PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | January, 2022

Haverford High School’s Cole McFarland is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week

The sophomore wrestler recently captured the Central League championship at 113 pounds, getting three pins, all in less than 90 seconds. As of Jan. 31, McFarland held a 22-1 record with 20 pins. Last year, he advanced to the PIAA East 3A Super Regionals, and nine of his 14 wins were by pin. Haverford High School wrestling coach Joe Jones said, “When Cole turns it on he’s unbeatable. He’s a great teammate, always helping show his teammates better technique.”

Fun facts – Cole McFarland

Favorite book: Green Eggs and Ham.

Favorite author: Dr. Seuss.

Favorite TV show: Schitts Creek.

Favorite movie: Dictator.

Favorite athlete: Tiger Woods.

Favorite pre-meet pump-up song: “Hip hop music and some country.”

Favorite team: Philadelphia Eagles.

Favorite place to visit: Sea Isle City, N.J.

Favorite pre-meet meal: “After weigh-ins. I like a soft pretzel from

Wawa with some candy and a drink.”

Person I most admire: Matthew O’Neill.

Family members: parents Thomas and Deb, sister Juile, brother Lucas.

Click HERE to read the full interview.

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Blooming Demetrius Lilley too much for the Fords

LOWER MERION — A little sheepishly, Demetrius Lilley admits that blocking shots isn’t really his thing. For his imposing 6-foot-9 frame, he’s still growing into his athleticism.

“Years ago, I could not block a shot for nothing,” the Lower Merion big man said. “In practice, we practice the wall up, so that’s helped me get better in the game. So I can block shots now.”

In Lilley’s position, camped in the low post at the center of Lower Merion’s defense, the only time he gets recognition on the stat sheet is when he fills up a boxscore or manages to get a hand on a shot. That may get the crowd riled up, but Lilley takes just as much pride in the myriad non-plays, the missed shots that owe to the very thought of him in the lane.

It doesn’t hurt that Lilley is pretty proficient when he does get his hands on the ball.

Lilley scored 25 points to go with 21 rebounds, three blocks and a slew of shots altered or deterred Tuesday night as the Aces topped Haverford, 58-47, in a battle of one-loss Central League teams.

“A block doesn’t really matter, but just knowing that I can change a shot, that matters,” Lilley said. “And it helps my team.”

Lilley was the deciding factor, as has become the norm for the Penn State commit who celebrated his 1,000th career point on the weekend. The regularity with which he got the ball on offense tracked neatly with Lower Merion’s offensive performance. He hardly touched the ball in the first four minutes of play, allowing Haverford (11-3, 8-2 Central) to run out to a 14-10 lead. But he replied in the second quarter with 12 points and eight rebounds, putting the Aces up two at the break.

In the third, the Fords made headway, largely with the Aces (14-2, 10-1) not directing offense through Lilley. But he ended up with seven points in the frame to put Lower Merion up 37-34.

He’s diversified his game ably. He was 11-for-14 from the field, most attempts within three feet of the rim, including an exclamation point slam in the final 10 seconds. But he hit his only 3-pointer of the game, threw a Eurostep at the Fords off the bounce and displayed a soft touch in the lane.

“Next level, I can’t just be the big man,” Lilley said. “I can’t just post up with my back to the basket. So I have to expand my game a little more. Coach (Gregg) Downer gave me a little leeway to expand my game a little more.”

And then there was the defense. By and large, the Fords dialed up the right game plan, recognizing Lilley would stay rooted to the low block, meaning open looks on the perimeter for the smaller man he was supposed to guard. But the Fords didn’t hit enough shots, going 6-for-24 from 3-point range, while deprived a steady steam of easy buckets thanks to the specter of Lilley in the lane.

“When he’s at the basket, it’s definitely difficult to finish around the rim,” Haverford wing JR Newman said. “You’ve got to be creative. If you can’t get the layup, you’ve got to look out for shooters.”

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Lower Merion’s Demetrius Lilley, right, drives past Abington's Caleb Baker during a District 1 Class 6A playoff game last year. (Owen McCue - MediaNews Group)

Lower Merion’s Demetrius Lilley, right, drives past Abington’s Caleb Baker during a District 1 Class

6A playoff game last year. (Owen McCue – MediaNews Group)

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Partsanakis makes sure final Centrals is Outstanding

RIDLEY TWP. — Penncrest’s Nikko Partsanakis had a goal when he arrived at Ridley High School for the Central League wrestling championships Saturday.

