Beating the clock

Wednesday roundup: Woodstown’s 4×800 relay qualifies for nationals at Meet of Champions; Pennsville announces Hall of Fame Class, names Athletes of the Year

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSAUKEN – The Woodstown 4×800 relay team had one job in Wednesday’s NJSIAA Meet of Champions and they got it done.

Winning the race would have been a nice get, but the Wolverines were focused on posting a time that would get them in the New Balance Nationals at Franklin Field later this month.

They got it done, even with their anchor a little under the weather. The Group I champion quartet of Karson Chew, Jacob Marino, Cole Lucas and Josh Crawford finished fifth in the MOC, but their 7:54.84 set a new Group I record and got them into the nationals.

“One thing those guys won’t do is shy away from competition,” Wolverines coach Reggie Teemer said. “They feed off it.”

Salem County had athletes in 12 events at the all-group meet. Salem’s Anthony Parker had the best individual finish, placing fourth in the boys long jump with a best of 23-5. Crawford also finished seventh in the 800, Schalick’s David Stewart was eighth in the 400 hurdles and Cougars’ 4×100 relay team (Reggie Allen Jr., Michael Eberl, Zaeshawn Mills, David Stewart) finished sixth.

Woodstown’s 4×800 time was more than four seconds better than their winning time in last weekend’s Group I championship meet. They were just shy of a provisional qualifying time for the nationals, but wanted to run a race in their last chance to get in that would leave no doubt.

Chew led them out in 1:59.50. Marino kept them on pace with a 2:02.4. Lucas set them up with a 1:58.45. And Crawford, running with a “minor” cough and fever that “slightly impacted my running,” brought it home with two laps in the 50s and a 1:54.46. Christian Brothers Academy won the race with a collective 7:48.55.

“We came very mentally prepared to break our previous record in the 4×8 and qualify for the New Balance Nationals and I wasn’t going to let a sickness get in the way of that opportunity for my teammates,” Crawford said. “ I was proud of all my teammates for running this race as if it was our last and thankfully earning another opportunity because of the combined culmination of our efforts to give our senior, Cole, a sendoff for the record books.”

It was a busy day for the junior. He ran in three events. He ran 1:53.83 to get on the podium in the individual 800 and ran a leg on the 4×400 relay.

Here are the Salem County results from the Meet of Champions:

MEET OF CHAMPIONS
At Pennsauken HS
GIRLS
1600: 12. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick, 5:05.56
3200: 21. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick 10:58.85
Shot Put: T-20. Tatiyonna Crawford, Pennsville 34-6
Pole Vault: T-10. Megan Morris, Pennsville 10-6
BOYS
4×800: 5. Woodstown (Karson Chew, Jacob Marino, Cole Lucas, Josh Crawford) 7:54.84
400 Hurdles: 8. David Stewart, Schalick 54.53
4×100: 6. Schalick (Reggie Allen Jr., Michael Eberl, Zaeshawn Mills, David Stewart) 42.08
800: 7. Josh Crawford, Woodstown 1:53.83; 20. Cole Lucas, Woodstown 1:58.23
4×400: 21. Woodstown (Karson Chew, Kyle Reitz, Anthony Costello, Josh Crawford) 3:25.85
Javelin: 14. Connor Ayars, Pennsville 165-0
Long Jump: 4. Anthony Parker, Salem 23-5
Triple Jump: 26. Bryan Garlic, Penns Grove 41-4

Pennsville tabs Hall class

PENNSVILLE – Five decorated athletes spanning five sports and four decades, three successful head coaches and two state champion teams will comprise the 2025 class that will be inducted into the Pennsville Memorial High School Athletic Hall of Fame.

The class was announced at the school’s annual awards assembly Wednesday night. It will be formally inducted in ceremonies at the school Oct. 7.

The class includes athletes Tom Ridgway (Class of 1978), HJ Lopes (’79), Lisa Doran (’86), Dannielle Dolbow-Darby (’95) and Ashley Minch (’08); coaches Ryan Wood (football/baseball), Jack Hathaway (soccer) and Dan LaMont (tennis/wrestling); and the 2005 state champion girls tennis and baseball teams.

“The Hall of Fame Committee did a wonderful job spanning several decades in putting together this year’s class,” Eagles athletics director Jamy Thomas said. “We have a wide variety of sports recognized with our inductees from field hockey, baseball, softball, soccer and tennis. The athletes in this group may have had one sport in which they truly shined, but each of them were great all-around athletes.

“In regards to the coaches being honored this year I have had the opportunity to be taught by Coach Hathaway as a PMHS student and work alongside Coach Wood and Coach LaMont. They are a group of great coaches and even more importantly are great people who are wonderful role models for our student-athletes.”

At the same assembly, potential future Hall of Famers Megan Morris and Connor Ayars were recognized as the school’s PEPPA Scholar-Athletes of the Year. Morris is a multiple state champion pole vaulter and tennis player, while Ayars is football/track standout. Both competed at the Meet of Champions prior to attending the ceremonies.

Megan Morris (L) and Connor Ayars were named Pennsville’s PEPPA Scholar-Athletes of the Year.

TCC All-Stars

Here are the Tri-County Conference all-star teams for the Classic and Diamond divisions as selected by the coaches

Baseball

POSCLASSIC FIRST TEAMCLASSIC SECOND TEAM
PLuke Wood, PennsvilleBrian Cuniff, Wildwood
PAiden Stranahan, PitmanMark Manera, Clayton
CJake Sharrow, PitmanConnor Starn, Pennsville
IFHudson Rue, PitmanLogan Streitz, Pennsville
IFNick Watson, PitmanPeyton O’Brien, Pennsville
IFCohen Petrutz, PennsvilleChase Davis, Salem
IFTrevor Troiano, WildwoodJustin Delaney, Clayton
OFJackson Austin, PitmanDane Collum, Pitman
OFChase Burchfield, PennsvilleMason O’Brien, Pennsville
OFJeff Wagner, PennsvilleJameson Emerle, Clayton
POSDIAMOND FIRST TEAMDIAMOND SECOND TEAM
PTyler Wood, OverbrookAaron Foote, Woodstown
PLucas D’Agostino, SchalickJack Holladay, Woodstown
CGavin Dillard, GlassboroRicky Watt, Schalick
IFLou Hanna, OverbrookEvan Glassy, Schalick
IFCooper Hines, OverbrookJude Dempster, Glassboro
IFJamari Whitley, SchalickJoey Tongue, Glassboro
IFElijah Crespo, Penns GroveBrennan Crosse, Glassboro
OFRocco String, WoodstownMike Romano, Overbrook
OFCharlie Snyder, OverbrookCaden Lawless, Overbrook
OFLuke Pokrovsky, SchalickEvan Sepers, Schalick

