PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | March, 2023

Nelson eighth at states, first Ridley medalist since 1985

HERSHEY — Kennett’s John Pardo knew he belonged in Hershey and knew he could be one of those guys on the podium, but he just needed another win or two to validate those beliefs.

Saturday, on the final day of the Class 3A PIAA Championships, Pardo even impressed himself.

The junior won his last two bouts in the Giant Center in Hershey to tie a program-best with a third-place finish at 215 pounds.

“I learned that I can really go all the way,” Pardo said. “I’m better than I thought I was. I don’t really need to overthink anything anymore.”

Pardo was the highest area placer, tying Kyle Bove’s third-place finish in 2009 as a Kennett record. Fellow Blue Demon, Bailey Shindle (285 pounds), capped his career with an eighth-place medal, and Ridley sophomore Curtis Nelson finished eighth as well.

Nelson was all smiles despite two losses Saturday.

“I’m pretty happy,” Nelson said. “I **** to end it on a loss, but I still got my medal and I still came here did what I did.”

In the fourth round of consolations, Nelson got in a 5-0 hole and couldn’t complete the comeback against Altoona’s Braiden Weaver, in a 5-4 loss. For seventh, Nelson led 3-2 at one point, but gave up the next four points before getting pinned by Easton’s Nicholas Salamone.

The progress was evident for Nelson, and ending a 37-year state medal drought for Ridley didn’t hurt, either. He was the first state medalist for the Green Raiders since Ron Venit finished fourth at 185 pounds in 1985. Nelson still has two more years to add to his accomplishments.

“I put myself in a good spot,” Nelson said. “Every year I try to work up. Last year I got here but didn’t medal. This year I got here and medaled. I’m always hoping for first, so I’ll be going for gold.”

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Ridley’s Curtis Nelson gets a hug from coach Ron Rainey after his win over Central Dauphin’s Thunder Beard in the 107-pound blood round. (Nate Heckenberger – For MediaNews Group)

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Kearney, Springfield defeat Central High

Springfield seemed to enjoy playing in Archbishop Ryan’s gym Friday.

The Cougars, who placed eighth in the District 1 Class 6A tournament, received scoring contributions from several players in their 58-41 victory over Central in the first round of the PIAA playoffs. Kaitlyn Kearney led four players in double figures with 14 points to take down the District 12 runners-up.

Lexi Aaron added 12 points and Cora Fattori netted 11 for the Cougars (21-8), who face the winner of Saturday’s game between Wyoming Valley West and Abington in Tuesday’s second round.

Anabel Kreydt recorded a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds, while Taylor Hunyet finished with nine points.

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Sniras’ last-second rim shot scores winning tune for Garnet Valley

Every basketball player fantasizes about hitting a shot at the buzzer to win a game, especially if it’s a playoff or championship contest.

Some players get to live that dream. Few get to do it twice.

Garnet Valley’s Jake Sniras is among the lucky few.

The 6-4 sophomore forward hit a 3-pointer as time expired Saturday to give the Jaguars a stunning, 46-45 victory over Cumberland Valley in the opening round of the PIAA Class 6A playoffs Saturday afternoon.

It was Sniras’ second game-winning buzzer-beater of the season. He hit a 3-pointer to give the Jaguars a 65-63 win over Coatesville in double overtime in the Pete & Jameer Nelson Classic at Widener in December.

“This wasn’t even like a shot,” Sniras said. “I threw it over my head almost.”

It was good enough to send the Jaguars (18-9) into the second round for the second year in a row. Garnet Valley will meet District 11’s Parkland (19-9) at a site and time to be determined next Wednesday. Parkland knocked off Henderson in the opening round by 56-39.

Garnet Valley needed Sniras’ heroics despite jumping out to a 13-3 lead after one quarter and taking a 24-14 advantage into the locker room at halftime. Max Koehler and Sniras had a big hand in giving the Jaguars that early advantage. Koehler scored eight of his team-high 15 points in the first quarter and 10 in the first half. Sniras had six of his 13 points in the opening 16 minutes.

