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Time Out
With Special Ed Ed
Morrone is a senior at Penn Charter with an interest
in writing. He has asked to file reports for this website and since we take anyone with a
pulse, he's part of the ballclub now! (smile) Ed covers Philly sports for PC's school
paper, The Mirror. |
FEB. 6
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 73, Haverford School 50
Im
not going to say too much about this one because Im going to leave soon to catch the
Dougherty-Oak Hill game over in Trenton (make sure to check back on that one for a
report as well), but there were a few things that stuck out in this triumph over
Haverford. You know what they say, Youre
not a good team until you prove you can win ugly.
Do they say that? Well, if
they dont, then I do. I think the
Quakers came into this one a little overconfident and maybe were expecting to blow the
Fords of Haverford out of their own gym. The
final score looks like they achieved that goal, but not without a lot of struggle.
The
weather conditions were nasty outside, and the shooting from inside was not much better. PC jumped out to a quick 8-0 lead and were up 18-5
with less than a minute to go in the quarter, so things actually werent going so
bad. But Tom Close (13 points, 5
boards) hit a three pointer from the left wing with less than 10 seconds to go in the
quarter, and this definitely swung the momentum in the Fords favor. PC started to take some bad shots and turned the
ball over more than usual. Things were so
bad in the second quarter that even good shots the Quakers took were rimming out. Close hit another 3 to make it 27-21, and then Jon
Haldy (11 points) responded with another three to cut the Quakers lead to 29-24. The Quakers got a timely 3 ball from Sammy
Zeglinski (9 points, 5 steals, 3 boards), but the score was still too close for
comfort going into halftime, with PC up 34-28. Rob
Kurz (7 for 17, 21 points, 8 rebounds) scored 10 in the half, but he shot only 3 for
9. Sean Singletary (18 points, 6
steals, 5 boards, 3 dimes) had an even tougher time, going 2 for 10 before halftime. Zack Zeglinski scored all 7 of his points
before halftime, and it was evident that the Quakers needed to do something if they wanted
to avoid a huge upset. Haldy scored all 11
of his points before the half, and they survived a first half on a night when their star
player had an off night too. Pete
Kathopoulis (8 points, 8 assists) scored 6 points and dished 6 assists in the first
half, but he finished 3 for 12 in the game. I
guess it was just one of those nights for some players tonight.
Thankfully for Charter,
Haverford had an even more difficult time scoring the ball in the third quarter, and this
allowed PC to gradually pull away. Singletary
caught his only real fire of the game in a brief spurt in the third where he scored 7
quick points to make it 43-31. It was a
difficult night for Sean. He finished the
night with a 5 for 19 performance, which is highly uncharacteristic for him. However, to his credit, he kept on shooting and
got a lot of good looks, they just wouldnt fall for him. I was sitting behind Haldys family, and they
suggested that Sean was struggling so much because their son was playing such great
defense on him. I dont know about all
that, I just think it was one of those rare off nights for Sean, and he should get back on
track this week with the last two regular season league games against Malvern and
Episcopal. The Quakers outscored Haverford
22-5 in the third and the bench played out the rest of the game.
With
this win, the Quakers clinched at least a tie for their second consecutive Inter-Ac Title. If Malvern defeats GA today or PC beats either
Malvern or Episcopal next week, the title is theirs.
As for the crowd, it was not very impressive, at least for a Friday night
game. Practically no PC students showed up
for this one, and I dont know if it was the rain outside or Haverfords losing
record that stopped them from coming, but I was a little disappointed. However, four faithful Bleacher Bums showed up
(sr. Mike Black and jrs. Hunter Hunt-Po Maloumian, Jake
Markovitz, & Dave Roithstein), and these guys should be commended for leading the
PC section tonight, even though they did not make too many friends with the Haverford
parents (smile). Those guys and myself just
had to do a little extra screaming tonight.
The Gans Spread of
the night: 33
sorry Gans, you lost this one, and I think Ill make this a
recurring feature for the rest of the season to see how good Gans is (for those of you who
have no idea what Im talking about, refer back to 2/3s PC-CHA report).
Special Eds Player of the
Game: Rob Kurz
Next Game: PC will play its
makeup game at Malvern on Tuesday, but check back for a report on Dougherty-Oak Hill later
tonight.
FEB. 3
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 94, Chestnut Hill 45
This was a battle of the polar opposites in the Inter-Ac, and the team with the
better record won easily. Penn Charter came
in to the game with a mighty 6-0 league record, while the Blue Devils of CHA were licking
their wounds at 0-6. PC had a sluggish first
quarter start as they missed some early shots and saw CHA jump out to an 8-4 lead, but the
Quakers soon got their acts together and finished the quarter strong behind the play of Gs
Sean Singletary and Zack Zeglinski. Sean
and Zigs accounted for 18 of the 22 first quarter points, and Singletary was just getting
started. He ended the first with 11, which
was highlighted by two treys toward the end of the period.
The show really began in the second quarter, though. In a span of about 90 seconds, Singletary hit 4
straight three balls to knock CHA out of it. It
was like playing NBA Jam when you hit a few shots in a row and you get on fire and
everything you throw up goes in. Add it up
and thats 6 three pointers in the first half.
He might have had a chance to join Teds 8-trey Club but Coach
Phillips only left him in for a few minutes in the second half. Sean finished 7 for 11 (6 for 8 on treys), 25
points (23 in the first half), 3 boards, and 2 each of assists and steals. As for Zeglinski, he was literally perfect. He shot 7 for 7 overall (2 for 2 on treys) and
also added 3 steals and 2 dimes. Sam
Zeglinski added 5 points and a season high 12 assists, including one on the best play
of the game. With 2:46 left in the second,
Sam dribbled across halfcourt and lobbed a perfect alley oop to Rob Kurz (11P, 4R,
2S) that Rob finished with a thunderous slam. This
put PC up 46-20, and things stayed like this for the rest of the game. CHA shot the ball well (44%), but only made 15
field goals. The Blue Devils didnt have
any big performances, as their big scorers Julian McFadden and Chris McInerney
scored only 7 points each. On the flip side,
the Quakers shot a torrid 56 % from the field (31 for 55) and were able to get back in the
win column after Saturdays nail biting loss against Dougherty. As for the Inter-Ac as a whole, PC all
but clinched its second straight league title (knock on wood). Up 2 games with only 3 to go, a major collapse is
the only thing that would prevent the Quakers from winning it. There are still tough games left against Malvern
and Episcopal, but after winning 19 league games in a row (over the past 2+ seasons) and
playing like they have been over the past month, a collapse should be avoided.
Im going to keep this report relatively short since Im also going to
weigh in on the Prep-Roman game, but I have to say a few more things. Earlier in the day during school, PC soph. sub R.J.
Lyons said to me, Yo Ed, you gotta cover the JV game today! I told R.J. I couldnt because I was going
to another game afterwards, but as it turns out, I didnt have to watch the JV game. R.J. went 2 for 4 (1 trey) from the field and 6
for 6 from the line en route to a season high 11 points.
If he plays with as much confidence as he did tonight, he could be a solid
contributor on next years team. The
other very good sign I saw came from the teams other R.J. Jr. F R.J. Hollinshead played in his first
game since injuring his right knee on Jan. 9 at GA. He
entered the game midway through the third, quickly recorded a block and finished with 2
points. It was great to see R.J. back in the
lineup. Even though there are only a few
games left on the schedule, R.J. should be ready to resume his job as starting catcher on
PCs baseball team when the season starts in March.
Ramblings:
- The 49-point margin of victory was the
highest so far this season, surpassing the 48-point win notched over GFS in December.
- In attendance was Don the
Superfan. Don is known for
his loyalty to GFS basketball, but hes made it over to a bunch of PC games this
year. Let me tell you, this guy is INTENSE. He was cheering PC on constantly for 32 minutes,
and when I came back to kill some time at the JV game, he was still there rooting the team
on.
- According to PC jr. and Bleacher
Bum Matt Gans Gannon, PC covered the Gans Spread in this
game. Apparently, the Gans spread was 40
points in this one, but it has been known to fluctuate.
If Im not wrong, it was 30 in a game earlier this year. Whatever the case, keep up the good work Gans.
Special Eds Player of the Game: Sean Singletary
Next Game: Friday night, 7:30PM @ Haverford
FEB. 3
CATHOLIC SOUTH
SJ Prep 74, Roman 59
After missing the Dougherty-LaSalle game I intended to go to on Jan. 25, I finally
got out to my first Catholic League game on Tuesday night.
After getting in without a ticket (I used my tedsilary.com reporting credentials to
weasel my way in), I had to wait about 2 hours until the game started. The time went by slowly, but I did get to meet
fellow website reporters Huck and Colin Curtin Call Curtin,
which was fun. In the end, in front of a
packed house at Philadelphia University, I suppose the game was worth it. The leads never really got larger than 8-9 points
until the end when the Prep converted free throws down the stretch. However, even though the game was close
throughout, the Prep never really lost control and were flowing out there.
Prep sr. sniper John Griffin (a Bucknell signee) had a hot start, hitting
his first 3 shots en route to 7 first quarter points.
He hit some clutch shots for them down the stretch and finished with a solid all
around game: 6 for 14 (2/8 on treys), 14 points, 5 rebounds, 5 steals, and 3 assists. Preps other star guard Chris Clark
hit on 4 of his 11 attempts (3 for 8 behind the arc) and also converted 9 of 10 at the
line en route to 20 points to lead both teams. These
two guys love to hoist the long ball (they did the same when they beat PC back in
December), and both of them have such a sweet stroke that you have to be comfortable with
most of the shots that they take. However, it
was two other Prep players that impressed me the most.
Soph. F Reggie Redding (17 points, 8 boards, 4 dimes, 2 swipes) always seems
to have great all around performances. He
shook off an 0 for 6 start and played great the rest of the game. He gives the Prep something to look forward to the
next two seasons when they graduate the rest of their starting lineup in June. The other guy that really impressed me was 6-4 F-C
Mike Kearney. Hes not as
explosive as last years center Mark Zoller (although Kearney does sport a
similar hairdo), but he gets the job done. He
played relentless defense (I hear thats his trademark) and really kept Roman star Charron
Fisher from ever becoming a factor. He
also scored 8 points and even showed some range on a few open mid-range jumpers. I read in Teds DN story that Mike is a D-I
track prospect and is considering schools such as Marist, Marquette, and Fordham. These are all schools that I applied to, so maybe
well even end up being classmates next year (smile).
The other Prep starter, 5-9 sr. G Jared Black shot 3 for 5 (two treys) for 8
points and Corey ORourke added 7 off the bench. As for Black, I played a lot of CYO ball against
him back in the day when he was at St. Bernards and I was at St. Dominic. In another interesting twist, Im real good
friends with PC sr. and Bleacher Bum Mike Black, who is Jareds cousin. Small world.
As for Roman and Fisher (Niagara), Im sure theyve both had better
nights. Fisher was hounded by Kearney and
Redding all night and took only 8 shots, hitting 4 of them. He shot 6 for 6 at the stripe, good for 14
points. He added 8 rebounds and 2 steals. The 14 points is 9 below his season average. He missed a dunk in the fourth quarter that nobody
really contested, so I guess it just wasnt his night.
It also showed the quality of Preps defense.
With Fisher struggling, three other Cahillites stepped up and scored in double
figures: Khalil Ferguson (13P, 8R), Andre Sloan-El (12P, 4R), and Malik
Perry (12P, 4R, 2 blocks). Roman cut it
to 48-44 late in the third, but the Hawks quickly responded and a Redding 3 with 3:30 to
go in the fourth made it 64-52 and buried the Cahillites for the night. As for the crowd, it filled Philly Us gym to
capacity plus more but I was pretty disappointed with the student cheering section. As far as I saw, Prep didnt even have one
and Romans was weak. I guess this was
because it was a Tuesday nighter instead of Friday, but I still expected more rowdiness.
As for the Catholic League as a whole, its definitely stacked with the most
talented teams. I can definitely see another
Prep-Dougherty final in the future, except this time Dougherty would most likely be
favored to win. However, I wouldnt
count the Prep out of this. A lot of people
wrote them off when they lost Zoller and T.J. Valerio, but they look better than
ever. So far this year, theyve beaten
teams such as Roman, Penn Charter, West Catholic, La Salle, Neumann (twice), and stand at
a very impressive 17-2. Theyre the team
to beat in the Catholic League until someone can prove otherwise.
JAN. 31
SCHOLASTIC CLASSIC III
Dougherty 72, Penn Charter 68
What
a game, what a game, WHAT A GAME!!! If you
missed this one, then shame on you. This was
by far the most intense game Ive seen so far this season. It was everything I thought it would be and more,
and Im sure everybody who was there will tell you the same thing. All the hype leading up to this game suggested
that it would be Sean Singletary vs. Kyle Lowry for 32 minutes, but that
wasnt the case at all. It was Penn
Charter vs. Cardinal Dougherty, and both teams put forth a great team effort. PC found themselves down by 13 points in both
halves, but somehow managed to claw their way back into it twice. However, in the end, Dougherty was able to halt
the Quakers nine game win streak in front of a packed house at Arcadia University. I know theres no room for moral victories in
sports, but PC cant get down on themselves because they lost this game. They gave a deeper and taller Dougherty squad a
great battle but unfortunately fell just short.
