Keeping The Boot

Pennsville retains Wildman Willey Boot it took them eight years to get back; Schalick drops close one to Paulsboro

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNS GROVE — It took Pennsville eight years to get The Boot back. You don’t think the Eagles were going to give it up without a fight.

Pennsville retained the Norm “Wildman” Willey Boot Friday night with a resounding 41-0 victory over Penns Grove. It was the Eagles’ eighth shutout in the 68-year series, but first since 2013, and the first time they’d won back-to-back games in it since 2015-16.

When it was over, Grady Sanders ditched his crutches from an early-game foot injury and handed off the refurbished trophy to Robbie McDade and the senior quarterback ran it over to his teammates to raise in victory.

“We didn’t have it for a long time and getting it last year felt so good for everyone,” Eagles coach Mike Healy said. “I’ve had in my room for the past week. People would come in and look at it and I’d explain the story of The Boot. Even kids who don’t play football were asking questions and stuff.

“Hopefully it’ll be back on my desk Monday morning. Some of our seniors had some tough matchups against them in the past, so it’s awesome to be able to get this for them.”

Officially, the trophy is called the Pennsville Lions Club Award, but it’s more commonly referred as “The Boot” for the bronzed football cleat once belonging to Willey that sits atop it. Willey was a three-time Philadelphia Eagles’ All-Pro in a bygone era and a teacher in the Pennsville school district for more than 30 years. He passed away in 2011.

The Eagles won it back last year, brought it with them to Friday’s game — it rested on the bench — and it took up the same seat on the team bus going back home. 

“It means a lot,” said running back Rylan Hardy, who scored two touchdowns in the game. “The Boot has been in their hands for like seven years, so being able to go back-to-back years to finally bring it home to us is good. Maybe we can go on a streak now.”

“We’ve got to keep it,” sophomore linebacker Tristan Horner added.

The Eagles (3-3) opened a 14-0 halftime lead, but really came to life in the second half so as not to have a fourth straight game decided in the closing seconds. They scored touchdowns on all four of their possessions in the half – short runs by four different players – sparked by three of their four takeaways.

Hardy, Adrian Allenye and Vicktor Mosher all scored on 3-yard runs in the half and Aiden Collazo pushed in from the 1. Hardy rushed for 104 yards in the game to go over 2,000 total yards for his career. Nine ballcarriers combined to rush for 198 yards against the Red Devils (0-6).

“We’ve had an issue this year of not playing four full quarters and the big difference today was we played four full quarters,” Healy said. “They were able to finish the game when needed instead of letting them back into it.

“The past couple games we’ve gotten out to leads and let teams back in and make it interesting, but today we were able to really just finally execute.”

It might have been different had the Red Devils not had Terrell Thomas’ potential 69-yard touchdown pass from Brayden Lattig called back by a penalty in the first quarter, but the play sapped all of their momentum.

They did pick up 15 yards on their next snap, but managed only 50 yards of net offense after that, and 12 of those came on the final play of the game.

Speaking of plays, Horner turned in a nifty one in the third quarter. Horner blitzed into the Penns Grove backfield and batted down a pitch intended to Zane Thomas and recovered the loose ball. The play led to the Eagles’ third touchdown of the quarter and started the running clock.

“We went over it at film, we went over it at practice, and when I saw it I knew it was happening so I took my opportunity,” Horner said. “I saw him pull his arm back and I did my thing.”

NOTES: Penns Grove leads the overall series 38-26-4 … Penns Grove crowned its Homecoming King (Lacyir Reed) and Queen (Elif Sagir) at halftime.

Photo credit: Amory Alleyne

Pennsville 41, Penns Grove 0

 PV PG
121st Downs5
38-198Rushing12-46
0-2-0Passing8-14-3
0Passing yds59
0-0Fumbles-lost3-1
1-37.0Punts-avg2-32.5
1-15Penalties8-53
Pennsville86207-41
Penns Grove0000-0

SCORING SUMMARY
PV-Robbie McDade 8 run (Robbie McDade run), 8:17 1Q
PV-Rylan Hardy 1 run (pass failed), 1:06 2Q
PV-Rylan Hardy 3 run (run failed), 9:17 3Q
PV-Aiden Collazo 1 run (Perry Meranti pass from Robbie McDade), 3:04 3Q
PV-Adrian Alleyne 3 run (kick failed), 43.9 3Q
PV-Vicktor Mosher 3 run (Hayden Sherman kick), 4:16 4Q

Cougars can’t punch one in

PITTSGROVE — In a game that was basically played between the 30s, Paulsboro scored a touchdown late in the first half and held on to beat Schalick 6-0.

