Bedeviled by turnovers

7 turnovers (6 fumbles) conspire to send Penns Grove to its first opening day loss since 2016

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNS GROVE – John Emel has seen it so many times before, but that doesn’t make it any more palatable when it’s happening to you.

Burlington City 33,
Penns Grove 22
Next: vs. Pleasantville, Thursday, 10:30 a.m.

It’s the first game of the season. Neither team really knows what the other is bringing. The difference will be who makes the least first-game mistakes.

The Penns Grove coach said as much when discussing Friday’s season opener two days ago.

In a reversal of last year’s opening game, his Red Devils were the ones with too many mistakes this time and they lost to Burlington City 33-22. It was their first loss on opening day since 2016.

They racked up close to 400 yards of offense and outgained the Blue Devils by nearly 120 yards, but they fell victim to six lost fumbles and an interception in what Emel called the worst display of ball security he’s seen as a coach.

“Keys to victory, No. 1 is ball security,” Emel said. “We know we’re young and inexperienced at the quarterback position, but too many older guys – and it wasn’t one guy, it was a combination … You’re not ever going to make those mistakes and win the game. That’s one of the worst in terms of efficiency I’ve seen since I’ve coached.”

One of the more frustrating aspects of it was several of the fumbles came after long runs. The Red Devils ran only one play in the first four minutes of the game – a lost fumble – and were down 13-0. Despite three lost fumbles in the half, they fought back to earn a 16-13 halftime lead, but the third quarter was their downfall.

All four of their possessions in the quarter ended in a turnover. They outgained the Blue Devils by 70 yards in the quarter and fell behind 27-16.

A fumble stopped the opening drive of the second half at midfield. The next possession was an interception on their first pass attempt of the game. The third was a fumble that City’s Dymear Hill returned 71 yards for a touchdown. And the fourth was a fumble in the red zone as they were looking to close the gap.

They did get back to within 27-22 early in the fourth quarter, but Burlington City answered on a touchdown pass from Ayden Shansey to Hill and then stopped the Red Devils on downs in the red zone to effectively put it away. Hill scored three touchdowns. Shansey threw four touchdown passes.

“It’s tough, man, it’s tough,” Emel said. “It’s frustrating. I don’t know how to say it. It hurts. It hurts to work hard and see kids struggle.

“Everything we worked on was there. It’s not really a game-planning thing, it’s an execution thing.”

The Red Devils moved the ball; the rushed for 328 yards in the game. KaRon Ceaser made an impressive varsity debut as their first true freshman skill position starter in nearly 20 years. He rushed for 155 yards and two touchdowns on 18 carries and had one interception where he went over a receiver and nearly a second in the end zone. He had 94 yards rushing on 12 carries in the second half.

A year ago he was playing youth football. He said the experience of his first varsity game matched his expectations.

“Most definitely,” he said. “I knew I put the work in, hours in the weight room, practice. It felt good, but I have to stay humble, keep playing.

“I just kept my team up, tried to be a leader as a freshmen. It’s hard, they’re not going to listen to a freshman, but I tried my best.”

If he keeps running like that they’ll listen.

“I feel like he’s ready,” Emel said. “The one thing I will say about him is what he’s going to learn at this level, just like when you move to college and then the NFL, it’s more physically demanding; the game’s harder. Everybody was battling cramps, he was able to fight through. But once he’s able to play at that maximum level for the whole game I think he, just like a lot of guys, can be special.”

Top returning back Bryce Wright rushed for 119 yards and a touchdown on 18 carries, many of them carrying multiple tacklers before being brought down and made several big hits on defense. But he also had two of the fumbles.

“On the offensive side of the ball I think I could have done a lot better,” Wright said. “The No. 1 thing on the board is ball security and I think I lacked that today. We can’t win a game like that. Eight turnovers, that’s unacceptable. Eight-thirty on Monday we’re going to fix that, for sure.”

