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MARCH 24
PIAA CLASS AA STATE FINAL
Prep Charter 68, Aliquippa 66
Anyone have a Bible? Before writing this report, I should probably
place my left hand on the Good Book and raise my right hand and then
swear/affirm/whatever that everything will be the whole truth, etc. And even
THEN you might not believe it. As mentioned in the Alerts section, this game
featured circumstances for the ages and somehow, incredibly, PC wound up with a
second consecutive state title. We'll list some now, in no special order . . .
*With exactly 4:00 showing on the clock in the fourth quarter, PC trailed
by 14 points, at 60-46.
*PC committed 33 turnovers, with SEVENTEEN coming from the team's
far-and-away best players, the Memphis-bound Morris twins, 6-9 Marcus
(10) and 6-10 Markieff (seven).
*PC used its last timeout with 5:31 left in the THIRD quarter.
*Marcus posted one field goal for the GAME.
*In the first 12-plus minutes of the game, the twins combined for FOUR
points.
*Just before the third quarter began, a PC fan seated right behind press
row yelled to the players, "It's a long bus ride home, without a W!" He did not
get the desired response. Aliquippa scored six consecutive points in 48 seconds
to zoom further ahead, at 37-23.
*Markieff was the only Husky with a field goal over an 11-minute period
that spanned from late-first to early-third.
*Markieff incurred his fourth foul with 35 seconds left in the third
quarter (and never fouled out).
*Sr. G Kevin Radford incurred HIS fourth foul with 8 seconds left
in the same session (and never fouled out). Side note: the official box lists
him with three fouls, but No. 4 was announced at the time. It's a mystery
(smile).
So, how did Prep Charter win? In wild and wacky fashion. As much as
PC slit its own throat again and again in the first 28 minutes, that was exactly
what Aliquippa did in the final four. The Quips rushed and lost their poise and
suffered a big blow with 2:24 left when their franchise player, sr. F Herb
Pope (New Mexico State), fouled out with the score at 62-57. From then on,
Aliquippa unraveled and the Huskies said to themselves, in effect, "These guys
are pooping their pants. This game is ours to WIN!" PC caught two big breaks to
help make up for the absence of timeouts. There were delays for injured players
with 5:41 (a Quip) and 5:06 left (a Husky) and PC had a chance to collect its
breath and regroup. And then, late in the game, as he later admitted with a
smile, Marcus untied his sneaker and then got to re-tie it with the referees'
permission before shooting crucial free throws, again buying valuable
collect-yourself time. Here are the major moments of the final minute: Q went
ahead, 66-63, at 0:57 on the follow of a missed free throw (made possible in
part because Markieff, with four fouls, shied away); PC turned it over at 49.1;
Q missed a one-and-one at 42.7 (with Marcus rebounding); Markieff dunked on a
feed from Marcus at 0:32; Q missed a double-bonus at 0:22 (with Marcus grabbing
the rebound); Marcus got the ball on the left wing, backed his defender into the
lane and was grabbed as he began to execute a move at 0:11; he missed the first
freebie, but hit the second to create a 66-66 tie; Marcus stepped forward to
help on defense and made a steal at 0:07 at close to three-quarters court;
Marcus was fouled almost immediately at 0:06 and nailed two FTs to make it 68-66
for just the Huskies' third lead of the game (also 6-5 and 8-7); before he could
launch a desperation shot, which would have come from a shade inside halfcourt,
a Quip was called for traveling at 1.4. Phew, what an amazing turn of events! PC
wound up putting four players in double figures in points: Markieff (16), Marcus
(11, thanks to nine FTs), Radford (14, 4-for-5 on treys!) and soph PG Parrish
Grant (13). Markieff (16) and Marcus (11) enabled PC to ring up a 47-43
rebounding edge. Radford's importance to this win cannot be minimized. Aside
from the treys, he was EXTRA disruptive on defense. Frosh Shaquille Duncan
also posted an effort to long remember by grabbing six rebounds in just eight
minutes. Aside from its cheerleaders, PC had maybe 30-35 rooters. Aliquippa,
almost the exact same distance from Penn State's Bryce Jordan Center (it's 30
miles northwest of Pittsburgh), appeared to have a couple thousand
BONUS TIDBITS (with photos!)
Meanwhile, this was the most time I've spent in a car in one
day in my LIFE. Just short of eight hours. Phew! The ride home featured a guest
appearance by Puck, who was (by choice) in the back seat the whole time
and spent part of the journey napping and snoring, big-time! We stopped at a
rest stop near King of Prussia and got some Burger King food. Puck thought we
were going to eat there. No way! So, we're heading for the door and Puck says,
"'Hold on, I gotta take a cwap." Oh, baby. He puts his soda and bag of food on
top of a trash can. I walk out to go get the car. I pull up in front of the door
and wait and wait and wait . . . and finally, I see Puck bobbing and weaving
inside the building, blurting out comments. People are looking at him . . .
yeah, like he's nuts (brilliant deduction). He finally comes out and I say,
"What the heck were you doing?" He plays dumb (not a stretch). "Whatcha mean?
Nothin'." I say, "I know exactly what happened. You put your food and soda on
top of that trash can, then couldn't remember where you put it. You were looking
all over, asking people if they saw your food." He starts laughing. "How you
know? I thought somebody stole my stuff." We drive a little more and I call the
wife to let her know our locale and to provide entertainment with assorted Puck
stories. She's been listening to them for almost 15 years now. She always loves
them. After maybe 30 seconds, I tell her, "Here, say hi to Puck." I hand Puck
the cell phone. He starts blabbing about all the day's crazy stuff and then
says, "Yo, who winning the game?" I tell him, "Puck, she doesn't watch
basketball on TV. Unless I force her to!" He says, "Yo, what you watchin'? Put
the NCAA game on for me. Channel 3. I need to know who winnin' for my pool."
Anne's place in heaven is sealed. She actually changed the channel and told
Puck that UCLA was winning, 32-31. "Yeah!" Puck roared. He gave me back the phone
and I said to Anne, "That was fun, eh?" She said, "Was that really him? I
thought it was you, imitating him!" For further enjoyment, here are some Puck
photos . . .
|
This is Puck (right) and the Pittsburgh version of Puck. He goes by Deuce, though Puck, in all his puckedness, calls him "Goose." |
This is Puck, sleeping in my back seat on the return trip from Penn State. That's part of me, driving (smile). I held out the camera and pointed it backward. |
MARCH 18
PIAA CLASS AA QUARTERFINAL
Imhotep 70, Bishop Hoban 52
Thirty-and-0 and down they go! That phrase is not original. And who knows,
maybe the guy I got it from “borrowed” it from someone else. In 1974, North
Catholic went 16-0 in CL North play and its opponent in a Palestra quarterfinal
was Dougherty. At the Markward Club luncheon that week, Dougherty coach Bob
Harrington (continue R-ingIP, Bob; great guy!) told a few people,
“Sixteen-and-0 and down they go . . . and don’t quote me until after the game.”
Needless to say, Dougherty won. So did Imhotep, though it wasn’t easy. At least
not early. And not even BEFORE early. Huh?? Well, Imhotep’s team bus experienced
problems coming up the Northeastern Extension of the Pa. turnpike and coach/AD
Andre Noble made the decision to wait for the fan bus, which was lagging
behind, and put the players on that one. The game was scheduled for 3 p.m. The
Panthers walked ONTO the court at 3:01 and tipoff was 3:25. Oh, baby. Only in
the charter-school portion of the Pub (smile). In the early moments, the
Panthers looked scared and/or groggy. All they did was miss shots and turn it
over and Hoban, supported by maybe 2,000 fans (Imhotep had maybe 20) in the
brand new gym at Bethlehem Freedom HS, jumped to an 8-0 start. Prospects for
round No. 3 in the ‘Tep-Prep series (as in Imhotep-Prep Charter) were not
looking good. Thankfully, the Panthers regrouped and wound up cruising and the
next battle, in the Eastern final, will take place Wednesday night. (Details TBA
tomorrow, hopefully). The ink went to sr. PF-C Kashief Edwards (Niagara),
who scored 18 of his 23 points in the second half while adding six of his nine
rebounds and posting all three of his assists. Check this out: until the waning
moments, the Panthers’ second half field goals were exclusively twos by Edwards
and treys by soph WG Will Adams (three) and sr. G Jermaine Washington
(two). So, the inside-out offensive approach was working perfectly. Sr. WG-SF
Hanif Nixon was a rock throughout. He grabbed eight rebounds, scored eight
second quarter points (of 11 total) to key the comeback and dealt all five of
his assists in the second half. Washington finished with 16 points and three
assists. Adams went 4-for-5 on treys en route to 14 points. His other field goal
was a dunk that followed a steal and drive over three quarters of the court.
Will has a tender hand/thumb and had to sit out the previous game. He banged it
pretty hard on his dunk and had it taped. Jr. G Lamar Trice posted four
assists and a 4-for-4 performance at the foul line. ‘Tep-Prep could be VERY
interesting this last time around. The winner will punch a ticket to Penn State,
site of the state final next Saturday.
MARCH 17
PIAA CLASS AA QUARTERFINAL
Prep Charter 65, York Catholic 57
The plan was to catch an unusual "doubleheader" today. This one
at 1 p.m. in Reading and Imhotep-Bishop Hoban at 5 in Bethlehem. Being WAY too
concerned about travel time, as always, I got to this one a shade before 11:30
and briefly had the gym to myself. Then a ref and his buddy walked in, then some
other folks and my cell phone rang. It was Imhotep coach Andre Noble,
reporting that the Panthers' game had been postponed to tomorrow due to the
weather. Hay-zoooooooooos. (So, after this one, I hightailed it back to
Norristown to catch the second half of Gratz' win over Lower Merion. Amauro
will do the report.) As this game began, it was easy to wonder how a team from
Philly, with very little fan support, would fare on St. Patrick's Day against a
team nicknamed the Fighting Irish -- yes, their uniforms are green -- with
IMPRESSIVE fan support. Despite some shaky calls and admittedly poor play (can
anyone here make a simple entry pass?), the defending state champs lived to see
another round thanks to clutch foul shooting and good defense down the stretch.
Everyone knows about the Memphis-bound Morris twins, 6-10 Markieff
and 6-9 Marcus. Well, their mom, Thomasine, also proved to
be quite entertaining. She happened to sit right nearby behind one of the
baskets and she came out with a series of funny remarks. Not real loud, but
supportive. When one of her twins made a free throw, she would invariably utter,
"Thank you, baby!" or "Thank you, sweetheart." On one occasion, BEFORE Marcus
was going to shot a free throw, she said, "We need this." Clank. She followed up
with, in stern fashion, "I SAID we need this." In time, if she keeps this up,
she'll be as popular in Memphis as the twins (smile). So, how'd the big guys do?
Both were dominating, which was to expected considering their height advantage.
Markieff had 18 points, 13 rebounds, two assists, five steals and four blocks.
Marcus had 23, 11 and two (in those first three categories). The next best
Huskies were soph WG Jesse Morgan and sr. CG Kevin Radford. Morgan
helped loosen things up by making five consecutive shots from the floor,
including two treys, in a 14-point second half that enabled him to finish with
16. Radford went 5-for-6 at the line down the stretch and, more importantly,
played staunch defense on Jacob Iati, YC's dangerous jump-shooter. Iati
did finish with 18 points, but had no treys after the early part of the third
quarter and made just two of his last nine shots. Before the game began, there
was concern because PC kept not showing up. The Huskies did not make it onto the
court until 12:48 some of YC's guys were on there as early as 12:20. I've been
told PC was running late the other night for the Lower Moreland game, too. PC
won this one, pretty much, with an 8-0 run to end the third quarter and make the
score 38-35. They even got a break from the refs to help make it happen. With YC
on offense, the buzzer inadvertently sounded (just a very short beep) and Iati
stutter-stepped, thinking something was wrong. A travel was called and after a
spirited exchange, that call stood. Morgan came down and hit a trey on a pass
from Radford to make it 36-35. Morgan's next triple made it 43-37. Late in the
game, YC posted back-to-back, three-point plays (neither foul would have been
called in Philly; there was minimal contact) to draw within 59-57. Then, Marcus
was called for a 5-secon violation as he tried to inbound. The twins' mom and
those nearby were NOT happy. I think I might have heard the phrase, "Oh, here we
go. Don't cheat us." Maybe five times (smile). YC inbounded and, with Radford in
his face, Iati missed a left-corner trey. Jon Showers rebounded and
whipped a pass out to Cory Stiles. He launched another trey that was
partially blocked by Markieff. Marcus got that rebound, was fouled and made it
61-57 with two free throws at 26.9. Two free throws apiece by the twins closed
out the scoring, with one last missed trey by Iati also part of the
waning-moments scenario.
BONUS TIDBIT!! (ha ha)
As I arrived home, I could hear the phone ringing inside. I didn't
get there in time, but while scrambling across the living room I could hear
Puck on my answering machine, calling from Frostburg, Md., site of the
Alhambra tournament. "He ain't answerin'. Yo, you try him." Click . . . The
phone rang again. It was Roman assistant Chris McNesby. We laughed
about Puck, of course, then he put Puck on his cell phone (brave man, that Chris
McNesby because when Puck uses your cell phone, contamination is guaranteed.)
Puck goes, "Yo, Ted!" I said some things. "Ted, you there? I can't hear you . .
. Yo, Chris, I can't hear him. Here, you twy." Chris got back on and of course
could hear me perfectly. THREE MORE TIMES, back and forth with Chris, Puck got
on the phone and could not figure things out. It was classic Puckleheadness!! I
told Chris, "Tell him to put it to his EAR! That might help!" Chris was beside
himself. "I can't believe him. He keeps saying he can't hear you." Anyway, I
gave the necessary messages to Chris and he spoke them out loud to Puck . . .
The lunacy nevvvvvvver ends with the Puckster.
MARCH 14
PIAA CLASS AA SECOND ROUND
Imhotep 66, Wilkes-Barre GAR 34
At halftime of this one I called Amauro to see how Prep Charter was
faring against Lower Moreland. He said PC was trailing by four late in the first
half and was basically sleep-walking. Well, that was NOT the case in the
beautiful new gym at Freedom HS, in Bethlehem. Imhotep was extra aggressive from
the very outset and seized the life from the Grenadiers. The Panthers ran and
jumped and rebounded and whipped outlets and trapped guys for steals and played
the way teams MUST play in the state tourney – as if the opponent is stacked
with NBA players. Anything less and you leave yourself vulnerable. Hats off to
coach Andre Noble and his players for coming into this game with the
proper mindset and then MAINTAINING it when it would have been easy to downshift
a gear or two. Never came close to happening. The early difference-maker was sr.
F Tamir Johnson (Central Connecticut State), who wedged eight points,
four boards, two assists, one steal and one block into the first six minutes
before he had to sit down with foul trouble. His finishing numbers: 16 and seven
in points and rebounds. Sr. F-C Kashief Edwards (Niagara) was a manchild
inside with 17 points, 12 boards and four blocks. The other D-I signee, sr. G
Jermaine Washington, mixed nine points, four assists and mostly flawless
floor-generaling. Also starting was soph F Ivory Wells. I honestly didn’t
remember seeing much of him earlier this season, but I LIKED what I saw tonight.
He went hard to the hoop on several occasions and dared people to try to stop
him. Nice! The DN attention went to sr. F Hanif Nixon, who has been
forced to endure incredible tragedy in his life. Three brothers were shot to
death, his dad died of cancer and his mom was batting cancer earlier this
season. Hanif stepped away from basketball for about a month to help care for
his mom and he greatly appreciates every moment he spends around his coaches and
teammates. Noble used all 11 of his players and, near the end, it was nice to
see jr. F Shawn Rodgers hit the scorebook. The biggest cheers were
reserved for soph G Tyree Morgan, however. The cheerleaders shrieked with
delight when they saw him heading toward the table and later kept chanting,
“Ty-ree MOR-gan! Ty-ree MOR-gan!” Alas, Tyree launched no shots. (Doubt that’ll
hurt him with the ladies in school tomorrow – smile. This kid appears to be very
popular.) Those kids who are friendly with jr. F Demar Morine might want
to check out his myspace page in the next few days. He said he needed a pic for
his page and I think I obliged. No charge, of course. (ha ha).
MARCH 13
PIAA CLASS A SECOND ROUND PLAYOFF
Reading Central Catholic 54, Freire 45
This was one of those pick-your-poison games. Freire coach Lawrence
Threadgill said he was told by two other coaches that RCC would be very
difficult to play man-to-man because of its ability to be patient and set
millions of screens and wind up with fantastic shots. So, he opted to play zone
and then later a box-and-one (because one of the Cardinals was sniping from
distance in unconscious fashion) and, well, nothing worked out too well. Not
sure if the Freire coaches noticed and, yes, I realize that quite young Freire
(no seniors; just nine players total) is not exactly deep itself, but RCC used
just five players until someone fouled out in the last minute and since it was
VERY hot in the gym, I thought the best move would have been to run and run and
run some more. Oh, well. Live and learn. If the Cards had not shot so well, we
wouldn’t be having this discussion. Then again, if the Dragons had done a better
job of getting to the shooters . . . In defeat, the ink went to 6-4, 200-pound
frosh Octavious Booker. He found it rough to finish inside against a big,
strong kid in 6-6 Colin Naugle, and went 0-for-8 from the floor, but he
did use his instincts and good hands to claim 13 rebounds. “Booker” it: this kid
will be a force in the years to come. Jr. WG Jarrod Denard scored 17
points while hitting two treys (and missing his last four free throws after
hitting his first two. Oddly, he had one mark apiece in the rebounds, assists,
steals and blocks categories. Jr. PG Antoine “Blueberry” Singleton
had to miss six minutes in the first half with an ankle ding. He finished with
10 points and three assists. When Blue went out, the Dragons were down by 13-9
after threy No. 3 by Matt Ashcroft. The deficit was 19-13 when he
returned and the Dragons embarked on a strong stretch that saw them storm into
the locker room with a halftime lead of 25-21. Denard provided the lead, at
23-21, with a top-of-the-key three and Singleton added to it by making a
halfcourt steal and going in for a layup. Thereafter? Ugh. RCC scored 22 of the
next 31 points. Like Shykee Brooks before them, Rysheen Dorn and
Victor Pomales did nice jobs on Ashworth in the box-and-one. But in the
second half, three other guys combined for five treys, thus enabling the Cards
to finish with 10 treys for the game (and only eight regulars). To its credit,
Freire did rally – in immediate fashion, too – after RCC built a 43-34 lead with
3:10 left. Dorn scrapped for a three-point play, then Denard canned a layup off
a pass from Singleton. But from the right corner, a
Cardinal put too much mustard on what was supposed to be
an entry pass and the ball, holy Christmas, zipped right through the net!