The Red Raiders loaded up the box against Schalick’s wing-T, but the Cougars also were limited by the absence of quarterback Kenny Bartee, injured at the end of last week’s game with Salem, and speedster David Stewart sustaining a back injury in the second half.

It also didn’t help that they ran only eight plays in the first half because Paulsboro controlled the clock. The Cougars had the ball with five minutes left and mounted a threat for the winning score, but the drive was gutted by back-to-back penalties.

“We struggled trying to throw the ball, struggled trying to run the ball and when we had a little bit of success we shot ourselves in the foot,” Cougars coach Kevin Leamy said. “It was rough. It was tough.”

Their defense, however, stood tall and held a Paulsboro team that was undefeated and averaging 35 points a game to just one touchdown.

They were particularly stout after extending two Paulsboro drives on a roughing the punter penalty and a punt that glanced off a member of the Cougars’ return team.

“Defensively we played fantastic,” Leamy said. “We had a great defensive scheme ready for them and the kids executed phenomenally. It was a defensive battle from both sides.”

WJFL Standings

DIAMONDALLDIV
Glassboro6-03-0
Salem2-32-1
Schalick2-42-1
Woodbury1-41-2
Woodstown2-41-2
Penns Grove0-60-3
PATRIOTALLDIV
West Deptford5-14-0
Paulsboro6-04-0
Pennsville3-32-2
Overbrook4-21-2
Collingswood4-21-2
Camden Catholic0-50-3
Audubon0-40-3

THURSDAY’S GAMES
Pleasantville 40, Woodstown 0

FRIDAY’S GAMES
Glassboro 56, Deptford 0
Paulsboro 6, Schalick 0
Pennsville 41, Penns Grove 0
Collingswood 31, Sterling 14
Haddonfield 29, West Deptford 14
Overbrook 38, Clayton 14

SATURDAY’S GAMES
Gateway at Woodbury, 10 a.m.
Audubon at Gloucester Catholic. 11
Camden Catholic at Haddon Heights, noon
Salem at Middle Township, noon

WJFL scoreboard

Here are the scores from Friday night’s West Jersey Football League schedule, includes Saturday’s schedule

FRIDAY’S SCORES
Burlington Twp. 8, Burlington City 0
Bridgeton 21, Cumberland 7
Cedar Creek 35, Oakcrest 6
Cherokee 22, Shawnee 21
Cherry Hill East 42, Clearview 0
Cinnaminson 20, Florence 0
Collingswood 31, Sterling 14
Delran 45, Hightstown 0
Eastern 35, Trenton 7
Glassboro 56, Deptford 0
Haddonfield 29, West Deptford 14
Hopewell Valley 21, Seneca 14
Kingsway 33, Hammonton 0
Lawrence 52, WW-Plainsboro South 0
Lower Cape May 34, Egg Harbor Township 0
Mainland 20, Ocean City 7
Maple Shade 38, Palmyra 6
Millville at Delsea, Monday
Northern Burlington 43, Allentown 6
Notre Dame 21, Highland 0
Overbrook 38, Clayton 14
Paulsboro 6, Schalick 0
Pennsville 41, Penns Grove 0
Princeton 18, Holy Cross 14
Riverside 36, Bishop Eustace 0
St. Joseph 34, Buena 8
Triton 28, Cherry Hill West 21
Washington Township 48, Lenape 0
Williamstown 21, Rancocas Valley 18
Willingboro 53, Timber Creek 6

SATURDAY’S GAMES
Mastery Charter at Wildwood, 10 a.m.
Gateway at Woodbury, 11
Camden Catholic at Haddon Heights, noon
Hamilton West at Nottingham, noon
Pennsauken at Eastside, noon
Salem at Middle Township, noon
Winslow at Camden, noon
Audubon at Gloucester Catholic, 1 p.m.
KIPP at Ewing, 2
Moorestown at Steinert, 2
Robbinsville at Bordentown, 6

Thursday’s results

Here are scores and highlights from Thursday’s Salem County sports schedule

BOYS SOCCER

Pennsville 4, Salem Tech 0: Sam Hassler scored the first of his two goals in the second minute of the match and Coen Rinnier made 10 more saves in another shutout.
Schalick 4, Overbrook 0: Jaxon Weber scored two goals in the Cougars’ fourth straight win.
Pitman 2, Penns Grove 0: Jake Bowen-Ashwin and Micah Frost scored goals in the second half.
Clayton 6, Salem 0: Jonathan Rehm had a hat trick.

