Getting started

Salem Tech falls to Sterling in its first field hockey game in school history; also includes girls soccer, girls tennis

THURSDAY’S SCORES
FIELD HOCKEY
Sterling 4, Salem Tech 0
GIRLS SOCCER
Washington Twp. 5, Schalick 0
GIRLS TENNIS
Overbrook 5, Penns Grove 0
Vineland 3, Schalick 2
Wildwood at Salem

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SOMERDALE — It was the first day of school for the students at Salem County Vo-Tech and a new day in the world of athletics at the school.

The Chargers have expanded their varsity sports offerings this academic year with the additions of field hockey, baseball and softball, and Thursday they played their first official field hockey match in school history.

It was a spirited debut despite losing to Sterling 4-0.

“I think we were all really excited for the game,” Chargers coach Maureen Lewis said. “The score honestly wasn’t a good reflection of how the game was actually played. If someone missed the first 10 minutes they would have thought at the end of the fourth it was 0-0.”

The game came at the Chargers fast, with the Silver Knights scoring all four of their goals in the first 10 minutes of the match. Alexis Johnston, Amelia Champion, Rilynn Eddis and McKenzie Ferrari all scored for the Silver Knights.

After that, Caroline Tighe stoned them in the cage. She was credited with five saves.

“I think we needed to get out our first official game jitters,” Lewis said. “Once we called a time out after the fourth goal was scored, we regrouped and they kicked it into gear.”

The Chargers will classify as Group 2 for NJSIAA playoff purposes and play in the Tri-County Conference Classic Division. They will compete as an independent this school year because the conference is in the second year of a two-year schedule cycle, but will be eligible for the state playoffs.

Their roster is a mix of players who may not have had an opportunity to play the sport before and, because the school now has a team to call its own, Vo-Tech students who had been playing at other programs because it had no team.

The plan is to play a schedule that gives the fledgling program every chance at early success. Most of their matches this season are against opponents that did not make the playoffs last year.

“We have some really talented players and I am really excited to see what they are going to do this season,” Lewis said. “Our new players are also doing great and getting better every day. Sometimes I forget some players are brand new to the sport. It’s been really cool to see their progress.

“This team is just really special and I’m lucky to be a part of it. It wasn’t easy for some of them to leave their teams they’ve played on for the last two or three years and I really respect how they have handled that. On the flip side, starting this team has given other players who may not have played for their home district an opportunity to play or try something new.”

The Chargers put their product in front of the home folks Wednesday against Paulsboro in their first-ever home opener.

GIRLS SOCCER
WASHINGTON TWP. 5, SCHALICK 0: Corrine Myers scored two goals in the first half and Taylor Stuart scored a pair in the second half as Washington Twp. spoiled Schalick’s season opener.

GIRLS TENNIS
VINELAND 3, SCHALICK 2
Kaitlyn Jones (V) def. Miya Watkins, 6-0, 6-0
Kasha Patel (V) def. Annmarie Podehl, 6-3, 6-1
Gonna Soto (V) def. Macy Slow, 6-1, 6-1
Olivia Lunemann-Sebrina Bradford (S) def. Angelina Apel-Marely Garcia-Flores, 6-2, 1-6, 10-2
Sammi Twigg-Jasmine Hunt (S) def. Cassidy Keller-Liliana Beni, 6-2, 6-4
Records: Vineland 3-0, Schalick 1-1,

OVERBROOK 5, PENNS GROVE 0
Sophia Burgos (O) def. Andrea Restrepo, 6-0, 6-1
Natasha Hreiz (O) def. Kavita Pulchard, 6-0, 6-0
Isabella Sepulveda (O) def. Ada Lopez, 6-0, 6-0
Anna Mason-Leah Wilde (O) def. Gianco Tirado-Nathalie Dominquez, 6-0, 6-0
Sophia Perticari-Charlotte Gall (O) def. Valaria Pedroza-Andrea Chapone, 6-1, 6-4.
Records: Overbrook 1-2, Penns Grove 0-2.