The
first half of the first quarter was brutal for Penn Charter. PC scored the first basket of the game but then
saw the Cardinals score the next 15 points, quickly falling behind by 13. Lowry was money in the first quarter, going 4 for
4 (two treys) en route to 10 points in the period. He
played outstanding defense on Singletary, frustrating Sean beyond belief. Lowry twice swiped the ball away from Sean and
raced to the other end for an uncontested dunk and then a beautiful lay in to beat the
trailing Singletary, who was nipping at his heels. The
lay up put the Cardinals up 15-2, prompting PC coach Jim Phillips to call timeout. However, just when everyone in the gym was
thinking blowout, the Quakers were able to make some stops on defense and end
the quarter on an 11-3 run. The highlight of
the spurt came with 7.8 seconds left in the quarter.
Singletary missed a shot, Brian Teuber grabbed the rebound but missed
a lay up, and then somehow, despite three guys who are 6-8 or 6-9 standing in the paint,
PC sr. 5-5 reserve guard Hanif Hopkins grabbed the rebound and flipped up a wild
shot as he was fouled and got it to fall. He
missed the foul shot, but it cut the Dougherty lead to 18-13 and definitely swung the
momentum back in PCs favor. The shot
prompted my dad to shout Nif for president!!
If you wanted to judge the Lowry-Singletary matchup after one, Kyle would
have won it having outscored Sean 10-1. Rob
Kurz (14 points, 5 rebounds) scored 6 in the quarter for PC and DeSean White
(21 points, 7 rebounds) added 7 for the Cardinals. PC
missed 4 out of 6 free throws taken in the quarter, and free throw shooting would
ultimately come back to haunt them.
The
Quakers kept on charging at Dougherty as the second quarter got underway. White picked up his third foul with 6:18 to go in
the quarter and had to watch the rest of the half from the bench. The Quakers used his absence as an advantage and
started taking the ball inside a little bit more and eventually tied things up at 24. But Lowry continued to beast it, scoring 6 more
points in the second despite being emphatically rejected by Singletary on a field goal
attempt. Shane Clark also got in on
the action and totaled 7 points before halftime. But
Clark was far from finished and was the main reason Dougherty was able to win the game,
but Ill stop getting ahead of myself. The
Cardinals erased the tie and finished the half on a 9-2 run, making the score 33-26 at
halftime. Singletary shot just 2 for 9 in the
first half (7 points), but like Shane Clark, he was far from finished. Kurz led the Quakers with 8 in the half, while Zack
Zeglinski (16 points, 2 boards, 2 assists) chipped in 7. Lowry was the high man with 16.
It
appeared that Dougherty was poised to run away with the game again, as they came out of
the locker room and pushed around the Quakers again.
Led by Clark and White, they pushed the lead back up to 13 (47-34). Im sure youre thinking that there was
no way Dougherty would blow another 13-point lead, right?
Wrong. PC scored the next 7
points as Singletary finally began to find his shot.
He scored 12 in the quarter and was aided by Zack Zs 7 and the Quakers
cut Doughertys lead down to 2, going into the fourth trailing 51-49.
After
watching Charter erase another double-digit deficit, it was obvious that the crowd was
going to be in for a fourth quarter treat. Singletary
hit two free throws to tie the game at 51, but Dougherty stole the lead back on a Clark
free throw. Dougherty survived a scared on
its next possession. Clark received an outlet
pass and raced upcourt and appeared to have an easy dunk in front of him. However, Teuber stepped in front of him and tried
to take a charge. Shane flattened Teuber,
made the lay up and fell to the ground himself. Teuber,
after taking a nasty hit, surprisingly got up unfazed and it was Clark who stayed on the
floor writhing in pain. Thankfully, after a
few scary moments he got up and was able to stay in the game. With the Cardinals leading 58-55, ZZ got a runner
to fall, cutting the lead to 1. PC then made
a defensive stop and put the ball in Singletarys hands. He raced up the floor and instead of going all the
way to the hole he fed Joe Rauchut (5 points, 4 boards) a beautiful bounce pass
that Rauchut laid in. This gave PC its first
lead since 2-0 as they went in front 59-58 with 3:36 to go.
Unfortuneately, the lead was short-lived.
Lowry scored his only two points of the second half on the next possession
and White made a beautiful shot off of a nice post up move.
Singletary followed with one of his three 3-pointers to trim the lead to
62-61. Clark then followed Whites lead
and posted his way to the basket for two more, making it 64-61. PC then began to intentionally foul Dougherty to
stay in the game and I believe every time they fouled in the final two minutes it was
Clark that went to the line. Singletary was
fouled on a 3-point attempt with 1:01 to go and he converted 2 of 3, which was good to cut
the lead down to 66-63. Clark hit two more at
the line and it was on the following possession that things really began to get wild. With the Quakers down by 5, it was obvious that
they needed a 3 ball. Dougherty thought the
same thing and put some extra pressure on Singletary and Zack, which was good enough to
free up Joey Rauchut for a wide open 3 at the top of the key. Rauchut, who was just 1 for 5 prior to that shot,
drilled the 3 and made it 68-66 with 35 seconds to go.
This made the PC fans go crazy. But
wait, it gets better. Rauchut then fouled who
else but Clark, who went to the line for a one-in-one.
To everybodys surprise, he missed it, and PC grabbed the rebound,
setting up a potential tying or maybe even a game winning shot. After taking some time off of the clock,
Singletary found Rauchut wide open again, this time from the left corner. Joey launched another 3 pointer, but
unfortuneately, this one went in and then rimmed out.
Clark gobbled up the rebound, hit four more free throws and sent the
Dougherty faithful home happy.
This
game featured so many great performances. White
had some great post up moves and finished with 21 points.
Zack Zeglinski played like a man possessed en route to 16 hard earned
points. Singletary had a phenomenal second
half, shooting 7 for 9 and outscored Lowry 22-2 after halftime. The final numbers looked like
this
Singletary: 9 for 18 (3 for 6 on treys), 8 of 12 at the line, 29 points, 11
rebounds, 7 assists; Lowry: 8 for 14 (2 for 7 on 3s), 18 points, 8 boards, 6 dimes, 4
steals. So looking at that, Singletary had
the better numbers, but Kyles team won the game, so you be the judge on who goes to
the McDonalds All-America game. I
would take both of them because its too hard to pick one (read Teds report on
this game for the more in depth look at the Sean vs. Kyle matchup). However, among all the great performances, it was
Shane Clark who was the difference maker. He
scored 19 points after halftime and had a barrage of beautiful moves in the post. My dad said he was a pogo stick around the rim,
which is a pretty accurate comparison. His
clutch free throw shooting down the stretch (8 for 9 in the final minute and a half) was
what really won it, where he finished 10 for 13 overall.
His final numbers were 8 for 16 from the floor, 10 for 13 from the line, 26
points and 10 rebounds. He was phenomenal in
the second half.
After
the game, Singletary and Lowry were named the games MVPs.
This shocked everybody, including Lowry.
I think he, like all of us, expected the trophy to go to Clark. So even though Clark didnt win the award
officially, Lowry went right over to Shane afterwards and gave him the trophy. That was a real classy move by Lowry, because I
think he understood that Dougherty probably wouldnt have won that game had it not
been for Clark. As for PC, this was a tough
loss to endure, but they played their hearts out. The
only visible mistakes that they made were getting down by double digits two separate times
and missing too many free throws. After going
17 for 18 the night before vs. GA, they converted only 12 of 18 against Dougherty. Who knows, they might have won had they made a
couple more foul shots, but thats neither here nor there. It was a great game nonetheless, one of the best
Ive ever seen. If you did happen to
miss the game, make sure to watch it tomorrow as it is being broadcasted on CN8 from noon
to 2PM. Im definitely going to tape it
and keep it to show my grandkids, because thats how much I enjoyed it.
Before
the PC-Dougherty game, Gratz beat GA 69-57.
I was going to report on that one too, but Ive gone on for far too
long here so Ill let my buddy ZB take care of it as Im sure hell do a
good job.
Special Eds Player of the Game: Shane Clark
Next Game: 2/3 vs. CHA
JAN. 30
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 74, Gtn. Academy 64
After
watching the Penn Charter-GA game on Friday night, its no wonder these teams have
such a historic and competitive rivalry. The
fans were intense and both teams played extremely hard, but in the end it was the Quakers
who picked up their ninth consecutive win, boosting the overall record to 15-6. This game had a different feel to it than the
first PC-GA game did three weeks ago (PC won that one, 56-53). In the first game, the Quakers jumped out to a
17-point first half lead, only to see it slip away and had to hold on for the victory. This time around, both teams brought more offense
to the table and made a lot less mistakes.
As
students, teachers, parents, and other fans from both schools squeezed into Penn
Charters crowded gym, each offense immediately found its comfort zone. GA brushed off an early 12-6 deficit and matched
the Quakers point for point in the first quarter, getting most of its points from star
players Brian Grimes and Ryan Ayers. Grimes
looked especially confident in the early going en route to 10 first quarter points, while
Ayers stepped up and added 6. I thought the
Patriots did a good job defensively on Sean Singletary, holding him to 5 in the
first. GA led 22-20 after eight minutes, and
for the most part the game would remain this close throughout.
Despite
being behind to start the second quarter, the Quakers never lost confidence and started to
play better defense. The highlights of the
period came courtesy of Rob Kurz, who made two simultaneous great plays on both
ends of the floor. Grimes made the mistake of
trying to drive to the bucket and was emphatically rejected by Kurz. The Quakers then picked up the loose ball and fed
it inside to Kurz under his own basket and he threw down a ferocious (yes, ferocious!)
dunk that made the Penn Charter student section go insane (I know this because I was among
them). Kurz (19 points, 12 boards, 4 blocks)
did most of his damage in the first half, scoring 13 points. PC took the second quarter 17-11, and all in all
it was a pretty even game up to this point. Singletary
picked up his scoring touch a bit and also added 13 in the first half, while Grimes was
the high man with 14. GA sr. G Doug Depte
played aggressively in the first half and scored all 6 of his points off the bench.
The
second half was when things got really exciting. The
Quakers led for most of the third quarter, but at the very end GA swooped in and stole
away the lead. With less than a minute to go
in the third, each team took turns trading three pointers.
First, GA sr. PG Larry Sharp (7 points, 6 assists) hit a three from the left
wing to make it 53-52 in the Patriots favor. Next,
Quakers jr. G Zack Zeglinski (13 points, 3 for 6 3s) hit a trey bomb
from the top of the key to give PC the lead again. However,
Ayers (16 points, 5 rebs) responded with another three from the same spot Sharp hit his,
and GA took a 56-55 into the fourth quarter.
When youre behind going into the fourth, who ya gonna call? No, not Ghostbusters, but I will admit I
set myself up for that one. The answer, of
course, is Sean Singletary. Sean was the man
in the final quarter and he led the Quakers over that final hump to the win. With neither team scoring much in the first three
minutes of the period, Sean hit a huge three at the top of the key with 4:55 to go, giving
PC a 60-56 advantage. This paralyzed the
Patriots, who never got closer than 4 points the rest of the way. GA kind of shot themselves in the foot offensively
in the fourth and they didnt score their first field goal of the period until 3:40
remained on the clock. This was partly due to
the Quakers defense, but GA just began to miss shots that they had been making the whole
game, and they finished with only 8 in the quarter. With
2:40 to go and GA still hanging around, Singletary put an exclamation point on the game by
doing what we all knew he could do but hadnt so far this season. He dunked it.
After picking off a pass, Sean raced down toward GAs end by himself, glanced
at the student section out of the corner of his eye and threw down a perfect dunk. It doesnt sound like much, but keep in mind
that Sean stands at 5 feet 11 inches tall. Im
511 and I can barely touch the net.
Sean ended with 30 points, 9 rebounds, 8 assists, and 4 steals (I know
hes going to get a triple double at least once before the season ends because
hes come close 3 or 4 times). This slam
was the stake driven through GAs heart, as they were forced to put PC on the line
the rest of the way (where they were able to seal the win).
Sammy Zeglinski (5 assists) scored only 2 points, but they were two big free
throws in the waning moments of the fourth. Joe
Rauchut provided another solid effort, finishing with 8 points, 4 boards and 3 steals. As for GA, Grimes was the headliner. He mixed 26 points, 9 boards, and 5 assists. With Kurz, Singletary, and Malverns Brian
Grandieri all graduating, look for Grimes to be the cream of the Inter-Acs crop
next year. He has a lot of talent.
The
schedule doesnt get any easier for either team.