Burlington City 33, Penns Grove 22

BURL CITY (33)PENNS GROVE (22)
141st Downs17
34-63Rushes-yds48-328
9-20-2Passes2-4-0
188Passing yds41
0-0Fum-Lost7-6
3-31.0Punts-avg0-0
6-40Penalties-yds9-97
Burlington City130146 –33
Penns Grove8806 –22

Scoring plays
BC – Micah Anderson 19 pass from Ayden Shansey (Spencer Ostner kick), 9:53 1Q
BC – Dymear Hill 45 pass from Ayden Shansey (pass failed), 7:55 1Q
PG – KaRon Ceaser 3 (Bryce Wright run), 5:24 1Q
PG – KaRon Ceaser 10 run (Bryce Wright run), 5:06 2Q
BC – Malachi James 32 pass from Ayden Shansey (Spencer Ostner kick), 7:30 3Q
BC – Dymear Hill 71 fumble return (Spencer Ostner kick), 5:29 3Q
PG – Bryce Wright 1 run (run failed), 10:24 4Q
BC – Dymear Hill 44 pass from Ayden Shansey (kick failed), 7:28 4Q

Photo: Penns Grove’s KaRon Ceaser cuts around the corner to score his first varsity touchdown and the Red Devils’ first touchdown of the season.

Final scrimmages

Woodstown, Pennsville see encouraging signs in final scrimmages of camp; both open their seasons Thursday

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – The first thing Woodstown coach John Adams thought when he saw the Delsea team his Wolverines were scrimmaging Thursday night get off the bus was it might be a tough go for his charges.

It didn’t get any easier when the Crusaders stifled Woodstown’s opening possession and then broke off an 87-yard touchdown run on their second play from scrimmage.

But then Adams saw something that bodes well for the Wolverines when their regular season gets underway next week. 

They didn’t back down.

The Wolverines immediately answered two of Delsea’s three touchdowns and their defense stopped the defending South Jersey Group III champions on the final series of the varsity half to keep the margin a respectable 21-13.

“I loved the battle from our kids,” Adams said. “When they walked in, we were like … they were big; they had great size. But I thought we battled. It seemed like we answered against one of the best teams in the state.

“It was good seeing our kids fight from a deficit and still fight and be able to answer back.”

The Wolverines put together a 65-yard drive to answer Delsea’s first score. They went three-and-out after the second, then put together a 70-yard, nine-play drive after the third.

Woodstown’s offensive line has every Delsea lineman covered giving quarterback Max Webb time to find an open receiver. Webb was 8-of-10 for 95 yards and two TDs passing. (Photo by Ellen Sickler)

It was evident with Delsea’s size the Wolverines weren’t going to have much success running the ball, especially with star James Hill still two weeks away from rejoining the offense. So, they went up top and quarterback Max Webb was right on time.

The senior hit his first five throws and finished 8-of-10 for 95 yards with touchdown passes of 13 yards to Garrett Leyman to answer Delsea’s first score and 9 over the middle to Anthony Ford-Dale to answer the third. He also had two nice runs to get out of trouble.

Leyman caught three passes for 30 yards, Ford-Dale caught three for 33 and Zach Bevis had two for 32. The varsity rushed for 58 yards on 16 carries.

“We told the kids we’re not going to be able to run the ball on everybody and I thought we did a fantastic job in the pass game tonight,” Adams said. “Max looked lights out, scrambling for first downs, knowing where his receivers were. The pass blocking was pretty good for him.

“I was really, really pleased with how we executed offensively, because we knew with their size we were going to have trouble running the ball in between the tackles on them. And that’s the goal we wanted this year. We can’t just rely on the run, so being able to come out against a team like that and knowing we do have the passing game and were able to execute it well was phenomenal.”

The Wolverines open the regular season at home Thursday against Haddon Heights.

“It’s game week now,” Adams said. “Now it means something.”

Woodstown’s Anthony Ford-Dale looks to get around the corner. (Photo by Ellen Sickler)

Eagles encouraged going forward

PENNSVILLE – Pennsville scrimmaged the team Woodstown opens its season against next week and although the Eagles came up short in the varsity portion of the exercise 18-14, coach Mike Healy saw “enough good stuff on there to make me happy and give me encouragement.”

The Eagles opened up their passing game with some downfield throws and quarterback Robbie McDade connected twice with Malik Rehmer for long touchdown passes.

They hooked up on a 45-yard pass to open the scoring, then connected on a 70-yarder for another score.

“Malik’s a very good receiver; he’s going to go up and get the ball,” Healy said. “He’s got all the attributes you want and Robbie just has a lot of trust in him to go get the football. That confidence to know he’s going to go get the ball is huge for a young quarterback.

