The learning curve

Despite second straight loss, Salem coach Carr sees signs of improvement and doesn’t have to dig for them

WJFL DIAMOND DIVISION
FRIDAY’S GAMES
Penns Grove 34, Deptford 0
Schalick 23, Cumberland 0
Woodstown 14, Delsea 13
SATURDAY’S GAME
Collingswood 14, Salem 7
Glassboro 22, Haddon Heights 12
Haddonfield 21, Woodbury 20

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SALEM – The players on the Salem football team slowly and sullenly made the long walk back from the field to the locker room after their second straight loss to open the season. There wasn’t a lot to feel good about it.

The post-game conversation was likely to center on the things that haven’t gone right for the Rams in the first two games of the season. There was some of that, but instead of whipping up on the shortcoming of a 12-7 loss to Cinnaminson Saturday, Rams coach Kemp Carr started his post-mortem on something much more upbeat.

“We took a step forward,” he said. “Several degrees we took a step forward.”

And then, when prompted, he proceeded to list all the things the Rams did better in Game 2 than they did in their 35-0 season-opening loss to Willingboro a week ago.

* They scored.
* Gave up fewer points. And yards.
* Got off the field more times on third down, forcing the Pirates to punt five times. 
* Had short-field situations in the second half that they didn’t have last week.

“It’s development; they’re all marginal things you can look at,” Carr said. “I don’t take moral victories. I’m not happy (with the loss). I’m far from satisfied … but you’ve got to make sure you give the guys something positive, so in the game you can find some things.”

Alas, there still are things the Rams need to fix. They didn’t execute in the short-field situations. They were 0-for-9 on third down, 0-for-4 on fourth. They gave up a long touchdown pass over the top in a prevent defense.

“They’re the things we need to fix,” Carr agreed. “We need to execute on offense a little better. We don’t want to be in second-and-long, third-and-long. We want to avoid those because probability-wise, according to anybody’s assessment, they’re not good positions to be in.

“You’re always tweaking. When you don’t execute there’s always things to tweak. We’ll watch the film. We’ll get better. There’s a whole lot of things to do to … make … us … bet-ter. But again we took strides. We just let it slip through our fingers.”

It did start good for the Rams. On the third snap of the game Pop Jackson broke those two waves of traffic close to the line, then bolted 62 yards for the Rams’ first touchdown of the season 65 seconds into the game.

“Everybody was excited, everybody was jumping up and down,” sophomore center Wyatt Irvine said about the early score. “You can see in the end zone, everybody was having a party.”

But that was basically the extent of Salem’s offense. The Rams had 80 yards of offense in the three-play series, but only 26 yards and zero first downs in their 33 plays that followed. In the second half, they had minus-5 yards of net offense, minus-19 rushing. Twenty of their total plays went for zero or negative yards.

Of course, it’s hard to generate much offense when you only have 15 plays in the half. Cinnaminson, while not the offensive juggernaut either, did manage to eat up big chunks of clock when it had the ball, moving it with dives and powers. The Pirates ran 26 offensive plays in the second half.

The Pirates answered Salem’s opening salvo with a 54-yard touchdown drive to tie the game, capping it with an 11-yard Dylan McAndrews TD pass to Jackson Machado. It remained 7-7 until McAndrews beat Salem’s prevent defense in the final minute of the first half with a 58-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Palladino on third-and-long.

Salem’s defense kept the Rams in the game. The unit recovered three fumbles, one in the end zone to keep it a 7-7 game and one by Irvine at the 40 with 2:29 to play to give the Rams one more shot at a game-tying score.

But they never moved the chains after any of the takeaways. They turned one of the possessions over downs, punted with another and with the last one took a 12-yard sack and had their final play fall incomplete.

“I was extremely happy (getting that final takeaway),” Irvine said. “I thought we had a big push there. I thought we had a lot of momentum going into that, but unfortunately it didn’t (pan out). Things just kind of fell apart, but next week we’ll fix that and we’ll get the W.”

The Rams open their Diamond Division schedule next week at Woodbury, a 21-20 loser to Haddonfield on Saturday.

