District distinction

Penns Grove’s Bobo channels his inner Rocky, wins district title, MOW award; 17 Salem County wrestlers qualify for Region 8

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SEWELL – Don’t know if Penns Grove’s Clinton Bobo is a big fan of the Rocky movies, but the way he took it to his opponent in his district title match Saturday it reminded a lot of people of the way America’s favorite underdog took down the massive Ivan Drago in Rocky IV.

Giving up six inches to Paulsboro’s Evan Holloway, he pinned the Red Raiders senior 39 seconds into the second period to win the District 32 175 title – and the admiration of the coaches who voted him Most Outstanding Wrestler of the tournament.

“It was just so beautiful,” Bobo said. “One of my coaches kept telling me you don’t understand how much of a chance you have at winning first place in districts. I missed it last year so we’ll have to see. It was just really awesome.

“Then (up on the podium) they said ‘Penns Grove’ and I was like, “Is that really me?’ It was such a great experience. I’ll definitely remember it forever.”

The turning point of the match came in the first period after Holloway dropped Bobo once and let him up just to drop him again, this time with an elbow to the eye that required injury time. It enraged the Red Devils senior and he went on the attack.

Starting the second period from a neutral position down 6-2, Bobo flipped his taller opponent over his left hip – a move he said he and teammate Tre Brown had been working on the last two weeks – got control of him in the middle of the mat and finished off the pin.

Any similarity to person or persons dead or alive may be just a coincidence in the movies, but it wasn’t lost on Penns Grove athletics director Anwar Golden.

“That’s exactly what happened in Rocky IV when he (Rocky) made the Russian bleed,” Golden said. “When he saw that drop of blood from the Russian, that was it. It was like that. He’s not a machine.”

“It’s almost like something hit him and he woke up,” Penns Grove coach Chuck Weigle said. “It was like he came to life and … boom.”

Bobo called the comparison to the Rocky film “a perfect representation.”

“After he took me down the second time he went up to the crowd and showed a ‘T’ with his hands saying he was going to try to tech fall me,” Bobo said. “I ended up pinning him and so many people started just yelling ‘tech fall where,’ ‘tech fall how.’ It was crazy.”

Bobo won all three of his matches by pin – in 12 seconds (fastest of the tournament), 4:45 and 2:39. He’s the first Penns Grove wrestler to win a MOW in the postseason since Tyreke Brown won it in the 2019 region tournament and the first to win it a district tournament as far as any of the coaches can remember.

Amazingly, he has only been wrestling two years. A full-time student at Salem Vo-Tech, which doesn’t offer wrestling, he joined the team from his home district school at the urging of another Vo-Tech student established on the team, heavyweight Wayne Scott. He didn’t have anything planned after Vo-Tech’s soccer season so he accepted the challenge.

He took to it right away, posting 20 wins in his debut season and finishing second in the district tournament. The only reason he wasn’t the No. 1 seed in his weight class this weekend was he lost the top seed (who Holloway beat in the semifinals) 7-6 in a dual match earlier this year.
 
“No. 1, he is strong as an ox and has got a chiseled frame,” Weigle said. “He’s a student of the sport and he’s always asking questions.”

Last year Bobo was the only Penns Grove wrestler to reach the regions, which made the experience a little uncomfortable. This year he is one of three Red Devils advancing to next week’s Region 8 tournament at Williamstown, along with 285 runner-up Scott and 150 third-place finisher Tre Brown.

Salem County’s other 14 region qualifiers all came out of the District 30 meet at Delsea. 

Pennsville’s Brett Land (106), Schalick’s undefeated Ricky Watt (165) and Woodstown’s Travis Balback (132) and Mateo Vinciguerra (285) won district titles. Vinciguerra’s win for the 285 district title was the 99th of his high school career.

Woodstown and Schalick finished 2-3 in the District 30 team standings. Schalick coach Joe Frassenei was recognized as the District 30 Coach of the Year.

District 30

TEAM SCORES: Delsea 295.5; WOODSTOWN 148.5; SCHALICK 113; Millville 103.5; Cumberland 97.5; PENNSVILLE 92.5; Gateway/Woodbury 38.5; Cedar Creek 33, Buena 32, Vineland 24

REGION QUALIFIERS
106: 
Brett Land, Pennsville; Hunter Allen, Woodstown; Reid Lightfoot, Delsea
113: DeAnthony Harden, Cumberland; Christian Snyder, Gateway/Woodbury; Chase Bordley, Vineland
120: Amari Vann, Delsea; Carson Bradway, Woodstown; Ruben Cruz, Millville
126: Gage Summers, Delsea; Luke Silva, Schalick; Aidan Barbato, Gateway Reg/ Woodbury
132: Travis Balback, Woodstown; Ryan Miller, Schalick; Jamison Devlin, Delsea
138: Zavier Stokes, Delsea; Patrick Tull, Millville; Gabe Supernavage, Pennsville
144: Cameron Pote, Delsea; Daniel Lloyd, Cumberland; Lucas Gellura, Buena
150: Jamar Dixon, Delsea; Ayden Jenkins, Schalick; Michael Carastro, Cumberland
157: Riley Boos, DelseaBrett Rowand, WoodstownColin Prokson, Millville
165: Ricky Watt, Schalick; Mar`Quis Allen, Millville; Charles Six, Delsea
175: Joel Anderson, Delsea; Greyson Hyland, Woodstown; Sebron Hall-Jones, Cumberland
190: Greg Sawyer, Delsea; Connor Ayars, Pennsville; Braden Cattlet, Millville
215: Salvatore Marchese, Delsea; Walter Carter, Woodstown; Jayden Jones, Millville
285: Mateo Vinciguerra, Woodstown; Alex Grippo, Delsea; Slayton D`Amico, Cedar Creek

CHAMPIONSHIP MATCHES
106:
 Brett Land (Pennsville) tech fall over Hunter Allen (Woodstown), 15-0 (2:16)
113: DeAnthony Harden (Cumberland) maj. dec. Christian Snyder (Gateway/Woodbury), 15-4
120: Amari Vann (Delsea) pinned Carson Bradway (Woodstown), 2:26
126: Gage Summers (Delsea) tech fall over Luke Silva (Schalick), 20-3 (2:28)
132: Travis Balback (Woodstown) tech fall over Ryan Miller (Schalick), 18-1 (1:27
138: Zavier Stokes (Delsea) pinned Patrick Tull (Millville), 1:01
144: Cameron Pote (Delsea) pinned Daniel Lloyd (Cumberland), 3:12
150: Jamar Dixon (Delsea) tech fall over Ayden Jenkins (Schalick), 18-3 (1:36)
157: Riley Boos (Delsea) pinned Brett Rowand (Woodstown), 1:13
165: Ricky Watt (Schalick) dec. MarQuis Allen (Millville), 10-6
175: Joel Anderson (Delsea) pinned Greyson Hyland (Woodstown), 3:38
190: Greg Sawyer (Delsea) tech fall over Connor Ayars (Pennsville), 15-0 (3:31)
215: Salvatore Marchese (Delsea) pinned Walter Carter (Woodstown), 2:55
285: Mateo Vinciguerra (Woodstown) dec. Alex Grippo (Delsea), 6-1

THIRD-PLACE MATCHES
106:
 Reid Lightfoot (Delsea) pinned Sincere Wilcox (Cedar Creek), 1:05
113: Chase Bordley (Vineland) pinned Luke Senn (Cedar Creek), 0:40
120: Ruben Cruz (Millville) dec. Kolton Sheppard (Cumberland), 12-10
126: Aidan Barbato (Gateway/Woodbury) pinned Zach Cohen (Buena), 1:23
132: Jamison Devlin (Delsea) pinned Chad Sciore (Vineland), 1:50
138: Gabe Supernavage (Pennsville) dec. Gionni Sharkey (Buena), 11-5
144: Lucas Gellura (Buena) pinned Travis Hagan (Pennsville), 0:17
150: Michael Carastro (Cumberland) pinned Ryan Tepper (Millville), 0:46
157: Colin Prokson (Millville) maj. dec. Riley Papiano (Schalick), 12-1
165: Charles Six (Delsea) pinned Gabriel Rodriguez (Cumberland), 1:55
175: Sebron Hall-Jones (Cumberland) pinned Joseph Halstread (Pennsville), 0:41
190: Braden Cattlet (Millville) pinned Evan Elliott (Schalick), 1:46
215: Jayden Jones (Millville) pinned Gerardo Felipe (Schalick), 2:57
285: Slayton D’Amico (Cedar Creek) pinned Trevor Waddington (Pennsville), 1:55

