Pennsville girls get a feel for the NBA on the Sixers’ floor at Wells Fargo Center, includes scores and highlights from Tuesday night’s Salem County basketball schedule
GIRLS GAMES
BOYS GAMES
Clayton 56, Pennsville 38 (WFC)
Penns Grove 70, Pennsville 37
Woodstown 68, Schalick 15
Woodstown 65, Schalick 39
Salem 63, Gloucester Cath. 51
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PHILADELPHIA – All the times Nora Ausland would watch the 76ers play, whether it be one of the rare times in person or on TV, she always thought the NBA 3-point line was way out there.
Then she actually got on the floor and saw it from a player’s perspective and her suspicions were confirmed. The line was way, way out there.
But that didn’t keep her or her Pennsville teammates from trying their hand at shooting from out there. The Eagles made seven 3s from the NBA line Tuesday afternoon, with Ausland and Taylor Bass each hitting three, in a 57-38 loss to Clayton in the Wells Fargo Center that was more about the experience than the result.
“I just wanted to hit some NBA 3s and I did do it,” Ausland said. “I’m impressed because it’s really far.
“I always thought it looked far. When I was walking down on to the floor I’m like it’s not really that far, and then my first shot completely air-balled it; it was pretty far. It makes my perception really off, so I was glad I was able to make a few.”
Ausland wasn’t the only one drawn by the NBA 3-point line. Marley Wood also kept an eye on the arc. She only took a few shots from out there during the game, but finally hit one in the fourth quarter to cross that off her basketball bucket list.
“Being able to shoot from the NBA 3-point line was something really cool, being able to score from there,” she said. “It bounced off the rim a couple times and then went in, but it felt really cool to be able to make it from there.”
“I thought it was a great opportunity for them to have that experience,” Pennsville coach Steve Merritt said. “I’m really happy for them.”
Ausland had hit 37 3s this season, 77 in her two seasons at Pennsville and 139 in her career from the high school line, but when you get the chance to shoot on an NBA floor, that line is a challenge no one could resist. The extra four feet from the NBA line, when the shots started going in, made her feel a little like Caitlin Clark, a little like Steph Curry.
Shooting into the abyss that would be filled with fans watching the Sixers lose to Toronto later that evening, many of the Eagles’ shots from behind the arc during warmups hit nothing but … air. Undeterred, Ausland hit three of the next five attempts – all from the wing. She also made a layup and finished with 11 points.
“I got the hang of it,” she said. “Just being able to make those shots is what I’ll remember.”
That’s what Merritt was hoping they’d all remember, the experience of the day. All 11 Eagles who made the trip got in the game and can say they held court in an NBA arena. And they all got shots up.
“That was the whole thing,” he said. “Prior to the start of the game I called them all together, they were trying to acclimated to the depth perception, so I said, ‘Look, you know how I feel about competition and my desire to win – I don’t like not winning — but today, when are we ever going to get an opportunity to play basketball on an NBA court, when am I going to get a chance to coach on an NBA court, we’re just here to have some fun.
“Our position in the division is set. As far as the tournaments are concerned, that’s already locked, too. So, there’s nothing to be gained by winning this game so let’s just go out and have fun. Go out and enjoy yourself.”
It was a quick game and had to be. The teams had an hour to play while workers set up for the NBA game that followed and they didn’t have all the customary amenities that come with a regular game. It may have been a rushed experience, but one they wouldn’t trade for anything.
“It was really cool,” Ausland said. “Just thinking about the fact that all these famous players like Kobe (Bryant), people I looked up to, were playing on the same court I just played on was really cool.”
Pennsville’s Nora Ausland (10) and Jaida Burns (15) come across the center logo during the Eagles’ game with Clayton in the Wells Fargo Center. Top photo, Taylor Bass goes up for the opening tip to get the once-in-a-lifetime adventure started. (Submitted photos)
Salem CC women give maximum effort in an overtime loss to Mercer that leaves their playoff hopes with little room for error
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
WEST WINDSOR, N.J. — The Salem CC women’s basketball team is cutting it close.
The Mighty Oaks played Tuesday night with an energy like their playoffs lives depended on it — and it did — but in the end fell to Mercer County CC 85-75 in overtime.
The Mighty Oaks are 11-11 now and must finish .500 or better to qualify for the Region XIX Division II playoffs. With Tuesday night’s loss, they now must win one of their final two games against two of the better teams in the region to make the cut.
Those two games are Saturday at Lackawanna, the current No. 3 team in Region XIX Division II and at home Feb. 18 against 15th-ranked Region XIX Division III leader Montgomery County CC on what’s sure to be an emotional Sophomore Night.
“It’s not going to get any easier,” Salem coach Brian Marsh said. “That’s why the RCSJ-Gloucester was so huge because that’s a game you had to have to give yourself a chance.
“We still have a chance. I’ve been saying this the whole year: Everything we want is still in front of us. We just have to go get one. This would have been really nice to get. If we continue to play this hard and with this much intensity we’re going to get one of those last two.”
The teams played to a 67-all tie through regulation. The Vikings had the last shot. Jhava Wilson drove the baseline in the closing seconds, but a layup from underneath and clock ran out.
Mercer scored the first 10 points in overtime to take control. Xana Garcia made a layup off the opening tip and Lia Sekhniashvili buried back-to-back 3s at the end of the run to make it 77-67 with 2:14 left. Kathryn Laurence’s 98th career 3-pointer finally got Salem on the board, but then the Vikings closed it out by going 8-for-10 from the free throw line over the final two minutes.
The Mighty Oaks were 3-for-11 from the field in overtime after shooting 52 percent in regulation. Mercer was 3-for-3.
“They were just making shots,” Marsh said. “I don’t think it was anything we didn’t do. I just think it’s something Mercer did. They started making shots they weren’t typically making.”
The Vikings (16-6) used a similar run at the end of the second quarter to take an eight-point halftime lead. The Mighty Oaks were up 27-23 with three minutes left in the quarter, then Mercer’s Zaakirah Edwards went on a personal 12-2 tear with a pair of 3-pointers to give her team the lead.
The Mighty Oaks climbed back in it by outscoring their hosts 16-6 in the third quarter. Maggie St. Clair had eight of her career-high 27 points in the third quarter and 23 in the second half and overtime.
Nyaijah Jackson (12), Laurence (13) and Akira Chambers (11) also scored in double figures for the Mighty Oaks. St. Clair (492) and Laurence (489) are both closing in on 500 career points at Salem.
“I thought the effort and intensity were fantastic,” Marsh said. “I thought our energy was excellent and I thought our big-time players really came to play.
“I think Maggie had a fantastic game. Ny had a great game. Kathryn was hitting her 3s. JaKayla (Jenkins) played really well, Caroline’s sick and she played so much minutes. I just thought it was a really incredible effort. We gave them everything they could handle.”
