PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | December, 2021

PA All State Soccer

Congratulations to the following players from the Central League who were named All American and All State Players.

 

Sebastian Tis- Conestoga: 2021 Male State Player of the Year,  2021 USC Region II Male All America Team, 2021 USC All Region II (East) Male Team, 2021 Boys Pennsylvania All State Team

Joseph Reid- Lower Merion: 2021 Boys Pennsylvania All State Team

Emily Daiutolo- Radnor: 2021 Girls Pennsylvania All State Team

 

David Zimmerman- Conestoga: AAAA Boys Coach of the Year

Jake Solderitsch- Radnor: AAA Girls Coach of the Year

Conestoga’s Sebastian Tis tries to split two Lower Merion defenders during the DIstrict 1-4A championship game

on Nov. 6. (Austin Hertzog – MediaNews Group)

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2021 Pennsylvania High School Field Hockey Coaches Association All-State Teams

Congratulations to the following Central League players named to the All State Teams.

Class AAA

First Team

Katie Galica Conestoga
Lily Wolfe Conestoga

Second Team

Alex Lepore Conestoga
Shae Wozniak Conestoga
Lexi Patterson Conestoga
Kayla Snyder Garnet Valley

Honorable Mention

Riley Gallagher Garnet Valley
Maura Greek (GK) Garnet Valley

Conestoga’s Kate Galica

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Mackey, strong defense push Conestoga past Downingtown East at Unionville Tournament

EAST MARLBOROUGH >> Points were at a premium for most of Friday night’s season opener for Conestoga and Downingtown East. The two teams just did not seem in sync in the Unionville Tip-Off Tournament. But, Conestoga played flawless defense and shut down all but one of the Downingtown East players. Connor Shanahan led all scorers with 28 points, but the Cougars junior’s heroics were not enough as Conestoga came away with the 47-34 victory in the first round of the Unionville Tournament.

Conestoga led wire to wire. The Pioneers harassed Downingtown East into a cold 10-for-42 shooting night from the field and held the number of Cougars who scored to just three.

Senior Ryan Mackey led the way for the Pioneers with a team-high 14 points to go along with five assists.

“We had a great scouting report from the coaches on what they wanted to do,” Mackey said. “We knew they had the big guy (George Bousum) and the left-handed guard (Connor Shanahan) and we tried to take away their strengths. We played very good defense tonight and we were able to keep them out of the paint for the most part. It was an **** win but it is a win. It’s always better to win an **** game rather than lose one.”

Conestoga jumped out to a 19-8 halftime lead as Mackey and 6-foot-9 center Mike Walz dominated the first half.

Walz finished the game with 12 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists and got Bousum in foul trouble early in the first half. The Pioneers held East to five second-period points after the Cougars scored just three in the initial stanza.

After three periods, the margin was down to 21-14 for Conestoga, and Shanahan was just warming up for the Cougars. He scored 17 of his 28 points in the fourth as East tried to make a charge.
Shanahan rolled down the lane and scored on a floater early in the fourth to close the gap to 21-16. But, Mackey and Walz scored inside baskets on the Pioneers’ next two possessions for a 25-16 lead.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Conestoga’s (3) Ryan Mackey puts a shot up past Downingtown

East’s George Bousuml in the first quarter Friday evening.

Pete Bannan – Daily Local News

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Lower Merion basketball celebrates its 17th annual Maroon Madness