Cinnaminson 14, Salem 7

CINN (14)SAL (7)
91st Downs2
40-79Rush-yards17-48
5-10-0Passing (C-A-I)7-18-1
134Passing yds58
4-3Fum-lost1-0
5-27.4Punts-avg5-35.0
3-10Pen-yds6-40
Cinnaminson (1-1)7700-14
Salem (0-2)7000-7

SCORING SUMMARY
S-Pop Jackson 62 run (Andrew May kick), 10:58 1Q
C-Jackson Machado 11 pass from Dylan McAndrews (Aedan Burk kick), 7:26 1Q
C-Tyler Palladino 58 pass from Dylan McAndrews (Aedan Burk kick), 0:51 2Q

WJFL DIAMOND DIVISIONDIVALL
Glassboro0-01-0
Penns Grove0-01-1
Salem0-00-2
Schalick0-01-1
Woodbury0-00-1
Woodstown0-01-0

NEXT WEEK’S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY GAMES
Schalick at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
SATURDAY GAMES
Salem at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m.
Glassboro at Penns Grove, noon

Back on track

Woodstown wins OT thriller over defending state champs in Trautz’ first game as head coach; Schalick, Penns Grove get back in win column

WJFL DIAMOND DIVISION
Penns Grove 34, Deptford 0
Schalick 23, Cumberland 0
Woodstown 14, Delsea 13
SATURDAY’S GAME
Glassboro at Haddon Heights, 11 a.m.
Haddonfield at Woodbury, 11 a.m.
Collingswood at Salem, noon

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – No matter how long Frank Trautz stays in the coaching game or how many games he wins along the way, he’ll never forget his first one.

Bryce Belinfanti and Jake Ware hand-delivered their new coach his first win in his first game in overtime, running for a touchdown and nailing the extra point, respectively, to lift Woodstown over defending Group 3 state champion Delsea 14-13.

“I’ll remember this for the rest of my life, that’s for sure,” said Trautz, promoted from quarterbacks coach in the offseason to succeed John Adams who retired from coaching after 14 seasons. “It’s been a very emotional day; I just wanted to get to the game. I was just so proud of the kids, proud of my staff, all the work that they put in; that’s what made this win possible.

“To be able to celebrate that with all them was such a cool moment.”

The Wolverines led from the moment Jack Holladay threw his first career touchdown pass with his second career completion in the second quarter. Delsea forced overtime with a touchdown with 3:21 left in regulation and missed a game-winning field goal with 46 seconds left.

The Crusaders got the ball first in overtime and Dan Russo scored on a 22-yard run on the second snap. But they barely missed the extra point to the left, opening the door for Woodstown to win on the ensuing possession.

The Wolverines didn’t waste any time. Belinfanti took the first snap and went 25 yards to tie the game and Ware drilled the extra point for the win. Belinfanti, a 1,700-yard rusher a year ago, ran for 97 yards in the game.

Holladay had waited his entire life to be the Wolverines’ starting quarterback and seized the opportunity when presented to him. He hadn’t thrown a pass in a varsity game, but connected with Garrett Leyman for his first career touchdown. He was 3-for-5 for 43 yards.

“It was huge for him, huge for his confidence,” Trautz said. “I told him I have confidence in you to open the playbook and we’re going to let it rip, and he did a great job. I know getting that first touchdown pass out of the way is a big deal for a quarterback, so I was very happy for him.”

Carter Orlandini preserved the 7-0 halftime lead when he intercepted a pass at the 2 and the Wolverines stopped Delsea’s seven-minute opening drive of the second half.

“Our defense came up huge all night in a game that was an incredibly physical game and obviously Delsea is such a great team,” Trautz said. “To come up with that interception right there at the end of the half was huge.”

The new coach won’t have a lot of time to enjoy his first win. The Wolverines open their WJFL Diamond Division schedule next week.

“I’m going to go enjoy it with my wife tonight and we’ll celebrate the win,” he said, “and tomorrow it’s back to work and we’re going to get ready for Schalick.”

