Mighty Oaks double up

Salem CC men beat Atlantic Cape to clinch playoff berth, women rally past Anne Arundel to keep their postseason hopes alive

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

MAYS LANDING – The Salem CC basketball team won its fifth game in a row and qualified for the post-season Thursday with an 88-72 win over Atlantic Cape.

POWELL

The Mighty Oaks improved to 14-4 with 10 regular-season games remaining. Teams that finish .500 or better in the regular season make it into the Region XIX tournament. They have never been 10 games over .500 since the school brought the program back five years ago.

They are 11-2 in Region XIX, third in the Division III standings by percentage points, second in games behind region leader Union.

The Mighty Oaks last made the playoffs 2021-22. They won an opening-round game over Thaddeus Stevens, then lost in the quarterfinals at CC of Philadelphia and finished the year 18-10.

“It’s not really a relief (to know they’ve qualified), to be honest,” coach Mike Green said. “We want to get as high as we can. We want to host a game come playoff time. The job’s not done yet. We’re still trailing, I think, three teams. Those games mean more to me.

“I’m definitely getting a whiff of that. It’s different now. The expectations we have within that locker room are different, maybe different than they’ve ever been for the Salem clubs. We’re wanting to compete for a championship. We said that from the beginning.:

The Mighty Oaks placed four scorers in double figures against the Buccaneers and had a pair of double-doubles. They took the lead in the middle of the first half and never gave it back.

Tamir Powell came out hot and led the scoring with a career-high 18 points on 7-of-11 shooting and four 3-pointers. He might have had even more if he hadn’t gotten three early fouls.

Akeem Taylor had 17 points, five assists, four steals and four blocked shots. Jyheim Spencer, who just received a D-I offer from Cal State-Bakersfield, had 16 points, 15 rebounds and five blocked shots; only one point has kept him from four double-doubles in his first four games. Tyrese Fortune had 14 points and 11 rebounds, his fifth double-double of the season.

“We try to get our guys to wear other guys down,” Green said. “We have a deeper bench than most people. Most people aren’t playing 10 people legit minutes. We play 10 people legit minutes and it’s starting to wear on teams. I looked at them (the Bucs) when we got up and down a couple times and was like they’re tired.”

Women finish strong

ARNOLD, Md. – The start of the stretch that will define the Salem CC women’s season got off to a good start Thursday night.

JACKSON

The Mighty Oaks (7-8) dominated the final 6:30 of the game, putting together a 16-2 run to rally past winless Anne Arundel 63-52. They trailed 50-47 with 6:36 to play, then scored the next 11 points to take the lead and never let it go.

After losing at home to Harcum Tuesday night, Salem coach Brian Marsh said his team’s next four games would give it a “good indication” of where they’d land for the season. They now have nine games left and must win at least five of them to qualify for the playoffs.

“We’re well aware of what we’re playing for,” Mighty Oaks coach Brian Marsh said. “We knew a loss today would have been really tough to overcome. I don’t think we played particularly well, but I thought we played well enough to win. We got off to a slow start, but we came through when we really needed it.”

Nyaijah Jackson came up big for the Mighty Oaks down the stretch, making several key steals and scoring seven of their last nine points. The freshman guard from Wilmington finished with a game-high 21 points and six steals off the bench.

Her steal and three-point play with 1:13 left in the second quarter drew the Mighty Oaks even after they trailed most of the first half.

“She was fantastic down the stretch,” Marsh said. “She’s such a competitor and she hates to lose and she just wanted to do whatever she could to win that game. I told her just go play your game, which is really tough defense and attacking the basket. I thought she did a really nice job and provided that spark that we really needed down the stretch.”

The Mighty Oaks won despite struggling from the outside. They made only two of 23 shots from 3-point range, but one of them – by Pennsville’s Caroline Zullo with 6:06 to go – gave them the lead for good. Zullo finished with seven points and eight rebounds.

Maggie St. Clair added 14 points. Jakayla Jenkins grabbed 10 rebounds.

“I think we were settling for a lot of jump shots,” Marsh said. “We just weren’t making anything outside, so I tried to speed the game up and told them they needed to get to the basket.

“I thought Ny did an excellent job really attacking the basket. Maggie started attack the basket. Trying to get some easier shots and if they don’t go in, they foul us and we get to the line. We were just trying to really get some higher percentage shots.”

Next up in the stretch is another road game Saturday at Essex, the team immediately ahead of them in the standings.

SALEM CC 63, ANNE ARUNDEL 52
SALEM CC (7-8) –
 Caroline Zullo 3-8 0-0 7, Maggie St. Clair 7-19 0-0 14, Dani Gustin 2-3 1-1 5, Kathryn Laurence 2-15 0-0 5, Jakayla Jenkins 3-7 1-4 7, RayNescia King 0-8 0-0 0, Nyaijah Jackson 9-18 3-6 21, Akira Chambers 1-4 0-2 2, Alexas Hopkins 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 28-86 5-13 63.
ANNE ARUNDEL (0-10) – Chloe Underwood 2-8 0-0 4, Holly Wall 0-3 0-0 0, McKenzie Gilbert 1-5 0-1 2, Reona Robinson 4-6 0-0 10, Ayannah Gorham 7-13 4-4 19, Aichatta Soumaoro 4-13 3-6 11, Lania Nick 3-13 0-0 6, Jasmine Mauldin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 21-61 7-11 52.

Salem CC11122218-63
Anne Arundel1510189-52
3-point goals: Salem 2-23 (Zullo 1-2, St. Clair 0-3, Laurence 1-7, Jenkins 0-1, King 0-4, Jackson 0-3, Hopkins 0-3); Anne Arundel 3-13 (Wall 0-2, Gilbert 0-1, Robinson 2-2, Gorham 1-3, Nick 0-5). Rebounds: Salem 51 (Jenkins 10, Zullo 8); Anne Arundel 53 (Wall 13, Gorham 8). Total fouls: Salem 11, Anne Arundel 15. Officials: Virgil Davis, Ronald Herbison, Ed Krug.