“A lot of teams don’t take us seriously at the start,” Garnet Valley coach Mike Brown said. “We’re not that physically imposing and it helps us a lot when we jump out to big leads. But they’re good. I knew they’d come back. It was just a matter of how quickly.”

The Eagles (21-5) stormed back in the third quarter to cut the deficit to 39-38. Nolan Buzalka had seven of his team-high 15 points and Nolan Gilbert netted seven of his 13 in the period to get the District 3 runnerup Eagles back into the contest.

From that point, it was a back-and-forth affair. Cumberland Valley scored the first four points of the final period to take a 42-39 lead. Garnet Valley went back in front, 43-42. Buzalka buried a 3-pointer with 33 seconds left to put the Eagles back on top, 45-43.

That set the stage for the Jaguars and Sniras.

Brown usually doesn’t like to call a timeout in game-ending situations but he did in this case with 2.6 seconds left.

“You don’t know what kind of defense they’re going to be in and you have to inbound the ball,” Brown said. “But we were so scrambled, kind of out of sorts. We were all over the place. That’s why I called the timeout with two seconds left.”

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Garnet Valley’s Jake Sniras grabs a rebound against Methacton in districts last season. (Owen McCue – MediaNews Group)

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Upper Darby’s wild finish puts Yassir Joyner, Royals into second round

Yassir Joyner did not hesitate.

The 6-3 senior guard saw the ball bounce right to him with time dwindling down in the second overtime Saturday, with Upper Darby deadlocked with Bethlehem Liberty in the opening round of the PIAA Class 6A playoffs.

Joyner grabbed the ball and put a soft shot off the glass with his left hand. The ball bounced on the rim a few times before finally falling through the hoop just before the horn went off to give the Royals a stunning 66-64 victory over the District 11 runnerup Hurricanes.

“I just took advantage of it,” Joyner said by phone. “I saw an opening; nobody was there, so I laid it up.”

Joyner’s bucket capped a wild back-and-forth battle between the Royals and Hurricanes and sends Upper Darby (19-8), the sixth seed out of District 1, into Wednesday’s second round against District 3 champion Reading at a site and time to be determined. The Red Knights (28-1) rolled over Haverford, 74-43.

Nadir Myers led the Royals with 20 points. Joyner chipped in with 16 points and Niymire Brown added 15 before fouling out.

“It was crazy,” Joyner said.

The Royals jumped out to a 12-11 lead after one quarter and held Liberty to one field goal in the second period to expand their advantage to 29-14. Upper Darby was up, 44-31, after three periods and appeared to be in firm control of the contest but the Hurricanes were not about to go quietly on their home court.

Liberty (16-11) fought back and outscored Upper Darby, 25-12, in the final period. The Hurricanes tied the game at 56 when Dywane Chess hit a free throw with 9.3 seconds left in regulation. The Royals had a last-second heave from midcourt to win it but the shot was off the mark.

Upper Darby took a 58-56 lead in the first extra session but once again the Hurricanes were able to tie it on a pair of free throws by Ziego Goodman. Khysir Slaughter had a good look at a 3-pointer from the top of the key to win it but his shot kicked off the back of the rim to send the game into double overtime.

Trailing, 61-58, Niari Hodges buried a 3-pointer to tie it. Nadir Myers then hit a 3-pointer to put the Royals up, 64-61. Once again, though, Liberty showed its resolve. Nate Rivera hit a 3-pointer from the right corner with 47 seconds left in the second overtime to tie the game once again and set the stage for the final, crazy sequence.

