This week’s schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of Sept. 9-14; all events 4 p.m. unless noted

SEPT. 9
FIELD HOCKEY
Paulsboro at Pennsville
GIRLS SOCCER
Camden County Tech at Salem
GIRLS TENNIS
Woodstown at West Deptford

SEPT. 10
FIELD HOCKEY
Schalick at Triton
GIRLS TENNIS
Glassboro at Penns Grove
Gloucester Catholic at Woodstown
Salem at Schalick
Wildwood at Pennsville
BOYS SOCCER
Penns Grove at Gloucester Co. Christian, 3:45 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
Gloucester Co. Christian at Penns Grove
Woodstown at Wildwood

SEPT. 11
GIRLS SOCCER
Salem Tech at Cape May Tech
GIRLS TENNIS
Triton at Pennsville, 3:45 p.m.
Salem at Wildwood

SEPT. 12
FIELD HOCKEY
Deptford at Woodstown
Glassboro at Schalick
Salem at Pennsville
BOYS SOCCER
Clayton at Salem
Salem Tech at Pennsville
Schalick at Overbrook
Woodstown at Penns Grove
GIRLS SOCCER
Overbrook at Schalick
Pennsville at Glassboro
Pitman at Salem Tech
Salem at Clayton
Penns Grove at Woodstown
GIRLS TENNIS
Penns Grove at Woodstown
Pennsville at Schalick, 3:45 p.m.
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
Salem Tech at Gloucester Catholic

SEPT. 13
FOOTBALL
Audubon at Bordentown, 6 p.m.
Collingswood at West Deptford, 7 p.m.
Schalick at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
GIRLS TENNIS
Penns Grove at Lindenwold
Pennsville at Lower Cape May

SEPT. 14
FOOTBALL
Camden Catholic at Paulsboro, 10:30 a.m.
Salem at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m.
Pennsville at Overbrook, 11 a.m.
Glassboro at Penns Grove, noon
FIELD HOCKEY
Woodstown at Washington Twp., 10 a.m.
CROSS COUNTRY
South Jersey Open, Dream Park, 8:30 a.m.
Woodstown at Belmont Plateau, 10:30 a.m.

Cover photo of Woodstown kicker Jake Ware’s game-winning overtime PAT against Delsea by Ellen Sickler.

The learning curve

Despite second straight loss, Salem coach Carr sees signs of improvement and doesn’t have to dig for them

WJFL DIAMOND DIVISION
FRIDAY’S GAMES
Penns Grove 34, Deptford 0
Schalick 23, Cumberland 0
Woodstown 14, Delsea 13
SATURDAY’S GAME
Collingswood 14, Salem 7
Glassboro 22, Haddon Heights 12
Haddonfield 21, Woodbury 20

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SALEM – The players on the Salem football team slowly and sullenly made the long walk back from the field to the locker room after their second straight loss to open the season. There wasn’t a lot to feel good about it.

The post-game conversation was likely to center on the things that haven’t gone right for the Rams in the first two games of the season. There was some of that, but instead of whipping up on the shortcoming of a 12-7 loss to Cinnaminson Saturday, Rams coach Kemp Carr started his post-mortem on something much more upbeat.

“We took a step forward,” he said. “Several degrees we took a step forward.”

And then, when prompted, he proceeded to list all the things the Rams did better in Game 2 than they did in their 35-0 season-opening loss to Willingboro a week ago.

* They scored.
* Gave up fewer points. And yards.
* Got off the field more times on third down, forcing the Pirates to punt five times. 
* Had short-field situations in the second half that they didn’t have last week.

“It’s development; they’re all marginal things you can look at,” Carr said. “I don’t take moral victories. I’m not happy (with the loss). I’m far from satisfied … but you’ve got to make sure you give the guys something positive, so in the game you can find some things.”

Alas, there still are things the Rams need to fix. They didn’t execute in the short-field situations. They were 0-for-9 on third down, 0-for-4 on fourth. They gave up a long touchdown pass over the top in a prevent defense.

“They’re the things we need to fix,” Carr agreed. “We need to execute on offense a little better. We don’t want to be in second-and-long, third-and-long. We want to avoid those because probability-wise, according to anybody’s assessment, they’re not good positions to be in.