Softball

POSCLASSIC FIRST TEAMCLASSIC SECOND TEAM
PJessica Bretz, PitmanMadelyn McGinn, Gloucester Cath.
PSavannah Brewer-Palverento, PennsvilleEmma Contreras, Wildwood
CKylie Harris, PennsvilleAlexus Paden, Clayton
IFMakenzie Widener, PennsvilleAyanna Davis, Clayton
IFMaya Hutchinson, Gloucester Cath.Avery Watson, Pennsville
IFRosalina Pereira, ClaytonMaura Quinn, Pitman
IFGraillyn Weber, PennsvilleJulia Ennis, Wildwood
OFLily Edwards, PennsvilleSawyer Simmons, Pennsville
OFJulianna Aguilar, ClaytonMadison Peek, Pitman
OFKaitlyn Capalbo, Gloucester Cath.Samantha Scutt, Pitman
POSDIAMOND FIRST TEAMDIAMOND SECOND TEAM
PAddi Shimp, SchalickTaylor Adcock, Glassboro
PLeah Clark, WoodstownLayla Perez, Overbrook
CScarlett Saicic, GlassboroLila Bowling, Woodstown
OFSienna Kudless, GlassboroMarissa Rode, Glassboro
OFGianna Simon, OverbrookCecelia Mitchell, Overbrook
OFEllie Wygand, WoodstownShyann Higinbotham, Woodstown
IFOlivia VanAcker, SchalickAva Landolt, Overbrook
IFCloe Elliott, SchalickDanica Maggi, Overbrook
IFAubrie Rennie, WoodstownEmma Schoch, Glassboro
IFAlaina Dufresne, OverbrookMarissa Pasquarello, Glassboro

Tennis

POSCLASSIC FIRST TEAMCLASSIC SECOND TEAM
SGabe Schneider, PennsvilleMaddox Efelis, Pennsville
SGeorge Gould, SchalickBrody Wiggins, Pennsville
SChase Fronczkiewicz, ClaytonRocky Monticolo, Schalick
DKaden Barnes, SchalickCarter Willis, Pennsville
DCayden Brzozowski, Schalick Ian Peacock, Pennsville
DLucas Cooksey, PennsvilleDavid Santana, Schalick
DSawyer Humpreys, PennsvilleAnthony McGrath, Schalick
POSDIAMOND FIRST TEAMDIAMOND FIRST TEAM
SZeph Kell, DelseaMohammad Sheyam, Highland
SLucius Davis, DeptfordBradyn Gee, Deptford
SDrew Stengel, WoodstownEli Croce, Delsea
DLuke Shaw, WoodstownAlan Marcos, Overbrook
DMason Shimp, WoodstownGabe Martinez, Overbrook
DJacob Bramble, DelseaBen Stengel, Woodstown
DJude Thompson, DelseaNicholas DiTeodoro, Woodstown

Boys Golf

CLASSIC FIRST TEAMCLASSIC SECOND TEAM
Mikey Joyce, Gloucester Cath.A.J. Beach, Gloucester Cath.
Joey Zubert, PitmanRobbie Ricardi, Gloucester Cath.
Owen Boulton, PitmanLuke Driscoll, Pitman
Jake Bowen-Ashwin, PitmanJackson Venuto, Clayton
Max Pappalardo, PitmanBurke Fotzsimmons, Wildwood
Gavin Burns, WildwoodChase Ayars, Salem Tech
DIAMOND FIRST TEAMDIAMOND SECOND TEAM
Jaxon Weber, SchalickRiley Bowman, Pennsville
Seth Fisher, SchalickTrevor Hann, Pennsville
Erich Lipovsky, WoodstownJeffrey Boyd, Overbrook
Anthony Sepers, SchalickChase Pepper, Cumberland
Grant Prater, WoodstownMichael Nelson, Schalick
Joey Olbrich, WoodstownJack Bucksar, Woodstown

Boys Track

EVTCLASSIC FIRST TEAMCLASSIC SECOND TEAM
100Jason Stewart, ClaytonJosiel Figueroa Marrero, Clayton
200Willie Weathers, ClaytonJamel Lemon-Ward, Gloucester Cath.
400Alexander Osayemi, ClaytonXavier McGriff, Salem
800Wyatt Evans, ClaytonLiam Edelman, Pitman
1600Jake Bowen-Ashwin, PitmanSamuel Cooke, Salem
3200Rhys Blackman, PitmanMaximus Weng, Pitman
100HAnthony Parker, SalemTimothy Gregory, Salem
400HJerry Seals, SalemLucas Razze, Pitman
HJDayvon Williams, WildwoodGiani Jackson, Wildwood
LJOmarion Pierce, SalemJustice Santiago, Wildwood
TJDonovan Weathers, SalemMission Barnes, Salem
PVGradin Buzby, SalemDuncan Freeman, Clayton
SPPedro Ibarra, ClaytonTorryn Ransome, Salem
DISNate Newcomb, PitmanGiovani Talavera Rosas, Salem
JAVWyatt Irvine, SalemJovani Rios, Salem
4×400ClaytonSalem
EVTDIAMOND FIRST TEAMDIAMOND SECOND TEAM
100Xavier Sabb, GlassboroColin McGlinn, Pennsville
200Zaeshawn Mills, SchalickAxcel Bailey, Overbrook
400John Froehlich, OverbrookKyle Reitz, Woodstown
800Josh Crawford, WoodstownSteve Chomo, Schalick
1600Ty Blackman, GlassboroCole Lucas, Woodstown
3200Joey Saicic, GlassboroJacob Marino, Woodstown
100HDayshaun Day, GlassboroKnowledge Young, Penns Grove
400HMekhi Parker, GlassboroBryan Garlic, Penns Grove
HJAmari Sabb, GlassboroReggie Allen, Schalick
LJAlex Adeleye, GlassboroJaiden Mitchell, Overbrook
TJDavid Stewart, SchalickMoses Robles, Glassboro
PVDaniel Adams, GlassboroSalvatore Longo, Schalick
SPKyle Williams, GlassboroSheldon Goldsborogh, Schalick
DISEthan McLean, SchalickAiden Tulane, Woodstown
JAVConnor Ayars, PennsvilleNyzier Wonder, Schalick
4×400WoodstownPenns Grove

