All in all game

Salem CC men: After 90-minute meeting to get some things straight, Mighty Oaks were engaged all game, rediscovered their outside shot and beat Lehigh Carbon

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – If Mike Green’s post-game comments two nights earlier about his team being “not good enough” in certain aspects of the game was a not-so-veiled message directed at his players through the media, they certainly seemed to hit the mark.

And if they didn’t, well, a 90-minute closed-door meeting in lieu of practice Friday morning with the coach doing most of the talking reinforced the idea.

The Mighty Oaks, who’ve been consistently slow out of the gate in their first three games, were engaged from the start Saturday and even got their long-range shooting touch back in beating Lehigh Carbon CC 90-76 at the DuPont Fieldhouse.

They did it with another big second half, but at least this time they didn’t have to dig themselves out of an early hole before doing their second half thing. That’s what he’s talking about.

“They responded very well,” Green said. “Good teams hold each other accountable and we don’t do that all the time. I challenged them again to hold each other accountable because I’m not going to keep doing it. It’s got me looking crazy. I’m yelling. I don’t yell.

“Today they held each other accountable. You saw my starting lineup? Those are the people who have been accountable up to this point. The guys who have been given minutes, been given opportunities, y’all got to earn them now because I’m going with the people who hold each other accountable. They responded well. They responded very well.” 

On Thursday night the Oaks fell behind Delaware Tech 14-0 at the start and trailed by as many as 15 points in the first half, but unlike their first two games when they rallied from slow starts to win, this time they never recovered and suffered their first loss of the season.

It prompted the second-year coach to say his team was “not good enough” to regularly give teams points early with hopes of rallying later, a point he reiterated in Friday’s meeting – and again at halftime Saturday.

“We are a very good team when we play together, so coach was saying we have a lot of selfish, a lot of egos, going on,” freshman guard Tyrone Tolson said. “We came together, we talked about it, everybody figured out what we wanted to do and get our roles all in.”

What was particularly frustrating about Thursday’s game was they endured one of the worst shooting nights in Green’s short tenure with the program. The Oaks made 188 3s in their 18 games with Green last year, but were only 6-of-36 from 3-point range against the Squares and had just 14 in the last two games.

But they hit seven 3-pointers in the first 10 minutes against the Cougars Saturday and drained a season-high 17 in the game — the second most in the Green era — on 38 attempts. The first basket of the game was a jumper by Tyrese Fortune and then all 10 of their field goals the rest of the half all from beyond the arc. And then they opened the second half with one from Niame Scott to take the lead for good. Seven players made at least one 3-pointer in the game. Leading scorers Josh Ramos (15 points) and Tolson (13) had four each. 

“Our shooters had to lock in and shoot,” Tolson said. “The pass is there, we’re getting open shots and today we were knocking them down. They were falling for us and we stayed locked in.”

The reason it worked is they were moving the ball. They had a season-high 23 assists (on 27 baskets), tied for the most in the Green era, and that doesn’t count “coach’s assists” on passes that resulted in free throws on shots that failed to fall. Twelve of the 13 Oaks who got in the game scored.

“I’m in the gym with these guys all the time; I know they can make shots,” Green said. “When we’re not making shots it’s because people are being selfish; you’re not passing the ball to the open man. When we’re making shots, it’s just because we’re moving the ball. We have to be a high-volume assist team because we’ve got shooters.”

It wasn’t all rosy, though. Late in the second half the Cougars cut a 20-point Salem lead with 8:30 left to nine with 4:25 to play. Going back to the initial theme the Oaks are “not that good” to have garbage time with a big lead.

They managed to stop the bleeding by returning the accountable players to the game. Stefan Phillips’ putback (his only bucket of the game) and Tolson’s left corner 3 got the Oaks back on track and they kept the lead in double digits the rest of the game.

“We’re all supposed to hold each other accountable,” Tolson said. “The bench is supposed to come in with the same energy. They came in, we had a couple guys lollygagging, not playing serious, getting petty fouls, but coach took them out and put us back in the game.

“I told coach we can’t have that. We’ve got to stay on it, everybody has to be on the same page, everybody has to be together. We’re only good as one. Without each other we don’t do good.” 

Cover photo: Tyrone Tolson launches one of the season-high 17 3-pointers the Salem CC men’s team hit Saturday in a 90-76 win over Lehigh Carbon. (Photo by John Holt)

SALEM CC 90, LEHIGH CARBON 76
LEHIGH CARBON (1-4) –
Joel Contreras 6-15 10-12 24, Josh Shepherd 5-16 5-5 16, Robert Johnson 5-8 1-5 13, Andrew Hoadley 5-15 2-4 12, Daquan Burgess 2-9 5-6 16, John Kuchta 0-0 0-0 0, Nick Hetman 0-1 0-0 0, Jacob Schuebel 0-0 0-0 0, Mekhi Adonis 0-3 1-4 1. Totals 23-68 24-36 76.
SALEM CC (3-1) – Julien Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Tyrese Fortune 3-12 1-2 7, Tyrone Tolson 4-7 1-2 13, Rodney Shelton 0-0 3-4 3, Sami Anderson 2-3 2-2 8, Dontarius Jones 3-5 0-0 8, Niame Scott 2-8 1-2 7, A.J. Jones 3-6 0-0 8, Tivon Woolford 0-4 2-2 2, Josh Ramos 5-12 1-2 15, Xavier Brewington 2-7 0-0 4, Shyheed Taylor 2-4 3-3 8, Stefan Phillips 1-1 5-6 7. Totals 27-68 19-25 90.

Lehigh Carbon 4036-76
Salem CC4050-90

3-point goals: Lehigh Carbon 6-26 (Contreras 2-5, Shepherd 1-9, Johnson 2-3, Hoadley 0-4, Burgess 1-5); Salem CC 17-38 (Fortune 0-4, Tolson 4-6, Anderson 2-3, D. Jones 2-4, Scott 2-4, A.J. Jones 2-3, Woolford 0-1, Ramos 4-9, Brewington 0-2, Taylor 1-2). Rebounds: Lehigh Carbon 42 (Hoadley 14, Johnson 8, Contreras 9); Salem CC 36 (Fortune 8, Shelton 5, Brewington 5). Technical fouls: Lehigh Carbon coach Foley. Fouled out: Adonis. Total fouls: Lehigh Carbon 18, Salem CC 26.