“You’re always tweaking. When you don’t execute there’s always things to tweak. We’ll watch the film. We’ll get better. There’s a whole lot of things to do to … make … us … bet-ter. But again we took strides. We just let it slip through our fingers.”

It did start good for the Rams. On the third snap of the game Pop Jackson broke those two waves of traffic close to the line, then bolted 62 yards for the Rams’ first touchdown of the season 65 seconds into the game.

“Everybody was excited, everybody was jumping up and down,” sophomore center Wyatt Irvine said about the early score. “You can see in the end zone, everybody was having a party.”

But that was basically the extent of Salem’s offense. The Rams had 80 yards of offense in the three-play series, but only 26 yards and zero first downs in their 33 plays that followed. In the second half, they had minus-5 yards of net offense, minus-19 rushing. Twenty of their total plays went for zero or negative yards.

Of course, it’s hard to generate much offense when you only have 15 plays in the half. Cinnaminson, while not the offensive juggernaut either, did manage to eat up big chunks of clock when it had the ball, moving it with dives and powers. The Pirates ran 26 offensive plays in the second half.

The Pirates answered Salem’s opening salvo with a 54-yard touchdown drive to tie the game, capping it with an 11-yard Dylan McAndrews TD pass to Jackson Machado. It remained 7-7 until McAndrews beat Salem’s prevent defense in the final minute of the first half with a 58-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Palladino on third-and-long.

Salem’s defense kept the Rams in the game. The unit recovered three fumbles, one in the end zone to keep it a 7-7 game and one by Irvine at the 40 with 2:29 to play to give the Rams one more shot at a game-tying score.

But they never moved the chains after any of the takeaways. They turned one of the possessions over downs, punted with another and with the last one took a 12-yard sack and had their final play fall incomplete.

“I was extremely happy (getting that final takeaway),” Irvine said. “I thought we had a big push there. I thought we had a lot of momentum going into that, but unfortunately it didn’t (pan out). Things just kind of fell apart, but next week we’ll fix that and we’ll get the W.”

The Rams open their Diamond Division schedule next week at Woodbury, a 21-20 loser to Haddonfield on Saturday.

Cinnaminson 14, Salem 7

CINN (14)SAL (7)
91st Downs2
40-79Rush-yards17-48
5-10-0Passing (C-A-I)7-18-1
134Passing yds58
4-3Fum-lost1-0
5-27.4Punts-avg5-35.0
3-10Pen-yds6-40
Cinnaminson (1-1)7700-14
Salem (0-2)7000-7

SCORING SUMMARY
S-Pop Jackson 62 run (Andrew May kick), 10:58 1Q
C-Jackson Machado 11 pass from Dylan McAndrews (Aedan Burk kick), 7:26 1Q
C-Tyler Palladino 58 pass from Dylan McAndrews (Aedan Burk kick), 0:51 2Q

WJFL DIAMOND DIVISIONDIVALL
Glassboro0-01-0
Penns Grove0-01-1
Salem0-00-2
Schalick0-01-1
Woodbury0-00-1
Woodstown0-01-0

NEXT WEEK’S SCHEDULE
FRIDAY GAMES
Schalick at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
SATURDAY GAMES
Salem at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m.
Glassboro at Penns Grove, noon

Back on track

Woodstown wins OT thriller over defending state champs in Trautz’ first game as head coach; Schalick, Penns Grove get back in win column

WJFL DIAMOND DIVISION
Penns Grove 34, Deptford 0
Schalick 23, Cumberland 0
Woodstown 14, Delsea 13
SATURDAY’S GAME
Glassboro at Haddon Heights, 11 a.m.
Haddonfield at Woodbury, 11 a.m.
Collingswood at Salem, noon

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – No matter how long Frank Trautz stays in the coaching game or how many games he wins along the way, he’ll never forget his first one.

Bryce Belinfanti and Jake Ware hand-delivered their new coach his first win in his first game in overtime, running for a touchdown and nailing the extra point, respectively, to lift Woodstown over defending Group 3 state champion Delsea 14-13.