Unbelievable. RCC CTO (closed things out) from there. It’ll be interesting to
see what happens with Freire’s program next year. Everyone is DUE to come back.
Will that happen? Well, two strong players did disappear during this season and
with the way kids love to play hopscotch these days (encouraged by
coaches/parents of all variety), nothing is certain. This was a fun night at
Norristown. The AD, Chuck Knowles, formerly coached football at
Conwell-Egan (and was the AD, as well) and one of his sidekicks, Bob Davis,
is a buddy from way back in the Oreland summer basketball league. Bob introduced
me to Norristown’s coach, Mike Evans, and I also got to catch up briefly
with ex-Gtn. Academy legend Keith Wood (well, he IS still a legend –
smile). Thanks to Chuck for letting me use his office to write the DN story. It
was his birthday, but he was babysitting this doubleheader. (Congrats to
Bodine’s girls for winning the opener! Photos of that one also are posted.)

This picture was taken at the CL basketball final. With me from L to R are
Eric
"Neckbone" Williams (Germantown FB '07), Chris Banks (Northeast FB '05) and
Rockeed McCarter (Roman FB and BB '06). Chris was buggin' me to put this on the
homepage. My kids weren't havin' it (ha ha). Chris wrote for this site during
his days at
Judge and NE. Somehow we survived .
(Photo by Saadiq "Banks' Li'l Brothah" Stewart, NE FB '05)
MARCH 10
PIAA CLASS AAAA FIRST ROUND
Gratz 82, Upper Darby 73
It took longer than most would have predicted (three years) and
in a manner (such a high-scoring game) that few would have predicted, but the
Pub's most glamorous program now owns a win in state tournament competition.
This was the second of two games at Northeast and the crowd was again too much
for the facility. Not like the first game, though. UD's players are small and
smaller and their approach is step on the gas and ignore all attempts by the
police to pull them over. Instead of going with its commonplace halfcourt-game
approach, Gratz opted to rock and roll and the outcome was impressive. Sure,
there were turnovers and misfirings, both of passes and shots. At a frenetic
pace, that's to be expected. But to a large degree, Gratz conquered UD at its
own game and did so, in part, because its guys with a hint of height, srs.
Ishmawiyl McFadden and Tommie "T.J." Sykes, ran the floor and kept up
like guards. Sr. PG Josh "Scrap" Martin met the challenge of UD's style
in wonderful fashion. He finished with 25 points, seven boards, five assists and
five steals and four of his dimes came in a 26-10 first quarter. He shot
7-for-10 and 11-for-12. The other main G, jr. Charles White, added 11
points and eight assists and five of his dishes came in an 18-point third
quarter. McFadden was spectacular early, posting nine of his 18 points. He had
one dunk then and another one later on, and his other stats of note were six for
rebounds and four for blocks. Sykes, the original All Business Man, had 14
points and nine boards. Jr. WG-SF Alibaba Odd, whose playing time was
curtailed by fouls, scored eight points. The Bulldogs' six bench points came
from jr. F Keith Harding. He and jr. F Sebree Johnson halved six
rebounds. Overall, this was hardly a special doubleheader. At least everyone
behaved.
MARCH 10
PIAA CLASS AAAA FIRST ROUND
Pennsbury 56, Frankford 50
Now that its season is over, it can officially be
written: Frankford REALLY overachieved. The Pioneers' lengthy roster included no
natural scorers, but through hustle and togetherness (forgetting the occasional
acts of complaining about playing time) coach Ben Dubin was able to
advance to the district class 4A final and earn a spot in the state playoffs.
About the "no natural scorers" contention. Not even sr. WG-SF Kenny Spotwood
is a natural point producer. He boasts impressive body control, though, and he's
an old-school kind of guy when it comes to instincts and spirit and he helped
the Pioneers hang to some degree in this one with 18 points, finalizing his
career total at 1,005. However, even Kenny had trouble in the second quarter,
going 0-for-3 as the Pioneers went 1-for-9 in a frustrating 13-4 session, and
the momentum taken by Pennsbury into halftime, at 24-17, proved to be enough.
Not that Spotwood didn't try . . . With a series of brassy moves, he scored 10
points in the third quarter and the last of those five baskets lifted his total
to 1,001 with 1:32 showing. The timing was bad, as things turned out. The game
was briefly stopped and an announcement was made to the standing-room-only crowd
at Northeast. Frankford was within six, at 35-29. When play resumed (maybe the
Pioneers were distracted?), Pennsbury roared to nine consecutive points as soph WG Dalton Pepper scored seven and passed to Temple-bound sr. C Lavoy
Allen for a dunk. Though the final score looks kinda close, the truth is,
Frankford finished with a mini-rush. It was more like a 10-point game. With his
future coach, Fran Dunphy, in attendance, Allen was impressive. He still
gives off a slightly uncoordinated appearance, but his good moments are MUCH
more prevalent and there's MAJOR reason to love his possibilities. I liked that
he showed athleticism, especially along the baseline, and was sure to collect
himself. He finished with 19 points, 15 rebounds, eight blocks and three
assists. Villanova coach Jay Wright was on hand to watch Pepper, who is
said to be drawing interest from Duke. No one else reached double figures for
Frankford. Two srs., PG Rakeem Golden-White and sr. SF Edmund Gonzalez
(two treys), came close with eight apiece. G-W added three assists. Spotwood
added eight rebounds. Frankford killed (even mutilated) its chances by going
2-for-13 at the line. Northeast was not nearly large enough to host this game.
(The listed capacity is just over 1,000). Many people wound up standing behind
the basket at the north end. This is only an estimate, but I'd guess that
Pennsbury's fans outnumbered Frankford's by at least 10 to 1. If not more. If
not much more. Unbelievable, right? Note to Vallas: People can't be FORCED to
care. Another note to Vallas: Too many of your underlings do not have a clue. No
one connected with Northeast or the School District or good' ol District 12
bothered to set up a concession stand. And the plugs were pulled on the
water/juice machines right at the entrance. Ugh. (As game two ended, a lady and
some kids were in the hallway pedaling soft pretzels and bottled water. I think
I heard them say they were connected with the school's dance band? Something
like that. At least that group had the good sense to see a need and meet it,
finally.)
MARCH 9
PIAA CLASS A FIRST ROUND
Freire 61, Nativity Pottsville 31
After getting crunched in a A-AAAA semifinal vs. Gratz, and then having
10 days to lick wounds and develop cobwebs, there was no way to know for sure
how Freire would react. The answer? Wonderfully! The Dragons did not get slain
this time, folks. They delivered the punishment and did exactly to Nativity (one
point short of a double-up job) what Gratz did to them. Phew, what would Gratz
do to Nativity? Defense made this one a frolic job. Freire collected no fewer
than 19 steals and had seven in the first quarter while shooting 8-for-15 and
roaring to a 16-2 bulge. It was obvious that Nativity had not faced fast teams
very often because the Hilltoppers kept making slow-paced passes that were
picked off by the Dragons. Insult to injury came in the fourth quarter, won by
Freire, 11-0. The ink went to jr. WG Jarrod Denard, yet another
tricky-dick lefty with a variety of ways to score. He shows an effective,
soft-touch, step-back jumper and can also seize the baseline and/or knife
through the lane. He collected maybe four-five of his field goals off drives of
half the court or more that followed steals. Frosh PF-C Octavious Booker
had an impressive night with 15 points and 12 boards. He shows a lot of maturity
and I like how he truly attacks/swallows the ball as it comes off the glass. Jr.
PG Antoine “Blueberry” Singleton again showed why he’s a dynamite guy to
have on a team. He played hard and sensibly with seven assists and five steals
and I’m sure his teammates appreciate his skills and approach. Jr. F Ameen
Rorie had eight boards and four steals and made four of his five shots for
eight points. All nine Dragons saw action. In the A and AAA groupings, Freire
will be the only Pub squad to see the night of a second-round game. Robeson, FLC
and Comm. Tech all suffered defeats. Freire has reason to feel proud. Two of the
better Dragons left school during the course of the season, with one moving all
the way to Texas. The other dropped 23 points against Prep Charter in his one
league appearance of the season, then disappeared to who knows where. I didn’t
see this because I was down at the other end of the gym interviewing Denard, but
Amauro said there was a vintage dustup right after the game between two
adult Nativity fans. Please don’t tell me one guy was blaming another’s son for
the loss. Um, your team lost by 30. Meanwhile, you know a Philly team is playing
a team from WAY outside Philly when you pull into the parking lot and the car
right next to yours has a front license plate celebrating the life and career of
. . . drum roll, please . . . Elvis Presley. Hay-zoooooooooos.
MARCH 7
The CL's all-star doubleheader has been POSTPONED. No date yet, but
we've been told the games will not be played until AFTER the Alhambra tournament
involving Roman/N-G/SJ Prep.
MARCH 6
PIAA CLASS A PLAY-IN GAME
Camp Hill 64, Robeson 55
When the three zebras went to referees school, their major was traveling
violations. Walking was called a minimum of 20 times and in time the players on
both teams were scared to even think about beginning a move, let alone actually
do so. This tilt was played at Northern HS, in York County not far from
Harrisburg/Gettysburg, and the trip required a shade more than 2 hours. Why’d I
go? Well, the Robeson coaches, Rob Powlen and Tahar Sutton, are
good people and I hadn’t seen the Huskies all season and I was up for a little
adventure and, what the heck, I just felt like going. Robeson played hard and
mostly sensibly and its occasionally wacky moments were a result of
overzealousness, not pigheadedness. While on the one hand it would be easy to
point to back-to-back techs as the backbreaker, and complain about them long and
hard as THE difference-maker, it’s also a fact that Robeson shot 3-for-19 in the
quarter (third) when the techs occurred. Amauro and I were sitting across
the way, but the second tech was doled out between shots of the first and
appeared to result from an argument over whether a player could be subbed into
the game to shoot ‘em. (Mark Citron, the girls’ coach and AD, later came
over to ask us about that. Pretty sure it’s allowed. Well, at least I know
Wood’s Fran McGlinn, once last season and once this season, was inserted
into games to shoot techs.) Anyway, the four free throws made it 34-30 and CH
eventually expanded its lead to 50-41 before Robeson made a late push that
reduced the deficit to 50-49 on a steal and layup by soph WG-SF Dom
Owens (14 points, 10 rebounds, three steals) before some late misfirings/turnovers
caused defeat. Robeson’s girls played the first game (and also lost), but this
was a nice overall experience for both teams’ players and that was the DN focus.
The two senior Huskies are Fs Kahri Harris and Dom Medlock. The
bouncy Harris, who’s being eyed by the state schools, had seven points, six
rebounds and three steals. Medlock had 10 and eight. Like every Huskie, he
missed some chippies. Jr. PG Rob Hall had five points and five assists
and got help from frosh Jay Harris, a 5-foot competitor with flare and
more than a little skill. Fun to watch! He nailed two treys while adding two
assists and as many steals. The only player with height/bulk was soph C
Daniel Mack (11 rebounds). Frosh G Xavier Brown added seven points.
The drive home went smoothly. All kinds of tractor-trailers on the turnpike, and
off to the side, but not many cars. How can people drive mile after mile after
mile for a living and sleep on the side of the road? I’ll never understand that
one (smile).
MARCH 5
SPECIAL NOTE
The CL all-star doubleheader
will be played WEDNESDAY at Judge, with games at 6 and 7:30. The dunk and
three-point contests have been eliminated. Defensive MVPs and overall MVPs for
each game.
MARCH 4
CATHOLIC LEAGUE FINAL
Roman 59, Neumann-Goretti 56
The Cahillites were right on the verge. Right ON it. The
this-does-not-look-good-at-ALL verge. Just under six minutes remained in a
lively fray at the hallowed Palestra and Roman was down by 10 points, at 52-42.
Yes, 10. So now, go back to the score line and do the arithmetic. Ch-ch-ch-ching.
Roman closed with a 17-4 run! Amazing, right? (More amazing: if you're reading
this report for the second time, for some strange reason, you might have noted
that the numbers changed from 52-41 and 18-4. The reason? Mr. Pucklehead!!
Amauro and I both remembered 52-42, but Puck kept insisting that it was 52-41.
"It right here on my sheet. I wote down every scoring play. C'mon, use my stuff.
I did play-by-play for the whole game. I told you I handle it, so you don't have
to worry about it." This was over the phone, by the way. Puck neglected to put
his carefully crafted play-by-play sheet on my clipboard before I left the
Palestra. So, I called him Monday morning and asked him to check the
play-by-play again. Because at 1 a.m., I watched the CN8 broadcast via Comcast
On Demand and saw that the lead was 52-42, not 52-41. Me: "Puck, go get your
papers." Him: "Why?" Me: "Because you messed something up." Him: "No, I didn't."
Me: "Get your papers!" Him, after I can hear major scrambling of papers in
background: "OK, what I gotta check?" Me: "Whether the score was 52-41 or
52-42." Him: "I got it right here. 52-41 . . . Oh, wait. Ohhh, I mess up. I got
50-42, then I got Wick Jackson gettin' a basket, but I wote down 52-41. Ohhh, I
mess up. Should say 52-42. Oh, boy, I weally scwew that up, huh?" Me: "Royally.
It was only the most important fact of the game." Him: "Man, how I do dat? How I
wite down 52-41?" Me: "Because you're Puck, and you never cease to amaze and
drive me crazy.") Anyway, the title is the 29th in school
history (the CL was formed for the 1919-20 school year) and coach Dennis
Seddon now owns the league mark for crowns with 10. Roman’s Billy
Markward won nine in the ’20s and ‘30s. Dennis is the most unaffected guy
you could ever hope to encounter and deserves every bit of good fortune that
comes his way. After accepting the title plaque from CL boys’ hoops moderator
Joe Sette, he stepped away and let the players bask in all of the glory.
That action did not surprise me at all. In fact, I was surprised it took him
maybe 2 seconds to step away instead of 1 (smile). A team with two high-profile
Division I signees and a decided height advantage is not supposed to cough up an
11-point lead with a third consecutive championship just six minutes away. It
happened, though. Believe it. The Saints missed shots and made mistakes to
prevent shots and had problems with synchronization, and the final two shots
wound up being threeball attempts by a guy, sixth man/sr. SF Mark Hatty,
who’s not known for long-range sniping but rather timely little things mostly
around the basket, especially on find-open-space follows. Oh, he can hit threes,
and he has, but it was unfortunate that the Saints had to rely on him to perform
that duty at the most crucial moments of the season. The Cahillites showed
incredible resolve when they faced the 11-point deficit. Not only did they reel
off 12 consecutive points, they did so in 1 minute, 40 seconds! Sr. WG
Bradley Wanamaker, playing with four fouls, was a monster during that
stretch. His best play was a perfectly whipped, thread-the-needle pass to jr. G
Courtney Stanley for a layup at 4:34. That moved Roman within 52-51 and
its fans were going nuts!! Soph PG Maalik Wayns was the next hero. He
made a steal a shade beyond halfcourt and drove hard for a layup and a 53-52
lead. Moving ahead . . . Roman went ahead for good, at 56-54, as Bradley
Wanamaker stole the ball from 6-9 sr. C Rick Jackson in the low post and
found jr. SF Will Kirkland for a layup. The next bucket was also Roman’s
as Wayns hit sr. G Brian Wanamaker, Bradley’s fraternal twin, for a 58-54
score. Jackson scored low on a feed from his ‘Cuse-bound best buddy, sr. PG
Antonio “Scoop” Jardine, and Roman called time at 1:14. Some clock was
wasted and then Bradley went hard to the hoop from the left side. Stalemate!
Jackson met him at the summit and blocked the shot. The ball did not squirt
free, so a jump ball was called and the arrow favored N-G. From there: Jardine
missed a shot and Bradley was called for walking at 32.8; Hatty, left
ridiculously wide open as Roman focused on others, air-balled a left-wing trey
and the ball bounced off frosh G Tony Chennault out of bounds at
16.4. As Brian advanced upcourt, sr. G sub Wali Hepburn played great
defense and the ball caromed out of bounds. The ruling: off Hepburn at 11.9.
Roman again inbounded and Kirkland was spotted all by his lonesome coming in
from the left wing. Trying to do too much too fast, he bobbled the ball but at
least recovered and drew a foul at 6.4. He made the first to make it 59-56. He
got a little happy on the farm, going from the line to midcourt to slap hands
with Bradley and point to his dad in the stands before he returned to the line.
He missed the second shot. Disaster for N-G. The rebound came out slightly long,
to the top part of the lane, and no one bothered to check out Stanley. He had no
trouble claming the rebound, then went to the line for a double-bonus at 4.9.
