After an impressive opening night, Pennsville falls flat in home opener, losing to Lower Cape May
ROYAL DIVISION SCORES Lower Cape May 28, Pennsville 7 Cumberland 6, Pitman 0 Collingswood 19, Gateway 14
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – A rousing win in the season opener had the Pennsville football team brimming with confidence and feeling pretty good about the season ahead. But those good vibes didn’t carry over to their home opener.
Lower Cape May 28, Pennsville 7 NEXT: vs. Gateway, Friday, 7 p.m.
In a time frame when tradition says teams make their most improvement, the Eagles fell flat against a much better team than they faced the week before and lost to Lower Cape May 28-7 Friday night in Lou D’Angelo Stadium.
“I think the whole team is sad,” said Malik Rehmer, a junior receiver who scored the Eagles’ only touchdown. “We came off a big win last week high and mighty and then we just get wrecked right now.
“This team (the Capers) came in with more heart. They were more conditioned. They just outworked us.”
The Eagles (1-1) allowed their visitors too many big-yardage plays in the first half while falling behind 21-7. Their offense, meanwhile, managed only 147 net yards total and just 43 on the ground.
Sky Eppes had 53 yards rushing on 20 carries. Rehmer caught six passes for 41 yards, including his 4-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter on a route he hadn’t run before this year to get the Eagles within 14-7.
Lower Cape May’s Isaiah Wing was the game’s leading rusher with 137 yards and two touchdowns on 19 carries. Impressive receiver Braswell Thomas caught four passes for 78 yards and had an interception on defense.
The Capers (2-1) scored on three of their first four possessions and were approaching the 10 on their final drive when the half ended. Of their first 13 plays on offense, seven went for 10 yards or more and two others went for at least eight. They had three more in a row on their third scoring drive of the half.
“We were flat,” Pennsville coach Mike Healy said. “We just didn’t come ready to play and they did and that was the big difference. They’re a good football team and against a good football team if you don’t come ready to play and play every play that’s what happens.
“Man for man they beat us up tonight. It’s a combination of us being flat and just not executing. We just didn’t come ready to play tonight. It was definitely disappointing. I had much higher expectations for us.”
The Eagles did much better in the second half, defensively at least, giving up only 86 yards and one touchdown after halftime. But it was hard to take solace in that when the offense continued to struggle, mustering only 71 yards in the second half.
“We played better defensively, but it’s such a small school, everyone playing both ways, you hope that carries over so it’s hard to be happy about one when we struggled some much on the other,” Healy said.
Lower Cape May 28, Pennsville 7
LCM
PMHS
18
1st Downs
11
32-217
Rushes-yards
31-43
10-18-1
Passes
9-25-1
124
Passing yards
104
0-0
Fumbles-lost
0-0
4-36.5
Punts-avg
3-31.3
14-120
Penalties-yards
3-35
Lower Cape May (2-1)
14
7
7
0 –
28
Pennsville (1-1)
0
7
0
0 –
7
Scoring plays LCM – Isaiah Wing 12 run (Dennis Serra kick), 8:52 1Q LCM – Logan Haggerty 1 run (Dennis Serra kick), 4:23 1Q P – Malik Rehmer 4 pass from Robbie McDade (Jackson Leino kick), 8:35 2Q LCM – Hunter Ray 25 run (Dennis Serra kick), 3:12 2Q LCM – Isaiah Wing 24 run (Dennis Serra kick), 8:55 3Q
Lower Cape May’s A.J. King (40) wags his finger at Pennsville’s Hayden Sherman (6) as if to say “Not today” during Friday night’s game. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)
Salem wins big, Pennsville falls in their season openers
SALEM COUNTY SCORES Thursday’s games Gloucester Catholic 6, Pennsville 1 Salem 10, Clayton 0 Schalick at Woodstown, ppd.
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News PENNSVILLE – It wasn’t the kind of opener Pennsville field hockey coach Lisa Doran was expecting or the team she was expecting to see.
The Lady Eagles opened their season Thursday with a disheartening 6-1 loss to Gloucester Catholic.
The Lady Rams scored two goals in the first quarter, including one right before the buzzer, to take control and then put it away with three in the fourth quarter.
“I don’t know if it was the first day of school or nerves or what, but we just weren’t the team we saw at the last scrimmage,” Doran said. “Hopefully, the next game is going to be a little better.”
Pennsville scored its only goal with 1:41 left in the third quarter when Kendall Hoyt collected a lead pass from Cara Hoyt, dribbled into the goal area, then crossed it to Sophia Marandola, who banged it in from the left side.
“(Kendall) is a back and she never played that position,” Doran said. “Right before we put her in she was like, ‘I don’t play midfield,’ because she’s new and she got in there and hustled her butt down there and made the cross and that’s what we needed, so it was perfect and Sophia put it in.”
Bridget Taney scored two fourth-quarter goals for Gloucester Catholic. Kenzie Biondi had two assists.
