PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | March, 2024

Mobley finds the range to make Lower Merion champions

PHILADELPHIA — Lower Merion’s John Mobley didn’t have a 3-point shot in his repertoire last season. It’s one aspect of his game he continues to improve.

In the offseason, Mobley trained with professional basketball player and Philadelphia native Jared Armstrong, who has molded Mobley into a better outside shooter. They always meet local LA Fitness. Somewhere in that gym is a basketball court.

“It’s a small one,” Mobley said, “but it gets the job done.”

This time a year ago, you wouldn’t have seen Mobley hit a 3-pointer in the biggest game of his high school career. In Saturday’s District 1 Class 6A final at the Liacouras Center, Mobley pulled up and sank a triple as time expired in the third quarter, giving the Aces a 10-point advantage.

“We would go there at five in the morning, work out three or sometimes five days a week,” Mobley said of his work with Armstrong. “We worked on catch-and-shoot, pull ups and everything like that. I actually have a lot more to work on when (Armstrong) comes back.”

For now, Mobley’s range is more than good enough for the District 1 champion Aces.

Behind Mobley’s 17-point, 10-rebound effort, top-seeded Lower Merion (27-1) captured its second District 1 Class 6A title in three seasons with a 57-49 win over Central League rival and No. 19 Garnet Valley.

“My sophomore year I was on the team but sat on the bench. I always wanted to go back here and actually be able to play on the court,” Mobley said. “Being on the court in this game means so much more. This guy right here (guard Owen McCabe), I grew up with him. So to be able to win with my brothers, it means the world to me.”

After hitting the game’s first field goal – a Grayson Golek 3-pointer – the Jaguars would spend the next several minutes looking to get back on the scoreboard. Their cold streak to close the first quarter – 0-for-8 – enabled the Aces to build a nice cushion at 11-3 through eight minutes.

The poor shooting in the opening period was an issue all night for the Jags. They shot 30.4 percent (17-for-56) from the field, including a 7-for-27 effort from 3-point distance.

“Quite honestly, we had to shoot better,” said GV senior guard Quinn O’Hara, who had 12 points. “You just keep playing hard. You keep your head in the game, the shots will fall. As long as you control what you can control, how hard you’re playing, how many rebounds you’re getting, I really can’t complain. Those guys left it all out there on the floor.”

GV would close the gap in the second quarter thanks in large part to Brady Krautzel, who tallied eight points in the stanza. O’Hara made a triple to cut what had been an eight-point Lower Merion lead to three midway through the second.

And that’s as close as the Jags (19-9) would get.

“Garnet is a tough team … they are always going to stay in the game,” said McCabe, who recorded 10 points and two assists. “John’s (3-pointer) really took us to the next level going into the fourth. Mobes put it all that work and to see that take place in that moment really sparked the team.”

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Garnet Valley's Jake Sniras drives to the rim against Lower Merion during the District 1 Class 6A final Saturday night. (Austin Hertzog - MediaNews Group)

Garnet Valley’s Jake Sniras drives to the rim against Lower Merion during the District 1 Class 6A final Saturday night. (Austin Hertzog – MediaNews Group)

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Michael Spielman earns gold, one of six Delco wrestlers heading to states

OXFORD — The drama began Friday for the Delaware County contingent at the District 1 Class 3A Southeast Regional at Oxford High School, continued Saturday and resumes next week at the PIAA state tournament in Hershey.

Six Delco wrestlers punched their tickets to Hershey for the three-day competition that begins Thursday at the Giant Center. That’s down from eight wrestlers last year and 16 two years ago. The class of 2024 includes Michael Spielman (Strath Haven), Jayden Lee (Radnor), Curtis Nelson (Ridley), Brecken Strickland, Hunter Delaney and Brandon Carr (all of Sun Valley).

The relatively unheralded Spielman was the only wrestler from the lengthy group of Delaware County wrestlers to win gold, the sophomore securing the 189-pound title, elevating his record this season to 38-1.

“It feels nice,” said Spielman, who beat highly regarded Carter Euker of Perkiomen Valley, 4-2 in the title bout. “I still want more. I’ve got to show up next week, too. When I stepped outside this morning and looked at the grass, I just knew it was my day. I knew I was ready.”

That was fairly routine compared to the stories that will be told of this regional in the years to come. The craziness began Friday when three-time All-Delco and perennial states qualifier Cole McFarland of Haverford forfeited after failing to make the 121-pound weight. The senior was a couple of pounds over the max, ending his prep career. He finished fifth in the state at 106 pounds in 2021-22. Shocking as that was, it paled in comparison to what happened at 114 pounds.

Lee earned a shocking defensive pin over the Nelson, the only Delco grappler to medal at states last year. Nelson had his opponent in a Merkl hold and was winning convincingly until inadvertently rolling on to his back. Faster than you could say pin, Nelson was in a most bizarre state that took a while to process. The referee’s sudden slap of the mat signalling the verdict surprised both wrestlers and the coaches. Nelson walked toward the parking lot figuring out how to reset.

“I thought I was getting back points,” Nelson said. “And (the official) said, ‘No. You got pinned.’ I ran outside, had a long talk with my dad. It was a case of it’s over. There’s nothing you can do. You’ve got to get over it and just worry about states.”

Nelson got over it, and so did Lee as both will be angling for medals at the state tournament, Lee as the second-place finisher from the region at 114 pounds, Nelson as the third-place guy.

It was a banner day for Sun Valley, the only Delco school to send multiple wrestlers to Hershey. Strickland (133), Delaney (139) and Carr (172) all are headed up the turnpike for the Vanguards, the most participants for the school since 2013.

Coach Tom Ellis, who will stack his Vanguards program up against any in Delco in terms of performance over the past five years, is eager to watch the medals ceremony next week.

“We hope to bring back plenty,” Ellis said. “The program has just kind of taken off. It’s never a rebuild. It’s more of a reload.”

Speaking of reloading, at 114 pounds, Lee made a compelling case for himself by wrestling hard after his good fortune. He pinned Jake Evans of Upper Dublin in 1:19 to open the regional, and after being awarded the pin over Nelson, Lee decisioned Chase Sigle of Downingtown West, 12-10, to clinch a berth in the championship bout.

In the finals, Lee lost by fall to Colby Martinelli of Pennsbury, who finished third at 107 pounds last year in states.

Lee is the first Radnor wrestler to reach Hershey since heavyweight Daetrel Jerome in 2021, and the first to reach the regional finals since Tommy Meyers in 2015.

“Last year didn’t go so well for me in districts and I’m happy, I’m very excited to go to states,” Lee said. “Thanks to all my coaches. They helped me out throughout my whole wrestling career. They got me here.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Strath Haven's Michael Spielman has his hand raised after winning the 189-pound title at District 1 Class 3A Southeast Regional at Oxford Saturday. (Bill Rudick/For Media News Group)

Strath Haven’s Michael Spielman has his hand raised after winning the 189-pound title at District 1 Class 3A Southeast Regional at Oxford Saturday. (Bill Rudick/For Media News Group)

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