“I’ll remember this for the rest of my life, that’s for sure,” said Trautz, promoted from quarterbacks coach in the offseason to succeed John Adams who retired from coaching after 14 seasons. “It’s been a very emotional day; I just wanted to get to the game. I was just so proud of the kids, proud of my staff, all the work that they put in; that’s what made this win possible.

“To be able to celebrate that with all them was such a cool moment.”

The Wolverines led from the moment Jack Holladay threw his first career touchdown pass with his second career completion in the second quarter. Delsea forced overtime with a touchdown with 3:21 left in regulation and missed a game-winning field goal with 46 seconds left.

The Crusaders got the ball first in overtime and Dan Russo scored on a 22-yard run on the second snap. But they barely missed the extra point to the left, opening the door for Woodstown to win on the ensuing possession.

The Wolverines didn’t waste any time. Belinfanti took the first snap and went 25 yards to tie the game and Ware drilled the extra point for the win. Belinfanti, a 1,700-yard rusher a year ago, ran for 97 yards in the game.

Holladay had waited his entire life to be the Wolverines’ starting quarterback and seized the opportunity when presented to him. He hadn’t thrown a pass in a varsity game, but connected with Garrett Leyman for his first career touchdown. He was 3-for-5 for 43 yards.

“It was huge for him, huge for his confidence,” Trautz said. “I told him I have confidence in you to open the playbook and we’re going to let it rip, and he did a great job. I know getting that first touchdown pass out of the way is a big deal for a quarterback, so I was very happy for him.”

Carter Orlandini preserved the 7-0 halftime lead when he intercepted a pass at the 2 and the Wolverines stopped Delsea’s seven-minute opening drive of the second half.

“Our defense came up huge all night in a game that was an incredibly physical game and obviously Delsea is such a great team,” Trautz said. “To come up with that interception right there at the end of the half was huge.”

The new coach won’t have a lot of time to enjoy his first win. The Wolverines open their WJFL Diamond Division schedule next week.

“I’m going to go enjoy it with my wife tonight and we’ll celebrate the win,” he said, “and tomorrow it’s back to work and we’re going to get ready for Schalick.”

Woodstown 14, Delsea 13 (OT)

DEL (13)WTN (14)
40-143Rush-yards23-102
2-14-0Passing (C-A-I)3-5-1
121Passing yds43
Delsea (0-1)00076-13
Woodstown (1-0)07007-14

SCORING SUMMARY
W-Garrett Leyman 19 pass from Jack Holladay (Jake Ware kick), 6:28 2Q
D-Luke VanAuken 12 pass from Jimmy Reardon (Zack Greer kick), 3:21 4Q
D-Dan Russo 22 run (kick failed), OT
W-Bryce Belinfanti 25 run (Jake Ware kick), OT

Jack Holladay made the most of his first varsity start. The senior threw his first career touchdown pass and directed the Woodstown offense to an overtime victory. On the cover, the Wolverines celebrate after winning. (Photos by Ellen Sickler)

Simmons returns in Schalick win

PITTSGROVE – Senior quarterback Kenai Simmons returned to the Schalick lineup Friday night and helped the Cougars exorcise the demons of last week’s dud in the Battle at the Beach, 23-0 over Cumberland.

“This week was all about getting a win, that’s all that mattered,” Cougars coach Mike Wilson said. “It didn’t matter how we won or how we looked, it was just about getting our mojo back and getting a W.”

It’s the first time in two years the Cougars faced that kind of adversity and the resiliency of bouncing back from an in-season setback. They haven’t lost back-to-back games since mid-October 2021. Since then, they have gone 22-5.

“It says a lot about the kids’ fortitude, a lot about them being mentally strong, a lot about their work ethic and bouncing back and being honest about what they had to do,” Wilson said.

Simmons returned after a full week of practice and ran for a pair of short-field touchdowns. Reggie Allen scored on a 20-yard run early in the third quarter. Allen rushed for 135 yards.

The defense recorded the Cougars’ first shutout in the series since 2016. They held the Colts to 86 net yards, had four interceptions (two by game MVP David Stewart) and a safety. Riley Papiano led the unit with eight tackles and was in on the safety with Thomas Hymer. Alec Bramell had six tackles.

“In my (five) years here that’s probably the best we played defensively overall,” he said.