SALEM 10, CLAYTON 0: Marissa Bower and Julliana Love scored two goals apiece and Autumn Foote had a goal and three assists as the Lady Rams opened the Shanna Scott era in a big way. Scott was the team’s assistant last year before being elevated to the head coaching spot.
The goals came fast and furious for the Lady Rams. Bower scored her two goals four minutes apart in a four-goal first quarter. She also assisted on the first goal of the game less than two minutes into the season. The Lady Rams scored their 10 goals on 29 shots.
The 10 goals were Salem’s most in a game since an 18-0 rout of Penns Grove in 2020. It was the 13th time since 2015 they have shutout Clayton.
Schalick wins its season opener, but all other county soccer teams come up short
SALEM COUNTY SCORES Thursday’s games BOYS Glassboro 1, Penns Grove 0 (OT) Overbook 2, Pennsville 1 Pitman 6, Salem 1 Schalick 4, Woodstown 2 GIRLS Spartan Kickoff Tournament at Deptford Timber Creek 7, Woodstown 1 Deptford 2, Pitman 1
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News GLASSBORO – Mano Massari admitted he was a little bummed when the schedule came out and he saw who the young Penns Grove soccer team he had inherited as the new head coach had to face in the opener.
It was the team that knocked the Red Devils out of the playoffs in double overtime last year and has become a veritable thorn in their side the last couple years.
The Red Devils suffered another tough loss at the hands of new nemesis Glassboro Thursday, 1-0 in overtime, but for the first time in a long time Massari didn’t feel crummy about a loss.
“My team just gave me new life with this group of guys,” Massari said. “It’s unbelievable what I saw them do on the field today with the heavyweight Glassboro is.
“We lost three-quarters of our team last year and we were taking it to them the entire game. We just couldn’t finish. I have a new life and fire in me and so do these boys. It’s unbelievable. I can’t wait to see them (Glassboro) in Penns Grove in a couple weeks.”
Every time the teams have gotten together the last couple years it’s been a dogfight. Last year they split two one-goal games and had a 1-1 tie. Seven of their last nine meetings have been one-goal games or draws and they’re 4-4-1 in the stretch.
The only goal in Thursday’s season opener came about five minutes into overtime when Atakan Ozdemir collected a 25-yard free kick in the box and before the Red Devils could adjust found the back of the net for his golden goal.
Sophomore keeper Dwayne Guzman did a nice job keeping the Bulldogs off the board until then. Massari called him “the best keeper I’ve seen coaching Penns Grove within the last 8-10 years.” He also was excited about the play of new outside backs Ricardo Vichi Torres, a freshman, and Eddie Tino, a junior first-year player, both of whom solidified their positions “for the foreseeable future.”.
“If this is at the end of the year it’d be very different, but because this is the first game, I don’t want to sound corny, I’m fired up,” Massari said. “The guys were bummed out but I think everyone has a fire in their belly now. They saw the beast inside of them and they’ve just got to pull it out.
“I really don’t think I’ve been this excited after a loss in a long time. When we got the schedule there was a little bit of a frustration level that we opened the season with Glassboro because I was kind of throwing my kids into the fire there, but now I’m thrilled we have them because know I know for sure we have it.”
Glassboro 1, Penns Grove 0
Penns Grove (0-1)
0
0
0 –
0
Glassboro (1-0)
0
0
1 –
1
GOALS: 1. Atakan Ozdemir, G.
OVERBROOK 2, PENNSVILLE 1: The Rams won only four games last season, didn’t win their first until Game 5, lost to Pennsville late in the season last year and you’ve got to go beyond 2010 to find the last time they won a season opener, but they put all that behind them by taking down the Eagles on the road.
David Ayala-Revas looped in a 25-yard free kick in the first half and Angel Mejia-Castro scored from the top of the box in the second to give the Rams a 2-0 lead. Pennsville’s Stone Mumink was dragged down on a breakaway and put away a red-card penalty kick to make it a one-goal game with 15 minutes left, but the Eagles couldn’t get the equalizer.
“The reality is obviously this is a game we wish we would’ve won,” Pennsville coach Derek Foglein said. “Opening at home, you always want to go get those wins, but I do think there’s a lot of good positives.
“Our over-the-top ball is where knew we were going to be strong and that’s where we got our (goal). Stone and Shane (Puckett) are phenomenal strikers, so once we get them more involved in the game I think it’s going to be really positive.”
Overbrook 2, Pennsville 1
Overbrook (1-0)
1
1 –
2
Pennsville (0-1)
0
1 –
1
GOALS: 1. David Ayala Revis, O; 2. Angel Mejia, O; 3. Stone Mumink, P (PK).
SCHALICK 4, WOODSTOWN 2: The Cougars erupted for three second-half goals to pull away from a 1-1 halftime tie and win their season opener.
Anthony Sepers scored the go-ahead goal on an assist from Donimic Bassano, then Bassano scored to extend the lead. The Wolverines made it a one-goal game again before Bradford Foster put the game away.
