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SPECIAL NOTE
To all scorekeepers: PLEASE try to make sure that correct info
on scoring is called into the Score Service -- 215-854-4570. Generally,
it's better when the winning team calls in the results. That way the
papers receive info to explain HOW the game was won because representatives of
the winning team will usually be in a better mood (just human nature) to provide
extra details such as rebounds, assists, etc., or the identity of someone who
maybe hit a winning shot. Thank you.
DEC. 30
TEDBIT
If you've followed Roman's top-notch basketball program through this
century, perhaps you've noticed a change. Outrageous scorers are no longer on
the scene. From 2000 onward, 11 times a Cahillite has averaged at least 17
points per game. However, no one has done so since 2010. On the flip side, for
the third straight year there's a good chance four guys will finish with
double-digit averages. The two lists are below.
Roman Players With Overall
Averages Of at Least 17 PPG, 2000-18 |
||||
Name | Year | G | Pts | PPG |
*Eddie Griffin | 2000 | 25 | 636 | 25.4 |
Charron Fisher | 2002 | 25 | 582 | 23.3 |
*Maalik Wayns | 2008 | 23 | 514 | 22.3 |
Charron Fisher | 2004 | 28 | 609 | 21.8 |
Charron Fisher | 2003 | 27 | 557 | 20.6 |
Rakeem Brookins | 2009 | 27 | 547 | 20.3 |
Rakeem Brookins | 2010 | 27 | 513 | 19.0 |
Tamal Forchion | 2001 | 29 | 547 | 18.9 |
*Bradley Wanamaker | 2007 | 31 | 552 | 17.8 |
*Maalik Wayns | 2009 | 18 | 317 | 17.6 |
Mike Ringgold | 2006 | 32 | 561 | 17.5 |
*advanced to NBA | ||||
Roman's Double-Digit Scorers, 2017-19 | ||||
Name | Year | G | Pts | PPG |
Allen Betrand | 2017 | 26 | 367 | 14.1 |
Da'kQuan Davis | 2017 | 26 | 332 | 12.8 |
Seth Lundy | 2017 | 22 | 264 | 12.0 |
Jon-Paul Sanders | 2017 | 21 | 228 | 10.9 |
Seth Lundy | 2018 | 29 | 460 | 16.4 |
Lynn Greer | 2018 | 30 | 458 | 15.3 |
Hakim Hart | 2018 | 30 | 454 | 15.1 |
Allen Betrand | 2018 | 30 | 425 | 14.2 |
Hakim Hart | 2019 | 10 | 167 | 16.7 |
Seth Lundy | 2019 | 10 | 152 | 15.2 |
Lynn Greer | 2019 | 9 | 128 | 14.2 |
Jalen Duren | 2019 | 10 | 128 | 12.8 |
DEC. 27
TEDBIT
In Wood's most recent game, a win over Lansdale Catholic, Wood soph
JD Mosco scored three points and inspired this list. Over the last 25
seasons, at least, he's part of the seventh CL father-son combo. JD's dad,
John Mosco, is in his sixth season as the Vikings' coach. Jack Walsh,
who coached right before him, called the shots for two sons, Jack and Eric.
Tom and Martin Ingelsby had the most success. Tom, who played at O'Hara,
Villanova and in the NBA, coached Carroll to the 1995 CL championship and
Martin, a key performer for that squad, went on to earn first team All-City
honors in '97. He then starred at Notre Dame and is now the coach at Delaware.
Note: Not all sons listed below played their entire careers for dad.
UPDATE: I neglected to
mention Ed/Sean Givnish of Wood. That gives the Vikings three father-son
combos. Thanks to John Greenberg for speaking up! He played for/with the
Givnish duo in 1982.
Catholic Coaches With Sons on Their Teams | |||
Coach | Son | *G | *Points |
Ed Givnish | Sean | 46 | 526 |
Wood, , 1978-84 | 1982-84 | ||
Bob McTamney | Jim | 25 | 176 |
Kennedy-Kenrick, 1994-00 | 1994-95 | ||
Tom Ingelsby | Martin | 42 | 677 |
Carroll, 1992-97 | 1995-97 | ||
Brad | 1 | 2 | |
1997 | |||
Bill Fox | Brendan | 26 | 169 |
Judge, 1975-85; 1987-99; 2001-05 | 1996-97 | ||
Brian | 22 | 177 | |
1997-99 | |||
Bernie Fitzgerald | Colin | 3 | 11 |
La Salle, 1992-93, 2002 | 2002 | ||
Jack Walsh | Jack | 21 | 168 |
Wood, 2010-13 | 2010-11 | ||
Eric | 6 | 17 | |
2012-13 | |||
Joe Dempsey | Joe | 0 | 0 |
La Salle, 2005-18 | 2018 | ||
John Mosco | JD | 1 | 3 |
Wood, 2014-19 | 2019 | ||
*CL regular season (games scored & points) |
DEC. 24
TEDBIT
Yes, there are 21 total schools
in the Catholic/Inter-Ac leagues and, as much as possible, I try to spread
around the attention. But now, for the third time in eight days, the spotlight
is being shone on McDevitt and, Holy Christmas Eve, coach Will Chavis'
Lancers assuredly are worthy. This is McDevitt's 56th season as a Catholic
League member. Thanks to yesterday's 53-38 triumph over SJ Prep,
they are 3-0 in league play for just the
THIRD time. That's a rounded-off average of once every 18 seasons.
Amazing. And how the current Lancers achieved this record is downright
astonishing. Their wins have come against Wood, Carroll and the Prep. They'd
lost a combined 30 consecutive games against those teams -- 13 vs. Wood, 12 vs.
Carroll and five vs. Prep, counting a playoff just last season. In 2014, the
Lancers captured their regular season tilt vs. Prep by a score of 54-53.
Tyrell Long (17) and Jayson Clark (11) scored in double figures.
Matt Reed (eight), James Bogans and Qadir Burgess (seven
apiece) helped out. Below are details for the Lancers' 3-0 start this year and
starts of 5-0 in '97 and 4-0 in '88, respectively. One of the '88 starters,
Dan Greenberg, is a veteran McDevitt assistant. He's part of wonderful
family and below the chart is a story I wrote about him in that '88 season.
McDevitt's Catholic League Starts of at Least 3-0, 1964-2019 | |||||
2018-19 (3-0) | McD | Opp | Top Scorer | Pts | Other Mainstays |
Wood | 62 | 58 | Jamil Manigo | 19 | Ahmir Harris |
Carroll | 57 | 52 | Jamil Manigo | 16 | Robert Smith |
SJ Prep | 53 | 38 | Jamil Manigo | 17 | Seneca Willoughby |
Cameron Gardner | |||||
Glenn Smith | |||||
1996-97 (5-0) | McD | Opp | Top Scorer | Pts | Other Mainstays |
Wood | 54 | 47 | Ryan Presson | 18 | Jarrett Medley |
Ryan | 80 | 60 | Dan Brett | 20 | Chris Kittredge |
North Catholic | 70 | 61 | Ryan Presson | 24 | Dustin Sutton |
Judge | 61 | 56 | Walt Woods | 14 | |
Dougherty | 54 | 41 | Ryan Presson | 20 | |
1987-88 (4-0) | McD | Opp | Top Scorer | Pts | Other Mainstays |
Kenrick | 70 | 54 | John O'Connell | 21 | Dan Greenberg |
North Catholic | 57 | 56 | John O'Connell | 20 | Aaron Ervin |
Ryan | 56 | 55 | John O'Connell | 17 | Matt Buber |
Dougherty | 93 | 75 | John O'Connell | 18 | Allen Ray |
Derick Pickett |
McDEVITTS GREENBERG A CHIP OFF OLD BLOCK
Jan 30, 1988
By Ted Silary, Daily News Sports Writer
Being a
Catholic League basketball player named Greenberg means forever having to
explain whether you are related to Chip.
Chip Greenberg, that is - the former La Salle High first team Daily News
All-Scholastic selection (class of '82) who became an All-Big 5 performer for La
Salle University.
For the record, Bishop McDevitt 's Dan Greenberg , a 6-2 senior swingman,
is Chip's first cousin.
He is also the son of Charlie Greenberg, who started for La Salle's Tom
Gola-led 1954 NCAA champions and coached Father Judge from the 1963-64 season
through December 1973.
Last night at McDevitt , Greenbergs were everywhere as the Lancers licked
La Salle, 87-75, in as entertaining a high school game - played before a large,
revved-up crowd - as you could ever want to see.
Dan shot 5-for-6 (with three "threes") and 3-for-5 for 16 points, dished
4 assists and made 2 steals. His elder brother, Chuck, who played last year for
McDevitt , was there to watch. His younger brother, Paul, a sophomore, played
for the Lancers in the junior varsity game.
On hand as coaches were Chip, first assistant to La Salle's Marty
Jackson, and Greg, Chip's brother, a former player at Archbishop Wood and first
assistant to McDevitt 's Joe Sette.
You want more? Spectators included Charlie Greenberg, his elder brother,
Joe (more popularly known as "Hank," he also played for then-La Salle College in
the late 1940s) and three more of Joe's sons, Jerry, Tucker and John.
"Everyone always asks if I'm Chip's brother," Dan said. "Some story even
referred to me as 'Chip Greenberg's brother. ' I said, 'Sounds nice, but it's
not right.'
"I've always admired Chip as a player and person. When I was in the sixth
grade, and he was a senior in high school, I picked him to be my sponsor for
confirmation because he was always someone I wanted to be like. I can remember
going to watch his games all the time, and being at the Palestra when La Salle
won the Catholic League championship (in '81). "
Immediately before the game, as the starting lineups were being
introduced, Dan made it a point to trot to La Salle's bench and shake Chip's
hand.
He wanted to say, in effect, "Look, cousin, I'm here. "
"I was sick all week," Dan said, "and Chip kept kidding me about it. He
was saying, 'What a wimp. You'll be sick Friday night, too. That's because you
don't want to go against La Salle. ' "
According to Sette, who also received especially impressive performances
from 6-7 center John O'Connell (25 points, eight rebounds) and junior lead guard
Aaron Ervin (16 points, seven assists, faultless floor leadership), sickness is
becoming one of Dan Greenberg 's staples. Along with a tender left ankle.
"Danny hasn't been healthy all season except for the first half of the
Kenrick game (Jan. 3)," Sette said. "He played very well then, until spraining
his ankle. Against North and Ryan, he just dragged his foot through those two
games and wasn't a factor (he was scoreless in both), then he got sick. I'd say
he has practiced only once in the past 14 days. "
Dan Greenberg 's primary function in McDevitt 's offensive scheme is to
knock down medium- to long-range jump shots. Often, the farther he is from the
basket, the more successfully he shoots.
Early in the third quarter, as La Salle threatened to storm back from a
44-34 halftime deficit, Greenberg went three-for-three on "threes. "
"Tucker was sitting in the front row, hollering at me," Dan said. "He was
saying, 'If you're making them, keep shooting them. '
"Greg knows I like to shoot from the outside. He says if the guys aren't
passing me the ball, I should tell them about it. When my shots aren't going in,
he says things to keep my confidence up. "
"Danny has pretty much a green light," Sette said. "He's such a good
shooter, I don't want him to get the feeling that he's going to be yanked for
missing.