Salem CC guard Josh Ramos (11) looks to make a move with the ball in front of the watchful eye of coach Mike Green. Ramos led Salem’s balanced scoring attack against Lehigh Carbon with 15 points. (Photo by John Holt)

Woodstown’s big night

Wolverines post first playoff shutout in more than 40 years to win the Central Jersey Group I title

GROUP I SECTIONAL FINALS
South: Glassboro 40, Schalick 9
Central: Woodstown 31, Shore 0
North I: Butler 42, Mountain Lakes 7
North II: Cedar Grove 35, New Providence 14
STATE SEMIFINALS
Woodstown (10-1) at Glassboro (11-0)
Butler (11-0) at Cedar Grove (12-0)

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN — Woodstown set out to win another sectional football title Friday night. The Wolverines didn’t know they’d be making a little history along the way.

Bryce Belinfanti returned to the fold as the lead back and Carter Orlandini led a stout defense with two interceptions, one he returned for a touchdown, as the Wolverines walloped Shore Regional 31-0 for the Central Jersey Group I football title in coach Frank Trautz’ first season.

It was the Wolverines’ first playoff shutout in more than 40 years. In 1984, they held Hammonton without a touchdown in an 8-3 second-round win in the SJ Group 2 playoffs.

“It was a great game and moment for everyone in Woodstown, but especially Coach Trautz,” Belinfanti said. “I wanted him to win this one big time and we did.”

Corbin Walz wraps up a Shore Regional ballcarrier as part of a Woodstown defense that scored its first playoff shutout in more than 40 years Friday night. (Photo by Ellen Sickler)

Belinfanti, who had been out or limited in an offensive role since turning an ankle in the regular-season finale, rushed for 225 yards and a fourth-quarter touchdown. He also eclipsed the 1,000-yard rushing mark for the second year in a row. He only needed 10 yards to reach the plateau and got all of that and more on his first run of the night — a 15-yard gain. He touchdown covered 39 yards in the fourth quarter.

Orlandini returned an interception 38 yards for a touchdown to cap a 17-point first quarter that gave the Wolverines (10-1) control of the game. The junior defensive back with a nose for the ball has four interceptions and nine takeaways this season. The pic-six was the first of his career.

“We really wanted to focus on starting fast and setting the tone of the game from the beginning, and that’s exactly what we did in that first quarter,” Orlandini said. “I think the momentum really shifted when I crossed the goal line, and we were all rolling from there.

“As a defense, it’s always the goal to keep the other team off the scoreboard, but to do it the way we did in that big of a game, and for it to possibly be the first playoff shutout in school history, it was really special. Everyone had a hand in it.”

Shore had scored 325 points in winning its first 10 games this season. The Blue Devils had 188 yards rushing Friday night.

Just as they did the week before in knocking out Pennsville, the Wolverines did all their damage offensively on the ground. They had 315 yards rushing on 45 carries and no passing yards. In addition to Belinfanti’s big night, Alex Torres rushed for 52 yards and a touchdown on nine carries and quarterback Garrett Leyman rushed for 36 yards and a touchdown on nine carries.

“Our plan was to be all around offensively, but our running game was superior from the start,” Belinfanti said. “Getting 1000 (yards) was definitely great, but the win is the best part of it all.”

The Wolverines now travel to Glassboro next week for the state semifinals in a rematch of last year’s state semifinal won by the Bulldogs on a 60-yard halfback pass to Xavier Sabb with 50 seconds to play. The Bulldogs (11-0) handed Woodstown its only loss this season. The winner will face the Butler-Cedar Grove winner for the Group I crown.

Carter Orlandini is congratulated in the bench area after returning an interception for a touchdown to give Woodstown a 17-0 first-quarter lead. On the cover, the Wolverines celebrate their Central Jersey Group I title. (Photos by Ellen Sickler)

Woodstown 31, Shore 0

Shore 0000-0
Woodstown 170014-31

SCORING SUMMARY
WO-Jake Ware 25 FG
WO-Garrett Leyman 5 run (Jake Ware kick)
WO-Carter Orlandini 30 interception return (Jake Ware kick)
WO-Bryce Belinfanti 39 run (Jake Ware kick)
WO-Alex Torres 17 run (Jake Ware kick)

Bryce Belinanti returned to the Woodstown backfield and had a big night. He rushed for 225 yards to go over 1,000 for the second year in a row. (Photo by Ellen Sickler)



Schalick shut down

Cougars needed to be flawless to win the South Jersey Group I title game, but early miscues and top-seeded Glassboro never gave them a chance

GROUP I SECTIONAL FINALS
South: Glassboro 40, Schalick 9
Central: Woodstown 31, Shore 0
North I: Butler 42, Mountain Lakes 7
North II: Cedar Grove 35, New Providence 14
NOV. 15 STATE SEMIFINALS
Woodstown (10-1) at Glassboro (11-0), 6 p.m.
Butler (11-0) at Cedar Grove (12-0), 7 p.m.

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

GLASSBORO – Schalick coach Mike Wilson knew it was going to take a near flawless effort for his Cougars to get past top-seeded Glassboro in the sectional title game Friday night. As much as they wanted it, It just didn’t happen.

The Cougars mishandled fourth-down snaps on their first two possessions and the Bulldogs converted both into Xavier Sabb touchdowns to take early control of an eventual 40-9 victory for the South Jersey Group 1 sectional crown.

Glassboro (11-0) will now host Central Jersey champ Woodstown next week in the Group 1 semifinals. Woodstown beat Shore Regional 31-0 in its first playoff shutout in more than 40 years.

The Cougars (8-4) actually had three mishandled fourth-down snaps in the first half, leading to 32 yards in losses and three Glassboro touchdowns. The Bulldogs also had two defensive touchdowns on back-to-back snaps in the fourth quarter to put the game out of reach. 

“You have to play a perfect game, we shot ourselves in the foot,” Wilson said. “We fought in the second half … what are you going to do? 