Schalick 4, Woodstown 2
Woodstown (0-1)
1
1 –
2
Schalick (1-0)
1
3 –
4
GOALS: 1. Luke Price, S; 2. Adrian Ibarra, W; 3. Anthony Sepers (Dominic Bassano), S; 4. Dominic Bassano, S; 5. Woodstown; 6. Bradford Foster, S.
PITMAN 6, SALEM 1: Charlie Duffield and Jake Bowen-Ashwin scored goals one minute apart early in the first half to give Pitman control of the match. Jose Vilalplando got Salem on the board early in the second half.
TIMBER CREEK 7, WOODSTOWN 1: The Wolverines young team got a rude welcome to varsity soccer in the first half of their opener of Deptford’s Spartan Kickoff, but the whole experience gave them a baseline off which to work for the rest of the season.
Woodstown started six underclassmen in the game – five sophomores and a freshman – and fell behind 4-0 at halftime. It was 5-0 before Lia Covely converted a pass from Bailey Arnold Peters in the 58th minute for the Wolverines’ goal.
Ava Stowell had three of Timber Creek’s first five goals for her third straight Spartan Kickoff hat trick. Adiat Dickson had a goal in each half.
The Wolverines had a couple other scoring chances by Talia Battavio and Gianna Pearlingi in the second half and had four corner kicks total, but couldn’t finish them. Keeper Ellie Wygand was peppered throughout the night and came up with 12 saves.
“We do have a very young team,” Woodstown coach Kieran Keyser said. “It was a good game to open up with because their a non-division game and it gave us an avenue to what we need to work on the rest of the season.
“It gave us the opportunity to see girls in new positions. It gave us the opportunity to see what mistakes we’re making and how to correct them. You want to move on and learn from losses like this. Yes, you want to forget them in a sense, but it’s a learning opportunity for our younger players and for me as a coach.”.
The Wolverines will play Pitman in Friday’s 5:30 p.m. consolation match. The Panthers fell to host Deptford 2-1.
Timber Creek 7, Woodstown 1
Timber Creek (1-0)
4
3 –
7
Woodstown (0-1)
0
1 –
1
GOALS: 1. Adiat Dickson (Ava Stowell), TC; 2. Ava Stowall (unassisted), TC; 3. Billie Frazier (unassisted), TC; 4. Ava Stowell (Karissa Coleman), TC; 5. Ava Stowell (Billie Frazier), TC; 6. Lia Covely (Bailey Arnold-Peters), W; 7. Adiat Dickson (unassisted), TC; 8. Sophie Willingmyre (Madison Freedman), TC
All 5 Salem County football teams in action this weekend, but Pennsville only one playing at home; Woodstown’s Hill cleared for full contact
SALEM COUNTY GAMES Friday’s games Salem at Pleasantville, 6 p.m. Schalick at Wildwood, 6 p.m. Lower Cape May at Pennsville, 7 p.m. Saturday’s games Penns Grove at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m. Woodstown at Paulsboro, 10:30 a.m. By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – The excessive heat this week has impacted the things Pennsville wanted to get done in the run up to Friday night’s football game with Lower Cape May, but Eagles coach Mike Healy is confident everything is in place for what really is an important early-season game.
The Eagles open their WJFL Royal Division schedule with their home opener. In a division that’s not likely to get more than one team in the playoffs, getting off to a good start in the division is important. Lower Cape May lost one division game in a 6-2 regular season last year and didn’t make it.
“It’s huge from that aspect, if we want to be in that conversation at the end of the year,” Pennsville coach Mike Healy said. “The short term goal is to go 1-0 each week, any coach is going to say that, but long term, you win your first division game and now you’re in that battle all season long and your destiny is in your hands. Obviously it’s a long season, a lot of things can happen, but it feels a lot better when you’re in control of things.
“Division winners are getting in the playoffs, so if we want to accomplish our long term goals then we have to take care of business on Friday. Obviously other things can happen, but it’s better to take care of the division and not have to worry about that.”
The Eagles are 1-0 for the third time in four years. They won their season opener last year, but didn’t win another game the rest of the season. This year, they’re a lot more settled in, showed to be more sound in their technique in the opener and are just more confident going forward. The last time they were 2-0 was 2020 – the last time they beat the Tigers.
“Definitely feeling more confident than we did last year just based on how we played,” Healy said. “Every team makes mistakes during a game, but we didn’t have huge gaping issues that were apparent to us that we’re trying to cover up.
“I feel like we did a very good job last week; obviously, I was happy. It’s a different team this week. They’re 1-1, so they won a game this year. We’ve got to step up to that and I think if we play the way we can play – we want to be confident, but not overconfident – I think the kids are feeling we’re going in the right direction.”
Like all the teams in this part of the state, the Eagles have hit a few speed bumps this week because of the weather, juggling practice schedules to accommodate high temperatures and heat index. As recently as Wednesday they had to wait until the evening to get outside and then they had to start without pads.
“We definitely have changed what we’ve had to do,” Healy said. “We’re not even really sure what time we’re able to get out each day, so we start with a meeting and then we have to wait until we get the OK from the trainer to go outside.