"He's shooting the ball better on 'threes. ' The reason is, he has more
of an opportunity to set his feet. Inside the line, he has to put the ball on
the floor and create his shots. When you penetrate, there's traffic and hands
and so forth. He takes more forced shots inside the line than he does outside.
It's weird. "
NOTES: Both teams incessantly pushed the ball and took the first
available good shots. What a godsend . . . Dan Greenberg , who barely missed
achieving second honors in the just-completed marking period, has heard from
Lycoming, Ursinus and Millersville . . . McDevitt shot 32-for-49 (65.3 percent)
. . . Junior guard Brian Reilly hit consecutive "threes" to pull La Salle within
78-74 with 1:39 left, but McDevitt scored seven of the next eight points
(one-and-one conversions by Steve Sheaffer and Greenberg, John O'Connell's
three-point play) in 0:52.
DEC. 23
TEDBIT
The Inter-Ac League's opening tripleheader won't take place until
Jan. 4 and all KINDS of things could take place before and after. But Haverford
School will enter league play as the favorite and so far the Fords are 10-0 in
non-league games, so . . . By the end of the season, they could own a spot on
the list below to the left. Since 1985, 13 I-A champs (outright and shared) have
racked up winning percentages of at least .846 in games outside the 10 regular
season tilts. Just two squads have achieved perfection, Germantown Academy in
'93 and Episcopal in '88. Four other squads suffered just one loss. Below, the
list to the right shows individual scoring through 10 non-league games for coach
Bernie Rogers' squad.
Top Non-League Records by I-A Champs, 1985-2018 | Haverford School So Far . . . (10-0) | ||||||
School | Season | W-L | Pct. | Name | Year | Points | |
Germantown Academy | 1992-93 | 15-0 | 1.000 | Christian Ray | Sr, | 224 | |
Episcopal Academy | 1987-88 | 15-0 | 1.000 | Tyler Seward | So. | 113 | |
Germantown Academy | 1984-85 | 17-1 | .944 | Jameel Brown | Fr. | 98 | |
Malvern Prep | 2011-12 | 16-1 | .941 | Gavin Burke | Sr, | 78 | |
Episcopal Academy | 1989-90 | 14-1 | .933 | MJ Atkins | Jr. | 57 | |
Penn Charter | 1985-86 | 14-1 | .933 | Asim Richards | Sr. | 35 | |
Episcopal Academy | 1990-91 | 17-2 | .895 | Scott Burke | Jr. | 14 | |
Episcopal Academy | 1986-87 | 16-2 | .889 | Jameer Nelson | Sr. | 13 | |
Germantown Academy | 1999-00 | 15-2 | .882 | Pat Toal | Jr. | 13 | |
Episcopal Academy | 1988-89 | 15-2 | .882 | Matt McKenna | Jr. | 8 | |
Chestnut Hill | 2007-08 | 14-2 | .875 | Jack Leary | Jr. | 2 | |
Penn Charter | 1993-94 | 14-2 | .875 | Dante Perri | Jr. | 2 | |
Chestnut Hill | 1993-94 | 11-2 | .846 | 657 |
DEC. 22
TEDBIT
Pretty sure we all knew Isaiah Wong would explode for a high
point total at some juncture. And it happened last night as Bonner-Prendie
battled Patterson, of Baltimore (MD), in a non-league game. So what if the game
went overtime? It all counts, baby! The senior guard, a Miami commit, scored 37
points as the Friars triumphed, 75-71, in two OTs. (Notice? He scored almost
half of B-P's points.) According to B-P assistant Ryan Arakelian, Isaiah
shot 10-for-16 on twos, 2-for-5 on treys and 11-for-12 at the line. Oh, he also
claimed 18 rebounds and scored all eight of the Friars' points in the second
extra session. The list below, compiled with help from Tom Taylor, shows
details of all outbursts of at least 35 points by Bonner/B-P players over the
last 25 seasons (1995-2019). And, yes, Ashley Howard is now the coach at
La Salle University. Last year, Isaiah's top effort was 32 points and he twice
hit that number in postseason action.
Efforts of at Least 35 Points for Bonner/B-P Players, 1995-2019 Seasons |
|||
Year | Player | Points | Opponent |
2007 | Jeff Jones | 41 | N-G |
1999 | Ashley Howard | 41 | K-K |
1998 | Dennis Moran | 37 | Prep |
2019 | Isaiah Wong | 37 | Patterson (MD) |
2007 | Jeff Jones | 36 | West |
2005 | Derrick Graff | 36 | K-K |
1999 | Ashley Howard | 35 | Prep |
2007 | Jeff Jones | 35 | Ridley |
DEC. 21
TEDBIT
Well, that didn't take long. Devon Prep, formerly of the Bicentennial
Athletic League, last night made its Catholic League debut and notched a 52-47
win (or 49, slight discrepancy in scorebook) over visiting Father Judge. Since
the mid-1950s, the CL has welcomed 12 new members. DP, joining O'Hara, is just
the second to win its debut. The breakdown for all 12 schools is below. DP,
Egan, Lansdale, McDevitt and Kenrick switched over from other leagues. The
others were new schools and did not have a senior class in their first season.
Bonner (officially Archbishop Prendergast for that first season) and Ryan didn't
win until their second campaign. Kenrick finally broke into the win column to
start its third CL season and then won just once more for a 2-36 start (ouch).
Devon Prep, coached by Jason Fisher, received 24 points from soph
Eamon Walsh. He packed 16 into the second half and overall went 10-for-11 at
the line, pacing the Tide's 22-for-27 (81 percent) charity stripe marksmanship.
Juniors Scion Dorsey (11) and Nick Crowe (10) also scored in
double figures. Congrats to the Tide!
Details of First Wins for New Catholic League Members Going Back to the Mid-1950s | |||||||
School | 1st Year | Record | 1st Win | Defeated . . . | Score | Winner's Leader | Pts |
Cardinal O'Hara | 1964-65 | 1-13 | No. 1 | West Catholic | 46-41 | John McFadden | 23 |
Devon Prep | 2018-19 | TBD | No. 1 | Father Judge | 52-47 | Eamon Walsh | 24 |
Bishop Egan | 1963-64 | 9-3 | No. 2 | Bishop McDevitt | 58-53 | John Kerr | 16 |
Lansdale Catholic | 2008-09 | 5-11 | No. 2 | Bishop McDevitt | 48-33 | Brendan Stanton | 12 |
Cardinal Dougherty | 1957-58 | 4-11 | No. 3 | North Catholic | 51-46 | Jack Shepper | 18 |
Archbishop Carroll | 1968-69 | 1-15 | No. 3 | St. James | 74-59 | Mike Dwyer | 31 |
Bishop McDevitt | 1963-64 | 2-10 | No. 5 | Bishop Kenrick | 55-35 | Frank McCall | 19 |
Father Judge | 1955-56 | 1-12 | No. 8 | Monsignor Bonner | 60-47 | Bill Penny | 21 |
Archbishop Wood | 1966-67 | 1-13 | No. 10 | Bishop McDevitt | 59-58 | Ed Fitzpatrick | 20 |
Monsignor Bonner | 1955-56 | 0-13 | *No. 14 | Bishop Neumann | 63-54 | Tom Rudderow | 17 |
Archbishop Ryan | 1967-68 | 0-16 | *No. 17 | La Salle | 68-56 | Lou Peltzer | 20 |
Bishop Kenrick | 1963-64 | 0-12 | #No. 25 | Bishop Egan | 64-46 | Bob Smith | 17 |
*second season | |||||||
#third season |
DEC. 20
TEDBIT
As oldheads know very well, the
late Paul Arizin became an all-time NBA player even though he "never"
played varsity basketball while attending La Salle High. "Never" is in quotes
because that description has been out there forever. Turns out it's not
completely correct. One bio I found stated that Mr. Arizin was cut from the team
shortly into his senior season. Whoa. Let the cross-checking begin. Via
newspapers.com, I did find Mr. Arizin's name in a boxscore for a non-league game
vs. Gratz on Dec. 7, 1945. He hit three field goals for six points.
And he was still on the team as of Dec.
23 because he scored two points in a win over Holy Spirit, of South Jersey. In October
of 1996, during the league's Golden Anniversary season, the Villanova product
was named one of the Top 50 players in NBA history for amassing 16,266 points,
6,129 rebounds and 1,665 assists. In playoffs he added 1,186, 404 and 128 in
those respective categories. Two generations later, two grandsons, senior
Gabe and junior Chris Arizin, are playing for St. Joseph's Prep and Tuesday
night in a Catholic League opener at Archbishop Ryan, they combined for 22
points (Chris 14, Gabe eight), thus lifting the league play point total for Mr.
Arizin's sons/grandsons above 1,500. Sons Michael, Tim, Dennis and Chris
all played for Cardinal O'Hara. Matt (Penn Charter, Inter-Ac; primary
sport baseball) and Gabe are Michael's sons. Chris is -- you got it -- Chris'
son. Alicia (O'Hara '73) was the one girl in Paul's crew. Luke (SJP
'17), brother of Matt and Gabe, was the manager for the Hawks' basketball team
and four times won letters in lacrosse and cross country. Olivia (O'Hara
'17) is Chris' sister. She's on a track scholarship at Georgetown as a world
class middle distance runner and, who knows, could soon wind up in the Olympics.
UPDATE: More on Mr. Arizin's La
Salle High career has been added above (in gray).
CL/I-A Points for Paul Arizin's Sons/Grandsons | |||
Name | School | Sr. Yr. | Points |
Michael | Cardinal O'Hara | 1972 | 621 |
Tim | Cardinal O'Hara | 1976 | 35 |
Dennis | Cardinal O'Hara | 1980 | 203 |
Chris | Cardinal O'Hara | 1985 | 216 |
Matt | Penn Charter | 1997 | 81 |
Gabe | St. Joseph's Prep | 2019 | 315 |
Chris | St. Joseph's Prep | 2020 | 35 |
1,506 |
DEC. 19
TEDBIT
While checking out last night's Catholic League results, you likely
were anything from surprised to stunned by one . . . McDevitt 62, Wood 58.
McDevitt assistant Dan Greenberg sent an email to ask when the Lancers
had last beaten Wood. I told him the research had already started. The answer:
In the first of two meetings in 2008, back in the ol' Northern Division,
McDevitt won, 46-42, as R.P. Boyle and James Williams scored 10
points apiece. The Vikings then rolled to 13 consecutive wins - one in '08, two
apiece in 2009 and '10 (Blue Division) and one apiece from '11 through '18 (all
one league). The details are below and the Vikings triumphed by an average,
rounded-off score of 67-51. Last night's game was played at McDevitt and the
leading scorer for coach Will Chavis' squad was jr. Jamil Manigo
(19 points). Robert Smith, featured in Monday's Tedbit, added 18
points while Ahmir Harris (13) also reached double digits. Rahsool
Diggins (24) topped Wood. In a follow-up email, Dan Greenberg noted,
"great game but best part of night might have been end of game
when my cousins Tuck and Jerry high-tailed out of McD." He's referring to former
Wood players Tucker and Jerry Greenberg and they knew what would have
been coming (ha ha). The Greater Greenbergs are likely the world's most
entertaining family and Dan would have enjoyed busting chops. In person, that
is. I'm sure it happened via texts.