“Our kids played their (butts) off. They played hard. The effort’s there. Great group of kids. They did a lot for the program and they’ve done a lot of good things over the last four years.”

Schalick quarterback Kenai Simmons was under seize all night. The Bulldogs came after him with such fury they eventually sent him to the sidelines with a leg injury after being fallen on twice by massive Glassboro lineman Brandon Simmons. It forced the Cougars to bring in backup Gary Simonini for the final 3:37 of the half.

“I knew what it was like, I played against them three times and every time they probably had at least three, four sacks on me a game,” Simmons said after his final high school game. “In trying to get ready for this game, I planned on getting out of the box a little bit more, but a couple of their guys kept me in the box. If we complete a couple more of those passes we have a better ballgame in the first half.”

The pressure Glassboro brought Friday was “way more” than it did in their regular-season win over the Cougars, Brandon Simmons said. The Bulldogs held Schalick to 86 total yards and they got almost half of that on a 34-yard pass to Dylan Sheehan in the fourth quarter. They had more than a dozen plays that went for negative yardage.

“We learned from our mistakes,” he said. “We realized we gave him too much time in the pocket, he felt too comfortable. I talked with the D-line, we’ve all been talking all week, once we put so more pressure on him it makes our DBs’ and linebackers’ job way easier. 

“We knew we kind of screwed them over a little bit last time we played them by giving them by giving them too much time in the pocket, so we knew we had to help the team out and put more pressure on them.”

Schalick trailed 27-3 at halftime with only 11 yards of net offense. Quarterback Simmons, who left the field at halftime under his own power, returned to the lineup to start the second half and the Cougars came out looking to make something happen. They recovered the onsides kick to open the half and put together a 10-play, 50-yard drive for their only touchdown – a 2-yard pass from Simmons to Jace Volovar.

“We always play to win,” Wilson said. “We were not thinking we were going to lose that ball game. We were like, this is how we get back in the game. We weren’t going to roll (over).”

Glassboro put it out of reach with two defensive touchdowns on back-to-back snaps 21 seconds apart midway through the fourth quarter. The first was a 33-yard fumble return by Devon Barr after Simmons and Dorian Kelsey flushed Kenai Simmons from the pocket and into something that looked like a pass but was allowed to come back as a fumble. The other was a 38-yard interception return by Sabb on another deep ball thrown under pressure.

“This is probably one of the top two defensive games we ever had,” Sabb said. “They couldn’t run the ball. (and0 throwing the ball was a nightmare. They had a couple special plays, but outside of that … That quarterback, he likes to run a lot and we checked him out early, so once we took that away it was about over.”

“We wanted to play physical,” Glassboro coach Timmy Breaker said. “We wanted them to feel the physicality in the beginning of the game and the boys did a heck of a job doing it.”

While the loss ended Schalick’s season, in some ways this may have been a better year than last year’s 11-1 campaign. The Cougars moved into the strongest Group I division of the WJFL and played better competition all season long. Their four losses have come from three of the four teams playing for a berth in the Group I title game, teams that are a combined 33-1 — Cedar Grove, Woodstown and Glassboro (twice) – and that one loss came from within the group.

“We played fantastic this year against much better competition,” Wilson said. “We rose to the occasion. We go to back-to-back sectional championship games; that’s not easy to do.

“Big picture, can’t be upset. Obviously you don’t want to lose games and it’s going to kill us to look at the tape and see could’ve, would’ve, should’ve, but the bottom line is these kids have done a lot.”

Glassboro 40, Schalick 9

SCHALGLASS
71st Downs12
26-36Rushing17-93
7-15-2C-A-I10-19-0
52Passing139
5-1Fum-lost4-3
3-23.7Punts0-0
7-60Penalties11-101
Schalick (8-4)0360-9
Glassboro (11-0)1413013-40

SCORING SUMMARY
G-Xavier Sabb 16 run (kick failed), 10:42 1Q
G-Xavier Sabb 29 pass from Jack O’Connell (Amari Sabb run), 7:06 1Q
S-Hunter Dragotta 30 FG, 10:26 2Q
G-Kenny Smith 1 run (Sal Esgro kick), 7:29 2Q
G-Amari Sabb 29 pass from Jack O’Connell (kick failed), 3:54 2Q
S-Jace Volovar 2 pass from Kenai Simmons (pass failed), 5:01 3Q
G-Davon Barr 33 fumble return (Sal Esgro kick), 7:21 4Q
G-Xavier Sabb 38 interception return (kick failed), 7:00 4Q

Salem CC splits

Mighty Oaks women come to life in the second half to pull away from Delaware Tech; men’s team gets off to another slow start, but this time doesn’t recover

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – Brian Marsh expects a certain amount of ups and down with virtually a new team. You just hope there are more ups than there are downs.

JENKINS

The Salem CC women’s team’s second game of the season had a little of both, but in the end there were enough ups to produce a victory over Delaware Tech.

The Mighty Oaks had all they could do to grab a five-point halftime lead were deadlocked midway through the third quarter, but they got it together over the last quarter and a half to finally shake the winless Squares, 76-52.

“I think with a young team you’re just going to see those ups and downs,” said Marsh, the Oaks’ second-year head coach. “What we’re trying to be is consistent with the energy. We have a lot of depth, so we want to use that as much as possible, wear the other team down.”

And that’s just what they did. The Oaks (2-0), who scored 99 points in their season opener two nights earlier, only led 28-23 at halftime and were tied at 36 with 5:09 left in the third quarter before their depth started making a difference. 

They outscored the visitors 14-2 the rest of the quarter, a run that morphed into a larger 40-12 barrage that put the game out of reach.

“I think we took their best shot in the first half,” Marsh said. “They really came at us and we were still up five at halftime – I thought that was a good thing.

“Our team plays really hard. Sometimes they want to go, go, go so much sometimes you have to reel them in a little bit. We’re just trying to be more consistent. Instead of having a bad first half or a good second half, I always say start fast, finish strong. That’s exactly what we’re trying to do.”