District 32

TEAM SCORES: St. Augustine 277.5, Paulsboro 217, Clearview 133.5, Deptford 80, PENNS GROVE 77, Clayton/Glassboro 71, Pitman 50, Lindenwold 45.5; SALEM 8

SALEM COUNTY REGION QUALIFIERS
150: 3. Tre Brown, Penns Grove
175: 1. Clinton Bobo, Penns Grove
285: 2. Wayne Scott, Penns Grove

CHAMPIONSHIP MATCHES
106:
 Will Cruz (Paulsboro) dec. Chase Sudano (St. Augustine), 2-0
113: J.D. Christmann (St. Augustine) dec. Antonio Chila (Paulsboro), 14-7
120: Aundre Hill (Paulsboro) maj. dec. Richie Wootten (St. Augustine), 14-6
(Third place: Deny Ramos (Lindenwold) tech fall over Devine Arce (Penns Grove), 18-3)
126: Carter Pack (St. Augustine) tech fall over Hayden Holmes (Paulsboro), 19-2 (5:52)
132: Jean Paul Bonnette (St. Augustine) pinned Anthony Morales (Clearview), 1:41
138: Jaylen Huertas (Deptford) pinned Adrian Arbelo (St. Augustine), 1:21
144: Anthony DePaul (St. Augustine) pinned Brandon Caro (Lindenwold), 0:57
150: Johnny Chirico (St. Augustine) maj. dec. Kyare Harvey (Paulsboro), 13-2
(Third place: Tre Brown (Penns Grove) dec. Steven Benkert (Clayton/Glassboro), 11-4)
157: Kole Reiss (Clearview) pinned Xavier Harvey (St. Augustine), 4:53
165: Tyler Trovato (Clearview) pinned Luke Ward (St. Augustine), 4:16
175: Clinton Bobo (Penns Grove) pinned Evan Holloway (Paulsboro), 2:39
190: Ron Kraus (St. Augustine) tech fall over Aaron Veytsman (Clearview), 17-1 (4:24) 
(Third place: Dante Scott (Paulsboro) pinned Julian Espino (Penns Grove), 3:43)
215: Aiden Milward (Pitman) dec. Frank Damminger (Paulsboro), TB-1 5-2
(Third place: Jeffrey Smith (Clayton/Glassboro) dec. Abdur Jenkins (Salem), 8-2)
285: Nate Mason (Clearview) tech fall over Wayne Scott (Penns Grove), 16-0 (4:45)

This week’s schedule

Here is this week’s Salem County sports schedule for the week of Feb. 23-March 1

SUNDAY, FEB. 23
TRACK
NJSIAA Group I Championship, Bennett Center, Toms River
WRESTLING
NJSIAA Girls South Regionals, Absegami
COLLEGE BASEBALL

Sussex CC vs. Salem CC (2), MSI Chichester, noon

MONDAY, FEB. 24
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Penns Grove at Salem, 4 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Genesee CC at Salem CC, 2 p.m.

TUESDAY, FEB. 25
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Gloucester Catholic at Salem, 4 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26
BOYS BASKETBALL
South Jersey Group I Tournament
(16) Wildwood at (1) Pitman, 5:30 p.m.
(9) Burlington City at (8) Penns Grove, 5:30 p.m.
(12) Glassboro at (5) Woodbury, 5 p.m.
(13) Paulsboro at (4) Audubon, 4 p.m.
(14) Clayton at (3) Haddon Twp., 7:30 p.m.
(11) Salem at (6) Palmyra, 6 p.m.
(10) New Egypt at (7) Woodstown, 7 p.m.
(15) Maple Shade at (2) KIPP Cooper Norcross, 5 p.m.
GIRLS BASKETBALL
South Jersey Group I Tournament
(16) Schalick at (1) Haddon Twp., 5:30 p.m.
(9) Glassboro at (8) Penns Grove, 4 p.m.
(12) Cape May Tech at (5) Audubon
(13) Gateway at (4) Woodstown, 5:30 p.m.
(14) Riverside at (3) Wildwood
(11) Woodbury at (6) Pennsville, 5 p.m.
(10) Burlington City at (7) Clayton, 5 p.m.
(15) New Egypt at (2) Palmyra
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Region XIX Division III Tournament
Salem CC at CC of Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Brookdale at Montgomery
Atlantic Cape at Union
Camden at Northampton

FRIDAY, FEB. 28
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Brookdale at Salem CC, 1:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, MARCH 1
BOYS BASKETBALL
South Jersey Group I Tournament
Wildwood-Pitman vs. Burlington City-Penns Grove
Glassboro-Woodbury vs. Paulsboro-Audubon
Clayton-Haddon Twp. vs. Salem-Palmyra
New Egypt-Woodstown vs. Maple Shade-KIPP Cooper Norcross
GIRLS BASKETBALL
South Jersey Group I Tournament
Schalick-Haddon Twp. vs. Glassboro-Penns Grove
Cape May Tech-Audubon vs. Gateway-Woodstown
Riverside-Wildwood vs. Woodbury-Pennsville
Burlington City-Clayton vs. New Egypt-Palmyra
WRESTLING
Region 8 Championships, Egg Harbor Twp., 9 a.m.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
North Atlantic Championship
At Northampton
(Two winners advance to national tournament)
A: Camden-Northampton winner vs. Atlantic Cape-Union winner, noon
B: Salem-Philadelphia winner vs. Brookdale-Montgomery winner, 3 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Salem CC at Brookdale CC (2), noon
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Monroe-Bronx at Salem CC (2), noon

Making a statement

Salem solidifies its position as a tough out in the playoffs after winning Tri-County B Flight as a No. 8 seed; Farmer: I wouldn’t want to see us

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

GLASSBORO – Salem coach Anthony Farmer stood out on the floor, surrounded by his jubilant players, holding the plaque that signified them as tournament champions and knowing it’s only the beginning.

“We got hardware,” he told the players as all they reached in to touch it. “We want more. We want more.”

The Rams won the overachievers B Flight of the Tri-County Conference Showcase Friday night, but they also won something more.

Their us-against-the-world tour continued with a 66-53 victory over Glassboro and the message it sent resounded louder than the music blaring over the gym sound system during game breaks.

It was as if they were telling the world – well, at least the state of New Jersey – seed us as low as you want, we’re going to be tough to handle in the state tournament.

The Rams won the middle bracket of their conference tournament as the No. 8 seed in the flight – effectively the 16th overall seed – and won three straight games on the road by double digits to make it happen. They face a similar road (pun intended) in the South Jersey Group I tournament, where they’ve been installed as the 11th seed in a 16-team field.

“Putting us down there even though we know we’re not supposed to be there, it put a chip on our shoulder,” sophomore guard Tymear Lecator said. “We knew who we are, we knew the type of team we are, we knew these guys can’t really stay with us. It gave us a chip on our shoulder – we’re all we got, we’re all we need – and we came in and did what we had to do.”

Salem center Antwuan Rogers celebrates with his teammates after the Rams were given the championship plaque for winning the TCC B Flight.

The Rams may have been an 11-12 team when the TCC tournament started at the beginning of the week, but they’ve been playing more like the 18-8 team they would have been if the NJSIAA hadn’t stripped them of four wins in January due to an ineligible player.

They’ve played with a chip on their shoulder ever since and that makes even more dangerous when the game is on the line. They’ve gone 11-5 since the ruling and now have won five in a row.

“It was really about showing everybody what we can do really do,” senior forward Azhone Burden said. “We went through a lot this season. Everybody’s been thinking we were just done. We’re coming to show them we’re really good.”

“We want to prove we can win it all, that we’re the best,” sophomore Deshaan Williams added.