Congrats to the Lancers . . . and also to the Vikings for that lengthy run of
dominance.
UPDATE: In its next CL
game, McDevitt beat Carroll. Carroll had won all 12 meetings in the 2000s -- two
apiece in '09 and '10; all eight from 2011-18. The teams were in different
divisions from 2000-08 and did not meet at all.
Details of Wood's 13 Consecutive Wins over McDevitt | ||||||||
Year | Wood | Pts | McDevitt | Pts | Wood Leader | Pts | McDevitt Leader | Pts |
2008 | Wood | 55 | McDevitt | 49 | Tim Fahy | 20 | 3-Two guys | 12 |
2009 | Wood | 58 | McDevitt | 52 | Tim Fahy | 19 | Reggie Charles | 15 |
2009 | Wood | 62 | McDevitt | 39 | Fran Dougherty | 18 | Reggie Charles | 18 |
2010 | Wood | 70 | McDevitt | 48 | Joe Getz | 18 | Matt Conroy | 14 |
2010 | Wood | 60 | McDevitt | 47 | Brian O'Grady | 21 | Gerald Scott | 14 |
2011 | Wood | 62 | McDevitt | 49 | Tommy Rush | 15 | Brahieme Jackson | 19 |
2012 | Wood | 85 | McDevitt | 74 | Pat Smith | 22 | Markiese Chandler | 29 |
2013 | Wood | 56 | McDevitt | 53 | Pat Smith | 24 | 4-Three guys | 13 |
2014 | Wood | 89 | McDevitt | 72 | 1-Two guys | 19 | Tyrell Long | 27 |
2015 | Wood | 61 | McDevitt | 50 | 2-Two guys | 17 | Jayson Clark | 16 |
2016 | Wood | 74 | McDevitt | 45 | Andrew Funk | 15 | Malik Heyward | 14 |
2017 | Wood | 73 | McDevitt | 45 | Collin Gillespie | 23 | Quentin Beasley | 20 |
2018 | Wood | 59 | McDevitt | 42 | Andrew Funk | 17 | Robert Smith | 26 |
864 | 665 | |||||||
66.5 | 51.2 | |||||||
1-Luke Connaghan / Joe LoStracco | ||||||||
2-Luke Connaghan / Tyree Pickron | ||||||||
3-Dan Drennen / James Williams | ||||||||
4-Tyreek Fairfax / Carl Garner / Kenyatta Long |
DEC. 18
TEDBIT
In year No. 4 as the coach at
Haverford School, Bernie Rogers now is part of a special club. One of the
players on his roster is a soph named Bernie Rogers and, yes, the kid is
the son of the adult. Over the last 50 years, six other Inter-Ac basketball
coaches have guided teams that included their sons. This is the first time since
2012, when Bill and Billy Dooley could be found at Chestnut Hill. At
Episcopal, from '77 through '92, Dan Dougherty coached three of his sons
-- Dan, Mike and Brian. Penn Charter's Billy Harris played under
his dad for two years, then for two more under Lee Jackson. He scored 685
total points in league play and 1,646 overall. He averaged 28.7 in league play
as a senior and that number still holds the top spot in I-A history. Billy’s
older brother, Buddy, was a first-magnitude hoops star at Roxborough and
wound up pitching briefly in the major leagues. Ray Edelman coached his
son, Mike, for five varsity seasons at Haverford School. Mike scored 619
league points and 1,550 in all. When Germantown Academy's Jim Fenerty
bagged career win No. 400 in 2007, the last five points were scored by his son,
Jimmy, who was making his first varsity appearance.
Inter-Ac Coaches With Sons on Their Teams | |||
Coach | Son | *G | *Points |
Dan Dougherty | Dan | 37 | 262 |
Episcopal, 1977-97, 2001-10 | 1977-80 | ||
Mike | 16 | 90 | |
1981-83 | |||
Brian | 31 | 235 | |
1989-92 | |||
Bill Dooley | Billy | 24 | 157 |
Chestnut Hill, 2008-12 | 2009-12 | ||
Bucky Harris | Billy | 13 | 193 |
Penn Charter, 1968-69 | 1968-69 | ||
Jim Fenerty | Jimmy | 9 | 41 |
Gtn. Academy, 1990-2019 | 2007-09 | ||
Ray Edelman | Mike | 37 | 619 |
Haverford School, 1974-78 | 1974-78 | ||
Brian McMahon | Brian | 32 | 213 |
Penn Charter, 1990-95 | 1991-94 | ||
*-Inter-Ac League play |
DEC. 17
TEDBIT
It's often not easy for guys named Smith to distinguish themselves.
McDevitt's Robert Smith is doing his best, folks. In a showcase game
Saturday, the junior guard, a solidly built lefty, scored 35 points vs.
Fairmount Heights, of Maryland. Assistant Dan Greenberg reports that
Robert nailed three three-pointers and went 2-for-5 at the line. That leaves 12
other field goals and Dan says ALL were layups. Mostly on fastbreaks, but
sometimes off hard drives out of a halfcourt set. The list below, compiled with
help from the ever-ready Tom Taylor, shows all McDevitt outbursts of at
least 30 points in this century. The top spot belongs to Chris Hanes, who
accomplished his feat in late November of 2002. My story on that game is right
below and helps to explains why so many of the outbursts occurred in that
season. Meanwhile, Robert Smith owns 76 points through four games and his career
total stands at 505. McDevitt's school record belongs to '84 grad Eric Ervin
(1,272).
Hanes fashions 52-point
show for McDevitt
Chris Hanes no longer needs to be convinced. He now officially loves
the run-and-gun style being used this season by Bishop McDevitt High's
basketball team.
No wonder. In a non-league game Wednesday, Hanes poured in a
school-record 52 points as the Lancers swamped visiting Wyncote Academy, 120-59.
The total ranks No. 2 all time for Catholic League players behind the 58
scored by Cardinal Dougherty's Shawn Newman in December 1990 in a non-league
game vs. West Catholic, which then was runnin' and gunnin' in Loyola Marymount
fashion. McDevitt's Bob Haas (51 vs. Archbishop Ryan in 1968) still holds the
mark for CL play.
The lefthanded Hanes is a 6-1, 175-pound senior wing guard. He shot
10-for-21 on twos, 8-for-14 on threes (one make short of the city record) and
8-for-8 at the line. He scored 33 points a day earlier in McDevitt's opener, a
106-61 win over Mercy Tech. He averaged nine points in CL play last season.
"Coach [Jack] Rutter was saying in the offseason that we were going to
use this style, do or die, and that we'd better get in shape," Hanes said. "But
until we started practice, we didn't fully know what it would be like. The first
day was rough. We ran and ran and ran. We were so tired. It was, 'We're not
going to like this. '
"But now we all love it. It's a lot of fun. We're in such great shape, we
can go the full 32 minutes. The other teams are dying in the third or fourth
quarter. "
Members of McDevitt's Krazy Korner fan section informed Hanes of the
school record as he drew closer. With about 6 minutes left, he was pulled aside
by Rutter.
"He told me I was four points away and that he was going to leave me in
to go for it," Hanes said. "He said, 'Don't worry about bad shots because you're
not coming out. ' Pretty much the whole game, I was on fire. "
Hanes' brother, Fred, was a first-team Daily News All-City defensive lineman for
McDevitt in 1996.
"I'm still the better low-post player," Fred said. "Overall? He's got me
now. I give it to him."
McDevitt's Outbursts of at Least 30 Points in the 2000s | |||
Year | Player | Points | Opponent |
2003 | Chris Hanes | 52 | Wyncote Academy |
2014 | Tyrell Long | 41 | New Foundations |
2000 | Wayne Bishop | 38 | Lansdale Catholic |
2018 | Robert Smith | 35 | Fairmount Heights (MD) |
2003 | Chris Hanes | 35 | Friends Select |
2014 | Tyrell Long | 34 | O'Hara |
2000 | Wayne Bishop | 34 | Ryan |
2014 | Tyrell Long | 33 | West |
2014 | Tyrell Long | 33 | B-P |
2004 | Greg Stitt | 33 | Morrisville |
2003 | Mike Ross | 33 | Plumstead Christian |
2003 | Chris Hanes | 32 | Mercy Catholic |
2014 | Tyrell Long | 31 | C-E |
2000 | Wayne Bishop | 31 | Lutheran |
2012 | Markiese Chandler | 31 | Upper Moreland |
2012 | Markiese Chandler | 31 | Phil-Mont |
2013 | Carl Garner | 31 | Chichester |
2003 | Mike Ross | 30 | Friends Select |
2003 | Mike Ross | 30 | Lansdale Catholic |
2003 | Mike Ross | 30 | Sun Valley |
=
DEC. 6 TEDBIT We're barely into the 2018-19 season and a major accomplishment has already occurred. With yesterday's 68-59 win over Pennington School (NJ), Germantown Academy coach Jim Fenerty raised his career win total to 622 and that enabled him to ease past Dan Dougherty for the No. 2 spot in city leagues history. Dan went 621-285 in 36 combined seasons at Malvern (five years) and Episcopal (31). Jim is now 622-372 in 38 seasons at the ol' Bishop Egan (eight) and GA (30). The list to the right shows how many times each man has won at least 23 games in a season. Jim leads, 11-10. Dan leads the at-least-25 competition, 4-2. All of Jim's big-win seasons have been posted at GA. Through the years, of course, the number of overall games played by teams has varied, as has strength of schedule. Jim has won 17 Inter-Ac titles with 12 outrights. Dan won 13 with also a dozen outrights. In league play, Dan went 239-143 for a winning percentage of .626. Jim, counting his Egan days, is 236-180 for .567. He's .722 (208-80) at GA. |
|
NOV. 28
TEDBIT
Coach John Owens, formerly an assistant at Abington Friends,
began his Penn Charter coaching career with a bang that resembled a sonic boom.
Yesterday, the Quakers thumped Germantown Friends, 69-23, as junior G Ryan
"Pooch" Holmes scored 20 points and Dylan Topaz added 10. Five others
scored at least six. The list below -- hopefully, a few years were tough to nail
down -- shows all debuts (only in first stints, some did more than one) for PC's
coaches going back to 1961. Ron Haigler, a major star at Penn, took over
shortly into the 1975-76 season. When William "Speedy" Morris made his
debut in the 1982-83 season, PC's top scorer in a win over Ryan was none other
than -- drum roll, please -- Carl Arrigale (16 points). He's entering his
21st season as the boss at Neumann-Goretti while Speedy is in season No. 18 at
SJ Prep.