They certainly finished strong. The Oaks were 21-of-46 from the floor after halftime – after hitting only 12 buckets the first half – and outrebounded the Squares 28-16. Dani Gustin had 10 of her 14 rebounds in the half.

Jakayla Jenkins was particularly active in the second half. The sophomore captain from Dallas scored all eight of her points after the break, along with collecting five of her eight rebounds and five of her seven assists.

“For me, I knew my first half wasn’t the best just judging by the score, so I knew someone had to bring the energy back up” Jenkins said. “And I knew defense is always going to bring us back up, so therefore I just started playing defense for my team. That’s how we all got steals and points on the board and I feel like my energy started a domino effect and everyone just started doing their part and that’s how we started pulling away.

“(The first half) was hard to watch from the sidelines. Forget the first one and just remember the second one.”

SALEM CC WOMEN 76, DELAWARE TECH 52
DELAWARE TECH (0-5) –
 Tierra Johnson 2-7 5-8 9, Jendaya McNeal 2-6 0-0 4, Amiya Mills 5-17 0-0 13, Kendyl Baker 1-2 1-2 3, Aniyah Williams 3-6 0-0 6, Samantha Grunza 0-0 0-0 0, Ciara Whittle 0-3 0-2 0, Thailys Torres 4-14 7-8 17. Totals 17-55 13-20 52.
SALEM CC (2-0) – Maggie St. Clair 4-11 0-0 9, Daniella Gustin 3-6 0-0 6, Kathryn Laurence 5-10 1-2 14, Jakayla Jenkins 4-9 0-0 8, Akira Chambers 3-8 0-0 6, RayNescia King 2-4 1-2 5, Nyaijah Jackson 3-8 0-1 6, Caroline Zullo 2-3 1-2 6, Geovanna Tjaden 2-8 0-2 4, Jolee Robinson 0-0 0-0 0, Imara James 1-2 0-0 2, Alexa Hopkins 4-8 0-1 10. Totals 33-77 3-10 76.

Delaware Tech 10131514-52
Salem CC10182226-76

3-point goals: Delaware Tech 5-21 (Jonson 0-2, Mills 3-12, Torres 2-8); Salem CC 7-25 (St. Clair 1-4, Laurence 3-5, Jenkins 0-2, King 0-2, Zullo 1-2, Tjaden 0-5, Hopkins 2-5). Rebounds: Delaware Tech 30 (Baker 5, Williams 5, Torres 5); Salem CC 49 (Gustin 14, Jenkins 8). Technical fouls: Torres, Whittle, Jackson. DQ fouls: Zullo. Total fouls: Delaware Tech 12, Salem CC 19.

Cold shoot dooms men

CARNEYS POINT – The Mighty Oaks got off to another slow start and this time they couldn’t shake it.

The Oaks fell behind by 14 at halftime and had one of the worst shooting nights in coach Mike Green’s 21-game tenure in the program and suffered their first loss of the season, 77-64 to Delaware Tech.

It was the third straight game the Oaks were slow out the gate, but the first one they’ve lost. They fell behind 14-0 to start Tuesday’s win over Bucks County CC and came from behind to earn a halftime tie in their opener with Delaware County CC before pulling away with a big second half.

“It’s on me, it’s on me, gotta figure it out,” Green said. “I’m switching lineups, I’m flipping through them, I think that (injured) Tamir Powell and Jyheim Spencer, those shoes, were too much to fill.

“Thought it would be a little easier. I thought guys would step up and claim it, but it shows we’re still missing Tamir Powell big time.”

It didn’t start that bad. The Oaks actually led early, scoring the first five points of the game, and were tied at 11, then the Squares, uh, squared up.

The Oaks started missing shots, turning it over and getting cleared out on the boards. The Squares pulled away with a 12-0 run and Salem could never catch up. They used a 15-5 run later in the half – with 10 second-chance points – to open a 16-point lead before halftime.

Salem got within nine with seven minutes left, then Tech scored 10 straight to regain a comfortable lead. Drew Zimmerman scored the last six points in that run and finished with 24 points in the game. Toma Smith had 17 points, Cam Moore grabbed 15 rebounds and Obi Coleman had 10 boards.

“We’re not that good to keep giving up points (and coming back to win); it showed today,” Green said. “Our guys think we could do that because it happened before, but we’re not that good. I like to say I’m a motivator coach; I think I overmotivated. I think I let these guys think they’re better than people, and that’s on me.

“We went up against a team that plays a lot of people and got whatever they wanted with the basketball. We prepared for it. Our guys just went out there and did whatever they wanted to. That was a good ol’ butt-whuppin’.”

It’s hard to come back when you don’t shoot it well. The Oaks shot 30.8 percent from the field and were an arctic 6-for-36 from 3-point range – second worse in the Green era to only a 4-for-34 at Northampton last February 15.

You didn’t have to remind Green of that. He has the box score from that game tackled to the corkboard in his office to keep him grounded. 

Niame Scott hit a 3-ball to put the Oaks up 5-0, then they hit only three of their next 19 behind the arc the rest of the half and none in the final 7:15. Nine of their 12 players took at least two 3s in the game, but only five made at least one. Tyrone Tolson made two.

Rodney Shelton was Salem’s only scorer in double figures. He had 10 points and nine rebounds. Stefan Phillips had eight points and eight boards. Shyheed Taylor had eight points, five boards and four steals.

“We had some bright spots; we’ve just got to let those bright spots shine,” Green said. “We’ve got to let them shine. We’ve got to stop caring about spreading the minutes. Those guys who were good, they’re going to be good for us again.”