As a senior, he wanted to go out a champion.

“That’s really what drove me, knowing this is my last chance to get it,” Partsanakis said. “I wanted to go home with a gold medal.”

Partsanakis accomplished that feat and more, named the Outstanding Wrestler of the tournament.

“I always got to see the best wrestlers out there receive this and I looked up to them,” Partsanakis said “I wanted one for myself, and here I am.”

Partsanakis came into the meet seeded third at 152 pounds. He claimed his second league title and first OW award in dramatic fashion, winning all three of his bouts by fall to raise his season record to 22-5. Partsanakis pinned sixth-seeded Matt Boye of Conestoga in the quarterfinals (4:55) and then decked second-seeded Kyle Bell of Haverford in 4:39 to reach the finals.

The win over Bell, though, almost proved costly. He injured an ankle that put his appearance in the final against Strath Haven’s Kelton Brunner briefly in doubt.

“My coaches were telling me I had no other choice (but to wrestle),” said Partsanakis, who won the 126-pound title as a sophomore and fell to Garnet Valley’s Daniel Husain in the 146-pound final last year. “I knew there was no other choice. I guess it’s a good thing that I stuck it out and wrestled that match.”

The final was against a familiar foe in Brunner, who Partsanakis defeated in a dual meet this season by a 6-3 score and against whom he held a 3-0 career record. Partsanakis took care of business quickly, pinning Brunner in 1:20 to claim the crown.

“I thought I could get the job done,” Partsanakis said.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Penncrest’s Nikko Partsanakis was named the Outstanding Wrestler

at the Central League championships Saturday, winning all three of

his matches by fall to claim the 152-pound title. (MediaNews Group Photo)

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Sydnor, Brown pace impressive night on the track for Strath Haven

Strath Haven’s Teghan Sydnor and Alexa Brown and Upper Darby’s Alice Etienne won gold at the fifth Delaware Valley Girls Track Coaches Association meet of the season Friday night at Alvernia.

Sydnor won the 60 hurdles (9.37 seconds) and teamed with Hannah Driscoll, Ayshia Montgomery and Anna Mazur for fifth in the 4 x 200. Brown claimed the shot put (37 feet, 2 inches) to highlight a big night for the Panthers.

Kaitlin Nieczpiel was second in the 600. Casey Conway earned bronze in the 1,000. Lola Babin was fourth in the 300 and the foursome of Rowe Crawford, Hannah Prokup, Nora Chen, Hannah Driscoll was fourth in the 4 x 800.

Upper Darby’s Etienne jumped 35-3 ¼ to take gold in the triple jump.

Garnet Valley earned four medals, two by Alyssa Wert. She was fourth in the 400 and anchored the team of Stephanie Roberts, Anna Archer and Laura Wert to third in the 4 x 200. Anna Saboja placed fourth in the 60 hurdles and Veronica Filippone took sixth in the 300.

Hannah Casey of Penncrest finished fourth in the 600, and the quartet of Zoe Clark, Julia Scholtz, Sophia Donnelly and Kelsie Robinson was fourth in the 4 x 400 for the Lions. Ridley’s Ja’Rae Fontaine, Sydney Kusner, Kristina Tapie, Emma Winward earned silver in the 4 x 400, and Molly Schmit was sixth in the 1,000 for the Green Raiders.

Chester’s Alina LaForest took third in the 60 hurdles. Saige Forbes of Episcopal Academy was fourth in the 200 while Springfield Beth Schearer was sixth in that event. Tamara Williams from Bonner-Prendergast was fourth in the long jump. Archbishop Carroll’s Mariah Kinder placed fifth in the 60, and Gabrielle Watson from Delco Christian was fifth in the 1,000.

Strath Haven’s Teghan Syndor competes during the outdoor season last spring. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

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Lower Merion’s Demetrius Lilley scores 1,000th career point

Lower Merion High School senior Demetrius Lilley scored his 1,000th career points for the Aces boys basketball squad in a 79-69 win against William Allen Jan. 22 at The Geigle Classic. Lilley, who scored his 1,000th point on an emphatic slam in the second half, finished the game with 31 points to lead all scorers.
“I’m happy for him, it’s a great accomplishment,” said Lower Merion boys basketball head coach Gregg Downer, who poinsted out that Lilley is also the school’s all-time leading rebounder.

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Rowland, Fords finally hand Springfield a league loss

HAVERFORD — Emma Rowland and the Haverford girls basketball team spent a lot of time practicing their foul shooting this week. The Fords have been inconsistent in that area this season.