Ardmore >> In front of a packed house at the Bryant Gymnasium, the Lower Merion High School boys and girls basketball teams participated in the 17th annual Maroon Madness Dec. 3.
The festive occasion, celebrating the Aces’ 2021-22 basketball season, included various musical performances, player introductions and a tribute to the late Lower Merion High School principal Sean Hughes, who was an avid supporter of LM basketball.
“Maroon Madness is one of Lower Merion’s most unique traditions and showcases what Aces Nation is all about,” said Lower Merion boys’ basketball assistant coach Doug Young. “It will never be the same without Sean, but we’d like to think he was smiling down and enjoying the celebration of school spirit, camaraderie and community he was so instrumental in creating.”
The event also included a tribute to the 2020-21 Lower Merion boys’ basketball team, which captured its first District 1 title since the Kobe Bryant era; a Maroon/White basketball game refereed by LM boys basketball coaches Gregg Downer and Kevin Grugan; and a post-game performance by DJ Jase.
“It’s great to be back in the Lower Merion gym — the girls are excited and have been working so hard,” said Lower Merion girls’ basketball head coach Erin Laney. “Last year was a huge hurdle for us as we were barred from practicing or competing for 11 months due to the COVID pandemic. It feels right to be starting our season in December and the team’s energy is buzzing with anticipation after the Maroon Madness festivities.”
A large framed photo of last winter’s Lower Merion boys’ basketball team was displayed to the packed crowd of LM students, along with a video of last season’s highlights. Last winter, the Aces won their first PIAA District 1 title since 1996 and came within an eyelash of defeating Archbishop Wood, the ninth-ranked boys’ basketball team in the United States, in the PIAA 6A state semifinals.
It was the first time the Aces won three straight road games in the District 1 playoffs, and Lower Merion maintained its hold on Pennsylvania’s longest current consecutive state playoff streak (11 years), dating back to 2011.
The Lower Merion boys’ basketball team will kick off its 2021-22 season Dec. 10 against Pocono Mountain West at Albright University.
While the Lower Merion boys lost point guard Sam Davison (called “the engine of our team” last winter by head coach Gregg Downer) and forward Zack Wong to graduation last spring, the Aces return a prominent star in 6-foot-9 senior all-state center Demetrius Lilley, who recently committed to Penn State.
Last winter, Lilley became the first player to average more than 20 points (22.2) and 10 rebounds (12.2) since Kobe Bryant in 1996. He is also the first Ace to average a double-double in consecutive seasons since Bryant. Lilley is the only Ace to ever score more than 30 points and collect more than 30 rebounds in a single game, a feat he has accomplished twice. He also received first team All-Main Line honors last winter.
Other key returnees include junior guard Sam Brown and senior guard Jaylen Shippen, both of whom received All-Main Line recognition last season.
“Our team will rely on Demetrius, who is one of the better big men in the state to anchor the interior, and experienced guards like Jaylen and Sam Brown to help space the floor and provide leadership,” said Young. “We will need to replace the leadership and grit of Sam and Zack, who were key to the district championship run. We return several additional players with game experience, including seniors Peter Gribbin and Henry Bard as well as juniors Sam Wright, Justin Poles and Andrew Coyne. The rest of the roster is almost entirely made up of ninth- and 10th-graders. It’s a relatively young group. Our team goals remain the same — be in position to compete for league and District titles, and qualify for the state playoffs.”
The Lower Merion girls’ basketball team is looking to make progress during the 2021-22 season.

Click HERE to read the full article.

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Lower Merion’s Elly Slensky is Main Line Girls Athlete of the Week

The junior midfielder scored 13 goals this fall, was third in the Central League girls’ soccer MVP voting, and was named the Most Valuable Player of an Aces squad that posted a 15-3 record and was the top-ranked team in the PIAA District 1 power rankings.

Fun facts – Elly Slensky

Favorite TV show: Criminal Minds.

Favorite movie: Home Alone.

Favorite pre-game pump-up song: Club Can’t Handle Me by Flo Rida.

Favorite team: Liverpool FC.

Favorite place to visit: Outer Banks, N.C.

Favorite pre-game meal: “Any type of pasta.”

Family members: parents Brett and Kim, younger brother Brody.

Click HERE to read the full interview.

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Volleyball: The All-Delco teams

Congratulations to the players from the Central League who were named to the All Delco Teams.