DELAWARE TECH 77, SALEM CC MEN 64
DELAWARE TECH (3-2) –
 Cameron Moore 2-9 3-4 8, Drew Zimmerman 9-18 6-10 24, Ethan Wilkins 3-8 2-2 9, Toma Smith 8-11 1-1 17, Obi Coleman 3-13 2-2 9, Corey Mitchell 0-0 0-2 0, Adam Bailey 1-1 0-0 3, Dominic Angeloni 0-0 0-0 0, Logan Fitch 0-0 0-0 0, Amare Whittington 0-0 0-0 0, James Gordy 2-4 0-0 4, Amari Moses 0-0 0-0 0, Christian Taylor 1-4 1-2 3. Totals 29-70 15-23 77.
SALEM CC (2-1) – Niame Scott 1-3 0-0 3, Tyrese Fortune 1-10 4-6 7, Tivon Woolford 1-3 0-0 2, Xavier Brewington 1-8 0-0 2, Rodney Shelton 5-10 0-0 10, Julien Jones 1-4 0-0 2, A.J. Jones 1-7 0-1 2, Josh Ramos 1-9 0-0 3, Tyrone Tolson 3-8 0-0 8, Shyheed Taylor 3-7 2-4 8, Stefan Phillips 3-4 3-3 8, Sami Anderson 3-5 2-3 9. Totals 24-78 10-16 64.

Delaware Tech 4730-77
Salem CC3331-64

3-point goals: Delaware Tech 4-16 (Moore 1-4, Zimmerman 0-1, Wilkins 1-2, Coleman 1-3, Bailey 1-1, Angeloni 0-2, Gordy 0-1, Taylor 0-2); Salem CC 6-36 (Scott 1-3, Fortune 1-7, Woolford 0-2, Brewington 0-5, A. Jones 0-2, Ramos 1-7, Tolson 2-5, Taylor 0-2, Anderson 1-3). Rebounds: Delaware Tech 48 (Moore 15, Coleman 10); Salem CC 40 (Shelton 9, Phillips 8). Technical fouls: Zimmerman, Anderson. Total fouls: Delaware Tech 15, Salem CC 19.

Shootout sadness

Both top-seeded Schalick and No. 2 Woodstown fall in PK shootouts in South Jersey Group I boys soccer semifinals

SJ GROUP I SEMIFINALS
Haddon Twp. 2, Schalick 1 (4-1 SO)
Palmyra 2, Woodstown 1 (4-2 SO)

FRIDAY’S SECTIONAL FINALS
South: (4) Haddon Twp. at (3) Palmyra
Central: (9) Brearley at (3) Middlesex
North I: (2) Waldwick at (1) Emerson Boro
North II: (11) Verona at (1) Glen Ridge

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PITTSGROVE – Brody Beals was as surprised as anyone that he was in the shootout lineup in his team’s biggest game of the year.

After all, he’s only a freshman and he hasn’t taken a penalty kick all season.

But there he was, the fourth Haddon Twp. player on the spot, just six yards separating him and the  Hawks from their moment of glory.

Beals buried his shot into the right side of the goal to clinch the shootout and give the Hawks a 2-1 victory over top-seeded Schalick in the South Jersey Group I boys soccer semifinals.

“I have no idea how that got determined; I didn’t expect to kick a PK, actually,” he said. “I felt a little bit of pressure. (When it went through) it was such a great feeling for my team, all these seniors, trying to keep their seasons alive (in) their last go at it. I was just super happy to get the win.”

The Hawks (14-6-2), who beat Schalick 1-0 on an early goal in the opening round of the Coaches Cup two weeks ago, didn’t miss in the shootout. They picked up on Schalick keeper Evan Sepers’ preference for diving to his right, so they kept shooting it to their right. Sepers, meanwhile, figured they all couldn’t go the same way.

Eamonn Sheehan, who got a PK past Sepers in the second half for the tying goal, got the Hawks started. Gabe Chatten and Mason McCarthy also put it into the right side setting the stage for Beals’ clincher.

“The first penalty taker was the same kid who took their penalty and I felt like he wasn’t going to go the same way twice, but he did, and I guessed the wrong way. And I kept guessing wrong way. It’s just unfortunate,” Sepers said. “I’m thinking they’re not all going to go the same way, but they did.”

Schalick’s shooters tried mixing it up. Jaxon Weber missed wide to his right, Mike Nelson was stopped on a relatively straight shot with HT keeper Collin Feeley favoring his left side, and Eli Cummings’ shot flew left over the crossbar.

“They just took very solid penalties,” Cougars coach Joe Mannella said. “Once that first one goes in and we miss our first one the pressure intensifies quite a bit. It kind of just got the best of us, I think.”

In a match that had all the markings of a sectional final in the semis, the teams battled strong winds as much as themselves all game. Actually, the Cougars were getting the better chances – and more of them – through regulation.

The Cougars (19-3) broke on top when Oscar Hernandez finished off a Luke Price rebound a little over 10 minutes into the second half. The Hawks tied it on Sheehan’s PK inside the right post after a Haddon Twp. player was dragged in the box. Weber hit the crossbar with a long left to right shot with 6:10 left in regulation.

“I thought our guys played as good as they possibly could; best game of the year, especially considering the other team and the situation,” Mannella said. “One of these times I want to be on the side of the team that gets outplayed and then wins the shootout.

“I’ve never been on that side, always the other end of it and it kind of sucks to have these guys in that situation, but overall they did what we set out to do other than win. They played a great game, outplayed I think a very good team. Unfortunately, it happens.”

PALMYRA 2, WOODSTOWN 1: The Wolverines were looking to make a little history, but their dream of reaching the sectional final for the first time since 1996 was dashed in a penalty kick shootout.

Palmyra (13-7), the No. 3 seed, won the shootout 4-2 after the teams played to a 1-1 tie through regulation and overtime. Cole McCamy, Connor McCann, Jaden Jennings and Jaxon McCamy all hit for the Panthers.

Grant Prater and Erich Lipovsky hit Woodstown’s first two attempts in the shootout. Panthers keeper Deakon Haines stoned Adrian Ibarra on the third attempt and Ben Lippincott shot high with the fourth.

Palmyra took a 1-0 lead in the second half on a goal by Jaxon McCamy. The second-seeded Wolverines (16-5) tied it on a goal by senior Dante Holmes with six minutes left in regulation. It was Holmes’ third career goal, all in the last three playoff games. 

The loss snapped Woodstown’s six-game winning streak that included coach Darren Huck’s 300th career coaching win.

Salem CC sweeps

Scott’s acrobatic layup in closing seconds saves Mighty Oaks from slow start, women open their season with dominant victory; stories will be updated

SALEM CC BASKETBALL
Men 83, Bucks County CC 82
Women 99, Anne Arundel 61

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – When Niame Scott was growing up in North Philly two things used to always happen. He would watch highlights of Kyrie Irving playing basketball and then he would go out in the park and practice acrobatic layups, never really knowing if he’d ever get to use one or not.