Oops, he missed both! Jr. F Jamal Wilson rebounded on the left side. He
headed upcourt and passed ahead to Hatty. Mark stopped on the right wing, in
front of N-G’s bench (east end of the building) and fired up about a 24-footer.
The ball got rim, but not enough to bounce up and maybe have a chance to fall
in. Ballgame. Four guys reached double figures for Roman – Bradley (17), Wayns
(13), Kirkland (12) and Brian (10). Stanley was the only other scorer with
seven. Bradley, the subject of Rich Hofmann’s column (yeah, baby, famous
columnist in the house! -- smile), added six rebounds, seven assists and four
steals. My own story focused largely on Will Kirkland (his identical twin,
Wes, was the seventh man). Double-figure scorers for N-G were Jackson (20,
but 0-for-4 at line), Chennault (13, also three steals) and Wilson (10). Jackson
added 18 rebounds and six blocks, so he finished the three-game playoff series
with averages of 22.7 points, 14 boards and six blocks. Jardine dealt 11 assists
and was guilty of just two turnovers, so that part of his outing was wonderful.
He shot just 3-for-12. Jr. PF Rashad Savage grabbed nine rebounds before
fouling out with 5:27 left. N-G was still holding eight, at 52-44. Hatty added
four rebounds and two apiece of assists and steals . . . OK, because the overall
effect was nothing outrageous (though it very much COULD have been), I held off
in dealing with this year’s post-game issue. But 10 to 15 seconds after the game
ended, maybe a half-dozen plastic bottles, filled to varying degrees with
water/Gatorade/etc., thudded on the court at Roman’s end. If anyone was hit, I
did not see it. Security personnel said they were thrown from a spot high above
N-G’s bench, and one guy said most were thrown simultaneously by “young men” –
he thought they were older than high school age; current students were behind
the west basket -- in the same row of the stands. They quickly ran out a nearby
exit. At least one bottle was thrown a short time later because it landed a
shade to the left of press row. Roman’s players were hurriedly directed to their
locker room for safety reasons, but later returned to accept the plaque and
interact with Roman’s student rooters. Roman had a tremendous turnout and many
of the kids came storming into the building the instant the doors opened, taking
positions behind the east basket. They had juice from the very beginning. N-G’s
turnout was also strong, but its enrollment is much lower than Roman’s and its
group was slower to reach full strength.
MARCH 2
PUBLIC LEAGUE FINAL
Prep Charter 49, Gratz 48
The hope is always to see a game that comes down to the last shot, right?
Well, this goodie came down to the last THREE shots, one of which was launched
after the game “ended” and Prep Charter’s players/coaches mad a made dash to the
locker room. Huh? This was a wonderful edition of Only in the Pub (smile). Since
the events were so noteworthy, we begin at the end. Gratz roared back from a
47-42 deficit with the help of three straight PC turnovers. The go-ahead basket
came at 39.8 on a layup by jr. G Charles White off a pass from sr. PG
Josh “Scrap” Martin; sr. F Tommie "T.J." Sykes (13 points) had
knocked the ball loose. At the other end, sr. C Markieff Morris planted
himself near the left block and implored soph F Tyree “Chuck” Harris,
back from an ankle injury, to make an entry pass from the left corner. Markieff
caught the pass and then blew the gimme! But he stayed with the play, grabbed
the rebound and put the ball right back in the basket for a 48-47 lead and Gratz’
timeout came at 16.3. On the possession, Martin dribbled out front for a while
and then made a move to the right side. He wound trying a semi-wild flip shot –
his body was awkwardly angled – and Markieff slightly deflected the shot. Jr. WG-SF
Alibaba Odd rebounded and his attempt at a follow was severely rejected
by sr. G-F Marcus Morris. The clock melted down to 0:00 and the Huskies
began to celebrate. Their fans stormed the court and the sound system even
played, “We Are the Champions.” Um, no. Not yet. The ball had gone out of bounds
clearly before the buzzer. Ref Pat Shanahan noticed and was signaling
right away that the game wasn’t over. PC was brought back and 1.3 was put on the
clock. Martin inbounded from in front of Gratz’ bench, not far from the left
corner. His pass went to White on the left side behind the arc. White fired. The
ball hit the rim and bounced high as White tumbled to the floor near Markieff,
who’d contested the shot. The whole ending sequence was vintage. Again the PC
folks stormed the court and, best of all, everyone behaved. The twins got quite
emotional in the immediate aftermath and it was impossible not to feel good for
them. They’ve been tremendous players and young men through their three years at
PC and I’m predicting they’ll come to own Memphis because of their skills and
personalities. Just two nights earlier, in a CL semifinal win over North, N-G’s
Rick Jackson had 26 points, 17 rebounds and eight blocks. Cue the
Twilight Zone music. Markieff in this one had 23, 18 and eight. And get this: he
incurred NO personals. Though Marcus (10 points, 10 rebounds, five assists)
finished with four fouls and did briefly have to sit down, he did not get his
first foul until 1:41 remained in the third quarter. The fact that the twins
were able to stay on the floor was huge because, as expected, PC had turnovers
problem – 19 to just six for Gratz. Also, the non-Morris Huskies shot 5-for-18
from he floor. Soph WG Jesse Morgan had nine points, five boards and
three assists. White (11) and sr. F Ishmawiyl McFadden (10) joined White
in double figures. Martin had five assists and two steals and was solid-plus in
taking care of the ball, but went just 1-for-10 from the floor. White (4-for-19)
and McFadden (4-for-13) had similar struggles. McFadden added three blocks. For
all of its wild success over the last two decades, Gratz has now suffered nine
defeats in its 16 title-game appearances since 1989. This is the third by one
point; two of the other games were decided in OT. (One of those one-point
losses, to FLC in ’94, was later overturned when it was found that the Bobcats
had used ineligible players.) One of the best parts of the night was seeing five
members of West Philly’s 30-0 1977 squad, along with their chief rival. The guys
started off sitting behind the west-end basket, then were invited to sit behind
the scorers’ table. They were introduced to the crowd and spent some time being
interviewed for Fox Philadelphia’s telecast. The Speedboys on hand were starters
Gene Banks, Clarence “Eggy” Tillman, Joe Garrett, Mike Nichols and sub
Terry “Cotton” Scott. The chief rival was Overbrook’s Lewis Lloyd.
Banks (Duke) and Lloyd (Drake) played in the NBA. In 1977, when West’s new gym
was being built, the school played its home games at what was then Sayre Junior
High. I’d mentioned to Amauro that Lew had put on an amazing show in
defeat in that legendary regular season show at Sayre. (The gym was stuffed and
all kinds of people were turned away as police on horses tried their best to
maintain control outside the gym in the schoolyard. What a crazy day!) Anyway,
when Lloyd was walking past us, I pulled him aside and asked, “Lew, do you
remember your numbers from ‘the Sayre game?’ “ He said, “The Sayre game? 34 and
24.” Yes, as in 34 points and 24 rebounds! At least Amauro now knows I was
telling the truth (smile). What a glorious era that was for the Pub. West won
five consecutive titles from ’74 to ’78 and the Speedboys’ records in Gene’s
three varsity seasons were 25-0, 24-2 and 30-0 (ninth grade was part of junior
highs back then, so freshmen never played varsity). They were 33-1 in Tillman’s
senior season, 1977-78, with the one loss, at Overbrook, ending a state record,
68-game winning streak. ‘Brook then took over in ’79 and ’80, going 34-1 (with
the one loss coming AT West) and then 34-0. Phew! Those two schools were the
kingpins for a LONG time. It’s hard to believe that neither has won a title
since ’83 (when ‘Brook beat West) and, get this, that West has not even had a
coaches’ first team All-Public honoree since Devin Baker in ’93 . . . If
you just woke up from fainting, sorry for jolting you like that (smile).
FEB. 28
CATHOLIC LEAGUE SEMIFINAL
Roman 62, Dougherty 44
The doubleheader has been over for several hours now and a bit of
research has been completed going back to the 1941-42 season. From the
standpoint of point differentials, mixing in Neumann-Goretti’s 73-45 frolic past
North Catholic in the nightcap, this was the third least competitive set of CL
semifinals in all that time. The two “worst” twinbills were in ’01 (55 points)
and ’97 (50 points). Oh, well, at least the CL is back at the Palestra. In CL
history, more than one division MVP has had the misfortune to turn in a playoff
stinker and this time the victim was Dougherty sr. G Kahlil Mumford. I’m
told St. Peter’s was among the witnesses and I hope these guys ask for tape of
all of Kahlil’s wonderful performances through the season and don’t go strictly
by this one. From the outset, when he was guilty of some unforced errors (and
his mates also displayed what appeared to be a severe case of the jitters), ‘Lil
was more than a ‘lil off. Thanks mostly to the dogged defense of sr. G Nick
Daggett, who received occasional help from jr. G Courtney Stanley,
Mumford was held to seven points. He shot 2-for-11 total and 2-for-2 at the line
and the first of those free throws turned out to be quite necessary, not to
mention historic. Mumford entered the game needing six points to hit 1,000 for
his career. He sank a trey in the second quarter and converted a drive in the
fourth and then he went hard toward the hoop from the right side and drew a foul
with 3:06 left. He nailed both free tosses for points 1,000 and 1,001 and that
was where his career total stayed frozen. He fouled out with 1:28 left while
unsuccessfully trying to prevent a dunk by Roman’s best player, sr. WG
Bradley Wanamaker (Pitt signee). Whenever I’ve been around to watch
Dougherty, and I trust when I haven’t, Kahlil has been the picture of class. It
would have been rough to witness a fall-just-short-of-1,000 scenario and, during
the post-game interview, Daggett, speaking of class, made sure to pass on
congratulations to Kahlil. Anyway . . . Dougherty killed itself with horrendous
play (no other word for it) at the beginning of each half. The Redbirds stumbled
into a 12-2 hole at the outset. And then, after battling back within 23-19 at
halftime, they allowed Roman to enjoy a 10-0 run to start the third quarter.
There was a sequence right at the end of the half that, as crazy as this is
gonna sound, could have made a difference if had turned out differently.
Victimized by a rare brain cramp, Wanamaker took a three-pointer with 0:08 still
on the clock. That gave Dougherty time not only to rebound, but also move
upcourt for its own “last shot.” It was a deep trey by Mumford and it came close
to succeeding. A swish could have given Dougherty all kinds of momentum heading
into the locker room. Plus, that trey would have given him exactly 1,000. And
that issue would have disappeared. Wanamaker had a wonderful night overall. He
shot 8-for-12 and 6-for-8 for 22 points while adding seven rebounds and three
steals. Soph PG Maalik Wayns totaled 17 points, two assists and two
steals. Bradley’s twin, Brian, made just one of eight shots, but managed
two assists and three steals. Jr. SF Will Kirkland had nine points and
five boards. Sr. SF Roberto Townsend (12) and frosh backup PG Willis
Nicholson (10) scored in double digits for Dougherty. Nicholson added two
assists and three steals and often appeared to be the only non-nervous Card.
Roman’s student rooters might have set a CL (world?) record for earliest chant
of this: “It’s all over! It’s all over!” They came out with that one with 17
minutes remaining in the pregame warmup session, and followed it with, “We want
Neumann! We want Neumann!” Ex-Roman FB stars Joe McCourt and
Scott Paxson were sitting in front-row seats right across from Roman’s
bench. Joe, who helped key North’s football resurgence, is back at his alma
mater as the offensive coordinator. Scott is merely drawing a paycheck in the
NFL (smile). He’s on Pittsburgh’s roster and hoping to become a factor next
season. Thanks for the wonderful assistance provided all night by assorted
sidekicks and folks in the DN sports department. Amauro Austin and Ed
“Huck” Palmer, sporting his West Catholic football-title ring, helped with
official stats. Mark “Froggy” Carfagno and Keith Hines, my main
stat guy from back in the day (he still makes occasional appearances), served as
extra sets of eyes and lent general support. Penn had no fax machine readily
available, so we had to read the full boxscores over cell phones to Tom Mahon
and Bob Cooney back in the office. Huck handled that duty after game No.
2 because Puck kept whining and crying and complaining when I asked him to do it
(smile). No sweat. His squad, Norf Catlic, had just been dealt a rough loss.
Finally, and this is MOST important, are thoughts and prayers are with Amauro
and his family as his father prepares for a serious medical procedure.
FEB. 27
PUBLIC LEAGUE SEMIFINAL
Gratz 69, Freire 35
Well, troops, this was definitely the fear. As the Pub tries to maintain
some sanity despite having a ridiculous amount of teams, some of which would
have trouble winning games in a back-in-the-day gym class at Overbrook or West
Philly, different scenarios are being tried when it comes to playoffs. This
year, a decision was made to determine all four class champions in the
quarterfinal round and have the semis feature AAAA vs. A and AAA vs. AA. Ouch
for the first one. Freire is small and young and at least two pretty good
players have disappeared over the course of the season, so it was not a match
for a school that almost always gets to the championship game. Freire had one
chance: receive a monstrous performance from jr. WG Jarrod Denard, a
savvy lefty. Gratz jr. CG Charles White made sure there was no chance of
that. Though Denard stayed aggressive throughout and did finish with 16 points,
he shot just 6-for-20 and was 0-for-7 in the first half as Freire sagged into a
29-15 hole. White is a spirited defender, and he never allowed Denard to enjoy
even a hint of comfort. White, who went from Gratz (ninth grade) to American
Christian (10th grade) back to Gratz, professes not to care a whole lot about
offense, but it’s not like he can’t play it. In fact, he was prominent in the
stretch that put the game beyond away, as opposed to just away, where it already
was (smile). As the third quarter wound down, White raced downcourt for what had
the look of a breakaway layup. Instead, Denard gave chase and wound up
committing an intentional foul. White then added a three-pointer on a pass from
sub forward Keith Harding. White then passed to the ultimate warrior, sr.
F Tommie "T.J." Sykes (17 points, six steals) for a fastbreak layup, and
then added his own layup off a steal at halfcourt. That sequence made it 50-27.
Gratz’ starters aside from White and Sykes were sr. PG Josh “Scrap” Martin
(eight points, six assists, two steals), sr. CF-C Ishmawiyl McFadden (12
points, eight rebounds) and jr. WG Alibaba Odd (four assists). For Freire,
only jr. G Antoine "Blueberry" Singleton managed more than four points
aside from Denard. Oddly enough, they were his team's first seven of the game.
Frosh Octavious Booker had five rebounds and three blocks in addition to
four points and each of his baskets came on a short baseline jumper after a
solid catch and plant-the-feet sequence. Freire had nine players in uniform.
Only eight got into the game. When you’re losing by 30-plus points, I don’t know
how the ninth guy never gets in, but that was what happened. The name of soph G
Bernard Ford is making it onto the website, though. At one point in the
first half, I advised Amauro to take a look at the sneakers of Freire
soph Stephon Fulton, a big’-un with very limited skills, for now. I could
not believe that his sneaks were barely tied. How can someone play ball like
that? Is that not a sprained/broken ankle waiting to happen? In the second half,
Amauro nudged me and said excitedly, “Look! Fulton just stepped out of his
shoe!” Indeed he had. “Amar” will handle the report on the second game. That
tilt was better than this one (kinda had to be, by default), but surely nothing
special. Let’s hope the title game is a classic.
FEB. 25
PUBLIC LEAGUE QUARTERFINAL
CLASS AAA FINAL
Franklin LC 65, Communications Tech 60
The Duckster is a little tied up with regular work this week, so
we’ll slap together a slightly delayed report. No one connected with FLC would
have predicted this scenario: at halftime, franchise sr. G Malcolm Eleby
(St. Bonaventure) owned just four points, and had attempted just two shots from
the floor, yet his squad was in control, at 29-19. Huh? How’d that happen? You
mean there are actually other Bobcats? Yes, sir! Five other guys owned points by
intermission and the leader was the eighth man into the game, soph WG Denzel
Yard. In the second quarter, Yard sniped for a trio of treys on passes from
jr. PG Kyle Sawyer and they gave FLC a serious boost. No idea what
happened to CT’s defenders. Yard was wide open on all three launchings. As the
third quarter began, FLC reeled off 10 consecutive points to storm ahead by 20,
yes, 20, and the potential for a garbage-time fourth quarter was certainly in
the air. CT G Najee Edwards would have none of it. Making every shot he
too in the session, three from the floor and four at the line, the
ever-aggressive Edwards posted 10 points and the deficit was down to 14 by the
end of three. Edwards drained a threeball early in the fourth and later picked
up three assists as sr. F Shyheem Satchell (12 points, all in second
half), G Shaquille Shannon (3-for-3, one trey, seven points) and PG
Antoine “Gee” Monroe, son of N-G assistant Charles Monroe, picked up
the scoring slack. CT kept rollin’ and rollin’ some more and charged within
three, at 63-60, with 0:39 left as Shannon buried his trey on a pass from
Edwards. Eleby (14 points, 10 rebounds, six assists) hit the front part of a
double-bonus at 0:31. On CT’s possession, Edwards made a hard drive to the left
baseline and missed about a 12-footer under pressure. Eleby added another free
throw at 0:16. Sawyer got the ink thanks to nine points, five assists and two
steals. Strangely unproductive was CT jr. F Andrew “Scootie” Randall,
who’d recently gone over 1,000 points for his career. He shot just 1-for-8 en
route to five points. He did have seven boards, two assists and three steals.
Though he has always been a reliable go-to guy, he did not receive too many
setups in this one. We’ll pin that on the fact that CT trailed by an uncommon
amount early and was thrown off track.