Woodstown 14, Delsea 13 (OT)

DEL (13)WTN (14)
40-143Rush-yards23-102
2-14-0Passing (C-A-I)3-5-1
121Passing yds43
Delsea (0-1)00076-13
Woodstown (1-0)07007-14

SCORING SUMMARY
W-Garrett Leyman 19 pass from Jack Holladay (Jake Ware kick), 6:28 2Q
D-Luke VanAuken 12 pass from Jimmy Reardon (Zack Greer kick), 3:21 4Q
D-Dan Russo 22 run (kick failed), OT
W-Bryce Belinfanti 25 run (Jake Ware kick), OT

Jack Holladay made the most of his first varsity start. The senior threw his first career touchdown pass and directed the Woodstown offense to an overtime victory. On the cover, the Wolverines celebrate after winning. (Photos by Ellen Sickler)

Simmons returns in Schalick win

PITTSGROVE – Senior quarterback Kenai Simmons returned to the Schalick lineup Friday night and helped the Cougars exorcise the demons of last week’s dud in the Battle at the Beach, 23-0 over Cumberland.

“This week was all about getting a win, that’s all that mattered,” Cougars coach Mike Wilson said. “It didn’t matter how we won or how we looked, it was just about getting our mojo back and getting a W.”

It’s the first time in two years the Cougars faced that kind of adversity and the resiliency of bouncing back from an in-season setback. They haven’t lost back-to-back games since mid-October 2021. Since then, they have gone 22-5.

“It says a lot about the kids’ fortitude, a lot about them being mentally strong, a lot about their work ethic and bouncing back and being honest about what they had to do,” Wilson said.

Simmons returned after a full week of practice and ran for a pair of short-field touchdowns. Reggie Allen scored on a 20-yard run early in the third quarter. Allen rushed for 135 yards.

The defense recorded the Cougars’ first shutout in the series since 2016. They held the Colts to 86 net yards, had four interceptions (two by game MVP David Stewart) and a safety. Riley Papiano led the unit with eight tackles and was in on the safety with Thomas Hymer. Alec Bramell had six tackles.

“In my (five) years here that’s probably the best we played defensively overall,” he said.

It’s the first time either team has won back-to-back games in the Battle for the Hars-Lake Trophy since Schalick won in 2018-19. The Cougars have won 11 of the last 15 meetings.

CUMB (0)SCHAL (23)
61st Downs10
23-79Rush-yards41-123
3-16-4Passes (C-A-I)2-4-0
7Passing14
0-0Fum-lost1-1
12-95Penalties6-74

A convincing first win

DEPTFORD – Penns Grove needed a win and got it in convincing fashion.

The Red Devils bounced back from their season-opening loss with a convincing 34-0 win on the road over Deptford Twp. for head coach Mark Maccarone’s first win at the head of the program.

Melo Erickson threw a career-high three touchdown passes – to Knowledge Young, Kylee Goodson and Karon Ceaser – and a two-point conversion to Tre Brown. Ceaser played tailback most of the game and ran for two scores and the defense kept the Spartans out of the end zone.

“I’m happy for the kids,” Maccarone said. “It gives them a confidence build. They start to see the system works. When we say to do X, Y and Z and they do X, Y and Z, it results in good things. You saw when they don’t do what they’re being asked to do, the outcome is not good.

“It was a good win, a good team effort by everybody. It’s a good one for the program … a good win to build confidence in what the system is and how I run a program, how my brother runs an offense and how I run a defense.”

The Red Devils open their WJFL Diamond Division gauntlet next week against Glassboro, where Maccarone was the head coach for seven seasons (2011-17).

“Coming back as a head coach for the first time against Glassboro, not an assistant coach, it’s definitely going to be different for me,” he said. “The current head coach at Glassboro was a player under my brother when I was an assistant coach in 2008.

“It’s going to be different. I don’t really know how to describe it. I really haven’t given much thought to it other than it’s another game on the schedule. I probably would feel different if we were playing them there. It’s been seven years since I’ve been around Glassboro.

“It is going to be different for my brother (Gary). It’s the first time he’s coaching against the guys he coached last year, the kids that he has in class. It’s going to be more (nostalgic) for him than me.”

Penns Grove (1-1)147013-34
Deptford (0-2)0000-0
DIAMOND DIVISIONDIVALL
Glassboro0-00-0
Penns Grove0-01-1
Salem0-00-1
Schalick0-01-1
Woodbury0-00-0
Woodstown0-01-0
Woodstown’s Bryce Belinfanti rushed for 97 yards and scored a touchdown in overtime that sent the Wolverines to a 14-13 win over Delsea. (Photo by Ellen Sickler)

Special delivery

West Deptford sophomore quarterback pressed into emergency duty with game on the line, throws winning TD pass on fourth down with 34 seconds to play to spoil Pennsville’s home opener

WJFL PATRIOT DIVISION
Camden Catholic 36, KIPP Cooper Norcross 0
Collingswood 12, Overbrook 6
West Deptford 29, Pennsville 26
SATURDAY’S GAMES
Paulsboro at Audubon, 11 a.m.