“We were a very young team last year. We’re still young this year, but we’re definitely seeing more chemistry develop between all the players really. We’re starting to see the confidence go up a little bit, too. They’re realizing we can do some things. It’s just a consistency issue more than anything else.”

The Eagles open their season Thursday at Lindenwold, a team they beat 34-26 in last year’s opener for their only victory of the season.

Pennsville’s Daniel Saulin bats down a pass in Thursday’s scrimmage against Haddon Heights. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

Devil of an opener

Penns Grove opens season at home with Burlington City in a game that might loom large at end of the year

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNS GROVE – It might only be the first game of the season, but Penns Grove football coach John Emel is treating it as the most important game of the year.

Because it just might be.

It was last year.

FRIDAY: Burlington City
at Penns Grove, 10:30 AM

The Red Devils open their season Friday with a 10:30 a.m. home game with Burlington City. In a game that, even though early, truly could have end-of-season implications.

Emel is hoping the Red Devils have improved enough that it won’t come down to this again, but this game last year basically was the reason they got in the playoffs and the Blue Devils didn’t. Penns Grove won the head-to-head battle in the opener 48-14 giving them the tiebreaker to grab the last spot in the South Jersey Group I playoffs.

The Red Devils went on to lose to eventual state champion Woodbury in the first round of the South Jersey Group I playoffs, while Burlington City grabbed a 3 seed and won the SJ Group 1 regional invitational tournament.

“With the (WJFL) league we play in, this is a playoff game,” Emel said. “The winner of this game – I think we both feel the same way – whoever wins this game is going to, I don’t want to say qualify right away, but … will get ahead of the other one when it comes to qualifying for the playoffs.”

The game appears evenly matched with Penns Grove opening the season with a 55.82 strength index to Burlington City’s 55.23. The Red Devils were able to separate themselves in last year’s game by taking advantage of Burlington City mistakes and that will be a factor Friday.

“When a team like them is explosive on offense and has a veteran quarterback, you don’t want to give them extra possessions,” Emel said. “It’s going to be who’s going to make those first-game mistakes you see every year.

“I think they’re looking forward to getting a chance to get back at us. Even though we beat them pretty good (last year), the first game of the season you’re not looking past anybody. We’ve been preparing for them all season.”

The Red Devils do have a couple things going for them. They’re playing at home, where they’re 39- 17 in Emel’s nine years (including a 26-2 run from 2017-2020) and they haven’t lost a season opener since 2016. The two openers they’ve lost in Emel’s tenure have been by a combined eight points.

One of the biggest missions in the Red Devils’ camp this summer was determining their starting five on the offensive line. It shook out quickly with center Damani Brice, guards Isaiah Upshur and Tony Cooper, and tackles Wayne Scott and lone senior Misa Nieves.

Bryce Wright returns from a 600-yard rushing season to take over as the lead back, ready for a big year. The Red Devils have several other weapons, including Knowledge Young, Khiry Higgs and Karon Ceasar, the team’s first true freshman skill position opening day starter since 2005. Sophomore Remello Erickson is the quarterback with two previous starts under his belt.

The defense will be the strength of the team with a front seven that projects as good as any team around in Group 1.

The Red Devils have high expectations, but they still have to negotiate the tough WJFL Diamond Division, the SEC West of the league. All five teams from the division made the playoffs last year.

But they have to get past Burlington City first.

“All our scrimmages were away, so this is the first time we’ve been on the game field since last November, so it’s just an opportunity to start the season off on a high note,” Emel said. “You want to play at home. You want to play a good team at home and this is a quality opponent. The Red Devils and Blue Devils are going to get it on Friday.”

Devilish in openers

Penns Grove record in season openers under head coach John Emel
YEAROPPONENTSCORE
2022at Burlington CityW 48-14
2021BernardsW 40-20
2020at WoodstownW 48-7
2019at PennsvilleW 68-7
2018PennsvilleW 63-3
2017at DeptfordW 51-34
2016DeptfordL 27-20
2015at WoodstownW 18-6
2014WoodstownL 21-20

Photo: Penns Grove senior Nasir Stewart picks out the No. 52 jersey he has worn for three seasons as the Red Devils distribute game jerseys in the run up to Friday’s season opener with Burlington City.

