual Thanksgiving Day showdown with archrival Haverford, Upper Darby football coach Dave Barr had the Royals do every drill in practice exactly 11 times.

That was one repetition for every year since Upper Darby’s last won in the series, excluding last year’s date, which was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

“We wanted to remind them how long it’s been,” Barr said.

Quarterback Montez Ellis and receiver Covenant Horace only needed two tries to produce the touchdown that ended that drought.

Ellis and Horace hooked up on a 31-yard TD pass with 26.1 seconds left to give the Royals a thrilling 28-21 come-from-behind victory over the Fords at A.G. Cornog Field Thursday.

It was Upper Darby’s first win in the series since a 14-0 victory in 2009.

“I can’t express how happy I am,” senior two-way lineman Julien Laventure said. “This is unbelievable, something I’m going to remember forever. It’s something I’ll tell my kids about some day.”

His children better be in for a long story about a back-and-forth battle. The first half was a defensive slugfest that turned into an offensive showcase after the break and went down to the wire like so many other games in a series that began in 1921 and was being played for the 99th time.

“You look at all the scores of Haverford-Upper Darby and there are a lot of 28-21 games on that list, so this is in line with what happens in this game,” said Haverford coach Luke Dougherty, who like Barr was coaching in his first installment of the rivalry. “I’m proud of our kids. I wish we came out on the other end but we’ll grow from it and learn from it and I can’t thank our seniors enough for a great year.

“Upper Darby has a great football team, and Dave does a great job, nothing but class. They deserved it today. Both teams fought hard, but they deserved it. They made more plays at the end of the game so we have to give them their due. They earned it.”

It wasn’t decided until Ellis, who was selected as the offensive MVP of the game, and Horace hooked up for the second time in the game, this time with the clock winding down. And they did so on the exact same play they missed on one play earlier. On second-and-10, Ellis had looked for Horace on a pop pass over the middle but threw the ball behind him for an incompletion.

“It was a little run-pass option,” Barr said. “’Tez could take it straight ahead but depending on where the linebacker and safety were, or he could throw it. We thought we had it on the play before. Coach (Ryan) Dabney and I looked at each other and said, ‘Let’s run it again.’”

It was a good call.

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Upper Darby coach Dave Barr and his team celebrate with the trophy after beating Haverford, 28-21, Thursday. It’s the Royals’ first Turkey Day

win over Haverford since 2009. (PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES

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Garnet Valley’s long awaited title was for their coach, and for each other

CONCORD — One by one they arrived, then two by two, then in groups of five or six, each waiting their turn to define the moment.

All of them, former players who’d been coached by him over the past 38 years at Garnet Valley High, were there to congratulate coach Mike Ricci for a championship that, in a way, they had all had a role in accomplishing. The Jaguars had just defeated Coatesville, 54-15, for the first and last PIAA District 1 Class 6A championship Ricci would ever enjoy. Next weekend, they will play St. Joseph’s Prep on a neutral field. Next year, Ricci would be retired from coaching.

So it was Friday, the last game at Moe DeFrank Stadium, one way or another, for a Delaware County coaching legend. The post-game scenes, plural, would have their own perfect way of linking the generations.

There were the current players, as they should have been, taking turns with the championship trophy, lifting it over their heads, posing with it in groups – the linebackers, the linemen, the offense, the seniors, the friends.

They were not about to let that go.

Then there were the former players, taking turns surrounding Ricci.

They weren’t about to let that go, either.

“I’m proud of our alumni,” Ricci said. “I’m proud of our team. I’m proud of our assistant coaches. I’m proud of our community.”

That after 37 seasons it was all so interwoven best explains how the Jaguars could reach the championship game against a storied program in Coatesville and play so well that the fourth quarter would require speed-up mercy rules. The alumni inspire the players. The players delight the community. The community supports the coaches, all of them, assistants included. The assistants believe in Mike Ricci.

It’s that unbreakable circle that has kept the Jaguars unbeaten for the last two seasons and has them situated to try to win two more playoff games and Ricci’s first state championship.

“We are so happy that we were able to be coached by him,” said senior Joey Halloran after catching two touchdown passes from Max Busenkell. “We know the legacy he has built in this program. We’re unbelievably happy.”