Debuts for Penn Charter's Basketball Coaches, 1961-2018 | |||||
Coach | Season | Opponent | W-L | PC | Opp. |
Buff Weigand | 1961-62 | Abraham Lincoln | Won | 52 | 48 |
Joe Perrott | 1966-67 | Pa. School for the Deaf | Won | 88 | 56 |
Bucky Harris | 1967-68 | Pa. School for the Deaf | Won | 68 | 32 |
Lee Jackson | 1969-70 | Peddie School (NJ) | Lost | 61 | 62 |
Ron Haigler | 1975-76 | Frankford | Lost | 47 | 70 |
Ed Enoch | 1977-78 | Germantown Friends | Lost | 47 | 51 |
Speedy Morris | 1982-83 | Archbishop Ryan | Won | 47 | 44 |
*Bill Michuda | 1984-85 | Archbishop Ryan | Lost | 46 | 53 |
Lefty Ervin | 1987-88 | Germantown Friends | Lost | 44 | 67 |
Brian McMahon | 1988-89 | Germantown Friends | Lost | 50 | 53 |
Bill Gallagher | 1995-96 | Frankford | Lost | 34 | 56 |
#Flipper Phillips | 2000-01 | Cardinal O'Hara | Lost | 44 | 60 |
Lynard Stewart | 2011-12 | St. Albans (MD) | Won | 52 | 50 |
John Owens | 2018-19 | Germantown Friends | Won | 69 | 23 |
*-two stints; #three stints |
OCT. 31
TEDBIT
In 1997, Neumann beat unbeaten Carroll for the Catholic League
championship. The Pirates' coach was Tom Dougherty and he was hired on
Halloween in 1994, ending years of frustration. Here is that story . . .
NEW NEUMANN COACH FINALLY REACHES GOAL
OCT. 18
TEDBIT
Thanks to Boston Celtics rookie Bradley Wanamaker, who made
his debut Tuesday night against the 76ers, Roman has now reached double digits
in terms of producing NBA players. The Cahillites still trail Overbrook (12),
but more progress could be made in the coming years. Interestingly, four guys on
the list below never played varsity at their high school.
Philly Schools With Most NBA-ABA Players | ||
OVERBROOK (12) | Grad | Debut |
Wilt Chamberlain | 1955 | 1960 |
Mike Gale | 1967 | 1972 |
Walt Hazzard | 1960 | 1965 |
Wayne Hightower | 1958 | 1963 |
Wali Jones | 1960 | 1965 |
Rich Laurel | 1972 | 1978 |
Hal Lear | 1952 | 1957 |
Lewis Lloyd | 1977 | 1982 |
Andre McCarter | 1971 | 1977 |
Jackie Moore | 1950 | 1955 |
Angelo Musi | 1937 | 1947 |
Malik Rose | 1992 | 1997 |
ROMAN (10) | ||
Mike Bantom | 1969 | 1974 |
Rasual Butler | 1998 | 2003 |
Dallas Comegys | 1983 | 1988 |
Matt Guokas Sr. | 1934 | 1947 |
Eddie Griffin | 2000 | 2002 |
Marc Jackson | 1993 | 2001 |
Lari Ketner | 1995 | 2000 |
Bob Schafer | 1951 | 1956 |
Bradley Wanamaker | 2007 | 2019 |
Maalik Wayns | 2009 | 2013 |
WEST PHILA. (8) | ||
Gene Banks | 1977 | 1982 |
*John Baum | 1963 | 1970 |
Nelson Bobb | 1942 | 1950 |
Frank Card | 1962 | 1969 |
Norm Grekin | 1948 | 1954 |
Ray "Chink" Scott | 1956 | 1962 |
Art Spector | 1938 | 1947 |
Hubie White | 1958 | 1963 |
SOUTHERN (7) | ||
Nate Blackwell | 1983 | 1988 |
Stan "Loady" Brown | 1947 | 1948 |
*-Ollie Johnson | 1966 | 1973 |
Louis "Red" Klotz | 1939 | 1948 |
Petey Rosenberg | 1936 | 1947 |
Lionel Simmons | 1986 | 1991 |
Isaiah "Bunny" Wilson | 1966 | 1972 |
BARTRAM (6) | ||
Clarence Brookins | 1964 | 1971 |
Joe Bryant | 1972 | 1976 |
Earl "Pearl" Monroe | 1962 | 1968 |
Jim Mooney | 1948 | 1953 |
Richie Moore | 1960 | 1968 |
Jerry Rullo | 1941 | 1947 |
FRANKLIN (6) | ||
Fred Carter | 1963 | 1970 |
Greg Fillmore | 1965 | 1971 |
Paul "Snoop" Graham | 1985 | 1992 |
*John Postley | 1958 | 1968 |
Jerome "Pooh" Richardson | 1985 | 1990 |
Randy Woods | 1988 | 1993 |
EDISON (5) | 1963 | 1968 |
Cliff Anderson | 1963 | 1968 |
Jerry Baskerville | 1970 | 1976 |
*Tyrone Britt | TBA | 1968 |
Erv "Stu" Staggs | 1966 | 1970 |
Tom "Trooper" Washington | 1962 | 1968 |
*-did not play varsity |
OCT. 17
TEDBIT
At 10:21 last night, with 49.9 seconds remaining in his team's opener
against the visiting Philadelphia 76ers, Boston Celtics guard Bradley
Wanamaker made his NBA debut. I can only imagine how wonderful he felt. This
was a lonnnnng time coming. This is season No. 12 since Bradley and his twin
brother, Brian, paced Roman Catholic to the 2007 Catholic League
championship. Bradley wound up being named the Daily News City Player of
the Year and played his college ball at Pittsburgh. In the seven seasons from
2012 through '18, he played in assorted countries overseas and spent a stretch
in the NBA's Developmental League. He signed with the Celtics four months ago,
just a few weeks before his 29th birthday. Not counting players who made their
NBA debuts in the league's first season, 1946-47 (the league was officially
known as the Basketball Association of America back then), Bradley is the sixth
"Our Guy' to make his NBA debut at least 10 seasons after his high school
graduation. Franklin's John Postley ('58, though he did not play varsity
there), Roxborough's John "Chubby" Cox ('73, his sister is Kobe
Bryant's mother) and Engineering and Science's Lynn Greer ('97) did
so in season No. 10. Kensington's Emanual "Vel" Davis ('86) did so in
season No. 11. Bradley stands second with 12 seasons and the leader is Walter
Byrd with 15. Walt graduated from Central in 1955 and made his ABA debut
with the Miami Floridians in the 1969-70 season. The forward played 22 games in
that campaign, averaging 1.5 points and 1.1 rebounds. Before and after, he spent
many seasons in basketball's version of minor leagues. He played primarily in
the Eastern League and, after his brief ABA stint, spent time with the Camden
Bullets. At Temple, he made his first start on Jan. 26, 1957, totaling 14 points
and 12 rebounds against Seton Hall. On various websites, Walt's birth year is
listed as 1942. No way that's legit unless he graduated from Central at age 13
(smile). The Wife, who has conducted outrageously thorough research on
her massive family (1,009 relatives so far!), checked the 1940 census. She found
a Walter Byrd, age 2, who lived in Philly and was born in 1938. Gotta be him,
right? At that time the family was living near 26th and Oxford. By the way, in
last night's game Bradley notched two points and one rebound in his brief
appearance. All the best, Bradley! And thanks to Roman's No. 1 fan, Tony "Cous"
Cousar, for making contact and sending
this pic
-- yes, he was in the arena -- shortly before the game began. . . . Of the 1947
NBA debut guys, the oldest was Roman product Matt Guokas Sr. He'd
graduated in 1934. His son, Matt Jr., a product of SJ Prep, also played
in the NBA.
SEPT. 21
TEDBIT
Roman Catholic sr. wing Hakim Hart is bound for Saint Joseph's
and, of course, he won't be the first high-quality "Our Guy" to play for the
Hawks. The list below includes all first, second and third-team All-City seniors
-- with two exceptions, Hart and Frankford's Carlin Warley in 1989 -- who
wound up playing on Hawk Hill. Some transferred out, some transferred in. Hart
earned third team All-City honors last season. Warley was a first-teamer in '89
before spending his final year at a small private school in Montgomery County.
Some other "Our Guys" have also played for the Hawks. Very prominent among them
is a guy with an extremely common name. In 1981, Neumann product John Smith
scored the last-instant bucket (on a pass from Roman's Lonnie McFarlan;
his name is below) as the Hawks stunned DePaul, 49-48, in the second round of
the NCAA Tournament.
Earned first team All-Big 5
honors
Earned second team All-Big 5 honors
Senior Year All-City Basketball
Honorees Who've Played for Saint Joseph's, 1972-2018 |
|||
Name | School | Sr. Yr. | Team |
Willie Taylor | Olney | 1972 | 1st |
Steve Vassalotti | SJ Prep | 1973 | 2nd |
John Willcox | Malvern | 1974 | 3rd |
John Griffin | Roman | 1974 | 3rd |
Zane Major | Roman | 1975 | 1st |
Al Clancy | Judge | 1975 | 2nd |
Jeffery "Monk" Clark | Frankford | 1977 | 1st |
Neil Collins | Wood | 1978 | 3rd |
Lonnie McFarlan | Roman | 1980 | 1st |
Tony Costner | Overbrook | 1980 | 1st |
Bill Mitchell | O'Hara | 1980 | 2nd |
Glenn Welton | Roman | 1981 | 2nd |
James "Bruiser" Flint | Episcopal | 1983 | 1st |
Jack Concannon | Bonner | 1983 | 2nd |
Rodney Blake | Bonner | 1984 | 1st |
Brian Leahy | Kenrick | 1984 | 2nd |
Henry Smith | West Phila. | 1984 | 2nd |
Ivan "Pick" Brown | Bonner | 1986 | 1st |
Ed McCrystal | Haverford School | 1987 | 3rd |
Mike Kempski | Carroll | 1987 | 3rd |
Brian Daly | Bonner | 1988 | 1st |
*Carlin Warley | Frankford | 1989 | 1st |
Eddie Malloy | O'Hara | 1989 | 1st |
Jason Warley | Frankford | 1989 | 2nd |
Bernard Jones | Roman | 1991 | 1st |
Wilbur "Will" Johnson | Central | 1992 | 3rd |
Rashid Bey | Neumann | 1994 | 2nd |
Andre Howard | Overbrook | 1995 | 1st |
Arthur "Yah" Davis | Frankford | 1996 | 1st |
Ronnie Conway | Frankford | 1996 | 3rd |
Marvin O'Connor | Gratz | 1997 | 1st |
Na'im Crenshaw | Overbrook | 1997 | 1st |
Bill Phillips | Carroll | 1997 | 2nd |
Alex Sazonov | O'Hara | 1998 | 3rd |
Derrick "DJ" Rivera | Neumann-Goretti | 2006 | 1st |
Chris Clover | SJ Prep | 2015 | 1st |
Charles Brown | Washington | 2015 | 3rd |
#Hakim Hart | Roman | 2018 | 3rd |
*-transferred to suburban school for senior season | |||
#-one season remaining |
JULY 30
TEDBIT
Thirty-five years ago, there was MUCH discussion about the
three-point shot and whether high school basketball should add it. I interviewed
some high school and college coaches for a Daily News story and asked
them what they thought. Their responses are below. The Catholic and Inter-Ac
leagues wound up permitting treys for the 1986-87 season. The Pub did so for
1987-88. The city's first trey was hit by North Catholic sub Marty
O'Donnell on Dec. 1, 1986. That day the Falcons were hosting Simon Gratz and
Gratz coach Bill Ellerbee gave his permission for three-point shots.