Salem CC basketball

Mighty Oaks men set scoring record against RCSJ-Cumberland, women closing gap on Harcum

TUESDAY’S GAMES
Salem CC men 119, RCSJ-Cumberland 53
Harcum 76, Salem CC women 45

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

VINELAND — The Salem CC men’s basketball team set a modern-era team scoring record for the second time this season Tuesday night when it routed RCSJ-Cumberland 119-53.

It was the third time this season the Mighty Oaks (13-4) have scored 100 in a game and the second time they’ve done it against the Dukes (0-17). The old single-game scoring record since the school revived the program was the 114 points this team put on the Dukes on Dec. 19.

“I think we guarded pretty well tonight,” Mighty Oaks coach Mike Green said. “We didn’t shoot it extremely well (from the 3 arc), but I think we guarded well.

“They had a hard time with the press,” coach Mike Green said. “Our guys were aggressive and alert, even the guys who came off the bench were super aggressive and alert. Our guys got out and has success in transition. They were very unselfish; we got a lot of layups. I just think we overpowered them.”

When the Mighty Oaks put 114 on the Dukes earlier this year they had four players with double-doubles. Tuesday night, they seven players score in double figures and three with double-doubles.

Jyheim Spencer had 15 points and 15 rebounds, Tajee (Herb) Jordan had 13 points and 11 boards, and Tyrese Fortune had 13 points and 10 boards. Akeem Taylor led the offense with 17 points. Xavier Brewington had 16, Tamir Powell 15 and A.J. Jones 10.

The 119 points would elevate the Mighty Oaks to 11th in JUCO Division III scoring average.

It was the Mighty Oaks’ fourth win in a row, moved them into third place in the Region XIX standings and one win from clinching a playoff spot. The last time they were nine games over .500 was the next to last game of the 2021-22 season (18-9) .

It comes as the Mighty Oaks step into perhaps their most demanding stretch of the season. From here to the end of the month they play at Atlantic Cape, Passaic, Williamson Trades and three of the top five teams in the region – at Union, Northampton and at CC of Philadelphia.

Women’s game

CARNEYS POINT – At least it wasn’t 60. Or 105.

The Salem CC women’s basketball team still hasn’t found a way to solve Harcum, but they’ve managed to narrow the gap. The first two times the Mighty Oaks played them after reviving the program they lost by 85 and 105. When they played earlier this year, the margin was 61.

Tuesday night, they were locked in a 13-point game in the middle of the third quarter before the Bears eventually pulled away 76-45.

“We’re definitely closing the gap,” Salem coach Brian Marsh said. “We’ve got to get to the point we’re not happy with good loses any more. We’ve got to get them to wins.”

The Mighty Oaks (6-8) appeared on the way to another one of those games when they struggled with their shot early and fell behind 20-5 in the first quarter. Maggie St. Clair’s basket right before halftime kept it under 20 at the break, and they had it within 13 (41-28) on St. Clair’s 3-pointer with 6:34 left in the third quarter.

Then Harcum post Amber Bullard took charge and the 18th-ranked Bears (12-4) pulled away for good. Bullard, a 6-4 sophomore Mount St. Mary’s commit who didn’t play in the first meeting between the teams, scored eight of the next 10 points in an eventual 14-0 run that put the game out of reach.

Bullard had 14 points in the second half and finished with 21 on 10-of-12 shooting and grabbed 12 rebounds. Freshman guard Sofia Vitucci was big for the Bears in the first half with all 13 of her points.

St. Clair led the Mighty Oaks with 17 points, tying her season high. She was 7-of-17 from the field with three 3-pointers. Nyaijah Jackson had 11.

“This team had every reason, especially after our game on Saturday, to lay down and they didn’t; they kept playing hard,” Marsh said. “I’m really proud of the way they played tonight. They battled. Sometimes it’s just not good enough when you’re playing a really good team.

“I thought we battled to the very end and that’s something we can build upon.”

And that’s a positive sign heading into this upcoming stretch of four gettable games that would enhance their hopes of a playoff berth. They play Anne Arundel and Delaware Tech, two teams they beat early in the season; Essex, which beat them by 10; and Middlesex, a game they let slip away Saturday.

They have 10 games remaining and must win six to get the .500 record that would get them in.

“I told the girls after Saturday’s loss we dug a hole, but it’s not a grave,” Marsh said. “They’re going to keep fighting. These next four games are really going to be a good indication of where we’re going to land for the season.”

HARCUM 76, SALEM CC 45
HARCUM (12-4) —
Jordyn Cooper-Best 3-8 2-2 9, Sofia Vitucci 4-11 2-2 13, Kimanhi Woods 0-2 0-0 0, Piper McGinely 2-7 2-3 7, Amber Bullard 10-12 1-2 21, Jaida Helm 4-10 4-5 12, Bryce Harvey-Carr 4-13 0-0 11, Shaylynn Waiters 0-1 1-2 1, Aubrey Wroten-Thomas 1-1 0-2 2. Totals 28-65 12-18 76.
SALEM (6-8) — Nyaijah Jackson 4-8 3-5 11, Caroline Zullo 1-6 0-0 2, Maggie St. Clair 7-17 0-1 17, Kathryn Laurence 1-9 0-0 3, Jakayla Jenkins 1-8 2-2 4, RayNescia King 0-5 0-0 0, Daniella Gustin 0-2 0-0 0, Akira Chambers 4-10 0-2 8, Alexa Hopkins 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 18-65 5-10 45.

Harcum20182117-76
Salem CC5141412-45
3-point goals: Harcum 8-33 (Cooper-Best 1-4, Vitucci 3-7, Woods 0-2, McGinely 1-5, Helm 0-5, Harvey-Carr 3-10); Salem CC 4-26 (Jackson 0-1, Zullo 0-5, St. Clair 3-10, Laurence 1-7, Jenkins 0-2, Chambers 0-1). Rebounds: Harcum 48 (Bullard 12, Hełm 7, Vitucci 7); Salem CC 31 (Zullo 8, Gustin 5). Technical fouls: Gustin. Total fouls: Harcum 13, Salem CC 17.