That mindset was on full display in the fourth quarter, when they turned their game up a notch and pulled away from a 44-44 tie to win. With Tymear Lecator handling the ball and getting to the line, and Williams and Burden delivering big baskets and rebounds, the Rams outscored their hosts 22-9 in the fourth quarter to turn a close game into a rout.

“It’s really a testament to everything we’ve been through,” Farmer said. “Things that have happened to us all year, it’s just been blow after blow after blow. That’s fine. We preach basketball is really a game of life. We fought through adversity and I’m really proud of my guys.

“Tonight we grew up a little bit – we’ve been growing up – and were able to get on the other side of it by making the plays we needed to make down the stretch. We made some errors, but overall we made more plays down the stretch that got us over the hump.”

Lecator returned to the floor after serving a two-game suspension for his ejection in the Penns Grove game and led the Rams with 26 points and seven assists. He was 11-of-13 from the line, 8-for-10 in the fourth quarter. Williams had 11 points and 10 rebounds. Burden scored all six of his points in the 13-3 run that opened the fourth quarter.

“I definitely wanted to get back there, I’ve been wanting to be back,” Lecator said. “We’ve been playing a great brand of basketball recently so I definitely wanted to get back and play with my guys and keep that going into the playoffs.

“It was fun. I missed being back out there. I knew what it was going to be, I knew what type of game this was going to be, and I was excited to play in it.”

Salem guard Tymear Lecator (L) directs the Rams’ offense while Glassboro defender Kenny Smith eyes making a move on the ball.

Kenny Smith led Glassboro, the sixth seed in the flight, with 25 points. He scored the Bulldogs’ first seven points of the game. Xavier Sabb had 12, including a dunk that beat the second quarter buzzer and gave the Bulldogs a 30-29 halftime lead.

It was a play that had the potential to be a huge momentum grabber. Devon Barr stole the ball in front of the scorer’s table and blindly flipped it backwards onto the court of play. Sabb collected it near midcourt and drove hard to the basket, finishing it off with a thunderous dunk right before the horn sounded.

Fortunately for the Rams, the halftime break helped keep a lid on the emotion of the play, so they weren’t worried about it becoming a firestarter. Neither team led by more than four in the second half until the Rams pulled away in the fourth quarter.

The ruling that took away those early wins also slowed Farmer’s run to 100 career wins. Friday he officially picked up No. 99. He can reach the milestone with an opening-round win in the SJ Group I tournament Wednesday at sixth-seeded Palmyra. 

To reach the Final Four, the Rams potentially would have to go through the 1, 2 and 3 seeds – all on the road. The Rams have as many or more “on the floor” wins this season than all three of those teams.

“I think you should really be nervous,” Farmer warned the Rams’ potential playoff opponents. “I wouldn’t want to see us.

“(No. 100) will be a great milestone when it comes. I’m all about survive and advance. I want to win for the guys. I want to win for the city. That’s (milestone) great along the way, but my overall goal is to bring some hardware back to Salem.”

And he didn’t mean the plaque the Rams were holding Friday night.

SALEM 66, GLASSBORO 53
SALEM (14-12) –
Donovan Weathers 0 0-0 0, Xavier McGriff 2 1-2 7, Neziah Spence 4 2-2 13, Tymear Lecator 6 11-13 26, Deshaan Williams 5 1-4 11, Darrelle Johnson 0 0-0 0, Antwuan Rogers 1 1-2 3, Joe Tunis 0 0-0 0, Azhone Burden 3 0-0 6. Totals 21 16-23 66.
GLASSBORO (10-15) – Xavier Sabb 4 3-6 12, Tre Thomas 1 2-4 4, Kenny Smith 7 9-12 25, Davon Barr 2 0-0 4, Will Boggans 0 0-0 0, Marley Crowl 2 1-2 6, Aiden Harris 1 0-0 2. Totals 17 15-24 53.

Salem9201522-66
Glassboro1416149-53
3-point goals: Salem 8 (McGriff 2, Spence 3, Lecator 3); Glassboro 4 (Sabb, Smith 2, Crowl). Rebounds: Salem 32 (Williams 10); Glassboro 24 (Smith 6). Fouled out: Spence, Sabb. Total fouls: Salem 21, Glassboro 22.
Salem’s Xavier McGriff encourages the crowd to get into it as the Rams close out Glassboro to win the B Flight of the Tri-County Conference Tournament.




Top of the line

Woodstown’s Battavio becomes Wolverines’ all-time leading scorer in girls basketball; Schalick, Penns Grove girls fall short after rallying to get back in their game; Salem boys to play for TCC B Flight title

TCC GIRLS TOURNAMENT
Washington Twp. 46, Woodstown 39
Clearview 65, Pennsville 46
Delsea 42, Penns Grove 39
Deptford 44, Schalick 41
Highland 63, Salem Tech 38
TCC BOYS TOURNAMENT
Salem 88, Gloucester Catholic 76
Woodstown 69, Penns Grove 41

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SEWELL – Back when she was a middle schooler Talia Battavio can remember walking into the Woodstown gym to watch the players she looked up to as a young basketball player, glancing at the banner with all the school’s big scorers on it and thinking how neat it would be to have her name on the list someday.

She earned her place on the big board last year when she hit 1,000 points, but now she’s moved all the way to the top of it.

Battavio hit a 3-pointer early in the third quarter Thursday night to become Woodstown’s all-time leading scorer in girls basketball. Sadly, the emotion of the milestone wasn’t enough to carry the Wolverines to victory and they fell to second-seeded Washington Twp. 46-39 in the Tri-County Conference A Flight semifinals.

“I don’t think it’s like really hit me yet; I think when the season’s over (it will),” she said. “But it’s a big accomplishment and I couldn’t have done it without my teammates and all my coaches who have gotten me to where I am today. It is a huge accomplishment and I’ve very grateful.”

The Goldey-Beacom signee needed seven points to pass Tori Smick as Woodstown’s all-time leading scorer in the girls game, but said she wasn’t even thinking about it as the game got underway. In fact, she admitted being surprised when they called time to recognize the feat.

She tied the record in a low-scoring first half and had to sit on it through halftime. She reset the standard that stood for 12 years in typical Talia fashion, hitting a 3-pointer from the left corner 25 seconds into the third quarter. More than one-third of her career points have come from behind the 3-point arc.

“On my 1,000th, I hit it on a foul shot, so I think it was pretty cool for (the record-breaking points) to be a 3-pointer,” she said.

Battavio finished with 24 points in the game and now has 1,584 points for her career. The only player in school history with more points is boys leading scorer Joe Hickman, who wrapped up his 1,726-point career in 1972.

She is now the fifth leading scorer in Salem County girls history, having also surpassed Schalick’s Tia Furbush on the county girls list. No. 4 is Salem’s Brittany Smith (1623), a rung on the ladder Battavio could reach in the upcoming South Jersey Group I tournament.

“I remember going to the high school games in middle school and I told myself, I would look at the banner and I knew I was going to do it,” she said. “Really, just (for) the thousand, but this was like the cherry on top. This was a really big accomplishment for me.”

Battavio has always been a scorer. She dropped 260 points as a freshman, 395 as a sophomore and made a big move last season with 539., getting both her 100th 3-pointer and 1,000th career point. She also has 183 3-pointers, more than 230 assists and is closing in on 200 steals.

“Talia is a great player,” Woodstown coach Matt Smart said. “Credit has to go to her family, also to (her coaches) and all the teammates that have come before her, and she’ll tell you that. It is an individual record, but she didn’t do it all. There are lots of people along the way who have helped her.

“My favorite part of the night was when she got it, and it was a big shot in the game, seeing all the other girls go up and hug her and congratulate her. Talia, all year, through the ups and downs, never lost her confidence. She’s never afraid to shoot the ball and I’ll never take that away from her. When she has the ball in her hands and she’s shooting it, we’re confident it has a pretty good shot of going in.

“It’s incredible to see her growth throughout her hs career. I saw her play her freshman, sophomore and junior years and now having the blessing and opportunity to be her coach, she’s great.”