Girls Track

EVTCLASSIC FIRST TEAMCLASSIC SECOND TEAM
100Miyana Johnson, ClaytonJaiyoni Yates, Clayton
200Raniyah Parsons-Smith, SalemGabrielle Pernell-Lipsey, Clayton
400Leila Ortiz, ClaytonMolly Wiśniewski, Pitman
800Amanda Bradley, PitmanAntonia Yucis, Gloucester Cath.
1600Macie McCracken, WildwoodSamantha Dale, Salem
3200Lauren Streck, PitmanMackenzie Whilden, Pitman
100HAnna Gallo, ClaytonTahirah Davenport-White, Salem
400HAudrey Boggs, SalemCarly Razze, Pitman
HJUnique Nance, SalemZyonnah Forman, Salem
LJMaKayla Smith, SalemLily Atkinson, Wildwood
TJAlaina Williams, PitmanHanna Keefe, Pitman
PVKashira Patterson, SalemTatiana Miller, Salem
SPAva Rodgers, SalemMarJziah Bundy, Salem
DISDestinee Williams, Clayton Jocelyn O’Brien, Pitman
JAVRainelle Blocker, ClaytonMegan Wehlen, Pitman
4×400ClaytonSalem
EVTDIAMOND FIRST TEAMDIAMOND SECOND TEAM
100Tamia Smith, GlassboroKezia Brackett, Glassboro
200Gia Martellacci, SchalickMissouri Pratt, Overbrook
400Rylee Clark, OverbrookSamantha Sterner, Woodstown
800Lillian Norman, WoodstownKelis Coston, Glassboro
1600Jordan Hadfield, SchalickHelen Lillia, Schalick
3200Abby Marino, WoodstownAnabel Schaal, Woodstown
100HLia Covely, WoodstownGabriella Simonini, Schalick
400HLondon Banks, OverbrookSarah Seiden, Woodstown
HJAshley Armstrong, GlassboroKami Casiano, Woodstown
LJPhoebe Alward, SchalickEmma Perry, Woodstown
TJJaelynn Jarmon, SchalickOnye Peoples, Overbrook
PVMegan Morris, PennsvilleElizabeth Mann, Glassboro
SPHeaven Franklin, GlassboroZoey Ceasar, Penns Grove
DISSunny Moore, GlassboroVirginia Tarasevich, Glassboro
JAVAllyson Green, SchalickNevaeh Robinson, Schalick
4×400SchalickOverbrook

Girls Lacrosse

POSSJILL AMERICAN FIRST TEAMSJILL AMERICAN SECOND TEAM
GShelby Foote, WoodstownMackenzie Keleher, Haddonfield
MRiley Austin, HaddonfieldCallie Warner, Clearview
MDelaney Walker, WoodstownHaley Brown, Kingsway
MMaddie Eastlack, W. DeptfordRiley Walsh, W. Deptford
MBrooke Schultz, HaddonfieldJaime Deal, Woodstown
DMia Borodin, ClearviewMarley Nate, Clearview
DFiona Keenan, HaddonfieldEmily Coyle, Clearview
DSienna Struzynski, W. DeptfordElizabeth Daly, Woodstown
OGrace Farrell, HaddonfieldSofia Conrey, Haddonfield (D)
OLauren Hamblin, HaddonfieldReese Remaly, Clearview
OPhoebe O’Rourke, KingswayRiley MacHenry, Clearview
ORhea Remaly, ClearviewCeCe Batson, Haddonfield
OEmma Morgan, Woodstown Marlina Kadar, Haddonfield

Boys Lacrosse

POSSJILL AMERICAN FIRST TEAMSJILL AMERICAN SECOND TEAM
AKeegan Borkowski, KingswayR.J. Sciarrotta, Clearview
AOwen Dougherty, KingswayJake Borkowski, Washington Twp.
AMyles Malone, Washington Twp.Aidan Batterman, Williamstown
ARobert Donahue, WoodstownMichael Kugler, Clearview
DJ.D. Seidel, ClearviewDane Jespersen, Kingsway
DCole DeNick, KingswayEthan Wechter, Washington Twp.
DDominic Hibbs, KingswayCole Aquino, Washington Twp.
DJoseph Kopaczewski, WilliamstownWalter Carter, Woodstown
GJohn Mentee, KingswayJoseph Hatefi, Williamstown (FOGO)
LSMRyan Glenn KingswayJake Devereaux, Washington Twp. (G)
MT.J. Mills, ClearviewGarrett Leyman, Woodstown (M/L/D)
MPatrick Civitarese, KingswayMason Bryan, Kingsway
MRobbie Finnegan, Washington Twp.Nicholas Maccariella, Williamstown
M/FThomas Dipietro, KingswayParker Reese, Washington Twp.



Wild cards and such

Salem County has athletes in 12 events at Wednesday’s Meet of Champions

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

Schalick’s boys 4×100 relay team cut it close, but it’s getting another chance to qualify for nationals.

The Cougars’ relay made the field for the Meet of Champions as the cut off team in their event, giving Salem County athletes in 12 events at Wednesday’s NJSIAA season-finale at Pennsauken High School.

The quartet of Reggie Allen, Michael Eberl, Zaeshawn Mills and David Stewart ran 42.82 to finish third in the Group I Championship Friday and it was good enough to earn one of seven wild card spots Salem County athletes received.

“I’m glad they got in,” Schalick coach James Turner said. “Our goal is to qualify for the New Balance Nationals.