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Upper Darby’s Yassir Joyner, left, and Ridley’s Seth Sizemore battle for a rebound in the first half of a game in January. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

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Lower Merion’s Alexa Conner is Main Line Girls Athlete of the Week (March 6-12)

The junior swimmer finished first in the girls 100 back and third in the 200 IM at the PIAA District 1 3A swimming championships last month. She was undefeated in dual meets in individual events this winter, and broke three team records (2:02.56 in the 200 IM; 54:65 in 100 back; 57.17 in 100 fly.) Last year, at the PIAA 3A state championships, she finished fourth in the 100 back and sixth in the 200 IM. Outside of the pool at Lower Merion, Conner is a member of Writing Fellows (a tutoring program to help students with their writing), Bulldog Ambassadors (a program that helps new students and rising freshmen acclimate to Lower Merion) and the American Sign Language Club. She has verbally committed to Duke University to continue her swimming career. “Alexa is extremely hard-working and dedicated to swimming,” said Lower Merion girls swimming coach Mikell Nigro.

Fun facts – Alexa Conner

Favorite book: Educated.

Favorite author: Colleen Hoover.

Favorite TV show: Gossip Girl.

Favorite movie: Mean Girls.

Favorite athlete: Missy Franklin.

Favorite pre-meet pump-up song: All Night Longer.

Favorite team: Philadelphia Eagles.

Favorite place to visit: Costa Rica.

Favorite pre-meet meal: Chipotle.

Click HERE to read the full interview.

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Penncrest completes ‘unreal’ run to Central title

ASTON – The mythology of the Penncrest hockey team’s Central League championship comes wrapped in a neat red-and-white bow.

Yeah, there’s the seven seed that the Lions entered the Central League playoffs with this week. But more than that, there’s the goose egg endured when the current crop of seniors were freshmen in 2019-20. It’s a juxtaposition the Penncrest players front and center in this triumph.

“It feels unreal,” senior defenseman Colin Curran said after a 6-4 win over Lower Merion in the final at Ice Works Thursday night. “Since my freshman year, when we didn’t win a game, and to progress all the way to winning the Central League championship, it’s just an unreal thing.”

The Lions were the better team from start to finish Thursday. They led 5-2 after two periods and held on late as No. 5 Lower Merion pushed for a goal, tipping the momentum with a short-handed tally. But goalie Fiona Walker came up with 27 saves, the Lions were consistently solid with three lines and had a defensive corps that steadily made plays to lift their first Central League championship since 2005, a year they also claimed the state title.

It was evident from the very start. Penncrest led 4:37 into the game when Gabe Hartman willed a shot through traffic and past Lower Merion goalie Will Zeger, who got a piece of it. Eddie Morroni doubled the lead 10 minutes later, slipping to the net front on a delayed penalty call to cash in a board battle won by Kain Walker and Jackson Wickman below the goal line.

“Adrenaline, and we’ve had in in our heads that we haven’t won a Central League championship since 2005 and haven’t been in one in 10 years,” Kain Walker said. “So it was just something we needed to get done. … We wanted it more, we worked harder out in those corners, pop it out to him right in front, he’s there to bury it.”

Joe Kirchoff, driving the paint, made it 3-1 early in the second when Zeger allowed a juicy rebound of a Wickman point drive on the power play. Walker roofed a shot high glove on a breakaway down the right wing at 12:50 of the second, and Matt McKay picked off a pass at his own blue line to spring Scott Scranton for a breakaway goal to make it 5-2. Kain Walker nearly made it 6-2 but missed slipping a breakaway on the short side by inches late in the second.

The play of McKay and Nash Grant, who scored twice in the semifinal win over Radnor, is significant from a pair of freshmen on the blue line who are willing to step into ever larger roles.

“They’ve both improved so much, and they’re so much more confident out there,” said Curran, the leader of the defensive corps. “And they don’t play scared at all.”

Lower Merion played a near spotless game in the semifinal to upend top-seeded Haverford, 4-0. After taking just one penalty in that game, they were whistled for three in the first 20 minutes of play Thursday and played much of the final 10 minutes down a man when Jeremy Kagan got a game misconduct for ****-ending McKay in front of the net.