First Team

Maddie Wood, Garnet Valley Jr. S
Kelly St. Germain, Garnet Valley Jr. RS

Second Team

MaryPearl Tienabeso, Garnet Valley Jr. OH
Emily McGinn, Strath Haven Sr. MH

Honorable Mention

Garnet Valley: Kate Dugery, Sarah Weins, Klaira Zakarian, Leah Ellis, Rachel Sokalsky, Maddie Snmelgrove.
Haverford: Macy Dahl, Sydney Jones, Erin Olsavsky, Ahdyah Kwan.
Marple Newtown: Azira Benjamin, Mary Buchy.
Penncrest: Liz Kurcon, Kay Wimberly, Emma Curran.
Radnor: Samantha Gasink, Monika Mortenson, Margot Lane, Bryn Carrigan.
Ridley: Emily Liberio, Mia Campanile.
Springfield: Bianca Brown, Katie Letcher, Baleigh Rhodes.
Strath Haven: Lauren McGinn, Jillian Surkis, Molly Prendergast.
Upper Darby: Janiya Watford.

 

Garnet Valley’s Kelly St. Germain, left, sends a ball toward Ridley’s

Olivia Parker, center, and Julia Solomon, right, earlier this season.

(Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group).

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All-Delco Volleyball: Future looks beachy keen for Garnet Valley’s Maddie Wood

CONCORD – Anyone who has visited Maddie Wood’s home had a pretty good indication that playing beach volleyball in college was in her future.

“We have a beach volleyball court in our back yard,” Garnet Valley’s junior setter said.

Wood determined at all of 14 years old that the beach version of the sport was her first love and she will play the beach game at the University of Tampa. Wood recently made a verbal commitment to the Spartans, who have won the last two American Volleyball Coaches Association’s Division II national championships.

“Tampa was just the right fit,” Wood said. “I was looking at FAU (Florida Atlantic University) and Coastal Carolina, UNF (University of North Florida) a little bit, schools like that, but Tampa just felt right.”

The same can be said for her love of beach volleyball.

“Beach and indoor are completely different games,” Wood said. “There are only two players in beach volleyball (as opposed to six in the indoor game) so it’s much more fun and so much more room to use your brain and be strategic. There are so many more touches and you get to be on the beach, which is awesome. That sport has my heart and I’ve been playing it since I was four.”

Another good part about playing the beach game is that she gets to team up with her younger sister, Sarah, an eighth-grader at Garnet Valley Middle School.

“My sister is 13 and she’s 6-foot-1,” Wood said. “We’re definitely very competitive with each other. We’ve been at it since she started playing beach, but we’re completely different players and have different strengths. I’m obviously not 6-1 (Maddie Wood is 5-7), but then we started playing beach volleyball as pairs and we’ve been really successful.”

Wood still enjoys the indoor game and excels at it, too. In just three years she has recorded a school-record 1,789 career assists. That includes 807 helpers this season as the Jaguars (20-4) won the Central League title for the fourth year in a row, finished fifth in the District 1 Class 4A tournament and reached the PIAA quarterfinals for the third time in the last six seasons before falling to Bishop Shanahan in a tough five-set match.

For that, Wood is the 2021 Daily Times Player of the Year.

Joining Wood on the first team, which was selected by the Daily Times sports staff after consultation with county coaches, is Garnet Valley teammate Kelly St. Germain, Cardinal O’Hara’s Bridget McGuinn and Maggie Doogan, Notre Dame’s Margo Kemp, Sun Valley’s Jenna Jones and Sacred Heart’s Emily McKenna.

McGuinn is the only repeat selection from 2019, the last time the All-Delco team was chosen. She and Doogan are the only seniors on the first team. Wood, St. Germain, Kemp and McKenna are juniors. Jones is a sophomore.

Wood is the fifth player from Garnet Valley to earn Player of the Year honors, joining Rachel Cain (2018), Erin Patterson (2017), Lizzie Herestofa (2016) and Jenna Hostetler (2014). She also is the third setter to earn first-team honors in the last five years. Cain was a two-time selection (2017, 2018) and Gabby Davis earned the honor in 2016.