MERCER COUNTY CC 85, SALEM CC 75 (OT) SALEM CC (16-6) – RaNescia King 0-1 2-2 2, Ny Jackson 4-7 4-4 12, Caroline Zullo 1-7 1-2 3, Maggie St. Clair 12-18 1-2 27, Dani Gustin 1-1 0-0 2, Kathryn Laurence 5-12 0-0 13, JaKayla Jenkins 2-8 0-0 5, Akira Chambers 4-7 3-3 11, Alexa Hopkins 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-61 11-13 75 MERCER (11-11) – Jhava Wilson 5-17 8-12 18, Zaakirah Edwards 6-19 2-4 16, Valerie Rivas 2-6 0-0 5, Carla Cencerrero 4-7 0-0 8, Jayla Jones 2-10 6-6 10, Lia Sekhniashvili 4-11 0-0 11, Xana Garcia 5-12 6-6 17. Totals 28-82 22-28 85.
Salem CC
16
15
16
20
8-
75
Mercer County CC
14
25
6
22
18-
85
3-point goals: Salem 9-19 (Zullo 0-1, St. Clair 2-4, Laurence 3-9, Jenkins 1-5); Mercer 7-24 (Wilson 0-1, Edwards 2-6, Rivas 1-4, Jones 0-1, Sekhniashvili 3-7, Garcia 1-5). Rebounds: Salem 52 (Jackson 10, Laurence 8, Zullo 8); Mercer 38 (Wilson 8). Fouled out: Jackson, St. Clair, Edwards. Total fouls: Salem 24, Mercer 15. Officials: Hope, Crawford, Coleman.
Region XIX standings
DIVISION II WOMEN
REG
ALL
Union
15-0
24-0
Harcum
11-3
19-5
Lackawanna
10-4
15-6
Raritan Valley
8-5
14-10
Mercer
8-6
16-6
Middlesex
4-8
11-12
Salem CC
4-10
11-11
Essex
2-12
5-13
Morris
0-0
0-0
Delaware Tech
0-14
0-20
TUESDAY’S GAMES Mercer 85, Salem 75 (OT) Northampton 91, Lehigh Carbon 49 Union 101, Raritan Valley 37 Philadelphia at RCSJ-Cumberland, canceled RCSJ-Gloucester 74, Atlantic Cape 49 Middlesex 73, Bronx CC 34
THURSDAY’S GAMES Atlantic Cape at Passaic Delaware Tech at Middlesex Montgomery at RCSJ-Gloucester Lehigh Carbon at Bergen Bucks at Camden Ocean at Brookdale Raritan Valley at Essex Monroe Univ. at Union
SATURDAY’S GAMES Salem at Lackawanna Ocean at Camden Passaic at Philadelphia Union at Harcum RCSJ-Cumberland at Sussex Lehigh Carbon at RCSJ-Gloucester Raritan Valley at Middlesex Chesapeake at Middlesex Bryant & Stratton (NY) at Raritan Valley
Relishing the life of the underdog, Schalick wrestlers knock off top-seed Audubon to reach Wednesday’s SJ Group I team finals
WRESTLING SOUTH JERSEY GROUP 1 TOURNAMENT Quarterfinals At Audubon Audubon 45, Pitman 24 Schalick 44, Haddon Twp. 36 Semifinals Schalick 36, Audubon 31 At Paulsboro Woodstown 61, Pennsville 16 Paulsboro 62, Palmyra 15 Semifinals Paulsboro 38, Woodstown 37 SJ Group I Championship Wednesday at Paulsboro Schalick at Paulsboro
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
AUDUBON – Riley Papiano has never felt so happy to be dropped on his head before.
Papiano painfully won his match at 157 in the South Jersey Group 1 wrestling semifinals Monday night when Audubon’s Pedro Marte was disqualified for slamming the Schalick senior to the mat.
As much as it hurt in the moment, Papiano knew what it meant. The win clinched the Cougars’ 36-31 victory over the No. 1 seed sending them to the sectional final for the first time in school history.
“It was a great night,” Papiano said. “I think it was amazing for the team, the school, everybody.
“I don’t think anybody counted on us getting this far. All the newspapers were going against us and I think we’re just shocking the world. We’re showing everybody else wrong that we can compete at a higher level than anybody else thinks we can.”
The school-record setting win sends the once-beaten Cougars (24-1) to Paulsboro Wednesday – weather permitting – to face the perennial power Red Raiders for a spot in the state final four.
“I don’t think anyone thought we had a shot,” Schalick coach Joe Frassenei said. “Everyone was like, you don’t wrestle a good enough schedule. They weren’t afraid of the big situation. They just wrestled them like they were another opponent and went out and did a great job.
“I told my assistant it was like disbelief (when they clinched). We knew we had a shot, but then reality set in that we actually are going to the South Jersey final for the first time in school history.”
The Cougars had a lot of work to do to get there. Ricky Watt (175) and Evan Elliott (190) “really set the tone for the whole night” with a pin and decision in the first two weight classes to get them rolling.
The Green Wave (22-5) won the next four bouts to go up 20-9. The Cougars stormed back to retake the lead 24-20 on wins from E’Shion Underwood, Luke Silva and Ryan Miller, but Audubon took it right back on Tyler Perozzi’s tech fall at 138 to set up the end game.
Koen Martin (144) and Ayden Jenkins (150) won tight decisions to set up the Papiano-Marte match. If Marte won, the match would go down to the final bout. If Papiano won, it was over.
“I was more proud of the team (than his win),” said Papiano, who’s headed to Norwich (Vt.) University to play football. “It was a team win tonight, it wasn’t an individual. It wouldn’t have been a clinch if Ricky Watt didn’t pin in the first and Ayden Jenkins did get that tough match or Koen didn’t squeeze by and all these other matches, it wouldn’t have mattered.
“As a team I think we embrace (the underdog role) fully. We know no one believes in us and we know every time we win it just makes everybody else more mad.”
If the Cougars are able to pull it off Wednesday, Papiano said, “it would mean the world” to him. He also was part of the Schalick football team that played for South Jersey Group I title in the final.
“Two sectional final games in one year for me is amazing,” he said. “I’d love to win one.”
The Cougars got to Audubon by beating Haddon Twp. in the quarterfinals 44-36. They opened a 44-0 lead, then forfeited the last six weight classes.
Paulsboro got through its half of the bracket by beating Pitman 45-24 and Woodstown 38-37. Sawyer Cabanas pinned Thomas Lacy in 21 seconds at 157 to give Paulsboro a 13-point lead in the Woodstown match and the Red Raiders forfeited the last two weight classes to bring the final margin.
Woodstown took out Pennsville 61-16 in its first-round match.