GIRLS SOCCER
Schalick 8, Overbrook 0: Cali Fisler had her first career hat trick under the stadium lights on Senior Night, Quinn Berger scored twice and Kyleigh Cutler had a goal and two assists for the Cougars.
Pennsville 6, Penns Grove 0: Taylor Bass scored a career-high four goals and assisted on another to lead the Eagles. She scored the first three goals of the match and the final goal.
Woodstown 1, Glassboro 0: Gina Murray scored the game’s only goal in the second half with an assist from Emma Perry.
Clayton 9, Salem 0: Deondria Simon and Alivia Howrey each scored twice.
Pitman 6, Salem Tech 0: Emery Sharpnack and Carly Razze each scored two goals. Sharpnack had the assists on the Panthers’ first two goals 49 seconds apart in the third minute of the match.

GIRLS TENNIS
Schalick 4, Wildwood 1

Schalick’s Miya Watkins and the doubles team of Sebrina Bradford and Olivia Lunemann are in the field for the state singles and doubles championship this weekend at Mercer County and Veterans Park near Trenton.

Watkins will face Gov. Livingston’s Julia Kravchenko in a Saturday opening-round match at Mercer County Park. The winner will face 3/4 seed Sofia Basto-Cabrera of Shawnee.

Bradford-Lunemann will face a team from Pompton Lakes Saturday with the winner facing a 5/8 seed from Pingry.

Tough night on road

Not a lot went right for Woodstown in midweek shutout loss at Pleasantville; includes WJFL Diamond, Patriot standings

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PLEASANTVILLE – Frank Trautz just wanted to get to the bus. It was that kind of night.

It wasn’t a good Thursday night from a Woodstown perspective and the sooner the Wolverines and their coach could put it in their rear view mirror the better.

The Wolverines already were down nine starters to injury and had to make a long mid-week bus ride down the AC Expressway to play an aggressive Group 3 opponent designated by the West Jersey Football League. The results were predictable.

The Wolverines lost to Pleasantville 40-0.

“I’ve been doing it long enough now where I’ve been on this end of this before,” Trautz said. “It was just one of those nights where nothing seemed to work.”

Some things did. Max Casszar, in his first game back from injury, forced Pleasantville running back Nazir Griffin to fumble twice on the second play of the game and Noah Chiu recovered it.

Mark Levick intercepted Pleasantville quarterback Semaj Dozier in the final minute of the first half to keep the Greyhounds (4-2) from adding to their 28-0 halftime lead..

The Wolverines (2-4) didn’t have a turnover, either. Other than that, there wasn’t much else.

Pleasantville held them to minus-11 yards net rushing and 13 yards total. The two first downs they got came on an 11-yard catch by Sincere Cook-Reese and penalty in the second quarter and an 11-yard run by Tyrell West in the third quarter. They ran one play on Pleasantville’s side of the field and it lost a yard to the 50.

“We knew it was going to be a tough battle,” Trautz said. “They’re a very talented, physical football team.

“I was proud of the way our guys fought. We fought until the end. We got some guys some playing time, some younger guys in. Our guys, there’s no quit in them, and that’s what I love about this group. They’re going to fight to the very last whistle.

“We’re getting better. I know some of these scores don’t look that way, but we can take positives away from all these games and, honestly, just every varsity game experience for these guys is a positive. We’re gonna keep working and get ready for next week.”

While nothing seemed to go right for the Wolverines, most everything did for their hosts. 

Jamil Hudson caught a touchdown pass and threw for two other scores. Dozier ran for the game’s first touchdown and threw 46 yards to Hudson for another on the first play of the second quarter. The defense sacked Woodstown freshman quarterback Frankie Hoerst four times in the first half.

It was the first time the Wolverines had been shut out in a regular-season game since losing to St. Thomas Aquinas 6-0 in the 2021 season opener. Glassboro shut them out in last year’s Group I state semifinals.