This week’s schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of Jan. 13-18

JAN. 13
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Clayton at Salem
Overbrook at Woodstown
Pennsville at Schalick
Penns Grove at Glassboro, 4 p.m.
Salem Tech at Wildwood
BOYS BASKETBALL
Penns Grove at Glassboro
Salem at Clayton
Schalick at Pennsville
Wildwood at Salem Tech
Woodstown at Overbrook
SWIMMING
Woodstown vs. Schalick at Vineland YMCA, 3:15 p.m.
TRACK
Pennsville, Woodstown at Ocean Breeze, Staten Island

JAN. 14
WRESTLING
Cumberland at Penns Grove
Pennsville at Pitman, 6:30 p.m.
Salem at Cedar Creek
Schalick at St. Joe (Hamm.)
BOWLING
Salem vs. Gloucester City at Wood Lanes
Salem Tech vs. Clayton
MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at RCSJ-Cumberland, 5 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Harcum at Salem CC, 5 p.m.

JAN. 15
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Pennsville at Penns Grove, 4 p.m.
Pitman at Salem Tech, 4 p.m.
Salem at Gloucester Catholic, 4 p.m.
Schalick at Woodstown
BOYS BASKETBALL
Gloucester Catholic at Salem, 7 p.m.
Penns Grove at Pennsville
Pitman at Salem Tech
Woodstown at Schalick
BOWLING
Salem vs. West Deptford, Bolero Deptford Lanes
Salem Tech vs. Gloucester City at Westbrook Lanes
SWIMMING
Woodstown vs. Haddon Heights at Camden County Tech
WRESTLING
Woodstown at Middle Twp.

JAN. 16
WRESTLING
Clayton at Penns Grove
Pennsville at Schalick, 6 p.m.
Timber Creek at Woodstown, 6 p.m.
SWIMMING
Woodstown vs. Gloucester Catholic at GCIT, 5:45 p.m.
Schalick vs. Pitman at GCIT, 7:15 p.m.
Salem vs. Deptford at GCIT, 8:15 p.m.
BOWLING
Salem vs. Salem Tech at Wood Lanes
MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at Atlantic Cape, 6 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at Anne Arundel CC, 5 p.m.

JAN. 17
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Camden County Tech at Salem Tech
Pennsville at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
Salem at Gloucester City
BOYS BASKETBALL
Pennisville at Woodstown
Haddon Twp. at Schalick
Salem Tech at GCIT
TRACK
NJSIAA Relays, Bennett Center, Toms River

JAN. 18
BOYS BASKETBALL
Salem at Lenape, 1 p.m.
WRESTLING
Pennsville Collingswood, Sterling at Vineland
Penns Grove, Salem, Overbrook at Pitman
Deptford, Haddon Twp., Pemberton at Schalick, 9 a.m.
Buena, Haddon Heights, Pennsauken at Woodstown
MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Passaic County CC at Salem CC, 2 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at Essex County, noon

Another milestone

Salem CC men eclipse last year’s win total by getting past RCSJ-Gloucester; women fall at Middlesex

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

DEPTFORD – The Salem CC basketball team reached another milestone in what is quickly becoming an historic season.

The Mighty Oaks came from behind Saturday to beat RCSJ-Gloucester 94-75 for its third win in a row. More significantly, it was their 12th win of the season (12-4), eclipsing their win total of the entire 2023-24 season (11-14), and moving them within two wins of qualifying for postseason play.

“I’m not downplaying that, it’s definitely significant, but the job’s not finished,” coach Mike Green said. “That was never our goal to win more games than last year. Our goal is to compete for something at the end of the year, compete for a championship, compete for a trophy, all that stuff. And we’re in a good position to do so, so far.”

Their best season since reviving the program was 18-10 in 2021-22, but that team didn’t get its 12th win that season until Feb. 1.

It took the Mighty Oaks a while to get going in this one. They fell behind by 11 six minutes into the game and trailed by nine with nine minutes left in the half. But that’s where they started to turn it around.

They put together a 22-4 run to take the lead before halftime and then opened the second half with an 18-2 run to put it away.

“We want to wear teams out,” Green said. “Teams that play six and seven people, we want to wear them out. I feel like we wore them down with our first unit, then our second unit came in and wore them down. It worked out well that way.

“And we guarded better. The first half they shot a high percentage – it looked like they barely hardly missed. The second half we did a better job guarding them in the half court and got out and got some runs.”

Everybody contributed. Jaheim Spencer had a game-high 19 points, but six players scored in double figures. Akeem Taylor and Josh Ramos each had 12, Tamir Powell and Tyrese Fortune each had 11, and Tajee Jordan had 10.

Powell had nine straight points in the middle of the first-half flurry, including a 3-pointer with 4:54 left in the half that gave the Mighty Oaks the lead for good 

After Saturday’s high-scoring win, the Mighty Oaks are 14th in JUCO Division III in scoring. They’re in the top 10 in 3s made per game and free throw percentage and the top 20 in rebounding.

With a plus-7 turnaround through 16 games over last season, might it be time for the Mighty Oaks to start getting attention in the Division III poll. After all, one of their most recent wins was over one of the teams also receiving votes in the most recent poll. 

“How does that work?” Green asked. “I think we’ve done enough to at least get some votes, but that’s on the coaches. Can’t really control that. If somebody thinks we’re a force to be reckoned with, then cool. If not, then we’ll be showing them.”

Top photo: Salem CC’s Jaheim Spencer (32) races to bring the ball up the floor against RCSJ-Gloucester Saturday. (Photo courtesy Gus Ostrum, RCSJ-Gloucester)

SALEM CC 94, RCSJ-GLOUCESTER 75
SALEM CC (12-4) –
 Jyheim Spencer 9-16 1-3 19, Akeem Taylor 4-7 3-5 12, Josh Ramos 4-8 0-0 12, Tamir Powell 5-9 0-0 11, Tyrese Fortune 5-8 0-1 11, Tajee Jordan 5-7 0-0 10, Xavier Brewington 3-6 0-0 8, A.J. Jones 3-3 0-0 6, Tivon Woolford 2-5 0-0 5, Dontarius Jones 0-4 0-0 0. Totals 40-73 4-9 94.
RCSJ-GLOUCESTER (6-10) – Hajir Davis 5 4-6 16, Titus Bacon 5 2-4 14, Ace Cassiter 3 2-3 9, Aiden Cranmer 2 0-2 5, Fred Orock 7 2-6 16, Kendell McCray 3 1-1 7, Chance Kershaw 0 0-0 0, Daniel Mendez 5 0-3 10, Jon Guzman 0 0-0 0, Amara Sacko 0 0-0 0. Totals 30 11-25 75.