“We already know that we’re capable of running faster than we did at states. One of our runners was sick and another is dealing with an injury. After reviewing the film, I noticed our handoffs did not go as smooth as they did at the sectional meet. We’re going to work on that Monday. The kids are motivated and excited to have another chance.”

The county’s five Group I state champions – Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield (1600), Pennsville’s Megan Morris (pole vault), Woodstown’s Josh Crawford (800), Salem’s Anthony Parker (long jump) and Woodstown’s 4×800 relay team – as well as Woodstown’s runner-up 4×400 relay team received automatic bids. The best of the rest rest were eligible for wild cards.

Of course, even though they’re qualified, the athletes in multiple events may not compete in all of them Wednesday night. Woodstown’s Crawford isn’t likely to run in the individual 800 to focus on the two relays, Schalick’s David Stewart likely won’t run the 400 hurdles that he’s only recently added to his repertoire in order to be sharp for the 4×100, and Schalick’s Hadfield is still contemplating the 3200.

MEET OF CHAMPIONS
SALEM COUNTY QUALIFIERS
GIRLS

1600: 12. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick (5:01.16)
3200: 20. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick (10:59.56)
Shot Put: 23. Tatiyonna Crawford, Pennsville (36-9)
Pole Vault: 12. Megan Morris, Pennsville (10-6)

BOYS
4×800: 5. Woodstown (7:59.15)
400 Hurdles: 16. David Stewart, Schalick (55.04)
4×100: 27. Schalick (42.82) 
800: 3. Josh Crawford, Woodstown (1:53.44); 15. Cole Lucas, Woodstown (1:55.01)
4×400: 18. Woodstown (3:23.93)
Javelin: 12. Connor Ayars, Pennsville (172-10)
Long Jump: 10. Anthony Parker, Salem (22-5)
Triple Jump: 24. Bryan Garlic, Penns Grove (44-0)

Repeat winners

Day Two of the Group I Championships brings Salem County two more state champions – Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield (1600) and Woodstown’s record-setting 4×800 relay; county produces 5 champions total

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SOMERSET – From the minute they were put together right before the sectionals last May, it was days like this the Woodstown 4×800 relay team has been training for.

The quartet of Jacob Marino, Karson Chew, Cole Lucas and Josh Crawford has won a lot of races, broke a bunch of records and even won a state championship in the 12 months they’ve been together. But what they did Saturday in the Group I championship meet at Franklin High School took their legacy to a whole ‘nother level.

They won the Group I boys title for the second straight year, but this time set the meet and state Group I record while blowing away the field. Their 7:59.15 broke the old record set by Shore Regional in 2017 by seven-tenths of a second and were waiting for runner-up Hasbrouck Heights at the finish line, winning by more than 13 seconds over teams that pushed them last year.

“It wasn’t just like a win for us, it really showed how far we’ve come,” said anchor Crawford, who won the 800 individual title the day before. “Not that we could just win the state meet like we did last year, but really blow them out of the water. It was just a great day that we’ve been training for for weeks and weeks.”

“We’ve definitely grown and learned from last year to this year,” Chew added. “We’ve definitely made our statement that we wanted to make.”

The Wolverines’ relay team was one of two repeat state champions Salem County produced on Day Two of the meet. Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield defended her girls 1600 title, winning in a time of 5:01.16.

County athletes brought home a total of five state titles over the weekend. The top two finishers in each event qualified for Wednesday’s Meet of Champions at Pennsauken. Several other non-winners, like Lucas (800), Pennsville’s Connor Ayars (javelin) and Penns Grove triple jumper Bryan Garlic, qualified for wild cards.

The Wolverines went into the 4×800 maybe a little sore from Friday’s events but were confident about what they were going after and ran what Chew called a “perfectly smooth” race. All four runners went sub-60 on the first lap of their legs and all were around 1:02 bringing it home. Crawford called it “definitely the best performance” they put out to date.

“We came in knowing we were going to win,” coach Reggie Teemer said. “It was a matter of how dominant we were going to be.”

Like a Ferrari against a Volkswagen. Marino set the tone with a 59.90 out of the gate and completed his leg in a best-ever split 2:01.94. Chew followed with a 2:00.71 to establish the lead and as Teemer said, “it was over from there.”

Lucas, the lone senior in the group, stretched an already big lead with his 1:59.21 and Crawford brought it home in 1:57.27. By the time the baton got to Crawford, the Wolverines were racing against the clock in pursuit of the meet record.

“We came into this thinking we can do this, we can break this state record, we can hit this state championship again,” Chew said. “We came in thinking let’s give it our all and let’s see what happens and we’re very happy with how the result came out.

“Last year going into the state we thought we could win it and everybody did their job and we won it. This year, we were in some individual events and another relay, but this 4×8 is definitely the pinnacle of our team. We like to call our team the ‘Middle Distance University of Salem County’ because all of us are 800 runners, so it’s definitely one of our favorite events. It’s great to see my guys so happy about it and it’s great to get that championship done again.”

As strong as their run to the title was, it did miss one mark. The Wolverines were hoping to run a time fast enough to qualify for the New Balance Nationals later this summer, but came up just short of a 7:58 provisional time. That will be their focus at the Meet of Champions.

Chew and Crawford also ran legs on the Wolverines’ 4×400 relay team that finished second to the Camden team that ran in the Penn Relays, but they still qualified for the MOC. With his win in the 800 Friday, Crawford is qualified for three events in Pennsauken and “most likely” will run all three if the schedule allows.

“He had a great weekend,” Teemer said of Crawford.