FEB. 25
PUBLIC LEAGUE QUARTERFINAL
CLASS AA FINAL
Prep Charter 52, Imhotep 48
If Imhotep had pulled off this one, the circumstances (during)
and reaction (afterward) would have not have been as legendary as they were
during Friday's win over Strawberry Mansion (in case you haven't heard, the
Panthers trailed by 19 after three quarters and won by seven). In this one,
Imhotep had the score doubled on it (32-16) by a shade past the midway point of
the second quarter. But AGAIN coach Andre Noble's squad came back from
the almost-dead and only some late heroics by one of Prep's young-boy lesser
lights, soph F-C Ferg Myrick, prevented what surely would have been
another wild celebration. Myrick is a transfer from Haverford School and his
chances to impress have been rare because he's a backup to the Memphis-bound
Morris twins, 6-10 Markieff and 6-9 Marcus. Unless they're in
foul trouble, there's no reason for coach Dan Brinkley to take them off
the court, especially since their chemistry is even more impressive than their
talent. But in this one, Markieff fouled out with 3:54 left while trying to
convert a tap-in and that meant Myrick would get an extended, pressurized
chance. He fared well, thank you. His overall numbers showed four points and
eight rebounds, along with a timely block, and coming through like this in a big
game should do wonders for him going forward. With 2:10 remaining, Myrick
grabbed the rebound after sr. F-C Kashief Edwards (11 points, eight
boards), a Niagara signee, missed the second of two free throws. He then hustled
downcourt and turned a pass from soph PG Parrish Grant (11 points, seven
assists) into a basket that provided a 48-45 lead. From there: sr. F-C Tamir
Johnson (Central Connecticut) made the first of two FTs at 1:36 and Myrick
rebounded the second miss; sr. F Hanif Nixon converted a pass from sr. PG
Jermaine Washington (also Cent. Conn.) to create a 48-48 tie at 1:10; sr.
CG Kevin Radford missed a right-corner trey and Marcus (12 points, 10
rebounds) turned his second follow into a bucket for a 50-48 lead at 0:45;
Imhotep worked the clock and Washington finally attemped a lean-back, left-wing
jumper that was unsuccessful; Marcus rebounded and passed ahead to Grant, who
converted a double-bonus after getting hacked. Imhotep's far-and-away best
player was Johnson. He scored 10 second quarter points to pretty much
singlehandedly get the Panthers back in the game. He was a combination of calm
and feisty while totaling 20 points, six rebounds, two assists, three steals and
two blocks. My ol', long-time stat sidekick, the incomparable Keith Hines,
came out of semi-retirement to work this doubleheader at Southern (FLC-CT was
game 2). Keith is the definition of personable and knows everybody and we had a
lot of fun. Duck served as our extra set of eyes for Game 1 and he, too, laughed
early and often at Keith's assorted nutty comments. Duck spent Game 2 behind
FLC's bench. He couldn't help it. He bleeds both shades of Bobcat blue (smile).
FEB. 24
CATHOLIC LEAGUE QUARTERFINAL
Dougherty 68, La Salle 50
Don't let the final score fool you. Well, only a little bit.
Things are worded that way because Dougherty WAS in control pretty much
throughout, but definitely DID experience some fourth quarter consternation.
Sounds weird, right? With 4:35 left, Dougherty owned a 50-40 pad. Then, a short
time later, jr. CG Frank "My Buddies Call Me Frankie" Pierson buried a
left-wing trey on a pass from franchise jr. WG-SF Clay Penecale and he
was fouled while doing so, and when he made the free throw, the Explorers
suddenly were within 51-45. The deficit then dwindled to four points as future
legend C.J. Aiken, a freshman who goes about 6-8, sank two free throws in
easy-as-Pie fashion. (I used "Pie" with a capital P because that's my wife's
nickname and she's sitting on the other end of the sofa and, just to bug me, she
keeps reaching over to tap my right elbow to make me hit the wrong keys on the
laptop computer. What a knucklehead! ha, ha, ha). A gigantic sequence followed.
Dougherty sr. G Kahlil Mumford went to the line for a double-bonus. He
made the first, missed the second. Ah, but he scrambled to secure the rebound
and then he drove hard to the basket. As the lefty reached the left side, he
made a backward flip pass over his shoulder to the trailing Tim Gates,
the sr. C. Gates easily converted the layup and that made it 54-47. Though La
Salle did hang around some more, Dougherty finished with a big-time rush. The
highlight? Well, it was the kind of play you'd see in a StreetBall video. After
Penecale missed a shot, sr. F Sean Benz rebounded and tried to pass
slightly across the court to a teammate. Sr. F Roberto Townsend
intercepted and set sail on a drive covering three-quarters of the court. As he
neared the basket, he bounced the ball hard enough to send it up toward the rim.
Then he caught it one-handed and wolfed it down in ferocious fashion. Whoa!!!!
Damn!!!! Maybe someone will put the video on YouTube? It was 'Berto's second
dunk of the game and we won't mention that he missed two earlier attempts at
throwdowns. Oh, I guess we just did (smile). For excitement purposes, the two
makes negated-and-then-some the two misconnections. Townsend posted 12 points,
four rebounds, four assists, three steals and two blocks. He also did a decent
job of withstanding constant abuse from La Salle's student fans over the missed
dunks, his goofy looking sneakers (the color of brown mustard), etc. Mumford,
the North MVP, used a solid fourth quarter to finish with 16-five-four-two in
the P-R-A-S categories. Overall, though, the best Cardinal was sr. G-F Justin
Minter. He was consistent throughout en route to 16 points, eight boards and
two assists. Jr. F Isiah Mason made all of his shots (four floor, one
line) for nine points. Penecale again turned in a strong effort, though again he
got off to a slow start. As you might remember, he got cooking in the second
half the other night when La Salle beat Judge, also at Ryan, for fourth place.
This time he settled for two points in the first quarter and then was impressive
in numerous ways as he pumped up that total to 25. He also had three assists and
all four of the Explorers' steals. He truly showed poise in the Explorers' last
three outings (including the regular season finale at Judge). Even when guys are
in his face, he has the uncanny ability to look like he's by himself in the
middle of a playground somewhere. Not a hint of nervousness. OK, he might have
forced a shot or two, but let's face it, he had to on a day when there were VERY
few alternatives. I sat behind the basket closest to Ryan's locker rooms. La
Salle's students were behind me and they came out with some classic lines. A few
were over the top, but not one was uttered with enough volume to be heard too
far away. (Phew, thank goodness.) As you might imagine, the guys played the
we're-superior-academically card early and often. In the fourth quarter, after
Dougherty's students, fronted by the mascot, spelled out C-a-r-d-i-n-a-ls, a La
Salle kid yelled out, "Now you can pass second grade!" Pause. Same kid. "Try
spelling 'Dougherty!' " Hey, Duke has to get its clever rooters from somewhere,
right?
FEB. 24
CATHOLIC LEAGUE QUARTERFINAL
North Catholic 53, Ryan 48
Of all eight teams in the playoffs, you could say the North
Catholic Falcons had the most difficult assignment because their game wound up
being played in their opponent's gym. And that scenario really appeared to favor
Ryan in the beginning as the Raiders, obviously familiar with their
surroundings, stormed to a 13-4 lead by hitting three treys and two regulars.
But if the Falcons were experiencing sinking, here-we-go feelings, they never
let it show. By the end of the quarter, they were within five points, at 21-16,
and they kept digging and, especially, trying their best to not get bored while
playing defense against the ever-patient Raiders and in the end, they prevailed.
How? Well, it wasn't with foul shooting (smile). But if you're going to miss,
even brick, free throws, it helps to collect the offensive rebound and North did
a whole lot of that down the stretch. Sr. G-F Andrew Pomager twice
grabbed boards after jr. PG Velton Jones missed foul shots. The second
time, Jones went hard to the hoop, absorbed slid contact and made the layup. His
tacked-on free throw gave North a 49-46 lead with 1:14 left. From there: Jr. PG
Andrew Rogers converted yet another brassy drive to make it 49-48 at
0:48. Jones missed a one-and-one at 0:31. Sr. F-C Chris Edwards could not
grab the rebound, but he did guide ball back out front and a massive struggle
took place, as they were falling, between Pomager and jr. F Chris Wilk.
The possession arrow favored North at 0:28. At 0:23, Jones went to the line for
a double-bonus. He missed BOTH. But Edwards again was right where he needed to
be, and this time he scored on a put-back. Wilk followed by missing a trey from
the right corner. The rebound kicked long and another mad scramble, this one
between Jones and sr. WG Eric Dethloff, took place for the all-important
rebound. A jump was called at 0:08 with possession to Ryan. Sr. G-F Jeff
Sottnick was the inbounder. The bouncy, long-limbed Edwards stood in front
of him. Maybe you can tell where we're going here. No, the result was not a
5-second call. But Sottnick could inbound to no one nearby and he had to fire
the ball out close to midcourt. Wilk made a leaping catch, but was called for
walking as he came down. North's clinching basket came immediately as Pomager,
inbounding from halfcourt, found jr. PG Billy Dolan for a breakaway layup.
As you read the stretch-run recap, what probably stood out was how many little
things North did right. Coaches always preach to pay attention to those things.
I guess they know what they're talking about. The Falcons showed balanced
scoring thanks to Jones (15), Edwards (14) and Pomager (13). Pomager also
grabbed 10 rebounds. Jones had four assists and two steals. Jr. WG R.J. Handy
had three apiece of assists and steals. After North went on a 36-19 run, staking
it to a 40-32 lead, Rogers brought back Ryan from the almost dead with seven
consecutive points. He just kept taking it straight down the middle and dared
the Falcons to stop him. They couldn't. Then, sr. WG Keith Czarny drove
hard for a flip shot and Ryan edged ahead, 41-40. Jones drove for a bucket.
Dethloff answered with a right-corner trey on a feed from Rogers (three
assists). Moving ahead a little, Ryan made it 46-43 with 2:42 left as Sottnick
missed a right-corner three and Wilk came flying in from the left for a get-it,
release-it follow. In retrospect, the head-scratching development of the game
was this one: In the first half, Ryan sniped 5-for-9 on treys (with all makes in
the first quarter), yet went 0-for-6 at the line. Rogers (17) and Sottnick (12)
were the lone Raiders in double figures. Not surprising, considering their size
disadvantage, but the Raiders were almost doubled on the glass. This will be
North's first trip to a semi since 1994.
FEB. 23
PUBLIC LEAGUE ROUND OF 16 PLAYOFF
Imhotep 80, Straw. Mansion 75
The DN work is finished and it’s roughly 10:30 as I start this report.
Again and again, the various elements of this all-time classic keep racing
through my mind. Those in attendance in Mansion’s cozy, way-loud gym will talk
about this one forever and the focal point will undoubtedly be The Great
Collapse. Understandable, since Mansion did blow a 19-point lead over the final
eight minutes, going 1-for-7 from the floor and 5-for-10 at the line and
committing 12 turnovers. But here’s hoping folks also discuss the major reason
for TGC and the events of the game’s early portion. Being a big fan of dead-eye
shooters, I have to start there. In the first quarter, after missing his first
shot, a threeball, Mansion jr. WG Dwayne Davis hit SIX consecutive treys.
Yes, six. He did most of his damage from the right wing, with the first four
coming against a zone. The Panthers then went man-to-man and he drilled two
more. On No. 6, he was literally falling out of bounds in front of Mansion’s
bench. Amazing! The Knights finished the first quarter with a 22-12 edge and
Davis accounted for the other four points with one assist apiece on FGs by soph
WG Eddie Frazier and soph PG Marcus Grimes. (In the CL North
pre-playoff the other night, Judge's Kevin Lynch accounted for his team's first
19 points with 14 of his own and assists for the other five.) Davis hit no treys
in the second quarter, but did go 4-for-4 at the line and mix in a regular FG to
complete the half with 24 points. Third quarter? Two MORE threes in as many
attempts (the city game record is 10 by Mansion's Maureece Rice in 2003)
and a pair of free throws for a grand total now of 32 points. Ah, but problems
were already developing. Davis incurred his third personal with 5:13 left in the
session and his fourth at 1:10. Coach Gerald Hendricks took him out and left him
on the bench as the fourth quarter began. He returned at 6:47 . . . and was gone
just 7 seconds later because of a reach-in foul at midcourt. By then the lead
was already beginning to dissipate and there was just no stopping the Panthers.
Spurred on by their wildly energetic coach, Andre Noble, who kept
stomping his feet and clapping his hands, they kept rolling and rolling and
rolling and rolling and the eyes of Mansion’s youthful players kept getting
wider and wider. Pretty early in the comeback, it was easy to tell that Mansion
would either lose or barely manage to hold on, if only because Imhotep would be
severely spent down the stretch from having expended so much energy. After
Frazier made a free throw, Mansion was up, 72-65. The Panthers scored two quick
field goals, with the second an impressive drive for a left-handed layup by sr.
PG Jermaine Washington. Almost simultaneously, I looked at statman
Steve Reid and he looked at me and our expressions both screamed, “Imhotep’s
gonna win this game!” (And since Steve truly loves Mansion, it had to hurt.) The
tie, at 72-72, came on a follow by very important frontcourt sub Hanif Nixon.
Imhotep sr. F Kashief Edwards and Mansion jr. G Darren Lawrence
then traded two free throws apiece. Lead for good: A foul-line jumper by Edwards
on a pass from Washington at 1:08. Mansion could not deliver a counter-punch and
as the final seconds melted away, the Panthers could not contain their
enthusiasm. They did try hard, though, because they had almost no fans in the
building – strangely, neither team bothered with cheerleaders today – and they
knew the Mansion supporters were feeling all kinds of
frustration/disappointment/anger/whatever. One of the best post-game visuals was
the hug exchanged by Washington and Davis. Jermaine – remember, he was on the
winning team – had a tear streaming down his face as he walked away and Davis
was crying big-time. He pulled up his jersey to cover his face. What a moment.
Finally, as the Panthers scrambled downstairs to their locker room, they allowed
their emotions to bubble and it was quite a scene to see. Washington got the
ink. He finished with 16 points, six assists and three steals and scored seven
points in the fourth quarter. Edwards and sr. F-C Tamir Johnson,
like Washington a Central Connecticut signee, also had seven points apiece in
the fourth quarter. Nixon had six to complete a wonderful performance (17
points, seven boards, three assists). Imhotep’s other rotation guys were soph
G-Fs Will Adams and Kenny Battle (six boards) and jr. Gs
Lamar Trice and Steven Leath (three assists, three assists). Trice
did his best to try to keep up with Davis after the early onslaught. For
Mansion, jr. C Devon White, also saddled with severe foul trouble, had 13
points and 10 boards. OK, now it’s a shade after 11 o’clock and I’ll be posting
this report momentarily. Around the city, I KNOW the players and fans are
texting and calling each other to spread the word about this game. Some won’t be
able to sleep until very late, if at all. It was THAT kind of game. With THOSE
kinds of elements. A guy on one team hits six consecutive threes in the first
quarter! The other team winds up winning by five points thanks to a 31-7 fourth
quarter! Phew and phew again!!
FEB. 22
PUBLIC LEAGUE FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFF
Penn 91, Bok 71
This was my first look at Penn all season, and my first at Bok since
early December. A more competitive game would have been nice, of course, and all
of us could have done without the early ending, as caused by a fan disturbance
with 13.1 seconds remaining. Harold Alexander, who had to miss
this game, has obviously done a nice job in his first season as the Lions’
coach. His team plays hard and together and there’s an interesting mix of
players. For way too long, Penn has been like a farm club for other programs.
Did you know that ex-Sixer Marc Jackson began his high school career at
Penn before transferring to Roman and that college star Mustafa Shakur
did likewise before winding up at Friends’ Central. Even Germantown star
Darryl McBride, a junior, played last year at Penn before hitting the pike.
If Harold is able to retain the job – he’s not a teacher, and runs the risk of
being supplanted by someone who is – the Lions could become dangerous over the
next few years because he has good contacts around the city and Penn is easily
accessible via the subway. Oh, well, we’ll see how it all plays out. The most
productive Lions were jrs., F-C Kevin Hudson and WG Brandon
Tondreau. Hudson is not that tall, but his instincts in the lane are quite
impressive and he truly thirsted for the ball as it came off the boards. He’s a
quick jumper, too. He had 19 points and 18 rebounds. Tondreau, a lefty who
sports, believe it or not, a Mohawk haircut, is quite similar to a guy I saw
yesterday, Lincoln’s Brandon Bowes. Tondreau is not as quick, but
displays the same repertoire of shots, even from distance. He knocked down 23
points. The story was garnered by sr. CG Orie Johnson, who’s all of 5-2,
120 pounds. He had nine points and four assists and buzzed around all over the
place. He holds long-time membership in the Fierce Competitor Club and it’s
impossible not to want to see this kid succeed. Two more seniors, Curshawn
Banks and Mark Allen, also do much of the ballhandling, as Orie
sometimes plays on the wing. Srs. Jovan Smith and Anthony Parker
lend inside help. Thanks to some JV additions, Penn had 18 players in uniform.
Bok had eight. Ouch. The Wildcats killed themselves with nine turnovers in the
first quarter and 4-for-14 miseries at the line in the first half. Corey
Curtis (17) and Chris Parks (14) led Bok in scoring while Tremell
Green swept 13 rebounds. The first and third guy are sophs and Parks is a
junior, so coach Lloyd Jenkins could have fun next season as well. The
problem began after deep sub Braheim Dixon (I know that name from
somewhere; he must have played football) banked in a deep trey from the right
wing while drawing a foul. At Bok, all spectators must watch the game from a
balcony that runs the length of the court. Maybe 15 Penn girls were up there,
cheering away, and some Bok loyalists began to harass them. There was pushing
and shoving and a plastic bottle of sports drink came flying down onto the
court. The refs waved their hands in it’s-over fashion and, yes, that was it.