HIGH SCHOOL COACHES
Dan Dougherty, Episcopal
"I'm not in favor, though I'd be more apt to consider it if there was
uniformity on the college level. It's ridiculous now. "
Bill Fox, Father Judge
"I like it. The ACC distance is too short and the NBA distance is too
long. Maybe 20 feet would be a happy medium. "
Mark "Max" Levin, Overbrook
"Forget it. I don't like the whole idea. It encourages bad habits in the
kids. (Habits) we try like hell to eliminate in the first place. "
Bill "Speedy" Morris, Penn Charter
"I'm totally against it. The name of the game is to get the best possible
shot. Throwing one up from 25 isn't my idea of that. You're going to fire from
anywhere, you might as well do away with the coaches. "
Joe Rapczynski, North Catholic
"I'm not in favor. I'd rather see a three-point play inside than a
three-point shot from outside. It's been ingrained: the closer to the basket,
the better the shot. "
Ralph "Bones" Schneider, Mastbaum
"I like it, but there's not enough room in some of our gyms for a
three-point line. We'd also have a hard time getting somebody to paint the lines
on the court. "
Ed Stefanski, Bonner
"I might go more for this because it helps keep the underdog in the game.
"
COLLEGE COACHES
Mitch Buonaguro, Villanova assistant
"That could be very interesting. "
Jim Boyle, St. Joseph's
"I don't like the idea that lucky desperation shots can count for three.
Maybe they could have three-point areas, like a 2-foot wide stripe. "
Dave "Lefty" Ervin, La Salle
"You'd have kids tending to specialize and that would hurt more than
help. Overall, it's not a good shot statistically. "
Craig Littlepage, Penn
"My overall reaction would probably be negative, although I'd admit that
it does add an element of excitement. "
Jim Maloney, Temple assistant
"Part of a high school coach's job is to get his kids ready for the next
level. If you had this, a 6-3 kid could maybe develop his outside shot and
become a two (shooting) guard in college. Also, a little guy can't make himself
taller, but he sure can perfect a three-point shot and make himself a very
important part of the game. "
Joe Rogers, Drexel assistant
"It would certainly add excitement."
JULY 12
TEDBIT
At least in "modern" times (1978-forward), Mike Lake now owns a
Catholic League record for baseball coaches -- largest gap (18 years) between
stints at the same school. And he's pretty close to the record for the other
major sports. Succeeding his father, Al, Mike coached Ryan's diamond
squad from 1990 through 2001 and he has just been hired for the 2019 season. In
between he coached La Salle University for 10 seasons (2008-17) and for four
years beforehand assisted Lee Saverio. The cake-taker for the three major
sports is Eddie Burke, who had a 22-year gap between stints as St.
Joseph's Prep basketball coach ('71/'93). Eddie guided Drexel University's squad
for 14 seasons (1978-91). He had quite the coaching life. How many guys,
anywhere, in any sport, were the head coach at different schools in four
consecutive years? Eddie steered St. Thomas More in its last year of existence
('75), then McDevitt in '76 and West Catholic in '77 before moving up to Drexel.
Also, he won CL crowns in consecutive seasons -- '71 at SJ Prep and '72 at ST
More. Amazing. John "Jocko" Collins also lived quite the sporting life.
He was a Phillies scout and prominent college basketball ref and coached at four
CL schools -- North Catholic (1930-31), Salesianum in Delaware (1936-37) and ST
More ('43) in addition to the Prep stints listed below. Jack Concannon's
stretches at Monsignor Bonner/Bonner-Prenderdast, separated by 19 years, lasted
nine total seasons. No football bosses qualify for the list.
Name/School | Years | Gap |
Eddie Burke | 1969-71 | 22 |
St. Joseph's Prep | 1993-99 | |
John "Jocko" Collins | 1944 | 19 |
St. Joseph's Prep | 1963-65 | |
Jack Concannon | 1992-96 | 19 |
Msgr. Bonner/Bonn.-Pren. | 2015-18 | |
Mike Lake | 1990-2001 | 18 |
Archbishop Ryan | 2019 |
JULY 10
TEDBIT
The story below, written by the great Bill Shefski, appeared
in the Daily News in January of 1962. It was about
Cardwell Woods, then a very promising ninth grader at
Sulzberger Junior High in West Philadelphia. He was expected to
attend Overbrook, Wilt Chamberlain's alma mater. But that
didn't happen. Check back tomorrow for a partial update. I've
found bits and pieces of Woods' story, but not everything.
UPDATE, JULY 11
. . . According to a
story from 1964, Woods' father was a government worker and was
transferred to a job in Bristol. So the family moved there and
Caldwell Woods (not Cardwell, at least according to many
stories) played for Bristol High. Listed as a junior, he starred
for the 1964 team that advanced to the Class B Eastern final
before falling to Montrose. In one story, Woods was described as
slow-moving. Yet when spring came around, he ran the hurdles for
the track team. As the 1964-65 school year rolled around . . .
Nothing. Woods was no longer in school. Perhaps the family moved
again? Perhaps Caldwell decided to go into the service? . . . In
1971, Woods was playing for State Farm in Bristol's YMCA Adult
League. He had 37 points in a loss to Beck-Dougherty. He popped
up again in a 1973 story, scoring 33 points in a loss to IMI. On
newspapers.com, there are all KINDS of results for a "caldwell
woods" search. Reason: It's the name of a neighborhood park in
Chicago.
ANOTHER UPDATE, JULY
11 . . . This comes from Chuck Langerman.
Spoke to a friend of
mine, Kevin Lendo, that went to high school at Pennsbury
High in the same era as Caldwell "Woody" Woods. He saw Woods
play at Bristol, and said he was a 6-foot-6 center who was named
Bucks County basketball player of the year in 1964. My friend
vividly recalls reading in the Bucks County Courier Times that
Woods, the big man on the Bristol High basketball team in 1964,
got married and dropped out of school.
. . . Note from Ted: Indeed. A blurb detailing that fact
was published in the paper's May 1, 1964, edition. It was part
of a notes column by the sports editor, Ben Borowsky.
JULY 3
TEDBIT
Paul Ward coached at Overbrook for 15 seasons (1967-81) and produced
an NBA player, on average, once every three years. Not bad, eh?
The guys on the list below produced at least three NBAers. You
could make a strong argument that Roman's Dennis Seddon
also "produced" five NBAers. But I went by graduation year for
this list and Maalik Wayns was coached as a Roman senior
by Chris McNesby. Bartram's Tony Coma later
coached the girls squad at Dobbins and one of his players, Linda
Page, scored 100 points in one game in 1981.
PAUL WARD, Overbrook (5) |
|
Wayne Hightower |
1958 |
Walt Hazzard |
1960 |
Wali Jones |
1960 |
Mike Gale |
1967 |
Andre McCarter |
1971 |
DENNIS SEDDON, Roman (4) |
|
Marc Jackson |
1993 |
Lari Ketner |
1995 |
Rasual Butler |
1998 |
Eddie Griffin |
2000 |
DOUG CONNELLY, West Phila. (3) |
|
Ray Scott |
1956 |
Hubie White |
1958 |
Frank "Watusi" Card |
1962 |
TONY COMA, Bartram |
|
Richie Moore |
1960 |
Earl "The Pearl" Monroe |
1962 |
Clarence Brookins |
1964 |
KEN HAMILTON, Franklin (3) |
|
Paul "Snoop" Graham |
1985 |
Jerome "Pooh" Richardson |
1985 |
Randy Woods |
1988 |
RICH YANKOWITZ, Dobbins (3) |
|
Greg "Bo" Kimble |
1985 |
Doug Overton |
1987 |
Larry Stewart |
1987 |
BILL ELLERBEE, Gratz (3) |
|
Aaron McKie |
1990 |
Rasheed Wallace |
1993 |
Maurice "Mardy" Collins |
2002 |
DAN DOUGHERTY, Episcopal (3) |
|
Jerome Allen |
1991 |
Wayne Ellington |
2006 |
Gerald Henderson |
2006 |
JULY 2
JOEBIT
Earlier today, a tribute page was posted for former Roman coach
Dennis Seddon. This email was sent by Joe McCourt,
football all-timer at Roman (Class of 2001) and a three-sport
athlete. Thanks for doing this, Joe.
We had just finished winning the ‘99 PCL football championship
during my junior year at Roman. I had been wrestling around the
idea to not play basketball and focus solely on football. I
called Coach Seddon and thought it would be a smooth
conversation considering I was the 12th man on the bench and
figured he wouldn’t care whether I played or not. I was 100%
wrong. He told me I was making a big mistake and that I should
reconsider my decision. I decided to play and it was one of the
best decisions I ever made. Fate had it we played a basketball
tournament during my senior year on the campus at Lafayette
College which turned out being an unofficial visit and in the
end I chose Lafayette as my college destination. I always think
back to Coach Seddon and our conversation about whether to play
or not. He coached some of the greatest high school players to
ever play in the city of Philadelphia. But, he cared about you
the same whether you were a star or the last guy on the bench. I
consider him a dear friend and one of my greatest influences I
ever had in my life.
-- Joe McCourt ‘01
JUNE 29
TEDBIT
The trend continues, folks. New coaches have been
hired at five Catholic League schools and three of the newbies
are not CL alums. Not that there's anything wrong with
that (smile). That makes eight non-CL hires over the last three
years -- three, two and three -- and lifts the current number to
seven; half of the league. Starting with the 1969-70 season, it
took eight seasons for coaches with non-CL roots to be hired. Of
the 28 "outsiders" who've guided teams since 1970, just three --
still-active Carl Arrigale (20 at Nemann-N-G), Joe
Dempsey (14 at La Salle), Barry Kirsch (12 at
Carroll) -- have reached double digits in seasons coached. The
average stint has lasted four seasons and 17 guys have served no
more than two. Two of those short-stinters -- Conwell-Egan's
Bryan Caver, McDevitt's Will Chavis -- are still in
charge.
UPDATE: Adam Bowen, a
product of Council Rock North, was announced as Conwell-Egan's coach on Nov. 12.
New Catholic League Coaches for the 2018-19 Season | ||
School | New Coach | Alma Mater |
Bonner-Prendie | Kevin Funston | SJ Prep |
Carroll | Francis Bowe | St. Pius X (Pottstown) |
Conwell-Egan | Adam Bowen | Council Rock North |
La Salle | Mike McKee | Roman |
O'Hara | Ryan Nemetz | Bishop Hoban (Wilkes-Barre) |
West Catholic | Miguel Bocachica | Imhotep |
JUNE 28
TEDBIT
In the previous decade, T.J.