Rams mean business

Season opener on a college campus will be a business trip for Salem in new coach Danny Mendoza’s debut

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

The Salem Rams may still have some questions about their second game of the season next week, but there’s no question what their season opener is all about.

Under first-year coach Danny Mendoza, the Rams open the season Friday night in a college stadium some two hours away against a team whose coach runs his program by the major-college principles he learned as a P5 player.

FRIDAY: Salem vs. Executive Education,
at Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., 7 p.m.

With all that as a backdrop, suffice to say the game against Executive Education Academy of Allentown, Pa., in Lafayette College’s Fisher Stadium is no sight-seeing trip.

“For them it’s a great thing because they’re going to understand what a business trip is,” Mendoza said. “Locked in on the way up. When we get there, the atmosphere of the stadium and the locker room. Coming out of the tunnel. Getting that experience now.

“These guys have been at Rutgers, they’ve been at the big stadium, so I think getting that experience early as opposed to later will help us handle certain atmospheres throughout the year.”

The Rams are going to be a lot of places this season as their stadium moves closer to completion, racking up nearly 700 round-trip miles before the regular season ends. It took them weeks to find this Week Zero game and now they’re in a similar search mode to find a venue for next week’s game against Camden after logistics issues within the event forced led to the teams pulling out of the Mid-Atlantic Pigskin Classic in Wilmington. 

The players are looking forward to the adventure.

“It’s a great opportunity to show everybody what we can do,” senior lineman Darius Brooks said. “With a new coach everybody’s doubting us pretty much and it gives us an opportunity to let everybody know we’re still here.”

“It’s time to set a statement for everybody,” added quarterback Ramaji Bundy. “Let them know what we’re going to do, how we’re coming this year.”

And it might be a little different than people remember. Mendoza was approved as the Rams’ head coach in mid-June, charged with keeping the train moving after two straight sectional titles. He’s trying to infuse the flash of his Florida football background with Jersey grit already in place while installing new schemes on offense and defense. It’s catching on.

“It was a little different for me at first, but now we’re just rocking and rolling,” massive lineman Detric Simmons said.

In their only outside scrimmage of camp, the Rams demonstrated an ability to move the ball with decorated receiver Bundy moving to quarterback and an aggression and cover package on defense that isn’t inclined to give up much.

It should be a good test for the secondary. The Raptors, a third-year program coming off its first district title, are a spread team that averaged 354 yards a game last year, 256 through the air. Kris Cruz moves into their starting quarterback slot after backing up a 2,900-yard passer last year. Their top returning receiver, 6-4 Damon Young, had 684 yards receiving and seven touchdowns last season.

Mendoza said his secondary – Omarion Pearce, Terrance Smith, Kaden Robinson and Raymere Jones – has played “very well” in camp as they adjust to the new concepts.

“We’re ready to get up there, test the waters up there in a different state and get our guys in that atmosphere,,” Mendoza said. “It’s going to be a fun deal for them.”

Fun, but all business.

Legacy opener

Schalick has a lot of history with opening-night opponent Gloucester City; Cougars to recognize 2003 title team, former player

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PITTSGROVE – If Mike Wilson weren’t coaching football, chances are you’d find him wandering around some old Civil War battlefield soaking in all the history it has to offer.

He’s been to almost all of them. The self-described “history nerd” could probably give you a tour of Gettysburg off the top of his head and make it just as real as if he were standing under a witness tree watching the battle unfold in front of him.

Friday: Gloucester City
at Schalick, 7 p.m.

History is a big part of the talks he gives his Schalick football team and it’s the underlying theme as the Cougars open their season at home Friday night against Gloucester City.

The teams may be 30 miles apart but have a rich history together. The Cougars have played the Lions more than any team in their football history (43 times). You could look it up. Assistant coach Frank Amar did. 

“One of the coaches said we’ve played them so much how come they’re not our trophy game,” Wilson said. 

The teams have played almost continuously since 1977, missing only in 1989 and 1990 and 2018-21. Gloucester won the first meeting 12-0 and leads the series 29-13-1, but the tide has turned in recent years with Schalick winning 12 of the last 18. The Cougars’ first win came in 1984.

There’s more history than that surrounding this game and this season. The Cougars will recognize the 20th anniversary of their 2003 South Jersey Group I championship team and honor the memory of former player and local legend Anthony Allen, who lost his battle with cancer during the offseason.