There was no MAJOR trouble, but as the Lions boarded their bus out on Mifflin
Street, school personnel and police supervised. Meanwhile, one of the refs was
Vince Trombetta, who happens to be the defensive coordinator for Bok’s
football team. Vince is one of the all-time great guys, but there’s no way he
should be officiating Bok games, especially a playoff game, especially since
some of Bok’s hoopsters are also FB players. The whole scenario opens too many
potential cans of worms. As I arrived at the school an hour before gametime, my
cell phone rang. It was sidekick Mark “Froggy” Carfagno, suggesting I
come up to the school library. Therein, FB coach Tom DeFelice was
supervising an informal luncheon for his team. The highlight was the
distribution of awards and beautiful jackets recognizing the Wildcats’ Class AAA
District 12 title. Tommy introduced The Frogster and yours truly to the players
and made some very nice comments about our work and the best thing was, he
didn’t make us say anything (phew, thank goodness – smile). Some pics from the
luncheon are posted in the same folder with the basketball shots.
FEB. 21
CATHOLIC NORTH PRE-PLAYOFF
La Salle 56, Judge 51
There were two guarantees before this one even started: Clay Penecale
would play well for La Salle; Kevin Lynch would do likewise for Judge. It
happens EVERY year, folks. Guys who get dissed/screwed in the coaches’
All-Catholic voting wind up making a statement in the playoffs. Penecale, a jr.
WG-SF, did not get royally dissed/screwed because he did finish sixth and head
the second team. It would not have surprised to see him among the top five,
however, and he certainly played like a first-teamer tonight (though he kinda
waited until the second half – smile). At intermission, Penecale owned just four
points on 2-for-6 shooting and it appeared his squad was soon going to have
start exploring offseason leisure activities. La Salle was down, 30-20, and had
trailed by 13 just moments earlier. But Clay molded (bet he’s never heard that
line, eh?) a second-half turnaround by scoring 17 points. He mixed his patented
dribble-dribble-stop-pop mid-range jumpers with a pair of threeballs and even
went hard to the hole. I’d written about Clay earlier this season, so tonight
the ink went to jr. CG Frank Pierson, the sixth man. And it wasn’t a
stretch, by any means. His contributions were CRUCIAL to the win. After
experiencing shooting miseries pretty much all season, Pierson went 4-for-5 with
two treys for 10 points. Also, get this, he was second among the ‘Splorers in
rebounds, with four, while notching two apiece of assists and steals. He was
also Mr. Perfect Timing. With 2:08 left, having been given room, he made a
brassy drive down the middle and swished a flip shot for a 50-45 lead. Then,
after Penecale made a steal, he accepted a kick-out pass from jr. F Joe
Migliarese (eight points) and banged home a trey for a 53-45 bulge. Judge
kept toothing and nailing. In fact, on their last meaningful possession, the
Crusaders even had a chance to tie. But after going 4-for-5 on treys en route to
14 points, jr. WG-SF Bob Zanneo could not connect on a straight-on
attempt. The rebound kicked out long. Pierson made the grab and passed ahead to
Penecale for a breakaway layup. Other things to note: jr. C Matt Crozier
had 10 boards and sr. G sub T.J. Brown, on a pass from sr. G-F Anthony
Acey-Davis, buried a trey late in the third quarter, just as La Salle was
exerting its influence. Now, about Lynch. Though he did have a couple of down
performances in league play, overall he was Judge’s mainstay and the only true
ballhandler among the starters and I’d have to think the fact he did not make
A-C at all caused his coaches to scratch their heads. Well, all he did in this
one was have a DIRECT role in Judge’s first 19 points! He scored the first 14
himself, with two treys mixed in, then made assists to account for the next five
as Zanneo hit a trey and jr. C Andrew Vose (eight rebounds) scored down
low. Not bad, eh? Overall, Lynch went 9-for-9 (three threebies) and 4-for-6 for
25 points while mixing in four steals. It was a shame for him that such a
memorable performance came in a loss. I watched this one from right behind the
basket closest to the locker rooms in Ryan’s gym. Perfect for photo purposes.
Plus, Hockey Puck didn’t want to sit there (he stationed himself off to
the side of midcourt), so the night was pain-free (smile). Sitting right nearby
was Jason Budd, a former Judge athlete and now an assistant principal. If
I remember correctly, Jason said Zanneo ranks third in the junior class
academically and is hoping to go Ivy. Great news! Also, he said the team is
filled with character kids and that the starters, especially, likely have never
been guilty of even one misstep that would have resulted in detention. Great
news again!
FEB. 21
PUBLIC LEAGUE PRELIMINARY PLAYOFF
Mastbaum 76, Lincoln 64
There are undoubtedly worse ideas, but none comes to mind at the moment:
Never go TO Mastbaum with a team suffering from ballhandling issues. The
Panthers often don’t have much height, but pesky guards are always in abundance
and if you don’t take care of the ball, zoom, it’s goin’ in the other direction.
‘Baum roared to a 40-21 halftime lead mostly because Lincoln kept turning it
over and over and over. When the Railsplitters did manage to get into halfcourt
sets, their flow was mostly non-existent. They fared much better in the second
half, but honestly, those 16 minutes mostly gave off a this-is-for-fun aura and
Lincoln never truly caused consternation. Mr. Story Man was sr. PG Sean
Rice-Fleming, who earlier this year told me just to use Rice but this time
said his mom was adamant about the fact he’d better go back to using the
hyphenated, full-blown version (smile). He carries just 145 pounds on a 5-11
frame, but don’t let that concern you. He plays with a bruiser’s mentality and
makes the right decision again and again. Even when playing in whirlwind
fashion, there’s still something calm and collected about his approach and that
quality is extremely rare. He went for 19 points and eight assists and
thoroughly enjoyed himself. The other two srs. of note are CG Marvin Warden
and F-C Chris Ayandokun. Warden mostly plays off the ball on offense, in
deference to R-F, but he’s also a point guard at heart and his ballhawking
skills keyed the defense. He posted six thefts in the first half alone, along
with four assists, and appeared not to care at all that he hadn’t even scored by
halftime. Ayandokun is a thin, bouncy guy who projects as a SF. Maybe even as a
WG down the line, depending on college level. He was also awesome in the first
half, going for 12 points and nine boards. Jr. WG-SF Michael Rainey went
for 21 points overall, mostly because he owned the baseline and near wing and
was very decisive once he got the ball. If the opportunity was there, boom, he
took it. The little-things guy was jr. PF-C Marvin Smith. But it’s pretty
cool when your little-things guy can shoot 6-for-8 from the floor and total 14
points. Lincoln earlier this season had a respectable three-headed monster, but
one of those guys disappeared due to academic ineligibility and the loss proved
to be too much. The scoring machine is sr. Brandon Bowes, a slight lefty
with a great touch and the ability to do things on the move OR while just
flat-out gettin’ and launchin’. He went for 33 points and drained five treys.
Check this out: He packed 19 points into the first 10 minutes of the second half
by nailing seven consecutive shots from the floor. Four of them were threeballs!
FB star Tyrone Bolden, who’s still trying to make a decision on what
sport to play in college (maybe both), managed 13 points and nine boards. He had
two wicked dunks down the stretch. One made it into Special Photos. One didn’t,
no thanks to the ref who was standing right in front of me (grrrrrrrrrrrr,
smile). As always, the visit to Mastbaum was pleasant. Teachers always seem to
want to watch the kids play the games, and I hope the kids appreciate that such
a culture does not exist at many schools. Once the bell rings, right out the
door. Not at 'Baum. Phys ed teacher/coach Joanie Houston, a family friend
famous for non-stop energy, dashed across the court right before gametime and
led the students in cheers of “Let’s go, Mastbaum, let’s go!” Gotta love it!
FEB. 20
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Prep Charter 52, Imhotep 50
Every team wants to win a division title. That’s especially so when losing
means you might find yourself at always-tough Strawberry Mansion in a few days
with the prospect of not being able to later advance to the state playoffs.
Imhotep has three Division I signees in sr. G Jermaine Washington and
F-Cs Tamir Johnson (both Central Connecticut) and Kashief Edwards
(Niagara). Now, the Panthers also have a hard way to go in the AA portion of the
Pub playoffs. Considering they blew leads of 10 points (halftime) and six points
(after three quarters) in a home game, though the site was Finley RC instead of
Lonnie Young, they mostly have themselves to blame. But there was one gigantic
call that was just flat-out wrong, and it wound being a killer. With Imhotep up,
48-47, PC soph WG Jesse Morgan broke loose for had the look of an
easy basket. However, the long-limbed Edwards showed incredible hustle and got
back in time to prevent the layup. In fact, he delivered a very hard foul –
making the perfect basketball play! – to assure that Morgan would have no chance
for a field goal, let alone an and1. There was nothing malicious about the foul.
Nothing to cause a fight. But a ref whistled an intentional foul and that meant,
of course, that PC would keep the ball after the free throws. So, what happened?
Morgan, a sweet shooter who had somehow gone 0-for-4 at the line to this point,
knocked down two straight and then hit two MORE to give the Huskies a 51-48
lead. From there, Washington missed a trey and Imhotep got a break when the ball
glanced off a PC player and trickled over the baseline. Washington inbounded to
sr. F Hanif Nixon and he scored at 0:05. There was a long delay as the
refs/scorekeepers tried to determine whether Imhotep even had a timeout
remaining. This was at least the "dozenth" stoppage of the game for clock,
score, foul, everything problems, and, man, does this crap get old. The clock
operator kept putting too many points on the scoreboard and the refs kept saying
he didn’t know how to take them off and would just not add any the next time
that team scored. Oh, baby. Meanwhile, of course, the fans would get stirred up
because they knew the score was incorrect. Anyway, Imhotep was granted the
timeout and Morgan was hacked at 0:04. He missed the first, then made the
second. A halfcourt desperation shot had no real prayer. The ink went to Morgan,
who it four treys before his late heroics at the line and thus finished with 17
points. He said he routinely launches 500 shots a day thanks to sessions after
PC’s practices and then later at night at a middle school close to his Olney
home. The Memphis-bound Morris twin towers, Marcus and Markieff,
had 14 points apiece. They never truly exerted their influence in the fashion
we’ve come to expect except in the third quarter. Markieff did those honors,
scoring nine points on a series of post-up moves. Marcus added 11 rebounds and
three blocks. ‘Kieff had three steals. With 4:28 left, he momentarily fouled
out. But there was major discussion and one ref overruled the other, saying the
foul had been committed by Marcus. ‘Kieff never did foul out. After a rocky
start, soph PG Parrish Grant recovered enough to deal four assists
and keep PC’s second half turnovers to a minimum. Instead, it was Imhotep that
became unraveled in the stretch. For whatever reason, Washington often did not
have the ball and that just can’t happen. He’s a D-I signee, for goodness sakes.
He has to DEMAND it, and his teammates have to make sure he has it. If he messes
up, hey, at least the Panthers go down having taken the right approach. Edwards
finished with 14 points and four of his field goals were unconscious dunks. Some
of his jumpers were way-too-hard pictures of ugliness and I’m not sure what was
going on there. But this guy is very athletic and quick off his feet and with
proper development, we’re talking franchise player for the Purple Eagles.
Johnson, who plays with a certain edge and, at times, appeared to get under the
twins’ skin, had eight points and 10 boards. WG-SF Will Adams, a
promising soph, had eight points and five rebounds. Maybe a dozen college
coaches were in attendance, as were Gratz coach Leonard Poole and his
predecessor, Bill Ellerbee. Gratz’ game with FLC, which would have
been for the Division A title, was canceled because it had no true “meaning”
(because the schools are in different classifications), so that gave Poole a
chance to scout. Interesting tidbit: Imhotep’s cheerleaders spent the first half
in the stands. They spent the second along the baseline behind the basket – you
got it – where PC was shooting. They mostly behaved (smile), and did nothing
more distracting than wiggle their fingers as PC guys shot free throws. But
late, they also began to hoot and holler and hold up signs honoring Imhotep’s
seniors and one of the refs finally made them move away from directly behind the
basket. Two of the Philly cops on duty were former Pub stars and it was good to
see them. Clyde Jones played PG for Gratz in the mid-70s (after advancing
from being the manager) and Herman “Coozie” Willis was a productive
starting forward for Overbrook’s 1983 title squad. Cooz was the leading scorer
for 'Brook (19) in the 52-49 win over West that yielded the title. Moments after
the game began, DN photographer “Joe Kaz” said to me, “Do you know that
kid in the brown jacket over there? He just used your name to get in for free.”
The game was going on, so I didn’t have a chance to look over right away. But
when I was able to . . . Hey, it’s Bryton Hawthorne! Of “Lemme Bryton
Your Day" fame on this website! The Brytster said he’ll be filing a report. My
man! Bryton’s pop, Brent “McAdoo” Hawthorne, was also in the house.
Wonder if he paid or got in for free as Bryton’s ride? (smile)
FEB. 18
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
La Salle 57, Judge 45
Now that the Phillies are in spring training, let’s break out a baseball
analogy. This game was like a pitcher’s duel that momentarily blows up in one
crooked-number inning and then goes back to being a pitcher’s duel. Late in the
first half, La Salle seized a 27-26 lead on a drive by jr. WG-SF Clay
Penecale. As the second half opened, the Explorers steamed to 11 more
consecutive points as Judge went 0-for-7 and the game’s competitive nature was
pretty much squashed. Details: drive by Penecale; basket by sr. F Anthony
Acey-Davis on a pass from jr. PG Mike Topley; layup by jr. C Matt
Crozier on a fastbreak pass from Topley (after a block by Penecale); trey by
Clay (gotta love the occasional rhyme); layup by Acey-Davis on a pass from jr.
PG Frank Pierson. Judge’s cold spell was finally broken at 4:31 as jr.
F-C Andrew Vose followed his own miss for a field goal but if I remember,
the Crusaders never reduced their deficit to below six points for the rest of
the game. The result created a tie for fourth place in the Northern Division
between these squads and they’ll have to do it again in a pre-playoff (probably
Wednesday at Ryan or Dougherty; I’d favor Dougherty, but which school’s kids
would get to sit in the Looney Bin? -- smile). The inkster was Crozier, who
played last year for Conwell-Egan and said he transferred strictly for academic
reasons. The C-E folks must have believed him or they would have attempted to
block his eligibility, right? Plus, he said he'd been trying since the eighth
grade to enroll at La Salle. Matt goes 6-6, 220, and he was pretty effective
around the basket not so much because of outstanding athletic skills but because
of positioning, body control and relentless effort. He contributed 19 points and
11 rebounds and did much of his best work in the fourth quarter, thus assuring
Judge would pull off no miracles. Penecale was a steady, multipurpose force
throughout. Every so often, he made the kinds of plays that separated him from
all other participants, and otherwise he was solid with just the basics. He
finished with 17 points, six rebounds, two assists and four steals. Topley dealt
three assists, ran the show and was primarily responsible for sentencing Judge
counterpart Kevin Lynch, a senior, to 1-for-12 miseries from the floor.
Mike’s backup, Pierson, was pretty darn spunky, too. Acey-Davis had eight points
and three dimes and jr. F Joe “Gettin’ Miggy Wid It” Migliarese mixed
five points and four boards. As for Judge, Vose shot shot 6-for-10 en route to
13 points and snagged six boards; jr. F Bob Zuh-Zuh-Zanneo managed nine
and seven (along with three assists); sr. WG Bob Verrelle had four A’s
and two S’s in addition to seven points; and sr. WG-SF Ryan Walker used a
seven-point fourth quarter to finish with 12. Judge honored its first team,
1956-57, in a pre-game ceremony. Only three players were able to make it, but it
was cool to see that they were joined by the coach, Buddy Donnelly. A
very nice crowd was on hand, but there was little total noise from students.
Very weird. I have long wondered why Judge does not take advantage of the fact
there’s a stage at one end of the gym, as Roman does. Well, folks, there’s talk
that coach Frank Cahill is trying to change that for next year. Handled
the right way, a student presence on the stage could be very distracting for
opponents, if not discombobulating. Of course, at a school named Judge, the guys
would have to be called The Jury (smile).
FEB. 17
INTER-AC SHOWCASE TOURNAMENT
Final
Gtn. Academy 66, Malvern 56
Not too many people in attendance overall, and very few were
students, so the atmosphere was nothing special. The teams were quite loose
during warmups and I feared that this could turn into a go-through-the-motions
deal. That was NOT the case. The play was spirited and mostly crisp and it was
impossible not to enjoy the game. But in the really big news, the photos aren't
messed up by white or red eyes! Because of the many windows, Malvern's gym is
very bright on sunny days, so I was able to bag the flash and go with natural
light. Does it get any better? (Yes, if you're a professional photographer, and
actually have a clue. But as I've said many times, these pics are free, baby, so
keep the complaints to a minimum -- smile). GA's headliner, fittingly, was sr.