Taking offense

Salem drops another winnable game because of an inconsistent offense, falls to Cinnaminson 3-0 for 13th straight loss

THURSDAY WJFL SCORES
Cinnaminson 3, Salem 0
Buena 30, Lindenwold 6
Bridgeton 43, Clearview 0
Cherokee 42, Lenape 21
Cherry Hill East 60, WW-Plainsboro South 0
Clayton 2, Mastery Charter 0, forfeit
Delran 28, Ewing 0
Eastern 19, Ocean City 13
Gateway 33, Haddon Twp. 24
Pennsauken 41, Washington Township 0
Princeton 7, Allentown 6
Riverside 50, Florence 0
South Brunswick 10, North Brunswick 0
Winslow 47, Highland 0

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CINNAMINSON — The Salem defense is strong enough to keep the Rams in a lot of games. If they could ever get their offense in gear they might win some of them.

The Rams kept Cinnaminson out of the end zone and held it to just a field goal, but they never could punch it in themselves and fell to the Pirates 3-0 Thursday night.

It was the Rams’ 13th straight loss going back to the end of the 2023 season. They have held their opponents to 20 points or less in four of them. At the same time, their offense has scored eight points or less nine times. Both of their games this season were winnable.

The Rams had their chances Thursday night. All four of their possessions in the fourth quarter started at the 50 or better (43, 25, 41, 50), but they never capitalized on the short fields. Their best chance got to the 12 and ended in an interception at the goal line by Jake Barbich.

It left Rams coach Kemp Carr with some choice words for his offense.

“We (bleep) on offense,” he said. “We (bleep) on offense.”

Quarterback Desmund Thomas, who looked poised and threw some really nice balls in the scrimmages, completed only 10 of 27 passes for 84 yards against the Pirates. While he did overthrow several open receivers with his big arm, he was also the victim of at least a half-dozen drops and had a TD pass called back by a hold.

It was the second week in a row the Rams had a touchdown called back by a penalty.

“He’s a great player, he’s just not making plays,” Carr said of his junior quarterback. “You’ve got to make plays. You’ve gotta really build his confidence. He’s got a really good unit, he’s got a really good team. We’ve seen him complete the ball to 10 different receivers that one time. That’s not happening. We’ve got to make that happen.

“We’ve got guys. We played six or seven receivers again tonight. We had six, seven drops in key moments. We can’t do that. Drive killers.”

The only points of the game came off the foot of Aedan Burk. He kicked a 35-yard field goal to cap the Pirates’ first possession of the game. Burk had a 40-yard attempt last week that hit the crossbar.

After the field goal, the Pirates went three-and-out on their next three possessions of the half. They did open the second half with a nice series driven by direct snaps to Domenic DelGrippo, but even that went backwards once it got to the red zone and came away with nothing. Then it was back to the three-and-outs.

“The defense played extremely well, did everything to win the game except for (not getting) that pick (by Kaden Robinson on a wobbly ball) and run for a touchdown,” Carr said. “That team couldn’t move the ball against us at all. More talented, more aggressive, more fast, more explosive and we don’t take advantage of those opportunities.

“We need to learn how to win. This team does not know how to win.”

Cinnaminson 3, Salem 0

SAL (0)CINN (3)
121st Downs5
22-100Rushing31-90
10-27-1Passing (C-A-I)2-6-0
84Passing yds37
1-0Fumbles-lost0-0
5-32.2Punts-avg8-26.9
4-25Penalties-yds2-15
Salem (0-2)0000-0
Cinnaminson (1-1)3000-3

SCORING SUMMARY
C: Aedan Burk 35 FG, 2:22 1Q

WJFL Standings

DIAMOND DIVISIONALLDIV
Glassboro1-00-0
Woodstown1-00-0
Penns Grove0-10-0
Salem0-20-0
Schalick0-10-0
Woodbury0-10-0
PATRIOT DIVISIONALLDIV
Collingswood1-00-0
Overbrook1-00-0
Paulsboro1-00-0
West Deptford1-00-0
Audubon0-00-0
Camden Catholic0-10-0
Pennsville0-10-0

Top photo by Julliana Love

Why Salem? Why now?