Though Ricci would be coaching his last home game Friday, he had made sure in recent weeks to muffle that theme as much as possible, insisting it was never about him, but about the program. So it was with that dual purpose that the Jaguars – including 36 seniors – grasped the gravity of the moment.

“We realized it was his last home game, but it was our last home game, too, as seniors,” Halloran said. “So coming into it, it had a lot of meaning. Throughout the season, we wanted to do it for ourselves. We wanted to do it for the people before us. And we wanted to do it for him.”

The Jags did that by playing physical defense and trusting an over-supply of playmakers, so dominating their last two games that they only once had to go into punt formation. Willing as they were early, it quickly became clear that the 12-2 Red Raiders just happened upon The Moe on the wrong night.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley’s Shane Reynolds shares a hug with Jacob Krautzel

(77) after the Jaguars wrapped up their win over Coatesville.

(Nate Heckenberger – For MediaNews Group)

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Conestoga wraps up unblemished season with another state crown

HERSHEY >> Perfection is a constant pursuit on the soccer pitch, but, of course, it’s never fully realized. The Conestoga boys, however, came awfully darn close in 2021.

The Pioneers put the finishing touches on a perfect 26-0 campaign on Friday evening with a 1-0 victory over Seneca Valley to capture the PIAA Class 4A Championship. It is the program’s fifth state crown, and fourth in the past decade, dating back to 2011’s 3A title.

’Stoga also reigned over the state’s 4A class in 2016 and 2017, and they’ve all come under head coach Zimmerman, who wrapped up his 20th season at the helm.

“This is (Conestoga’s) first team to go completely undefeated with no ties, to win a Central League title, and a district title and now a state championship,” Zimmerman pointed out. “I talk to the team about the idea of us having a backpack, and during the season you put stuff into the backpack as we go along.

“Well, now everything is in that backpack.”

In a battle of unbeatens at Hersheypark Stadium, Conestoga did what it’s done all season: clamp down defensively and then strike with depth and skill. It culminated with an unblemished season, and ended with a gleaming team trophy and shiny individual medals.

“This was my dream – it’s the dream of all of the guys on this team,” said senior star Simeon Dorsey.

“It’s unreal,” added senior forward Jayce Tharnish, who scored the game’s lone goal. “We have a ton of talent all around the field. But maybe the biggest difference is our coaches. They know what they are doing. Coach Z (Zimmerman) knows exactly what he is doing.”

Along the way, this ’Stoga squad amassed some staggering accomplishments. And this may be the most impressive: stringing together eight straight shutouts from the start of the postseason to the glorious finish. That’s right, the Pioneers outscored their playoff opponents 21-0 this month.

“Our defense is the best part of our team. They are so solid,” said senior midfielder Sebastian Tis, the team’s leading scorer.

“Defense has been our number one priority this season,” echoed Dorsey. “The saying ‘defense wins championships’ is perfect for our team. It definitely is true.”

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Conestoga gives its soccer fans a double dose of Hershey action

Hershey >> For a high school to have both of its soccer teams competing in the state championship final is a rarity.

But Conestoga achieved this Friday at the PIAA Class 4A state finals at Hersheypark Stadium, and a sizable contingent of Pioneer fans braved the cold, windy evening to lend their support.

Conestoga boys soccer assistant coach Blake Stabert said, “This is the biggest student section we’ve ever had at a state [soccer] playoff game, and they brought great energy here, for both the boys and girls teams. It’s a great environment, one of the best I’ve seen, for high school playoff soccer. It shows the quality of soccer here at Conestoga, boys and girls, and a commitment to excellence. Both teams worked really hard through the ups and downs of the season.”

“The doubleheader, I think, was a first, certainly in school history to have both teams playing for a state championship,” said Conestoga boys’ soccer head coach David Zimmerman following his team’s 1-0 win against Seneca Valley in the nightcap. “The fan support for both teams tonight was great. I even saw a lot of Conestoga alumni here tonight, and it’s great to hear the roar of the crowd, it helps us a lot.”