CG Kyle Griffin, who's bound for La Salle. While others on both teams
often displayed helter-skelter tendencies, Griffin was the picture of
calm/collected throughout while still giving off the aura that he indeed was
going for the jugular. He shot 8-for-13 and 8-for-9 for 24 points while adding
nine boards and five assists. Sr. F D.J. Johnston was the Patriots' only
other double-figure scorer, with 12, and he claimed six boards. Frosh G-F
Cameron Ayers also was a mover-shaker, grabbing six rebounds, going 5-for-6
at the line and doggedly playing defense on Malvern's key man, sr. PG Joe
Hoban. No one else had impressive stats, but all of the people used by coach
Jim Fenerty made contributions and each time substitutions were made, the
pieces just kept fitting. I don't see many teams a WHOLE lot, but I'd have to
imagine GA was playing its best ball as the season concluded, and that's always
a good idea. Hoban had a rough outing shootingwise, going 3-for-9 (floor) and
0-for-5 (line). He did add eight rebounds, five assists and two steals and, as
always, got AFTER it. New Hampshire is checking him out for hoops purposes,
though he could wind up going there for FB (wide receiver). Sr. F Mike
Francisco was a game-long warrior in what will likely be his last hoops
contest (baseball, Villanova). The lefty willed his way to 16 points, 11 boards,
three assists and two steals. Another baseball's-first guy, sr. WG Phil
Gosselin (infield, Virginia), also went out on a good note with 11 points
and three assists. Jr. F Ryan Nassib, a QB with major promise, went
berserk in the fourth quarter, scrambling for five of his seven points and all
five of his rebounds. Two other seniors, SF John "Cheech" Alberici (I
guess that's how he spells the nickname) and PF-C-enforcer-legend-FB star
Paul Ostick, the future mayor of Ithaca, N.Y. (he's Cornell-bound), bowed
out with four points and three rebounds, respectively. GA was mostly in control
for the final three quarters. Malvern a few times caused the onlookers to think,
"This COULD be a game at the end." But never were the Friars able to force that
next thought: "This WILL be a game at the end." Not sure where I'm headed
tomorrow for the final day of CL regular season play, but I know my car will
rejoice. Malvern Thursday, Wood Friday and Malvern again today. Just a hop, skip
and jump. To the 10th power! Anybody have a couple bucks for gas? (smile)
FEB. 16
Fran McGlinn's Big Night
(This is the story that appeared in the 2/17 Daily News)
THE EXPRESSION appeared to indicate mushrooming stage
fright, which would have been entirely understandable.
Instead, it was one of lingering, and profound, disappointment.
This was last night, roughly an hour before Archbishop Wood High was to
host Archbishop Ryan in a Catholic North basketball game that
would produce significance way beyond the result.
It was also maybe 6 hours after Fran McGlinn, having spent a large chunk
of time practicing his jump shot in Wood's gym (yesterday was a
scheduled day off), went home and wound up receiving a call he
figured would cause him pain for the rest of his life.
McGlinn, now a 6-4, 210-pound senior, two summers ago was diagnosed with
cardiomyopathy, the heart disease that in 1990 killed ex-Murrell
Dobbins Tech star Eric "Hank" Gathers during his final college
season at Loyola-Marymount.
Except for two stints - one last season, one this - during which he was
able to shoot only technical fouls, and go for 2-for-4 total,
McGlinn had been inactive. Ah, but as the highlight of Wood's
Senior Night, he was going to play the first 3 minutes and
squeeze in as much fun as humanly possible.
The phone call nixed all that. A nationally known heart specialist, who
has guided McGlinn through the process, would not sign
permission papers. Thus, Wood's administration had no choice but
to, well, break McGlinn's heart.
"I was upset. I was mad," Fran said. "I did understand, but... This was
going to be my chance to really say goodbye to basketball. In a
great way."
Thanks to quick thinking by the coaches, Wood's Joe Sette and Ryan's
Bernie Rogers, a consolation prize was agreed upon. One of the
best in the history of consolation prizes.
"This night meant everything," McGlinn said. "It turned out great."
Here's what happened: After an emotional ceremony for Wood's seniors,
during which McGlinn was introduced last and received a standing
ovation, and after a 15-minute warmup period, during which Fran
made a series of shots and broke out in a sweat, and after the
player introductions, with Fran again receiving a standing
ovation, the game began.
There was a plan. He would be allowed to score an uncontested basket for
Wood. A Ryan player would be allowed to do likewise. Regular
action would occur from there.
Dan Comas won the tap. The ball went to Eric Loughnane. He flipped over
to McGlinn, stationed on the left wing. He drove to the hole
and...
Dunked! Easily! Like a 6-10 high flier! The clock showed 7:53. (If you
win the lottery today, I expect a cut.)
The game was halted. McGlinn walked toward Wood's bench. He hugged all of
the coaches and players, one by one. Near the end of that
process, he gave a giant-sized bear hug to the smallest Viking,
frosh Scott Adkins, and lifted him about 2 feet off the floor.
Then he turned and walked across the court, toward a spot where his
parents, Fran and Denise, and maybe 20 family members were
sitting. He went up several rows, exchanging greetings with all.
He scrambled back to the floor and began walking across. The tears
flowed. Except they more like giant raindrops.
"That was when it really hit me," he said. "Being with my family, that
was emotional enough. Then seeing my teammates all lined up,
waiting for me, with all of our students right behind them. It
was like, 'This is it. This is the end of my career.' "
Said Sette: "After 2 difficult years, at least he was able to get a taste
[of adulation]. It was staged and controlled, yes, but it had to
be that way, under the circumstances.
"This was one shining moment in his life, and we know he'll have many
more."
When asked at what point he'd decided to try a dunk, McGlinn laughed and
said, "As I was going up... Right before we went on the court, I
was thinking, 'Should I try one? Should I not?' The thing is, I
usually can't dunk off 2 feet. But, phew, I was up there.
Just dropped it in."
When play resumed, Ryan's Andrew Rogers drove for an uncontested layup.
Oops! He missed. Wood's Fran Brzyski grabbed the rebound and
handed the ball back to Rogers, who hit the follow. The game
proceeded in normal fashion from there.
Until the end. Which merely capped a wonderful night. Wood won, 49-48, as
Comas converted a one-and-one with 4.6 seconds remaining and
Rogers missed a last-second trey. The Vikings rallied from a
46-39 deficit.
Many of the most important people in Fran McGlinn's life were on hand.
Former La Salle High player Matt Greenfield made sure 70
T-shirts were printed with Fran's No. 24 and "Chise," the
shortened version of his nickname, "Franchise," on the back.
Former Wood players Chris Crawford and Jim Malatesta, two other
members of his inner circle, were also in attendance.
"I need to send a shoutout to Mike Madden, another friend," he said. "He
tried to make it back from Penn State for this, but didn't get
here in time. He left at 1 o'clock."
FEB. 15
INTER-AC SHOWCASE TOURNAMENT
First Round
Penn Charter 63, Chestnut Hill 57
At the risk of having my PC diploma revoked, I must say that seeing CHA
emerge with a win would not have bothered me at ALL. Even a PC assistant
acknowledged that CHA deserved to win and the first words out of head coach
Jim “Flipper” Phillips’ mouth as he stepped out of the post-game locker room
were, “We put the ‘dys’ in dysfunctional.” He then added, “Don’t write that
down.” But I told him with a laugh, “Too late. I already did.” This was the best
performance I’ve seen all season by an underdog squad and gigantic amounts of
credit must go to the Blue Devils/Hillers. CHA had to go without its two reps on
the coaches’ all-league team, sr. G Maurice “I Prefer Mo, Don’t You
Know” Young (hand injury) and soph F Gary Lawrence (illness). Also,
as rookie coach Mark Burke recovers from a health scare (he watched from
the stands), Matt Paul has been calling the shots. (Before plunging
forward, does Matt have wooden hands? Smile. At one point in the second half, he
tried to encourage his squad by clapping and clapping and clapping. My ears
still hurt and I wasn’t even sitting too close to him. Man, the noise was loud!
Love the energy, though.) The headlining Hiller, in far-and-away fashion, was
sr. PG Mike “Spike” Christiansen, who’s mostly famous for his legendary
hair. In this one, he played as hard as humanly possible and left the gym with
numerous admirers. He zoomed around the court in hard-to-believe fashion and
more than once sped down the lane to challenge three-four defenders. He’s in
many of the game photos. He finished with 14 points and five assists and I hope
someone has great video of this tilt because it would be a treasured keepsake
item for The Spikester. Wonderful job, young man! Sr. WGs Dave Jennings
(13) and Mark Justice (10) also showed poise and brass and soph F Matt
“Yup, Another Brother from THAT Star-Studded Family” Whitworth sniped for 13
points. Jr. F Mike Mattei, the FB QB, mixed five points, eight rebounds,
five steals and at least four highly impressive inbound-play rockets. Geez,
almost forgot. CHA didn’t win this game. Not from a lack of trying . . . The
story went to PC sr. F Brian Teuber, who also played football and is
bound for Drexel to play lacrosse. “Teubs” (or “Tubes” – still no word on
preferred spelling) had 12 points, eight boards and six assists in a
well-rounded effort. Sr. CG Sammy Zeglinski kept his career alive by
pouring in 27 points, with nine coming in the fourth quarter. He added three
assists and four steals. Frosh SF Travis Robinson had 10 points. Sr. G
Billy Goldman wanted to know during layup lines if I ever keep track of
pre-game scoring. Um, no. He said he had eight points at the time of his
question-popping. A couple minutes later, Malvern assistant Joe
Redican, sitting behind me, noted, “That kid hasn’t made a basket since he
asked you to keep track of his warmup points.” After the game, I hit the
drive-thru window at the Burger King on Lancaster Avenue before heading back
downtown to the paper. I would have gotten my food a shade faster, but only one
gal was on duty and she spent a LONG time taking an order from a husband-wife
team at the inside counter. It was Zeglinski’s parents! Nice to know I’m not
alone when it comes to gourmet dining. Friday night will find the Ziggies back
at Malvern for PC’s semi with Gtn. Academy. They did not want PC to lose this
game, of course, but they very much wanted to be at Wood to watch Fran
McGlinn in his three-minute stint vs. Ryan. John Zig coached Fran in
AAU ball (Phila. Patriots) and last summer gave him two short stints in Orlando,
Fla., in the national tournament. In one of them, Fran drained a shot from
almost halfcourt. I’ll be at Wood. This is going to be a fun night! . . . Oh,
and don’t forget. Chestnut Hill was highly impressive! (smile).
FEB. 15
INTER-AC SHOWCASE TOURNAMENT
First Round
Haverford School 56, Episcopal 41
Is there anything quite as relaxing as a 2-hour drive to Malvern? Didn’t
think so (smile). With the Expressway a mess because an ambulance somehow lost a
wheel near Girard Ave., I bailed out at South Street, weaved through West Philly
and Overbrook and then went straight out Lancaster Avenue. It took for-EVVVV-er.
And a day. Or was it two? Every season for assorted reasons, there’s a decent
team that I don’t get to see enough and in 2006-07 that ballclub has been HS.
There’s much to like now, and for the future as well. The present is mostly sr.
SF-WG John Haldy, who got the ink (but not for tomorrow; I did a feature
story about him in today’s Daily News). The Virginia-bound Haldy (for lacrosse)
totaled 16 points and three assists and every so often made a clutch shot or
pass or defensive play to keep Episcopal just enough at arm’s length. The other
srs. of note are WG Drew Goldstein and F Ben Grant. Goldstein and
jr. Matt Wunderlich are pretty much bookends when it comes to controlling
the Fords and making smart plays. Grant missed his first shot, then hit his
final four en route to nine points. Pogo-sticking frosh Dan Stewart did
not get many offensive looks, but did shoot 4-for-6 for eight points and grab
eight boards. Jr. F Andrew Hubley and frosh PG Tyreek Duren had
some good moments off the bench. In Year No. 1 After W&G, Episcopal finished on
a disappointing note. As has been their habit all season (from what I’ve seen
and heard), the Churchmen missed a bunch of chippies and were nowhere near as
effective on the boards as their height advantage would have suggested. That
being said, they could have won this game. With sr. PG Pat Kelly
unavailable due to mono, classmate Blair Fox received extended playing
time and was largely impressive, especially in the second half. The lefty
finished with nine points, seven boards and four assists, and it was his trey
(on a pass from sr. F Herb Bowen) that rallied EA within 45-39 with 6
minutes left. HS reeled off the next 11 points, with the first five coming on
Stewart’s layup on a pass from Haldy and Duren’s trey off a steal. But right
before those two buckets, EA was the victim of what certainly appeared to be a
wickedly incorrect call as Fox went hard to the hole and was called for a
charge. The defender still isn’t set (smile). Bowen had 14 points and seven
boards in his finale. Sr. C Mike Nealis managed eight and four. Jr. G
Dan Hilferty dished three assists.
FEB. 12
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
N. Catholic 52, Judge 45
This wound up being the night from hell for several reasons
once I arrived back at the office. You really don't care. I really don't care.
We'll leave it at that. The game? Pretty much a stinker. An overflow crowd was
on hand at Judge, but the spectators rarely got involved because there was
little reason to do so. There were some LONG stretches with little or no scoring
and, truthfully, I thought Judge killed itself by downshifting late in the first
quarter after "upshifting" had helped to create a 14-3 lead. The same thing
happened just before halftime. Why do teams do this? And, especially, why would
Judge do this? The Crusaders beat North both times last season and even captured
the teams' first meeting of this season in the intimidating Pit -- admittedly on
a halfcourt, buzzer-beating trey by jr. F Bob Zanneo, but who
cares? Tonight it was like the coaching staff's feeling was, "Oh, wow, we're
taking it to them, but maybe this is a mirage. The good vibrations probably
won't last. Let's go into a different mode." Lord only knows why and I can't
help but think the players also sensed the play-not-to-lose mentality. Could
Judge have taken it to North all night? Probably not. But it was certainly
flying high in the early going and the players certainly appeared to be
supremely confident. Oh, well . . . Just before halftime, Judge twice committed
turnovers during downshift mode. A steal and layup by jr. PG Velton Jones
brought North within 22-19. The Crusaders again botched a delay set and Jones
followed his own miss with a layup that beat the buzzer. Phew! The Falcons won a
brutal third quarter, 9-5, and rolled to 22 points in the fourth even though
they missed 11 of 23 free throws. Story Man was sr. F-C Chris Edwards,
who was as ornery as I've ever seen him en route to 15 points and the same
number of rebounds. There is MUCH to like about Edwards for down-the-road
purposes and he is working hard in an attempt to achieve a qualifying SAT score.
Some low and even medium D-I programs are keeping tabs. Sr. G-F Andrew
Pomager finished with 12 points even though, for a while, he had all kinds
of problems completing decent moves with shots that would go down. Jr. SF
Lenny Young and Jones scored nine points apiece. Pomager and jr. PF-C
Shahid Paulhill, a sub, halved 12 boards. As always, jr. WG-SF R.J. Handy
played a big role by perfectly doing the little things. He took just three
shots, making two of them, and was his ever-spindly, annoying self on defense.
Jr. wing player Bob Verrelle created much of Judge's early happiness with
three treys. He was covered by Edwards in the second half -- Chris said he
"demanded" the assignment -- and managed just two more points. Jr. F-C Andrew
Vose was thrown off track by early foul trouble. Thanks to second-half
hustle, he managed eight points and as many rebounds. Sr. SF Ryan Walker
missed his first eight shots before regrouping for six late points. He added
five rebounds, two assists and two blocks. Zanneo hit three treys en route to 12
points. Jones mostly kept sr. PG Kevin Lynch from being a factor. Lynch
had five early points, but added just three more (on free throws) and was
limited to one assist. Good news to report on the Ryan Langdon Front.
He's the sophomore who handles pre-game, chest-bumping duties. He barely got off
his tippy-toes two weeks ago when Judge hosted Wood and I kidded him about that
in my report. He promised good lift tonight and delivered. He'll be able to
touch the net any day now! (Just kidding. Strong performance, Ryan!)
FEB. 11
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Ryan 54, Conwell-Egan 29
Sometimes, there's just no way to explain why things turn out the way
they do. Despite too many unforced errors and early miseries (0-for-5) at the
line, C-E was within two points at halftime and appeared poised to give the
Raiders at least a little bit of a problem over the final 16 minutes. And then .
. . and then . . . and then . . . Did C-E come out for the second half? Goofy
development. The Eagles got off just two shots in the first 3:12 of the third
quarter (missing them both) and otherwise committed turnovers. The ugliness
continued. Ryan won the quarter, 18-2. Counting two free throws by jr. PG
Andrew Rogers 0:04 before the half, the Raiders reeled off 14 consecutive
points before C-E sr. F David Marcinkowski scored at 2:53 on a pass from
soph sub WG Ryan Golin. No more needs to be said, detailswise. The ink
went to sr. WG Eric Dethloff, but the game was not the focus. I wound up
looking ahead to Friday night at Wood, when sr. F Fran McGlinn, who's
been sidelined for the past two seasons with heart problems, will get to play
the first three minutes. He and Eric are long-time buddies thanks to their
involvement in the Phila. Patriots' AAU program. Dethloff finished with 12
points and went 3-for-5 on treys and his early contributions were necessary
because C-E soph Jonas Skovdal did an excellent job keeping Rogers in
check. Skovdal has size and decent quickness and he often kept Rogers from
getting the ball, let alone doing anything with it. To their credit, the Raiders
got the job done another way as Dethloff and fellow sr. WG Keith Czarny
kept the ball hoppin'. Hard to believe, but Rogers finished the game with only
those two points on the free throws; he went 0-for-8 from the floor. He did dish
six assists and was his usually efficient self, from the floor-general
standpoint, throughout the second half. Going forward, it will be interesting to
see if other Ryan opponents try to cramp Rogers' style by placing much larger
defenders on him. Ryan greatly helped its cause in this one by hitting eight
treys (all through the first three quarters). That's not always easy against
man-to-man. The third quarter stalwart was jr. G Eric Jann, with all
seven of his points and two steals. The Raiders' game-long rebounding leaders
were a pair of jr. frontcourters -- FB star Chris Wilk (six) and Tom
Marshall (five). Sr. F Tim Kelly left with nice Senior Day memories
thanks to a six-point fourth quarter. This was my first look at Egan (I knew I'd
forget to use C-E at least once -- smile) and its jr. F-C Hayk
(pronounced hike) Gyokchyan, who goes about 6-6. Like many foreign
players, he favors the perimeter. Though not heavy, he lumbers a little while
running and, at least today, he never looked fully comfortable. He made one of
only four shots and grabbed eight rebounds while adding two assists. Jr. PG
Rashad Little and soph WG Ryan Fitch have possibilities. Little has
some length and bounce and Fitch, a lefty sniper who has enjoyed some decent
moments this season, appears to be quite feisty/confident. Sr. F David
Marcinkowski used a late rush to finish with a team-high 11 points. I
watched this game with budding website legend Mike Tos, the walking
encyclopedia of Egan/C-E football. He spent the afternoon talking about football
and football and football and football and football and, oh wait, football. The
school's ex-coach and AD, Chuck Knowles, who's now the AD at Norristown,
also was in the vicinity. He had the good sense to sit next to me in the second
half, and not next to Mike (ha, ha). At one point, just messin' around, I
mentioned to Mike that I was going to post 50 pictures of Ryan players passing
the ball. In his ever-present, dry-wit, monotone voice, Mike said, "That'll
cover one possession." The officiating was quite uneven. And things almost never
went in C-E's favor. Let's estimate that there were 20 calls in the game that
could have gone either way. Let's estimate that 17 went against C-E. Coach
Rich Schafer had a funny, dripping-with-sarcasm comment at one point after
an Eagle went tumbling to the floor and there was no whistle. "He likes falling
down. He always does that. Sure, that's his thing. He just likes falling down."