“They’re all effective in their own way but she’s going to accomplish something that none of my other setters did,” Garnet Valley coach Mark Clark said. “She’s going to have four years of setting for the varsity and probably get over 2,000 assists. This year alone getting 800 assists is crazy. It’s a shame we had COVID last year because who knows what she would have gotten if we played a full season. The fact that she had 800 assists this year is amazing.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley’s Maddie Wood is the volleyball player of the year. (PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES)

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Girls Soccer: The All-Delco teams

Congratulations to the following Central League players who were named to the All Delco Teams.

First Team

Carly Walters, Springfield, Sr. D
Olivia Kelley, Radnor, Sr. D
Emily Daiutolo, Radnor, Sr. M
Mia Zebley, Garnet Valley, Jr. M
Coryn Silberstein, Springfield, Jr. M
Jane Daiutolo, Radnor, Sr. M
Makenzie Lacey, Haverford, Sr. F
Adria Kitzinger, Ridley, Jr. F

Second Team

Emily Boyer, Springfield, Sr. G
Alyssa Seavey, Haverford, Jr. D
Kate Boujoukos, Radnor, Sr. M
Jackie Deisler, Ridley, Sr. M
Selah Koleth, Radnor, So. M
Jess Lefkof, Ridley, Sr. M

Honorable Mention

Garnet Valley: Ella Bryan, Michelle Dragoni, Maddie Smith, Alyssa Wert, Samantha Wood
Haverford: Nora Burns, Mollie Carpenter, Madison Kantawala, Deegan Mack, Paige Snell
Marple Newtown: Olivia DiValerio, Lauren Gura, Noelle Lehrman
Penncrest: Gina Facciolo, Sophie Phillies, Taryn Tagtmeri
Radnor: Julie Breedveld, Ivy Chaskelson, Sydney O’Shea, Tellian Schwarz, Mallory Toomey
Ridley: Macie Clark, Emily Reeve
Springfield: Sara Bean, Liv Gutowski, Caroline Walters
Strath Haven: Marley Feinberg, Maeve Hanifin, Lily Ostiguy
Upper Darby: Aliyah Jones, Aubrey Patterson, Moira Penot

Haverford’s Mackenzie Lacey, left, turns upfield with the ball in

a playoff game against Springfield. (PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES)

(PETE BANNAN – DAILY TIMES)

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Turning toward retirement, Mike Ricci still doing Garnet Valley proud

RIDLEY TWP. — There were 17 seconds left in the last football game he’d ever expect to coach Friday when Mike Ricci took the first stride into the rest of his life.

His Garnet Valley Jaguars driving, yet out of reasonable time, Ricci would lift off his headphones and begin the slow walk across Phil Marion Field to congratulate St. Joseph’s Prep coach Tim Roken, the two shaking hands as time officially expired.

With what would be a 49-13 loss, the Jaguars would finish a phenomenal 14-1 season just one victory short of a spot in the PIAA Class 6A championship game. With that, an era would be over. By Sunday morning, for the first time in his 38 years as an educator and 35 years as the head coach at Garnet Valley, Ricci will wake up and not have a football team to coach.

He may feel an obligation to take one last look at the film of the semifinal game Friday, but even then, there wouldn’t likely be much reason to obsess over the details. The Hawks, defending state champions, were better, a little quicker to the ball on defense, with a little more burst in the open field. The Jags, who were almost perfect all season, were tormented by turnovers, a reminder of how that sport always finds a way to reveal imperfection.

While some may grumble that the Prep has a multi-state football recruiting footprint and no enrollment boundaries, Ricci didn’t become the second winningest coach in Delaware County history without a respect for whatever rules were written.

For that, even as several of his players, his former players and even some parents of players leaked tears both of exhaustion and pride, Ricci chose to remember what made his 260 career wins so precious, not necessarily the suddenness of his 125th defeat.

“It’s been a long time,” he exhaled. “Listen, I have loved every minute of this season. I just told our guys that the true measure of any team is to get the most of the ability level that you have. And this team certainly got the most of its ability level.