Salem CC4549-94
RCSJ-Gloucester4134-75
3-point goals: Salem CC 10-26 (Taylor 1-2, Ramos 4-7, Powell 1-3, Fortune 1-3, Brewington 2-3, Woolford 1-4, D. Jones 0-4); RCSJ-Gloucester 4 (Davis 2, Cassiter, Cranmer). Rebounds: Salem CC 32 (Spencer 9, Jordan 6, Brewington 5). Total fouls: Salem 23, RCSJ-Gloucester 13.

Women’s game

EDISON – It was a game, comparatively speaking, the Salem CC women should have brought back to Carneys Point as a win.

The Mighty Oaks drilled Delaware Tech by 24 when the teams played earlier this year. Middlesex barely beat them at the buzzer when they played recently.

But that’s the danger of comparing scores. The Mighty Oaks struggled in the second half on the road and Middlesex sent them home with a 63-40 setback.

Salem scored only 14 points in the second half. Middlesex’ Genilah Singleton had nine of her game-high 15 in the third quarter.

“There was no energy, no execution,” Mighty Oaks coach Brian Marsh said. “And on the road that’s not a good combination.”

Maggie St. Clair was Salem’s leading scorer with 10 points. The Colts (7-8) had three scorers in double figures.

The Mighty Oaks (6-7) return to action Tuesday at home against Harcum (11-4), No. 19 in the last JUCO Division II poll dated Dec. 16.

MIDDLESEX 63, SALEM CC 40
SALEM CC (6-7) –
 RayNescia King 0 2-2 2, Nyaijah Jackson 2 1-2 5, Caroline Zullo 2 0-0 5, Maggie St. Clair 4 0-0 10, Dani Gustin 0 0-3 0, Kathryn Laurence 1 0-0 2, Jakayla Jenkins 4 1-1 9, Akira Chambers 3 1-2 7, Alexa Hopkins 0 0-0 0. Totals 16 5-10 40. 
MIDDLESEX (7-8) – Yasmen Zafar 1 7-10 9, Genilah Singleton 6 2-6 15, Julianne Reyes 1 0-0 2, Alyssa Rice 5 0-0 10, Abria Durham 0 0-2 0, Amya Green 4 0-0 8, Reema Azouzi 0 0-0 0, Jalena Santiago 0 0-0 0, Taijaney McCollum 1 0-0 2, Kezia Feaster 4 2-5 11, Angelia Peralta-Almonte 3 0-2 6. Totals 25 11-25 63.

Salem CC141268-40
Middlesex17171514-63
3-point goals: Salem CC 3 (Zullo, St. Clair 2); Middlesex 2 (Singleton, Feaster). Total fouls: Salem CC 20, Middlesex 13.


Back even

Salem CC women allow fewest points since reviving the program, dump RCSJ-Cumberland to win second game of new year, reach .500 first first time since Dec. 12

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT — Kathryn Laurence scored a season-high 18 points, the bigs dominated the post and the defense was sharp as the Salem CC women crushed RCSJ-Cumberland 53-24 Thursday night.

The win was their second in a row and got them back to .500 (6-6) for the first time since Dec. 12. The 24 points were the fewest the Mighty Oaks have allowed in a game since reviving the program last season. They held the Dukes (5-8) scoreless for the first 6:30 of the game and to just one point over an 11-minute stretch of the second and third quarters.

They held the Dukes to 16.7 percent shooting for the game and forced them into 29 turnovers, off which they scored 22 points.

“We didn’t have a great game offensively (shooting 27 percent and committing 25 turnovers), but we played good defense and got the win,” Mighty Oaks coach Brian Marsh said. “We’re off to a good start in the new year (2-0), but we have a tough opponent on the road Saturday that beat us twice last season (Middlesex).

“We have really started to play with a chip on our shoulder and much better basketball on both ends of the floor.”

Laurence hit 7 of 18 shots from the floor, including four 3-pointers. She hit her first two 3s in the Mighty Oaks’ 12-0 start. The 5-5 sophomore guard from Texas has scored in double figures in four of her last five games, averaging 13 points per game in the stretch.

On the inside, Akira Chambers had a double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds, and Dani Gustin had 11 rebounds to go with five points.

SALEM CC 53, RCSJ-CUMBERLAND 24
RCSJ-CUMBERLAND (5-8) —
Sky Oyola 2-7 0-1 6, Ana Patino 1-7 0-0 2, Janessa Marienski 1-6 0-2 2, Gianna Baldino 1-11 2-4 4, Armani Mejia 2-7 1-2 5, Egypt Owens 1-6 3-6 5, Sophia Ramos-Garcia 0-4 0-0 0. Totals 8-48 6-15 24.
SALEM CC (6-6) — Nyaijah Jackson 1-10 0-0 2, Maggie St. Clair 1-10 2-2 4, Kathryn Laurence 7-18 0-2 18, Jakayla Jenkins 1-6 0-0 2, Akira Chambers 5-10 4-4 14, RayNescia King 2-9 0-0 4, Dani Gustin 1-4 3-3 5, Alexa Hopkins 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 20-73 9-11 53.

RCSJ-Cumberland55410-24
Salem CC1417715-53
3-point goals: RCSJ-Cumb 2-7 (Oyola 2-2, Baldino 0-2, Mejia 0-2, Owens 0-1); Salem CC 4-17 (St. Clair 0-1, Laurence 4-12, Chambers 0-1, King 0-1, Hopkins 0-2). Rebounds: RCSJ-Cumb 32 (Mejia 9); Salem CC 53 (Gustin 11, Chambers 10). Fouled out: Baldino. Total fouls: RCSJ-Cumb 17, Salem CC 14.