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE — John Emel may have moved on to another program, but he didn’t forget to take his magic over Pennsville with him.

Emel ran his personal coaching winning streak over the Eagles to eight games Friday night when backup quarterback T.J. Cross hit Zamir Davis on a 32-yard fourth-down touchdown pass with 34 seconds left to give his new West Deptford team a 29-26 win in their WJFL Patriot Division opener.

Before moving to West Deptford in the offseason, Emel won the last seven games his Penns Grove team played against Pennsville. 

“Every year’s different, different kids; tonight it was magic,” he said. “West Deptford football is always about the next man up. You hope it’s not fourth-and-6 on the road when you’re oh-and-1 looking for your first win.”

Of the eight, this one may have been the hardest to get. West Deptford trailed 20-7 midway through the third quarter but started putting together big plays and engineered their winning drive with a quarterback who had never completed a varsity pass.

Cross was pressed into action with 2:21 left — right after Pennsville regained a 26-21 lead — because starter Brady Cobb injured his surgically repaired collarbone on the previous possession that gave West Deptford its first lead of the game.

Cobb actually reaggravated the injury earlier in the drive, but it popped back into place allowing him to continue only to pop out again on his two-point conversion pass that put his team ahead 21-20 with 7:19 to play.

“They told me to get ready and I was ready to step up,” Cross said. “I’ve been practicing, I’ve been a quarterback for a while, and I was just ready to step up. My guys had my back. I just wanted to get the job done.”

Despite never playing a varsity game at quarterback before, Cross, a sophomore, got his team inside the Pennsville 30 with about a minute left, but the Pennsville defense stood its ground with back-to-back 1-yard losses to leave West Deptford to face a do-or-die fourth-and-4. Davis was wide open along the West Deptford sideline and Cross dropped the pass into his arms perfectly.

“There’s a lot of strategy that goes on at the end of the game,” Emel said. “When there was like three minutes left we were saying we got to let them score. Forget the fact that my backup quarterback was in. I feel like we can score if we have enough time. “I told (Cross) in the huddle it’s called split red 79 post wheel (and) he’s gonna be wide open. I don’t know if you can make the throw, but he’s gonna be wide open. That’s what we said and we didn’t lie; he was wide open. Just don’t drop it.”

“That kid won us that game today,” Cobb said. “He took the team on his back. He took his moment and rode with it. I’ve never seen anything like that. That was awesome.”

Pennsville had a chance for its own magical ending, but the bid ended when Davis intercepted Robbie McDade’s fourth-down pass with two seconds left.

The loss spoiled an exceptional outing from Pennsville running back Rylan Hardy that was part of an improved overall team effort from the week before. The junior rushed for 157 yards on 20 carries and scored three touchdowns. And he had another 44-yard run that would’ve given his team a 27-13 lead called back by a holding penalty.

And when the Eagles used Hardy as a decoy, McDade broke through for big gains. McDade scored on a 6-yard run to give his Eagles a 20-7 lead and finished with 86 yards rushing.

“He just flies around the field – on offense and defense,” Pennsville coach Mike Healy said. “He keeps his feet moving. He’s not the biggest kid but he runs physical. He’s very good at finding the hole. He knows what to do. He was awesome today.”

It was just spoiled by a bitter defeat.

“I told the kids there was nothing I can say to make you feel better after that,” Healy said. “That was just a gut punch.”

Cover photo: West Deptford quarterback T.J. Cross (7) goes through the handshake line after leading the Eagles to victory with a last-minute touchdown pass.