But she isn’t the only Woodstown player chasing history. Her running mate, the other half of the Wolverines’ dynamic duo, Megan Donelson, likely will pass Smick as well. She’s sitting at 1,548 points.

Now that record is squared away, Battavio’s mindset going forward is “focusing on going far.” The Wolverines open the South Jersey Group I Tournament next week as the No. 4 seed hosting Gateway. Barring upsets along the way, their path to the Final Four will run through Audubon, Haddon Twp. and Wildwood.

“I’m just playing basketball,” she said. “I’m letting my shots come to me and not forcing anything. However (the point total) ends up it ends up.”

The loss Thursday night snapped a six-game winning streak. The Wolverines trailed 18-16 at halftime. They missed an agonizing number of shots around the basket and Washington Twp. started pulling away.

“When we play these bigger group schools … it’s obviously a test for us and a challenge where we’re playing a more physical style basketball and we have to step up to the challenge,” Smart said. “Sometimes we do a very good job of doing that and then there are other times that we struggle.

“I never question the girls desire to win the game, but we have to find a way to get shots to fall under the basket under pressure and tonight was just a night they weren’t falling. We took good quality shots, they just weren’t falling.”

Alaina LaMonica hit five 3-pointers and led the Minutemaids (18-5) with 21 points. They now play top-seeded Gloucester Catholic (21-4) for the A Flight championship.

WASHINGTON TWP. 46, WOODSTOWN 39
WOODSTOWN (17-6) –
 Talia Battavio 8 6-6 24, Megan Donelson 3 3-4 9, Kyia Leyman 1 2-5 4, Emma Perry 1 0-0 2, Gianna Maiorini 0 0-0 0, Lauren Hengel 0 0-0 0, Ryann Foote 0 0-0 0. Totals 13 11-15 39. WASHINGTON TWP. (17-7) – Leah Roe 1 0-0 2, Shyla McLean 1 1-2 4, Frankie Begley 3 0-0 6, Elena Dabrowski 1 1-1 3, Kate D’Ottaviano 4 2-4 10, Alaina LaMonica 7 2-3 21. Totals 17 6-10 46.

Woodstown4121013-39
Washington Twp.991612-46
3-point goals: Woodstown 2 (Battavio 2); Washington Twp. 6 (McLean, LaMonica 5). Total fouls: Woodstown 12.

DEPTFORD 44, SCHALICK 41: The Cougars rallied from a 10-point halftime deficit with a strong second half. They had a chance to tie the C Flight semifinal in the final 15 seconds but missed two layups.

“We played a great second half (with) much more energy and up tempo, more confident,” Cougars coach John Whalen said.

A pair of freshmen led the comeback. Olivia Vanacker scored all 10 of her points in the second half, with Nevaeh Robinson tossing in eight of her team-high 12.

SCHALICK (6-17) – Cali Fisler 0 4-6 4, Ava Scurry 2 1-5 5, Abby Willoughby 0 1-2 1, Olivia Vanacker 4 2-2 10, Nevaeh Robinson 5 2-2 12, Willow Davis 2 2-3 7, Carly Vicente 1 0-0 2. Totals 14 12-19 41.
DEPTFORD (10-12) – Kylie Galantic 0, Rachel Farr 0, Zakyah Babb 2, Chaylin Morina 13, Brenna Ivey 7, McKenna Crowley 9, Madeline Anderson 6, Sanai Green 7.

Schalick961610-41
Deptford1015117-44
3-point goals: Schalick 1 (Davis); Deptford 1 (Green). Fouled out: Robinson. Total fouls: Schalick 25, Deptford 15.

HIGHLAND 63, SALEM TECH 38: The Tartans got big games from Sage Shaw and Tajai Webb to snap a five-game losing streak and score their second win of the season. Shaw scored 30 points and grabbed 30 rebounds, and Webb scored 20 points.

Shelby Liber hit four of Salem Tech’s seven 3-pointers and led the Chargers with 12 points.

HIGHLAND (2-23) – Tajai Webb 9 0-0 20, Sage Shaw 12 6-12 30, Yoselin Basantes 0 0-0 0, Christiana Crawford 1 0-0 2, Wilkaliry Rodriguez 0 0-0 0, Samantha Mattia 3 0-0 6, Keymiyah Shinholster 2 0-0 5. Totals 27 6-12 63.
SALEM TECH (2-20) – Kaylin Beardsley 1 2-4 4, Hannah Dewitt 0 2-2 2, Rylee Doerr 1 0-0 2, Demajae White 2 0-0 4, Shelby Drummond 3 0-0 8, Shelby Liber 4 0-0 12, Tiara Bazemore 1 0-0 3, Amora Delaine 1 1-4 3. Totals 13 5-10 38.

Highland15172110-63
Salem Tech118811-38
3-point goals: Highland 3 (Webb 2, Shinholster); Salem Tech 7 (Drummond 2, Liber 4, Bazemore).

CLEARVIEW 65, PENNSVILLE 46: Juliette Mirigliani hit career-high seven 3-pointers on the way to a career-high 38 points and the Pioneers held two of Pennsville’s top three scorers to five points each to win the A Flight consolation game. Mirigliani, a junior, has scored 65 points in the Pioneers’ two tournament games. 

Taylor Bass led Pennsville with 17 points. The Pioneers held 1,000-point scorers Marley Wood and Nora Ausland to five points each.

PENNSVILLE (17-9) – Taylor Bass 5 6-6 17, Marley Wood 2 0-0 5, Nora Ausland 2 0-0 5, Addie Johnston 5 0-0 12, Izzy Saulin 1 0-0 2, Jaida Burns 2 1-2 5, Ashlyn Fredo 0 0-0 0. Totals 17 7-8 46. 
CLEARVIEW (13-11) – Hannah Meloro 0 0-0 0, Hannan Richman 0 0-0 0, Sienna Maysonet 0 0-0 0, Claudia Webb 2 102 3, Alessia Lombardi 2 3-4 7, Leah Kelly 0 0-0 0, Cameron McGovern 0 0-0 0, Brett Foster 2 0-0 4, Jilian Guzzardo 4 1-1 11, Casey Maxwell 1 0-0 2, Juliette Mirigliani 15 1-2 38. Totals 26 6-9 65.

Pennsville9111511-46
Clearview24121316-65
3-point goals: Pennsville 5 (Bass, Wood, Ausland, Johnston 2); Clearview 9 (Guzzardo 2, Mirigliani 7).

DELSEA 42, PENNS GROVE 39: The Red Devils came from 13 points down in the first half to turn this B Flight semifinal into a battle, but just couldn’t finish it off at the end.

Penns Grove trailed 24-11 in the second quarter, but rallied behind RaNiyah Wilson and JaNiyah Cummings to cut its deficit to six at halftime. The Red Devils ramped up their defense in the second half and eventually took their first lead of the game on a layup by Wilson with 1:22 left in the third quarter.

A 3-pointer by Wilson gave Penns Grove a 36-33 lead with 5:13 to play, but Delsea scored the next eight points and never trailed again. Another 3 by Wilson with 56 seconds to go made it 41-39. Delsea tried to help the Red Devils by missing five of six free throws in the final 42 seconds, but the Red Devils were denied on a layup and had another shot rim out leaving them only a desperation heave at the buzzer that hit the backboard.

Wilson finished with a game-high 19 points. Cummings had 15.

Delsea168810-42
Penns Grove8101110-39

Boys
Complete game carries Salem to final

GLOUCESTER CITY – The Rams played perhaps their most complete game of the year in beating Gloucester Catholic for the third time this season, 88-76, for a spot in the B Flight title game as the No. 8 seed.

“Tonight was the first game we played 32 minutes; we played very well,” Salem coach Anthony Farmer said after securing career win No. 98. “Followed the game plan, executed the game plan, played hard and played together. I was really, really impressed with our win tonight.”

The Rams (13-12) scored 20 points or more in every quarter. Eight players scored and six had eight points or more.

Xavier McGriff led the offense with 23 points. Antwuan Rogers had a double-double with 13 points and 13 rebounds. Deshaan Williams had 12 points and eight rebounds. Darrelle Johnston had six points, seven rebounds and seven assists. Joe Tunis had 10 points and seven boards, and senior transfer Azhone Burden had what Farmer called “his best all-around night in a Rams uniform,” with nine points, seven rebounds, three assists and two steals.