SCHALICK 44, HADDON TWP. 36 165: Riley Papiano (S) tech fall over Damian Shepherd, 17-1 (3:25) 175: Ricky Watt (S) pinned Antonio Reyes, 5:57 190: Evan Elliott (S) pinned Joseph Sum, 1:01 215: Gerardo Felipe (S) dec. Brennan Berger, 5-1 285: Julian Reid (S) pinned Willem Conniver, 1:49 106: Emma Cain (S) pinned Sok Hoy, 3:15 113: Caleb Jenkins (S) pinned Jon Rodriguez, 1:05 120: E’Shion Underwood (S) won by forfeit 126: Owen Ziegler (HT) won by forfeit 132: Finn Boucher (HT) won by forfeit 138: Thomas Andrews (HT) won by forfeit 144: Brady Monoid (HT) won by forfeit 150: Justin Capri (HT) won by forfeit 157: Ryan Henry (HT) won by forfeit
SCHALICK 36, AUDUBON 31 175: Ricky Watt (S) pinned Joem Gonzalez, 5:40 190: Evan Elliott (S) dec. Gabriel McCracken, 10-3 215: David Borodziuk (A) tech fall over Gerardo Felipe, 19-4 (4:55) 285: Jonah Jordan (A) dec. Julian Reid, 8-1 106: Jason Ortiz (A) pinned Emma Cain, 0:41 113: Rocco Monteferrante (A) pinned Caleb Jenkins, 0:37 120: E’Shion Underwood (S) pinned Nicholas Sassany, 1:26 126: Luke Silva (S) dec. R.J. Bauman, 9-4 132: Ryan Miller (S) pinned Brayden Ervin, 1:11 138: Tyler Perozzi (A) tech fall over Collin Bittle, 22-6 (4:27) 144: Koen Martin (S) dec. Andean Leahan, 11-9 150: Ayden Jenkins (S) dec. James McSweeney, 4-2 157: Riley Papiano (S) over Pedro Marte, DQ 165: Giovanni Patti (A) won by forfeit.
WOODSTOWN 61, PENNSVILLE 16 175: Greyson Hyland (WO) pinned Joseph Halstead, 1:28 190: Paul Banff (WO) dec. Connor Ayars, 4-0 215: Walter Carter (WO) won by forfeit 285: Mateo Vinciguerra (WO) pinned Trevor Waddington, 0:09 106: Brett Land (P) pinned Hunter Allen, 3:35 113: Luke Woronicak (WO) pinned Erick Davalos, 3:39 120: Carson Bradway (WO) pinned Mehki Dicks, 2:10 126: Travis Balback (WO) maj. dec. Christopher Daniels, 11-2 132: Alex Torres (WO) pinned Nathaniel Mason, 4:44 138: Gave Supernavage (P) maj. dec. Louie Scholl, 10-1 144: Travis Hagan (P) pinned Angel Hernandez, 1:50 150: Brett Rowand (WO) won by forfeit 157: Thomas Lacy (WO) pinned Juan Velasquez, 1:43 165: Laitton Roberts (WO) won by forfeit
PAULSBORO 38, WOODSTOWN 37 190: Paul Banff (WO) pinned Evan Holloway, 1:37 215: Walter Carter (WO) dec. Frank Damming, 7-1 285: Mateo Vinciguerra (WO) pinned Jared Hazel, 0:48 106: Will Cruz (P) pinned Hunter Allen, 0:25 113: Antonio Chila (P) pinned Luke Woronicak, 3:16 120: Hayden Holmes (P) maj. dec. Carson Bradway, 15-4 126: Walker Battavio (WO) maj. dec. Sheena Cruz, 12-2 132: Aundre Hill (P) maj. dec. Travis Balback, 28-15 138: Julian Sosa (P) pinned Alex Torres, 3:17 144: Angel Hernandez (WO) pinned Ben Price, 3:39 150: Kyaire Harvey (P) pinned Brett Rowand, 5:27 157: Sawyer Cabanas (P) pinned Thomas Lacy, 0:21 165: Laitton Roberts (WO) won by forfeit 175: Greyson Hyland (WO) won by forfeit
GROUP I SECTIONAL FINALS South: Schalick (24-1) at Paulsboro (14-7) Central: Manville (21-5) at Delaware Valley (16-3) North I: New Milford (15-1) at Kittatinny (12-10) North II: Hasbrouck Heights (19-1) at Hanover Park (14-6)
Boys Bowling
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP 2 TOURNAMENT Cinnaminson 2, Salem Tech 0
Ian Jungbult rolled games of 202 and 232 to lead Cinnaminson to sweep. Aaron Dean rolled the high game (177) and high series (327) for the Chargers.
Swimming
NJSIAA GROUP C SECTIONALS Semifinals Seneca 91, Woodstown 79
Track
SJTCA MEET 18 At Ocean Breeze Complex, Staten Island
Salem’s Anthony Parker and Pennsville’s Megan Morris both scored top three finishes. Parker finished second in the 55 hurdles (7.61), while Morris was T-3 in the girls pole vault with Rancocas Valley’s Milena Too (9-6). Salem’s Ava Rodgers was eighth in the girls shot put (31-5.5).
Pennsville girls edge Penns Grove to set modern-era team win mark, heads to Wells Fargo Center Tuesday
GIRLS GAMES
BOYS GAMES
Pennsville 55, Penns Grove 49
Pitman 68, Penns Grove 38
Winslow 58, Schalick 31
Winslow 61, Salem 40
Salem at LEAP
Mastery Charter 59, Woodstown 54
Wildwood 68, Schalick 58
Triton 63, Pennsville 25
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – The Pennsville girls basketball team gathered on the floor for a picture after receiving instructions for Tuesday’s trip to the Wells Fargo Center. They just thought it was another opportunity to take a team picture, but little did they know at the time it was a whole lot more.
It was a picture for posterity.
When the Eagles dispatched Penns Grove 55-49 they became the program’s winningest team in recent memory.
The Eagles had been stuck on 15 wins three times in the last previous five years, but Monday’s win was their 16th of the season in coach Steve Merritt’s first season with the team. (Their winningest teams went 23-3 in 1986-87.)
“I’m not going to take all that credit,” said Merritt, who came out of coaching retirement to take the program. “The ingredients were there. I just helped direct it.
“I am blessed with a group of people who really want to work and want to win and want to play. If it weren’t for the personnel, it’s tough to do that.”
The Big Three in that personnel – Taylor Bass and 1,000-point scorers Nora Ausland and Marley Wood – combined for 48 points. Ausland hit three 3-pointers and had a game-high 23, her first 20-point game since going for a season-high 29 against Overbrook Jan. 28. She had scored 53 points with an oh-for in the six games in between.
She hit two 3s in the first quarter and was off and running.
“Once I start making my shots I have more confidence in myself,” Ausland said. “The previous games, if I keep missing and missing I get in my head. I’m glad I got out of it today because we really needed it. We had a tough team today.”
The Eagles (16-6) never shook the Red Devils (9-10). Every time Pennsville pulled out to a lead, Brianna Robbins was there to bring Penns Grove back.
Robbins led the Red Devils with 16 points. She hit three of her four 3-pointers in the third quarter when the teams traded the lead on 10 straight possessions.
The game was tied at 41 with 6:05 left when Merritt called time to avoid a turnover. During the break he implored his charges to make Penns Grove work the ball to 40 seconds. The Eagles came out of that break and scored the next six points, with each of their Big Three getting a bucket, and never trailed again.
The trip is a go
With winter weather looming and a winter storm watch kicking in while they play, the Pennsville girls’ basketball game with Clayton at the Wells Fargo Center Tuesday is still on.