Tomorrow night, GA will play Simon Gratz while Penn Charter will
battle with Cardinal Dougherty in the Scholastic Classic III at Arcadia University. Its not too often 4 of the citys top
10 teams meet in the same showcase event, so I highly recommend that everybody check this
out. GA-Gratz tips off at 6PM, while the
other highly anticipated game should begin around 7:45.
Saying a little more about the Dougherty game, I cannot wait for this. I think it has the potential to be the best game
played so far this season by any two teams. Everybody
will be focusing on the point guard matchup between Singletary and Kyle Lowry. If these two decide to do any one-on-one like Maureece
Rice and LeBron James did last year then I expect the roof to blow off of
Arcadias gym. Dougherty has the height
advantage in Shane Clark and DeSean White, who are both 6-8, but I
wouldnt count the Quakers out of this one. They
are on a major roll and they arent going to go down easily. It should be a classic.
Ramblings:
-
The PC fans, as usual on Friday night games, were outstanding. The chants were constant and the energy was
through the roof. The Charter Crazies spent
a lot of the night chanting Free Walling!, in reference to PC sr. and hoops
fan Chris Walling, who was suspended from school this week and wasnt at the
game. PC srs. Greg Lewis and Pete
the Pistol Silow even made signs that said Free Walling and passed them
out throughout the bleachers. With the help
of a little scotch tape, about 25-50 fans were proudly donning the signs on their shirts.
- Im pulling for the Quakers
tomorrow, not only because its been my job for the past 2 months but also because I
have a little bit with my dad on the outcome of the game.
Pops believes that Dougherty can pull off the win, so I took the Quakers and
asked him if he wanted to make things interesting. In
the end, the loser will pay the check at dinner after the game.
Special Eds Player of the Game: Sean Singletary
Next Game: You guessed it,
tomorrow night, 7:45 PM @ Arcadia U.
JAN. 24
NON-LEAGUE
Penn Charter 95, Hill School 88
One
hundred thirty-six. Thats how many
combined shots Penn Charter (33 for 67) and the Hill School (32 for 69) accounted for on
Saturday night, a very high number for a high school game.
And that number represents the kind of game this was. It was back and forth offense throughout, the kind
of fast paced game that sports fans love to watch. The
final score was NBA-like or perhaps even exceeded those standards (keeping in mind that an
NBA game is 48 minutes in length, while high school ones are only 32), with the 183 total
points being the highest scoring high school game Ive seen in quite a long time. Despite giving up 88 points, the Quakers played
overall good defense. They forced a lot of
turnovers and most of Hills points came on 3 pointers or offensive putbacks. PC let a lead that at one point was as large as 23
points slip to 5 in the final quarter, but they were able to hold on for their eighth
consecutive win, boosting the overall record to an impressive 14-6.
The first quarter was all Penn Charter. The
Quakers shot a scorching 11 for 18 (61%) in the first eight minutes en route to a 31-16
lead. They scored the first 10 points of the
game and 23 of the first 30, easily picking apart the 2-3 zone that Hill played for most
of the game. PC was able to accomplish this
in large part because of Sean Singletary (32
points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, 3 steals). Sean
was outstanding in the first quarter, finishing with 17 points, which was good enough to
outscore the entire Hill team. When hes
on, he is virtually unstoppable. It looked
like he had a good chance to surpass the 40-point mark for the first time this year (his
season high is 35), but he picked up his third foul with 4:46 to go in the second quarter
and had to go to the bench until halftime. Sean
settled with 32 for the game. The lead
ballooned to 23 in the second, and it appeared that the Quakers would easily coast to
victory. However, the determined Hill bunch
ended the half on a 12-2 run, making it 53-40 at halftime.
For most of the second half, PC maintained a double digit lead but it didnt
always seem like it. Every time PC would
score some points, Hill would come right back and do the same, preventing the Quakers from
blowing them out. The third quarter started
off on a humorous note, as Charter coach Jim
Phillips picked up a technical foul for jawing at the referees. The crowd applauded Flips rant, and he
didnt seem to care much that he got Ted up.
He mockingly clapped at the refs and continued to jaw at them until he was
restrained by his assistants. That was the
first technical foul that I think Ive seen in a high school game, and it was pretty
funny. Hill cut the lead to 9 a couple times
in the quarter, but Charter got it back up to 76-60 when Sammy Zeglinski (14 points, 8 rebounds) recovered
his own miss and tapped it in as the buzzer sounded.
Hill roared back from the deficit in the fourth.
They cut PCs lead to 93-88 in the final minute, and might have been able to
complete the comeback but were without two of their key players in 6-8 sr. F Beau Gibb (8 points) and 6-4 soph. G Devon McBride (31 points), who both fouled out. McBride was sensational, and his energy kept the
Blues in it. He scored a majority of his
points on aggressive drives to the basket and also on offensive putbacks. He is the second sophomore Ive seen so far
this season (the other being Abingtons Jason
Love) who really caught my attention, and I think its safe to say that they
would be talked about a lot more if their teams were better known. When McBride fouled out with 1:53 left in the
fourth, he was clearly dejected, either sitting on the bench with his hands on his head or
jumping up and down in frustration as he watched the comeback unfold without him. He really showed a lot of heart. 5-9 sr. G Alex
Kirk also was impressive. He finished
with 17 points and made a lot of pretty passes. He
has one of the more unique/ugly looking shots Ive seen, but he shot 6 for 9, so I
guess if it aint broke, then dont fix it.
6-9 jr. C Noah Levine played well
too, tallying 14 points, including two clutch threes that fueled Hills fourth
quarter comeback. I hadnt been to Hill
since ninth grade and Id never seen their basketball team play before, but they were
pretty good. They have a bunch of playmakers
on the roster and only four of them are seniors, so they should enjoy success for the next
few years.
As for PC, everybody chipped in, which is usually the case when your team scores 95
points. Rob Kurz was his usual self and came pretty close
to notching a triple double, finishing with 22 points, 14 rebounds, 8 blocks, and 6
steals. Sammy Zeglinski had his best game in quite awhile,
playing very assertive basketball. Usually
hell only shoot 3 pointers, but this time around he took the ball to hole, crashed
the boards, and hit some clutch free throws to thwart Hills rally. Keep in mind hes only a freshman. His brother Zack
Zeglinski contributed another solid unselfish performance with 12 points, 6 dimes, and
4 boards. The Quakers got a gritty
performance out of soph. Joe Rauchut (9P, 6R,
3S), who continues to fill in admirably for injured starter R.J. Hollinshead.
Brian Teuber (4 points) and Hanif
Hopkins saw significant time off the bench and both played well.
Ramblings:
-
It took me about 15 minutes to find the
gym at Hill. The school resembles a college
campus, and it was pretty easy to get lost. Thankfully,
a security guard pointed me in the right direction.
-
When I went up to PC asst. coach Mike Razler to get the official stat sheet after
the game, he exclaimed, You even made this trip?
Damn, youre all over the place!
For those of you who dont know, the Hill School is in Pottstown, which
is about 50 miles from my house in Northeast Philly.
How about a little gas money, Ted? (smile)
-
PCs next 3 games are against Malvern, GA,
and Cardinal Dougherty, who have a combined
record of 43-14. It will really say a lot
about the Quakers if they can maintain their current winning streak against these three
teams.
Special Eds
Player of the Game: Its hard to pick one MVP when so many guys chip in, so Ill
take the cowards way out and reward my player of the game to the entire PC starting
five. Honorable mention to Devon McBride and
Alex Kirk of Hill.
Next Game: 1/27 @ Malvern. However, if I can get my lazy butt out of bed, I
plan to make an appearance at the Dougherty-LaSalle game tomorrow, so make sure to check
back in for that.
JAN. 23
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 69, Episcopal 44
Remember
when I said PC played its most dominating game of the season against Haverford on Tuesday? Scratch that statement from the record. The Quakers absolutely manhandled the Churchmen
from Episcopal on Friday night, controlling almost every aspect of the game. EA did not play like their 15-2 record coming in
indicated, while PC played every bit as good as a team that has now won seven in a row. The loss dropped Episcopal to 2-3 in the Inter-Ac,
while PC has beaten every team in the league so far (and stands at a flawless 5-0).
Coming
into the game, I think a lot of people were concerned about how the Quakers were going to
handle EAs two sophomore studs in 6-4 F Gerald
Henderson and 6-2 G Wayne Ellington. Although the two are very talented, they are also
inexperienced, and Charters veterans used that as an advantage. The first quarter was played at a bit of a slow
pace for both teams, and this was most likely due to each team sizing up one another and
making the necessary adjustments on both sides of the ball.
Nothing too spectacular went down in the first, with PC holding an 11-8
advantage after eight minutes. Ellington (17
points, 8 for 21 shooting) scored 6 of the 8 Churchmen points, while Rob Kurz totaled 6 in the quarter for PC.
As
the second quarter progressed, the Quakers began to settle in more and more while EA
seemed to struggle more and more. Episcopal
was able to get shots for their two star players, but most of them were either off balance
or bad looks with a hand in their face. For
the umpteenth game in a row, PC played great team defense and that frustrated Episcopal
more than anything. It was clear that the
Churchmen were getting more discouraged as the game went along because they rarely got a
good look at the hoop. The Quakers upped
their lead to 28-19 at the half, led by Kurzs 10 points and 8 from Sean Singletary (15 points, 5 rebs, 3 assists, 2
steals). Things would only get better from
here.
PC
put the game away in the third, outscoring EA 22-7. The
Quakers came out of the locker room and scored 6 quick points, and two of these points
came on the best play of the night. Singletary
took the ball up the court and stopped at the top of the key and then fed a beautiful pass
inside to Kurz, who rewarded the crowd with a monstrous dunk over a helpless Henderson. This made it 34-19, and EA never had a chance
after this. This was one of Kurzs
better performances of the season, as he finished with 18 points and 8 rebounds. Although the numbers dont look amazing, Rob
was very aggressive, taking the ball to the hole and also knocking down some 16-20
footers. He also did a great job on defense
(particularly on Henderson, who despite scoring 19 points, never really looked
comfortable). Henderson was clearly
frustrated with himself, and after PC went up 43-23, Gerald went to the bench and kicked a
chair. The PC fans, who were awesome in this
one, got on Henderson when they saw this. They
never let up during the game, but Ill say more about the fans a little later. Zack
Zeglinski had another solid game for the Quakers, finishing with 12 points and 7
boards (his highlight of the night came when he swished a three ball at the third quarter
buzzer, making it 50-26 in Charters favor). Sammy Zeglinski (7P, 4R, 3A, 2S) had an all around
good game and fan favorite Hanif Hopkins (2P,
3A, 2S) again gave the team solid minutes off the bench.
It seems that the fans go crazy every time that Nif touches the ball and
theyre always pulling for him. Despite
having high scoring totals, Ellington and Henderson were outmatched in this one. They were hounded by Kurz and Singletary on the
defensive end and seemed to get emotionally and mentally frustrated as PCs lead
increased. They have tremendous upside, but
its clear that they also have a lot to work on over the next 2 seasons. Im sure the improvement will come as they
get more experienced. All in all, this was
one of the most impressive wins of the season (right up there with the win at GA). PC continues to play great in league competition,
and they were relentless against EA tonight. In
the beginning of the year, the Quakers would often play well for one part of the game and
then taper off in other parts, which allowed the opponent to stay alive. However, as of late theyve been playing
great basketball for all four quarters, and its showing on the scoreboard. But even though PC is as hot as ever, they
cant get cocky, especially with upcoming games against Malvern, Dougherty, and GA (who Im sure are hungry for revenge).
Ramblings:
-- Even though the
game was at Episcopal, there were definitely more PC fans than EA ones in the student
cheering section. Chants were non-stop
throughout the entire game, and they obviously had an influence on Coach Phillips.
In the fourth quarter, the fans began to chant We want Slobo!,
in reference to Quaker deep sub Mark Slobodinsky. Flipper immediately gave Slobo the nod, and he
came in and scored 2 points. Things got so
intense that a fight almost broke out in the bleachers at the start of the fourth quarter
between the two sets of fans, but it didnt escalate into anything too serious. There was constant bickering going on throughout
the game between the two sides (maybe it wasnt smart for all of us to sit in the
same section of the bleachers- smile), but the animosity is what makes the games fun. If you can sit in the bleachers on a Friday night
game and successfully get out alive, then you can most likely make it anywhere in the
world. My award for most intense fans goes
to Pete the Pistol Silow (who
drew chants of Screech! from the
EA faithful- you gotta cut your hair Pistol!) for PC and the shirtless crazy dude for EA
(I didnt catch his name, but he was pretty nuts).
-- I cleared a new hurdle in my
stat-taking challenge tonight. Ive been
getting better and better keeping the stats during the game, but tonight it was tough
because with all of the fans standing, I had to stand as well and hold my book at the same
time.