Toby Myers, the Aces’ smooth-skating and hulking defenseman, got them on the board with six seconds left in the first period, sneaking a shot under the pad of Fiona Walker. But Myers had the turnover that led to Scranton’s goal, another loose play that ultimately doomed the Aces.

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Penncrest players celebrate Kain Walker’s empty-net goal in the waning seconds of the Central League final Thursday night at Ice Works. The Lions defeated Lower Merion, 6-4. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

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Sniras’ meaningful effort leads to career high as Garnet Valley downs North Penn in District 1-6A 7th place game

TOWAMENCIN >> It meant something to Jake Sniras.

The annual slog of District 1 basketball playback games can feel unending, the void between a team’s exit from the district bracket and the start of the state playoffs. To Sniras, a 6-foot-4 sophomore at Garnet Valley, there’s no such thing as a “meaningless” game and he played like it Friday as the Jaguars traveled to North Penn to compete in the 6A boys seventh-place game.

It meant something to Jake Sniras and he played like it, scoring a career-best 39 points as GV ran over the Knights 88-52 to complete their seeding games.

“Every game means something, I **** when people say the seeding games don’t mean anything,” Sniras, who had 30 points in the first half, said. “Every game means something and any time you’re playing, you should be going 100 percent.”

The Jags staved off a losing streak going into states, earning the 1-7 spot in the PIAA bracket and a trip out to District 3 runner-up Cumberland Valley next Friday. North Penn dropped its third straight game, the Knights drawing a first-round clash with District 12 runner-up Central next week.

Sniras surpassed his previous career high of 33, set in a dramatic win over Coatesville at the Pete and Jameer Nelson Classic held in late December, so he’s not a stranger to big games. However, the sophomore was not happy with his performance in the game that put Garnet Valley in the playbacks, a quarterfinal loss to top seed Spring-Ford, and wanted to go into states on a good note.

“After the Spring-Ford game, it was a stinker, I didn’t play that good of a game, I was shooting a lot of bad shots and whatnot,” Sniras said. “I wanted to get it going at the rim. I try to work inside-out.”

Sniras missed his first shot, but not many more in the first half. For the game, the sophomore wing shot 15-of-25, 2-for-4 from long range and 7-of-8 at the foul line but his numbers in the opening 16 minutes were ridiculous, featuring the 30 points on 12-of-15 field goals, 2-of-3 threes and 4-of-5 free throws.

He scored pretty much every way possible, getting down low and finishing on the block, hitting the perimeter jumpers, ghosting behind North Penn’s defense for layups, getting run-outs and splashing turnarounds and pull-ups inside the arc. While the offense stood out, Sniras actually pointed to the other end of the floor as the catalyst.

Early on, it looked like it was going to be both teams running rampant on the offensive end. Knights guard Norman Gee was all over with 10 points and two assists on threes for North Penn in a 17-16 start. That prompted a change for the Jags, abandoning their man-to-man defense to go zone, leading to a 7-0 run to end the quarter with all seven coming from Sniras.

“They were running with us, beating us off the dribble in the first quarter and they didn’t know what to do, it looked like they weren’t ready for us,” Sniras said. “The wings are really important, especially when it’s on the opposite side and we do a good job of dropping. All our steals come off that zone, so it really helps us.”

Sniras ended the first quarter with 14 points and he was just on a different level in the second. The 6-foot-4 sophomore opened the quarter with a steal out of the zone and an impressive eurostep finish, he hit a smooth turnaround later in the quarter and ended the half sinking a midrange jumper, almost not even noticing the hand of a North Penn defender in his face on the contest.

As the Knights tried to slow him down, Sniras and the Jaguars used their passing to keep the points flowing.

“The cuts off the backdoor, that’s always there,” Sniras said. “Especially once they start getting all over me, the backdoor’s pretty easy to hit when they’re trying to take away my shots.”

Knights coach John Conrad was disappointed in his team’s effort on defense, the Knights giving up at least 71 points in all three games of the losing streak and more than 80 in two of the three.