Salem County schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the rest of this week

JAN. 8
WRESTLING
Gloucester Catholic at Schalick
Pennsville at Penns Grove
Salem at Cumberland
Woodstown at Deptford
SWIMMING
Salem at Lower Cape May
TRACK
Pennsville, Salem, Schalick at Bennett Center, Toms River

JAN. 9
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Glassboro at Salem
Penns Grove at Pitman, 4 p.m.
Schalick at Salem Tech
Triton at Pennsville
Wildwood at Woodstown
BOYS BASKETBALL
Pennsville at Gloucester Catholic
Pitman at Penns Grove
Salem at Glassboro
Salem Tech at Schalick
Woodstown at Wildwood
BOWLING
Salem Tech vs. Kingsway at Wood Lanes
SWIMMING
Schalick at Camden County Tech
Salem vs. Gloucester Catholic at GCIT, 8:30 p.m.
Woodstown vs. Highland at GCIT
TRACK
Penns Grove at Cherokee
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
RCSJ-Cumberland at Salem CC, 5 p.m.

JAN. 10
BOYS BASKETBALL
LEAP at Salem
Pennsville at Clayton
WRESTLING
Collingswood at Schalick

JAN. 11

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Delsea at Woodstown, 11:30 a.m.
BOYS BASKETBALL
Woodstown at Camden Catholic, 11:30 a.m.
St. Joseph at Penns Grove, 1 p.m.
Schalick at Collingswood
WRESTLING
Pennsville, Oakcrest, Overbrook at Millville
Penns Grove at Deptford
Salem at Cherokee
Schalick, Cumberland, Timber Creek at Buena

Cinnaminson Duals
Round 1, 9:30 a.m.
M1: Seneca vs. Haddon Twp.
M2: Paulsboro vs. Cinnaminson
M3: Lower Cape May vs. Haddonfield
M4: Wall vs. Woodstown
Round 2, 11 a.m.
M5: Seneca-Haddon Twp winner vs. Wall-Woodstown winner
M6: Paulsboro-Cinnaminson winner vs. LCM-Haddonfield winner
M7:Seneca-Haddon Twp loser vs. Wall-Woodstown loser
M8: Paulsboro-Cinnaminson loser vs. LCM-Haddonfield loser
Round 3, 12:30 p.m.
M9: Match 5 winner vs. Match 6 winner
M10: Match 5 loser vs. Match 6 loser
M11: Match 7 winner vs. Match 8 winner
M12: Match 7 loser vs. Match 8 loser
MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at RCSJ-Gloucester, noon
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at Middlesex, noon

Back at it

Salem CC returns to action after three-week break, sweep Camden CC; Taylor, Spencer have smashing debuts

MEN’S GAME
Salem CC 84, Camden CC 79
WOMEN’S GAME
Salem CC 61, Camden CC 55

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – Mike Green had been saying for weeks his Salem Community College basketball team would be different and better when the four players who had been sitting on the sidelines in street clothes got on the court in January. He wasn’t wrong.

Akeem Taylor, Jyheim Spencer, Tamir Powell and Taje’e Jordan — all out the first semester for ankle injuries or academics — all made their season debuts Tuesday night and the Mighty Oaks indeed were different than they had been.

Taylor and Spencer had smashing debuts that literally were three years in the making, but all four played big roles as the Mighty Oaks opened the new year with an entertaining 84-79 win over long-time thorn Camden CC. They had beaten the Cougars only once in their previous eight games since reviving the program in 2019 (Dec. 21, 2021).

Taylor, who missed the first half of the season with an ankle injury and spent the first semester doing the book at the scorer’s table, had 33 points, five rebounds and two assists, prompting inquiring minds to wonder if it was the most points in a Salem CC debut at least since the revival of the program. Spencer, who also had an ankle injury, had 22 points, 14 rebounds, three assists and three blocked shots in his first college game since December 2020.

Powell, another of the first-semester boot brigade, had six points and four assists. And Jordan, who played on the team last year but was academically ineligible in the first semester, had two points and six rebounds.

“I like to pride myself on telling you the truth,” Green said. “They’re just different players, man. I wish we would’ve had them earlier, but they’re at the top of the league when it comes to top players and they showed it from Day One. I didn’t expect them to show it like that so early, but they showed it.

“I knew they were good. I knew they’d be good, thinking maybe 16 for one, 18 the other, but 30 and 20, that’s next level. We knew we had that firepower coming in. The coaching staff did a good job of saying we’ll be all right, let’s just get through it, because once we get the full team we’ll be tough to deal with.”

And they weren’t even as full of strength as they could be even with the additions. Niame Scott and Julien Jones are out for a considerable period with first-semester injuries. They lost two other contributors as academic casualties and a third is stepping back to focus on his coursework. Dontarius Jones and Tyrese Fortune missed the game still stuck in Delaware after the weekend snowstorm. And A.J. Jones hasn’t registered for second semester classes yet. 

Taylor, a 6-4 sophomore guard from Chester, started his college career at Kutztown in 2021 and then took a gap year before landing at Salem. He wasn’t sure he was even going to play Tuesday. He tore all three ligaments in his left ankle in a preseason practice and had only been cleared to play hours before tip.

He wasted no time getting involved. He took Salem’s first shot of the game, a left-handed layup that rolled off the rim. He got it again on the next possession and this time rolled it in right-handed for the game’s first points.

He had 16 points at halftime on 7-of-9 shooting, including back-to-back three-point plays – one off a sharp pass from Spencer – during the Mighty Oaks’ early comeback. He and Spencer combined for 15 of Salem’s first 17 points of the game.

“First game against a real good team that we lost to the first time, there was a lot of hype, so I was excited to get back,” he said. “I was looking forward to this game – a lot – because they’re one of the top teams in our conference.

“I thought it was just going to be a game to get me in the rhythm, but the first couple shots went in and I was like it’s go time. That was the best debut ever, the best one I ever had my whole life.”