-- I think Im going to expand my
horizons and start getting out to some Catholic League games and writing some short
reports. I dont want to take anything
away from Jack, Space, or the other guys who do Catholic games
because I love reading their reports. I just
want to get to some games and see how I do writing about schools that arent my own. Who knows, maybe Ill run into those guys and
they can teach me a thing or two about the Catholic League.
-- A special thanks to Sean Woods for the compliment in his recent post. Sean, on behalf of all the student reporters, you
truly are an inspiration (smile).
Special Eds Player of the Game: Rob Kurz
Next Game: Tomorrow (1/24), @
Hill School.
JAN. 20
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 87, Haverford School 57
First off,
let me apologize for the lateness of the report. I
usually like to get them done as soon as I get home, but last night I went to the Linkin
Park concert right from the game and couldnt do that. So even though I debated starting the report at 1
AM when I got home, I decided to put it off for a day.
Thankfully, Ted was very forgiving and I hope everyone else will be too.
As
for the game, I think this was the most dominating the Quakers have been so far this year. Theyve had some pretty impressive wins, but
in this one they played solid for four straight quarters, never giving the Fords of
Haverford a chance. Despite being without R.J.
Hollinshead for the third consecutive game, PC smothered Haverford on defense for most
of the game and on top of that had one of their most impressive offensive showings of the
season. Sean Singletary (24 points, 6
steals, 3 boards, 2 assists) and Rob Kurz (17 points, 11 rebs) led the way in the
first quarter, which saw the Quakers jump to a quick 9-2 lead. Singletary is sixth in the city in scoring at 22.5
points per game, with Kurz also among the league leaders at 16.6 per contest. Maybe Im biased in saying it, but I think
these two are one of the best 1-2 punches in the city.
Between the two of them they bring so much to the game, and its been
fun watching them showcase their talents this season.
PC was up 20-8 after one, and the teams hot shooting in the second
quarter put the game away. In addition to
Kurz and Singletary, the Zeglinski bros got in on the action as well in the second. Zack (11 points, 2 boards, 3 for 5 on
3s) hit two of his three 3 point attempts in the final minute before halftime and Sammy
(11P, 6R, 2A, 3 for 5 on 3s) scored 8 of his 11 points in the quarter. PCs four stars had 48 of the teams 50
points at halftime, en route to a 29-point lead at intermission.
The
Quakers locked down on Haverford in the first half, alternating between a full court
press, double teams, and traps on the man with the ball.
The Fords could not solve the stifling D and often turned the ball over or
settled for a bad shot. Haverford standout
sr. G Pete Kathopoulis (16 points) was held to one field goal in the first half and
he had trouble creating opportunities for himself. Despite
his first half troubles, you can tell hes got talent.
Hes got a smoothness to his game that a lot of guys dont have. Even when he wasnt getting shots off, he
made good passes to set up his teammates, which is the sign of a truly talented point
guard.
The
defense let up a little bit in the third quarter and PC rewarded Haverford with some easy
baskets. It seemed like the Fords would maybe
claw themselves back into it, but Charters offense was too strong. The highlight of the game came in the third, when
Singletary picked off a pass and dribbled toward his own basket. Instead of laying it up or maybe even dunking it
(Ive yet to see Sean dunk this year, but I know he can), he waited for Kurz to catch
up to him before dishing a behind the back pass that Rob threw down for a dunk, making it
67-39 in PCs favor. It was an
unselfish Jason Kidd-like play that you unfortunately dont see too much of in
this day and age. Coach Phillips again rewarded his bench guys with the entire
fourth quarter, and they again played well. Fan
favorite Hanif Hopkins scored 5 off the bench, as did Dave McEnerney and R.J.
Lyons. Brian Teuber (3P, 3S, 2A,
2R) also contributed.
The
win set up a Friday night showdown against Inter-Ac rival Episcopal, who are off to
their best start in quite awhile at 15-2. Speaking
of formidable 1-2 punches, EA has their own dynamic duo in sophomores Wayne Ellington and
Gerald Henderson. These two are
creating buzz all over the city, and theyve been mentioned as one of the best
sophomore tandems to grace the court in quite some time.
However, the Churchmen are only 2-2 in league play while the Quakers boast a
perfect 4-0. Records aside, it should be a
great game.
Ramblings:
-
PC hit buzzer beaters in each of the first three quarters, and almost
did it for all four. In the first,
Singletary caught a Joe Rauchut air ball and laid it in as time expired. In the second, Zack Zeglinski hit a trey bomb from
the right wing. With time winding down in the
third, Rauchut heaved up a desperation 3, and to his surprise, it was all cotton. And in the waning seconds of the fourth, McEnerney
hit a 3 pointer, but there was still about 5-10 seconds left on the clock. Still, it was an interesting feat to accomplish.
- Former Charter student and basketball
player John Decker currently plays for the Fords, but John was not at the game. Maybe he was too afraid that the fans would get on
him too much (smile).
-
I apologize for the poor NFL picks last weekend, I was way off my
game. But who expected the Eagles to lose
that? Come on!
Im not even going to bother making a Super Bowl pick because I
dont even care. Three years in a row is
enough. Go Phillies.
Special Eds Player(s) of
the Game: Singletary and Kurz can share the honor again.
Next Game: Friday night, 7:30 @
Episcopal.
JAN. 16
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 64, Chestnut Hill Academy 39
Before
I get started on this one, I have to say a few words about a game that I missed earlier in
the week. Due to car problems with my amazing
1995 Neon, I was unable to attend Penn Charters 69-67 win over Life Center (NJ)
on Tuesday. Im obviously upset that I
missed this one, because as the score indicates, it was a good game. The headline from this one was that the Quakers
were able to squeak out a victory without their two stars, Sean Singletary and Rob
Kurz. Rob and Sean warmed up, but were
benched right before the game for disciplinary reasons.
But as we Philadelphians have seen all season with the Eagles, when
star players go down, other guys need to pick up the slack and produce. This is exactly what happened on Tuesday, with
everybody stepping up to help get a win. The
Quakers were led by Zack Zeglinskis 23 points (Zack also surpassed the 1,000
point milestone in this game), and Sammy Zeglinski (20 points), Joe Rauchut (11
points), & Brian Teuber (10 points) also contributed. Despite being undersized, the Quakers depth
allowed them to beat Life Center for the second time this year. And now onto tonights game
Though not as crowd pleasing as last Fridays game at GA, this game still made
PC fans happy. The first quarter was all
about Singletary (17 points, 5 steals, 3 dimes), who returned to the lineup with a
vengeance. With Kurz (9 points, 5 boards) and
the Zeglinski brothers starting the quarter on the bench, Singletary took over, quickly
knocking CHA out of the game. He scored 9 of
the teams first 11 points and 12 overall in the quarter, but his most impressive
play came on the defensive end. When CHA jr.
G Julian McFadden picked off a Quaker pass, he appeared to have an easy fast break
layup. But all of a sudden, Singletary caught
up to him from behind and recorded a NASTY block off of the backboard that would have made
Dr. Funk stand up and applaud. The gym
was still buzzing five minutes later, and that had to be one of the better blocks anyone
had seen in quite a long time. PC led 18-9
after one, and they quickly provided the knockout punch in the second quarter, much to the
dismay of the large CHA fan group. The
Quakers forced a bunch of turnovers in the second period and put the game away, outscoring
the Blue Devils 17-1. They would have held
CHA scoreless, but McFadden sunk a free throw with 1.8 seconds left and got his team on
the board. I was labeled a jinx by my friends
sitting around me, for a few seconds earlier I exclaimed, They aint gonna
score! (The free throw naturally came right after my bold prediction- smile). Nevertheless, Charter was up 35-10 at halftime,
and the 10 points allowed in a half was a season best.
The team defense seems to get better every game. In addition to Singletarys 5 swipes, Rauchut
(6 points, 2 rebs), Sam (2R, 4A), and Zack (9P, 2A) each had 3 steals. Rauchut did a great job filling in for RJ
Hollinshead, who is still recovering from the knee injury he suffered last Friday
night.
With
the Quakers up by 20+ points for the rest of the game, Coach Phillips let his bench
players get some tick, and they played well. Sr.
F Dave McEnerney led the assault, notching 8 points, 3 rebounds and 2 assists. Also performing well were Teuber (1P, 7R), Hanif
Hopkins (2P, 3R, 2S, and a block- hes 56!), James Hannah
(2P, 4R), RJ Lyons (4P, 5R), and Milo Trauss (4 points). Ive said all year that the Quakers strong
point is their depth, and that has stood out in the last two games, with everybody getting
in on the action. As for CHA, not much went
right. As a team, they shot a brutal 25% from
the field (13 for 51). Individually, their
star players were off too. McFadden (who
looks a lot like child rapper Lil Bow Wow) had a rough night. He had some nice moves, but he couldnt put
the ball in the hoop (finishing 3 for 18, with most of his 12 points coming in garbage
time). But I saw him play earlier this year,
and when hes on he can be very dangerous. Sr.
captain Chris McInerney (no relation to Dave) was also shut down, tallying 8
points.
The
crowd, as expected, was pretty rocking. It
lacked the back and forth chants that the PC-GA game had, but it was still fun. PC fans, though spread out across the gym, were
pretty loud (I tried to keep my section energized by doing a bit more screaming than I
usually do- smile). The highlight for CHA
fans came when one of their supporters was thrown out by the ref for being a little too
rowdy. As for PC, this was their fifth
consecutive win, which pushed their overall record to 11-6 (and a more important 3-0 in
the Inter-Ac). They will really be tested in
the next 2 weeks, with games against Inter-Ac rivals Episcopal (Jan. 23) and a
rematch with GA (1/30) as well as a matchup with city powerhouse Cardinal
Dougherty on January 31. The Quakers are
picking the right time to get hot and it sure has been fun watching them play lately.
Before
I go, I have to take some time to brag. For
all of you who read my report on last Fridays PC-GA game, you were treated to my NFL
picks for that weekend. Well, in case you
missed it, I went a perfect 4-0 (including my upset special Carolina over the Rams) and I
will again test my football knowledge and attempt to pick the winners of the championship
games this Sunday. In the AFC, Im going
upset and picking the Colts to beat the New England Patriots. Although the game is at New England, I think Peyton
Manning is a man on a mission and he will lead his team to the Super Bowl. In the NFC, the question around town has to be
Can the Eagles finally advance to the Super Bowl? Well sports fans, the answer is yes. I cannot see the Panthers coming in here and
pulling off the upset, it just cannot happen. The
Panthers are better than most people give them credit for, but after last weeks win,
the Eagles simply cannot lose this game. It
will be close, but Im picking the Birds to win it 24-17.
Special
Eds Player of the Game: Props to PCs bench for chipping in for a second
consecutive game, but my player of the game has to go to Sean Singletary, especially for
that jaw dropping block.
Next Game:
1/20 vs. Haverford School.
JAN. 9
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 56, Gtn. Academy 53
From
an offensive standpoint, this was not the greatest game.
Neither team shot particularly well, and there werent any
explosive performances. But in
terms of intensity, this was one of the best games that Ive seen (from the teams and
from the crowd). Comfort wise, this was also
a nightmare. The GA gym was packed, with many
people forced to stand or sit on the floor for the entire game. The bleachers were filled to capacity an hour
before the game even started, but people continued to cram themselves into the stands
throughout the game. But in the end, even if
your back, legs, feet, and butt began to ache as the game progressed, it turned out to be
incredibly worthwhile. Although the crowds
were hostile, this game had such a powerful atmosphere to it. With PC fans sitting in one section of the
bleachers and GA fans in the other, the chants kept going from start to finish. Im sorry to say I cant repeat most of
these chants (smile), but the energy of the crowd was amazing. The respective fans erupted on every significant
play, and in the end the Penn Charter supporters got the last laugh. This game was just another example of why this is
such an exciting and competitive rivalry. Both
teams wanted it so badly, and the crowd just contributed to the flow of the game.
The
first quarter was ugly for both teams. PC
shot only 4 for 15 (27%) in the period, while GA shot an even worse 2 for 15 (13%). Although defense definitely became a key later on
in the game, it was not much of a factor in the first quarter. Both teams just missed shots, and I think this was
due to the excitement that each team had to be feeling.
After the first eight minutes, the score was 10-5 in the Quakers favor. While things began to pick up for PC in the second
quarter, GAs offensive woes continued. Charter
got some nice inside looks from Rob Kurz (18 points, 6 boards) and some clutch
jumpers by Zack Zeglinski (11 points, 4 rebs, 2 steals, 3 for 5 3s) pushed
the Quakers lead to 25-9. PC led 27-16 at the
half, but the numbers for both teams werent very pretty. The Quakers shot 10/30 (33%) in the first half,
while GA converted just 27% of its shots (7 for 26).
The star players all had statistically rough first halves too: Kurz (3 for
9), Sean Singletary (2/8), Ryan Ayers (1/5), and Brian Grimes (3/11). But all of these players would have significant
impacts on the second half, which Ill get to in a second. The Quakers appeared to be cruising with a 27-16
halftime lead, but as my colleague ZB said in a recent report, when two Inter-Ac
teams step onto the court, the game will be competitive right down to the final buzzer. This game was no different, as the Patriots came
storming back in the third quarter.