GC’s Carlos Mendez led all scorers with 34 points. Jack Mustaro, their all-time leading scorer, had 18.

Salem will play at Glassboro, the No. 6 seed, for the B Flight title. The game is scheduled for Saturday, but because of an apparent conflict at Glassboro, the game is tentatively set for Friday.

The teams played earlier this season with the Bulldogs winning 76-62, but the Rams didn’t have Rogers that night. The junior post was in Texas on a football trip, but he’ll be fully available for this one. They’ll also have leading scorer Tymear Lecator back after serving his two-game penalty from last week’s ejection.

SALEM (13-12) – Donovan Weathers 3 1-2 7, Xavier McGriff 9 2-4 23, Neziah Spence 2 3-4 8, Deshaan Williams 5 2-3 12, Darrelle Johnson 2 2-2 6, Joe Tunis 3 3-4 10, Antwuan Rogers 6 1-1 13, Azhone Burden 4 1-1 9. Totals 34 15-22 88.
GLOUCESTER CATHOLIC (11-15) – Carlos Mendez 11 8-10 34, Jack Mustaro 6 2-2 18, Gary Connelly 1 0-0 3, Ben Cook 2 2-2 6, Jack Pund 2 0-0 4, Ehthan Dugue 4 1-2 10, Kamani Pyram 0 1-2 1. Totals 26 14-18 76.

Salem22212025-88
Gloucester Catholic1871833-76
3-point goals: Salem 5 (McGriff 3, Spence, Tunis); Gloucester Catholic 10 (Mendez 4, Mustaro 4, Connelly, Dugue). Rebounds: Salem 52 (Rogers 13, Williams 8); Gloucester Catholic 12 (Mustaro 4).

WOODSTOWN 69, PENNS GROVE 41: After losing to the Red Devils twice earlier this season, the Wolverines came out hungry and added more fuel to the adage that it’s difficult to beat a team three times in a season.

The Wolverines placed three scorers in double figures. Rocco String dominated inside with 24 points, M.J. Hall gave them 19 and Blake Bialecki had 12.

After the teams played a tight first quarter, the Wolverines pulled away with a 15-7 second and extended their lead with a 19-9 third. String scored 14 points in the first half. Hall had 11 in the third quarter and 17 in the second half.

“We’re in playoff mode,” Woodstown coach Ramon Roots said. 

PENNS GROVE (11-13) – B.J. Robbins 2 1-2 6, Roman Gipson 3 2-4 9, Karon Ceaser 5 0-0 12, Antione Robinson 1 2-2 4, Haneef Frisby 2 0-0 4, Luis Colon 0 1-2 1, Zane Thomas 1 0-2 2, Will Roy 0 0-0 0, Carson Pearsall 0 1-2 1, Geonni Conrad 1 0-0 2, Mishawn Brantley 0 0-0 0, Jeremy Costacamps 0 0-0 0. Totals 15 7-14 41.
WOODSTOWN (15-9) – Elijah Caesar 2 0-1 5, Blake Bialecki 5 1-1 12, Alejandro Vazquez 0 0-0 0, M.J. Hall 8 2-3 19, Garrett Leyman 4 1-2 9, Rocco String 11 2-10 24, Jalen Markward 0 0-0 0. Totals 30 6-17 69.

Penns Grove147911-41
Woodstown18151917-69
3-point goals: Penns Grove 4 (Robbins, Gipson, Ceaser 2); Woodstown 3 (Caesar, Bialecki, Hall). Total fouls: Penns Grove 21, Woodstown 17.

Hey, 19

Sixth-seeded Salem CC opens Region XIX Division III men’s tournament at CC of Philadelphia, winner plays for a bid to national tournament

REGION XIX TOURNAMENT
DIVISION III MEN
Saturday’s Games
No. 10 RCSJ-Gloucester (11-16, 9-9) at No. 7 Brookdale (18-7, 12-6)
No. 9 Ocean (16-8, 11-7) at No. 8 Atlantic Cape (14-13, 11-7)
Feb. 26 Games
RCSJ-Gloucester/Brookdale at No. 2 Montgomery (20-5, 15-3)
No. 6 Salem (21-7, 13-5) at No. 3 Philadelphia (20-7, 15-3), 6 p.m.
Atlantic Cape/Ocean at No. 1 Union (21-4, 17-1)
No. 5 Camden (17-10, 14-4) at No. 4 Northampton (22-5, 14-4)
March 1 Games
At Northampton CC
(Winners to NJCAA Tournament)
North Atlantic A Championship
Atlantic Cape/Ocean/Union vs. Camden/Northampton, noon
North Atlantic B Championship
RCSJ-Gloucester/Brookdale/Montgomery vs. Salem/Philadelphia, 3 p.m.

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – Just how deep is the Division III men’s basketball configuration in Region XIX? After putting together its first 20-win season in 20 years and making the biggest turnaround in the league, Salem CC pulled down a No. 6 seed for the region tournament that starts this weekend.

The Mighty Oaks will play at third-seeded CC of Philadelphia in the second round of the Region XIX Tournament Wednesday at 6 p.m.

“It feels good, it’s been a while for this school, but the job ain’t through,” Mighty Oaks coach Mike Green said. “It’d feel great to play in that national tournament. I keep telling my guys that’s where you want to be.”

It’s been a nice ride so far. The Mighty Oaks had their winningest season since reviving the program in 2019, enjoyed their first 20-win season in 20 years and beat a ranked opponent for the first time ever. They’re ranked eighth in the country (JUCO Division III) in scoring (87.2 ppg) and third in 3-pointers per game (8.8)

“We’re really proud of what coach Green and the team have been able to accomplish,” athletics director Bob Hughes said. “We’re looking forward to cheering them on and supporting them up in Philadelphia on Wednesday night.”

The team got a huge boost in January when they got four players back from injury and eligibility issues. They’ve gone 11-3 since their arrival.

If they had played enough games to qualify for the national stats (60 percent of team’s games), Jyheim Spencer would rank a solid second in Division III rebounding (14.0 rpg) and Akeem Taylor would be T-4 in the region in scoring (21.0 ppg). And because they hadn’t played in 80 percent of their team’s games, neither are eligible for all-region consideration.

“It’s OK,” Green said. “I hope they have a chip on their shoulder.”

The Mighty Oaks’ 21-7 record represents a 10-win, 8.5-game improvement over last season. When Green took the team after Christmas last year it was 2-5 and he went 9-9 trying to lay the foundation for his program.

“I think we’ve got enough guys who care,” he said of the difference. “It’s not just go out there and see what happens any more. I think these guys go out there and expect to win. Last year it was moreso go out there and give whatever you’ve got.

“I’m sure those guys wanted to win, too, but we had a built-in excuse last year, seven guys, eight guys. We don’t have that built-in excuse.”

It figures to be a competitive tournament. Five of the top six teams all posted 20 wins. Three are in the Top 15 and two others – CCP and Salem – received votes for consideration.

“On our side’s matchup I feel like anybody can beat anybody,” Green said. “It means your league’s good top to bottom. I don’t think it was that last year.”

The Mighty Oaks played CCP once this season and lost 62-59 at the end of the most demanding stretch of the season, a six-game run that included the top four teams in the league. They had a “good look” to send the game into overtime, but Taylor’s shot from the left side of the arc missed the mark.

It also was the game officials erroneously allowed the Lions to insert one of their best free throw shooters off the bench to replace the injured player who was fouled instead of allowing the Mighty Oaks to make the choice as per the rule for a common foul.

Ironically, CCP knocked the Mighty Oaks out of the playoffs the last time they made it (second round 2022).

“I think we played terrible that game, so I definitely feel good about the matchup,” Green said.

If the Mighty Oaks get through their tournament opener, they’ll advance to the bracket final at Northampton where they’ll play for a berth in the national tournament.

Because the region receives two direct bids to the JUCO national tournament, it will incorporate two separate brackets to produce two champions. One bracket is headed by No. 1 seed Union and the other that includes Salem is headed by No. 2 seed Montgomery County. 