The Eagles’ plan is to play their game in the NBA arena, spend some quality time together at a nearby Dave & Busters, then head back to watch the Sixers play Toronto. The team bus will return to Pennsville after the D&B dinner with those going to the Sixers game carpooling back.
“We are definitely going to go,” Pennsville athletics director Jamy Thomas said Monday.
It’ll be a quick game. The Sixers give the teams an hour on the floor to get their 2:50 p.m. game in while crews set up for the main event later that night.
The Schalick boys beat the Clippers at the Wells Fargo Center last year 42-35. Those who stayed for the NBA game saw Joel Embiid go for 70 points against the Spurs.
“I’m really excited,” Eagles junior guard Marley Wood said. “It should be a pretty fun night. I’d prefer to get a dub. Hopefully we get it.”
3-point goals: Penns Grove 9 (B. Robbins 4, Wilson 2, Patterson 3); Pennsville 5 (Bass, Ausland 3, Belitsas). Rebounds: Penns Grove 26 (Washington 8, Wilson 6); Pennsville 34 (Bass 6, Wood 6, Burns 11). Fouled out: Cummings. Total fouls: Penns Grove 14, Pennsville 8.
Boys games
PITMAN 68, PENNS GROVE 38: It’s never helpful when you’re missing a lot of shots, but missing against one of the top teams in the section is a recipe for disaster.
The combination of the ball refusing to go in the basket and 26 points from Pitman’s Elijah Crispin did the Red Devils in.
A 3-pointer play by Karon Ceaser and a 3-pointer by Roman Gipson got the Red Devils within two midway through the second quarter and then they went cold. Pitman scored the last 12 points of the half to take control of the game. PITMAN (15-4): Hudson Rue 5-2-12, Elijah Crispin 8-9-26, Greg Peterson 1-0-3, Michael Fisicaro 3-1-9, Aidan Stranahan 5-1-11, Jake Bowen 1-0-2, Joey Zubert 2-0-5. Totals 25-13-68. PENNS GROVE (10-10): B.J. Robbins 3-0-8, Roman Gipson 3-1-9, Karon Ceaser 2-1-6, Antoine Robinson 1-2-4, Will Roy 1-1-3, Luis Colon 1-0-2, Jeremy Costacamps 1-0-2, Carson Pearsall 0-4-4. Totals 12-9-38.
3-point goals: Woodstown 8 (Caesar, Bialecki 4, Vazquez 3); Mastery Charter 5 (Kendrick, James, Cosme, Jackson 2). Rebounds: Mastery Charter 20 (Cosme 7). Fouled out: Caesar, M. Hall. Total fouls: Woodstown 18, Mastery Charter 7.
WILDWOOD 68, SCHALICK 58: Reggie Allen scored a career-high 31 points and attacked the basket well enough to get to the free throw line, where he went 17-for-19. But his individual effort wasn’t enough to offset three double-figure scorers from Wildwood and Brian Cunniff’s 38 points.
“Reggie’s quick and was able to use his speed to create separation,” Cougars coach James Turner said. “Once he got in the lane he knew how to draw contact and get to the line. He played with a lot of confidence and poise.
“The two of them attacking all night made it a good game. Reggie did a great job staying in attack mode and credit to Cunniff, he finished well at the rim.”
Allen hadn’t taken more than eight free throws in a game in his career before Monday night. He was 9-for-9 at the line in his previous two games. He raised his season scoring average to 15.14 points per game to close the gap on county scoring leader Tymear Lecator of Salem, but remains second in the county.
WINSLOW 61, SALEM 40: Marcus Upton scored 27 points and the Eagles used a 23-8 fourth quarter to put the Rams away.
A pair of free throws by Neziah Spence got the Rams to within nine with 5:11 to play, but the Rams didn’t score again until Harlem Parsons’ 3-pointer with 20.9 seconds left. It was the Rams’ only 3-pointer of the game.
The game marked a homecoming of sorts for Salem’s Tymear Lecator. The sophomore guard transferred from Window after his eighth-grade year. He has been fighting through illness the past few games and was held to four points. Deshaan Williams led the Rams with 15 points and 10 rebounds.
Here are the official Tri-County Conference Tournament pairings; first-round games are Feb. 18, semifinals Feb. 20, finals Feb. 21 or 22; records as of Feb. 9
BOYS BRACKET Flight A (8) Deptford Twp. (11-8) at (1) Overbrook (18-3) (5) Delsea (13-8) at (4) Pitman (14-4) (6) Woodstown (12-7) at (3) Timber Creek (11-7) (7) Penns Grove (10-9) at (2) Kingsway (17-4) Flight B (8) Salem (9-11) at (1) Washington Twp. (7-14) (5) Clearview (9-13) at (4) Gloucester Catholic (9-12) (6) Glassboro (7-12) at (3) Triton (8-12) (7) Highland (7-13) at (2) Williamstown (7-14) Flight C (1) Clayton (9-12) bye (5) Cumberland (5-17) at (4) Schalick (6-15) (6) Pennsville (2-19) at (3) Wildwood (6-13) (7) Salem Tech (0-19) at (2) GCIT (9-12)
GIRLS BRACKET Flight A (8) Timber Creek (12-9) at (1) Gloucester Catholic (17-4) (5) GCIT (12-6) at (4) Wildwood (15-4) (6) Clearview (10-10) at (3) Woodstown (14-5) (7) Pennsville (15-6) at (2) Washington Twp. (13-6) Flight B (8) Cumberland (9-11) at (1) Williamstown (10-12) (5) Glassboro (9-11) at (4) Triton (14-8) (6) Kingsway (9-12) at (3) Penns Grove (9-9) (7) Delsea (8-14) at (2) Clayton (13-6) Flight C (1) Deptford Twp. (7-11) (5) Salem (1-16) at (4) Schalick (4-14) (6) Salem Tech (2-17) at (3) Overbrook (5-16) (7) Highland (1-18) at (2) Pitman (5-13)
Here are the statistical leaders from the Salem County high school basketball season through Feb. 8; minimum 50 percent of team’s games played needed to qualify
NOTE: The statistics are based on the consistency of reporting to the statewide reporting service. Players who do not score in games may not always be included in those nightly results and some teams do not report complete box scores or statistics.
Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of Feb. 10-15; all events 5:30 p.m. unless noted, watch the weather
FEB. 10 GIRLS BASKETBALL Schalick at Winslow, 3:45 p.m. Penns Grove at Pennsville, 4 p.m. Salem at LEAP, 4 p.m. BOYS BASKETBALL Pennsville at Triton Pitman at Penns Grove Salem at Winslow, 5:15 p.m. Schalick at Wildwood Woodstown at Mastery Charter BOYS BOWLING South Jersey Group 2 Tournament At Laurel Lanes Salem Tech vs. Cinnaminson, 3:45 p.m. TRACK Pennsville, Salem at Ocean Breeze, Staten Island SWIMMING NJSIAA Sectionals Woodstown vs. Seneca at Camden County Tech, 4:45 p.m. WRESTLING South Jersey Group I Tournament Quarterfinals At Audubon Pitman at Audubon Haddon Twp. vs. Schalick At Paulsboro Woodstown vs. Pennsville Palmyra at Paulsboro, 6 p.m. Semifinals At Audubon, 7 p.m. At Paulsboro, 7:30 p.m. FEB. 11 GIRLS BASKETBALL Gloucester Catholic at Salem, 4 p.m. Pennsville vs. Clayton at Wells Fargo Center, 2:30 p.m. Salem Tech at Pitman Woodstown at Schalick BOYS BASKETBALL Pennsville at Penns Grove Salem Tech at Pitman, 7 p.m. Salem at Gloucester Catholic, 7 p.m. Schalick at Woodstown GIRLS BOWLING South Jersey Group I Tournament At Thunderbowl, Wrightstown Salem vs. New Egypt, 3 p.m. At Wood Lanes, Woodstown Salem Tech vs. Point Pleasant Boro, 3:45 p.m. WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL Salem CC at Mercer CC, 5 p.m.
FEB. 12 GIRLS BASKETBALL Clearview at Penns Grove, 4 p.m. WRESTLING Haddon Heights at Pennsville, 6 p.m. Manchester Twp. at Penns Grove, 6:30 p.m. South Jersey Group I Team Finals
FEB. 13 GIRLS BASKETBALL Pennsville at Pitman Penns Grove at Salem, 4 p.m. LEAP Academy at Schalick, 7 p.m. Woodstown at Salem Tech BOYS BASKETBALL Salem at Penns Grove Salem Tech at Woodstown Schalick at Pennsauken Tech GIRLS BOWLING South Jersey Group I Tournament Salem Tech-PP Boro winner vs. Salem-New Egypt winner BOYS BOWLING South Jersey Group I Tournament At Ocean Lanes, Lakewood Salem vs. Donovan Catholic, 3 p.m. South Jersey Group 2 Tournament Salem Tech-Cinnaminson winner vs. Gloucester FEB. 14 GIRLS BASKETBALL Triton at Schalick BOYS BASKETBALL Salem Tech at Camden Academy Charter WRESTLING Schalick, Burlington Twp., Maple Shade at Cherry Hill West, 4 p.m. FEB. 15 WRESTLING Pennsville, Barnegat, Cherokee at Notre Dame, 9 a.m. Penns Grove, Rancocas Valley, Sterling at Highland, 9 a.m. Central Regional, Delran, Haddon Heights at Woodstown, 10 a.m. TRACK NJSIAA Sectionals at Bennett Center, 9 a.m. MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL Salem CC at Sussex County CC, 2 p.m. WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL Salem CC at Lackawanna, 1 p.m.
Salem CC’s Jyheim Spencer making most of his second chance at life, college basketball, putting a dark past in his rear view mirror
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
CARNEYS POINT – Rebounding is a part of basketball that by its very nature is built on heart and hard work. Nobody just becomes a good rebounder; it’s something you have to want to do.
It’s the kind of skill, really, that rewards a player who doesn’t mind getting in the middle of it and mixing it up.
On the defensive end, it clears away any challenge an opponent throws at you. On the offensive end, it sets up you or your teammates for a second chance to succeed.
It’s the perfect metaphor for the saga of Jyheim Spencer and the second chance he has been given in the Salem Community College basketball program.
Spencer’s story goes beyond the basketball court and way beyond the cliché of a player making the most of a second chance. His is a story of redemption, not just in the game, but in the game of life.
His life has always had its challenges, but over the past six years he’s endured a succession of personal tragedies that goes beyond the unreasonable. He’s lived through the deaths of a child, a brother and a parent, the impact of COVID that derailed his college career and the prospect of doing some serious jail time, circumstances that all put together would have broken another man.
But he has come out on the other side of all that with a new perspective and appreciation of life on the outside.
Since becoming eligible to play, which was an ordeal in itself, and making his debut Jan. 7, Spencer has embraced that role as a rebounder. If he had enough games to qualify for the national statistics, his 14.5 per game average would be second nationally in the JUCO division the Mighty Oaks play. Just last week, in one of the team’s biggest games of the year, he cleared a whopping 20 boards at CC of Philadelphia.
And he couldn’t be more appreciative for it. After every rebound, blocked shot, fall to the floor that might make another player angry, Spencer lifts his 6-foot-8 frame off the deck and sprints to the other end with a big grin on his face that seems to say he’s truly glad for the shot he’s been given.
After all, he’s been knocked down a hell of a lot harder than that in his life.
“I feel like that’s why I’m so happy because I got a second chance to do it,” he said after a recent practice. “The first chance, I didn’t really see the potential I had until I got incarcerated and had a whole year to sit and think about what I wanted to do. Once I realized I had another chance, it was like excited, very excited.
“It basically feels like I was born again. Like I got another chance. And the way it’s going, it’s going like I expected to go. That’s why I’m so happy.”
Darkest of times
Jyheim Spencer was always a good basketball player, but he never played organized ball until he got to high school. And when he finally did, he didn’t last long. He got kicked off the team each of his first two years. And then he got kicked out of school.
“Now I’ve got no school, no nothing; I was really doing nothing,” he said.
Then he moved to Dover and met the coach who took an interest in him as a person as much as a player. Spencer recalls those first conversations with Stephen Wilson as being more about his quality of home life than about points and rebounds and basketball stuff, the kind of conversations he had with Salem CC coach Mike Green when he started on his road back.
“I don’t even think we spoke about basketball until a month after I was there,” he said. “At first he just talked about how he wanted me to get in school, how my family was, me and my dad’s relationship, me and my mom’s. We were kind of building a bond so once I actually played for him it felt like he was a father figure. He helped me through everything, like a dad, a big brother.”
And he was about to need one as the period from 1999 to 2022 when he should have been at the height of his athletic development turned into the darkest time anyone could imagine.
His two seasons at Dover were state contending ones, but it wasn’t without tragedy. During his junior year his two-month old daughter died of sudden infant death syndrome. (The day he spoke to Riverview Sports News was two days after what would have been his daughter’s sixth birthday).
The basketball season helped get him through it and that year his team played for a state championship. They were headed that way the next year, his senior year, too, but COVID gripped the world and shut it all down.
Through it all his game had come back around enough to land him a spot at North Jersey’s Caldwell University, but neither the classes nor the basketball worked out for him. He played three minutes with no stats in a six-point loss at Concordia (N.Y.) on Feb. 21, 2021, but that was his last game until last month.
The COVID pandemic was in full force. Classes were all online and basketball was over for him. Back home, his father, with whom he was just started to rebuild a relationship, was killed. The combination of both events sent him into a downward spiral that left him questioning everything.
“That kind of messed me up a little bit,” he said. “Forget basketball, forget college, just forget all of it.”
He thought a change of scenery would change the outlook and he moved to Jacksonville, Fla., but trouble followed. His brother was killed while he was there and he began being investigated by various state and federal authorities in connection with an illegal firearms trafficking scheme that would eventually land him in prison.
He moved back to Delaware and in January 2022 was indicted with eight others on a total of 76 felony charges. His mind was racing.