McConnell and Ryan Nemetz are tied at the
disappointment hip. Both guys had their high school careers --
and dreams of a state championship -- ended by Philly teams.
McConnell, of course, is now a guard for the 76ers. In 2010 he
was a senior star at Chartiers Valley, coached by his father,
Tim, and that squad fell in the Class AAA state championship
game to Neumann-Goretti, 65-63. McConnell racked up 32 points,
but missed a last-second, right-corner trey that would have
given CV the win. Nemetz, meanwhile, has just been hired as the
coach at Cardinal O'Hara. In the 2006-07 season, he was a star
senior guard for Bishop Hoban, in Wilkes-Barre, and that school
was months away from ceasing to exist. On March 18, Hoban met
Imhotep in a Class AA quarterfinal at Freedom High, in
Bethlehem. Hoban entered the game with a 30-0 record! . . . And
headed home with a 70-52 defeat. According to a story in the
Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader, Nemetz and two other Argents
had experienced flu-like symptoms all week. Ryan finished with
14 points. Imagine if Hoban had won that game and two more. Has
any school, anywhere, closed after storming to a perfect
basketball season? Just like O'Connell, Nemetz was able to shake
off the disappointment. I'm hearing great things about him. Good
luck with the Lions, Ryan!
JUNE 24
TEDBIT
Once Penn State's Tony Carr steps onto the court for his first
regular season game with the New Orleans Pelicans, Roman's
number of NBA players will reach double figures. The Cahillites
already hold second place among Catholic/Public/Inter-Ac schools
and Overbrook is first with 12. Alas, 'Brook has not produced an
NBAer since 1992 (Malik Rose) and since Roman continues
to pump them out every so often, a tie and then a takeover might
be in the offing. West Philly, Southern and Bartram complete the
top five. Their respective droughts go back to 1977, 1972 and
1986.
OVERBROOK (12) |
Grad |
Debut |
Wilt Chamberlain |
1955 |
1960 |
Mike Gale |
1967 |
1972 |
Walt Hazzard |
1960 |
1965 |
Wayne Hightower |
1958 |
1963 |
Wali Jones |
1960 |
1965 |
Rich Laurel |
1972 |
1978 |
Hal Lear |
1952 |
1957 |
Lewis Lloyd |
1977 |
1982 |
Andre McCarter |
1971 |
1977 |
Jackie Moore |
1950 |
1955 |
Angelo Musi |
1937 |
1947 |
Malik Rose |
1992 |
1997 |
ROMAN (9) |
Grad |
Debut |
Mike Bantom |
1969 |
1974 |
Rasual Butler |
1998 |
2003 |
Dallas Comegys |
1983 |
1988 |
Matt Guokas Sr. |
1934 |
1947 |
Eddie Griffin |
2000 |
2002 |
Marc Jackson |
1993 |
2001 |
Lari Ketner |
1995 |
2000 |
Bob Schafer |
1951 |
1956 |
Maalik Wayns |
2009 |
2013 |
WEST PHILA. (8) |
Grad |
Debut |
Gene Banks |
1977 |
1982 |
*John Baum |
1963 |
1970 |
Nelson Bobb |
1942 |
1950 |
Frank Card |
1962 |
1969 |
Norm Grekin |
1948 |
1954 |
Ray "Chink" Scott |
1956 |
1962 |
Art Spector |
1938 |
1947 |
Hubie White |
1958 |
1963 |
SOUTHERN (7) |
Grad |
Debut |
Nate Blackwell |
1983 |
1988 |
Stan "Loady" Brown |
1947 |
1948 |
*-Ollie Johnson |
1966 |
1973 |
Louis "Red" Klotz |
1939 |
1948 |
Petey Rosenberg |
1936 |
1947 |
Lionel Simmons |
1986 |
1991 |
Isaiah "Bunny" Wilson |
1966 |
1972 |
*-did not play varsity | ||
BARTRAM (6) |
Grad |
Debut |
Clarence Brookins |
1964 |
1971 |
Joe Bryant |
1972 |
1976 |
Earl "Pearl" Monroe |
1962 |
1968 |
Jim Mooney |
1948 |
1953 |
Richie Moore |
1960 |
1968 |
Jerry Rullo |
1941 |
1947 |
JUNE 23
TEDBIT
Roman's participation in the NBA goes back to the very first season,
when Matt Guokas Sr. was part of the title-winning Philadelphia
Warriors. (Officially, the league was known as the Basketball
Association of America.) He was 31 when that season began and he
did play thereafter. He did score 86 points, counting playoffs,
and that got former Cahillites rolling toward an NBA total that
now stands at 21,804. The breakdown is below and Tony Carr,
drafted Thursday night by New Orleans, can't wait to lift above
the number above 22,000. And who knows where he'll take it from
there? . . . UPDATE:
The Warriors made their debut on Nov. 7 by beating the
Pittsburgh Ironmen, 81-75, before 4,185 at the ol' Philadelphia
Arena. Guokas scored three points. But check this out: The final
three minutes were played with EIGHT men on the court.
Five Ironmen fouled out and only nine were in uniform. Warriors
coach Eddie Gottlieb said he would let the Ironmen return
one of the fouled-out players to the floor. Opposing coach
Paul Birch declined the offer. Gottlieb responded by
removing one of the Warriors. Meanwhile, one of Pittsburgh's
players was Press Maravich. Yes, Pete Maravich was
his son. And one of the Warriors' starters was Overbrook product
Angelo Musi.
Breakdown for Draft Details/Points Scored by Roman's NBA Players | |||||||
Draft |
Round |
No. |
Last |
Reg. Sea. |
Playoffs |
Total |
|
Maalik Wayns |
2014 |
FA |
x |
2014 |
78 |
x |
78 |
Rasual Butler |
2002 |
2nd |
52 |
2016 |
6092 |
152 |
6244 |
Eddie Griffin |
2001 |
1st |
7 |
2007 |
2171 |
x |
2171 |
Lari Ketner |
1999 |
2nd |
49 |
2001 |
34 |
x |
34 |
Marc Jackson |
1997 |
2nd |
37 |
2007 |
3238 |
67 |
3305 |
Dallas Comegys |
1987 |
1st |
21 |
1989 |
856 |
x |
856 |
Mike Bantom |
1973 |
1st |
8 |
1982 |
8568 |
178 |
8746 |
Bob Schafer |
1955 |
3rd |
19 |
1957 |
273 |
11 |
284 |
Brooks Ricca |
1950 |
8th |
92 |
DNP |
x |
x |
x |
Matt Guokas Sr. |
1947 |
FA |
x |
1947 |
82 |
4 |
86 |
21392 |
412 |
21804 |
JUNE 22
TEDBIT
Posted yesterday was a list including all Catholic League coaches,
and their high school alma maters, going back to 1970. Once the
list was posted, this question hit me, "Which schools have
produced the most coaches?" Bonner takes the coaching cake with
14 guys and, interestingly, nine wound up guiding the Friars.
Bonner has always hit me as a tight-knit place with lots of
support/camaraderie, so I'm not surprised so many guys wanted to
draw X's and O's for their old school. St. Joseph's Prep is next
with 10 while Cardinal Dougherty/Father Judge are tied for third
with nine. North Catholic/Cardinal O'Hara are next with eight
apiece.
***Please note:
The names are listed in no special order.***
Catholic League Schools With Most Coaches Produced, Going Back to 1970 | ||
MONSIGNOR BONNER (14) |
||
Name |
Coached at . . . |
Years |
Fran Ingelsby |
Archbishop Carroll |
1998 |
John "J.R." Roe |
Archbishop Carroll |
1999-02 |
Paul Gallagher |
Monsignor Bonner |
1968-70 |
Fran Docherty |
Monsignor Bonner |
1976-77 |
Ed "Shot" Stefanski |
Monsignor Bonner |
1980-83 |
Art Hunter |
Monsignor Bonner |
1984 |
Kevin McCormick |
Monsignor Bonner |
1990-91 |
Jack Concannon |
Monsignor Bonner |
1992-96, 2015-18 |
Jim "Goose" Welde |
Monsignor Bonner |
1997-05 |
Brian Daly |
Monsignor Bonner |
2006-09 |
Tom Meakim |
Monsignor Bonner |
2010-14 |
Harry "Bud" Gardler |
Kenrick / O'Hara |
1969-75 / 1977-08 |
Mike Lynam |
Bishop Kenrick |
1976-78 |
Tom Stewart |
St. James |
1976-93 |
ST. JOSEPH'S PREP (10) |
||
Name |
Coached at . . . |
Years |
Eddie Burke |
SJP / ST More / McD. / West |
1969-71 / 1972-75 / 1976 / 1977 / 1993-99 |
Joe Sette |
McDevitt / Wood |
1981-89 / 1995-08 |
Bill McFadden |
Bishop Egan |
1969-71 / 1974-77 |
Bob DiFlorio |
Bishop Egan |
1994-01 |
Frank Sciolla |
Conwell-Egan |
2014-16 |
Phil Martelli |
Bishop Kenrick |
1979-85 |
Matt Griffin |
Roman |
2017-18 |
Bob DiFlorio |
St. John Neumann |
1986-93 |
Paul Croley |
St. Thomas More |
1969-71 |
Joe Donahue |
West Catholic |
1986-93 |
CARDINAL DOUGHERTY (9) |
||
Name |
Coached at . . . |
Years |
George Paull |
Archbishop Ryan |
1968-76 |
Dave "D.J." Mulholland |
Archbishop Ryan |
1986-94 |
Joe "Burger" Heinbach |
Archbishop Ryan |
1994 |
Ed Holzer |
Bishop McDevitt |
1974-75 |
Jack Rutter |
Bishop McDevitt |
1996-05, 2006-14 |
Bob Harrington |
Cardinal Dougherty |
1967-82 |
Billy Jackson |
Bishop Egan |
1972-73 |
Jim Fenerty |
Bishop Egan |
1982-89 |
Marty Jackson |
La Salle |
1987-91, 1994-01, 2003-04 |
FATHER JUDGE (9) |
||
Name |
Coached at . . . |
Years |
Sam King |
Archbishop Wood |
1973 |
Jim "Mo" Connolly |
Archbishop Wood |
1988-89 |
Sean Tait |
Wood / Judge |
2009 / 2010-18 |
Ron Zawacki |
Judge / Ryan |
1986 / 1995-00 |
Rich Miller |
Father Judge |
2000 |
Tony Costantino |
North Catholic |
1971-79 |
Brother Jim Williams |
North Catholic |
1994-02 |
Tom Lynch |
St. Joseph's Prep |
1975-77 |
Paul Lynch |
St. Joseph's Prep |
1978-81, 1986-89 |
NORTH CATHOLIC (8) |
||
Name |
Coached at . . . |
Years |
Joe Rapczynski |
Egan / North |
1976-81 / 1982-88 |
Frank Cahill |
Father Judge |
2006-09 |
Fran Dougherty |
North Catholic |
1970 |
Iggy Brodzinski |
North Catholic |
1980-81 |
Pete Bilinsky |
North Catholic |
1989-93 |
Mike McCarron |
North Catholic |
2003-09 |
Barry Brodzinski |
Roman |
1982-86 |
Dennis Seddon |
Roman |
1987-08 |
CARDINAL O'HARA (8) |
||
Name |
Coached at . . . |
Years |
Mike Brown |
Archbishop Carroll |
1982-87 |
Tom Ingelsby |
Archbishop Carroll |
1992-97 |
Lou Becht |
Archbishop Carroll |
2005 |
Steve Maiocco |
Cardinal O'Hara |
1976 |
Tim Kelly |
Cardinal O'Hara |
2009-13 |
Steve Cloran |
Cardinal O'Hara |
2014-16 |
Mike Doyle |
St. John Neumann |
1994 |
John Ostick |
St. Joseph's Prep |
1982-85 |
JUNE 21
TEDBIT
Miguel Bocachica is the new basketball
coach at West Catholic, and he likely has two claims to fame. As
far as we know, he's the first Hispanic hoops coach in Catholic
League history (SJ Prep football coach Gabe Infante has
Cuban roots) and he's the only CL boss who can claim he hit 11
three-pointers in one game. Bovachica accomplished that feat --
in a playoff game, no less -- while playing for the University
of Great Falls, in Montana, an NAIA school. That was his third
college stop after D-I Long Island University and D-II West
Chester. He also played pro ball in Puerto Rico and has recently
served as an assistant at Public League power Imhotep Charter. 'Tep
was the second of Miguel's two high school stops. He played one
year there after three at Washington. He earned second team
coaches' All-Public honors for Division C as a senior. In that
season, Imhotep went 27-4 and advanced to the Pub quarterfinals
before falling to Strawberry Mansion. In his high school career,
he scored 782 points. Click
here
for my story on Miguel from 2008. Going back to 1970, just four
other Public League grads have coached hoops at CL schools --
Overbrook's Fred Douglas at SJ Prep (1972-74), Lincoln's
Ed Givnish at St. James (1970-74) and Wood (1978-84),
Lincoln's Bill Day at Dougherty (that school's last
season) and Engineering and Science's Will Chavis at
McDevitt (coming off his first season). Douglas was the CL's
first black coach. Best of luck with the Burrs, Miguel!