Spencer had an even longer and harder road to get here. He started out at Caldwell University in 2020, but ran into academic difficulties, left school and fell into trouble that got him incarcerated for 18 months. Green found him, gave him a shot “not knowing me from a can of paint,” for which is he greatly appreciative, and now the 6-8 post from Dover is a freshman here with two years of eligibility. 

“I was kind of nervous a little bit but my teammates told me it’s just another game,” Spencer said. “They were encouraging me that I’m really him, that I’m really a dog out there on the court. It doesn’t matter who’s guarding me, just go out there and do what you’re supposed to do.

“I didn’t think I was going to do what I did, but my teammates encouraged me to go harder than what I usually do. I really fed off them.”

No more than three of the newcomers were on the floor at any one time in the game and most of the time there were two, but they all got significant minutes. Among other things, they allow the Mighty Oaks to play more above the rim and free up some of their other shooters.

New and old players alike didn’t get the new year off to a good start. Perhaps it was the combination of the two big newcomers having three years off of competition and the team not playing since Dec. 19, but the Mighty Oaks (11-4) fell behind 15-4 at the outset.

They finally started getting things together when Spencer entered for the first time five minutes into the game. They got back within one on Taylor’s crashing putback with 7:40 left in the half and took the lead for the first time since 2-0 on two free throws by Powell with 5:55 to go. They trailed 41-39 at the break, but it stayed tight the rest of the game.

The Mighty Oaks pulled away late. They opened a seven-point lead on Spencer’s slam with 1:51 to go, then sealed it with three free throws by Taylor and Powell in the final 11 seconds.

SALEM CC 84, CAMDEN CC 79
CAMDEN CC (9-6):
Tyson Shaw 4-8 1-2 9, Demere Hollingsworth 5-11 5-6 16, Mikey Campbell 3-7 1-2 7, Elijah Hightower 14-18 2-7 30, Jacquez Williams 3-9 0-0 6, Noah Allen 0-1 0-0 0, Charlie LaBarre 0-0 0-0 0, Glenmore King 2-4 0-0 5, Davit Gelashvilli 1-2 0-0 3, Cam Rambert 0-3 0-1 0, Titus Blalock 1-3 1-2 4. Totals 33-66 10-20 79.
SALEM CC (11-4): Tamir Powell 1-11 3-3 6, Joshua Ramos 1-9 0-0 3, Xavier Brewington 3-13 4-6 11, Rodney Shelton 0-3 0-0 0, Akeem Taylor 11-19 10-12 33, Tivon Woolford 1-3 4-6 7, Taja’e Jordan 1-3 0-0 2, Jyheim Spencer 9-12 4-4 22. Totals 27-73 25-31 84.

Camden CC4138-79
Salem CC4945-84
3-point goals: Camden CC 3-7 (Hollingsworth 1-1, Williams 0-1, King 1-2, Blalock 1-3); Salem CC 5-25 (Powell 1-6, Ramos 1-9, Brewington 1-5, Taylor 1-2, Woolford 1-2, Spencer 0-1). Rebounds: Camden CC 39 (Hightower 12, Campbell 10); Salem CC 42 (Spencer 14) Total fouls: Camden CC 24, Salem CC 17.

Women’s Game

CARNEYS POINT — The Salem CC women knew well before Christmas what they needed to do when they returned from the holidays in order to make the Region XIX playoffs.

They had to go three games over .500 in their remaining 15 games and were probably going to lose one of the winnable games off the schedule because Morris paused its season. It seemed a tall task for a team that won its first three games of the season, but that was the bed they made for themselves.

That made Tuesday night’s first game of 2025 imperative to get. It almost got away from them, but the Mighty Oaks got it nonetheless, holding off Camden CC 61-55 to start the new year right.

“It was a huge first step for us, especially in the new year, trying to get that win,” Mighty Oaks coach Brian Marsh said. “We’ve got a game on Thursday and a game on Saturday, trying to go 3-0 this week and obviously it starts with this game.

“I don’t like to look ahead, but this is a game we had to have for our playoff aspirations, for sure.”

The Mighty Oaks (5-6) didn’t look like a team that hadn’t played since Dec. 17 at the outset. They jumped out to an eight-point halftime lead and led by 17 late in the third quarter, then they had to hold on for dear life.

They shot only 19 percent from the floor in the quarter and the Cougars took advantage of it, bringing the margin all the way back to three before Nyaijah Jackson sealed it with three free throws in the final 11 seconds.

Jackson, a 55-percent free throw shooter this season, went 5-of-10 from the line for the game and finished with 13 points, 12 rebounds and five assists. Marsh called her a “tough basketball player who wants to do whatever it takes to win.”

“I just had to take my time,” the freshman guard from Wilmington said. “We needed those free throws. I tried to make them count. The crowd was talking a lot of stuff.”

Akira Chambers also had a double-double for Salem with 14 points and 14 rebounds, while Maggie St. Clair (13) and Kathryn Laurence (10) also scored in double figures. Julie Maldonado (11/12) and Katelyn Burns (10/10) had double-doubles for the Cougars (12-4).

After the win, the Mighty Oaks (5-6) now must go 8-6 the rest of the way to snag a spot in the Region XIX playoffs. It may be 7-6 if they lose a second game off the schedule with Morris, a team that seems to have abandoned the season.

Marsh said it’s doable.

“I think so,” he said. “I honestly said to my team I think we’re going to make a run. It’s starting to come together. Our energy and our execution is starting to come together. I just think we’re going to be a team don’t want to play right now.

“I think we ended the year (2024) very strong and we’re starting very strong, so I think it’s going to be a team if we put everything together for January we’re going to be a tough out in February.”

SALEM CC WOMEN 61, CAMDEN CC 55
CAMDEN CC (12-4):
Erica Paranzino 3-12 6-6 12, Brianna Kemble 5-22 1-4 11, Katelyn Burns 5-8 0-0 10, Clara Pons de vall Ruiz 3-7 0-1 7, Julia Maldonado 3-12 4-4 11, Isabella Boyle 2-12 0-0 4. Totals 21-73 11-15 55.
SALEM CC (5-6): RayNescia King 1-5 0-2 2, Kathryn Laurence 4-8 0-0 10, Jakayla Jenkins 4-10 1-2 9, Akira Chambers 7-12 0-2 14, Alexa Hopkins 0-7 0-0 0, Nyaijah Jackson 4-13 5-10 13, Maggie St. Clair 5-13 3-4 13, Daniella Gustin 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 25-70 9-20 61.