West Deptford 29, Pennsville 26

WDEPT (29)PVILLE (26)
121st Downs13
32-185Rush-yards42-258
6-8-0Passing (C-A-I)3-7-1
74Passing yards46
1-0Fum-Lost1-0
2-36.5Punts-avg1-37.0
3-15Penalties4-35
West Deptford (1-1)07616-29
Pennsville (0-2)7676-26

SCORING SUMMARY
P-Rylan Hardy 10 run (Luke Wood kick), 0:00 1Q
WD-Michael Joseph 16 pass from Brady Cobb (Aiden Paskiewicz kick), 5:30 2Q
P-Rylan Hardy 5 run (kick failed), 1:22 2Q
P-Robbie McDade 3 run (Luke Wood kick), 7:39 3Q
WD-Zamir Davis 32 run (kick failed), 2:11 3Q
WD-Cole Paskiewicz 46 run (Zamir Davis pass from Brady Cobb), 7:19 4Q
P-Rylan Hardy 10 run (pass failed), 2:21 4Q
WD-Zamir Davis 31 pass from T.J. Cross (Logan Rivell run), 0:34 4Q

PATRIOT DIVISIONDIVALL
Collingswood1-02-0
West Deptford1-01-1
Audubon0-00-0
Camden Catholic0-01-0
Paulsboro0-01-0
Overbrook0-11-1
Pennsville0-10-2



His time now

Jack Holladay takes over as Woodstown’s quarterback, getting his shot to lead the offense after learning behind cousin Max Webb

FRIDAY’S SALEM COUNTY GAMES
Penns Grove at Deptford, 6 p.m.
Cumberland at Schalick, 7 p.m.
Delsea at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
West Deptford at Pennsville, 7 p.m.
SATURDAY’S GAME
Cinnaminson at Salem, noon

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – It may be a little hyperbole, but Jack Holladay has been waiting for tonight all his life.

Ever since he got to high school, Holladay has dreamed and worked for the day he would become Wolverines’ starting quarterback. The day comes tonight when the Wolverines host Delsea in the first game of Frank Trautz’ tenure as head coach.

The last couple years Holladay’s been on the team but on the quarterback depth chart he was behind his cousin Max Webb as the Wolverines’ lead signal caller.

Well, Max has moved on after leading the Wolverines to three straight deep playoff runs and now it’s Holladay’s time to step up and shine.

“I’ve been thinking about it a lot,” Holladay said over the summer. “Since freshman year I’ve wanted to be the quarterback. I know that’d be behind Max, but I was just learn from him and do what I can in practice and I knew I’d be ready for my senior year.

“It’ll be different (now as the starter), but I think the coaches will have me prepared and I think I’m ready for it.”

It was always been like that as the two were coming up. Webb would be the starter because he was older and the next year Holladay would follow because Max would move up to the next level.

Holladay always felt he “did good” in the seasons he immediately followed his cousin.

He doesn’t have a lot of game statistics to show for the work he’s put in behind Max because his cousin was so durable – he hasn’t thrown a pass in varsity two seasons and has been credited with just five career carries – but he’s said to have a big upside.

Trautz said every time the Wolverines needed to put the 6-1, 170-pound Holladay in a game they were “completely confident” in his ability.

He’s shown a strong arm in the summer and an even disposition to combat the pressure of his elevated circumstances. In his first 7-on-7 game his first pass was intercepted, then he went 7-for-7 on the next series, culminating in a touchdown to Anthony Bokolas, and ultimately completed eight in a row. 

“I’m really excited to see what Jack’s gonna do this year,” said Trautz, Holladay’s quarterback coach before being promoted to succeed John Adams last spring. “He’s a great athlete. He’s got all the tools you want in a quarterback. He can make every throw. He’s a really good athlete, so he’s going to be able to help us out as well in the run game a little bit. I’m excited about the direction this offense can go with him under center.

“He’s definitely ready for this. He got a ton of reps last year in practice and already what I’ve seen from him early on in the summer is a lot of good stuff. I think the sky’s the limit for him. He could have a real special year.”

So tonight’s game has been a lifetime in the making.

When Holladay did allow himself to think of what it would be like to step into the starting role, his dream covered the total package.

“Just playing in front of everyone, the students, everyone at the game,” he said. “I thought that would be fun throwing touchdowns and just winning. I want to win a championship.”

AROUND THE COUNTY: There has been no change in Schalick quarterback Kenai Simmons’ status, coach Mike Wilson said Thursday, so it appears sophomore Ayden Jenkins will draw his second straight start in tonight’s home opener with Cumberland. Jenkins was under center the entire 41-3 loss to Cedar Grove in the Battle at the Beach. “We will be making sure to call the correct stuff to help him,” Wilson said. Tonight’s neighborhood rivals have split the last four games in the battle for the Hars-Lake Trophy, once a staple of the Thanksgiving Day slate … West Deptford coach John Emel may have moved onto a new team this season, but he’ll be looking for a same result when his Eagles take on Pennsville’s Eagles in tonight’s WJFL Patriot Division opener. Emel was 8-2 with a current seven-game winning streak against Pennsville when he was head coach at Penns Grove … Last week was a rarity in Salem County football. It was the first time in more than 20 years the county was shut out of the win column on the opening weekend with four or more teams playing. The county schools went 0-4 last week with Woodstown idle.