Stars seem to be aligned for Salem CC to start football, but decision after consultant’s report rests with board

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – The secret to taking a concept and turning into reality, whether it’s on the football field or in the board room, is striking when the iron is hot.

Why else do you think football teams almost immediately go up top after coming up with a momentum-swinging turnover?

ACCORSI

As Salem Community College explores the feasibility of bringing a football to its lineup of sports offerings, the landscape seems inexorably right. Maybe even the perfect storm.

Even college president Mike Gorman acknowledged when bringing the concept to the board for consideration at its most recent meeting “if we’re going to do it, this is our window of opportunity.”

The same elements – and questions – exist that were around when the school looked into it before. This time, there might be a more receptive ear on the inside.

Two weeks ago the board took a big step towards making it happen, giving the go-ahead to bring on Jay Accorsi as a consultant on a two-month contract to do a deep dive on the feasibility of football on Hollywood Avenue.

It is not Accorsi’s place to tell the board what decision to make, just provide them with as much detail as possible to make an informed decision on whether football fits. The internal vibe seems positive, but it was the last time Salem looked at the issue, too.

“Having the need for it is one thing, being able to do it is a whole different situation,” Accorsi said. “The need for it is certainly there, it’s just piecing everything together. There are a lot of things that will take care of itself, there’s a lot of other little things that need to be worked out to make sure it fits.”

Accorsi has long been intrigued by the absence of junior college football in New Jersey, given the quality of the high school game in the state. He just needed an opportunity to tell someone. That window opened last April when he retired after 30 years at Rowan, the last 22 as its head football coach.

He became even more convinced it could work after looking at what Sussex County CC was doing in the sport while his own Profs program was shut down by the COVID pandemic.

If it could work there, he wondered, why weren’t more New Jersey JUCOs following suit. If it could work at Sussex, he thought, surely it could work elsewhere under the right conditions.

The conditions seem right for Salem. The Mighty Oaks would basically be the only game in the region and have a deep pool of potential players to recruit from.

Sussex is still the only NJCAA member school in New Jersey playing the sport. When Lackawanna transitions to NCAA Division II, Pennsylvania will have none. Delaware has none. There are trade schools in Pennsylvania and Delaware that sponsor the sport and could become a potential opponent, but those are specialized institutions outside the NJCAA umbrella. That means there is only one JUCO program in the East between Central New York and Louisburg, N.C.

As it was, Sussex, which offers scholarships and dorms, drew players from Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington in addition to more homegrown talent.

“There’s a huge void there,” Accorsi said. “I had always thought in my mind and heart that there should be junior college football in New Jersey. I moved here in the early 90s. I was shocked that there wasn’t because of how great New Jersey high school football was and … there were a lot more junior college football programs back then than there are now.

“Then you would see all these Jersey kids have to leave the state to go to all these other places to play. It always kind of was in the back of my mind. I saw there were pay-for-play (prep) schools and I saw they were charging like $22,000 a year and they (players) got no academic benefit by going to those schools.

“When I looked at the rosters, they had 40, 50, 60 players and most of them were New Jersey kids. And when I looked at most of the rosters of the junior colleges, most of them were New Jersey kids. I said it’s crazy.”

Accorsi continued to investigate the JUCO game, privately keeping a file on his research that was the basis of the pitch he would take to Salem. He enhanced it with what he already knew of what it was taking to play the game at Rowan.

He considered making the pitch to other junior colleges in South Jersey, but he was familiar with Gorman and his athletics background and one day emailed to see if Salem might be interested in what he had to say. They had about a half-hour face-to-face meeting where Accorsi presented some “extensive” and “very detailed” research and it got the ball rolling.