“The senior leadership has been spectacular. With the underclassmen, the work ethic has been just stellar. It hurts when you lose the last game of the year, but I told them we are going to celebrate this awesome season and focus on that.

“Then, we are going to walk out with our heads held high.”

The Jaguars were undefeated in the Central League, as they have been since November of 2019. They rolled into the Final Four with some postseason victories over some classic programs, including a 54-15 victory over ever-respected Coatesville in Ricci’s final game at Moe DeFrank Stadium. Like league rival Strath Haven a night earlier, also at The Phil, the Jags were in deep against a magnet program from Philadelphia. But no traditional public school big-classification program was better, at least in the eastern hunk of the state.

“It’s been,” Ricci said, “an incredible season.”

The season was an appropriate flourish to his career. Ricci took the Jags over when they were being challenged in the small-school classifications and, as the enrollment grew, developed them into one of the most consistently respected programs in Pennsylvania. That he did with a minimum of FBS-level recruits and a maximum of coaching dignity, thriving in a family atmosphere behind an enduring program policy: Oneness.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Garnet Valley coach Mike Ricci speaks to his team following  a 49-13 loss to St. Joseph's Prep in a  PIAA Class 6A semifinal game Saturday night at Ridley High School. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group).

Garnet Valley coach Mike Ricci speaks to his team following a 49-13 loss to St. Joseph’s Prep in a PIAA Class 6A

semifinal game Saturday night at Ridley High School. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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To the end, a Strath Haven team worth remembering

RIDLEY TWP. — The offense was the same, the defense the same, the silver helmets classic, the situation so familiar Friday night, even if it was nearly two-plus decades later.

There was Strath Haven competing for a spot in a state championship football game, facing Imhotep of Philadelphia for a bus ride to Hershey. Once, that was something of an expectation, the Panthers having played for a PIAA championship in both 2002 and 2001, that after winning it all in 2000 and 1999. But enrollments changed and the state-bracket classifications morphed and the Central League grew and Philadelphia teams got involved and the charter schools were born and the natural cycle of high school sports whirled.

As for Kevin Clancy, the winningest coach in Southeastern Pennsylvania history, he just kept at it, running the Wing-T, rolling out big linemen, typically competing for league championships and winning playoff spots and expecting, always expecting, the Panthers to make those two state championship teams proud.

His 2021 Panthers would do that, finishing 13-2, losing only to Class 6A power Garnet Valley and then Friday, 36-0, to Imhotep Charter of Philadelphia at neutral-site Ridley in the PIAA Class 5A semifinal.

“You’ve got to look at it over 15 weeks, and the things that they did,” Clancy said. “They improved and achieved and from Week 1 through Week 15, it’s been unbelievable. They played their hearts out. Nobody quit in the fourth quarter. They battled. And that’s what I would expect of them.”

Clancy expected that in his first 30 seasons, as he expected in the final game of his 31st. It’s how he was able to keep Strath Haven relevant through so many changes and decades, and certainly into the Final Four Friday.

“It’s kind of neat to look back on those championship teams,” Clancy said. “We’ve had celebrations of the 1999 and 2000 teams the last couple of years. They set up their tents in the end zone, and our current kids really admire them. They love seeing the old guys come back. They hear their stories and talk to them. Some of them come to the practice field. The other night, Pookie Johnson came back and talked to the kids.

“So the alumni contribution is very big.”

Johnson was with for the Panthers just after that four-year blast of dominance, then later played for the Denver Broncos, Tennessee Titans, Pittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore Ravens. The linebacker was in the pipeline that had previously sent Dan Connor, Mark Jones, Lamar Campbell and Isaac Jones to the NFL, and which kept the Panthers’ program strong for years after the championship runs, including a District 1 Class AAA championship in 2010.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Strath Haven’s Austin Conner gets tackled by Imhotep’s Enai White in the fourth quarter of the PIAA Class 5A semifinals Friday evening.

(Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group

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