It’s the first time either team has won back-to-back games in the Battle for the Hars-Lake Trophy since Schalick won in 2018-19. The Cougars have won 11 of the last 15 meetings.

CUMB (0)SCHAL (23)
61st Downs10
23-79Rush-yards41-123
3-16-4Passes (C-A-I)2-4-0
7Passing14
0-0Fum-lost1-1
12-95Penalties6-74

A convincing first win

DEPTFORD – Penns Grove needed a win and got it in convincing fashion.

The Red Devils bounced back from their season-opening loss with a convincing 34-0 win on the road over Deptford Twp. for head coach Mark Maccarone’s first win at the head of the program.

Melo Erickson threw a career-high three touchdown passes – to Knowledge Young, Kylee Goodson and Karon Ceaser – and a two-point conversion to Tre Brown. Ceaser played tailback most of the game and ran for two scores and the defense kept the Spartans out of the end zone.

“I’m happy for the kids,” Maccarone said. “It gives them a confidence build. They start to see the system works. When we say to do X, Y and Z and they do X, Y and Z, it results in good things. You saw when they don’t do what they’re being asked to do, the outcome is not good.

“It was a good win, a good team effort by everybody. It’s a good one for the program … a good win to build confidence in what the system is and how I run a program, how my brother runs an offense and how I run a defense.”

The Red Devils open their WJFL Diamond Division gauntlet next week against Glassboro, where Maccarone was the head coach for seven seasons (2011-17).

“Coming back as a head coach for the first time against Glassboro, not an assistant coach, it’s definitely going to be different for me,” he said. “The current head coach at Glassboro was a player under my brother when I was an assistant coach in 2008.

“It’s going to be different. I don’t really know how to describe it. I really haven’t given much thought to it other than it’s another game on the schedule. I probably would feel different if we were playing them there. It’s been seven years since I’ve been around Glassboro.

“It is going to be different for my brother (Gary). It’s the first time he’s coaching against the guys he coached last year, the kids that he has in class. It’s going to be more (nostalgic) for him than me.”

Penns Grove (1-1)147013-34
Deptford (0-2)0000-0
DIAMOND DIVISIONDIVALL
Glassboro0-00-0
Penns Grove0-01-1
Salem0-00-1
Schalick0-01-1
Woodbury0-00-0
Woodstown0-01-0
Woodstown’s Bryce Belinfanti rushed for 97 yards and scored a touchdown in overtime that sent the Wolverines to a 14-13 win over Delsea. (Photo by Ellen Sickler)

His time now

Jack Holladay takes over as Woodstown’s quarterback, getting his shot to lead the offense after learning behind cousin Max Webb

FRIDAY’S SALEM COUNTY GAMES
Penns Grove at Deptford, 6 p.m.
Cumberland at Schalick, 7 p.m.
Delsea at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
West Deptford at Pennsville, 7 p.m.
SATURDAY’S GAME
Cinnaminson at Salem, noon

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – It may be a little hyperbole, but Jack Holladay has been waiting for tonight all his life.

Ever since he got to high school, Holladay has dreamed and worked for the day he would become Wolverines’ starting quarterback. The day comes tonight when the Wolverines host Delsea in the first game of Frank Trautz’ tenure as head coach.

The last couple years Holladay’s been on the team but on the quarterback depth chart he was behind his cousin Max Webb as the Wolverines’ lead signal caller.

Well, Max has moved on after leading the Wolverines to three straight deep playoff runs and now it’s Holladay’s time to step up and shine.

“I’ve been thinking about it a lot,” Holladay said over the summer. “Since freshman year I’ve wanted to be the quarterback. I know that’d be behind Max, but I was just learn from him and do what I can in practice and I knew I’d be ready for my senior year.

“It’ll be different (now as the starter), but I think the coaches will have me prepared and I think I’m ready for it.”

It was always been like that as the two were coming up. Webb would be the starter because he was older and the next year Holladay would follow because Max would move up to the next level.

Holladay always felt he “did good” in the seasons he immediately followed his cousin.

He doesn’t have a lot of game statistics to show for the work he’s put in behind Max because his cousin was so durable – he hasn’t thrown a pass in varsity two seasons and has been credited with just five career carries – but he’s said to have a big upside.