This story will be updated.

Region XIX standings

Here are the Region XIX basketball standings; games through Feb. 18; teams .500 or better make the tournament, seeding meeting Wednesday

MEN’S DIVISION IIIREGIONALL
x-Union17-1 21-4
x-Montgomery15-320-5
x-Philadelphia15-320-7
x-Northampton14-422-5
x-Camden14-417-10
x-Salem13-521-7
x-Brookdale12-618-7
x-Ocean11-716-8
x-Atlantic Cape11-714-13
x-RCSJ-Gloucester9-911-16
Passaic7-1111-15
Lehigh Carbon6-127-17
Sussex5-128-20
Luzerne5-137-16
Delaware County5-139-17
Harrisburg Area4-135-19
Thaddeus Stevens4-145-17
Bergen3-154-19
RCSJ-Cumberland0-180-26
x-Clinched playoff spot

TUESDAY’S GAMES
Harcum 89, Hagerstown CC 68
Brookdale 82, Sussex 59
Mercer 100, Raritan Valley 98
Montgomery 67, Middlesex 66
Essex 92, Atlantic Cape 81
Union 84, RCSJ-Cumberland 38
Morris 104, Prestige Prep 49
WEDNESDAY’S GAME
Penn St.-Lehigh Valley at Lehigh Carbon
THURSDAY’S GAME
Morris at Mercer

PROJECTED PLAYOFF PAIRINGS
SATURDAY’S GAMES
RCSJ-Gloucester at Brookdale
Atlantic Cape at Ocean
FEB. 26 GAMES
Gloucester-Brookdale winner at Montgomery
Salem at Philadelphia
Atlantic Cape-Ocean winner at Union
Camden at Northampton

DIVISION II WOMENREGIONALL
x-Union15-124-2
x-Harcum12-321-5
x-Lackawanna12-417-6
x-Raritan Valley11-518-10
x-Mercer9-716-7
Middlesex5-1012-14
Salem CC4-1211-13
Essex2-135-14
Morris0-00-0
Delaware Tech0-150-21
x-Clinched playoff spot

TUESDAY’S GAMES
Montgomery 55, Salem 43
Raritan Valley 74, Mercer 69
Harcum 86, Hagerstown CC 33
Brookdale 52, Sussex 32
Atlantic Cape 65, Lehigh Carbon 51
Lackawanna 83, Middlesex 67
Northampton 58, Passaic 47
THURSDAY’S GAMES
Middlesex at Harcum
Lackawanna at Monroe Univ.
Lehigh Carbon at Manor
Anne Arundel at Delaware Tech
FEB. 22
Essex at Delaware Tech
Harcum at Allegany (Md.)

Cougars get boost

Schalick, Woodstown, Penns Grove win first-round games in the Tri-County Conference girls tournament

TRI-COUNTY GIRLS TOURNAMENT
Flight A
Gloucester Catholic 60, Timber Creek 31
Wildwood 69, Gloucester Tech 50
Woodstown 52, Clearview 48
Washington Twp. 64, Pennsville 42
Flight B
Williamstown 64, Cumberland 24
Triton 41, Glassboro 40
Penns Grove 42, Kingsway 39
Delsea 59, Clayton 53
Flight C
Schalick 53, Salem 25
Overbrook 45, Salem Tech 43
(7) Highland at (2) Pitman
THURSDAY’S GAMES
Flight A
(4) Wildwood at (1) Gloucester Catholic
(3) Woodstown at (2) Washington Twp.
Flight B
(4) Triton at (1) Williamstown
(7) Delsea at (3) Penns Grove
Flight C
(4) Schalick at (1) Deptford
(3) Overbrook vs. (7) Highland/(2) Pitman

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SALEM — Schalick girls coach John Whalen went to bed Monday night resigned to the fact his team just missed out on the biggest tournament of the season. But about an hour before their Tri-County Conference flight opener Tuesday the Cougars got a big surprise.

With his junior players standing behind him, Whalen out of curiosity opened the South Jersey Group I girls tournament bracket on his computer and discovered they had indeed landed a spot in the field. It’s a tough spot — No. 16 to face top-seeded Haddon Twp. — but a spot nonetheless. 

The Cougars were the No. 17 team in the SJ Group I power points, but apparently bumped up into the field when Pitman fell out.

“It’s a nice surprise,” Whalen said. “I’m excited for the girls. It’ll be a good experience, especially for the juniors who didn’t get to see the playoffs last year and the freshmen will get a good experience. It’ll be a good opportunity for us as we look ahead to the future.”

Buoyed by that news, they went out and put together a balanced effort to throttle Salem 53-25 in their TCC Tournament Flight C opener.

The Cougars (6-16) jumped out to a 15-4 lead and outscored the Rams in three of the four quarters. Ten players scored, led by freshman Navaeh Robinson’s 11 points. Five players scored six points apiece.

“We played a very good, a complete, basketball game today,” Whalen said. “Before the game we kind of challenged the girls to play fast, play aggressive. We came out, we pressed, forced some turnovers, got some early scoring. It was good to see it be a balanced effort both defensively and offensively. Everybody chimed in and did their part.

“It’s nice for all the girls to kind of find some success. We’re starting to gain some confidence as the season is kind of coming to an end. It gives us a lot to look forward to for next year when we bring back everybody.”

While their South Jersey Group I Tournament draw is a tough one, the Cougars will get an advance feel for facing a No. 1 seed. Their win over Salem sends them to face the top seed in their flight, Deptford, Thursday.

SCHALICK 53, SALEM 25
SCHALICK (6-16):
Cali Fisler 2 2-2 6, Ava Scurry 1 0-0 2, Abby Willoughby 2 2-6 6, Olivia Vanacker 2 1-3 5, Navaeh Robinson 4 1-4 11, Willow Davis 2 1-2 6, Olivia Lunemann 3 0-3 6, Emily Miller 0 2-2 2, Carly Vicente 2 0-0 6, Victoria Basich 1 1-2 3, Emma O’Neill 0 0-0 0. Totals 19 10-24 53.
SALEM (3-17): Carlysia Pierce 2 6-7 11, Nevaeh Hickman 1 0-0 2, Zaniyah Frieson 2 1-2 6, Timmiyah Simmons 3 0-0 6. Only players reported. Totals 8 7-9 25.

Schalick1581713-53
Salem4966-25
3-point goals: Schalick 5 (Robinson 2, Davis, Vicente 2); Salem 2 (Pierce, Frieson).

PENNS GROVE 42, KINGSWAY 39

Kingsway (11-14)1541010-39
Penns Grove (10-11)591117-42

WOODSTOWN 52, CLEARVIEW 48
CLEARVIEW (12-11):
Hannah Meloro 0 0-0 0, Sienna Maysonet 0 0-0 0, Alessia Lombardi 0 1-2 1, Brett Foster 6 2-4 15, Jillian Guzzardo 1 0-2 3, Casey Maxwell 1 0-0 2, Juliette Mirigliani 11 3-4 27. Totals 19 6-12 48.
WOODSTOWN (17-5): Talia Battavio 5 9-11 21, Megan Donelson 5 4-4 14, Gianna Maiorini 0 2-2 2, Lauren Hengel 4 1-4 10, Kyia Leyman 1 0-2 2, Emma Perry 1 1-2 3, Ryann Foote 0 0-0 0. Totals 16 17-25 52.

Clearview1761312-48
Woodstown14151211-52
3-point goals: Clearview 4 (Foster, Gizzard, Mirigliani 2); Woodstown 3 (Battavio 2, Hengel). Fouled out: Lombardi. Total fouls: Clearview 19, Woodstown 14.

WASHINGTON TWP. 64, PENNSVILLE 42
PENNSVILLE (17-8):
Taylor Bass 17, Nora Ausland 9, Jaida Burns 2, Marley Wood 8, Addie Johnston 2, Izzy Saulin 4.
WASHINGTON TWP. (16-7): Leah Roe 10, Shyla McLean 17, Kate D’Ottaviano 6, Jade Mazzuca 3, Alaina LaMonica 15, Lena Giannini 6, Elena Dabrowski 7.