The third period was not kind to the Quakers at all, as they saw a double digit
lead shrink down to one by the end of the quarter. But
more importantly, they lost one of their key players to injury. Jr. F R.J. Hollinshead hit the floor hard
with a right knee injury with 2:21 left in the third and had to be carried off of the
court. By the looks of R.J.s painful
facial expressions, his prognosis does not look good.
Hopefully it will be nothing severe so that R.J. can get back on the court as soon
as possible. Ive said this whole season
that his play has impressed me more than anything else, and it would be terrible to lose
him for an extended period of time. He makes
all of the hustle/physical plays that are so important to the outcome of the game. In his place, soph. Joe Rauchut logged
significant minutes down the stretch, filling Hollinsheads shoes as best as he
could. He played well, scoring 4 points and
grabbing 5 rebounds. The third quarter
belonged to GA, though. Their shots finally
began to fall, and they used a 13-2 run to trim PCs lead to 36-35. Ayers (22 points, 9 rebounds) came to life in the
second half, scoring 8 points during the run (including back to back trey bombs). Hes got a great inside-outside game and he
stayed confident even though he had a tough first half, scoring 19 of his 22 points after
halftime. Grimes (7 for 20, 17 points, 9
boards) was also key in getting GA back into it, scoring 11 of his 17 in the second half.
Going
into the fourth, the Quakers had to do something, because it would be too painful and
humiliating to lose this one. Enter
Singletary (19 points, 12 rebounds, 5 assists) and Kurz.
With their team on the ropes, these two guys responded brilliantly and
calmly led PC to a nail-biting win. Singletary
scored the first 6 Quaker points of the fourth quarter, knocking down some clutch jumpers
and a pretty spin move/underhand layup. Kurz
scored the next 4, pushing the lead to 46-41. A
beautiful bounce pass from Singletary to a streaking Rauchut made it 51-45, but GA refused
to quit. Five more points from Ayers got the
Patriots to within 3 two times, but clutch free throw shooting by PC closed the deal. A comforting thing about the Quakers is that they
are a great free throw shooting team (especially in the clutch), so Charter fans
shouldnt have to worry about the teams ability to knock down foul shots with
the game on the line. They shot 17 for 19 as
a team, most of the damage being done by Kurz (8 for 9) and Singletary (7 for 8).
This was a great win against a very tough opponent. Any
doubt about PCs ability to win a big game is long gone, because this was about as
big as it gets. Its not easy going into
an arch-rivals gym and stealing a victory. The
most impressive thing about the game was not the fast start, but the way the Quakers
finished. After blowing the big lead, it
would have been easy to give up and let GA ride the momentum to a win. But the team responded well, playing a very
aggressive fourth quarter en route to what I think was the best and most satisfying
victory so far this season. Off to a 3-0
2004, it appears that PC is poised to put their so-so 2003 behind them and repeat as
Inter-Ac champs.
Ramblings:
Some of my favorite chants of the night
were: Nice Hat, Fat Kid!, Lauras better!, Braces! (in
reference to Singletarys newly acquired mouth full of metal), and . . .
. There are many more that are either too dirty to list or I just plain forgot because
there were so many. It was a fun night.
For all you NFL fans out there,
Im offering my predictions for this weekends games. If Im right, I can brag about how smart I
am, but if I get them wrong you can feel free to e-mail me and tell me how stupid I am
(smile). But here they are: Carolina over St.
Louis (upset special!), New England over Tennessee, Indianapolis over Kansas City, and the
only one that really matters, the Eagles in a close one over the Pack.
Be sure to look out for the rematch
between these two teams, which will take place on Friday, Jan. 30 @ Penn Charter. And yes, it is a night game (YAAAY!)
Special
Eds Player(s) of the Game: Sean Singletary and Rob Kurz.
Next Game:
1/13 vs. Life Center (NJ) (I think this is the right opponent, but if there is any changes
since PC already played Life Center this year, e-mail me and let me know)
JAN. 6
NON-LEAGUE
Penn Charter 66, Friends' Central 50
As I
watched PC G Sean Singletary warm up before the game with assistant coach Mike
Razler, it was evident that Sean had the touch. I
didnt count how many of the 3 pointers he took went in, but Im guessing it was
about 60-70%. He then came out and knocked
down all three of his 3-point attempts in the first quarter en route to 12 points,
allowing the Quakers to jump on Friends Central early.
Singletary had his best game in quite awhile, scoring 23 points, grabbing 10
boards, and dishing out 7 assists. He was a
major presence for the entire game, whether it was scoring the ball, boxing out in the low
post, making crisp passes, or playing good defense. When
hes on, the Quakers as a team are usually on, which was the case today. PC got out to an early lead (which was good for a
change) and never let up. They were up 25-10
after one, and had a 20-point lead 2 minutes into the second quarter. Rob Kurz (8/15, 18 points, 13 rebs, 4
steals, 3 assists) continued to produce for the Quakers.
He was a force down low, grabbing 10 offensive rebounds that led to some
easy putbacks. If you look up the word
consistency in the dictionary, you should see Robs picture next to it,
because thats what kind of player hes been this year. Fr. G Sammy Zeglinski (12 points, 2 steals)
also produced, hitting on 4 of his 7 three point attempts.
The Mustafa Shakur-less Phoenix looked decent, but it was obvious that they
missed their star guard (along with the 7 other players who graduated), who now plays
under Lute Olson at Arizona. They shot
only 44% (8 for 18) at the line, including some brick misses. They do have some talented players, though. Chris McCann (13 points) led three players
in double figures, which also included Justin Plummer & Max Huc (11
points). Despite their troubles, they are a
very young team with some definite upside.
After jumping out to a 32-12 first half lead, the Quakers watched Friends Central
go on a 12-2 run, cutting the lead in half. The
score was 38-26 at halftime, and for a moment it looked like the Phoenix were going to
make it a game. However, PC came out of the
locker room on fire, scoring 12 straight points to push the lead to 24. Zack Zeglinski scored all 5 of his points
during the run, and the Quakers never looked back from there. They played great defense in the third quarter,
forcing turnovers and making the Phoenix take some bad shots on the way to outscoring them
20-7 and building the lead to 58-33 after three quarters.
The
Quakers second consecutive win paved the way for a Friday night showdown with
Inter-Ac rival Germantown Academy. This
game should give an early indication on who is the favorite to win the league. If PC is able to win, it will prove a lot about
the teams character because it is not going to be easy going into the hostile
environment at GA and getting a victory. The
game is so hyped that Ive heard youll need to show up at least 30 minutes
early for a decent seat, which says a lot about the intense rivalry between these two
teams. If you like talented players, raucous
crowds, rowdy fans, and chants, you wont want to miss this one. It should be a great game.
Special Eds Player of the Game: Sean Singletary
Next Game: Friday night @ GA. The game tips off at 7:30.
JAN. 3
INTER-AC
Penn Charter 56, Malvern 47
One of the
best things about a new year is you can start with a clean slate, and this holds true for
the Penn Charter basketball team. Putting a
6-6 2003 behind them, the Quakers came out and effectively won their first game of 2004
against Malvern Prep. What makes the victory
even sweeter is that this was the first league game of the year, which are games that PC
must win if they wish to repeat as Inter-Ac
Champions. I know its a little too
early to be talking about the championship after only one game, but it was a promising
start. The Quakers had been mired in a slump,
losing four of their previous five games, so it was encouraging to see them come out and
control the tempo for most of the game.
Things
started out a bit slowly, for PC and for me. Minutes
before tipoff, I misplaced my pen and didnt locate it until halftime. Luckily for me, the always reliable Ted
(smile) was there and let me copy down his stats during halftime. The Quakers also stumbled a bit at the start,
playing a sluggish first quarter in which they were outscored 14-11. However, things picked up, as they usually do. The first half lacked offense from both sides,
but it was PCs stifling defense that set the tone for the remainder of the game. They held Malvern to 6 points in the second
quarter, and Rob Kurz (13 points, 6 boards) had
5 of his 6 blocked shots in the first half. Kurz
and Sean Singletary (21 points, 7 rebs) each
scored 9 in the first half, while Brian Grandieri
(8 for 11, 18 points) paced Malvern with 7 as PC took a 22-20 lead into the half.
Offensively,
things flowed a lot more smoothly for both teams in the second half. With the lead swinging back and forth between the
two teams in the third quarter, the Quakers got unexpected offensive lifts from jr. F RJ Hollinshead and so. F Joe Rauchut.
Hollinshead, known for his defense and hard-nosed style of play, finished
with 9 points, 5 assists, and 3 boards. He
also continued his physical play, taking two timely charges and diving for a loose ball
that led to a timeout. The team seemed to
feed off RJs energy and eventually pulled away in the fourth quarter. Rauchut only made one shot, but it was a huge one. With time winding down in the third quarter and PC
leading 35-34, Rauchut made a wide open 3-pointer from the left wing just before the
buzzer. This gave the Quakers a 4 point
cushion after three, and Malvern was never able to get back into it. Singletary then took over in the final quarter,
knocking down 3 big shots to keep Malvern at arms length. As for Malvern, this was the first time I really
saw Grandieri play, and he left me impressed. I
watched the Malvern-PC game last season, but it was hard to focus on his play because of
the rowdy PC fans (the game was on a Friday night, and anyone who has been to a Penn
Charter game on a Friday night will understand why its hard to focus on individual
performances). But anyway, Grandieri is an
aggressive ballplayer who always seemed to be going 110%.
Im sure he would have scored more than 18 points, but he missed some
time in the first half due to foul trouble.
As
for the Inter-Ac as a whole, this was my first opportunity to see all the teams play and
assess PCs competition for the next six weeks.
I think the league is definitely up for grabs, with four teams that are very
evenly matched. Although the records are all
over the place, its too difficult to pick a favorite.
Judging by wins and losses, it would appear that GA (15-2) and Episcopal (13-0) should be able to run away with
it, but both of these teams looked vulnerable today and didnt play as good as their
record indicates. And Im not trying to
take anything away from either team because they are extremely talented, Im just
stressing that the winner of this league may not be the team with the best overall record
because the teams are so deep. Wow, that was
really confusing. Let me try to say it again
in simpler terms. The Inter-Ac is like the
NBAs Western Conference in that there are so many talented teams and a champion
cant be determined by who has the best record.
Its all going to come down to which team wants it the most and who plays the
best defense. Is that clearer? I hope so. Whatever
the result, its going to be fun to watch.
Special Eds Player of the Game: RJ Hollinshead
Next game: 1/6 @ Friends Central
DEC. 26-30
SLAM DUNK TO THE BEACH (Lewes, Del.)
Our Savior/New American (NY) 74,
Penn Charter 52 (Dec. 26)
Laurinburg Prep (NC) 57, Penn
Charter 52 (Dec. 28)
Mt. Zion (NC) 67, Penn Charter 55
(Dec. 29)
Ouch! Im glad I wasnt able
to attend this tournament, because it was a rough one for Penn Charter, wins and losses
wise. The Slam Dunk to the Beach (a little
cold for beaches, isnt it?) Tournament in Lewes, DE featured five full days and 46
games of the most talented teams in the country, with teams from New York, Florida, Texas,
California, and even one from Canada (to name a few).
Despite my absence, Ive gathered enough information to attempt to
write a report on what happened to PC down in the first state. Also, in the spirit of the New Year, Id like
to take a look back at the Quakers up and down 2003, and then a look ahead to what awaits
them in 2004.
The
first game was against Our Savior/New American,
who hail from Centereach, New York. Coming
into the year, this team was ranked #19 in the country by schoolsports.com and features
one of the nations best players in Colombian sr. F Juan Diego Tello Palacios. PC had already met Our Savior down in North
Carolina at the end of November in the Bull City
Classic, and the Quakers squeaked out a 70-67 win behind a strong game from G Sean Singletary.
This time they werent so lucky. OSNA
jumped out to a 25-11 lead after one and made it 40-21 by halftime. Singletary was shut down, scoring a season low 10
points. Zack Zeglinski scored 16 to lead the Quakers and Rob Kurz added 13, but it wasnt enough. Palacios scored 23, and falling behind early
doomed PC. The second game was much closer,
but Charter fell to Laurinburg Prep (NC),
57-52. In the finale, PC was matched up
against the nations #2 team in Mt. Zion
from Durham, North Carolina. The Quakers also
played Mt. Zion in the Bull City Classic, succumbing to the Warriors 75-69 in overtime,
despite 31 points from Singletary. This time
around, the Quakers fell 67-55. I dont
know if this was coincidence or not that PC ended up playing these same two teams again,
but come on! Charter may have fallen to 6-6
in this tournament, but the strength of schedule was working against them. Im sure the teams in Mt. Zions
division back at home might have to play them
twice, but what are the chances that Penn Charter ends up playing them two times? Whats next, back-to-back games against the Los Angeles Lakers?