Camden CC12121120-55
Salem CC16161811-61
3-point goals: Camden CC 2-10 (Kemble 0-2, Ruiz 1-3, Maldonado 1-5); Salem CC 2-15 (King 0-3, Laurence 2-5, Hopkins 0-3, Jackson 0-2, St. Clair 0-2). Rebounds: Camden CC 40 (Maldonado 12, Burns 10); Salem CC 53 (Chambers 14, Jackson 12). Fouled out: Kemble. Total fouls: Camden CC 19, Salem CC 17.

Salem County schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the remainder of this week and the first full week of the new year

JAN. 2
BOWLING

Salem vs. Lindenwold at 30 Strikes
Salem Tech vs. Gloucester City at Wood Lanes

JAN. 3
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Glassboro at Woodstown
Pennsville at Overbrook
Penns Grove at Schalick, 4 p.m.
Salem Tech at Camden Academy Charter
Wildwood at Salem
BOYS BASKETBALL
Gloucester Catholic at Salem Tech
Overbrook at Pennsville
Salem at Wildwood
Schalick at Penns Grove
Woodstown at Glassboro
WRESTLING
Penns Grove in Bohemia Manor (Md.) Tournament
Schalick at Egg Harbor Twp.
SWIMMING
Woodstown vs. Timber Creek at GCIT, 7 p.m.
Schalick vs. Glassboro at GCIT, 8:30 p.m.

JAN. 4
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Pennsville at Cumberland, 11:30 a.m.
BOYS BASKETBALL
Cumberland at Pennsville, 11:30 a.m.
Eastern at Penns Grove, 1 p.m.
WRESTLING
Pennsville at Hammonton Duals
Penns Grove, Paul VI, Willingboro at Audubon
Haddon Heights, Mainland, Overbrook at Schalick
Salem, Burlington City, St. Joe at Pitman
Woodstown in Collingswood Duals
INDOOR TRACK
Salem, Woodstown at Ott Center, Philadelphia

JAN. 5
WRESTLING

Schalick at Williamstown Tournament
Pennsville girls at Williamstown Tournament

JAN. 6
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Penns Grove at Haddon Twp., 7 p.m.
Pennsville at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
Schalick at Buena
BOYS BASKETBALL
Buena at Schalick
Camden Tech at Salem Tech
Pennsville at Woodstown
WRESTLING
Paul VI at Pennsville
SWIMMING
Schalick vs. West Deptford at River Winds
Woodstown vs. Lower Cape May

JAN. 7
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Clayton at Salem Tech
Overbrook at Penns Grove, 4 p.m.
Salem at Pitman
Schalick at Glassboro
BOYS BASKETBALL
Glassboro at Schalick
Penns Grove at Overbrook
Pitman at Salem
Salem Tech at Clayton
BOWLING
Salem vs. Kingsway at Wood Lanes
Salem Tech vs. Lindenwold
MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Camden County at Salem CC, 7 p.m.
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Camden County at Salem CC, 5 p.m.

JAN. 8
WRESTLING
Gloucester Catholic at Schalick
Pennsville at Penns Grove
Salem at Cumberland
Woodstown at Deptford
SWIMMING
Salem at Lower Cape May
TRACK
Pennsville, Salem, Schalick at Bennett Center, Toms River

JAN. 9
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Glassboro at Salem
Penns Grove at Pitman, 4 p.m.
Schalick at Salem Tech
Triton at Pennsville
Wildwood at Woodstown
BOYS BASKETBALL
Pennsville at Gloucester Catholic
Pitman at Penns Grove
Salem at Glassboro
Salem Tech at Schalick
Woodstown at Wildwood
BOWLING
Salem Tech vs. Kingsway at Wood Lanes
SWIMMING
Schalick at Camden County Tech
Salem vs. Gloucester Catholic at GCIT, 8:30 p.m.
Woodstown vs. Highland at GCIT
TRACK
Penns Grove at Cherokee
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
RCSJ-Cumberland at Salem CC, 5 p.m.

JAN. 10
BOYS BASKETBALL
LEAP at Salem
Pennsville at Clayton
WRESTLING
Collingswood at Schalick

JAN. 11

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Delsea at Woodstown, 11:30 a.m.
BOYS BASKETBALL
Woodstown at Camden Catholic, 11:30 a.m.
St. Joseph at Penns Grove, 1 p.m.
Schalick at Collingswood
WRESTLING
Pennsville, Oakcrest, Overbrook at Millville
Penns Grove at Deptford
Salem at Cherokee
Schalick, Cumberland, Timber Creek at Buena
Woodstown in Cinnaminson Duals
MENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
RCSJ-Gloucester at Salem CC, noon
WOMENS COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Salem CC at Middlesex, noon

Salem CC stats

Here is where the Salem CC basketball teams rank in the national JUCO stats through Dec. 29; both Mighty Oaks teams return to action Jan. 7 at home against Camden County College

MEN (D3)VALRKWOMEN (D2)VALRK
Record10-4Record4-6
Scoring84.416Scoring68.853
FG Pct.41.953FG Pct..39843
3PT Pct.33.3243PT Pct.27.854
FT Pct.69.914FT Pct.56.6112
Rebounds42.918Rebounds38.482
Assists16.329Assists17.517
Turnovers12.419Turnovers15.318
Opp. Scoring74.135Opp. Scoring70.4110
Opp. FG Pct.39.816Opp. FG Pct..37186
Opp. 3P74-26041Opp. 3P45-18769
Opp. Rebounds39.149Opp. Rebounds41.3106
Opp. Turnovers12.468Opp. Turnovers20.252

Pictured players: Josh Ramos (11) is third in 3-pointers (43); Rodney Shelton is sixth in blocked shots (31). Additionally, Stefan Phillips is fourth in FT percentage (.900, 36-40).