“We’ve had limited practice time and, really, we just had to kind of pick what are the most important things we need to get done to be ready for the game. Everyone’s at a disadvantage from it, so it really comes down to who can adjust and prepare themselves the best in the limited time they’re going to have.
“Considering the circumstance I think we got in what we need to get in. Would I want more time? Yes, any coach is going to say that, but I think we did a good job as a staff getting in what needed to be put in for the game and I think the kids did a good job adjusting to the schedule and kind of just going with the flow.”
The Eagles are the only Salem County team at home this weekend. It’s the only week this season just one county team plays at home.
SCHALICK (2-0) at WILDWOOD (1-0): The Cougars are off to their best start in six years and are looking to go 3-0 for the first time since 2016 (when they started 6-0) as they open the most favorable stretch of their schedule.
But for all their early-season success, they’re also looking to put together a complete game and it starts with their Horizon Division opener – and first road game – against a Wildwood team Schalick coach Mike Wilson says looks to be one of its best in years.
The Cougars are “close,” Wilson said, but they could be a little sharper. They scored on their opening drive each of their first two games to take the lead, then held on for dear life. Last week against Pitman they opened the game with a flawless 74-yard drive that consumed nearly nine minutes, but they weren’t as consistent the rest of the way and needed a bang-bang stop of a two-point conversion in the fourth quarter to save the win.
“In hindsight we won two games against two very good teams, two solid playoff teams, both that will make a lot of noise this year, win a lot of games,” Wilson said. “We’ve just got to get better. I know that’s a coaching cliche, but that’s what it comes down to.”
The Cougars ran the table in their division last year and have won six straight division games. Of the seven games remaining on the schedule the Cougars beat six of them a year ago and the one they didn’t is 0-2 this season and lost to Wildwood last week.
Schalick leads the series with Wildwood 14-1 and have won the last 10 in a row. Last year’s 29-12 win was the closest game of the winning streak.
SALEM (0-2) at PLEASANTVILLE (1-1): The Rams go into their third game under new coach Danny Mendoza looking to put it all together. In their first game the offense and special teams held their own but the defense let them down. Last week it was just the opposite.
More than anything, they need to be sharper in the second half. In the opener they trailed 14-13 midway through the third quarter, then got outscored 28-6. Last week against Camden, a Group III state semifinalist last year, one bad bust on a pass coverage late in the second quarter led to a touchdown and a 7-0 halftime deficit, but they were swamped 27-0 after halftime.
“We competed, we just made really, really bad mistakes at the really wrong times,” Mendoza said. “Against teams with that size and those kind of guys you have to be, not perfect, but you got to be definitely teed in on a different level to be able to take that game from them.
“(What they did in the first half) I’m proud of them, but we have to sustain it. We can’t just be a first-half football team. That’s what we’re working on, understanding how to be a second-half football team … We’ve got to clean everything up. This is a big week for us.”
Salem is scheduled to open division play next week against Penns Grove, but a developing non-football related issue may impact the venue of the game. It is Salem’s home game, but because of the Rams’ on-going stadium project, it was moved to Penns Grove and then last week was moved back to Salem’s Walnut Street Field for what would be the final high school game played there.
But safety concerns around the game make playing it there an open question. Salem police declined to comment, deferring to the high school. Salem High officials call it an “ongoing situation” and continue to collect information. Penns Grove remains willing to host the game.
Saturday’s games
WOODSTOWN (1-0) at PAULSBORO (0-1): The Wolverines have had this game circled on their calendar for nine months, ever since the Red Raiders knocked them out of the playoffs.
They blanked Paulsboro during the regular season, but the script flipped in the higher-staked rematch. If that game taught them anything, it was the importance of being sharp and winning the turnover battle, lessons they’re sure to recall when they hit the field Saturday.
“It’s been something we’ve talked about since Day One, coming up short in that game and how well they played and executed and we didn’t,” Woodstown coach John Adams said. “It’s been a big focus … on doing our job, executing and finishing.”
The Wolverines got good news Wednesday when running back James Hill was cleared to return to full contact practice. Hill had been rehabbing off-season knee surgery and was cleared to return to football without contact last month.
He was expected to get full clearance Sept. 13, but his recent evaluation came in time to fulfill his six full practice requirement to be available for Game 3 next week at Deptford. He practiced Wednesday in shoulder pads and helmets because of the heat and Adams said “he looked good, he’s moving around good” and is “itching” to get back to full duty.
When Hill does play, he’ll probably start out at outside linebacker and maybe get in the mix at receiver before transitioning into the backfield. He’s a 3,000-yard career rusher.
PENNS GROVE (0-2) at WOODBURY (1-0): The Red Devils take a different approach and a lot of motivation into their first road game of the year and Diamond Division opener against the defending Group I state champions.