Maybe it was meant to happen that way, I dont know. Like I said, I wasnt there, but its
pretty crazy that it turned out the way it did. But
anyway, Im sure the Quakers will bounce back. I
know theres no place for moral victories in sports because a loss is a loss, but
Charter had to take something from this, some kind of confidence. PC scorekeeper/stat-man Gerry Mr. Sas Sasse told me that even
though PC went 0-3 in the tourney, they werent entirely unhappy with the way things
went. The team played well considering the
talent and older players it was up against. Mr.
Sas also said that they would take these hard fought games into league play and hopefully
have a successful second half. The good news
is that the season isnt even halfway over yet, but Ill get to that in a
moment. In other Slam Dunk news, PCs
rival Germantown Academy also participated in
the tourney. GAs fortunes were much
greater than the Quakers, as they finished the tournament 3-0 and pushed their overall
record to 14-2. Brian Grimes averaged 26 points over the first 2
games, Ryan Ayers averaged 16, and the Patriots
got 13 per game from Andrew Ott (including 24
in the finale against Laurel). Public League
power Chester also participated, losing both of
its games to Mt. Vernon (NY) and Mt. Zion.
A Look Back, plus A Look
Ahead
Before
I look ahead to 2004, I want to take a look back at 2003 and share a few highlights of the
Quakers young season. With Mike Boles (Albright) and Matt Ryan (Boston College) gone from the starting lineup and R.J. Hollinshead & Sammy Zeglinski taking their place, the Quakers
started off strong. As I already stated, PC
started off 1-1 at the Bull City Classic, almost pulling off an improbable upset against
Mt. Zion. Sean Singletary scored 58 points
in the two games, and this was just the start for Sean.
He scored 29 points in the home opener against Carroll, a game that went down to the final
minutes. Next, Singletary was matched up with
SJ Neumanns Richard Tabby
Cunningham, with both players being mentioned as the areas top guard. The two players went one-on-one during the game
for a little bit, but Tabby got into some foul trouble and finished with 11 points, while
Singletary scored 25 in leading the Quakers to an impressive 77-66 victory. PC won its third straight game against Life Center (NJ) in the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic, with Singletary almost
getting a triple double. Rob Kurz continued
his consistency and scored 18 points in the 77-60 win.
The biggest shocker of the season came on Dec. 16, as PC lost its second
game of the season to Abington Friends in
heartbreaking fashion, losing on a free throw with 2 seconds left. After shellacking GFS 85-37, the Quakers dropped a tough one to
reigning Catholic League champ St. Joes Prep in
the Scholastic Play-by-Play Classic, despite an
outstanding performance by Singletary and another double double from Kurz. PC proved they could win when Singletary was not
at his best, easily defeating Bonner in the Scholastic Classic II. After the win against Bonner, Charters
record was a respectable 6-3. However, they
then ran into trouble in Delaware, where they currently stand at 6-6. I dont think the mediocre record reflects
the Quakers performance, though. They
were matched up with two top-20 teams twice, as well as extremely talented teams like
Neumann and the Prep. The only real bad
loss was against Abington, where the Quakers underachieved. So I guess what Im saying is dont let
the record fool you. This is still a team to
look out for, which leads us to
2004! Yes, it is time to start
a new year, one which I hope produces a lot of wins for Penn Charter. The bad thing is that the schedule will only get
harder, but I think the Quakers are up to the challenge.
Even though PC lost more games than they would have liked to in 2003, they can bury
those losses by winning against Inter-Ac opponents. League play begins on Saturday against Malvern Prep and continues all the way through
February, and the Quakers are poised for a repeat as Inter-Ac champs. The biggest challenge is undoubtedly going to come
from GA, who would like to bring the league championship back to Fort Washington. GA has one of the deepest starting lineups around,
with 5 guys that can score at will. Their
14-2 record is no fluke, so PC has their work cut out for them. This is how it should be though, with the oldest
high school rivalry in the country going head to head for a shot at the title. PC travels to GA for the first time on Jan. 9, and
the loser will get a shot at revenge three weeks later on Jan. 30 at Penn Charter. But the Inter-Ac isnt just these two teams. For once, this is one of the deepest and most
talented leagues in the city, so some other teams will also look to steal the title from
PC. One of these teams is Episcopal Academy, which has raced out to one if
its best starts in recent memory. The
Churchmen have yet to lose at 11-0, and they feature two of the citys top sophomores
in Gerald Henderson & Wayne Ellington.
PC will travel down City Line Ave. to play EA on 1/23, with the rematch
taking place on 2/13 at PC. Another team that
is demanding respect is Malvern, who have started out 8-3.
They may have been overlooked in the preseason picks, but 6-4 sr. G-F Brian Grandieri is leading a talented Friars
squad. PC squares off with them on Saturday
at Arcadia U as well as on 1/27 at Malvern. Haverford (1/20 & 2/6) is also making noise at 5-5, while Chestnut Hill Academy (1/16 & 2/3) is struggling at 4-9. It all concludes with the Inter-Ac Postseason Tournament (2/17-2/21 @ EA),
which gives all six teams an opportunity to snatch away the title (at least on paper). It should be a dogfight, with four teams equally
capable of winning it all. It wont be
easy, but my early prediction is for the Quakers to repeat.
Sure, theyve struggled a little bit so far, but league play is a whole
new season and the Quakers arent ready to relinquish that championship. Perhaps the most anticipated game of the
seasons second half will take place on Jan. 31 at Arcadia University, where Penn Charter will meet
nationally ranked Cardinal Dougherty. PC got the best of Dougherty last year, but the
Cardinals are back and better than ever, boasting a lineup that features four D-1
prospects. The spotlight will be on the
matchup between Singletary and Dougherty PG Kyle
Lowry, with these two considered to be the best point guards in the city. This one has the makings of a classic, so
dont miss it.
Special Eds Player of 2003:
Sean Singletary, who was outstanding throughout.
Next Game: Inter-Ac Tripleheader:
Saturday, Jan. 3 @ Arcadia vs. Malvern. In
the other games, GA will play CHA and Episcopal will play Haverford.
Hope everyone had a good 2003, and Ill catch yall in the New Year. Peace
DEC. 23
NON-LEAGUE, SCHOLASTIC CLASSIC II
Penn Charter 66, Bonner 34
If
things keep going this way for the Penn Charter basketball team, at least there
shouldnt be any two game losing streaks in the future. PC lost to Mt. Zion, then responded by beating
Carroll. After falling to Abington Friends,
Charter came back the next game to beat GFS. Following
the defeat against SJ Prep at the Palestra on Saturday, the Quakers came out and took care
of business again, easily beating the Friars of Monsignor Bonner at the Scholastic Classic
II. Even though PC won this game by 32
points, I dont think it was their best performance.
The second quarter was a little sloppy, with the Quakers totaling only 9 points
(they didnt score a field goal until just under 4 minutes left in the quarter). However, things soon began to pick up. The game was flowing a lot better in the second
half, and PCs defense seemed to get better and better as the game progressed. Bonner didnt get too many good shots, and
when they did get a clean look the shot usually rimmed out.
I hadnt seen them play yet this season, but it looks like they have a
good team, as their 5-2 record coming in indicated. They
just couldnt buy a bucket today, shooting a hair under 30% (16 for 54). If you shoot that bad, there isnt much
chance for a win, no matter who youre playing.
Coming
into todays game, PC sr. G Sean Singletary
had a scoring average of 27.9 PPG, which has to be one of the highest in the city. Sean had scored at least 21 in every game, and had
30+ points in 3 of the 8 Quaker games. Therefore,
everybody had to be wondering how Charter would respond when Singletary didnt have a
good scoring night. As it turns out, they
responded quite well. Against Bonner,
Singletary was held to 12 points, but the Quakers didnt suffer. Everybody else chipped in, and even though Sean
didnt score 30 points, PC won in blowout fashion, which was very encouraging. Singletary may not have been scoring as much as he
usually does, but he still played a great game, grabbing 7 rebounds, dishing 5 assists,
and grabbing 4 steals. He also played great
defense, and he provided his usual highlight play when he broke Bonner Sr. G Andrew Thorntons ankles in the fourth
quarter, fooling Thornton so bad that he fell to the floor.
This, above all, showed that the Quakers can win even when Singletary
isnt at his best. Rob Kurz (19 points, 10 rebounds) picked up the
slack and provided another double double, scoring 16 of his 19 points after halftime. Rob is quietly having a great year, and he is hard
to stop down low once he gets going. Zack Zeglinski rebounded from one of his worst
games ever, scoring 17 points and grabbing 5 boards.
Zack and his brother Sam (8
points, 3 assists) scored 13 of the Quakers 19 first quarter points, pacing the team to a
19-7 lead after one. It was good to see these
guys bounce back from awful games against the Prep because they are so important to this
team. When they are both on, PC will be a
hard team to beat. Carlos Monroe led Bonner with 12 points, but he,
like everyone else on the team, couldnt get his shot to fall, finishing 6 for 17. As has been the case for most of this season, Penn
Charter started off slow and finished strong, outscoring Bonner 36-13 in the second half. However, once league play starts, PC is going to
have to put it together for four quarters because the games are going to be much more
intense.
This
was a good win against Bonner, especially since it was coming off a tough loss against the
Prep. However, PCs next step is going
to make or break the season. League play
officially starts on January 3 against Malvern Prep,
and the Quakers are going to have to shake off the inconsistency and put together a
winning streak, which would boost the teams confidence. What should motivate the Quakers to play even
harder is the fact that their Inter-Ac rivals have started out so strong. Episcopal,
led by sophomores Wayne Ellington and Gerald Henderson, has a surprising record of 9-0,
while PCs archrival Germantown Academy is
back and better than ever at 9-2. The
Inter-Ac is one of the strongest leagues in the city this year, so PC is going to have to
play mistake-free ball if they want to repeat as champs.
If anything, league play is going to be very fun to watch, especially the
Friday night games, which are out of control.
Special
Eds Player of the Game: Rob Kurz, but props to Zack Zeglinski for shaking off the SJ
prep game and playing well against Bonner.
Next Game: Penn
Charter will be participating in the Slam Dunk to the Beach Tournament down in Delaware,
but the next game Ill be reporting on will most likely be 1/3 vs. Malvern. If I dont make it down to Delaware,
Ill post the results on the page. Happy
Holidays, everyone!
DEC. 20
SCHOLASTIC PLAY-BY-PLAY CLASSIC
SJ Prep 78, Penn Charter 73
Another
game, another loss at the Palestra for the Penn Charter basketball team. For the second straight year, the Quakers lost
their game in the Scholastic Play-By-Play Tournament, albeit in a different fashion. Last year, they held a 14-point lead over Gratz,
only to lose the game 64-58. This time around
against St. Joes Prep, PC was behind for most of the game and had to worry about
erasing a double-digit lead instead of blowing one. This
was a game that any PC player will tell you they should have won, but poor shooting (the
Quakers shot 36% as a team) and second chance points by the Hawks held the Quakers back.
Things started out looking promising enough. Charter
controlled the tempo for most of the first quarter and led 11-9 with 1.1 seconds left. However, the Prep hit a 3 pointer, and then PC
soph. F Brian Teuber threw the ensuing inbound
pass into the arms of Prep sr. G John Griffin,
who made a layup as the buzzer sounded. The
quick 5-point spurt gave the Prep a 14-11 after one, and PC would never lead again. The second quarter ended up being the crucial
quarter of the game, with the Prep outscoring PC 28-20, creating enough space between the
two teams to thwart any chance of the Quakers ever regaining the lead. St. Joes used the 3-headed monster of
Griffin (9 for 20, 26 points, 7 boards), sr. G Chris
Clark (22 points, 3 assists), and soph. F Reggie
Redding (18 points, 14 rebs, 2 blocks) to smother the Quakers. Any time PC got within striking distance, one of
these three guys would hit a big shot that would make it a 7 or 8 point game. All of them are great players in their own
different ways. Griffin is one of the more
aggressive shooters that Ive seen. Even
when his shots werent falling, he kept firing away and never lost confidence. The 5-7 Clark is a good ballhandler, and his size
(or lack thereof) doesnt hold him down. Hes
a good shooter and he doesnt shy away from taking the ball to the hole. Perhaps the most impressive player was Redding. Hes got a great inside-outside game for his
size, and he snagged a lot of rebounds that led to second chance points. If he hadnt gotten those rebounds, the
outcome may have been different. All in all,
it didnt look like the Prep missed the departed Mark Zoller too much. Im sure they would love to have him back,
but they managed well without him. They are a
deep team, and I wouldnt count them out in the Catholic League title race.
With the Prep holding a 42-31 halftime lead, it was obvious that PC would need to
come out, hit some shots, and play better defense. They
ended up having their best quarter, outscoring the Prep 20-14 and getting to within 56-51
as the quarter ended. Despite missing 14
shots, PC sr. G Sean Singletary (11 for 25, 35
points, 12 boards) was fabulous. He kept the
Quakers in the game with his aggressive play, and he, like Griffin, kept on shooting even
if some shots were rimming out. Rob Kurz contributed another very solid
performance, finishing with 25 points and 14 rebounds.