FEB. 9
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Gtn. Academy 63, Malvern 52
As this one wound down, the feeling was disappointment. In a season where
parity was finally part of the Inter-Ac, I had a hard time accepting the fact
that the game would not be decided by somebody’s last-second heroics. But GA
deserves mucho credit. It did exactly what visiting teams are supposed to do in
ultra-important games on hostile turf: make sure the crowd cannot be a late-game
factor. The Patriots are young with a junior, three sophs and a frosh in the
rotation (along with three seniors). Tonight they all looked like grizzled vets
while capturing this showdown between teams that entered with identical 7-2
records. (This is the first time since 1980 that an 8-2 mark has been good
enough to produce an outright title.) On Jan. 19, I covered the teams’ first
meeting, at GA of course, and the Friars were the game-long aggressor while
claiming a five-point win. The opposite was pretty much true this time. The day
after that loss, the Patriots were sliced and diced by St. Benedict, a North
Jersey (and national) power, and coach Jim Fenerty ordered them to show
up at GA the next morning (yes, it was a Sunday; good thing the school has no
religious affiliation – smile) to watch film and chat and chat and chat some
more, with some physically demanding drills mixed in. They haven’t lost since.
As Fenerty and star sr. WG Kyle Griffin mentioned, there was a need for
the seniors to really assume positions of authority and to lead/push/prod the
young-’uns. That happened. Much of the ink went to the La Salle-bound Griffin.
Though he posted no field goals in the second half, shot just 3-for-9 total and
needed a 7-for-8 showing at the line to conclude his night with a team-high 13
points, he dished six assists and made a series of smart plays as the outcome,
in effect, was being decided. After three quarters, GA was ahead by only two,
36-34. He owned the early going in the fourth by passing for two buckets by jr.
PG Joe Hill and making another feed that enabled frosh WG Cameron
Ayers to go 2-for-2 at the line. The lead became 42-37 and there was a hint
of GA’s-taking-control in the air. A key sequence followed. Malvern sr. PG
Joe Hoban (played quite well all night by Hill) missed a trey and jr. F
Ryan Nassib could not quite get a follow to go down. Hill raced for a layup
on an outlet pass from sr. PF-C D.J. Johnston, thus making it 44-37 with
4:02 left, and . . . well, um, you could hear the breaking of Malvern fans’
hearts. The Friars did what had to be done in the last few minutes, again and
again sending GA to the line. No go. The Patriots went 13-for-15 in the fourth
quarter to cap a wonderful night overall (19-for-24). They also sniped well from
the floor (20-for-42; four treys) and won the rebound battle by a quite
comfortable margin, 35-22. Three Patriots joined Griffin in double digits and
another missed by a whisker – Hill and soph PF-C Jeff Holton had 12
apiece, Johnston had 10 and soph SF Dean Melchionni (much more of a
factor than he’d been in earlier games I witnessed) had nine. Sr. F-C Steve
Roma took no shots, but grabbed six boards. Hoban, saddled some by foul
trouble, needed some late, bull-in-china-shop rushes (with athleticism thrown
in, of course) to finish with 14 points. Sr. F Mike Francisco also
reached double figures with 11 while adding four steals. Jr. Fs Chris Cowell
(nine points, six boards) and Ryan Nassib (eight, six) produced similar
lines. In the post-game rush to do the necessary interviews, compile the full
boxscore with sidekick Frog Carfagno and get started on the story (thanks
to Malvern AD Kurt Ruch and helpers for assuring I’d have internet
access), I did not seek comments/insights on the game’s one controversial
moment. Plus, it happened at the other end of the court. However, it was obvious
from the Malvern fans’ reaction, which was quite heated/intense, that they felt
Francisco was kicked or stepped on by Hill in the stomach/groin area during the
aftermath of an early-third-quarter scramble that resulted in a steal for the
Friars. As Malvern rushed upcourt, and the referees’ attention went in the same
direction, Francisco was writhing big-time and had to leave the game. Also, Hill
sat down briefly either because Fenerty thought that was best or was advised to
do so by the refs. Francisco wound up missing 3 minutes, 20 seconds, and
returned to great applause. He even buried a trey from the top of the key to put
Malvern ahead, 34-32. He tried two more threeballs before the quarter and
Johnston got pieces of both. Those plays were huge, if nothing else from the
emotional standpoint. For a brief moment, the developing plot seemed to be,
“Francisco Gets Kicked, Later Inflicts Own Kind of Pain.” Anyway . . . the crowd
in Malvern’s large and beautiful gym was BIG. If this game had been played at GA
or PC or CHA or EA or HS, I’m guessing half to maybe even 60 percent of the
people would have been turned away. Malvern hasn’t won the title since ’95
(shared) and ’81 (outright), so the stakes were gigundo for first-year coach
Jim Rullo’s club. Malvern’s student section was electric. They had
two great chants. When a GA player tumbled to the floor, they came out with,
“How’s that wood taste!? How’s that wood taste?!” Later, GA’s students tried to
bust on Malvern’s by pointing out, “We’ve got girls! We’ve got girls!” The
response? “But they’re ugly! But they’re ugly!” Ha, ha, ha, ha. Even GA’s girls
were laughing at that one. Meanwhile, I finished doing the Daily News
story, and details/boxscores on other games, etc., about 11:20 (thanks to Ed
Barkowitz for his in-office help) and began to head for home. The drive
took about an hour. That area of Chester County looks quite different late at
night, troops. There were almost no cars and some of the traffic lights were in
flashing mode, even on Lancaster Avenue! Phew, who’da thunk it? At least the
Wawa was open. Diet Coke and a donut and I was ready to attack 202 and the
Schuylkill Expressway, or the Surekill Crawlway as a back-in-the-day radio
personality used to call it.
FEB. 8
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Swenson 69, Fels 67
Through the MANY years (hold the oldhead wisecracks, please – smile),
these somebody’s-finally-gonna-be-happy games have provided wonderful
entertainment and fierce competition. Nothing else HAD to be covered today, so
off it was to these squads with identical 0-12 records in Division B. Both
coaches were stunned to see me. Stuart London, a reporter for the News
Gleaner, said calmly, “I knew you’d be at this one.” He said he’d even predicted
as much to a guy from another Northeast-based weekly paper. I’m so glad I went!
This game came down, literally, to the final second and the result enabled sr.
PG Shawn Beatty to receive some well deserved attention. Shawn is only
5-7, 165, but is strong and savvy with the ball and a dead-eye jumpshooter, even
from distance while on the move, with no fear of taking it to the trees, either
(not that Fels had any). You might have noticed earlier this season that he
rattled home 36 points to claim Swenson’s school record. Well, that mark now
stands at 38 and he’s still the owner. Beatty shot 13-for-23 and 6-for-7 at the
line and from Way Out There he went a very decent 6-for-13. He cleared himself
for some of his deepies, but also received pick-setting help from sr. F Tom
Hayes, especially after Fels switched from zone to man-to-man for the fourth
quarter. Beatty added three assists and four steals and 10 of his points came in
the final four minutes as the Lions (2-18 overall) used a 13-0 run to
erase-and-then-some 61-53 deficit. Before I forget to mention it, one of Shawn’s
treys came from about halfcourt as the first quarter ended. The court is short
(more on those particulars later), but still it was cool! If Hayes’ name is
familiar, perhaps you’re a fan of Catholic League football. He played wideout
for Judge and later transferred to Swenson and was extremely important to this
win. He made smart, effective contributions throughout and I was glad to see
that Stuart interviewed him for the Gleaner. Hayes totaled nine points, seven
rebounds and eight assists. Jr. WGs Krentz Sainte (jumpers, mostly) and
Greg Manning (drives, mostly) had nine and seven points, respectively,
while sr. PF-C Greg Febles mixed six points and nine rebounds. The other
member of the six-man rotation, thin jr. PF-C Mike Riesar (love the large
tattoo on the bottom part of the right leg, dude – smile) was the perfect
little-things complement with five boards, two assists and three blocks. He took
just one shot and it appeared he could not have cared less. Tremendous attitude!
Here’s what happened after Hayes’ steal and pass for a basket to Beatty that
made it 66-61: Fels sr. G-F Thristan Lundy posted a three-point
play on a pass from sr. PF-C George Jones (11 points, 10 rebounds); on an
inbound play that was way too easy, Hayes scored on a pass from Manning; Lundy
forced a turnover and then went for a drive and banker, drawing Fels within
68-67 at 0:14; jr. G Tyquil Shoemake made a steal at halfcourt and sr. G
Brandon Watson went to the line for a one-and-one at 0:03; Febles
rebounded the front-end miss and was fouled at 0:02; Febles made the first and
missed the second, with Shoemake getting the rebound and a quick timeout at
0:01; Lundy inbounded and Watson was unable to come very close on a desperation
heave. Immediately, about 40 Swenson students, who’d made the half-mile walk
from the school, on Red Lion Road on the east side of Roosevelt Blvd., to the
Klein Branch JCC on the west side, scrambled onto the court to engulf their
heroes. See? Told you somebody would be happy. Games at Klein Branch are played
crosscourt, which is why the court is so short. Also, in two of the corners,
it’s impossible to shoot treys because of an overhanging indoor track. Gotta
love that! There are no stands, so the spectators sit in individual chairs
across the way from the team benches. A Swenson assistant taped the game from
midcourt and, during timeouts, assorted students would step in front of his
camera to say goofy things. Dave Durkin, son of Swenson coach Pat
Durkin, said dryly at one point, “I wonder if they’ll edit out all that
stuff.” Pat taught my oldest son, Teddy, now 28, in high school and was
his favorite teacher by far. Pat also coached him in Special Olympics
competition one summer at Penn State and they’ve talked a few times through the
years. I called Teddy around 9 o’clock to let him know what happened in the
game, and one of the 78 people who lives in his Hunting Park house (that
estimate might be low – smile) said he was already asleep! C’mon, Teddy, develop
some stamina! I often stay up until 2. You’re in bed by 9? Ha, ha. He does have
to get up very early for his job. I know he’ll love seeing Friday’s Daily
News and checking out the website pics. With that in mind, Pat asked me to
take a photo of Dave “so Teddy can see how big he is now. Teddy used to call him
his ‘little brother.’” I’m not the greatest judge of this stuff, but Dave
appears to be about 6-4, 275? After the game, Pat welcomed me into the locker
room for a couple of celebration pictures. Of course, it was impossible not to
feel sad for the Fels folks. Coach John Bissett, who’s back in charge
because first-year coach Nick Horvath had to step aside in early January
for health reasons, is likewise a long-standing member of the Good Guy Club. His
squad also played hard and cleanly. This was a great afternoon. Need more just
like it.
FEB. 6
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Strawberry Mansion 70, Sayre 55
Conventional wisdom says Mansion is too young to make a serious run for
the Pub championship. Its rotation includes NO seniors and the three guards who
see most of the playing time are sophs. Two games remain in the regular season
and the playoffs will be filled with land mines, but this squad has “something”
and it might even have enough to make serious noise. Jrs. Dwayne Davis
and Eddie Frazier, a slinky lefty, are excellent wing scorers, capable of
jumpers and good finishes off sensible and/or athletic moves, and classmate
Devon White (6-6) is an emerging inside force on the offensive AND defensive
ends. The Knights frolicked through a 23-10 second quarter to seize a 39-23
halftime lead and assure that the final 16 minutes would, honestly, be mostly
lackluster. White is the brother of ex-Dougherty star DeSean White, who
began his career at Mansion before transferring. Devon has followed the opposite
path; he’s a transfer from Roman. He greatly impressed in the first half,
collecting 14 of his 19 points and 12 of his 14 rebounds. He also ended the game
with five blocks and Sayre almost never attempted close-to-the-basket shots due
to his imposing presence. DeSean was in attendance (he’s between schools after
bouncing already from Providence to La Salle to Delaware; didn’t play at the
last two) and Devon said the two have been working out in an attempt to improve
each other’s game. Devon had two monstrous dunks in the first half. He was
challenged on both, which made them even more amazing. The second was part of an
and-1 and made the fans go crazy! A handful exploded onto the court to celebrate
and DeSean, who scrambled down from the fourth row, was among them (smile).
Devon said Big Bro has been after him to get more aggressive and to dunk
whenever the opportunity presents itself. Davis posted an outstanding line: 20
points, seven rebounds, five assists and 10 steals. He’s darn near impossible
for one man to cover because he can rush but appear NOT to rush, if you know
what I mean. Once he makes up his mind which shot he’s going to fire, his
release is very quick and the shots are mostly soft. Frazier had 19 points, 14
boards, three assists and four steals. He does things from a set position a
shade more often, especially when shooting treys, but don’t take that to mean
he’s slow. Not at all! In fact, he’s pretty darn springy and knifing
through/around guys is no problem. The starting guards are Marcus Grimes
and Darren Lawrence, with Marcus “Worm” Johnson (brother of
’06 star Matthew “Moo” Johnson) coming off the bench. I’m not yet
positive that any of these guys is a red-letter floor leader, but all three are
feisty and that can cover many sins. They definitely caused problems at the
defensive end and made it tough for Sayre to get comfortable shots. Sayre’s main
man is 6-7 sr. C Wayne Johnson, who played last year at West Philly
because Sayre did not yet have a varsity squad. He’s smooth with the ball, both
while passing and taking jumpers (even beyond the arc) and already has a decent
build with more room to expand. He projects at PF for college, with maybe even
SF in his future. He had 22 points, 11 rebounds, four assists and five blocks.
He disappeared a little in the second half, but that was mostly a result of the
Panthers’ ballhandling miseries. Even with no advancement, Wayne would be a
great fit for the Division II Pa. state schools. But with prep school or JC, he
could truly become a gem. Sr. WG Jovan Brown missed his first six shots,
but managed to score 10 points while adding a pesky nine rebounds. Sr. F
Kevin “Yao” White had eight points and 10 boards. Jr. PG Jayvon Johnson
had six points, nine rebounds, six assists and four steals. Mansion has long
been one of my favorite stops on the trail. The school has a strong
teacher/staff presence at its games and AD Charles Sumter works hard to
run a tight ship. (He told me to say that – smile. Nah, just kidding.) He does
spend the whole game moving from spot to spot to deal with any issues the
instant they happen. One of the refs was Paul Graham, father of
ex-Olney/Franklin star Paul “Snoop” Graham, who went on to play in the
NBA. Former West Philly coach Ed Wright was in attendance. Because of
declining enrollment, Mansion is now a Class AA school. Long-term success this
season might be difficult because Prep Charter and Imhotep Charter are also in
AA. However, I’d advise those squads not to take Mansion lightly. You might be
saying goodKnight to title hopes.
FEB. 5
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Neumann-Goretti 91, Kennedy-Kenrick 41
One tick under 2 minutes remained when deep sub Billy Balilonis
(seven rebounds) scored a basket on a pass from another deep sub, Isa Perry,
to give N-G a 91-41 lead. The Wolverines were turning over the ball on almost
every possession and N-G’s fans, especially those behind the bench, were having
great fun watching the lesser lights (and, who knows, future stars?) run and
jump and score and make some impressive plays. Undoubtedly fearing that the
number on the left side of the scoreboard was going to reach 100, K-K boss
Jack Flanagan ordered his squad to hold the ball. And hold it some more. N-G
complied by sitting back in a zone. At one point, with about 40 seconds left,
Flanagan did motion for the Wolverines to resume playing in normal fashion, but
that didn’t happen and the freeze wasn’t broken until soph Ronell Fairel
took an unsuccessful shot with 0:09 showing. Everyone wondered, “Why are you
here?!” N-G assistant John Mosco said I need a girlfriend (The Wife will
appreciate that one, John – smile) and another assistant, Mark Del Brocco,
tried to convince me I could have caught some good shows on TV. Well, I went to
this one to cover things from the K-K angle and wound up having a nice interview
with sr. Ryan Donovan for the DN story. K-K (0-22, 0-10) has a STRONG
chance to finish 0-26, which would make it the least successful squad in city
history. Only 10 players were in uniform. Seven had also dressed for the JV
contest. This ain’t easy, folks. Know what, though? The Wolverines played hard
and together and there was no knuckleheaded behavior and the Saints are also to
be commended for their approach to what they knew would be a butt-ugly mismatch.