No Schalick player will wear Allen’s jersey number this season and the team will wear a commemorative “42” decal on the back of their helmets in tribute to a player whose legacy in the community goes beyond the football record book. 

“I think it’s important to remember history,” Wilson said. “We talk about that a lot with the kids, the history of our program. It’s important for the kids to know what came before them so they can build on that.”

The Cougars will be out to make some new history Friday night. They haven’t won a season opener since 2019 (Palmyra 30-8) – the year before Wilson became head coach – and lost to the Lions in last year’s opener 21-0 when the series renewed after a four-year break.

“We’ve been preparing for this game probably the past month,” fullback Riley Papiano said. “We’re more than ready for this game, getting every single player as we can the most ready we can be for any team we’re going to be playing.”

It’s certainly not an easy opener. The Lions are a hard-nosed, blue-collar type team that went 9-3 last year and return 13 starters from a group that lost to Willingboro in the Central Jersey Group II final.

“We felt looking at our division schedule and our goal is to play playoff football; we needed to somebody with a higher strength index,” Wilson explained. “They were junior heavy last year, we were kind of senior heavy and this year we’re switched. They were last year what we are right now.”

The Cougars may be a little younger than their opening-night opponent, but they have a returning group Wilson says “who can play with anybody.” They’ve also added a dimension the Lions didn’t see last year. 

They have injected enough of a passing element to their offense to make teams respect that part of their game and Kenai Simmons has come along to become an effective dual threat. Simmons says it will make them “way harder” for teams to stop them this season.

“We’re ready,” Wilson said. “As a coach you always want more preparation, but we’re ready to go.”

Photo: Kenai Simmons (L) has moved to quarterback with an increased role as a passer for the Cougars and Riley Papiano is in a new role at fullback.

Salem-Camden moving

Logistical issues within the event prompt move of Mid-Atlantic Pigskin Classic game to a yet-to-be-determined alternate site

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SALEM – The Salem Rams were looking forward to another early-season game on a big stage, but now find themselves in a game without a home.

Logistical conflicts at the site prompted a change in game times that will prevent the Rams’ Sept. 2 game with Camden from being played in the Mid-Atlantic Pigskin Classic at Abessinio Stadium in Wilmington.

“It’s just unfortunate,” director of operations John Schmid said. “We had to make some logistical changes because of the streaming and the stadium and we were unable to work out a time that fit both schools.”

The changes would have prompted a time change to 11 a.m. or 2 p.m., but the schools couldn’t agree on a compromise. It was originally scheduled for a noon start.

The game is Salem’s home game, but the Rams are still working on their stadium so it can’t be played there, so an alternate site must be found.

It is still expected to be played Sept. 2 at its original noon start time, but at a site to be determined. Several nearby college and high school sites are being considered, making an already lengthy team travelogue that much longer.

“Right now we’re trying to find a place to play since technically it’s our home game,” Salem athletics director Darryl Roberts said. “If we can’t find anywhere to host, we’ll play at Camden.”

The Rams already are putting nearly 350 one-way miles on their team bus this season, not counting last weekend’s scrimmage in Wilmington. Camden’s home stadium is 18 miles farther from Salem than Abessinio Stadium.

The Rams open their season Friday night at Lafayette College’s Fisher Stadium against Executive Education Academy of Allentown, Pa. Later this season they will play at Rutgers University.

This story will be updated.

Cleared, but cautious

Woodstown RB Hill will rejoin team Tuesday without contact, isn’t likely to play until third game

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – The news wasn’t exactly what James Hill hoped to hear, but it was at least on the positive end of what he could have expected.

The senior Woodstown running back was cleared by his doctors Monday morning to return to football practice, but without contact. He was hoping to return without restrictions, but he also could have been held out longer.

“I got cleared to go to practice and everything, but me and my mom and my family and my doctor have waited on a decision of returning ASAP,” Hill said.

Hill, a 3,000-yard career runner, tore an ACL jumping in the Wolverines’ wrestling room this past winter. Typical recovery time is between six and nine months. His aggressive approach to recovery, which impressed both his coaches and his teammates, got him back on the front end of the window.

Wolverines coach John Adams was the first person Hill called after getting the report. He was “very excited” about the news Hill can return.

Despite taking the conservative approach, Hill called it “definitely a great day.”