A lot of these rebounds were offensive putbacks, and he kept the Quakers in
it when Singletary went to the bench with 4 fouls at the end of the third quarter. Today was not a good day if your last name was
Zeglinski. The usual reliable brotherly duo
of Zack and Sam Zeglinski had a day to forget, shooting a
combined 1 for 21. Ive been watching
Zack play since the fifth grade, and Im willing to bet this is one of the worst
games hes ever had. He didnt
score, shooting 0 for 11. He shouldnt
be faulted though, because he was aggressive and a lot of his shots were good ones, but
they kept rimming in and out. Everybody has a
bad game, and lets hope that this was it for the brothers. With the Zeglinskis being as off as they were,
more pressure was put on Singletary and Kurz to lead the comeback. They did an admirable job, but fell just short. R.J.
Hollinshead had another nice game, making a lot of hustle plays en route to 6 points
and 7 rebounds (all offensive). The Quakers
were within striking distance for most of the fourth quarter, but a Griffin 3-point dagger
made it 72-64, securing the victory for the Hawks.
Its hard to say what kind of effect these losses will have on PC. First came the stunner against Abington Friends,
follwed by the letdown against the Prep in todays game. Ted and I were talking about the team after the
game, and we both agreed that the loss of two key players (Matt Ryan and Mike Boles) hurt more than people know. The 6-5 Ryan was an outside threat and always
played hard. But the loss of Boles hurts the
most. As I stated in an earlier report, he
did the things that didnt show up in the box score by hustling on every play, as
well as being a good rebounder. The Quakers
have become a smaller team, which isnt necessarily a bad thing. It just means that against taller teams, the shots
will need to fall because theres a good chance theyll be outrebounded. The good thing is that even though the Quakers
stand at 5-3, theres a lot of basketball left to be played. I still think they are one of the better teams
around, and I think the intensity will increase as the team approaches the beginning of
league play.
Special Eds Player of the Game: The Preps John Griffin and PCs Sean
Singletary.
Next Game: 12/23 (Scholastic Classic II) @ St. Joes U. PC plays Bonner at 3:30.
Just when you thought I was done,
Im going to come back and talk about the other games of todays
tournament
· Neumann 68, Southern 59. I didnt see much of this game because I got
there when it was already in the fourth quarter, but I will say that ever since Neumann
lost to PC, they look better and better each game. They
have a really talented team, and I look for them to contend with Dougherty and the Prep
for the Catholic League title.
· Mount Zion (NC) 75, Life Center (NJ)
60. This one was fun to watch just because of
the team Mt. Zion has. I think they have 6 or
7 D-I prospects, which is unheard of. The
players on Mt. Zion threw down more dunks than in an NBA dunk contest, so this was the
game you wanted to watch if you wanted highlight reel jams.
Despite being the number 2 team in the country, Mt. Zion had trouble with
Life Center, and even trailed at points in the game.
However, they pulled away in the fourth and were able to get the win.
· Chester 63, Gratz 61. This was probably the best game of the day just
because it was close throughout. It appeared
to be over with Chester holding a 61-55 lead with less than a minute to play, but Gratz
sr. F Mark Tyndale made some great plays and
the game ended up being tied 61-61. Chester
hit 2 free throws, and Tyndales shot at the buzzer rimmed out, ending an exciting
game. It was a good thing for Chester that
they held on for the win, because any team would be kicking itself if it lost after
blowing a 6-point lead in the final minute. Tyndale
was excellent en route to scoring 30 points, and despite the loss, Gratz is still one of,
if not the best team in the city, so watch out for them the rest of the way.
* Dougherty
70, Lincoln (NY) 62. The finale of the
tournament was a bit of a letdown for two reasons. One
was, the fans barely got a glimpse of Lincolns Sebastian Telfair, the nations best player. Telfair didnt score, leaving midway through
the first after aggravating an ankle injury that kept him out the rest of the game. The second reason was that this was not the close
game that people expected it to be. Even
though the score looks like it was a close game, Dougherty was unstoppable throughout. After losing its first game to Gratz, the
Cardinals got their three suspended D-1 prospects (Kyle
Lowry, Bilal Benn, and Shane Clark) back in
the lineup. With a full lineup back on the
floor, Doughertys opponents have to be looking at their schedule and cringing. This is the one of the best teams Ive seen
in quite some time. Villanova signee Lowry
was on fire throughout, and hes every bit as good as people say he is. I cant wait until he and Sean Singletary go
head-to-head on January 31, because they are most likely the two most talented and
explosive guards in the city. Singletary
predicts that whoever has the better game will earn a spot in the McDonalds
All-America game. The 6-8 athletic Clark (15
points, 10 rebs) was great too, throwing down some dunks and winning MVP of the game. Despite all of the D-1 talent in the lineup, the
fan favorite is undoubtedly Dougherty sr. G Tim
Smith, the teams fifth starter. Before
the game, the Timmy Smith WHOOOOO! chants were rising up, and with good
reason. Smith, above all, is fun to watch. Hes a great passer and ballhandler, and on
any other team I bet hes the star player. I
just hope that when Jan. 31 comes around, Timmy is rocking the Steve Nash haircut that he flaunted last year,
which was awesome (smile).
DEC. 17
NON-LEAGUE
Penn Charter 85, Gtn. Friends 37
What
a difference a day makes. Twenty-four hours
after dropping an unexpected heartbreaker to Abington Friends, Penn Charter beat GFS by an
unprecedented 48 points. As it can be noted
from the score, this one was pretty much one-sided. The
Quakers led by 14 after the first quarter, and the lead ballooned from there. PC needed this win in the worst way, and once they
got going, GFS was powerless to stop them.
Even
though the game was all but over at halftime with the Quakers holding a 50-13 (PC
outscored GFS 25-2 in the second quarter) lead, there were still some highlights. Players rebounded from sub-par individual
performances against Abington. Even though
the starters only played for half of the game, you could tell that they were back to
normal. Sean Singletary (9 for 15, 21 points, 5 steals, 4
rebs) shook off the poor-shooting Abington game and was back to his old self, aggressively
taking the ball to the hole and providing a few highlight reel plays. Singletary scored 16 of his 21 points in the first
half, and also dished out 2 behind-the-back assists.
Zack Zeglinski (18 points, 6
rebs, 5 steals, 4 assists) also bounced back from a bad game, having an all-around great
day. Rob Kurz also contributed when he was on the
floor, scoring 12 points and grabbing 6 boards. Jordan Tucker scored 13 points for GFS,
including all 11 of the teams first quarter points.
However, it was obvious that GFS was lost out there, as they had trouble
getting the ball beyond halfcourt and they committed a lot of turnovers. My friend told me before the game that they had
graduated a lot of players last year, so they currently seem to be in a rebuilding mode. But even if they had a more complete team on the
floor I dont think they would have been able to stop PC, who had to have this win.
Charter
coach Jim Phillips took his starters out with
1:54 remaining left in the third quarter, ensuring that none of them would be hurt before
the Scholastic Play-By-Play Tournament at the Palestra on Saturday, which Ill get to
in a minute. But first, its necessary
to talk about the PC bench, which logged a lot of minutes in this one. Again the Quakers showed off their depth,
continuing to pour it on GFS as the starting five watched from the bench. Quakers 5-6 Sr. G and fan favorite Hanif Hopkins made the biggest contribution from
the bench, scoring 8 points, dishing out some nice passes, and making a nice crossover
move. Fans were urging him to be aggressive
and to shoot the ball, and I think the playing time really picked up his confidence and
showed people that PC has another capable scoring threat off the bench. Dave
McEnerney and Joe Rauchut also logged
significant minutes and scored 6 points each. As
for the game on Saturday, its a big one. PC
plays perennial city powerhouse St. Josephs
Prep, who embarrassed the Quakers last season. The
Prep will be without C Mark Zoller, who
graduated and now plays at Penn. Zoller was
a key component of a Prep team that went 30-1 last season and won the Catholic League
title. However, the St. Joes has
started off 7-1 and are looking just as good despite the absence of Zoller. The Prep is now led by Gs Chris Clark and John Griffin, as well as hustling 6-3 So. F Reggie Redding, so this team is still a formidable
contender. Singletary and Clark should be a
great match-up, so look for each team to bring its A Game.
**Special Eds Ramblings (a new feature!): Even though the PC-GFS game was not as
entertaining as the Lakers-Kings playoff game
from 2 years ago, it was still a fun occasion. The
fans were even treated to some halftime entertainment, as Bleacher Bums Pete the Pistol Silow, Chris Walling, Matt
Sutherland, and Kyle Roslyn stormed the
floor for a little 2 on 2. After a few alley
oops and some windmill jams (smile), Wally and Kyle won it, 6-0. After the game, I approached PC assistant coach Mike Razler to get the game stats, to which he
playfully replied, Not you again
This
reporting job has me making so many new friends (smile).
Special Eds Player of the
Game: Singletary and Zack Zeglinski each had great games, but I give player of the game to
the entire Quakers team for bouncing from the tough loss at Abington.
Next game: 12/20 vs. SJ Prep @ the Palestra. The
game tips off at 1:45. I hope to see everyone
there
DEC. 16
NON-LEAGUE
Abington Friends 69, Penn Charter 68
As
Penn Charter sprinted to a quick 8-0 lead in the opening minutes of Tuesdays game at
Abington Friends, things were looking good for the streaking Quakers. However, soon things began to fall apart,
culminating in a heartbreaking 69-68 loss. Its
hard to pinpoint the reason why the Quakers dropped this one. Too many missed shots in the second half was a
main factor, and also Abingtons confidence coming in was sky high. They knew they had nothing to lose in that they
were playing one of the citys better teams, and they played a great game. As I sat in the Abington bleachers before the
game, I asked a few people if theyve seen PC play this year. They said no, and I replied, Were
pretty good. Then an Abington parent
said to me, You watch, were pretty good too, were gonna win this
game. I didnt take it for much
then, but I began to see it as the game progressed. The
Quakers didnt play like the team that easily handled Life Center and Neumann last
week, while Abington threw everything they had at PC.
Charter
led 22-14 after one, but this was about as good as it would get. Shots steadily began to rim out, and Abington
began to climb back into it after a bad start. Despite
scoring 23 points, it was clear that Quakers star guard Sean Singletary was having an off night. Abington did a nice job defensively on him,
holding him to 9 for 21 shooting. Rob Kurz (22 points) started out strong and was
much more aggressive than in previous games, but his shots werent falling and he
earned most of his points at the foul line, where he shot 12 for 13. Zack and
Sam Zeglinski were off for the most part as
well, each finishing with 8 points. Abington
used a balance scoring attack, led by So. C Jason
Love (19 points). Love was really
impressive, and people around me were saying that Division I colleges were already
beginning to check him out. G Dan Lapone (14 points) played well, hitting some
big jumpers that really swung the momentum. Aaron Cohen (9 points) was the man of the hour for
Abington, though. Cohen hit a free throw with
2.1 seconds left, giving Abington the 1 point victory.
Despite all of the troubles, PC led at halftime 42-37. However, the second half was not kind to them. The shots just wouldnt fall, especially in
the fourth quarter, where they managed only 9 points.
The misfortunes included an uncharacteristic missed fast break layup from
Singletary. When things like that start to
happen, you know its not your night. Abington
clawed its way back into the game, and eventually took a 61-59 lead midway through the
last period. This lead increased to 67-62,
and things were looking bleak for the Quakers. They
ended up having a great chance to win, but since it was the common theme tonight, they
didnt catch a break. Singletary hit a
3 to cut the deficit to 68-67, and PC got some foul calls after that, giving them a chance
to win the game at the line. Unfortunately,
free throw shooting hurt both teams, albeit in different ways. Abington shot 14 for 29 from the stripe, an anemic
48%, but Cohens sole free throw make in 3 attempts negated this bad statistic. The Quakers' troubles at the line struck in the
final minute of the game. RJ Hollinshead drew two fouls, but missed both
one-in-one attempts. With 12.3 seconds left,
Zack Zeglinski made 1 of 2 free throws, tying the game at 68 instead of putting the team
up by 1. After Cohens free throw to
take the lead, PC still had one more chance to win it.
They ran a trick inbound play, which almost worked.
Singletary lined up to inbound it, but instead of throwing it in play, he threw it
to the other side of the baseline to Sam Zeglinski and then sprinted up the floor. This took Abington by surprise, and without
losing any time, Sam threw a one-handed football pass to a leaping Singletary, who caught
the ball right outside the 3-point arc. As he
turned to attempt the game winning 3, his shot was blocked, and the game ended.