NJSIAA GROUP I TRACK CHAMPIONSHIPS
At Franklin H.S., Somerset
(Top 2 advance to Meet of Champions, top 6 score meet points)
DAY TWO RESULTS
GIRLS
FINAL TEAM SCORES (Top 15):
Clayton 73, Metuchen 56, Woodbury 29, Glassboro 28, Haddon Twp. 27, Hasbrouck Heights 27, Shore 27, Audubon 22, Maple Shade 18, Burlington City 18, Schalick 16, Riverside 16, Pennsville 16; Mountain Lakes 15, Verona 15. Also, Woodstown 3
INDIVIDUAL EVENTS
400: 1. Leila Ortiz, Clayton 57.42
4×800 Relay: 1. Shore 9:42.55; 6. Woodstown (Abby Marino, Samantha Sterner, Sarah Seiden, Lilian Norman) 10:10.28
100 Hurdles: 1. Ciani Floyd, Maple Shade 15.69
200: 1. Leila Ortiz, Clayton 25.57
1600: 1. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick 5:01.16
4×400 Relay: 1. Clayton 4:05.03
Shot Put: 1. Sunny Moore, Glassboro 39-9; 3. Tatiyonna Crawford, Pennsville 36-9
Javelin: 1. Rainelle Blocker, Clayton 110-1
Long Jump: 1. Denirah Jones, Woodbury 17-0; 5. Emma Perry, Woodstown 16-0.5
High Jump: 1. Taylor Peters, Butler 5-2

BOYS
FINAL TEAM SCORES (Top 15):
Camden 46, Hasbrouck Heights 45, Glassboro 38.5, Woodstown 38, Manville 34, Clayton 32, Metuchen 24, Dayton 22, Pequannock 19, Schalick 18, Hawthorne 18, Indian Hills 16, Bound Brook 14, Kinnelon 14, Penns Grove 13. Also, Salem 10, Pennsville 4
INDIVIDUAL EVENTS
400: 1. Alexander Osayemi, Clayton 47.81; 4. Josh Crawford, Woodstown 50.05
4×800 Relay: 1. Woodstown (Jacob Marino, Karson Chew, Cole Lucas, Josh Crawford) 7:59.15 (Group I meet record, old record 7:59.88 by Shore Regional, 2017)
110 Hurdles: 1. Williams Cusick, Creskill 14.57
200: 1. Alexander Osayemi, Clayton 22.04; 4. David Stewart, Schalick 22.47; 5. Zaeshawn Mills, Schalick 22.48
1600: 1. Eric Schleif, Metuchen 4:22.02
4×400 Relay: 1. Camden 3:21.43; 2. Woodstown (Karson Chew, Kyle Reitz, Anthony Costello, Josh Crawford) 3:23.43; 3. Penns Grove (Kylee Goodson, Sebastian Hernandez, Bryan Garlic, Knowledge Young) 3:26.52
Discus: 1. Henry Struble, Pequannock 165-4
Triple Jump: 1. Dalsen Jean-Baptiste, Bound Brook 45-8.5; 3. Bryan Garlic, Penns Grove 44-0
Pole Vault: 1. Jacob George, Haddon Twp. 14-6

Down to the wire

Salem’s Parker, Woodstown’s Crawford, Pennsville’s Morris all win state track titles, Parker on last jump of the day, Crawford at the tape, Morris in tiebreaker

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SOMERSET – Talk about cutting it close.

Salem senior Anthony Parker has known the disappointment of being a No. 1 seed and not being able to get the job done too many times. It looked like it was going to happen to him again in Friday’s Group I state meet at Franklin High School here, but on his last jump of the night, literally the last jump of the event, he reached back and delivered a gold-medal winning effort.

Parker, the No. 1 seed in the Group I boys long jump, won the event with a last-chance leap of 22-feet, 5-inches, passing the two jumpers who left him in danger of not even qualifying for the Meet of Champions on their final jumps.

“It feels great,” Parker said. “All the other times I’ve been seeded first for states throughout my four years and my track career I’ve never won state. This is the first time. It feels great. I’m blessed.”

Actually, all three Salem County Group I state champions Friday took their wins down to the wire. In addition to Parker winning on his final jump, Woodstown’s Josh Crawford held off Metuchen’s Eric Schleif at the wire to win the boys 800 and Pennsville’s Megan Morris won a tiebreaker over New Providence’s Ilana Kornacki to take the girls pole vault for the second year in a row.

Crawford ran a 1:53.44 and beat Schleif by 16-hundreths of a second. Teammate Cole Lucas was third.

Morris and Kornacki both cleared 10-6 and missed at 11-0, but Morris won the gold when Kornacki missed her first jump way back at 9-0.

Parker, who is still undecided on where he’ll run in college next year, has been seeded No. 1 in his specialties entering the state meet at least four times in his Salem career.

The first time was last year in the outdoor 110 hurdles and he didn’t make it to the finals. In this year’s indoor championships he was listed first in the 55 hurdles and finished second. He’s also seeded No. 1 in the 110 hurdles here Saturday, but a right hamstring injury that affects his ability to pull over the hurdle (but not the long jump) will keep him from competing.

“It feels great (to finally deliver),” he said. “When I’m seeded first and I’ve got that mindset I’m first, I’m going to go win it and then I don’t, I get down on myself. I’m pretty hard on myself. All the coaches were telling me the whole meet to get out of my head and go jump, go have fun, remember why you came here and why you’re doing it.”

It still wasn’t easy. Glassboro freshman Alex Adeleye bumped Parker’s 21-9 from the lead with a 21-11 on his final jump. After waiting all day to compete, Parker had just one more attempt to get it back. He rose about the pressure and the noise and nailed it.

“This is his first moment where he definitely rose as the favorite, kind of just controlled it almost 90 percent of the time where in most cases he’s had to work his way up,” Rams coach David Hunt said. “It’s hard to perform when everyone expects you to win. When people don’t have that pressure on them it’s like they’re playing with house money. Everyone was coming after him. So to be able to hold that spot, to win it as the favorite for him was a big step. That is the first time he’s been able to do it.”

“It’s a lot of pressure, but, honestly, I think it’s better for me that way,” Parker said. “When I jumped my PR, 23-9, it was also my last jump. I think I jump better under pressure.”

Pennsville’s Morris successfully defended the pole vault title she won last year but conceded it was harder the second time around.

For starters, there was the stress of meeting the expectations she had for herself. And the field was so close any of the top five could have won it. It was so stressful she almost didn’t watch Kornacki’s last attempt at 11 feet that would have determined the champion.

As it was, Morris won because Kornacki had missed her first attempt at 9 feet, a height Morris passed to start at 9-6.

“All three of my jumps were pretty clean, but that 11 I’m just missing it,” she said. “This was honestly one of my stronger days. I wouldn’t say it’s my best, I think the Salem County Meet was my best, but this is probably top two.