“I don’t know what to do, I don’t want to go to jail, so I’m not turning myself in,” he said. “I was thinking about going on a run and I thought about it. I might as well get it over and done with because the longer I wait, the older I’m going to get, and you never know if I’m going to be able to play basketball again. I’m gonna go ahead and turn myself in.”
He wound serving time at SCI – the Sussex Correctional Institution – a 1,200-bed facility in Georgetown, Del., that houses minimum, medium and maximum security inmates as well as youthful offenders. While on the inside he tried to keep a low profile.
“Jail was like a big day care,” he said. “You’ve just got grown men watching you, CO’s watching you, telling you what do, what not to do, when to eat, when to sleep, how to sleep. I felt like they had control of us.
“While I was down there I was kind of walking on eggshells. I’m not going to be in their way.”
Through it all, he had basketball and a desire to play to keep him going, even though from the inside the chances of that happening seemed like a half-court shot at the buzzer. He tried to stay in playing shape in the event the chance ever came again by working out in the prison recreational facilities that are said to be better than some high school facilities.
“While I was in there I was thinking about what’s next, what I want to do,” he said. “When I’m in there I’m playing basketball. I need to go do something because the way I’m playing I’m really nice.
“When I came out here I had in the mind whenever I get the chance to play basketball again I’m going to go all out.”
While he was on the inside, authorities continued to work the case. He was later identified as one of the three leaders of the straw weapons purchasing operation and they faced a maximum cumulative sentence of 245 years in prison. That really threw him for a loop.
“I’m like what am I going to do,” he said. “In my mindset I’m going in there to do like 25 years or something. I’m like, forget it, I’m just going to go ahead and do my time, whatever I got to do, I’m going to go ahead and do it.
“Then I get in there and they’re talking like 100 and something years. Now I’m just going with the flow. They’re gonna give me whatever they give me, I’m going to go with the flow.”
As the case moved into discovery, Spencer’s team contended it didn’t look like authorities had any evidence physically tying him to anything that would put him away that long. He had high hopes.
He went to court again and this time was released from prison with time served, but he still had to serve six more months of house arrest and wear an ankle monitor the rest of his sentence.
The monitor was removed in November right before the basketball season started. That took a little to get used to.
“The first day I got off the ankle monitor I stayed in New Jersey, but when I woke up I panicked because I’m like, dang, I’m way out here in New Jersey and I didn’t tell my PO,” he said.
He doesn’t have to worry about that now.
New lease on life
Basketball was back on his radar. But where? And would his game hold up.
He came to Salem at the urging of Mighty Oaks players Tyrone Tolson and cousin Tyrese Fortune, who knew the kind of basketball player Spencer was convinced Green to give him a look.
“I’ve been going against him my whole life, so when we heard he could come, I said oh yeah you’ve got to come here with me, you’ve got to,” Fortune said. “It’s our last year here, so we just have to take advantage it and get a championship. We definitely want to get a championship with him.
“I used to talk to him a lot. I just said you’ve still got it in you, you’ve just got to keep going – for her (his daughter), your pop. I’ve got the same situation, my pops died, so we basically have the same type story. We’ve got to keep going to make them proud.”
They brought him for a tryout and Green liked enough of what he saw to know he could help the team he was building. And he was understanding enough of Spencer’s story to give him the shot at redemption here.
“It’s a tough situation,” Green said. “It never happened to me, but I come from that, that background, so I can relate. I’ve never done anything to that sort, but I know tons of guys, I’d seen it daily where I grew up (in North Philly).
“He made a mistake, man; people make mistakes all the time. I would never be the type of guy who’d like shun somebody who made a mistake. So, we wanted to be a helping hand to him and an extension of good. That’s how we looked at it.”
Spencer showed he was good enough to play on the college level. The question was could he get in to the program.
The Mighty Oaks didn’t necessarily have to jump through a lot of administrative hoops to get Spencer on campus but there were, Green said, “a lot of tough conversations” about his case to be had.
But once Green and then-Salem athletics director Bob Bunnell did their due diligence, school administrators “went to war” for the freshman. They went as far to request a hardship waiver for his eligibility, which the NJCAA denied reportedly due to his time enrolled at Caldwell and the elapsed time for his withdrawal.
Compliance director (and baseball coach) John Holt has a manila folder dedicated to Spencer’s case that he recently moved from the holder on top of his desk to a bottom desk drawer as a symbolic closing of the case.
“We stuck our neck out for him and thus far he’s given us a great compliment of doing what he’s supposed to have to do,” Green said.
And he doesn’t mean by delivering those double-doubles that seem to come every night. That, of course, is the bonus. What’s pleased them even more is Spencer pulled down a 3.0 GPA his first semester in the classroom.
He wasn’t eligible the first semester, but he was in school. He couldn’t participate in team activities until he got eligible so he stayed basketball ready playing in the open gym with his future teammates. It was there he hurt his ankle that set him back even more, but he was ready when it came to play his first game.
Back in the game
Everything Jyheim Spencer does on the floor, Salem CC coach Mike Green says, is done with energy, effort. Coaches from four-year schools recruiting the Mighty Oaks have said they don’t have players who play like him.
Finally, his opening night arrived, at home against Camden CC, a team the Mighty Oaks let get away earlier in the season. The night carried all the emotions you would have thought. The lights seemed just a little brighter. The sounds a little louder. Spencer was nervous, but excited to be back in the game.
He didn’t start and was the last uniformed player on the bench when the game began. He went in about five minutes into the first half with the Mighty Oaks down 15-4 and it didn’t take long for him to make an impact.
The first time he touched the ball he put back a missed shot for his first college bucket. Moments later he went hard to the basket, scored and hit the and one to get Salem’s comeback going.
He went for 22 points and 14 rebounds that night and along with Akeem Taylor, Tamir Powell and Tajee Jordan — all of whom also were playing their first games of the season — provided the boost to take the Mighty Oaks to the next level. Green talked throughout the early part of the season how the team would be better when those players got on the floor, and they didn’t didn’t disappoint.
“Three, four years of not playing, it was one of those great coming out parties,” Green said.
And it wasn’t just an opening night anomaly fueled by the adrenaline rush of being back on the floor. Since that night Spencer has averaged a double-double. He’s had 15 or more rebounds seven times in 10 games. He even hit his first 3-pointer since high school in last Saturday’s blowout of Luzerne.
“He’s playing w-a-a-a-y better,” Fortune said. “He’s way better than he was in high school.”
“Everything he does is like energy, effort, things that when I was playing were a prerequisite; now it’s a skill.” Green said. “It ain’t required for everybody, it’s just a skill. He’s cut from that cloth that I’m going to play hard through everything, through it all.
“He’s a lost art. He plays hard. That’s a skill now. Even the (Cal State) Bakersfield coach told him over the phone we don’t have guys who play like you.”
Bakersfield was the first Division I program to offer. Other four-year programs are said to be “very intrigued” with Spencer as a talent, just as they are with several players in the Mighty Oaks lineup. Not many are probably aware of his whole story; it’s not the type of thing you volunteer.