Pleasantville 40, Woodstown 0

 WOOD PLEA
21st Downs11
20-(-11)Rushing21-141
4-6-0Passing8-11-1
24Passing yds225
0-0Fumbles-lost2-1
6-31.3Punts-avg0-0
5-22Penalties8-75
Woodstown0000-0
Pleasantville82066-40

SCORING SUMMARY
P-Semaj Dozier 1 run (Takiesse Barnes run), 5:06 1Q
P-Jamil Hudson 46 pass from Semaj Dozier (Takiesse Barnes run), 11:49 2Q
P-Jamaad Washngton-White 18 run (pass failed), 8:23 2Q
P-Qwasim Jackson 21 pass from Jamil Hudson (kick failed), 4:10 2Q
P-Takiesse Barnes 30 run (kick failed), 7:52 3Q
P-Ralil Wiggins 56 pass from Jamil Hudson (kick failed), 10:10 4Q

WJFL Standings

DIAMONDALLDIV
Glassboro5-03-0
Salem2-32-1
Schalick2-32-1
Woodbury1-41-2
Woodstown2-41-2
Penns Grove0-50-3
PATRIOTALLDIV
West Deptford5-04-0
Paulsboro5-04-0
Pennsville2-32-2
Overbrook3-21-2
Collingswood3-21-2
Camden Catholic0-50-3
Audubon0-40-3

THURSDAY’S GAMES
Pleasantville 40, Woodstown 0
Other WJFL Games
Absegami 16, Atlantic Tech 0
Atlantic City 55, Vineland 10
Pitman 27, Lindenwold 22

FRIDAY’S GAMES
Glassboro at Deptford, 6
Paulsboro at Schalick, 6
Pennsville at Penns Grove, 6:30
Collingswood at Sterling, 7
Haddonfield at West Deptford, 7
Overbrook at Clayton, 7

SATURDAY’S GAMES
Gateway at Woodbury, 10 a.m.
Audubon at Gloucester Catholic. 11
Camden Catholic at Haddon Heights, noon
Salem at Middle Township, noon

Shake up, wake up

Woodstown soccer shakes up approach, offense comes to life in 3-0 win over Glassboro; also includes Wednesday’s Salem County field hockey, tennis, volleyball, cross country results

BOYS SOCCER
Woodstown 3, Glassboro 0
FIELD HOCKEY
Schalick 9, Pennsville 2
Woodstown 4, Salem 3
GIRLS TENNIS
Clearview 4, Pennsville 1
Mainland 5, Schalick 0
Woodstown 4, Triton 1
Overbrook at Penns Grove
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
Atlantic Tech 2, Salem Tech 0

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – Darren Huck has never been afraid to shake things up. If you’re standing still, he figures, you’re falling behind.

Frustrated with the state of his team’s offense over the past couple weeks, the Woodstown soccer coach shook up the lineup’s look Wednesday and it produced a 3-0 win over Glassboro. 

It was only the second time the Wolverines scored more than two goals in a match since their season-high eight-goal outburst against Salem Tech in the third game of the year. They’ve scored just 10 goals in the five games since, including 1-1 tie with Penns Grove and a 1-0 golden goal win over Pennsville, games they figured to have handled a lot easier than they were.

The new alignment basically puts two men up top and five in the midfield. No personnel was changed, just the responsibilities they hold on the field. It produced almost instantaneous results as Bryce Ayars scored on a breakaway three minutes into the match.

“We made a few changes,” Huck said. “Ask any of my players, especially any of my ex-players, I’m never afraid to shake it up, to change things. Obviously, my ultimate goal is what’s best for the team.

“We have three, possibly four, formations we can play depending on situations that occur. We really felt today’s was something we could use to our advantage. It’s just a different look, different responsibilities and some boundaries and borders we needed to stay within so we stay balanced.”

Ayars scored the first two goals against the Bulldogs and assisted on the third by Nick DiTeodoro, a goal created directly by the angle of attack the new formation created.

“It’s definitely a change of scenery,” Ayars said. “It definitely helped our middle out, which we needed to do. Teams are trying to force us middle, so having that extra guy in the middle helps us out in the long run. It did what we expected it to do today.”

The look they went with Wednesday was specifically for the Bulldogs. Whether they stay with it going forward or change remains to be seen.

“My formation comes down to where our strength and weakness is,” Huck said.

Despite the limited goal production, the Wolverines’ 7-0-1 record, which currently leads the South Jersey Group I power points standings by more than two points, is their best start after eight games in more than 15 years. The 2013 team that went 20-1-1 and 2023 team that went 15-4-1 both started 7-1.

They are only unbeaten team in all of Group 1 and one of only five across South Jersey’s six classifications.