SCOTT

The Salem CC sophomore pulled one out of his bag of tricks at the most opportune moment Tuesday night and the Mighty Oaks benefitted from it big time.

Scott contorted his body around Bucks County CC big man Jaquis Heath and hit a layup with 5.4 seconds left to give Oaks only their second lead of the night and they held on as a last-second shot bounced off the rim beating the Centurions 83-82 for their second win of the season.

“When I was little I worked on those shots, acrobatic layups, and I watch Kyrie, so I know how to do them,” Scott said. “Some of them go in, some of them don’t. I think this one was just me and him, just a one-on-one, and I’m good at one-on-one so I’m pretty sure I know I was going to make that.”

Because this one went in, the game ended a whole lot better for the Oaks than it started. They fell behind 14-0 in the first four and a half minutes and trailed by as many as 15 in the first half. Stefan Phillips finally got them on the board on a putback with 15:20 left in the half.

It was a long road back, but they eventually took the lead for the first time, 81-80, on two free throws by Xavier Brewington with 33.5 seconds to play. Bucks retook the lead on Heath’s aggressive putback with 12.2 seconds left. 

Scott got the game-winning play started by inbounding to Brewington then bolting to the far right corner. Brewington dribbled three times then fired a pass to Scott’s location. Scott then drove on Heath, putting up a shot with his right hand as he was falling to the ground. It went in and the Oaks had the lead.

“Basketball’s a long game and our guys fought to the end,” Salem coach Mike Green said. “I knew once we found the right unit, the cohesiveness, I knew we would get back in it.”

Green and staff spent the halftime break trying to get the right combination on the floor and apparently found the answer. The Oaks outscored their visitors 57-44 in the second half, shot 42 percent from the floor, ramped up their defense and steadily cut into the deficit until making it a one-possession game through the final five minutes.

They trailed in the first half of their opener, too, and needed A.J. Jones’ steal and layup in the final 10 seconds to earn them a 35-35 halftime tie.

“It seems like that’s been us every game,” Green said. “I told them maybe it’s me. Maybe I’ve got the wrong rotation in there. Maybe I’m starting the game with the wrong people. We can’t score in the first half. Me and the coaching staff has to figure that out.

“I thought we would come back, but it’s got to be on the coaches. If your team is not up and ready to go, it’s got to be on the coaches. We have to take credit for that. If we’re going down 14-0 maybe we’re starting the wrong people, maybe we’re not getting the right energy. It’s definitely on the coaches.”

Tyrese Fortune, Phillips, Brewington, A.J. Jones and, of course, Scott all played big roles in the comeback. Josh Ramos hit a corner 3 with 2:53 left to get the Oaks within one for the first time.

Fortune and Phillips combined for 18 points and eight rebounds in the second half and both finished with double-doubles. Shyheed Taylor had 13 of his team-high 16 points in the second half. Scott wound up with 12.

The Centurions still had time after Scott’s go-ahead layup to break Salem’s heart. They got the ball back into the hands of Heath, who dribbled from midcourt deep into the lane, pulled back out and shot it surrounded by Salem defenders Brewington, Scott and Phillips. The shot was in the air as the horn blew and backboard lit, but it hit the back of the iron and bounded harmlessly away.

The Oaks overcame a near disastrous technical foul in the final minute when a player on the bench spilled onto the floor after Scott and Jones forced the Centurions into a 10-second violation after Jones’ three-point play got them back within one again, 78-77.

SALEM CC 83, BUCKS COUNTY CC 82
BUCKS COUNTY CC (1-3) –
Jeremy Henry 3-8 3-6 10, Noah Morris 8-13 2-2 24, George Marion 3-11 5-5 11, Roberto Maldonado 0-2 0-1 0, Jaquis Heath 3-11 1-2 7, Octavio Alexander 2-6 5-6 10, Tyler Riddle 4-8 8-8 16, Craig Stargell 0-0 0-0 0, Al Corsino 0-1 0-0 0, Yaasir Muhammed 2-2 0-0 4, Niko Bianco 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-62 24-30 82.
SALEM CC (2-0) – Niame Scott 4-14 3-7 12, Tyrese Fortune 4-11 3-5 11, Josh Ramos 2-8 0-0 6, Xavier Brewington 1-9 5-8 7, Rodney Shelton 0-4 0-0 0, Julien Jones 1-2 0-0 3, A.J. Jones 3-10 1-1 8, Tivon Woolford 3-6 0-1 7, Tyrone Tolson 0-2 0-2 0, Shyheed Taylor 5-9 4-5 16, Stefan Phillips 5-8 3-3 13, Sami Anderson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 28-83 19-32 83.

Bucks County CC3844-82
Salem CC2657-83

3-point goals: Bucks 8-17 (Henry 1-2, Morris 6-10, Marion 0-2, Heath 0-1, Alexander 1-1, Riddle 0-1); Salem 8-36 (Scott 1-6, Fortune 0-2, Ramos 2-7, Brewington 0-6, Shelton 0-1, J. Jones 1-1, A. Jones 1-5, Woolford 1-3, Tolson 0-1, Taylor 2-4). Rebounds: Bucks 41 (Heath 9, Alexander 7); Salem 55 (Fortune 13, Phillips 13, Shelton 9). Technical fouls: Salem bench. Fouled out: Henry, Taylor. Total fouls: Bucks 25, Salem 20.

Salem CC’s Rodney Shelton (20) clears the boards surrounded by Bucks County CC players. On the cover, Salem’s Niame Scott drives for the game-winning layup.

Women’s Game

SALEM CC 99, ANNE ARUNDEL 61: The restocked Mighty Oaks did some nice things during their scrimmages while second-year coach Brian Marsh was trying to acclimate his seven newcomers into the rotation and style they want to play with an expanded roster, but he really wanted to see what they looked like when the lights came on for real.

The Oaks got points from 10 different scorers and nearly broke the scoreboard in their season opener against the undermanned Riverhawks.