The Division III schools that come around reportedly really love him, but his skill level may put him out of their reach. Still, his future lies in his transcript being qualified to match whatever offers come his way.
“I feel like if a coach would sit down and listen to my story and see how I am now, I think they’ll be like, OK, he’s different, he’s not the same,” Spencer said. “That’s not him (anymore).”
And wherever he does land, it’ll be light years away from where he’s been.
Salem’s energy falls flat in Senior Day loss to Absegami; includes all of Saturday’s Salem County sports action
BOYS GAMES Absegami 56, Salem 43 Cherokee 54, Woodstown 38 West Deptford 60, Pennsville 30 GIRLS GAME Cumberland 54, Schalick 21
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
SALEM – Even though his team was facing an opponent that had 19 wins and was fourth in South Jersey Group 3, Salem basketball coach Anthony Farmer believed it was a winnable game if the Rams brought the right energy.
But even with a Senior Day celebration to add some more juice, the Rams were flat and lost to Absegami 56-43.
The Braves are now 20-3 with a 12-game winning streak.
“I wish I had some answers for you, but the whole game it was energy and effort,” Farmer said. “This was considered a big one for us, we needed this one (and) thought it was a winnable opportunity for us if we played with the right spirit. We just didn’t have the spirit. We didn’t have the energy, effort that we needed.
“You expect the guys to come out and play with some spirit, play with some energy and effort and fly around and we just didn’t have that today. We were flat.”
The big downer was the third quarter. The Rams (9-11) were held to one late field goal and outscored 18-3.
It was a tight game early with the teams trading baskets through 7-7. The Braves started exerting its game-long dominance in the paint and opened an 18-8 lead, but the Rams buried three straight 3s by Tymear Lecator and Xavier McGriff to climb back in it.
It was a four-point game when Absegami coach John Arcidiacono called time with 2:43 left in the first half after Jermyis Burroughs’ 3-pointer gave the Braves a 23-19 lead and then then they really went to work.
They gave up a bucket to Neziah Spence that made it 24-21 then didn’t allow another bucket until Azhone Burden’s running hook with 2:08 left in the third quarter. It was the Rams’ only basket of the third quarter.
“It’s a (close) game at halftime, you’ve got to come out, make a shot or two, get some stops and the game could change just like that,” Farmer said. “Obviously, a three-point quarter, things didn’t go our way … We just need to be better. We need to be able to use energy or we’ll be out (of the playoffs) early.”
The Rams recognized their two seniors before the game and both scored in the game. Burden scored 10 points and grabbed five rebounds. Joe Tunis scored a bucket in the fourth quarter.
The game also marked the return of Darrelle Johnson. The junior guard had to sit out since Jan. 13 when the NJSIAA declared him ineligible for a violation of its transfer rules and stripped the Rams of four wins that interrupted Farmer’s run towards 100 career victories.
ABSEGAMI 56, SALEM 43 ABSEGAMI (20-3) – Steven Deviney 1 0-0 3, Donald Johnson 1 5-6 7, Adam Leigh 1 5-8 7, Jamal Davis 8 2-2 19, Jermyis Burroughs 4 5-7 15, Bobby Peterson 2 0-0 5, Quadir Epps 0 0-0 0, Jeriko Thomas 0 0-0 0, Elias Blocker 0 0-0 0. Totals 17 17-23 56. SALEM (9-11) – Donovan Weathers 2 1-2 5, Xavier McGriff 1 0-0 3, Neziah Spence 5 0-0 12, Tymear Lecator 2 0-0 6, Deshaan Williams 0 2-4 2, Antwuan Rogers 1 0-2 2, Joe Tunis 1 0-2 2, Darrelle Johnson 0 1-2 1, Azhone Burden 5 0-0 10. Totals 17 4-12 43.
CHEROKEE 54, WOODSTOWN 38: The Chiefs locked down defensively on the Wolverines in the second quarter and outscored them 18-1 to take control of the game. Cherokee placed three scorers in double figures, led by John Comito’s 15.
HAMMONTON – Brett Rowand was in the right place at the right time in Woodstown’s two wins here. Rowand (150) and Angel Hernandez (144) won the final two bouts to close out Williamstown and Rowand won the clinching match against Hammonton.
WOODSTOWN 41, WILLIAMSTOWN 34 157: Joe Hatefi (WI) pinned Thomas Lacy, 1:26 165: Laitton Roberts (WO( pinned Erick Garcia, 3:02 175: Greyson Hyland (WO) dec. Aiden Garcia, 9-7 190: Deryk Hannold (WI) pinned Paul Banff, 5:31 215: Walter Carter (WO) tech fall over Matthew Lahn, 18-2 (2:23) 285: Mateo Vinciguerra (WO) pinned Logan Kennedy, 1:06 106: Tristan Rosemeyer (WI) pinned Hunter Allen 1:34 113: Adam Froehlich (WI) pinned Luke Woronicak, 1:10 120: Carson Bradway (WO) tech fall over Freedom Neff, 17-0 (3:32) 126: Travis Balback (WO) pinned Joseph Lascala, 1:44 132: Jayden Hennessy (WI) maj. dec. Barry Coverly, 12-0 138: Jackson Slotnick (WI) pinned Louie Scholl, 0:44 144: Angel Hernandez (WO) maj. dec. Jack Masterson, 14-0 150: Brett Rowand (WO) pinned Rohan Jaswal, 0:44
WOODSTOWN 38, HAMMONTON 34 175: Greyson Hyland (WO) tech fall over Julius Witcher, 18-1 (4:59) 190: Paul Banff (WO) pinned Timothy Hignutt, 1:18 215: Walter Carter (WO) tech fall over Mark Hartley, 21-0 (5:34) 285: Mateo Vinciguerra (WO) pinned Angel Arvizu, 0:24 106: Tyler Police (H) maj. dec. Hunter Allen 11-2 113: Nathan Clauhs (H) dec. Luke Woronicak, 11-8 120: Shane Way (H) dec. Carson Bradway, 6-0 126: Barry Coverly (WO) maj. dec. Dylan Tollefson, 11-0 132: Travis Balback (WO) won by forfeit 138: Luca Giagunto (H) pinned Louie Scholl, 0:38 144: Wyatt Patterson (H) pinned Angel Hernandez, 0:40 150: Brett Rowand (WO) pinned Evan Allison, 1:27 157: Michael Maimone (H) pinned Thomas Lacy, 3:20 165: Vincent Palermo (H) pinned Laitton Roberts, 1:37
Pennsville Quad
PENNSVILLE – Brett Land, Connor Ayars and Trevor Waddington all went 3-0 and Gabe Supernavage and Travis Hagan went 2-0 as Pennsville won two of the three matches in its quad meet.
Ayars won by a tech fall, major decision and a pin. Waddington pinned two opponents and won a decision. Land had a tech fall, pin and a decision. Supernavage pinned both of his opponents and Hagan won by tech fall and pin.