Tuesday tennis

All three Salem County teams in action Tuesday won; defending sectional champ Schalick opens with 5-0 win, Pennsville wins 5-0 without losing a game

GIRLS TENNIS
Pennsville 5, Penns Grove 0
Schalick 5, Overbrook 0
Woodstown 4, Glassboro 1

PENNSVILLE 5, PENNS GROVE 0
Megan Morris (P) def. Amaris Butler, 6-0, 6-0
Regan Witt (P) def. Alease Stewart, 6-0, 6-0
Lily Edwards (P) def. Andrew Restrepo, 6-0, 6-0
Cassandra Fortenberry-Madison Wright (P) def. Elif Sagir-Janiyah Cummings, 6-0, 6-0
Pennsville wins by forfeit
Records: Pennsville 3-0, Penns Grove 0-1

WOODSTOWN 4, GLASSBORO 1
Gabby Kurds (W) def. Ella Killelea, 6-2, 6-1
Kaylee Johnson (G) def. Camille Osborne, 6-3, 1-6, 10-6
Aubrie Rennie (W) def. Halle Lazarus, 6-1, 6-4
Julianna Lindenmuth-Alyssa Berry (W) def. Alana Killelea-Taylor Adcock, 6-1, 6-1
Natalie Neron-Noelle Neron (W) def. Alice Dinzeo-Virginia Tarasevich, 6-1, 6-1
Records: Woodstown 1-1, Glassboro 0-1

SCHALICK 5, OVERBROOK 0
Emma Adams (S) def. Keira Riess, 6-3, 6-2
Allyson Green (S) def. Nesrine Fosso, 6-0, 6-0
Miya Watkins (S) def. Sophia Burgos, 6-0, 6-2
Julia Langley-Helana Tyers (S) def. Natasha Hreiz-Sophia Petricari, 6-2, 6-1
Annie Podeh-Kayleigh Veach (S) def. Madison Rikard-Gianna Hardy, 6-0, 6-0
Records: Schalick 1-0, Overbrook 0-2


This week’s schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of Sept. 2-7; all events 4 p.m. unless noted; x-scrimmage

SEPT. 3
FIELD HOCKEY

x-GCIT at Woodstown
x-Overbrook at Pennsville
x-Schalick at Haddon Heights
BOYS SOCCER
x-Clayton at Penns Grove
x-Woodstown at GCIT
GIRLS SOCCER
x-GCIT at Woodstown
x-Penns Grove at Clayton
GIRLS TENNIS
Gloucester Catholic at Salem
Pennsville at Penns Grove
Schalick at Overbrook
Woodstown at Glassboro

SEPT. 4
BOYS SOCCER
x-Pennsville at Cumberland
Cape May Tech at Salem Tech, 3:45 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
x-Delsea at Pennsville
x-Pitman at Penns Grove
Woodstown at Deptford, 6 p.m.

SEPT. 5
GIRLS TENNIS

Schalick at Gloucester Catholic
FIELD HOCKEY
Audubon at Pennsville

SEPT. 6
FOOTBALL
Overbrook at Collingswood, 6 p.m.
Penns Grove at Deptford, 6 p.m.
KIPP Cooper Norcross at Camden Catholic, TBA
Cumberland at Schalick, 7 p.m.
Delsea at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
West Deptford at Pennsville, 7 p.m.
BOYS SOCCER
Pennsville at Wildwood
GIRLS SOCCER
Deptford at Pennsville, 4:15 p.m.

SEPT. 7
FOOTBALL
Paulsboro at Audubon, TBA
Haddonfield at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m.
Glassboro at Haddon Heights, 11 a.m.
Cinnaminson at Salem, noon
GIRLS SOCCER
Schalick at Cherokee, 1:30 p.m.
CROSS COUNTRY
Pennsville in Cherokee Challenge, 9 a.m.