Accorsi didn’t make his research available for media and didn’t address Salem’s situation specifically, but much of the information related to finances, expenses, coaching salaries and player participation are available in the comparative school’s Equity in Athletics report that is available to the public. Gorman estimated Salem’s start-up outlay would be about $500,000.

Salem looked into bringing football to campus when it was reviving the athletics program in the twenty-teens, and although the sense then was it could work, the school decided not to launch at that time.

“I thought this might be a fit because of what Sussex did being a small college I think it really fit a need for a lot of things they wanted to do,” Accorsi said. “I think if you go to a bigger college it may not have the same effect, and I wasn’t interested in that. I was interested in making it something that was going to be hopefully really important.

“I told (Gorman) I’m just interested in serving New Jersey. I think it’s a shame all these New Jersey high school students leave the state to go to all these other places to play and pay a lot of money and in some instances don’t get any academic benefit. They’re just going to play, to get film, and spend a lot of money. That’s just, to me, bad.”

If the Mighty Oaks are going to pull the trigger in time to start in 2026, Gorman told the board a decision should be made by mid-October. The clock is ticking.

“There is a lot you need to do, a lot of groundwork, and a lot of things to take an idea from concept to reality,” Accorsi said. “You want to make sure it fits and is the best thing for the student athletes, the best thing for the student, the best thing for the institution, which I think make it very unique.

“I happen to be at the right place at the right time with the right institution and the right president and athletic director and people. So, things have kind of fit a little bit early, but there’s a lot of things you’ve got to cover and go through that we will in the next few months to make sure that whatever decision it is it’s the right one whether it is to proceed or not to proceed. I think that’s important.”

Full force full-time

Scurry, Virga each score twice as Schalick field hockey opens season of high expectations with a win; will be updated

TUESDAY FIELD HOCKEY
Schalick 5, Haddon Heights 2
Pennsville 3, Bridgeton 2

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PITTSGROVE — Ava Scurry scored a school-record 40 goals on a field hockey team that set a lot of records last season and she wasted little time setting out to break that mark this year.

The Schalick senior scored two goals in the first 100 seconds of the season Tuesday and assisted on another goal, sending the Cougars to a 5-2 win over Haddon Heights.

“We were hyping this game up a lot because we had a target on our backs from last season so we wanted to come out and show everyone we still have it,” Scurry said. “We have our whole team from last year. It was a good way to start the season and a great way to start the game.”

Her goals came on the Cougars’ first two attacks of the season. The first came 20 seconds into the game when Luci Virga lifted a ball into the circle and Scurry knocked in a pass from Phoebe Alward. The second goal came 78 seconds later when she converted a 30-yard flick from Caylen Taylor.

The first goal came so quick Scurry worried that her mother might not have gotten to the game yet to see it.

“That was really quick,” Cougars coach Heather Cheesman said. “The girls made a commitment to themselves, they’re going full force every single time, never giving up. They don’t care how far they’re behind in a game, how far they’re ahead of a game, that was one of their goals. They’re going full force, 100 percent every single time.”

Virga, a 22-goal scorer last year, lit the lamp twice in the second quarter to give the Cougars a 4-0 halftime lead. Addi Shimp scored their final goal in the third off another assist from Alward.

“That forward line (Virga, Alward, Scurry), all three of them are a force to be dealt with,” Cheesman said. “All three of them together have their own strength and just together they get it done.”

NOTES: Lydia Gilligan made 10 saves in the cage on her 17th birthday for the keeper win … The Cougars have been invited to play in the new 16-team South Jersey Field Hockey Coaches Tournament of Championship Oct. 4 at Camden Catholic and Oct. 5 at Clearview.

PENNSVILLE 3, BRIDGETON 2: Izzie Saulin scored twice and Laura Tamburella once as the Eagles won a back-and-forth affair for their first season-opening win since 2020. Kelsey Cook posted her 100th career save during the game while preserving the victory.

Getting to know … Ava Scurry

Schalick senior talks about her love for field hockey, becoming a goal-scoring machine, the expectations for her senior season and playing with his sister.