“Two practices ago, all we did was practice our foul shots,” said Rowland, a senior guard. “If we missed, we ran.”

A trot around the gym seems like the appropriate penance for a missed freebie, especially a team intending to make a run at a Central League championship.

It had been a long while since Haverford (or anyone else, for that matter) had beaten the Cougars. Prior to Friday, they had won 25 consecutive Central League games dating to the start of the pandemic-shortened 2021 campaign.

The last time the Fords defeated the Cougars was Jan. 17, 2018.

“A long time,” Maddie Williams said.

Williams ensured that streak wouldn’t extend another day. The senior guard was 5-for-6 at the free-throw line in the fourth quarter as Haverford claimed a 33-28 victory at Juenger Gymnasium.

“I’ve been working on free-throw shooting a lot, probably for about an hour the last few practice, so I stepped up to the line with a lot of confidence and I was really ready to put them in,” said Williams, who got all of her points from the charity stripe.

This was a signature win for the Fords (10-4), who have tough losses against Conestoga, Marple Newtown and Radnor this year. Their battles with Springfield in recent years were close, too. Last season, for instance, the Fords fell on a buzzer-beater by Alexa Abbonizio.

“For the seniors, we have not won against Springfield and we were preparing for this game for weeks now,” said Rowland, who scored a team-high seven points and grabbed eight rebounds. “It means so much to us that we finally overcame our weakness.”

It wasn’t pretty, but the Fords accomplished their mission Friday.

In typical Haverford-Springfield style, the defenses came to play from the jump. The opening quarter featured more combined turnovers (six) than total points (four). Springfield point guard Mia Valerio made two free throws and one field goal. That was all … for both teams. The score was 4-0 Cougars.

Haverford trailed 7-0 before it cracked the scoreboard with a Sky Newman free throw 5:14 before halftime. Aniya Eberhardt made a runner with 4:11 left for Haverford’s first field goal.

“We knew the shots were going to start to fall,” Williams said.

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Haverford’s Emma Rowland, left, shoots during the first half of the Fords’ Central League game against Springfield Friday night. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Harriton’s Annie Aspesi is Main Line Girls Athlete of the Week

The senior guard and captain, a first team All-Central League and All-Main Line girls’ basketball selection each of the past two years, is off to another fine start, averaging 14.5 points per game and 5 rebounds per contest. Next winter, she will play basketball for Tufts University. Aspesi is a three-sport athlete at Harriton (soccer, basketball, lacrosse), is an officer with the school’s Asian cultural club, and is a member of the school’s yearbook club and newspaper (Harriton Banner). She also is a member of Best Buddies. Harriton head coach Chris Wielgus said, “Annie is a joy to coach. She is a remarkably dedicated and talented athlete who elevates the game of everyone around her. Her love of the game of basketball is contagious.”

Fun facts – Annie Aspesi

Favorite book: Unbroken.

Favorite TV show: Gilmore Girls.

Favorite movie: Avengers: Endgame.

Favorite athlete: Tom Brady.

Favorite pre-game pump-up song: Candy Paint, by Post Malone.

Favorite team: New England Patriots.

Favorite place to visit: Park City, Utah.

Favorite pre-game meal: Pasta and edamame.

Person I most admire, and why: My grandma (who I’m named after) because she was the most selfless, generous, and hardworking person I knew.”

Family members: parents Dave and Diana, older brothers Kevin and Andrew.

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DiBona helps Marple Newtown snap slide

NEWTOWN SQUARE – In so many words, Justin DiBona and his Marple Newtown teammates understood the trends at play Thursday night.

The Tigers had won six of eight to start the season, then lost three straight, all with the 5A school tangling with the Central League’s 6A powers. To start the second half of a 22-game season the same way as the first, DiBona knew the Tigers would need to buck the losing trend against Upper Darby.

With DiBona leading the way, they were ready.

The senior guard supplied 11 of his 17 points in the first half, staking the Tigers to an early lead on the way to a 62-52 win.

For Marple (7-5, 4-4 Central), the win ends a three-game skid. For Upper Darby (3-7, 3-5) a three-game winning streak halts. Such is the Central League crossover conundrum.

“We knew this is the halfway moment of the season and we knew that we were 6-5 going into it,” DiBona said. “This was a big game to come into and play as hard as we did. … We knew this was a big test, and we were ready for it.”

The final margin for the Tigers was banked in that first quarter. Marple led 17-9 after eight minutes, then the two teams were even the rest of the way, including identical tallies in the second and fourth quarters.