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Wait is worth it for Conestoga’s McLellan

FRANCONIA >> In the first period of the 172-pound final, Conestoga’s Hayden McLellan arched back, grinning at the referee as he waited for him to start counting near-fall points.

McLellan believed he was in criteria to earn some back points. The ref disagreed, but McLellan did manage to score an early four points. If it was short-term patience that led to that eventual lead, it was that longer term resilience that had him in that spot in the first place.

McLellan converted that early lead into the first title by a Pioneer at the Class 3A Southeast Regional since Jack Chidester in 2008.

“I feel like it was long overdue,” McLellan said. “I’ve always had the talent. Whether it was getting sick or not peaking at the right time, it just didn’t work out.”

Earlier on Saturday, McLellan won his 100th career bout. It was his second pin of the two-day tournament. He followed it up with a major decision in the semifinals before defeating Pennridge’s Talan Hogan, 6-3, for gold to qualify for states for the first time.

“My teammates and I did a lot of offseason wrestling,” said McLellan, a senior. “It was a lot of coaches and a lot of specialized time to hone our attack.”

Conestoga tied a school record with three qualifying for the PIAA Championships, which begin Thursday at the Giant Center in Hershey.

Jake Allred (189 pounds) also made the finals but wound up on the wrong end of a 6-2 decision to Owen J. Roberts’ Dean Becthold, for his second straight trip. Miles Warkentine (127) won the fifth-place bout to grab the final spot.

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Conestoga’s Hayden McLellan looks for near-fall points in a 6-3 win over Pennridge’s Talan Hogan in the 172-pound final. (Nate Heckenberger – For MediaNews Group)

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Haverford dominates Pennsbury to stay undefeated, advance to district title game

HAVERFORD — Pennsbury didn’t stand a chance.

No. 2 Haverford didn’t mess around in Wednesday’s District 1 Class 6A semifinal against the 11th-seeded Falcons. From the tip-off, the Fords came to dominate before a packed Juenger Gymnasium, their final home game of a perfect season. Standing in the way were the Falcons, who failed to match up to the Fords in skill, height, athleticism … you name it.

With a 43-21 victory, undefeated Haverford (27-0) advances to a district final for the first time in program history. The Fords meet No. 1 Perkiomen Valley at Temple University’s Liacouras Center Saturday at 4.

The Fords suffocated a timid Pennsbury offense, which seemed unable to decide whether to summon the courage to drive against the Fords or settle for jump shots. Haverford’s length shut down any clean looks at the basket. The Fords swarmed and trapped, forced turnovers and ran the floor at will.

“I think it’s certainly our work ethic,” senior forward Caroline Dotsey said. “Our entire team has an incredibly good work ethic. And then just preparation. I think everybody comes into every practice knowing what needs to get done, what we need to work on and what we need to focus on. That shows up in our games.”

Haverford held Pennsbury to eight points in the first half and led 27-8 at intermission. After three quarters, the Fords were ahead 31-11, so whatever adjustments the Falcons made at halftime didn’t pan out. Haverford had the height advantage with six-footers Caroline Dotsey, Rian Dotsey and Mollie Carpenter. Pennsbury’s only bright spot was guard Sofia Vitucci, who scored all eight of her team’s first-half points. But Vitucci’s scoring effort was not nearly enough to put a dent in the Fords’ sizable advantage.

“We’ve played really well defensively all year,” coach Lauren Pellicane said. “We knew where we could give help and I think the girls executed tonight, for sure. (Vitucci) is a great player, a great scorer, and a lot of their offense runs through her. That was our focus tonight, just trying to get help and focus on her and limit her as much as we could.”

The Fords started 1-for-6 from the field and led 4-0 after five minutes. They quickly recovered from a sluggish start and busted the game wide open. Vitucci hit a basket in the first period to cut the Falcons’ deficit to 6-4, but the Fords exploded for 15 straight points to take a 21-6 lead with three minutes left before halftime.