“Leading up to it I thought I was going to be really nervous at the actual meet because I was nervous these two weeks leading up to it, and then when I got there all the nerves kind of went away.”

Truth be told, through all the stress and intense competition she did have a little extra incentive to repeat.

“My brother made a bet with me that if I won again he’d get us all Texas Roadhouse,” she said. “Right when I won I went to him and said I guess you owe me Texas Roadhouse.” 

The top two finishers in each event are guaranteed a spot in next week’s Meet of Champions at Pennsauken, although several Salem County athletes are in contention for wildcard spots to complete the field.

Pennsville’s Connor Ayars finished fourth in the boys javelin, but his 172-10 is expected to earn a wildcard spot.

Schalick’s 4×100 relay team along with Cougars David Stewart (400 hurdles) and Jordan Hadfield (girls 3200) and Woodstown’s Lucas (800) all finished third and will be contenders for wildcards.

NJSIAA GROUP I CHAMPIONSHIPS
At Franklin H.S., Somerset
(Event winners and Salem County scorers)
(Top 2 qualify for Meet of Champions, top 6 score meet points)

BOYS
TEAM SCORES (Top 10):
Glassboro 31.5, Camden 30, Hasbrouck Heights 24, Woodstown 16, Kinnelon 12, Manville 12, Schalick 12, Clayton 12, Dayton 10, Boonton 10, Metuchen 10, Salem 10, Palmyra 10. 
4×100 Relay: 1. Camden 42.50; 3. Schalick (Reggie Allen, Michael Eberl, Zaeshawn Mills, David Stewart) 42.82
800: 1. Josh Crawford, Woodstown 1:53.44; 3. Cole Lucas, Woodstown 1:55.01
400 Hurdles: 1. Alexander Osayemi, Clayton 52.79; 3. David Stewart, Schalick 55:04; 6. Bryan Garlic, Penns Grove 56.45
100: 1. Jaiden Steele, Camden 10.86
3200: 1. Matthew Ware, Dayton 9:32.39
Shot Put: 1. Oscar Solis, Hasbrouck Heights 52-10.25
Javelin: 1. Walter Hedblom-Green, Boonton 178-5; 4. Connor Ayars, Pennsville 172-10
Long Jump: 1. Anthony Parker, Salem 22-5
High Jump: 1. Jaleel Latimore, Palmyra 6-6

GIRLS
TEAM SCORES (Top 10):
Metuchen 24, Glassboro 18, Hasbrouck Heights 15, Clayton 15, Hawthorne 14, Haddon Twp. 12, Woodbury 11, Verona 11, Riverside 10, Audubon 10, Burlington City 10, Pennsville 10
4×100 Relay: 1. Woodbury 49.33
800: 1. Gwendolyn Neale, Verona 2:10.93
400 Hurdles: 1. Gina Minichiello, Hasbrouck Heights 1:04.56
100: 1. Sydney Greenidge, Riverside 12.31
3200: 1. Kaitlyn Connors, Metuchen 10:52.42; 3. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick 10:59.56
Discus: 1. Sunny Moore, Glassboro 142-6
Triple Jump: 1. Nyima Burley, Burlington City 35-9
Pole Vault: 1. Megan Morris, Pennsville 10-6

This week’s schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of May 27-31; some times TBA

MAY 27
BASEBALL
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
Paulsboro at Audubon, 4 p.m.
Buena at Palmyra, 4 p.m.
Clayton at Maple Shade, 3:45 p.m.
Gateway at Pitman, 4 p.m.
Salem at Pennsville, 4 p.m.
Haddon Twp. at Woodstown, 3 p.m.
Glassboro at Riverside, 3 p.m.
Wildwood at Schalick, 4 p.m.
Regular season
Penns Grove at Pleasantville
SOFTBALL
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT

Wildwood at Pennsville, 2 p.m.
Palmyra at Schalick, 3 p.m.
Glassboro at Woodstown, 4 p.m.
Regular season
Overbrook at Penns Grove
TENNIS
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
Gateway at Haddon Twp., 4 p.m.
Schalick at Woodstown, 3 p.m.
Palmyra at West Deptford, 4 p.m.
Audubon at Pennsville, 3 p.m.
GOLF
Tri-County Conference Showcase, Pitman GC

MAY 28
BASEBALL
Regular season
Penns Grove at Overbrook
SOFTBALL
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
Paulsboro at Audubon, 4 p.m.
Riverside at Cape May Tech, 4 p.m.
LEAP at Haddon Twp., 4 p.m.
Buena at Maple Shade, 3:45 p.m.
Clayton at Pitman, 4 p.m.
BOYS LACROSSE
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
Woodstown at Bernards, 4:30 p.m.
GIRLS LACROSSE
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
Lower Cape May at Woodstown, 4:30 p.m.
TENNIS
Pennsville at Clayton
Penns Grove at Schalick

MAY 29
BASEBALL
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
(Games at higher seed)
Buena at Audubon
Maple Shade at Pitman
Woodstown at Pennsville, noon
Glassboro at Schalick
TENNIS
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
(Matches at higher seed)
Woodstown at Haddon Twp.
West Deptford at Pennsville

MAY 30
SOFTBALL
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
(Games at higher seed)
Salem-Audubon winner vs. Riverside-Cape May Tech winner
Schalick at Woodstown
LEAP-Haddon Twp. winner vs. Buena-Maple Shade winner
Clayton-Pitman winner vs. Pennsville
TRACK
NJSIAA Group I Championships

MAY 31
TRACK

NJSIAA Group I Championships

Monday roundup

Here are scores and highlights from Monday’s Salem County sports schedule; boys tennis tournament pairings announced

SOFTBALL
Clayton 21, Penns Grove 1
Pennsville 17, Salem 2
Woodstown 8, Pitman 2

PENNSVILLE 17, SALEM 2: Kylie Harris had two hits and four RBIs, and Graillyn Weber and Sawyer Simmons both drove in three runs. The Eagles (18-3) jumped out front with 10 runs in the first inning. Julliana Love and Isla Bohn had two hits apiece for Salem. 

The Eagles (18-3) have won seven in a row, but remain 0.963 points behind Audubon in the race to No. 1 seed in the South Jersey Group I power points standings. The cutoff for playoff consideration is Wednesday.