Pennsville1261014-42
Washington Twp.17111125-64

OVERBROOK 45, SALEM TECH 43

Salem Tech (2-19)561121-43
Overbrook (6-18)6181110-45


Something to prove

Motivated Salem was the only Salem County boys team to emerge victorious from Tuesday’s opening round of the Tri-County Conference Tournament

TRI COUNTY BOYS TOURNAMENT
Flight A
Overbrook 59, Deptford Twp. 49
Pitman 52, Delsea 41
Timber Creek 58, Woodstown 49
Kingsway 73, Penns Grove 43
Flight B
Salem 57, Clearview 44
Gloucester Catholic 50, Triton 48
Glassboro 54, Williamstown 41
Highland 42, Washington Twp. 37
Flight C
Cumberland 67, Schalick 45
Wildwood 86, Pennsville 35 
GCIT 86, Salem Tech 18
THURSDAY’S GAMES
Flight A
(4) Pitman at at (1) Overbrook
(3) Timber Creek at (2) Kingsway
Flight B
(8) Salem at (5) Gloucester Catholic
(7) Highland at (6) Glassboro
Flight C
(5) Cumberland at (1) Clayton
(3) Wildwood  at (2) GCIT

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

MULLICA HILL – The last kind of team anybody wants to play in a tournament setting is one with nothing to lose and everything to prove.

Salem has been playing with an us-against-the-world mindset for the last month or so and Tuesday added another notch in its belt, knocking off adjusted top-seed Clearview 57-44 in the opening round of B Flight play in the Tri-County Conference Tournament.

The Rams (12-12) have been facing an uphill climb since mid-January when the NJSIAA ruled they had played an ineligible player and stripped them of four victories. That created a cascade of challenges that left a 15-win team on the floor to be seeded eighth in the second tier bracket of their conference tournament and No. 11 in the upcoming South Jersey Group I tournament.

In addition, they had to play Tuesday without leading scorer Tymear Lecator, serving the first of a two-game suspension for his ejection in the Penns Grove game, which would have been coach Anthony Farmer’s 100th career coaching win without the NJSIAA ruling.

“We’re keeping receipts,” Farmer said. “We’re definitely playing it to the tee, playing it up. It’s us against everyone, no one’s going to give us anything, everyone’s against us, we’ve got to go take it.

“We’re embracing it. Nothing has gone our way this year, but that’s life. That’s adversity. Life is adversity. Basketball teaches you how to deal with that. We’ve been facing adversity all year, but it’s how you respond to it.”

The Rams showed they meant business right from the start Tuesday night, holding their hosts to two points in the first quarter and opening an 11-2 lead.

Neziah Spence led the Rams’ offense with 17 points. Deshaan Williams had 13 points, 10 rebounds and two steals. Darrelle Johnson grabbed 10 rebounds and dished five assists. Xavier McGriff had eight points, eight boards and three steals. Joe Tunis brought energy for 11 points, five rebounds and three steals.

“When one guy guys goes, I know it’s a cliché, but it gives other guys opportunity to step up,” Farmer said. “That’s what this is about. We’ve been preaching the brotherhood all year, picking each other up.”

This year’s TCC B Flight has become a flight of fancy with all four lower seeds pulling off road “upsets” in the opening round. The Rams now travel to fifth-seeded Gloucester Catholic, one of those teams seeded ahead of them they have already beaten twice this season.

“We’re just trying to get better and hit our stride at the right time and win three, four in a row next week when it really matters,” Farmer said.

SALEM 57, CLEARVIEW 44
SALEM (12-12):
Donovan Weathers 2 0-0 4, Xavier McGriff 4 0-0 8, Neziah Spence 6 2-2 17, Deshaan Williams 6 1-1 13, Darrelle Johnson 2 0-0 4, Antwuan Rogers 0 0-0 0, Joe Tunis 4 3-3 11. Totals 24 6-6 57.
CLEARVIEW (9-16): Luke Andres 7 2-2 19, J.D. Steidle 0 0-0 0, Jake Flotter 2 1-2 5, Jonah Turner 2 4-4 8, Georgie Kritikson 1 1-2 3, Luke Zuba 3 2-2 9, Brady Medel 0 0-0 0. Totals 15 10-12 44.

Salem11141517-57
Clearview2141018-44
3-point goals: Salem 3 (Spence 3); Clearview 4 (Andres 3, Zuba).

KINGSWAY 73, PENNS GROVE 43
PENNS GROVE (11-12):
Karon Ceaser 1 1-2 4, Luis Colon 1 2-4 4, Jeremy Costacamps 1 2-2 4, Roman Gipson 0 1-2 1, Carson Pearsall 2 4-4 9, Antoine Robinson 1 0-0 2, B.J. Robbins 2 2-2 6, Will Roy 6 0-0 13, Totals 14 12-16 43.
KINGSWAY (21-4): Dasir Williams-Ray 5 0-0 10, Brady Shelton 1 0-0 2, Mike Hart 5 4-4 15, Abdulai Bayraytay 1 0-2 3, Maurice Tavares 4 0-0 9, Luca Kuzmick 1 0-0 3, Terrence Collier 1 0-0 2, J.D. Johnson 1 0-0 2, Owen Ellison 1 2-2 5, Dylan Lewis 1 0-0 3, Czar Witherspoon 4 1-2 9, Richmond 2 0-0 4, Kai Tolley 3 0-0 6. Totals 30 7-10 73.

Penns Grove461023-43
Kingsway16231816-73
3-point goals: Penns Grove 3 (Ceaser, Pearsall, Roy); Kingsway 6 (Hart, Bayraytay, Tavares, Kuzmick, Ellison, Lewis).

TIMBER CREEK 58, WOODSTOWN 49
WOODSTOWN (14-9):
Elijah Caesar 1 0-0 2, Blake Bialecki 4 2-2 12, Alejandro Vazquez 3 1-1 9, M.J. Hall 4 0-1 8, Garrett Leyman 2 4-7 8, Rocco String 4 2-3 10, Jalen Markward 0 0-0 0. Totals 18 9-14 49.
TIMBER CREEK (16-7): Asa Wharton 4 2-4 10, C.J. Atkins 4 0-2 9, Jerome Ford 6 2-2 14, Jaidyn Bolds 6 1-2 17, Noah Witzel-Smith 2 1-1 5, Ronald Johnston 0 1-2 1, Justice Avery 1 0-0 3, Roseby Lubintis 0 0-0 0, Julius Lee 0 0-0 0, Kenny Buchanan 0 0-0 0, Sencere Spriddle 0 0-0 0, Cody Murphy 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 7-13 58.

Woodstown991417-49
Timber Creek1461919-58
3-point goals: Woodstown 4 (Bialecki 2, Vazquez 2); Timber Creek 5 (Bolds 4, Avery). Rebounds: Timber Creek 32 (Atkins 10, Ford 12). Technical fouls: Timber Creek (admin). Total fouls: Woodstown 13, Timber Creek 16. Officials: McCormick, Bell, Valentine.

CUMBERLAND 67, SCHALICK 45
CUMBERLAND (6-19):
Kaleb Green 12, Josh Davis 9, Michael Hollis 8, Major Martin-Dunn 12, Pat Crawford 6, Kamal Branch 8, Dumajze Cartwright 2, Jaden Brown 4, Sincere Sadler 1, Khalif Dawkins 5.
SCHALICK (7-18): Reggie Allen 1 5-9 7, Nylan Sutton 8 1-6 17, Jamari Whitley 2 0-0 4, Sherrod Jones 2 3-4 8, Kenneth Bartee 1 0-0 2, Sean Kelly 2 3-6 7. Totals 16 12-25 45.

Cumberland18161617-67
Schalick461718-45
3-point goals: Schalick 1 (Jones).