“For the past couple weeks, all camps, I’ve been sitting at practice watching everybody,” he said. “Now I’m able to participate and push everybody else hard as I want to push. Push but don’t push over their limits.”

He plans to be at 8 a.m. practice Tuesday and participate in non-contact drills and be in uniform with his team for Thursday’s home scrimmage with Delsea, but it’ll be at least three weeks before he’ll see live action. His next doctor’s appointment is Sept. 13 and that, he says, is “my (date to) go play high school football.”

That means he’ll miss at least the Wolverines’ first two games against Haddon Heights and Paulsboro. He rushed for 540 yards and five touchdowns on 56 carries in those two games last season. In that scenario, his season debut would be Sept. 15 at Deptford.

“I said before Bryce (Belinfanti) and Bobby (Donahue) and everybody can take care of them, so I really didn’t need to rush myself back for them,” he said. 

Adams has said throughout Hill’s rehab the plan was to go slow with the player’s return. Hill was expected to start out playing defense before being thrown into the rigors of the Wolverines’ WJFL Diamond Division schedule.

“When he first got surgery they said probably Week 4 as a timeline of getting him back and then he was doing great so we got our hopes up for Week 1,” Adams said. “The doctor said he looks amazing, but doesn’t want to jump the gun and now we are looking at having him out only two games, which is still tremendous and ahead of the original timeline.

“It gives us a chance to ease him back in more and make sure he’s ready. In the end I think it is what is best for him and his future.”

Defense isn’t resting

Pennsville defense moving in right direction after offseason overhaul; Eagles show overall improvement in scrimmage with Buena

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – As a defensive coach at heart, it absolutely gored Pennsville head coach Mike Healy to see what was happening to the Eagles’ defense last year.

Since defense wins championships, Healy knew things had to change for his team to get back in a position to do just that.

He took things to the extreme, breaking down tackling technique to the most minute of details. He brought in new coaches to change the mindset and drill the concepts. Just as big a factor was the players, most of them freshmen and sophomore starters by the end of the season, got older.

“Last year we were not good on defense, or offense; it was just a frustrating year all around,” Healy said. “I knew for my own sanity in order to come back there had to be some changes in how we were going to do things. I brought guy in for the offense who does a great job and I had to rework things on defense to get us in a better position regularly.

“We changed up what we’ve done in practice, we’ve added some things. Schematically we changed some things we do to help us better and the way we practice it has helped us and made us much better. We’re still kind of toying with some things out there and seeing what works, what we like, but overall I’m very happy with the direction of our defense. We’re going in the right place.”

There was a marked difference in the Eagles’ scrimmage Monday with Buena. In three quarters of varsity action, Pennsville held the Chiefs to 164 net yards, out of the end zone in seven of eight possessions and made three fourth-down stops, including sophomore Hunter Hiles’ second interception in as many scrimmages.

The only thing that spoiled their day was a 60-yard burst in the second half shortly after the teams returned to the field from a simulated halftime.

Buena ended the Eagles’ season in last year’s regional invitational tournament, 28-14.

The offense, meanwhile, opened the game with a 80-yard touchdown drive, scored twice and moved the ball enough for more but stalled under the weight of some self-inflicted wounds. Sky Eppes rushed for 163 yards and scored both touchdowns, but lost the handle at the end of a 28-yar run that cost him another score. Quarterback Robbie McDade was 9-of-13 passing for 128 yards, but was intercepted on a pass over the middle that killed another drive.

“Overall we did better than we did in the first scrimmage (against Bishop Eustace and Pemberton); we had a lot of improvement on places,” Healy said. “We did good today the first two quarters and once we got to the third quarter we struggled. We’ve just got to understand we’re going to be playing four full quarters and we’ve got to be ready to go mentally.”

The Eagles were 1-8 last year, their worst year since 2004. They won their season opener by outscoring Lindenwold 34-26, but in the weeks that followed the offense had a hard time scoring and the defense continued giving up points.

“Last year, egos were a big thing,” 6-6 senior defensive end Daniel Saulin said. “The first game was fine, everyone was on the same page, then egos started getting in the way, stuff outside the team started getting in the way. This year we’re changing that. We’re all in the same spot. We’re all starting at the beginning. We’re all trying to work towards a goal and that’s going to the playoffs and win state. We want that state title.”