Trautz said every time the Wolverines needed to put the 6-1, 170-pound Holladay in a game they were “completely confident” in his ability.

He’s shown a strong arm in the summer and an even disposition to combat the pressure of his elevated circumstances. In his first 7-on-7 game his first pass was intercepted, then he went 7-for-7 on the next series, culminating in a touchdown to Anthony Bokolas, and ultimately completed eight in a row. 

“I’m really excited to see what Jack’s gonna do this year,” said Trautz, Holladay’s quarterback coach before being promoted to succeed John Adams last spring. “He’s a great athlete. He’s got all the tools you want in a quarterback. He can make every throw. He’s a really good athlete, so he’s going to be able to help us out as well in the run game a little bit. I’m excited about the direction this offense can go with him under center.

“He’s definitely ready for this. He got a ton of reps last year in practice and already what I’ve seen from him early on in the summer is a lot of good stuff. I think the sky’s the limit for him. He could have a real special year.”

So tonight’s game has been a lifetime in the making.

When Holladay did allow himself to think of what it would be like to step into the starting role, his dream covered the total package.

“Just playing in front of everyone, the students, everyone at the game,” he said. “I thought that would be fun throwing touchdowns and just winning. I want to win a championship.”

AROUND THE COUNTY: There has been no change in Schalick quarterback Kenai Simmons’ status, coach Mike Wilson said Thursday, so it appears sophomore Ayden Jenkins will draw his second straight start in tonight’s home opener with Cumberland. Jenkins was under center the entire 41-3 loss to Cedar Grove in the Battle at the Beach. “We will be making sure to call the correct stuff to help him,” Wilson said. Tonight’s neighborhood rivals have split the last four games in the battle for the Hars-Lake Trophy, once a staple of the Thanksgiving Day slate … West Deptford coach John Emel may have moved onto a new team this season, but he’ll be looking for a same result when his Eagles take on Pennsville’s Eagles in tonight’s WJFL Patriot Division opener. Emel was 8-2 with a current seven-game winning streak against Pennsville when he was head coach at Penns Grove … Last week was a rarity in Salem County football. It was the first time in more than 20 years the county was shut out of the win column on the opening weekend with four or more teams playing. The county schools went 0-4 last week with Woodstown idle.

This week’s schedule

Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of Sept. 2-7; all events 4 p.m. unless noted; x-scrimmage

SEPT. 3
FIELD HOCKEY

x-GCIT at Woodstown
x-Overbrook at Pennsville
x-Schalick at Haddon Heights
BOYS SOCCER
x-Clayton at Penns Grove
x-Woodstown at GCIT
GIRLS SOCCER
x-GCIT at Woodstown
x-Penns Grove at Clayton
GIRLS TENNIS
Gloucester Catholic at Salem
Pennsville at Penns Grove
Schalick at Overbrook
Woodstown at Glassboro

SEPT. 4
BOYS SOCCER
x-Pennsville at Cumberland
Cape May Tech at Salem Tech, 3:45 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
x-Delsea at Pennsville
x-Pitman at Penns Grove
Woodstown at Deptford, 6 p.m.

SEPT. 5
GIRLS TENNIS

Schalick at Gloucester Catholic
FIELD HOCKEY
Audubon at Pennsville

SEPT. 6
FOOTBALL
Overbrook at Collingswood, 6 p.m.
Penns Grove at Deptford, 6 p.m.
KIPP Cooper Norcross at Camden Catholic, TBA
Cumberland at Schalick, 7 p.m.
Delsea at Woodstown, 7 p.m.
West Deptford at Pennsville, 7 p.m.
BOYS SOCCER
Pennsville at Wildwood
GIRLS SOCCER
Deptford at Pennsville, 4:15 p.m.

SEPT. 7
FOOTBALL
Paulsboro at Audubon, TBA
Haddonfield at Woodbury, 10:30 a.m.
Glassboro at Haddon Heights, 11 a.m.
Cinnaminson at Salem, noon
GIRLS SOCCER
Schalick at Cherokee, 1:30 p.m.
CROSS COUNTRY
Pennsville in Cherokee Challenge, 9 a.m.