For the first two weeks, the emphasis was ball security and eliminating turnovers, but the Red Devils had 13 in the first two losses (nine lost fumbles) and are minus-9 in turnover ratio. Four of the turnovers have been inside their opponents 30 – two after sizeable gains – and seven inside the 40. That doesn’t count a fourth-down stop inside the 15.
Opponents have turned five of the takeaways into touchdowns, either directly on the return or on the ensuing possession. The Red Devils have converted two of their takeaways into touchdowns, including their only score against Pleasantville, and that’s the messaging going forward.
“Maybe I ought to change my emphasis from ball security to winning the turnover battle,” Penns Grove coach John Emel said. “We scored off our turnover so I think the key emphasis for me is turnovers lead to points and if we’re going to turn the ball over the other team is going to score more points than us. We need to get more turnovers and we need to protect the ball.
“I think we played better last week. Our defense can be pretty good. We cut down on the penalties, we played more disciplined, we limited big plays, but, again, we have to protect the football. We’re not good enough on offense to just waste possession and that’s what we’ve been doing.”
The Red Devils have plenty of motivation to break into the win column in this one. Woodbury has knocked them out of the playoffs each of the last two years and on a lesser scale the Thundering Herd rallied from a 12-0 deficit to beat them in the finals of the Taliaferro Foundation 7-on-7 tournament in June.
Salem CC bringing its softball games to Pennsville Little League park, fall event set for Sept. 24
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – College softball is coming to the Pennsville Little League.
The league and Salem Community College have entered into an agreement that will bring the Mighty Oaks to the PVLL Chris Watson Field as their home field for games and practices for as long as the sides see fit.
“It’s really exciting because we get college softball in Pennsville and that’s never happened before,” PVLL president Chris Watson said. “To bring that into Pennsville and to have the college girls practice and play in there, and our girls get to see that week in and week out, it’s kind of a big deal. It’s kind of like expanding our family.”
Salem CC revived its softball program after a 12-year hiatus last year and the softball Oaks played their inaugural season at the Carneys Point Recreation Park. They basically followed the school’s baseball team there, but after the season coach Angel Rodriguez went looking for a venue that would enhance the college softball experience for athletes and fans of their growing program and Pennsville proved attractive.
The Little League had been talking about having the Oaks play a game under the lights at the park, but it never materialized. Those talks morphed into more expansive discussions and soon after Watson brought his Pennsville LL softball team back from the Senior World Series the bigger deal was formalized.
“It just didn’t get a lot of attraction where we kind of really wanted it,” Rodriguez said of the team’s former home. “Where we wanted it to be as far being able to get out that we had a team again; most people still didn’t know we did. When we were thinking about what a college feel we wanted to bring, Pennsville just kind of had more of that feel for us.
“I think the new location’s going to help us kind of brand that news that we’re here, we’re a team that’s competing, trying to give back, and hopefully get a landing spot for a lot of Salem County athletes to come out and play.”
The Oaks had four Salem County players listed on their 2023 roster (Pennsville’s Faith Penn, Yari Laguna and Christina Dooley and Schalick’s Amy Chomo) and signed three in the offseason: Hailey Stewart (Salem Vo-Tech/Woodstown), Britney McCauley (Salem) and Gianna Dybus (Woodstown). Mackenzie Freas, one of Watson’s assistants on the Senior LL World Series team, joined the coaching staff this year.
The contract is a 12-month, year-to-year deal with each side having the option to renew. The college will pay a monthly fee of about $1,000 and be active in any facility enhancements. The playing field will need no alterations to accommodate the college game, but the first project they plan to tackle together is upgrading the dugouts.
“We have 21 women on the team,” Rodriguez said. “It gets pretty crowded in there.”
The team held its first practice in the facility Sunday and will be out there laboring on Labor Day. It has a fall season round-robin series scheduled with Delaware Tech and Anne Arundel (Md.) CC Sept. 24 and expects to play 12 to 15 doubleheader dates there during its spring regular-season.
It also plans to hold a clinic for Salem County athletes in October and conduct others during the year.
Here is the high school sports schedule for Salem County teams for the week of Sept. 5-9
Sept. 5 SCRIMMAGES GIRLS SOCCER Bridgeton at Salem, 4 p.m. Clayton at Penns Grove, 4 p.m. Pennsville at Gloucester City, 4 p.m. Timber Creek at Woodstown, 4 p.m. BOYS SOCCER Gloucester City at Pennsville, 4 p.m. Penns Grove at Clayton, 4 p.m. FIELD HOCKEY Woodstown at St. Joseph Academy, 9 a.m. Our Lady of Mercy at Woodstown, 3:30 p.m. Highland Regional at Salem, 4 p.m. Millville at Pennsville, 4 p.m.
REGULAR SEASON GIRLS TENNIS Penns Grove at Glassboro, 4 p.m. Pennsville at Overbrook, 4 p.m. Salem at Pitman, 4 p.m. Woodstown at Schalick, 4 p.m.
Sept. 6 GIRLS TENNIS Woodstown at West Deptford, 4 p.m.