JUNE 11
TEDBIT
How cool would this be? Not too far down the road, the Sixers win the NBA
championship and their general manager, an Overbrook High grad
(Class of '92) named Malik Rose, receives praise from
media outlets around the country. Here's hoping. Malik intends
to apply for the job -- maybe already has -- and I can't picture
anyone being a better fit. Malik is a GREAT man and has
experienced success at many levels. He starred at 'Brook and
Drexel, was a second round NBA draftee, played for 13 seasons
and won two championships with the San Antonio Spurs. Sixers
coach Brett Brown was a Spurs assistant when Malik played
there and, like many folks, thinks the world of him. After
stepping away from his playing career, Malik eased into
broadcasting (first with the Knicks) and spent four years as the
Sixers' TV analyst through 2015. For the past three seasons, he
has served as the manager of basketball operations for the
Atlanta Hawks. He added duties as the GM of Atlanta's D-League
team, the Erie BayHawks, this past season and wound up being
named the G-League Executive of the Year. Below is a scoring/W-L
breakdown for Malik's days as a player. Boxscores for one 'Brook
game in '91 and another in '92 were not reported, so his
darn-close point total stands at 8,342, counting NBA playoffs.
Also, his teams won 60 percent of their games over 20 total
seasons and his winning percentage was a smidgen under .700
through the first 16. Below is a story I wrote about Malik in
his senior year at Overbrook. Best of luck to Malik in his
pursuit of this job! (The records in two seasons are divided
based on when he switched teams.)
![]() |
|
JUNE 8
TEDBIT
When La Salle opens its 2018-19 basketball season, coach Mike
McKee will officially join the club listed below -- starter
for Catholic League champ, coach at another CL school. And
here's the kicker. McKee was the point guard for Roman's
championship teams in 1989 and '90 and the victim each time was
. . . La Salle. Oh, baby (smile). In each game, Mike dished NINE
assists and one of his teammates was Marvin Harrison,
who's now in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Two other members of
this club (Tom Ingelsby and Fran O'Hanlon) played
in the NBA/ABA and two others (Eddie Burke, Bill McFadden)
were starters for the same team at SJ Prep in '62. Also, Eddie
coached a championship team at his alma mater in '71 (with
Phil Martelli as a starter) before winning again the very
next season at St. Thomas More, which closed three years later.
Starter for CL Champ, Coach at Another CL School | ||||
Name |
Player |
Year |
Coach |
Year |
Mike McKee |
Roman Catholic |
1989/'90 |
La Salle |
2019 |
Phil Eisenmann |
Bishop Kenrick |
1976 |
Archbishop Carroll |
1988 |
Jim "Mo" Connolly |
Father Judge |
1975 |
Archbishop Wood |
1988-89 |
Phil Martelli |
St. Joseph's Prep |
1971 |
Bishop Kenrick |
1979-85 |
Tom Ingelsby |
Cardinal O'Hara |
1968 |
Archbishop Carroll |
1992-97 |
Fran O'Hanlon |
St. Thomas More |
1966 |
Monsignor Bonner |
1987-89 |
Eddie Burke |
St. Joseph's Prep |
1962 |
St. Thomas More |
1972-75 |
|
|
|
Bishop McDevitt |
1976 |
|
|
|
West Catholic |
1977 |
Bill McFadden |
St. Joseph's Prep |
1962 |
Bishop Egan |
1969-71 |
|
|
|
Archbishop Wood |
1974-77 |
MAY 23
CHUCKBIT
This comes from Chuck Langerman,
a noted South Jersey historian. Thanks, Chuck!
As the saying goes, "records are made to
be broken," but the South Jersey boys' basketball record of
51 consecutive victories may never be broken.
The original mark was set by
Moorestown
High School, which won
51 straight games from 1958 to 1960, while winning state Group 3 championships
in 1958 and 1959. The Quakers were coached by
Pete Monska
and featured future NFL Hall of Famer
Dave Robinson, Leroy Peacock, and high-scoring
Ed Douglas,
who once scored a then state-record 84 points in a 1959 game against
Hamilton High. Camden
High, coached by the legendary Tony
Alfano, who won
428 games at "The Castle on the Hill,"
captured state Group IV titles in 1959 and 1960 and tied Moorestown's South
Jersey win streak of 51 straight. Camden, then known as the Purple Avalanche,
featured stars
Ron "Itchy" Smith, Golden "Pete" Sunkett and Sam Fisher, Jr. Ironically,
coaches Tony Alfano and Pete Monska were both from the "City of Brotherly Love."
Alfano played football, basketball, and baseball at
Southern High
in Philly before helping Temple University win the 1938 NIT title. Moorestown
head coach Pete Monska was a 1944 graduate of the
old Northeast High
School. The last South Jersey team to
complete a season undefeated was 32 years ago in 1986 when Camden High
with Lou Banks and Vic Carstarphen finished with a 30-0 record.
Camden, coached by the late Clarence Turner, was ranked No. 1 in the
country in 1986 by
USA Today.
Since 1989, the NJSIAA Tournament of Champions (T of C) has been played to
determine which school will be crowned the No. 1 overall basketball team in the
state. Each year, only one team in the state can finish undefeated. In its 30
years of existence, North Jersey parochial schools have dominated the T of C.
South Jersey schools have only won the T of C twice-----Shawnee in 1992 and
Camden in 2000. In fact, Camden in 2000 with Dajuan Wagner is the last
public school in the state to win the Tournament of Champions. Speaking of
records that may never be broken, the New Jersey state and national record
for consecutive wins by a boys' high school basketball team is 159 wins,
set by Passaic High from 1919 to 1925. The Passaic "Wonder Teams" were
coached by Professor Ernest A. Blood, who was inducted into the Naismith
Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1960.
MAY 8
TEDBIT
For the third straight year, the NBA season for Kyle
Lowry and the Toronto Raptors has been ended by the
Cleveland Cavaliers. Lowry, who starred at Northeast (through
10th grade) and now-closed Cardinal Dougherty before spending
two seasons at Villanova, participated in all 10 playoff games
this season. He scored 174 points for a 17.4 average. The list
below, updated from last year, shows that Kyle now owns 948
playoff points, good for No. 5 among products of Public,
Catholic and Inter-Ac schools. He has moved up from No. 7. In
terms of average, he remains No. 5. As shockingly noted in
previous postings, Overbrook's Wilt Chamberlain is
NOT the king when it comes to average. He was beaten out by a
guy, Paul Arizin, who never played a minute of varsity
hoops while attending La Salle. Yes, Wilt played in many more
games, 160-49, but the numbers don't lie -- 24.2 for Paul, 22.5
for Wilt. Pretty amazing, right? They were teammates for three
seasons (1960-62) with the ol' Philadelphia Warriors. Those were
the first three seasons of Wilt's pro career and the last three
of Paul's. They played together in 24 playoff games. Those
numbers: 24-830-34.6 for Wilt and 24-582-24.3 for Paul. His
playoff norm in the pre-Wilt days was almost exactly the same --
25-604-24.1. All guys with at least 250 playoff points are
below. The No. 4 spot in terms of average is held by Franklin's
Fred Carter, the father of DN/Inky sports writer Aaron
"Ace" Carter. When informed of this, Ace could not resist
the chance to bust Dad's chops. "He never met a shot he didn't
like." Ha, ha. . . Please speak up if I missed someone. These
numbers were compiled via research on
http://www.basketball-reference.com/.
As also mentioned in the previous two years, Michael Arizin,
Paul's son, pointed this out:
Of ALL the
players who have ever played in the NBA (72 yrs---including
Wilt, Kobe, Jordan, Baylor, Bird, etc), his dad had the 2nd
highest average in his final year of play (21.9 ppg). Only
Bob Pettit averaged more in his final year (22.5). Not bad
for someone who never played on an organized team until he was
almost 20 years old. Michael didn't mention this, but I did.
Pettit played in just 50 games in his final season. Paul played
in 78. . . Meanwhile, Kyle Lowry now owns 14,312 overall career
points -- 1,392 at NE/Dougherty, 543 at 'Nova, 11,429 in NBA
regular seasons and 948 in playoffs. . . Another meanwhile, the
Morris twins, Markieff and Marcus, have pretty close to the same
amount of playoff points. Markieff leads, 216-212, but Marcus
and the Celtics are still alive this season and, who knows, he
could wind up with 250 not too far into the future.