TENNIS

Undefeated Pennsville (18-0) pulled down a No. 2 seed and has drawn a first-round bye to the South Jersey Group I tennis tournament along with No. 1 Haddon Twp. and No. 3 West Deptford.

No. 4 Woodstown opens with Penns Grove Tuesday, and No. 5 Schalick opens with Lower Cape May Wednesday. If they both win they meet in Round 2.

PENNSVILLE 5, WILDWOOD 0
Gabe Schneider (P) def. Giorgio Palesano, 6-0, 6-0
Maddox Efelis (P) def. Simon Palacias, 6-0, 6-0
Brody Wiggins (P) def. Cristopher Hernandez, 6-1, 6-0
Sawyer Humphrey-Lucas Cooksey (P) def. Chris Olivera-Alexis Mejia, 6-0, 6-0
Ian Peacock-Carter Willis (P) def. Daniel Salomao-Angel DeJesus, 6-0, 6-0
Records: Pennsville 18-0, Wildwood 3-12

SCHALICK 5, PITMAN 0
George Gould (S) def. Chase Pogozelski, 6-0, 6-0
Rocky Monticolo (S) def. Nolan Russell, 6-2, 6-0
Conor O’Toole (S) def. Jaron Scull, 6-2, 6-2
Kaden Barnes-Cayden Brzozowski (S) def. Ben Williams-Aiden Evans, 6-0, 6-0
David Santana-Anthony McGrath (S) def. Spencer Bianchini-Liam Etter, 6-2, 6-2
Records: Schalick 13-5, Pitman 5-14

CUMBERLAND 3, WOODSTOWN 2
Drew Stengel (WO) def. Luke Fischer, 6-1, 6-1
John Farrell (WO) def. Joseph Nolan, 6-3, 6-1
Carter Fischer (C) def. Jake Lewis, 6-0, 6-1
Asher Kennedy-Chase Sheppard (C) def. Luke Shaw-Mason Shimp, 6-4, 3-6, 10-6
Mason Staffieri-Justin Nolan (C) def. Ben Stengel-Joseph Kurpis, 6-2, 6-3
Records: Cumberland 15-1, Woodstown 13-4

GIRLS LACROSSE
WOODSTOWN 19, TRITON 1:
 Ten players scored goals for the Wolverines. Delaney Walker scored four (giving her 149 for her career); Jaime Deal scored three; Sienna Land, Emma Morgan, Blair Baldi and Arianna Hyman all had two; and Isabella Lindenmuth, Angelina Lindenmuth, Gina Murray and Lucy Mannella each scored one.

VOLLEYBALL
HIGHLAND 2, SALEM TECH 0:
The Tartans won 25-18, 25-16 in the first round of the Tri-County Tournament. Highland then fell to Kingsway 2-0 (25-10, 25-12) in the quarterfinals. 

Confidence booster

Pennsville hands Schalick just its second loss of the season in potential playoff preview; Woodstown walked off in 11th

MONDAY BASEBALL
Clayton 12, Penns Grove 3
Glassboro 11, Salem 1
Pennsville 8, Schalick 2
Pitman 6, Woodstown 5 (11 inns.)

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – The folks at the very top on the inside of the Pennsville baseball team talked about the Eagles’ 8-2 win over Schalick Monday just like it was another game when everyone on their side of the ballpark knew it was so much more than that.

The Eagles (13-7) celebrated Senior Day with a win over one of the best teams in South Jersey Group I, maybe even the state, that could serve as a message for a bigger matchup down the road.

They overcame a leadoff home run by the best player in the county and bunched their eight runs into three late innings to hand the Cougars (17-2) only their second loss of the season and one that didn’t come against a rushed schedule.

The way the South Jersey Group I power points are tracking, the teams are likely to finish 2 and 3, setting up a potential sectional semifinal rematch.

“It was a good baseball game, it was a good springboard for us heading to the playoffs,” Eagles coach Matt Karr said. “No message sent today other than Pennsville played a good baseball game at 4 o’clock on Monday May 19 and if we are lucky enough to run into each other again this game and that microcosm will mean absolutely nothing. At the end of the day, when we get to May 27 everybody’s 0-0 and it’s a brand new season.” 

The Eagles are now 4-0 against county rivals this year and have won 18 straight regular-season games against in-county competition (the only setback in the run was last year’s playoff loss to Woodstown). This year’s senior group, which includes the five-man heart of the batting order, is now 67-31 in their careers and has taken four in a row from the Cougars since losing the first game of a home-and-home series in 2022.

The loss snapped Schalick’s seven-game winning streak. The Cougars’ other loss came to Haddonfield in the opening round of the Diamond Classic in a game that started less than 12 hours after their five most veteran players got back home from their senior class trip and ended 30 minutes before the prom. Coach Sean O’Brien chalked up latest loss to a bad day.

“You play 18 games you’re bound to have a bad against a good team,” he said. “A bad game against a mediocre team you can recover from, against a good team (it’s tough). It’s one of those games you’ve got to leave behind. It happens.”

The game couldn’t have started better for the Cougars. Leadoff hitter Luke Pokrovsky, the player many hoped would pitch, opened the game with his 21st career homer. It was his fifth homer in five games and the third straight game he’s gone yard.

The next two hitters also singled, but after that they didn’t get another hit off Pennsville starter Cohen Petrutz until Eli Cummings singled leading off the seventh.

“Cohen’s been battling through some stuff; today, it was awesome for him,” Karr said. “I don’t  like to throw words around loosely so I won’t use the word domination. Cohen Petrutz was in absolute control of that game from the second batter on.

“Today was a reminder that he can beat anybody on any given day, which just makes us even more dangerous going to the playoffs to have two top-tier left-handed pitchers. I know they didn’t throw Pokrovsky, but they batted their lineup they would bat in a playoff game and Cohen held them in check.”

“I think I did all right,” Petrutz said. “I was feeling good. I’ve been having arm pain the past couple outings but today I felt really great. Ready to go the whole time, had trust in my infield, didn’t have to strike everybody out today. I just felt really good.”

For the second straight game the play of the game was delivered by Jake Layfield. The sophomore shortstop snared Ricky Watt’s screaming liner with two runners in scoring position for the final out of the fourth to keep it a 1-0 game.