Sept. 7 FIELD HOCKEY Clayton at Salem, 4 p.m. Gloucester Catholic at Pennsville, 4 p.m. Schalick at Woodstown, 4 p.m. BOYS SOCCER Overbrook at Pennsville, 4 p.m. Penns Grove at Glassboro, 4 p.m. Salem at Pittman, 4 p.m. Woodstown at Schalick, 4 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER Glassboro at Penns Grove, 4 p.m. Pennsville at Overbrook, 4 p.m. Woodstown at Deptford Twp., 4 p.m. GIRLS TENNIS Penns Grove at Woodstown, 4 p.m. Pitman at Pennsville, 4 p.m.
Sept. 8 FOOTBALL Salem at Pleasantville, 6 p.m. Schalick at Wildwood, 6 p.m. Lower Cape May Regional at Pennsville, 7 p.m. FIELD HOCKEY Pennsville at Gateway, 4 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER Woodstown at Deptford Twp., 4 p.m. Sept. 9 FOOTBALL Penns Grove at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m. Woodstown at Paulsboro, 10:30 a.m. BOYS SOCCER Gateway at Schalick, 10 a.m.
Former Salem coach returns with Camden and gets out with a win in the next-to-last game on his former field
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
SALEM – Rob Hinson has some nice memories of his one year playing on Walnut Street Field. He made a final one Saturday in the last time he’s going to play on it.
Hinson was the head coach at Salem for only one break-even year (2005) that started with an upset of a defending state champion but was part of the fabric that made the field historic. He coaches Camden now and in the next to last game to be played on the Rams’ longtime off-campus facility, his Panthers came in and gave their coach a 34-0 victory.
Camden 34, Salem 0 NEXT: at Pleasantville, Friday, 7 p.m.
“That’s significant, man, because my year here the previous coach, Montrey (Wright), played for me and he’s like a son,” said Hinson, who still lives in Carney’s Point. “When we got the schedule last year I was like it’s going to be great to go back to Salem and coach against Montrey on that field. But obviously it didn’t work out that way.
“Living in Salem County, we would come down here and watch games. I love the people in Salem. They have a lot of passion, very similar to the people in Camden; they love their Rams. So coming here and getting a win regardless of the score is a big deal. It’s pretty good to be here.”
The Panthers (1-1) parlayed three big scoring plays — one in each phase of the game — and Salem’s inability to create offense to win the next last high school game expected to be played at The Nut.
The game originally was scheduled for Wilmington’s Abissinio Stadium as part of the Mid-Atlantic Pigskin Classic, but conflicts at the site forced the teams to pull out. It was Salem’s home game, but they couldn’t play there because the Rams’ on-campus stadium was still under construction. And they couldn’t play at Camden, because the Panthers’ stadium was still undergoing renovations as well.
The Rams had played at Walnut Street for decades and the old-timers can remember times when fans ringed the fences many times deep to watch the game, but they ended that relationship at the end of last season when the bleachers fell into disrepair and they started work on an on-campus stadium. The City of Salem had been working to bring Walnut Street back for the youth teams and earlier this week confirmed to the Rams the venue would be ready with limitations for Saturday’s game.
The field was ready, the bleachers were occupied and the public address system was operational. There was no power to the scoreboard, so the official timing was kept on the field. Beyond that, it was business as usual.
The Rams will use the field one last time in two weeks when they host Penns Grove. Their stadium is expected to be ready for their Oct. 7 game with Paulsboro.
Camden’s Braheem Long will take away fond memories of the field, too. His late father used to live in Salem and the senior defensive back remembers playing on the field growing up. He came back Saturday as a Syracuse commitment to block a punt, return the second half kickoff 89 yards for a touchdown and – his personal favorite – return an interception 40 yards for the game’s final score.
“This is actually the field I grew up on, so I decided to play real hard; I did it for him,” Long said. “It was definitely special. People usually don’t throw my way, so when they threw my way, I made it count.”
It wasn’t such a good experience for the Rams. Salem coach Danny Mendoza said if he could put last week’s offense with this week’s defense they could have something to build on, but they just made too many mistakes.
With the exception of one coverage bust on fourth down that cost them a touchdown in the first half and tiring in the second half, the defense held up its end. They held the Panthers to 38 yards rushing and 126 yards total in the first half and turned them
The offense, however, could never make any headway against Camden’s imposing defensive presence. They barely had over 100 net yards — 71 of it came on two Ramaji Bundy pass completions — and through three quarters they were held to negative rushing yardage.
Their deepest penetration into Camden territory was the 29 (on the first play of the second quarter) and that snap produced an interception. It didn’t help three starters went down in the first quarter.
Special teams were equally problematic. The Rams (0-2) had two punts blocked, the ones they did get away didn’t go far, and they had that kickoff return by Long.
“You’re not going to win any games with that, no matter how good you play,” Mendoza said. “We’ve got to go back to the drawing board, do some soul searching and change some things offensively and see what’s the best package for us.