"Our Guys" With At Least 250 NBA/ABA Career Playoff Points | |||||
Name | School | G | Points | Avg. | Rank |
Wilt Chamberlain | Overbrook | 160 | 3,607 | 22.5 | 2nd |
Rasheed Wallace | Gratz | 177 | 2,384 | 13.5 | |
Earl Monroe | Bartram | 82 | 1,471 | 17.9 | 3rd |
Paul Arizin | La Salle | 49 | 1,186 | 24.2 | 1st |
Kyle Lowry | Dougherty | 62 | 948 | 15.3 | 5th |
Larry Foust | SE Catholic | 73 | 902 | 12.4 | |
Wali Jones | Overbrook | 70 | 833 | 11.9 | |
Aaron McKie | Gratz | 75 | 710 | 9.5 | |
Walt Hazzard | Overbrook | 58 | 685 | 11.8 | |
Ray Scott | West Phila. | *48 | 660 | 13.8 | |
Tom Washington | Edison | *66 | 585 | 8.9 | |
Mike Gale | Overbrook | *66 | 512 | 7.8 | |
Guy Rodgers | Northeast | 46 | 508 | 11 | |
Malik Rose | Overbrook | 82 | 506 | 6.2 | |
Fred Carter | Franklin | 28 | 446 | 15.9 | 4th |
Tom Gola | La Salle | 39 | 432 | 11.1 | |
Jim Washington | W. Catholic | 42 | 369 | 8.8 | |
Lewis Lloyd | Overbrook | 25 | 367 | 14.7 | |
Cuttino Mobley | Dougherty | 26 | 333 | 12.8 | |
Ronald Murray | S. Mansion | 45 | 319 | 7.1 | |
Gene Banks | West Phila. | 27 | 292 | 10.8 | |
John Baum | West Phila. | *35 | 262 | 7.5 | |
Matt Guokas | SJ Prep | 60 | 254 | 4.2 | |
*-includes ABA |
MAY 7
CHARLIEBIT
This item comes courtesy of website loyalist
Charlie Lamb, a former basketball/baseball player at West
Catholic (Class of '53) and La Salle College ('58). He served in
the USMC/Air Wing. He's the father of four adult children and
grandfather of two girls. He saw the recent picture of Eastern
High products English Gardner (Olympic gold medal in track) and
Logan Ryan (two Super Bowl rings with Patriots) and offered this
nugget. Thank you, Charlie.
--
Just to add my 2 cents, although no Super bowl rings, during my La
Salle College days , I was honored to rub shoulders with Al
Cantello (Javelin) 1953/1954 and Ira Davis (what then
was known as the hop, step and jump) now the triple jump (1958).
They both medaled in their respective events in NCAA.
This was a few years after Joe Verdeur won the gold at the
Olympics while swimming for La Salle College in the late forties
(2:39.3 in 200 breaststroke at London in 1948).
And one final note, this was taking place while LSC was winning the
NIT and the NCAA (1954) in basketball and making a repeat visit
to the final in (1955), losing to the University of San
Francisco with Bill Russell and K.C. Jones.
I lived the glory days of La Salle College.
Like many others, I could go on forever.
Note from Ted: I knew about the basketball part of Charlie's offering
and talked several times with Joe Verdeur when he was
teaching/coaching at Edison High. Great man! I was unfamiliar
with Al Cantello. His story, in brief: Graduated from Norristown
High and immediately took a job in a factory to help support his
mother, a widow. He ran into Verdeur at an event and Joe
encouraged him to enroll at La Salle. Once his days at La Salle
were completed, Cantello became a Marine Corps Lieutenant. He
also continued to compete in the javelin in numerous top-level
events and in 1959 broke the world record with a throw of 282-3
1/2! In the 1960 Rome Olympics, he launched the No. 2 throw in
the trails, but then was hit with dysentery and wound up
finishing 10th overall. His size? He was listed at 5-7, 163
pounds. Imagine being able to throw a javelin that far at that
size. . . . Meanwhile, Ira Davis (Overbrook) four times won the
NCAA triple jump and competed thrice in the Olympics; first as a
La Salle freshman.
UPDATE: Heard via
email from Brother John Kane, who formerly worked at WC
and La Salle and is now the president at Calvert Hall, in
Maryland. Brother John noted that Al Cantello has spent
55 years as a coach at the Naval Academy and has been the head
coach of men's cross country for 50. Brother John says Al still
remains in contact with La Salle. He also wrote that he has
known Charlie Lamb for many years. "He's a great guy."
Thanks for this, Brother John!
MAY 6
TEDBIT
Listen, I get it. If you're even a mild 76ers fan, you're allowed to
dislike Marcus Morris and hate the fact he has helped the
Boston Celtics claim a 3-0 lead in the NBA Eastern Conference
semifinals. But he's an "Our Guy" (Public/Catholic/Inter-Ac
product) and, hopefully, you're at least a sliver proud that
he's showing the time-honored Philly grit. In 2007, Marcus and
his twin, Markieff, powered Prep Charter, in South
Philly, to the overall Public League championship and the PIAA
Class 2A state title. Marcus' primary stats for the final three
Pub games and the state final are below, as are the numbers for
the first three Celtics-Sixers games. He has been very
consistent in rebounds and points, but check out the assists. In
the two most competitive high school games, he led the Huskies
in dimes in one (with five) and was the co-leader in the other
(four). In this NBA series, he had his top two assist numbers in
the closest games and his right-sideline inbound pass in last
night's game led to Al Horford's winning field goal.
Something to be said for that.
Prep Charter, 2007 | |||||
Game | Opponent | Score | R | A | Pts |
Pub qtr | Imhotep | 52-48 | 10 | 1 | 14 |
Pub semi | Franklin LC | 49-40 | 8 | 0 | 15 |
Pub final | Gratz | 49-48 | 10 | 5 | 10 |
State final | Aliquippa | 68-66 | 11 | 4 | 11 |
Boston Celtics, 2018 | |||||
Game 1 | 76ers | 117-101 | 5 | 1 | 11 |
Game 2 | 76ers | 108-103 | 6 | 3 | 11 |
Game 3 | 76ers | 101-98 | 7 | 3 | 9 |
MAY 4
TEDBIT
Question for oldheads and mediumheads. Did you ever think you'd see
this? For the 10th straight year, a product of a Public,
Catholic or Inter-Ac school was not named the Big 5 MVP. In this
century just three "Our Guys" have won the award and thank
goodness for Gratz grad Mark Tyndale, the 2008 MVP, or
the drought would be up to 16 years. The Big 5 was formed
the 1955-56 season. "Our Guys" won the award -- with some
co-winners mixed in -- through the first 10 years. The longest
previous drought lasted from 1968 through 1972 and another
(1974-1977) followed almost immediately thereafter.
Big 5 MVPs From Public/Catholic/Inter-Ac Schools | |||
Year | Name | College | High School |
1956 | Guy Rodgers | Temple | Northeast |
1957 | Guy Rodgers 2 | Temple | Northeast |
1958 | Guy Rodgers 3 | Temple | Northeast |
1959 | Joe Spratt | St. Joseph's | West Catholic |
1960 | Bill "Pickles" Kennedy | Temple | Lincoln |
1961 | Bruce Drysdale | Temple | Lincoln |
1962 | Hubie White | Villanova | West Phila. |
1963 | Wali Jones | Villanova | Overbrook |
1963 | Jim Lynam | St. Joseph's | West Catholic |
1964 | Steve Courtin | St. Joseph's | St. James |
1964 | Wali Jones 2 | Villanova | Overbrook |
1965 | Jim Washington | Villanova | West Catholic |
1967 | Cliff Anderson | St. Joseph's | Edison |
1973 | Tom Ingelsby | Villanova | O'Hara |
1978 | Michael Brooks | La Salle | West Catholic |
1980 | Michael Brooks 2 | La Salle | West Catholic |
1982 | Jeffery Clark | St. Joseph's | Frankford |
1984 | Ralph Lewis | La Salle | Frankford |
1987 | Nate Blackwell | Temple | Southern |
1988 | Lionel Simmons | La Salle | Southern |
1989 | Lionel Simmons 2 | La Salle | Southern |
1990 | Lionel Simmons 3 | La Salle | Southern |
1992 | Randy Woods | La Salle | Franklin |
1993 | Aaron McKie | Temple | Gratz |
1997 | Rashid Bey | St. Joseph's | Neumann |
1998 | Rashid Bey 2 | St. Joseph's | Neumann |
2001 | Marvin O'Connor | St. Joseph's | Gratz |
2002 | Lynn Greer | Temple | Eng. & Science |
2008 | Mark Tyndale | Temple | Gratz |
APRIL 28
TEDBIT
As mentioned on this website, oh, maybe a million times (smile), I
love it when guys play multiple sports and have strong faith in
both the short-term and long-range benefits. Penn Charter
product Mike McGlinchey, drafted at No. 9 in the first
round Thursday night by the San Francisco 49ers, was also a
quality basketball player. He scored in 32 games over four
seasons of Inter-Ac play and his point total was 308. He ranks
second on the list below -- basketball points scored by NFL
players from Inter-Ac schools, 1950 on up. Only 20 points behind
"Glinch" is Atlanta Falcons QB Matt Ryan, his first
cousin. Only 17 points ahead is Haverford School's Mike
Mayock, a well-known NFL draft guru and even an analyst for
draft telecasts. Overall, McGlinchey scored 862 points at PC.
Ryan totaled 682. Meanwhile, also on the they're-related trail,
we give you Malvern's Ryan and Carl Nassib. They're
brothers. GS = Games Scored.
I-A Basketball Points Scored by NFL Players, 1950- | |||||
Name | School | Last | Years | GS | Points |
Mike Mayock | Haver. School | 1976 | 4 | 38 | 325 |
Mike McGlinchey | Penn Charter | 2013 | 4 | 32 | 308 |
Matt Ryan | Penn Charter | 2003 | 3 | 28 | 288 |
Ryan Nassib | Malvern | 2008 | 3 | 21 | 165 |
*Andre Dixon | Chestnut Hill | 1994 | 2 | 14 | 63 |
Jim Fraser | Gtn. Academy | 1955 | 1 | 10 | 56 |
Carl Nassib | Malvern | 2011 | 1 | 8 | 29 |
*-Chestnut Hill not I-A football member at that time |
APRIL 25
TEDBIT
As you may have heard, Episcopal grad Wayne Ellington, of the
Miami Heat, this year broke the NBA record for most three-pointers for a bench
player by draining 227 in 579 attempts. And that figures to 39.2 percent. Quite
amazing marksmanship from beyond the arc. Hearing about Wayne's feat got me to
thinking. Did he hit threes with anything close to precision during his three
seasons with the Churchmen? Not sure about overall, but below is his three-point
breakdown in 16 games I covered (two in 2003-04, seven apiece in
2004-05/2005-06). Oddly, he hit at least two in three of the first four, then
hit as many as two just once thereafter. His overall percentage in those 16
games was 26.6. In all three, the I-A played its postseason showcase tournament.
Of course, Miami just fell to the 76ers in the first round of the NBA playoffs.
Wayne shot 12-for-30 from beyond the arc (40 percent). His numbers for nine NBA
regular seasons are 828-for-2174 for 38.1. He sniped 229-for-577 (39.7) in three
seasons at North Carolina. Just shows what hard work can do.
Wayne Ellington Beyond the Arc at Episcopal | |||
(In Games I Covered) | |||
2003-04 | Date | Made | Att. |
SJ Prep |