“It’s a good feeling,” Huck said.

FIELD HOCKEY
PITTSGROVE Ava Scurry scored the ninth hat trick of her career, and second against Pennsville, to lead Schalick past the Eagles 9-2.

Scurry scored her first goal less than two minutes into the game, notched her second two minutes later and got her third in the third quarter. She now has 76 career goals. Caylen Taylor had two goals and two assists.

Luci and Lena Virga both scored goals. It’s the sixth time in the last two seasons the sisters have scored in the same game; the Cougars are 6-0 in those games. Bailey Wents and Alexis Smith also found the back of the cage.

Kendall Hoyt and Abigail Bohn scored Pennsville’s goals, with Izzy Saulin assisting on both. For Bohn, a senior, it was her first career goal.

WOODSTOWN 4, SALEM 3: Julliana Love scored all three goals for Salem.

VOLLEYBALL
ATLANTIC TECH 2, SALEM TECH 0:
The set scores were 25-10, 25-19.

GIRLS TENNIS
WOODSTOWN 4, TRITON 1
Mary Ahrens (T) def. Nathalie Neron, 6-0, 6-3
Alyssa Berry (WO) def. PetraReina Ponce-Leon, 6-3, 6-0
Noelle Neron (WO) def. Elizabeth Davis, 6-2, 6-1
Madison LaPalomento-Emilee Kehr (WO) def. Lily Brennan-Olivia Schreyer, 7-6 (7-5), 7-5
Emma West-Angelina Lindenmuth (WO) won by forfeit
Records: Woodstown 9-3, Triton 6-7.

CLEARVIEW 4, PENNSVILLE 1
Serena Huang (CL) def. Lily Edwards, 7-5, 0-6, 10-7
Amelia McLoughlin (CL) def. Izzy Schrenker, 6-3, 6-1
Morgan Holt (P) def. Lia Lyle, 6-2, 6-4
Lily Culling-Helena Homann (CL) def. Naomi Hess-Emma Hankin, 6-3, 6-4
Taylor Cossaboon-Katherine Cianfrani (CL) def. Graillyn Weber-Lily Angelo, 6-3, 6-0
Records: Clearview 8-3, Pennsville 9-5.

CROSS COUNTRY
WESTHAMPTON –
The Salem Tech boys placed all five runners in the second 10 counters and edged Medford Tech for second place in the South Jersey Vo-Tech Championships.

Levi Seals led the Chargers across the line with a 10th-place 19:04.27. He was followed by Pierre Pozo (19:12.53), Anthony Morano (19:19.54), Chase Pompper (19:41.73) and Joseph MacNeil (20:06.69) for 73 team points.

Medford Tech had two in the top four, but only one other counter inside the Chargers’ top five for 75 points.

The Salem Tech girls placed third among four teams with two counters in the top 10 counters and three in the top 20. Paityn Harrington (25:03.56) and Abigail Vanaman (25:05.01) led the way.

GCIT won both team titles.

SOUTH JERSEY VO-TECH CHAMPIONSHIPS
BOYS TEAM:
GCIT 22, Salem Tech 73, Medford Tech 75, Atlantic Tech 100, West Tech 127, Cape May Tech 135, Pennsauken Tech 211.
BOYS TOP 10 OVERALL: Wyatt Evans, GCIT 17:15.06; Duke Snyder-Shellito, GCIT 17:40.47; Marcos Paulino, Medford 17:54.17; Chris Davis, Medford 18:22.08; Ryan Ejjalili, GCIT 18:45.01; Logan Monaghan, GCIT 18:49.75; Evan Feliciano, Cape May 18:50.88; AJ Trampe, GCIT 19:00.09; Carlo Blackman, ACIT 19:03.53; Levi Seals, Salem Tech 19:04.27.

GIRLS TEAM: GCIT 17, Atlantic Tech 60, Salem Tech 82, Medford Tech 86.
GIRLS TOP 10 OVERALL: Jordan Moczydlowski, GCIT 21:05.29; Kirstyn McHale, Cape May 22:58.49; Natalie Pandolfo, GCIT 23:02.00; Isabel Guerra, GCIT 23:07.51; Francesca Carnevale, GCIT 23:32.57; Rosa Cameron, Cape May 23:35.43; Addison Kris, Medford 23:51.81; Eunice States Clara, GCIT 24:58.50; Paityn Harrington, Salem Tech 25:03.56.