The Syracuse-bound co-franchise players, sr. C Rick Jackson and sr. PG
Antonio “Scoop” Jardine, played maybe a quarter apiece. Jackson had eight
points and six boards in the first six minutes en route to totals of 10 and
eight. Jardine (12 points) knocked down two treys. In a starting role, star FB
QB Mark Hatty mixed five points, four boards, four assists and two
blocks. Jr. Tyrell Taylor, with his brother, ex-West Catholic star
Marshall Taylor, shaking his head in amazement (smile), went 3-for-4 on
treys. Balilonis, a lefty, earned a big response when he finally scored. Perry
had seven points, two steals and two assists and even jr. WG Chalie “Nah, I
Don’t Like Using an ‘R’” Stinsman, who only occasionally gets to dress for
varsity games, went 2-for-2 for five points. Oh, and soph C Andre
“Scooter” Gillette, the heir apparent to Jackson, registered five blocks.
For K-K, jr. WG Karlton Byrd tallied 18 points the hard way. He missed 14
shots mostly because, as is his habit, he kept using his good ball skills and
“swivelability” to get close to the hoop, where Jackson or Gillette or Hatty or
jr. PF Rashad Savage was waiting. The shots that weren’t blocked were
altered and/or rushed. Donovan had nine points, three boards, one assist and one
steal. Jr. G Greg Santangelo, who also had to endure a winless FB season
as the prime RB, scored eight points. Soph F-C Brad Miller grabbed three
early rebounds and he’ll be telling people the rest of his life, “Rick Jackson?
I owned that guy!” (smile) The Wolverines’ leading board man, with five, was
soph Alex Byrne. I did some research for the DN story on K-K’s
long-standing struggles and here's some of it: Its 14-year record in CL games is
15-177 and just once (in ’95) has it won as many as three games. Its overall
mark over the last eight seasons is 34-160 and ’03 also produced a winless
campaign (0-24). The average margin of defeat this year in CL play is 31;
overall it’s 26. I didn’t get specific in the paper, but five pretty prominent
guys from last year’s team (or guys who could have been prominent this year) are
elsewhere. Courtney Stanley (Roman) and Kasheef Festus
(Carroll) remained in the CL. Tim Bowman is at Norristown. Dwayne
Davis is at Strawberry Mansion. Wes Bill is at Germantown Friends. I
wonder how much they think about their old teammates, or sympathize with their
current plight? I wish the K-K players and coaches good luck going forward. The
three assistants on hand for this one, the Rafferty twins (Dan, Mike)
and Dan Neeld, (his brother, David, was K-K's coach two
regimes ago), were spit-and-grit players for the Wolverines and I know their
hearts are in the right place as they try to help their alma mater regroup. Same
for Jack, who played for the school in its Kenrick days.
FEB. 4
NON-LEAGUE
N. Catholic 82, Penn Charter 67
It's called a pass and it can help teams score field goals and
get to the foul line. The Falcons now appear to grasp that concept (smile). Team
Occasionally to Often Selfish today did a great job of playing team ball and the
result was a comfortable win. Not too many people were watching in The Pit and,
since this was a non-league game, not too much was at stake. But change has to
start somewhere and the Falcons' approach was quite refreshing. Will they
maintain the share-and-share-alike demeanor when the gym again is packed and the
juices are flowing? Time will tell. At least now the Falcons know that THIS way
can work and that it produces overall enjoyment. If they lapse into old/bad
habits later, shame on them, right? North notched 21 assists on 30 field goals
(55 attempts) and almost always kept the ball hoppin'. They mostly limited PC to
one shot and got out in transition and a good time was had by all. Leading in
scoring with 19 points apiece were sr. G-F Andrew Pomager and jr. WG-SF
Lenny Young. With 0:54 left, on a pass from sr. CF Chris Edwards,
Pomager converted an easy layup to raise his career total to exactly 1,000. He
then left the game. Andrew also had 11 rebounds and three assists. Young had
five A's while Edwards mixed 14 points and three A's. I know what you're
wondering. How about Velton Jones? How'd he do? Was he part of this new
look? Absolutely! Jones, a jr. PG, took just five shots from the floor en route
to scoring six points and dealt seven assists. VERY nice. Among the observers
was Delaware coach Monte Ross, who has offered Jones a scholarship. Jr.
WG-SF R.J. Handy had 12 points while jr. PF-C Shahid Paulhill
grabbed seven boards. With the score at 8-8, the Falcons reeled off seven quick
points to establish command. There was minor slippage thereafter, and PC even
went ahead, 20-19, but North regrouped for a 28-26 halftime lead and exploded
for 27 third quarter points thanks in part to a 3-for-5 showing on treys. For
PC, I'd imagine the most noteworthy development was the continuing production of
soph C Justin Renfrow. The big-bodied (but not fat) Renfrow finished with
13 rebounds. Frosh SF Travis Robinson went for 18 points and had these
incongrous shooting totals -- 2-for-2 on treys, but 6-for-13 at the line. The
Sammy Zeglinski Mystery continues. The Virginia-bound sr. PG had 14 points,
five rebounds, five assists and three steals. He shot just 5-for-20 and was
short on pretty much EVERY miss. One has to wonder: Maybe he's having vision
problems? Maybe he's not getting his usual extension, or lift, because he's
pumping weights in an attempt to prepare for ACC ball? It's really perplexing.
On one late-game drive, he impressively attacked the hoop and the ball went
three-quarters of the way down before popping out. OK, I might be exaggerating,
but not by much (smile). The expression on his face seemed to say, "I don't know
what's going on. I just wish it would stop." Sr. WG Leland O'Connor and
sr. F Brian Teuber had nine and seven points, respectively, while halving
10 rebounds. Jr. G Mark Rhine mixed seven points and two assists. The
late-game highlight was a right-side trey by sr. G Tom Caramanico, a deep
sub. Afterward, I went over to the scoring table and exchanged some stats with
Puck. He asked me a couple of questions and when I tried to answer, he
kept saying, "Yo, I'm tryin' to concentrate on fillin' out this (stat) sheet.
Talk to me later." Only in the Puck. He asks ME questions, then claims I'm
bothering HIM when I try to answer. That's why he's the best (pain in the butt
ever)! Ha, ha, ha.
FEB. 2
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Judge 50, Wood 33
Leave it to Hockey Puck to come up with the best line of the day.
This morning, he was saying how I’m bad luck for North because the Falcons
dropped both games against Dougherty this Northern Division regular season. I
told Puck he should talk to (Judge coach) Frank Cahill because the
Crusaders haven’t won when I’ve seen them in the two seasons he has been the
boss. Puck blurted out, “You bad luck for the Oblates.” Shortly before this one
started, I went over to say hello to Frank and I could hear his heart hit the
floor. It’s nice to be loved (smile). Anyway, the jinx is over. The Crusaders
roared to an 11-2 lead, were still in command at the end of the first quarter,
17-6, and later overcame the fact that they were somehow outscored, 10-2, in the
second quarter. Your Saturday Daily News, which even soph F Ryan
Langdon can jump over (maybe), will feature sr. PG Kevin Lynch, who
had four assists in the early going and finished with nine. Not an easy feat,
troops, when your team only scores 50 points. He was responsible for all but
three of the ‘Saders 13 field goals through three quarters; he scored two and
dished for eight. His right shoulder is bothering him due to the fact it popped
out of place at a practice last Sunday, so he took only three shots total. He
made his only two free throws for six points total while adding two steals and
five rebounds. Kevin did a nice job of setting tempo and making snappy passes
the instant the opportunities presented themselves. He’s applying to larger
schools just for student purposes, but D-3’s could do a lot worse. The main
beneficiaries were sr. SF Ryan Walker and two jrs., wing shooter Bob
Zuh-zuh-Zanneo, as the PA announcer calls him, and PF-C Andrew Vose.
Walker had a seven-point first quarter, thanks to a 5-for-5 showing at the line,
and finished with 13 while adding eight rebounds, two steals and two blocks.
Zanneo went for 10 points and grabbed five boards. Vose was mostly quiet in the
first half (two points), but bounced back to finish with 15. He had seven of his
points and four of his seven boards in the fourth quarter as Judge pulled away.
For Wood, jr. C Dan Comas mixed 10 points and 11 boards and jr. PG
Eric Loughnane dealt four assists but went just 1-for-10 from the floor.
Tim Fahy, the soph sniper, hit a pair of trey and managed five assists.
Sr. F Fran Brzyski, again the victim of early foul trouble, had nine
points and eight rebounds. Two situations drove me nuts! With momentum, Wood
held the ball for the final 56 seconds of the first half. The last shot wound up
being an off-balance 22-footer. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. Judge started to hold with
1:40 left in the third quarter and from there committed two turnovers.
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrr again! Back to Ryan Langdon. He was the guy who stepped away
from the rest of the subs to act as Judge’s greeter for the announced starters.
You know how that goes. Some just want to slap hands. Some want to chest-bump. I
took a pic of Ryan bumping with Zanneo. Except his feet are still on the floor!
Yo, buddy, work on that vertical. Ryan said, “They don’t like to jump.” Well,
Zanneo was at least 3 inches off the floor!! Is that a white-boy Northern
Division record? (smile!)
FEB. 1
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Dougherty 71, N. Catholic 69
People say at the end of some close, hard-fought, emotional games,
“Neither team deserved to lose.” At the end of this one, not to sound too harsh,
but I’d imagine most folks almost had the feeling, “Neither team deserved to
win.” Early, there were lots of great plays and pinpoint shooting. Late, there
was mostly lack of success from the floor and foul line. North missed two shots
that could have produced a tie in the final moments and had loads of problems
with seemingly easy shots in the couple of minutes beforehand. The Falcons also
were spotty at the line. Dougherty, meanwhile, had its own foul line miseries
and got sloppy with the ball once or thrice. Let’s see . . . OK, we’ll count
down the final 1:47. Sr. G-F Justin Minter makes the second half a
double-bonus to put Dougherty up, 70-65. NC jr. PG Velton Jones misses a
one-and-one. Minter misses both ends of a double-bonus. Jones misses a drive.
(Sensing a theme?) The ball squirts all over the place and is finally recovered
near halfcourt by Minter and Dougherty gets time at 0:50. Turnover. NC sr. G-F
Andrew Pomager misses a drive. Jr. G R.J. Handy makes the second of a
double bonus at 38.4, edging NC within 70-66. Frosh PG Willis Nicholson
makes a spectacular pass to Minter, who blows a layup. Pomager gets a fastbreak
at the other end, draws a foul and makes the second at 0:22. Nicholson makes the
first of two at 20.7. The rebound off the second shot kicks out long to
Dougherty jr. G-F Isiah Mason. The ball comes loose. Jones releases and
takes a pass from Pomager for a layup at 10.4. North is within two! Dougherty
inbounds. Sr. CG Kahlil Mumford catches the ball in front of North’s
bench, but stutter-steps and is whistled for walking at 9.3 Jr. SF Lenny
Young inbounds for North. Jones sizes up about a 15-foot jumper from the
right wing. It misses. The ball bounces long to the left side where it’s
collected along the baseline by Jr. PF-C Shahid Paulhill. He makes a
quick drive and hoists a layup/flip shot. It gets MANY parts of the rim, but
does not fall. Ballgame! The ink went to sr. PF-C Tim Gates, who goes 6-2
˝ and 188 pounds. He’s the Cardinals’ little-things guy and especially the king
of taking charges. His defensive assignments in this one included sr. F Chris
Edwards (two points) and Paulhill (none). Edwards never got untracked due to
foul trouble (and some perceived selfishness of a teammate; more on that later)
and Gates sent him to the bench for good with 2:55 left by taking a charge on a
hard drive down the middle. Gates finished with 11 points (nine in the first
half), seven rebounds, two steals and a ringing in his ears, thanks to an
inadvertent elbow from Jones. Mumford was killin’ in the first half, witness his
18 points. He, too, experienced foul problems, as did almost everyone in this
whistlefest, and scored just five in the second. They were a big five, though.
With two minutes left in the third quarter, North was up, 52-46, and the Cards
were slightly reeling. But Mumford posted a three-point play, and then a basket
off a steal by Minter. Right back in the flow. Sr. F Roberto Townsend had
11 points, 11 boards and three steals. Mason shot 5-for-7 en route to 12 points.
Minter and Nicholson halved six assists. North’s scoring leaders were Young with
23 and Pomager with 19. Young turned in a snappy performance. He mostly made
quick, solid decisions and only bad luck prevented him from sinking a pair of
late baskets off penetration. Pomager, as always using his left hand as much as
his right, was a whirlwind around the basket and on the near wings. He does a
lot to excite North’s fans. He also had seven rebounds and three apiece of
assists and steals. Jones scored 13 points while shooting 4-for-13 and 5-for-9.
He added five assists. As for the perceived selfishness . . . On the website,
within reason, I feel as though it’s my duty to discuss situations that come up
in games that were obvious to most/many of the people in attendance. Late in the
game, though it was noisy, it was impossible not to hear – and, more
specifically, see – Edwards yell at high volume, and with very demonstrative
facial and hand movements, at Jones, “Pass me the ball! Pass me the ball! Pass
me the ball!” This was at the other end, after a foul was called and the Falcons
had some time for interaction before the Cards went to the line. Had Jones been
selfish? Well, more than once, even fans yelled toward him, “Pass the ball!”
Actually, he was being himself. Here’s the deal: He tends to be very deliberate
when out front and takes a while to set up his own shots. He almost always CAN
beat his man off the dribble or create enough room for a jumpshot, but as he’s
doing all of the setup work, his teammates mostly have to stand and watch. The
other variable is, backup PG Billy Dolan, a jr., is a fan favorite. Not
an easy situation . . . Time for some pleasantness. In a pre-game ceremony, 1988
grad Jim Schultice was inducted into NC’s Basketball HOF. Many of Jim’s
family members and former teammates were on hand and it was nice to see the big
guy enjoy his night in the limelight. His former coach, Joe Rapczynski,
came back to do the presenting. This was a pregame ceremony, and the Falcons
watched while lined up across the baseline closest to the school-building end of
the gym. Afterward, Jim shook the hand of every coach and player. Jim had
mega-numbers for scoring and rebounding at Holy Family after his North days.
Meanwhile, Rapczynski called him one of the top five players in North history.
Jim was nice enough to invite me to the chow-down in the cafeteria after the
game, but I had to rush back to the office to write the story for the paper. Our
deadlines are ridiculously early these days. Congrats on a well-deserved honor,
Jim. You were the headliner in a glorious period for the Falcons. (North won the
title in ’87 and placed second in ’88. In that ’88 tilt, Jim merely had 19
points and 14 rebounds. As mentioned in the recap for '87 in the research
section, Jim showed North's resolve by getting a field goal on his fourth shot,
and third follow, of a possession.)
FEB. 1
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Central 66, Furness 44
Please help me understand this. On a day when just ONE game is being
played in the entire Public League, how can two refs not be on hand? If the
second guy, whoever it's supposed to be, knows he won't be able to make it,
doesn't he make a quick call to Charles Sumter, the commissioner,
and report his problem, so Sumter can get one of the other 75 available refs who
are sitting at home? Apparently not. The one ref did his best to keep up, but
these teams feature many guards -- Furness could almost compete in
5-10/and/under league -- and there was all kinds of flying up and down the
court. Later, there was a lot of pushing and slapping off the ball because the
players knew they could get away with it. Right at the start of the second half,
the ball trickled over the baseline and the ref awarded it to Central. Probably
the wrong call, but the ref was a good distance away. Furness coach Brian
Blasy snapped, "Watch the game!" The ref asked him to knock it off, but
Blasy repeated the comment. Tweet! Technical foul. Oh, baby! This was my first
look at both teams this season (and the players were happy that their team pics
were finally going to appear on the website -- smile). Central's most impressive
player was jr. PF Acquil Cook, who doubles as the soccer goalie. He's
long-limbed and can jump/float, but any evaluation must be tempered because
Furness had no one to even remotely challenge him inside. Anyway, he posted 15
points, 10 rebounds and seven blocks and he big-time stirred the fans in the
final minutes with a pair of wicked throwdowns in transition. Jr. PG Yusef
Nuriddin had some problems with turnovers, as the Furness munchkins seemed
to be everywhere, but he dealt five assists and made some impressive plays in
transition. Sr. combo guard Sean Gadson, one of three lefties in the
rotation, had 12 points. Sr. F Marcus Morris, the only holdover from the
'05 title team, worked for 14 points and seven boards. He's a solidly built kid.
Jrs. Joffrey Cummings-Glynn and Darren Gee had six boards
apiece. Furness' main whirlwind is sr. Robert Antrom, who can't be any
more than 5-10 but is forced to mostly play forward. He mixed 11 points, 15
rebounds -- yes, 15! -- and six steals and again and again went to the hole come
hell or more hell. Sr. PF-C Sam Bracley -- maybe 6-1 -- managed to block
three shots. Sr. WG Quieron Abbott had 14 points with the help of two
treys. The other mainstays were the Johnson brothers, jr. Erick
and soph John. Not sure about John, but Erick played at Carroll earlier
this season and assumedly played hopscotch because of the arrival and emergence
of Bodine transfer Lamar Jackson, also a junior PG. The Johnsons are
waterbugs. Erick had five assists and four steals while John managed two of each
along with seven points. This game was another example of what’s wrong with the
Pub these days. Aside from the fact there are WAY too many teams, there are also
WAY too few tall kids. Half the guys in the league are playing out of position.
How does that help their development? I’m writing this in the cafeteria at North
Catholic. This is the fourth electrical outlet. The first worked briefly. The
next two didn’t work at all. One of the crew steered me toward a corner where
there’s a soda machine. “The one back there has to be working,” he said. You are
correct, sir! Thanks!