Festive in the Fieldhouse

Salem CC men’s basketball team sets modern-era single-game record for points, wins before Christmas in rout of RCSJ-Cumberland; score four double-doubles 

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – Salem Community College had its annual Christmas party in the lobby of the Dupont Fieldhouse Wednesday. The Mighty Oaks basketball team had its own party in the gym Thursday night.

Call it a Festival of Heights.

The coaches were decked out in colorful Christmas sweaters. There was hip-hop holiday music playing over the sound system. And by the end of the night the players were flying around the gym like Santa’s reindeer.

What better way to go into the holiday break than with an historic 114-56 rout of winless RCSJ-Cumberland in their final game of the first semester.

“It makes the holidays really good,” Mighty Oaks coach Mike Green said. “You’re not going anywhere with 99 concerns. You’re going in there building off what you just had.”

“It gives me a really positive attitude going into the holidays,” post Rodney Shelton said.

The game was historic on so many fronts. The Mighty Oaks (10-4) set a modern-era record for points in a game and became the first team since the school revived the program in 2019 to win 10 games before the break. They had six players score in double figures and an incredible four double-doubles, which Green said was “pretty cool.”

They had only six double-doubles all season prior to Thursday night and never more than two in any game. They had had only 11 in the previous 31 Green-coached games.

Their previous single-game high was 113 points against Atlantic Cape on Feb. 4, 2020. They had scored 110 under Green last season and 106 earlier this year (Lancaster Bible JV). The 10 wins are one more than Green won last year after being hired on Dec. 23. Ironically, RCSJ-Cumberland was his first game and first victory.

The 2021-22 team won nine games before its holiday break.

“That’s big time; that’s good,” Green said. “Take your hat off to the guys and our coaching staff. It shows we’re going in the right direction. It’s always great being the first. We want to be the first one with however many wins; is it 25? 30? We want to be the first with everything. That’s how you build programs. We’ve got 10, so we’re better than we were last year already.”

“I kind of knew (they’d do this well), if I’m being honest,” guard Josh Ramos said. “Coming into the season I felt with the group of guys we had, especially after last year with the low number we had, I had so much confidence that we would be one of the best teams in the region and (have) double-digit wins before the break.”

Ramos hit a career-high eight 3-pointers in the game, six in the second half, and led the Mighty Oaks in scoring with 28 points. The double-doubles in points and rebounds went to Shelton (17/13), A.J. Jones (17/10), Tyrese Fortune (14/10) and Xavier Brewington (13/14). Ramos also had five assists and Shelton had five blocked shots. It was the fourth time they went over 100 in Green’s tenure.

“Just everybody chipping in,” Green said. “That’s how we want the team to look. It showed tonight. We just played the right way and shared the ball. It was a good look for us.”

“It really shows how deep we are, how good we actually are,” Ramos said. “I feel like when we all play as a team, everyone’s playing hard, look at the box score, there are four double-doubles, everyone’s in double digits, that’s how we should play every night.”

“When we all share the ball it’s like we’re out there playing outside,” Shelton said. “That’s exactly what it felt like. It felt like an outside game playing with the bros.”

It wasn’t as if the Mighty Oaks were intentionally running it up. They called off the press with 12 minutes left. They only have nine players available, so it’s not like they could empty the bench with deep reserves. And the shot clock keeps them from holding onto the ball.

The Mighty Oaks hit eight 3-pointers in the second half as a team. Ramos, who said his range is all the way to “the parking lot,” was 6-for-9 from a variety of distances behind the arc in the half. He hit three in a row early in the half and had four in the 25-5 run it became. He goes into the break ranked third in JUCO Division III 3-pointers (43-107) while the team is third in 3s made per game (9.6) and attempts per game (29.0).

“My biggest thing is I know if I come out slow I just stay sane,” he said. “I keep myself composed just knowing that there’s a whole ‘nother half to shoot and help win the game. I don’t really dwell too much on the first half and I just come out in the second half.”

Jason Brice led the Dukes (0-14) with 24 points, three 3s and six rebounds. Schalick product Nasir Sutton had a JUCO career high eight points and five rebounds.

SALEM CC 114, RCSJ-CUMBERLAND 56
RCSJ-CUMBERLAND (0-14) –
Kyelle Ruiz 0-2 0-0 0, Lemann Johnson 5-17 1-4 13, Ryan Due 3-16 4-9 11, Jason Brice 8-13 5-9 24, Rodrigo Gonzales 0-7 0-0 0, Mike Dougherty 0-4 0-0 0, Nasir Sutton 2-3 4-4 8, Aidan Hobson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 18-62 14-26 56.
SALEM CC (10-4) – Dontarius Jones 4-5 1-2 11, Tyrese Fortune 4-11 6-6 14, Tivon Woolford 0-4 0-0 0, Xavier Brewington 5-11 2-2 13, Rodney Shelton 8-16 1-1 17, A.J. Jones 6-14 4-4 17, Josh Ramos 9-16 0-0 26, Shyheed Taylor 2-6 3-5 7, Stefan Phillips 4-7 0-0 9. Totals 42-90 17-20 114.

RCSJ-Cumberland2729-56
Salem CC5163-114

3-point goals: RCSJ-Cumb 6-22 (Johnson 2-7, Due 1-3, Brice 3-7, Gonzales 0-2, Dougherty 0-3); Salem 13-31 (D. Jones 2-2, Fortune 0-1, Woolford 0-2, Brewington 1-5, A. Jones 1-4, Ramos 8-15, Taylor 0-1, Phillips 1-1). Rebounds: RCSJ-Cumb 26 (Brice 6); Salem 67 (Fortune 10, Brewington 14, Shelton 13, A. Jones 10). Technical fouls: RCSJ coach Stalling. Fouled out: Woolford, Phillips. Total fouls: RCSJ-Cumb 17, Salem 22.

Salem CC head coach Mike Green (R) and his assistants sport colorful Christmas sweaters for Thursday’s final game before the holidays. Sophomore post Rodney Shelton wanted in on the fun, but it was coaches only.