PENNSVILLE 68, BURLINGTON CITY 6 120: Mehki Dicks (P) pinned Owen Williams, 4:50 126: Vincent Ciccantelli (P) won by forfeit 132: Christopher Daniels (P) dec. Aaron Woomer, 11-7 138: Nathaniel Mason (P) pinned Brandon Greenberg, 2:37 144: Gave Supernavage (P) pinned Calvin Barchue, 2:45 150: Travis Hagan (P) tech fall over Qaddeah Bright, 17-0 (2:00) 157: Xzavier Waters (B) won by forfeit 165: Juan Velasquez (P) dec. Owen Keefe, 12-5 175: Joseph Halstead (P) tech fall over Suleemon Watson, 15-0 (4:10) 190: Christian Blyler (P) won by forfeit 215: Connor Ayars (P) tech fall over Delkontee Lincoln, 15-0 (2:37) 285: Trevor Waddington (P) pinned Jaden Martinez, 2:45 106: Brett Land (P) tech fall over Gerard Cole, 19-4 (1:13) 113: Erick Davalos (P) won by forfeit
EGG HARBOR 43, PENNSVILLE 31 126: Anthony Pineda (EH) maj. dec. Christopher Daniels, 8-0 132: Marco Manzo (EH) dec. Nathaniel Mason, 9-6 138: Gave Supernavage (P) pinned Graham Schlemo, 3:04 144: Travis Hagan (P) pinned Lionel Lertara, 1:26 150: Tyler Schumacker (EH) won by forfeit 157: Joseph Henderson (EH) pinned Juan Velasquez, 3:00 165: Thomas Corcoran (EH) won by forfeit 175: Zia Ali (EH) pinned Christian Blyler, 0:44 190: Joseph Halstead (P) pinned Jacob Cicchino, 3:32 215: Connor Ayars (P) maj. dec. Marco Saavedra, 10-1 285: Trevor Waddington (P) pinned Kaiden Valera, 2:28 106: Brett Land (P) dec. Maruf Reza, 8-7 113: Jayson Garcia (EH) pinned Erick Davalos, 0:43 120: Alex Piskun (EH) pinned Mehki Dicks, 0:50
PENNSVILLE 63, St. JOE (HAMM.) 18 113: Brett Land (P) pinned Damien Spera, 2:15 120: Mehki Dicks (P) won by forfeit 126: Christopher Daniels (P) pinned Naheem Davis, 1:50 132: Nathaniel Mason (P) pinned Tiernan Tracy, 0:53 138: Dalton Ammon (P) won by forfeit 144: Mason Hollywood (SJ) won by forfeit 150: Paul Lacy (SJ) won by forfeit 157: Juan Velasquez (P) won by forfeit 165: Bobby Butkus (SJ) won by forfeit 175: Joseph Halstead (P) won by forfeit 190: Christian Blyler (P) won by forfeit 215: Connor Ayars (P) pinned Chris Morgan, 1:15 285: Trevor Waddington (P) dec. Cayden Banks, 4-0 106: John Sassi (P) won by forfeit
Salem CC pounds Harrisburg Area to earn 20th win, first 20-win season in 20 years; Fortune continues his hot streak
By Riverview Sports News
HARRISBURG, Pa. – There are just certain numbers in sports that exude excellence – 100 hits, 1,000 points, 20 wins.
The Salem CC basketball team hit one of those benchmarks Saturday, securing win No. 20 in a 95-78 pasting of Harrisburg Area CC.
It left the Mighty Oaks 20-7.
“Twenty feels great,” coach Mike Green said. “It’s a number in college basketball that is considered a successful season everywhere I’ve been. It’s really hard to do. Not too many teams are winning 20 games in one year. Out of 360-some basketball teams, I’m sure there’s not half of them that’s getting to 20. It’s a big deal.”
“We’ve got to celebrate for coach,” sophomore Tyrese Fortune said. “It’s his second year here, so that’s a big accomplishment.”
It’s the Mighty Oaks’ first 20-win season in 20 years and second in 30. The 2004-05 team went 20-10. The 1994-95 team was 20-6.
“I feel like it’s a new day, it’s a new regime, we’re getting different type of players in,” Green said. “It’s a testament of the work that’s been put in before, but, more important, the work that we’ve been putting in.”
Fortune continued his hot streak. He led the Mighty Oaks’ offense with 22 points, his third 20-point effort in the last four games. In that stretch he is 18-for-18 from the free throw line.
Xavier Brewington had 20 points and Tamir Powell had 18. Guard A.J. Jones had 15 rebounds and Jyheim Spencer, one of the nation’s leading rebounders, pulled down 10 and also blocked four shots.
The Mighty Oaks played without leading scorer Akeem Taylor to rest him for the postseason. They wrap up the regular season Saturday at Sussex County CC and it’s doubtful he’ll play in that one, either.
When asked if it were likely the sophomore would play in that one, Green said, “I don’t think so.”
SALEM CC SCORING: Tyrese Fortune 22, Xavier Brewington 20, Tamir Powell 18, Josh Ramos 8, Jyheim Spencer 7, A.J. Jones 6, Stefan Phillips 4, Dontarius Jones 4, Tivon Woolford 3, Tajee Jordan 2, Rodney Shelton 1.
Region XIX standings
Here are the men’s Region XIX basketball standings; games through Feb. 8
MEN’S DIVISION III (x-based on percentage)
REGION
ALL
Union
15-0 (1.000)
19-3
Montgomery
14-2 (.875)
18-4
Philadelphia
14-3 (.824)
18-7
Camden
13-4 (.765)
16-10
Northampton
12-4 (.750)
20-4
Salem
12-5 (.706)
20-7
Brookdale
11-6 (.647)
16-7
Ocean
9-6 (.600)
14-7
Atlantic Cape
10-7 (.588)
13-12
RCSJ-Gloucester
9-8 (.529)
11-15
Passaic
7-9 (.438)
11-13
Lehigh Carbon
6-11 (.353)
7-16
Sussex
5-11 (.353)
7-18
Delaware County
5-12 (.294)
7-16
Luzerne
4-11 (.267)
6-13
Harrisburg Area
4-12 (.250)
5-18
Thaddeus Stevens
3-14 (.176)
4-17
Bergen
3-15 (.167)
4-19
RCSJ-Cumberland
0-16 (.000)
0-24
SATURDAY’S GAMES Salem 95, Harrisburg Area 78 Bergen 81, Montgomery 80 Union 78, Camden 71 Harcum at CCBC Dundalk, cancelled Lackawanna 69, Rockland CC 66 RCSJ-Gloucester 97, Passaic 64 Delaware County 91, Sussex 66 Orange County CC 87, Essex 73 Lehigh Carbon 92, Philadelphia 73 Ocean 90, RCSJ-Cumberland 67 Northampton 89, Atlantic Cape 88 Luzerne at Brookdale Delaware Tech at Howard CC, cancelled
TUESDAY’S GAMES Passaic at Luzerne Harrisburg Area at Sussex Misericordia JV at Thaddeus Stevens Philadelphia at RCSJ-Cumberland Northampton at Lehigh Carbon Montgomery at Union Rockland at Mercer Delaware at Williamson Trades Ocean at Camden Morris at Lackawanna