WILDWOOD 86, PENNSVILLE 35
PENNSVILLE (2-22):
Daniel Knight 2 1-2 6, Mason O’Brien 3 0-0 8, Cole Johnston 0 0-0 0, Adrian Alleyne 2 0-0 5, Jacob Miller 2 0-0 6, Gavin Spears 2 0-0 5, Logan Hill 1 1-2 4, C.J. McDevitt 0 1-2 1, Noah Owen 0 0-0 0, J.P. Laughrey 0 0-0 0. Totals 12 3-6 35.
WILDWOOD (8-15): Eric Jordan 5 0-0 10, Nolan Mawhinney 8 1-1 20, Trevor Troiano 2 0-0 6, Vinny Sweeney 3 0-0 7, Jordan Dozier 0 0-0 0, Daniel Benichou 3 0-0 7, Gianni Troiano 4 0-0 9, Justice Santiago 1 0-0 2, Brian Cunniff 6 2-2 14, Sammy Santiago 1 0-0 2, Jeff Knight 1 1-2 3, Jack Fullerton 3 0-0 6. Totals 37 4-5 86.

Pennsville57167-35
Wildwood21222617-86
3-point goals: Pennsville 8 (O’Brien 2, Knight, Alleyne, Miller 2, Spears, Hitt); Wildwood 9 (Mawhinney 3, T. Troiano 2, Sweeney 2, Benichou, G. Troiano). Rebounds: Pennsville 17 (O’Brien 7). Wildwood 49 (Cunniff 8, Jordan 8).

GCIT 86, SALEM TECH 18

Salem Tech (0-21)3393-18
GCIT (11-14)16252322-86


So close, so far

Salem CC women fall in final bid to make region playoffs, take No. 14 Montgomery County deep into the fourth quarter but run out of gas

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT — Brian Marsh had never seen his Salem CC women’s basketball team in a do-or-die situation before and frankly he was a little nervous about how it would handle it.

The Mighty Oaks had to beat nationally ranked Montgomery County in Tuesday’s Sophomore Night season finale to qualify for the Region XIX Division II playoffs. There was no two ways around it: Win and you’re in with a .500 record, lose and the season’s over. There was no tomorrow.

Would the moment be too big for a program in only its second year back on the floor or would the team that already exceeded last year’s production cast the pressure aside and deliver in a big moment.

It didn’t start off so well, but the moment wasn’t too big for the Mighty Oaks. They gave themselves a chance in the second half — some might even say had the Mustangs on the run – but they just didn’t have enough at the end and suffered a 55-43 defeat that brought their season to a close.

“We had a lot of things work against us, but I thought we played really well in the second half energy wise, we just didn’t make shots,” Marsh said. “I was worried it was going to be too big a moment, but I don’t really think that happened. I just thought we didn’t make shots, and that happens.”

Actually, the Mighty Oaks came within three minutes and eight seconds of making the region playoffs for the first time in 20 years. They trailed by only four with 3:08 to play and five with 2:36 left, but didn’t score the rest of the game.

They were hurt on the boards in the first half and didn’t shoot well the whole game. They were outrebounded badly by the 14th-ranked Mustangs (22-2) in the first half, but thanks to a halftime adjustment held their own on the boards in the second half.

What really hurt them was going 2-for-22 from 3-point range, 0-for-14 in the second half.

It was their worst night from behind the arc at home since bringing the program back last year and third overall, behind only a 2-for-23 in a mid-January win at Anne Arundel this year and a 2-for-26 last Feb. in a dreadful loss at RCSJ-Gloucester.

“I’ve got to give them credit,” Marsh said. “They did some things, they did just enough to win or found the right people and were making free throws at the end. I thought we played our hearts out. At some point you’ve gotta make shots and we didn’t.”

The Mighty Oaks wanted to jump out quickly to control the pace but fell behind by 11 in the first quarter. They kept the deficit from getting any larger in the half by holding the Mustangs to just nine points in the second quarter. 

It was a five-point game with 3:42 left in the third quarter, but five straight empty possessions led to seven Montco points and the deficit was back up to 12. The Mighty Oaks cut it to four for the first time with 7:08 to go on a pair of Alexa Hopkins free throws and twice more later after layups by Nyaijah Jackson and Maggie St. Clair, but they never could get closer.

In addition to the better rebounding, the Mighty Oaks had 12 steals in the second half and forced the Mustangs into 19 turnovers. 

“I realized after the first half we needed to step it up,” sophomore Caroline Zullo said. “In the second half I think we all kind of realized, especially the sophomores, that this might be our last game so we had to step it up. We tried our best, we just came up short.”

Zullo hit a free throw with 2:36 to play to make it 48-43, but that would be the Mighty Oaks’ final point of the season as they didn’t score again and the Mustangs pulled away with seven free throws over the final two minutes.

Jackson led the Mighty Oaks with 16 points and was their only scorer in double figures. St. Clair had nine points, six rebounds and five steals in her final JUCO game. The Mustangs had two scorers in double figures and three players with 10 or more rebounds. 

GATHERING ACORNS: The Mighty Oaks started their five sophomores on Sophomore Night. For Hopkins, it was her first start since Jan. 7 against Camden … With Salem failing to qualify, the Region XIX Division II women’s playoffs are expected to be a six-team affair … The win was Monaco’s 18th in a row … Salem guard Kathryn Laurence scored her 500th career point in the first half. St. Clair scored her 500th point in the Lackawanna game.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY CC 55, SALEM CC 43
MONTCO (22-2) —
Azjiona Golston 7-15 3-6 19, Tieisha Walker 2-10 3-6 7, Rachel Dunn 4-14 0-1 8, Alana Decker 1-3 0-0 2, Molly Butler 5-7 2-2 12, Kyla Taylor 0-2 0-2 0, Koumba Samassa 3-9 0-0 6, Sanaa Gulled 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 22-61 9-19 55.
SALEM CC (11-13) — Caroline Zullo 1-6 1-4 3, Maggie St. Clair 4-19 0-2 9, Kathryn Laurence 2-13 1-2 5, Jakayla Jenkins 0-5 0-0 0, Alexa Hopkins 2-4 2-2 7, RayNescia King 0-2 0-0 0, Nyaijah Jackson 8-16 0-2 16, Dani Gustin 1-1 0-1 2, Akira Chambers 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 18-67 5-15 43.

Montgomery2291113-55
Salem CC1191211-43
3-point goals: Montco 2-9 (Golston 2-6, Dunn 0-1, Decker 0-1, Taylor 0-1); Salem 2-22 (Zullo 0-1, St. Clair 1-6, Laurence 0-9, Hopkins 1-3, King 0-2, Jackson 0-1). Rebounds: Montco 56 (Butler 16, Dunn 12, Samassa 11); Salem 32 (Zullo 8, Jenkins 8). Technical fouls: Salem (admin). Fouled out: Samassa, Zullo. Total fouls: Montco 16, Salem 17.

Tourney pairings

Here are the South Jersey Group I basketball tournament pairings; Woodstown, Penns Grove set up to host doubleheaders, Pennsville girls get home game, Schalick girls, Salem boys open on road

GIRLS
Feb. 26 Games
(16) Schalick at (1) Haddon Twp.
(9) Glassboro at (8) Penns Grove
(12) Cape May Tech at (5) Audubon
(13) Gateway at (4) Woodstown
(14) Riverside at (3) Wildwood
(11) Woodbury at (6) Pennsville
(10) Burlington City at (7) Clayton
(15) New Egypt at (2) Palmyra
March 1 Games
Schalick-Haddon Twp. vs. Glassboro-Penns Grove
Cape May Tech-Audubon vs. Gateway-Woodstown
Riverside-Wildwood vs. Woodbury-Pennsville
Burlington City-Clayton vs. New Egypt-Palmyra

BOYS
Feb. 26 Games

(16) Wildwood at (1) Pitman
(9) Burlington City at (8) Penns Grove
(12) Glassboro at (5) Woodbury
(13) Paulsboro at (4) Audubon
(14) Clayton at (3) Haddon Twp.
(11) Salem at (6) Palmyra
(10) New Egypt at (7) Woodstown
(15) Maple Shade at (2) KIPP Cooper Norcross
March 1 Games
Wildwood-Pitman vs. Burlington City-Penns Grove
Glassboro-Woodbury vs. Paulsboro-Audubon
Clayton-Haddon Twp. vs. Salem-Palmyra
New Egypt-Woodstown vs. Maple Shade-KIPP Cooper Norcross