“We’ve got have the energy in all three phases of the game. If we can ever get all three phases relatively similar production-wise, I think we’ll be able to pick it up. We’ve got to fix some things.”
Camden 34, Salem 0
CAM (34)
SAL (0)
13
1st Downs
5
27-151
Rushes-yds
26-18
11-24-0
Passes
7-18-2
114
Passing yds
89
0-0
Fumbles-lost
1-0
1-24.0
Punts-avg
7-14.0
9-75
Penalties-avg
5-35
Camden (1-1)
0
7
13
14 –
34
Salem (0-2)
0
0
0
0 –
0
Scoring plays C – D’hani Cobbs 47 pass from Jaythan Candelario (Jah’Rodd Hamilton kick), 4:14 2Q C – Braheem Long 89 kickoff return (Jah’Rodd Hamilton kick), 11:38 3Q C – Judah Anthony 11 run (kick failed), 1:46 3Q C – Judah Anthony 17 run (Jah’Rodd Hamilton kick), 6:24 4Q C – Braheem Long 40 interception return (Jah’Rodd Hamilton kick), 4:45 4Q
Cougars once again ‘found a way’ to win, turning back late 2-point conversion to edge Pitman, remain undefeated
SALEM COUNTY GAMES Friday’s game Schalick 14, Pitman 13 Saturday’s game Camden at Salem, noon
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PITTSGROVE — Nobody pays attention to a two-point conversion until it matters. Oh, did it matter Friday night.
Schalick senior safety Jake Siedlecki went over Pitman tight end Stephen Devanney to knock down a go-ahead 2-point try with 1:24 to play to preserve the Cougars’ 14-13 win and unbeaten on the season.
It was 6-foot-1 against 6-2 defending running back Trey Tinges’ jump pass for the lead and Siedlecki, the smaller of the two, went over the top to come out on top. The Panthers set up the potential game-winning play when Tinges pushed in from the 1 after Siedlecki had gotten beaten on a pass to Devanney on fourth-and-15 the play before.
“The play before I messed up, but I was able to make up for it, thank God,” Siedlecki said. “On that last play we were in man coverage and once I saw (Devanney) put his head up I knew it was going to be a pass. I got my hand in front and executed the play.
“I didn’t have my eyes in the backfield, so I honestly don’t know (it was going to be a Tim Tebow jump pass), I just had my eyes on my man and it went in my favor. I’m glad we got the win.”
Earlier in the quarter, in a scenario eerily similar to last week’s game with Gloucester City, the Cougars stopped Pitman quarterback Kyle Kubat on fourth-and-1 from the 4 to maintain a 14-7 lead. R.J. Piernikoski, Reggie Allen and Levi Freeney-Childers led the charge that stopped Kubat about eight inches from the line to gain. A week ago, the defensive line stuffed Gloucester City quarterback Jake Seibert twice from the 1 to keep him the Lions of the end zone.
And just like last week, the Cougars’ offense couldn’t move ball out and Kenai Simmons had to punt from his end zone. This week, he got off a high punt that took a Schalick bounce and set the Panthers up just short of midfield.
Pitman drove down to score, just like Gloucester City did, to tighten the game, but this time Schalick and Siedlecki denied the extra point, preventing the need for the Cougars to put together a winning drive into the final minute.
Pitman coach Chris Thomas said there was no doubt he was going for the win in that situation. The play was a pass all the way.
“We had something for the situation, something we felt good about and that decision was made a long time ago,” he said. “We knew on the road, against a team that’s very, very good, a playoff team like Schalick, (if) the situation presents itself where we have a chance to win the game with that play with about a minute and a half left, on the road, especially, no question we’re going for that.
“It might not have worked out, (but) I’d still make the call. I need to make a better play call in that situation. You’ve got to give credit to them. They played it very well.”
The conversion try was a bang-bang play in the end zone and neither team’s head coach could say definitively if they thought there was pass interference on it. Siedlecki was behind Devanney in man coverage but said he got his hand in while breaking up the pass.
Pitman’s Trey Tinges (4) brings down Schalick quarterback Kenai Simmons after a short gain. Top photo: Schalick’s Jake Siedlecki (2) saved the Cougars’ victory by knocking down the potential go-ahead two-point conversion in the end zone. (Photos by Heather Papiano)
The Cougars improved to 2-0 for the first time since 2017 with their second nailbiter in as many weeks, but they were far from satisfied with the performance. Even the hero of the night, Siedlecki, agreed “that’s not how we should win a game.”
They put together a flawless 74-yard drive that consumed nearly nine minutes to start the game, capped by Kenai Simmons’ 2-yard run to open the scoring, but they didn’t do much else offensively after that. Allen scored on a 2-yard run with 29 seconds left in the second quarter to give the Cougars a 14-7 halftime lead, but in the second half they had only 46 yards of net offense.
Outside of their two scoring drives, they had only 57 more yards. Allen, who did a lot of the heavy lifting on the opening drive, finished with 67 yards rushing. Tinges had 109 yards rushing for Pitman, 82 in the second half, 50 in the fourth quarter.