Though
this was a disappointing loss for Penn Charter, its good it happened when it did. The Quakers had lost a close game earlier in the
season, but it was to national powerhouse Mount Zion, therefore the loss became somewhat
of a moral victory. This type of loss had to
put a bitter taste in the teams mouth, a taste so bitter that they wont want
to feel it again. Since it happened early in
the season, they can hopefully fix the problem and come back with a vengeance. As for the rest of the season, PC should be fine. As I sat in shock and watched Abington celebrate
its victory, the same parent that guaranteed the victory tapped me on the shoulder. I figured it was to gloat, but instead he told me
not to worry and that we would rebound from this because we have such a fine team. I hope hes right again, because these things
are no fun to write when the team is on the losing end.
Special Eds Player of the Game: Jason
Love and Aaron Cohen of Abington, who made clutch plays late in the game.
DEC. 13
NON-LEAGUE, COACHES VS. CANCER
Penn Charter 77, Life Center (N.J.) 60
First
off, its necessary for me to clear up the schedule confusion for this game, which
took place at St. Josephs University as a part of the Coaches vs. Cancer tournament.
Originally, Penn Charter was slated to play
St. Dominics (NY) at 2:45. But
according to Ted, St. Dominics cant play a team with any fifth year seniors on
it, so opponents had to be switched around. PC
ended up playing Life Center (NJ), who was supposed to play Southern in the first game
(confusing I know, but stay with me). In the
end, Southern ended up playing St. Dominic in the inaugural game. In an interesting twist, the Quakers game time was
apparently moved up to 2:15, but overtime in the Southern-St. Dominic game ultimately
pushed it back again. Lucky for me, since I
didnt arrive at the arena until around 2:30. But
anyway, now that I have everyones brains up and running, lets get onto the
game
In
the three games Ive witnessed so far, it seems that PC has tended to start slowly
and then finish with a bang. I guess this is
OK, because theyve won each time. The
first half was ugly, dominated by cold shooting and turnovers. It appeared as if the Quakers would again have
trouble keeping up with a much taller Life Center frontcourt, which included 6-11 Sr. C Aleks Maric and 6-9 Sr. F Zeljko Egeric.
However, PC played good enough defense in the first half to keep Life Center
from capitalizing on the Quakers poor shooting. Charter
trailed 32-27 at the break, and it was clear that they would need to come out with a
greater intensity in the second half if they were to win their third straight game.
Just like in the PC-Neumann game, the third quarter served as the major turning
point. Against Life Center, PC scored more
points in the third quarter (29), than it did in the entire first half (27). The Quakers came out firing on all cylinders with
explosive outside shooting, mainly from G Sean
Singletary. Singletary had his best all
around game of the season, nearly notching a triple-double (12 for 23, 32 points, 7
assists, 8 steals). In a span of about 90
seconds, Singletary hit 3 of his 5 three pointers, which helped turn a 5 point deficit
into a double-digit lead. Its not often
6-9 F Rob Kurz is guarded by someone who is
taller than he is, but with the 6-11 Maric hounding him for most of the game, it was
uncertain how much Rob would contribute. He
ended up having a nice all around game, finishing with 18 points and 7 rebounds. He also kept Maric in check, who started strong
but finished with 12 points. The brotherly
duo of Zack and Sammy Zeglinski continued its consistency, as
they each finished with 11 points and 5 assists. Life
Center was paced by Maric and 6-4 Sr. F Sherman
Diaz, who had a team high 23 points. The
squad from Burlington, NJ put up a good fight, but they were unable to overcome another
solid team effort from the Quakers.
What won the
game for Penn Charter was not its outside shooting, but its second half defense. PC held true to the old saying of defense
wins ballgames. Not to quote Sixers
ex-coach Larry Brown, but the defense was
simply phenomenal. Charter coach Jim Phillips had the team come out in a full court
press, and it worked wonders. After every
offensive basket, the Quakers would smother Life Center by setting traps and utilizing
double teams on the man with the ball. The
pressure defense caused some turnovers that led to more Charter points, and it also caused
a 10-second violation. The tenacious D (which
is also the title of a cool band) swung the momentum in the Quakers favor in the second
half, allowing them to run away with the victory.
Special Eds Player of the Game: Its a tie!
Sean Singletary and Penn Charters team defense earn co-MVP of the game.
Next Game: Tuesday 12/16 @ Abington Friends. Also,
make sure to get your tickets for the Scholastic Play-by-Play Classic on 12/20 at the
Palestra. Not only does this tournament
feature Penn Charter, but also one of the top teams in the country (Mount Zion) and the
nations top player (Sebastian Telfair).
DEC. 9
NON-LEAGUE
Penn Charter 77, Neumann 66
After
7 long days off, Special Ed is back
YAAAAAAY! The
spectacular weather over the weekend cancelled Charters games in the Germantown
Community Tournament, which also featured Germantown High, MLK, and Germantown Friends. But now I have returned with a vengeance, or
something like that
This game was a much hyped contest of two of the
top teams in the city. Each team also boasts
fantastic point guards in PCs Sean Singletary
and Neumanns Richard Tabby
Cunningham. Much to the delight of the
crowd, Singletary and Cunningham spent most of the game going one-on-one, resulting in
some jaw dropping plays. In the early going,
it seemed as if the Quakers would have trouble keeping up with the much taller Pirates,
who used the height factor to its advantage and recorded a bunch of offensive boards. However, Charters outside shooting began to
pick up, and despite a few nice plays in the first quarter, Neumann couldnt get
Cunningham (2 for 9, 11 points, 7 for 7 FTs) going. Much
of his struggles were because of frequent foul trouble, but Singletarys defense also
deserves some credit, which was outstanding. Singletary
(7 for 15, 25 points, 5 steals, 5 assists, 10 for 10 FTs) is more fun to watch every game. Besides playing great defense, he made some great
plays on offense, including a spin move/off balance layup that brought the entire crowd to
its feet. Singletarys offensive
successes also hurt Cunningham, who seemed to be caught up in the one-on-one battle. He picked up some costly fouls and took a few bad
shots after some of Singletarys highlights. The
first half was low scoring and very physical, with PC holding a 34-31 lead at the break.
The
third quarter was the turning point, with PC outscoring Neumann 22-9. Singletary scored 9 in the quarter, while Zack Zeglinski (5 for 9, 12 points) and Sammy Zeglinski (5 for 11, 15 points, 3 for 7
3s) hit some big 3 pointers that really swung the momentum in the Quakers favor. I have to say I sympathize with every team that
has to put up with the Zack-Sam duo. I had
the pleasure in my grade school days of playing against the Zeglinski clan when they were
at Our Lady of Calvary, and by looking at my picture above, Im sure you can guess
who got the best of who (smile). They really
showed in the second half that they could hit the big shots at the opportune time. Charter got a quiet but effective 16 point, 14
rebound performance from Rob Kurz, who often
was double teamed by the Neumann frontcourt. Ive
said before that what will bring PC to its ultimate success is its depth. In the previous game against Carroll, Jr. F R.J. Hollinshead and So. F Brian Teuber made significant physical
contributions to help the Quakers win. This
time around, Teuber (5 points, 9 rebs) had another impressive performance off the bench. Every time he was on the court, he was around the
ball, grabbing rebounds, and chasing loose balls. Hes
also a pretty good baseball player. As for
Neumann, they got contributions from Fr. F Earl
Pettis (18 points), Sr. F Adon El (6 for 7,
15 points), and Jr. F David Burton (15 points,
4 assists). To their credit, these guys
fought hard and made it a game in the fourth quarter, getting as close as 6 points. However, clutch shooting by the Quakers was enough
to secure the victory.
The
home turf also helped PC. The Bleacher Bums were 10 times more rowdy than in the
home opener, and I have a feeling it will be hell for any opposing team who has to play at
Penn Charter this year. Led by Jason, Kyle, Pat, and LJ this time around, the Bums were on their feet
and shouting during most of the game, and had the Sean Owns Tabby chant going
in the third quarter. In a surprise
appearance, my dad, Ed Morrone Sr., might have
been the loudest person in the gym (hope he didnt scare you too much Ted- smile). Before I go, there are a few other things I have
to get off my chest. I may be new to the
reporting scene, but I have to say keeping track of stats is about as easy as solving some
biochemical equations. The JV game was well
underway before I finally had everything I needed. Also,
I have to give a much-needed shout out to PC sr. F Dave
McEnerney. Dave was furious that he was
not included in my first report, and this is my way of apologizing. We all love you Dave.
(smile)
Special Eds Player of the Game: Sean Singletary
Next Game: Coaches vs. Cancer, Saturday 12/13 @ SJU.
PC plays Life Center of Burlington, NJ, at 2:15
DEC. 2
NON-LEAGUE
Penn Charter 76, Carroll 65
For the
first time on this site, at least to my knowledge, there will be a column dedicated solely
to an Inter-Ac basketball team. More
specifically, that team is the Penn Charter Quakers.
So for the next 10 weeks or so, you will all be lucky (or perhaps unlucky)
enough to experience the adventures of the PC B-ball team through my eyes. Enjoy
Before I get
started, Id like to state for the record that Charter coach Jim
Flipper Phillips was adamant about me not over-hyping the team and
making it sound like they were the second coming of Jesus. However, if youll excuse me Flip, I have to
briefly state why Penn Charter is a team to look out for this season. The obvious reasons are 6-8 senior F Rob Kurz and 6-0 senior G Sean Singletary.
Kurz (Notre Dame) and Singletary (Virginia) are already committed to Division-I
programs and should be one of the most dynamic duos around.
But Kurz and Singletary shouldnt have to carry the team, mainly because of
the depth at other positions. 5-11 Jr. G Zack Zeglinski is a three-year varsity starter,
and he can knock down the open looks when opposing teams are concentrating on shutting
down Singletary. 5-11 Fr. G Sammy Zeglinski (Zacks brother) & 6-3
Jr. F-C R.J. Hollinshead round out the starting
lineup and should also make significant contributions.
Despite an improved Inter-Ac, a deep and talented Quakers team has what it takes to
repeat as champs. Sorry Flip, hope I
didnt get too out of control
Now, without further delay, onto the game.
Having just returned from an overtime loss against No. 2 nationally ranked
Mount Zion (Tracy McGradys alma mater) at the Bull City Classic in
North Carolina, the Quakers were in need of a pick-me-up win. They got it, but with great difficulty and a lot
of hard work. Charter jumped out to an early
10-3 lead behind a quick 6 points from Sean
Singletary (10 for 14, 29 points, 4 boards, 3 assists, 2 steals) and a Larry
Johnson-esque 4-point play from Zack
Zeglinski (11 points). Carroll responded
quickly with some deadly outside shooting from Sr. G Mike Welsh (16 points), and they controlled the
tempo for most of the first half. There were
some holes in Charters perimeter defense, which allowed Carroll to knock down a
bunch of outside shots. The Patriots were
able to keep Singletary in check in the second quarter, but Rob Kurz (17 pts, 12 rebs, 5 blocks) kept the
Quakers in it and scored 11 of PCs 18 points in the second. Carroll took a 42-40 lead into the half, much to
the dismay of the PC crowd. Charter made the
necessary defensive adjustments at halftime, as Carroll began to miss the jumpers they
were making in the first half. However, some
offensive putbacks and made free throws kept the Patriots in it, with PC leading 58-55
after three. Charter really clamped down on D
in the fourth, holding the Patriots to 10 points. A
Zack Zeglinski 3 in the waning minutes of the game broke a 65-65 tie, and Sean
Singletarys clutch free throw shooting the rest of the way locked up the W for Penn
Charter. Sr. 6-4 F Mike Springman (19 points, 8 for 8 FTs) paced Carroll, while PC also got 6 points off
the bench from So. F Brian Teuber.
Though fans were
obviously happy with the Kurz-Singletary-Z. Zeglinski trio, I was most impressed with the
play of PCers Sammy Zeglinski (3 pts, 8
assists) & R.J. Hollinshead (5 pts, 3 rebs,
4 assists). Though the point total may not
indicate it, these guys played big roles in helping the Quakers secure the win. Sammy had some nifty crossovers and a lot of nice
passes that set up baskets. Hes only a
freshman, but he plays beyond his years and hes going to have a nice future at PC. As for Hollinshead, his gritty play really set
the defensive tone in the in the second half, and he also had some nice hustle plays that
the team seemed to feed off of. His physical
game helps the Quakers maintain the banger that they lost last year in Mike Boles, who was underrated and did many good
things that didnt show up in the box score. As
for the crowd, it was decent for the home opener. Though
the gym wasnt filled, the energy was certainly there.
The parents sitting to my left shouted their intense displeasure anytime the
refs made a questionable call, while the entire crowd rose to its feet when Rob Kurz
blocked a second quarter shot off of the backboard. Before
I go, I have to give a shout out to Pete, Mike, Jeb, and the rest of the
Bleacher Bums, whom we will most likely continue to hear about as the season rolls along.
Special Eds Player
of the Game: Sean Singletary, with a close second to R.J. Hollinshead.
Next Game: Germantown Community Tournament, Friday-Saturday @ Gtn. Friends.