“He doesn’t do anything flashy, but he just seems to always make the play,” Karr said. “He doesn’t look like your typical shortstop you see on some of these elite teams but when push comes to shove Jake will be there to make the play.”

The Eagles took the lead in the bottom of the inning. Stevie Fatcher hit a two-out, two-strike, two-run double to center to put them ahead 2-1 and he rode home on Mason O’Brien’s triple to right.

“He got me chasing high for the first two and I was just thinking got to get it in play,” Fatcher said. “Then he lifted one right down the middle and I took it and hit it.

“This is one we marked on the calendar that we wanted. Coming into school today all I could think about was this game, wanting to win. I kind of wanted to show them a little bit. We did. We came in there and produced. It’s a lot of fun when you win games like that against those teams you’re going to see.”

The Eagles added two more in the fifth on Chase Burchfield’s RBI double and Petrutz’ run-scoring single to get starter Lucas D’Agostino out of the game, then tacked on three more in the sixth on four walks and Jeff Wagner’s two-run single.

The Cougars threatened in the seventh. Petrutz was going to get all 110 pitches he was promised and started the inning but gave up a single and two walks and came out. Gavin Spears put out the fire with a sacrifice fly by Evan Sepers and two strikeouts.

PITMAN 6, WOODSTOWN 5: Drew Keefe’s two-out single to right field on a payoff pitch – his fourth hit of the game – walked it off for the Panthers in the 11th inning. 

The Wolverines took a 5-4 lead in the top of the ninth on Ty Coblentz’ two-out double but Pitman extended the game on Aidan Stranahan’s two-out RBI single in the home half. Stranahan also homered in the game.

Caiden Spinelli had three hits for the Wolverines, while Coblentz and Chase Harding each had two. Rocco String had an RBI single in the fifth and walked five times – four intentionally.

CLAYTON 12, PENNS GROVE 3: Christian Thibault went 3-for-3 with three RBIs and David Chapes had three hits to lead the Clippers. Elijah Crespo (2×2, walk, HBP) and Alex Paz (3×3, walk) both had perfect days at the plate for Penns Grove. 

GLASSBORO 11, SALEM 1: Aidan Evengelisti and Colin Riley both had two hits, Gavin Dillard and Ryan Newell both drove in two runs and two Glassboro pitchers combined to hold the Rams to four hits. Bryce Harris drove in Salem’s run in the sixth inning. 

This week’s schedule

Here is this week’s Salem County sports schedule for the week of May 19-24; events start at 4 p.m. unless noted

MAY 19
BASEBALL
Glassboro at Salem
Penns Grove at Clayton
Schalick at Pennsville
Woodstown at Pitman
SOFTBALL
Clayton at Penns Grove
Pitman at Woodstown
Salem at Pennsville
GOLF
Salem/Cumberland County Tournament, Centerton CC, 8 a.m.
Schalick girls vs. Delsea, Centerton CC, 3:30 p.m.
TENNIS
Pennsville at Wildwood, 3:45 p.m.
Pitman at Schalick
Woodstown at Cumberland, 3:45 p.m.
LACROSSE
Williamstown at Woodstown, 6:15 p.m.
GIRLS LACROSSE
Triton at Woodstown
VOLLEYBALL
Salem Tech at LEAP

MAY 20
BASEBALL
Pennsville vs. Tome School (Md.), Frawley Stadium, 7 p.m.
SOFTBALL
Clayton at Salem
Pennsville at Schalick
Woodstown at Wildwood
GOLF
Schalick vs. Pitman, Pitman GC, 3:30 p.m.
Schalick girls vs. Washington Twp., The Birches, 3:30 p.m.
TENNIS
Pennsville at Penns Grove, 3:30 p.m.
Woodstown at Delsea, 3:45 p.m.

MAY 21
BASEBALL
Penns Grove at Overbrook
Pennsville at Salem
SOFTBALL
Delsea at Pennsville
Palmyra at Schalick
GOLF
Schalick girls vs. Kingsway, River Winds, 3:30 p.m.
TENNIS
South Jersey Group I Tournament
GIRLS LACROSSE
Millville at Woodstown
VOLLEYBALL
Salem Tech at Clearview

MAY 22
BASEBALL
Collingswood at Schalick
Penns Grove at Pleasantville
Pennsville at Triton
Woodstown at Cedar Creek
SOFTBALL
Clearview at Pennsville
Schalick at OLMA
Woodstown at Ocean City
TENNIS
Pennsville at Cumberland, 3:45 p.m.
Schalick at Wildwood, 4:15 p.m.
LACROSSE
West Deptford at Woodstown
VOLLEYBALL
Salem Tech at Triton

MAY 23
BASEBALL
Salem at Camden Academy Charter
GIRLS LACROSSE
Woodstown at Williamstown, 3 p.m.

Playoff projections

Here are the South Jersey Group I playoff projection for baseball, softball, boys tennis; the baseball and softball power points are open through Wednesday

Saturday was the originally scheduled cutoff date for eligible power points towards playoff consideration, but the date was moved to Wednesday due to all the inclement weather this season. Here is what the South Jersey Group I baseball and softball playoffs would have looked like if the Saturday date stood.

BASEBALL
Paulsboro at Audubon
Palmyra at Buena
Haddon Twp. at Woodstown
Gateway at Pitman
Salem at Pennsville
Clayton at Riverside
Glassboro at Maple Shade
Wildwood at Schalick

SOFTBALL
Burlington City at Audubon
Cape May Tech at Riverside
Glassboro at Schalick
Palmyra at Woodstown
LEAP at Haddon Twp.
Buena at Maple Shade
Clayton at Pitman
Paulsboro at Pennsville

The boys tennis cutoff date was Saturday, pairings are expected to be announced Monday. Here are the projected pairings; some teams may opt out of the competition (Glassboro and Pitman have), which would open up byes in the official bracket

TENNIS (May 21 first round) 
Glassboro at Haddon Twp.
Gateway at Clayton
Wildwood at Schalick
West Deptford at Woodstown
Buena at West Deptford
Pitman at Palmyra
Audubon at Point Pleasant Beach
Penns Grove at Pennsville