It didn’t take long for Hiles to notice the change.

“It’s gotten way better,” he said. “In the beginning of the season we were still trying to figure out alignment and assignments and this year when camp started we knew what we were doing for the most part. Over the practices we’ve gotten way better.

“Last year, we did a lot of it to ourselves. This year we’ve got that all figured out it seems like. It seems like everybody’s having more fun.”

The Eagles scrimmage again in three days against Group II Haddon Heights. It’s a game-like 6 p.m. Thursday scrimmage to keep the Eagles on track for their season opener the following Thursday.

“I’m excited because it’s another step up for us in competition,” Healy said. “We know if we can compete with them and play well then we’re going in the right direction for the season.”

Photo: Pennsville’s Perry Meranti (30) stops a Buena ballcarrier in his tracks during Monday’s scrimmage.

Pennsville’s Hunter Hiles races upfield with his second interception in as many scrimmages. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

This week’s schedule

Here is the Salem County high school sports schedule for the week of Aug. 20-26. The football games of Aug. 25 are regular-season openers, everything else listed is a scrimmage

Aug. 21
FOOTBALL
Buena at Pennsville, 10 a.m.        

Aug. 23
GIRLS TENNIS
Millville at Schalick, 9 a.m.
Vineland at Pennsville, 10 a.m.

Aug. 24
FOOTBALL
Haddon Heights at Pennsville, 6 p.m.
Delsea at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
BOYS SOCCER
Pleasantville at Penns Grove, 10 a.m.
GIRLS TENNIS
Salem at Deptford Twp., 9 a.m.
Woodstown at Triton Regional, 9 a.m.
West Deptford at Pennsville, 10 a.m.

Aug. 25
FOOTBALL
Burlington City at Penns Grove, 10 a.m.
Gloucester City at Schalick, 7 p.m.
Salem vs. Executive Education Academy at Lafayette College, 7 p.m.
GIRLS TENNIS
Penns Grove at Pleasantville, 10 a.m.
Pennsville at Millville, 10 a.m.

Cover photo by Ellen Sickler

Rams settle in

Salem’s only preseason scrimmage before season opener nets good results for new coach Mendoza; Schalick, Woodstown also scrimmage Saturday

TRI-STATE SCRIMMAGE
at Thomas McKean HS, Wilmington
McKean 8, Olney 0
Salem 0, Olney 0
Salem 14, McKean 0

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WILIMINGTON, Del. – It was about an hour before the not-so-meaningless preseason scrimmage and new Salem football coach Danny Mendoza was standing in the end zone inspecting the field on which his team was about to play.

As he watched the other two teams on the program – Philly’s Olney High and host Thomas McKean – warm up, he didn’t mind saying he was feeling butterflies for the first time in a while. It was a lot like the feeling he had before his first spring game as a head coach in Florida.

Here he was, a new coach with a new team, teaching a whole new offense and defense to a team that was about to face a couple outside opponents in live action for the first time – and only time before opening the season for real next week. What was there to be nervous about?

“It’s the new beginnings, taking over a program with the tradition that we have here,” Mendoza said. “It’s the unknown right now and seeing if they bought into what we were selling and what we were doing and hoping all the work we put and the belief that we have in them showed and it came to fruition.

“That’s always the deal. Not nervous for myself, more nervous for them and it worked out well at the end.”

Outside of the usual glitches that accompany a first time on stage, the Rams acquitted themselves well in their two halves of action.

They dominated Olney in their first half and by rights should have scored two touchdowns, but had to settled for a scoreless tie after two fumbles from inside Trojans territory killed their possessions. They came back and beat McKean 14-0, yielding only 31 net yards, with most of those coming on one disputed pass completion late in the game.

“I think they were a little nervous going out there and once we warmed up a little bit and got it going … we definitely saw what we wanted to see in the second half,” Mendoza said. “The offense we’ve got to clean some stuff up, kind of believe in what we’re doing, but at the end of the day solid performance from everybody. Without the mishaps, we should be a team to be reckoned with.”

Salem QB Ramaji Bundy watches his defense at work in Saturday’s scrimmage.

One of the more intriguing parts of Mendoza’s first camp in Salem is implementing a new offense while replacing an All-Diamond Division quarterback with an All-Diamond receiver.