“I could never dream that we’d have two teams in the state finals here today, but it’s a tribute to our soccer program,” said Conestoga athletic director Kevin Pechin. “Our girls and boys put in a lot of hard work and time and effort, and it’s a tribute to our coaching staffs as well. There’s always a little friendly competition between the two teams – if the one team’s successful, the other team wants to match it, and they’re a very close-knit group.”

After the Conestoga girls lost to Moon Township, 2-0, in the PIAA 4A girls state final, the team stayed to watch the Conestoga boys battle Seneca Valley.

Conestoga girls senior defender and captain Haleigh Wintersteen said, “My brother Kole is on the [boys] team, and he gets a lot of minutes – I’ll be here supporting him and the team through the cold (laughs). He and I even wear the same number [28]. This doubleheader, with both [Conestoga] teams going to Hershey for the state final, has been an amazing experience for both teams.”

Conestoga sophomore forward Kole Wintersteen said, “A whole lot of school spirit has been going on the last few days, a lot of encouragement and motivation [between the two teams]. We all came into this game in the best frame of mind.”

Pioneer senior midfielder Sebastian Tis said, “Having two teams in the state finals just means that our program is one of the best in the state, if not the best in the state. And the [Pioneer] Pit is the greatest thing in the world, I love them all. When we went over there to shake their hands after the game, it felt like everything we have worked for finally happened, and they [the Pit] can share it with us.”

A number of Conestoga players and coaches mentioned how the friendly competition between the two teams made each one better.

Conestoga girls soccer head coach Ben Wilson said, “Practicing on the same field every day, one after another, you definitely pick up some of the energy from each other, and there’s competition to see who can go further [in the post-season]. Conestoga is a soccer school, a soccer area. All of our players and all of the [Conestoga] boys players play for a variety of clubs in the area – the West-Monts, the Delcos, the Penn Fusions.”

Pioneer senior midfielder and captain Elli Mayock said, “I definitely think our two teams feed off each other’s momentum, especially coming off last year with the COVID. This year everyone was so much more hungry to win.”

Following the Conestoga boys’ 1-0 win against Seneca Valley, Pechin said, “It was in the back of our minds that we didn’t have the opportunity to compete last year in the state tournament because of COVID, so this definitely sweetens it.”

Following the Conestoga girls’ 2-0 loss to Moon Township Friday, coach Ben Wilson focused on his team’s positives.

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Blocking (quarter)back Milligan helps clear path to Haven victory

NETHER PROVIDENCE — Sam Milligan encapsulated what it means to be a Strath Haven football player with one inordinate play from a quarterback.

It had nothing to do with the junior’s ability to throw or run the ball.

Milligan, who wears many hats for the Panthers, became the lead blocker on running back Matt Shuler’s 24-yard touchdown run in the second quarter Friday night. Milligan handed the ball to Shuler and started looking for someone to hit. He engaged with Academy Park’s Eric Willis, one of the top defensive backs and all-around players in Delco, and blocked the Knights senior from getting anywhere near Shuler.

As Shuler crossed the goal line Milligan drove Willis into the turf. The score put Haven ahead to stay and it was the turning point that put the No. 2 Panthers in complete control of their District 1 Class 5A semifinal bout with the sixth-seeded Knights. Haven dominated the second half and rolled to a 34-6 win.

“That felt great,” Milligan said. “Our O-linemen do it every day, our running backs do it every day, so it’s nice to be able to get in on that, too. Their whole team was fast, just a bunch of great athletes. I know that Matt’s behind me and he’s going to get in regardless of what I do. It makes it a little bit less stressful for him.”

Shuler amassed a game-high 107 yards on the ground with two touchdowns. He was not surprised to see Milligan taking matters into his own hands on his first scoring run.

“He’s an amazing player and he does literally everything,” Shuler said. “He can run, he can throw the ball, he’ll do literally everything for the team.”

Milligan also shined defensively in the secondary, covering AP’s fleet-footed wide receivers. Oh, and he had a 47-yard punt and was the holder on extra points.

“That’s all attitude and hustle right there,” senior running back Chase Barlow said of Milligan’s key block. “I love having him on my team. He did that for me against Radnor a couple weeks ago and it was the best play of the game. Personally, those are my favorite types of plays and to see him doing that is great. He’s a quarterback, hustling all the way downfield. He’s got a lot of heart and determination.”