RIVERVIEW SPORTS NEWS: You play a lot of sports at Schalick, but you’re a field hockey player first. Why did it rise to the top of your sports menu?

AVA SCURRY: I just enjoy it so much. I’ve been playing with all these people, my teammates, since I started in fourth grade. I played softball since I was like 4. (Field hockey) is just so much more fun to me.

RSN: What was the first success you enjoyed in it that told you this was the sport for you?

AS: Probably winning when we were in fourth and fifth grades, winning big games or big tournaments with all of our team, just celebrating. We made so many fond memories and had so many big moments.

My mom told me when I was like 12 I thought softball was going to be it for you and then field hockey just like kind of sucked it away.

RSN: I remember you early on as a big assist person, but last year you turned into a big goal scorer. Was that a conscious effort on your part or did it just happen?

AS: I think it just happened like that because I’m always trying to assist my teammates. I still try, but now being on the right side helps a lot and I think my teammates do great at sending balls (my way), that’s what changed.

I played on the left when I was a freshman and sophomore and I think that helped a lot with me getting a lot of assists. I moved to right last year and I think that made a huge change.

RSN: You guys had a really big year last year and everybody is back from that team, so what are your expectations for this year?

AS: Very high. I think our goal is to win state championship. It’s our last time as a group being together.

RSN: How much better is it now?

AS: I think we’ve progressed all season. We’ve been working in the offseason. We’ve been with each other all summer. We do camps together.

RSN: You’re playing with your sister Renee this year, a year delayed because of her injury, what will that be like?

AS: When we were little I didn’t really like it that much, but now I think it’s so much fun playing with her. We come to school together every day, we come to practice together, it really strengthens our bond. It’s just so much fun doing something that you love with your best friend.

RSN: What’s recruiting like for you?

AS: I’m committed to Montclair State. I’ve been committed since April. I knew I wanted to stay close to home, but not too close. I thought Rowan was way too close. Montclair is a bigger D-III. I liked the size. And the coaches and team atmosphere were really nice.

Tennis

Tuesday’s matches
Pennsville 5, Penns Grove 0
Salem at Gloucester Catholic
Schalick 5, Overbrook 0
Woodstown 5, Glassboro 0

PENNSVILLE 5, PENNS GROVE 0
Lily Edwards (P) def. Alease Stewart, 6-0, 6-1 (ret.)
Isabell Schrenker (P) def. Kavita Pulchard, 6-0, 6-0
Morgan Holt (P) def. Ada Lopez, 6-0, 6-0
Gabi Forino-Naomi Hess (P) def. Andrea Chapone-Valaria Pedroza, 6-0, 6-0
Yerlian Charon-Emma Hankin (P) def. Gianco Tirado-Nathalie Dominquez, 6-1, 6-1
Records: Pennsville 2-1, Penns Grove 0-1

SCHALICK 5, OVERBROOK 0
Miya Watkins (S) def. Sophia Burgos, 6-4, 4-1
Annamarie Podehl (S) def. Natasha Hreiz, 6-4, 6-0
Macy Clow (S) def. Isabella Sepulveda, 6-0, 6-0
Olivia Lunemann-Sebrina Bradford (S) def. Leah Wilde-Anna Mason, 6-0, 6-1
Sammi Twigg-Jasmine (S) def. Sophia Perticari-Charlotte Gall, 6-0, 6-2
Records: Schalick 1-0, Overbrook 0-1.

WOODSTOWN 5, GLASSBORO 0
Nathalie Neron (WO) def. Alana Killelea, 6-0, 6-0
Alyssa Berry (WO) def. Taylor Adcock, 6-0, 6-0
Noelle Neron (WO) def. Alice Dinzeo, 6-1, 6-1
Madison LaPalomento-Emilee Kehr (WO) def. Virginia Tarasevich-Sofia Dungca, 6-2, 6-2
Emma West-Elianna Norman (WO) def. Amani George-Ellie Whitaker, 7-5, 6-4
Record: Woodstown 1-0, Glassboro 0-1