Ramaji Bundy, who has nearly 1,500 receiving yards the last three seasons, has been handed the keys to the Rams’ offense and even though he’s learning on the go, it’s as if he’s never left.

“I like it well,” Bundy said of the transition. “I played quarterback all my life since pee-wee league, so coming up playing quarterback again, it’s not really too hard. I just have to get that experience again because it’s on the high school level this time.

“(The offense) kind of fits me well. We’ve got a 50-50 pass-run offense and we’re mixing in a lot of stuff. Everything is running well, to be honest. It’s like the Baltimore offense and (he’s like) Lamar Jackson … I’m a big Lamar fan, but I like Jalen Hurts better.”

Bundy was 1-for-5 passing in the scrimmage with a 36-yard completion to Omarion Pierce against Olney, and had a couple other nice throws that didn’t connect. He rushed for 57 yards in the two halves and scored on a 13-yard run against McKean. He would’ve had more against Olney, but was charged with a big loss when he lost the handle preparing to pass and tried to kick the ball out of bounds.

“He’s a ballplayer and we knew that coming into it,” Mendoza said. “We saw a hell of a player that’s going to have a hell of a season and we just look forward to watching that kid shine.”

Terrance Smith scored the first touchdown of the Mendoza era with a 25-yard burst in the first series against McLean. Ethan Young kicked both extra points. Smith rushed for 38 yards and Jared Pew had 44.

The defense made several big plays with Markhai Brown delivering a bone-jarring hit, Kyree Little packing a sack, Detric Simmons making life miserable for opposing ballcarriers and Kaden Robinson snaring an interception. The Rams held their two opponents to a combined 1 net yard rushing on 10 total carries.

“Seeing guys fly around like that, I’m excited for our defense,” Mendoza said.

The Rams play their first real game of the Mendoza era Friday in Lafayette College’s Fisher Stadium against Executive Education Academy of Allentown, Pa.

Terrance Smith (4) is congratulated by his teammates after scoring Salem’s first touchdown for new coach Danny Mendoza in Saturday’s scrimmage.

Cougars come alive

DEPTFORD – Schalick played two live-ball varsity quarters against Deptford Twp. and after a slow start scored on its last two possessions to win that portion of the scrimmage 14-6.

Deptford opened the scrimmage with a 19-play drive, pushing it in from the 1, and then held the Cougars to a three-and-out. Once the Cougars got comfortable, they came alive.

Quarterback Kenai Simmons found the end zone from the red zone and Reggie Allen scored from the goal line. The defense had a three-and-out and takeaway on downs after the opening drive.

Sophomore kicker Hunter Dragotta hit both extra points, including a long first one backed up by a celebration penalty. Dragotta was 19 of 23 on PATs last season and at one point made 16 in a row.

“We kind of woke up a little bit, shook the cobwebs off and generated a lot of pressure,” Schalick coach Mike Wilson said. “We could’ve played a whole game today. Our kids aren’t even tired. I like our conditioning. We’re definitely in football shape.

“We’ve got to clean stuff up, there’s things we have to get better, but for a game scrimmage we got better since Wednesday. Just get better next week and get ready for when it gets real.”

The Cougars open their season at home Friday 7 p.m. against Gloucester City.

Woodstown focuses on passing

PINE HILL – Woodstown continues to work towards enhancing its passing game and that was its main focus at Overbook. During some evenly matched 10-and-10 segments with the 1s, the Wolverines ran it only a couple times.

“We threw the ball a ton,” Wolverines coach John Adams said. “We really didn’t work our run game in much and when we did work our run game in we had some good runs.”

Garrett Leyman caught a touchdown pass from Max Webb and had another big play on a nice screen.

“I thought we got what we wanted out of it,” Adams said. “We really wanted to see the on film the route running, making sure our spacing’s correct, the timing’s correct, the O-line pass block a lot and set the pocket for Max and I thought we did really, really well with it.”

The defense also continued its progression. For the second scrimmage in a row it didn’t give up a live-ball touchdown.

“The last scrimmage was more split, pass and run, this one was more pass and the next one (Thursday against Delsea) will be more game-like, like calling it in the flow of the game,” Adams said.

Top photo: New Salem football coach Danny Mendoza gives his team a thumbs up after it dominated two opponents in Saturday’s scrimmage.