The Panthers will play for a district championship for the first time since 2010 next week when they travel to No. 1 West Chester Rustin, which defeated fifth-seeded Plymouth Whitemarsh, 19-14.

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Reynolds, Jaguars uninvite Quakertown from Garnet party

CONCORD — The deeper the Garnet Valley High football team rolls into the District 1 Class 6A playoffs, the more the reality grows clear: Some way, somehow, with whatever player is targeted on a particular drive, the Jaguars will find a way to score.

“Party in the end zone,” Shane Reynolds said Friday.

In a 58-39 victory over previously unbeaten Quakertown, which entered with a big and highly regarded defense, Reynolds rushed for 245 yards, scored four touchdowns and added a two-point conversion. Yet as overwhelming as the Navy-bound running back was, he had plenty of company at that end zone jamboree, with Ryan Saunders, Joseph Checchio and Joey Halloran each scoring at least one touchdown of 19 or more yards.

“They are,” Quakertown coach George Banas said, “a great team.”

Since both teams entered the district semifinal at 12-0, and thus with some measure of recognized greatness, the Jaguars figured they would face a test. For a half, that test was difficult, as the Panthers would carry a 24-20 lead into intermission.

“They put a sense of urgency into us,” Reynolds said. “We are used to situations like this. We had close games with Ridley, and then last week against Central Bucks West. When CB West challenged us, I told my teammates, ‘That’s what playoff teams do. We respond to adversity.’”

The adversity level peaked late in the half, just after a 49-yard touchdown pass from Max Busenkell to Saunders gave the Jags a 20-14 lead with 1:41 left. With 13 seconds left, Quakertown quarterback Will Steich, who would pass for 302 yards, found Tyler Woodman with an 11-yard touchdown pass, Riley Gaj adding the PAT for a one-point lead.

On the ensuing possession, the Jags fumbled a lateral, the Panthers recovering at the Garnet Valley 23. As time expired, Gaj hit a 33-yard field goal.

“We knew Quakertown was a great team coming in,” GV coach Mike Ricci said. “They execute their offense. We knew they were going to be able to come in and run the ball, and they did that. I loved the way we responded, though.”

The response, however, was not immediate, as Quakertown recovered an on-side kick at the Garnet Valley 38 to begin the second half and threaten to inflate a lead. But Garnet Valley held on downs, then took control.

With 9:53 left in the third, Reynolds gave the Jags the lead with a 65-yard touchdown run. Andrew Jackalous ended the next Quakertown possession with the first of his two interceptions, leading to a one-yard Reynolds scoring burst.

By the time Joseph Checchio scored on a 19-yard run and Joey Halloran corralled a two-point conversion pass from Busenkell, Garnet Valley’s depth of potential scorers had Quakertown stumped.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley quarterback Max Busenkell carries the ball in the

first quarter against Quakertown Friday night. (PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES

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Lower Merion’s Alex Bullard is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week

The senior captain was voted Most Valuable Runner of a Lower Merion boys’ cross country team that captured the PIAA District 1 3A team championship this fall. He was medalist at the PIAA District 1 3A individual championships (13th), PIAA 3A state championships (23rd), Paul Short Invitational (13th) and Central League Championships (4th). “Alex has been one of our hardest workers, and one of his gifts is remaining calm in high pressure races and being able to pace himself and measure his energy expenditure,” said Lower Merion boys cross country coach David Van Houten. “The State Championship race is a great example. Alex was 107th at the mile mark and finished 23rd. He quietly worked his way through the field and led his team to its best finish ever at States.”

Fun facts – Alex Bullard

Favorite book: Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card.

Favorite author: Christopher Paolini.

Favorite TV show: Dexter.

Favorite movie: The Matrix.

Favorite athlete: Michael Phelps.

Favorite pre-race pump-up song: Do I Wanna Know? by Arctic Monkeys.

Favorite team: Sixers.

Favorite place to visit: Camp Moosilauke in New Hampshire.

Favorite pre-race meal: “Any kind of pasta (the night before).”

Person I most admire, and why: “My mom, she’s the person that keeps our whole house functioning because me, my dad, and my brother can be a mess.”

Family members: parents C.W. and Jen, brother Matthew, dog Emmett.

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