“We found a way to win, I give the kids credit for that; however, we deserved to lose tonight,” Schalick coach Mike Wilson said. “We did not play well. We were not focused. We had no energy from the get-go. We talked to them all week about it. They laid a duck tonight and I told them. Not happy.
“When we had to dig down deep, we did, but we should have never got to that point … We are our own worst enemies. Like tonight on offense, we stopped ourselves; they never stopped us. And that’s the frustrating part, we can’t put together a complete game. So, we’ve got to do a little searching of souls this week.”
The Cougars might not be happy with the first two games, but there are outside interests that believe, especially after they won the opener, they have a real chance to run the table.
The rest of their schedule appears favorable. Of the seven teams remaining on the schedule, the Cougars beat six of them a year ago and the one they didn’t is 0-2 this season.
They’re not listening.
“In all honesty, I understand from an outside perspective, but I’m a week-to-week guy,” Wilson said. “I only look at scout film for somebody else when the game’s over with. We’ve got to win every week and at the end if you win them all, you win them all, but it’s a week by week thing.”
NOTES: Friday’s game was the closest in the series since 1985, the only other one-point game they’ve played (20-19 Schalick) … Each team had only one possession in the first and third quarters … The Cougars have won 13 of the last 14 games played between the teams … The last time they were 3-0 was 2016, when they started the season 6-0.
Schalick 14, Pitman 13
PIT (13)
SCH (14)
15
1st Downs
11
33-182
Rushes-yds
34-133
6-13-0
Passes
4-5-0
64
Passing yds
61
1-0
Fumbles-lost
0-0
2-32.0
Punts-avg
2-39.0
4-25
Penalties-yds
5-35
Pitman (0-1)
0
7
0
6 –
13
Schalick (2-0)
7
7
0
0 –
14
Scoring plays S – Kenai Simmons 2 run (Hunter Dragotta kick), 3:19 1Q P – Chase Rollins 2 run (Hudson Rue kick), 9:39 2Q S – Reggie Allen 2 run (Hunter Dragotta kick), 0:29 2Q P – Trey Tinges 1 run (pass failed), 1:14 4Q
Pennsville plays complete game, erupts for 33 points in second quarter, routs Lindenwold
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
LINDENWOLD – It’s been a couple years since Pennsville put together as complete a game as it did in its opener Thursday night. It may never have had a more prodigious second quarter.
The Eagles dominated in all three phases and erupted for 33 points in the second quarter to open their season with a 49-6 rout of Lindenwold.
Pennsville 49, Lindenwold 6 NEXT: vs. L. Cape May, Friday, 7 p.m.
“Obviously we’re excited because we played a full game how we’re capable of doing; that we can show up and do what’s expected from the first snap to the last snap,” Pennsville coach Mike Healy said. “Even our younger kids when they were in at the end of the game, they still kept playing, kept moving the ball, played well defensively. The entire program I was happy with.
“It’s the first time in a couple years I really felt like we played a full game start to finish and, more importantly, didn’t have any letdown at any point during the game.”
Their first two drives of the game netted in a field goal and a fumble out of the end zone trying to score for a touchback. After that, they were relentless.
Sky Eppes rushed for 118 yards and four touchdowns and Rylan Hardy rushed for 60 yards and two scores. Quarterback Robbie McDade completed 4-of-6 passes for 109 yards and a touchdown to Malik Rehmer. Rehmer caught three balls for 88 yards.
The Eagles scored their 33 points in the second quarter in a span of about 10 minutes. Eppes scored the first three touchdowns and Hardy scored the last two. The first four came over a stretch of about four minutes.
“We’re setting the tone early and we’re going to finish the same way, letting everybody know we’re different this year and we’re not letting up any time soon,” Eppes said. “Before the game when we’re breaking it down I told everybody that we’re going to try to break records this year and they stepped up and tried to make it happen.”
The Eagles play their home opener next Friday against Lower Cape May looking to go 2-0 for the first time since 2020.
The loss was Lindenwold’s 16th in a row going back to 2021. Pennsville won last year’s game 34-26, but the Lions were driving for a potential game-tying score when time expired.
Pennsville 49, Lindenwold 6
Pennsville (1-0)
9
33
7
0 –
49
Lindenwold (0-2)
0
0
0
6 –
6
Scoring plays P – Jackson Leino 34 FG, 7:40 1Q P – Malik Rehmer 43 pass from Robbie McDade (PAT failed), 2:36 1Q P – Sky Eppes 48 run (PAT failed), 11:36 2Q P – Sky Eppes 1 run (Jackson Leino kick), 10:34 2Q P – Sky Eppes 14 run (PAT failed), 7:53 2Q P – Rylan Hardy 20 run (Jackson Leino kick), 7:30 2Q P – Rylan Hardy 20 run (Jackson Leino kick), 1:49 2Q P – Sky Eppes 9 run (Jackson Leino kick), 5:09 3Q L – Denny 1 run (pass failed), 5:15 4Q