“We really want to have energy all over the floor,” Marsh said. “We were Anne Arundel last year. We were shorthanded, so I know what that’s like. We wanted to push the pace. They didn’t have a bench. We finally have a bench this year so we really wanted to go and use our depth to our advantage.”

Anne Arundel came into the game with only six players so it didn’t take long for the deeper Oaks to take control. They opened as much as a 21-point lead in the first half and then erupted for 60 points in the second half. They had 90 points with just under six minutes to play. The most points they scored in a game last year was 81 and they scored more than70 just six times.

“I liked it,” Marsh said of the opening-game effort. “When we played our last pre-season game we had 15 turnovers in the first half. That was one of things we were really focusing on, to really take care of the ball. I told them I wanted it under 10 for the game. (They had seven).”

The Oaks placed four scorers in double figures – Kathryn Laurence (13), Nyajiah Jackson (16), Geo Tjaden (14) and Alexa Hopkins (15). Tjaden was quite active. In one particular exchanged, she blocked a shot, knocked the rebound off the shooter out of bounds and a 3-pointer on the other end.

SALEM CC 99, ANNE ARUNDEL 61
ANNE ARUNDEL (0-1) –
Aichatta Soumaoro 3-15 5-9 11, Addi Hurst 1-4 0-1 2, Lania Nick 9-18 3-4 24, Reona Robinson 1-14 1-2 3, Ayannah Gorham 7-11 7-12 21, Jasmine Mauldin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-62 16-28 61.
SALEM CC (1-0) – Maggie St. Clair 4-12 1-2 9, Daniella Gustin 2-4 0-0 4, Kathryn Laurence 5-16 0-0 13, Jakayla Jenkins 3-5 1-2 8, Akira Chambers 3-7 3-4 9, RayNescia King 1-5 0-0 3, Nyaijah Jackson 5-9 6-9 16, Caroline Zullo 0-3 0-0 0, Geovanna Tjaden 5-9 1-5 14, Jolee Robinson 0-1 0-0 0, Imara James 4-8 0-0 8, Alexa Hopkins 6-9 1-1 15. Totals 38-88 13-23 99.

Anne Arundel7181918-61
Salem CC18213822-99

3-point goals: Anne Arundel 3-11 (Soumaoro 0-2, Hurst 0-1, Nick 3-6, Robinson 0-1, Gorham 0-1); Salem CC 10-33 (St. Clair 0-3, Laurence 3-11, Jenkins 1-1, King 1-2, Jackson 0-3, Zullo 0-3, Tjaden 3-5, Hopkins 2-5); Rebounds: Anne Arundel 48 (Gorham 15, Nick 10); Salem CC 42 (Gustin 8, James 7). Fouled out: Gorham. Total fouls: Anne Arundel 16, Salem CC 22.

WJFL Patriot Stars

Pennsville’s first playoff team since 2019 placed four players on the WJFL Patriot Division all-star team as voted upon by the coaches last week and recently approved by the athletic directors — OL Jacob Hand, 1,000-yard rushing RB Rylan Hardy, DB Malik Rehmer and LB Connor Ayars. Former Penns Grove player Bryce Wright, a transfer to West Deptford this season, was picked as a first-team LB. Division winner Camden Catholic had nine players on the first team.

WJFL PATRIOT DIVISION OFFENSE
OLRyan BurkeOverbrook
OLLars StegnerCamden Catholic
OLJacob HandPennsville
OLSal FilfeWest Deptford
OLChris NeffPaulsboro
QBMike MoritzCamden Catholic
RBNymir DailyCamden Catholic
RBRylan HardyPennsville
WR/TEYon AndersonCollingswood
WR/TEJeremiah CarrPaulsboro
WR/TESean WeideCamden Catholic
KMatthew KilicCamden Catholic
ATHTeriq MooreOverbrook
ATHKyair HarveyPaulsboro
WJFL PATRIOT DIVISION DEFENSE
DLJonah JordanAudubon
DLJoel AmegatherCamden Catholic
DLJarred HazelPaulsboro
DLEric ScottPaulsboro
DBTommy QuinnAudubon
DBJoshua CollierCamden Catholic
DBMalik RehmerPennsville
DBZamir DavisWest Deptford
LBSean O’ReillyCamden Catholic
LBConnor AyarsPennsville
LBCaden LubyCollingswood
LBBryce WrightWest Deptford
PLogan GilbertAudubon
ATH Bryce ClarkCamden Catholic

This week’s schedule

Here is this week’s sports schedule for events involving teams from Salem County for the week of Nov. 11-16

TUESDAY
BOYS SOCCER
SJ GROUP I SEMIFINALS
Haddon Twp. at Schalick, 2 p.m.
Palmyra at Woodstown, 4 p.m.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Bucks County CC at Salem CC, 7 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Anne Arundel CC at Salem CC, 5 p.m.

THURSDAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Delaware Tech at Salem CC, 7 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Delaware Tech at Salem CC, 5 p.m.

FRIDAY
FOOTBALL
GROUP I SECTIONAL FINALS
Schalick at Glassboro, 6 p.m.
Shore at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
Mountain Lakes at Butler, 7 p.m.
New Providence at Cedar Grove, 7 p.m.
BOYS SOCCER
GROUP I SECTIONAL FINALS
South: Palmyra-Woodstown winner vs. Haddon Twp.-Schalick winner
Central: Brearley-Shore winner vs. College Achieve-Roselle Park winner
North I: Lenape Valley-Emerson Boro winner vs. Indian Hills-Waldwick winner
North II: Wallington-Glen Ridge winner vs. Verona-New Providence winner

SATURDAY
CROSS COUNTRY
Meet of Champions, Holmdel Park
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Lehigh Carbon CC at Salem CC, 2 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Lehigh Carbon CC at Salem CC, noon

Group I championship

Girls runner-up Hadfield, Marino score top 10 finishes to qualify for Meet of Champions; Woodstown boys’ position impacted when Chew’s tag didn’t register at the finish

By Riverview Sports News

HOLMDEL – Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield and Woodstown’s Jacob Marino both finished in the top 10 of their respective Group I cross country championship races Saturday to qualify for next week’s Meet of Champions back here at Holmdel Park.