DiBona hit all three of his 3-point attempts in the first half and was 5-for-7 from the field overall. He added six points in the fourth quarter, including 4-for-4 from the line. Jordan Bochanski had eight points and five boards in the first eight minutes. He had 14 at the break, on the way to a 16-point night.

Making Marple’s 35-27 halftime lead all the more impressive is that it came with just a solitary point and two shot attempts from leading scorer Eric McKee, who endured early foul trouble.

“We know other guys on our team can step up at any point,” forward Johnny Small said. “Everyone on the floor can step up and score at any point that they want to. It’s not a one-man game. All five of us play together as a unit and can dominate together as long as we keep playing like that.”

The aptly named Small took center stage in the third quarter, when he had six points. He was 7-for-8 at the line for 11 points plus seven rebounds overall. He and Matt Cantwell (10 points, five rebounds) aren’t the biggest forwards, and they faced a noted height disadvantage against the Royals. But they ground out a 33-20 advantage on the boards.

“We’re expected to be the smaller team, usually every game we go into,” Small said. “At practice, we fight. Every practice, we’re battling, getting rebounds over each other, boxing each other out. It’s a whole mentality thing. Whoever has more motivation will get the ball.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

ustin DiBona, right, seen in a game last season, scored 17 points in a win over Upper Darby Thursday night. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

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Berger, Liberio help Ridley roll past Penncrest

RIDLEY TWP. — No one on the Ridley girls basketball team needs to be told twice. They know if they play more like they did Saturday night against Penncrest, they can make a run in the Central League.

The Green Raiders have been searching for consistency. One night they look solid, but the next night there can be a significant drop-off. Yet Saturday’s 45-28 victory was one of Ridley’s better performances of the 2021-22 season.

“I think we started off on a little bit of a rough patch, but I think we’re definitely learning from all of our games we’ve played so far,” said senior guard Emily Liberio, a Temple lacrosse commit and four-year member of the varsity team. “I think we are finally coming together, and I think tonight’s game really proved that we shouldn’t be considered out for the count yet.”

Ridley (4-5, 4-2 Central), which had lost three of its prior four games, entered Saturday ranked 31st in the District 1 Class 6A power rankings. Coach Roe Falcone hopes the victory is the turning point moment of their season.

“They came out fired up tonight,” Falcone said. “We had a really good practice. … You know, you have to come ready every game and I thought they showed that tonight. In that first quarter, they were fired up.”

The Green Raiders went on a 12-0 run in the opening period to pull away from the Lions. They led 19-5 going into the second period. Senior forward Amirah King (nine points, nine rebounds) dominated the glass in the first half and scored all nine of her points in the opening quarter. Ridley’s ability to get second and third chances on offense helped the Raiders grow their lead to as many as 15 points in the first half.

Junior guard Peyton Berger had a strong floor game, leading all players with 12 points to go with eight rebounds and one assist. Ridley’s success is contingent upon several players contributing on the offensive end and that’s precisely what the Green Raiders accomplished Saturday. Kyra Carney hit a pair of 3-pointers and finished with eight points, while Liberio chipped in with six points and four assists. Abbi Hinchey hopped off the bench to produce five points and seven rebounds.

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Emily Liberio, pictured in a game last season against Springfield, had six points and four

assists Saturday to help Ridley defeat Penncrest (PETE BANNAN/MEDIANEWS GROUP)

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Haverford High School’s Caroline Dotsey is Main Line Girls Athlete of the Week

The 6-foot-1 junior forward is averaging 15.5 ppg and 10.3 rpg for the Fords (7-3 as of Jan. 10). Last winter, she was a strong presence underneath for the Fords, scoring 12.3 points per game, pulling down more than eight rebounds per contest, and blocking an average of one shot a game, and receiving first team All-Central League and All-Main Line recognition. Dotsey will play lacrosse for the Fords in the spring, and outside of Haverford, she plays basketball for the 2023 Lady Runnin’ Rebels. Off the court, she is a member of the National Honor Society and Student Senate at Haverford.

Fun facts – Caroline Dotsey

Favorite book: The Kite Runner.

Favorite TV show: Outer Banks.

Favorite athlete: Kobe Bryant.

Favorite team: Sixers.

Favorite place to visit: Ocean City, N.J. beach.

Favorite pre-game meal: Chicken parm sandwich.

Family members: parents Dan and Sue, sister Rian.

Click HERE to read the full interview.

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