And they did it by sharing the ball. Junior guard Aniya Eberhart had all five of her points in the second period. Caroline Dotsey, Rian Dotsey, Carpenter and Ashley Wright, who was tremendous off the bench, each tallied four points in the second stanza. After missing five of their first six field-goal attempts, the Fords closed the first half shooting 66.6 percent (10-for-15).

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Rian Dotsey, right, scored 12 points to help Haverford to a 43-21 win over Pennsbury in a District 1 Class 6A semifinal Wednesday night. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES)

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Jack Rabinowitz talks big, plays bigger in Lower Merion win over Haverford

ASTON – There is a shared belief among Lower Merion hockey players that they can do serious damage in the postseason. When the Aces are whole, they can handle anybody in the ICSHL Central.

Behind Will Zeger’s stellar goaltending, the fifth-seeded Aces blanked No. 1 Haverford, 4-0, in the semifinal round of the league tournament Tuesday evening at IceWorks. Lower Merion faces the winner of the game between No. 6 Radnor and No. 7 Penncrest, which ended too late for this edition of the Daily Times.

Haverford was the defending Central League champion. Last week, when Lower Merion and Haverford met in the penultimate game of the regular season, the Aces were missing key contributors. The result was a lopsided 6-1 defeat which helped the Fords claim the No. 1 seed in the playoffs.

On the next night, the Aces upset first-place Conestoga with a full roster. The 6-2 victory was precisely the sort of momentum the Aces wanted to establish heading into the tournament.

“I think when we have all of our players, we are a completely different team,” coach Dan Harkins said. “They worked hard all year. I think this year has been a turnaround season for them. I have five seniors and they all worked extremely hard this year and they were looking for this opportunity to do something they haven’t had a chance to do in the last couple of years. So they stepped up, they did that work and now they’re seeing the fruits of all their labor, you know?”

The Aces handled Springfield in Monday’s opening round, 5-2, scoring three times in the first period. Tuesday’s first period was a scoreless affair, but it was evident that Lower Merion had better tempo. The Aces’ diligence paid off three minutes into the second when Jack Rabinowitz received a pass from Harrison Crane and nailed a slapshot past Haverford goalie Andrew Henderson.

“I mean, we knew from the beginning we had to come out and get that first goal,” Rabinowitz said. “That was the biggest goal of the game and from there, we just kept it going. We knew that we had to get momentum our way. Haverford is a pretty good team and they have some good skaters. So our game plan was pretty much just shut them down, take away the passes in the middle of the ice, get the boys going and that’s exactly what we did. We got shots on net and capitalized.”

After the Aces went ahead 3-0, the Fords were in all-out attack mode. They had the lone power play of the game late in the second period. It carried into the third, but the Fords could not solve Zeger in net.

“Our defense played great this game,” Rabinowitz said. “The boys came ready to play, you know? Every single person came ready.”

Zeger was impenetrable. He saved 28 shots on the way to recording the shutout. In the win against Springfield, he registered 23 saves. In the Haverford game last week, he entered in the second period and thwarted 17 of 18 shots.

“Even if I let up early goals, I think I always stay pretty focused out there,” Zeger said. “It’s all about the preparation before the game. I thought I did pretty well in that game last week and also, a lot of those guys are on my club team, too, so I know a lot of the guys on Haverford pretty well.”

Rabinowitz isn’t surprised by Zeger’s performances so far in the postseason.

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MEDIANEWS GROUP STAFF PHOTO
Haverford's Owen Rabadam tries to get a defensive angle on  Lower Merion's Harrison Crane, right, in a Central semifinal game at IceWorks Tuesday night.

Lower Merion's Jack Rabinowitz blocks a shot from the point by AJ Moleski of Haverford

MEDIANEWS GROUP STAFF PHOTO Haverford’s Owen Rabadam tries to get a defensive angle on Lower Merion’s Harrison Crane, right, in a Central semifinal game at IceWorks Tuesday night. Lower Merion’s Jack Rabinowitz blocks a shot from the point by AJ Moleski of Haverford

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