Hadfield, the runner-up in last week’s sectional race at DREAM Park, finished second in the girls Group I championship race in a time of 19:25. Walkill Valley’s Delana Einreinhofer won the race in 19:08.

Marino was ninth in the boys race, running a 17:17. The top 10 runners in each race qualify for the MOC.

Woodstown’s girls finished ninth in their team standings, while Schalick was 18th. Abby Marino and Lilian Norman virtually finished side-by-side in 21:18 to lead the Wolverines.

“We were elated with our top 10 team finish and look forward to earning our spot again next year,” Woodstown coach Michelle Williams said. “The team was thrilled to see they had outscored the other Group 1 South teams they had fallen to just last Saturday at the sectionals.”

Woodstown (16th) and Schalick (19th) both finished out of the top 15 in the boys standings. The Wolverines’ position and that of county champion Karson Chew were greatly impacted when Chew’s runner’s tag wasn’t read coming through the finishing chute after running what coach Steve New described as “a decent race.”

UPDATE: Chew ran an 18:18, which would have been T-43 (36th among team counters). It would have elevated Woodstown to 11th place with 291 points.

A shooter’s touch

After a cold first half, Ramos hits 5 3-pointers to spark run that lifts Salem CC past Delaware County CC for first season-opening win since 2021

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – Mike Green doesn’t hold back when he says Josh Ramos could easily be the top 3-point shooter in the league, region or any other classification you want to put the Salem Community College basketball team in. And the sophomore shooter did nothing to dispel his coach’s confidence in Saturday’s season opener, especially in the second half.

RAMOS

Ramos nailed five straight 3-pointers – each farther out than the next – during a four and a half minute stretch midway through the second half that gave the Mighty Oaks control of their 81-73 win over Delaware County CC at the DuPont Fieldhouse.

It was their first win in a season opener since 2021-22 when they beat the Eastern University JV 67-56.

“He’s just like a little microwave,” Green said. “He’s a spark. He’s a big spark.

“Once you see one go through you’d better come back to him again. You probably have to come back to him for the next four minutes until he’s burnt up. He’s one of those type players you’ve got to go right there to him.”

And that’s exactly they did. Ramos was just 1-of-4 from behind the arc in the first half as teams battled to a 35-35 draw, but he got hot after halftime, going 5-for-5 during a 19-7 run that took the Oaks from 48-45 down to 64-55 with 9:45 to play. He finished with 18 points.

“The first half, I don’t know, I could tell it was long, but I came into the second half mentality-wise like I’m going to keep my head up, get in the game and if he started me for the second I came here (and started hitting),” Ramos said. “My teammates were finding me, I was just letting it go and the confidence just kept building. As the half went on … we won.”

He went bang-bang-bang on three straight possessions, tying the game, putting the Oaks up for good and extending the lead. The fourth came from out near the Salem logo. 

“After I hit the first four it was no-brainer, I was just letting it go,” he said. “Shooters shoot, that’s all I can say.”

“He should have had more, he should’ve had eight,” Green said. “We need to do a better job of finding him.”

Ramos was one of the best 3-point shooters in the region last year, hitting 60 of 146 in 23 games (41.1 percent) and 42 of 96 in conference play (42.9). He was sixth in the league in number and top 10 in percentage playing six fewer games than the leader. He wants to be the No. 1 3-ball in the league.

He was 8-of-20 in six games before Green became the Oaks’ coach shortly before Christmas, but flourished in the role after the change. He had one three-game stretch in early February in which he went 18-of-31.

“Anytime Josh’s on the floor, we’re going to Josh,” Green said. “Everybody knows it. We had a meeting. I told them we only run plays for three people and really it’s only Josh. They know. The team knows.”

If Ramos’ goal is to be the No. 1 3-point shooter in the league, A.J. Jones’ goal is to be the No. 1 defensive player. He got off to a impressive start Saturday. He had 14 points – all in the first half – but also had several several steals, assists and rebounds and did what Green called a “wonderful” job on Delco’s Darrius Best, holding one of the region’s best guards to 14 points on 5-of-19 shooting.

It was his steal and layup in the final 10 seconds that earned the Oaks their 35-35 halftime draw.

“He didn’t play well in our last scrimmage and I challenged him,” Green said. “We challenged him big time and he responded.”

Saturday’s game kicked off a busy week for the Mighty Oaks. They play three games next week in doubleheaders with the women’s team and play their first seven games in their House of Pane.

“It can give great confidence, but it can give false confidence, too, because it’s a different game on the road and we saw that last year,” Green said. “It was tough on the road. But I’ll the other side of it, I’ll take the confidence.”

SALEM CC 81, DELAWARE CO. CC 73
DELAWARE CO. (1-1) –
Cameron Daut 1 2-2 4, Jabree Martin 6 2-2 16, Omar Davis 5 3-5 13, Evan Vandelti Spahr 3 1-1 8, Jaquan Fisher 3 3-4 9, Darrius Best 5 2-2 14, Luke Bushra 0 0-0 0, Tahmeire Manning 1 2-4 7, Amir Wilson 0 0-0 0, Stephen Rosemin 1 0-0 2. Totals 25 15-20 72 71.
SALEM CC (1-0) – Dontarius Jones 1 1-2 3, Niame Scott 1 7-8 10, Tyrese Fortune 2 1-2 5, Tyrone Tolson 2 0-0 5, Rodney Shelton 1 1-2 3, Julien Jones 0 1-2 1, A.J. Jones 6 0-1 14, Josh Ramos 6 0-0 18, Xavier Brewington 4 3-4 12, Stefan Phillips 3 2-2 8, Sami Anderson 1 0-0 2. Totals 27 16-23 81.

Delaware Co. CC3538–73
Salem CC3546–81

3-point goals: DCCC 6 (Martin 2, Vandelti-Spahr, Best 2, Manning); Salem 11 (Tolson, Brewington, A. Jones 2, Ramos 6, Scott).

Cover photo: Josh Ramos puts up one of his five second-half 3-pointers in Salem CC’s season-opening win.