Looking for the magic

Salem shut out by Willingboro in Carr’s first game as Rams’ head coach; Chimeras win first opener in 13 years

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

SALEM – It was about a half-hour after the game had ended. Kemp Carr had finished talking to his players after a disappointing season-opening loss and there was still a lot about it he didn’t like.

But as the new Salem coach walked back to his office, his youngest grandson Nathaniel raced across the field and jumped into his arms. Carr held him tight and in that moment all was right with the world.

“You’ve got to separate the two, right?” he explained. “You’ve got to know how, you’ve got to know when, even though you’re an emotional human being, right. We go through it, we’ve got to process some joys in life. You’ve got to take the ups with the ups and the downs with the downs.

“That was my youngest grandson. That’s the future. Anytime you see the future running up and it’s part of your DNA, your bloodline, you get excited about that, right.”

WILLINGBORO 35,
SALEM 0
Next: Cinnaminson at
Salem, Saturday, noon

But soon after that interaction it was back to what the day was all about. And that would be Salem’s 35-0 loss to Willingboro in Carr’s first game back as a head coach in six years and what the Rams were going to do about it going forward.

While there were some things the coach found to his liking, there were a lot of others things the Rams need to correct to be the team Carr knows it can be.

They gave up two short-field touchdowns early in the game because of turnovers to fall behind 14-0. The running game, which was expected to be a strong suit, had too many carries of negative or zero yards. They didn’t come close to scoring, although they looked headed that way in the fourth quarter until the running clock caught up to them.

“It’s all about that magical box,” Carr said. “We weren’t able to establish the run, which is always going to be an issue if you can’t do that. They beat us in the TBR – tackle, block, run. If we can’t do the TBR against teams you’re going to have a hard time beating them. Your special teams better be real special in order to win games if you can’t TBR. We didn’t TBR well.

“We thought we were built for this. I thought we had a great pre-game. I thought we looked like, before we out there, we had that mojo, that ‘it’ factor, and it just never showed up on the field, but I promise you it will. This ain’t no 2-7 football team.”

Willingboro’s James Pemberton scored two touchdowns and had an interception on a tipped ball. Mekhi Cottle did some “purposeful” running and scored a touchdown in the final minute of the third quarter. Jamier Harper and quarterback Sean Taylor also found the end zone. Taylor threw three touchdown passes.

For the Chimeras, it was their first Week Zero or season opening victory since 2011 (Cinnaminson).

“This team is gritty, they’re hard working, they show up and bust their humps every day,” Willingboro coach Kenny Scott said. “We just wanted to make a statement. They haven’t won a Week Zero game in over a decade, so they earned that one.” 

On the positive side for Salem, Carr was happy with the active and disruptive play of defensive ends Michael Green and Antwan Rogers and the running of sophomore Jamaal Shockley, who had two nice runs in the fourth quarter when the Rams’ offense finally seemed comfortable.

“I think if he’s willing to learn I think he’ll be decent player here,” Carr said of Shockley. “He’s fast, he’s strong, he’s active. Once he starts to understand his development, once Pop (DaviYonn Jackson) is gone, who’s it? The job’s open right. So those guys should be fighting and clawing. I’m looking for the next guys and he showed some bright signs that he can be it.”

Willingboro (1-0)77147-35
Salem (0-1)0000-0

SCORING SUMMARY
W-Brandon Cox pass from Sean Taylor (James Pemberton kick)
W-James Pemberton pass from Sean Taylor (James Pemberton kick)
W-James Pemberton pass from Sean Taylor (James Pemberton kick)
W-Mekhi Cottle run (James Pemberton kick), 0:48 3Q
W-Sean Taylor 1 run (James Pemberton kick), 2:41 4Q

Willingboro quarterback Sean Taylor (1) accounted for four touchdowns against Salem Saturday.

Back in the game

Penns Grove, Salem drop season openers in their head coaches’ return to the sidelines; PG’s Maccarone on being back: ‘Like riding a bicycle’

SATURDAY’S WJFL SCORES
Diamond Division

Paulsboro 12, Penns Grove 7
Willingboro 35, Salem 0

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PAULSBORO – The Penns Grove offense had the Red Devils right where they wanted to be. They were in a position to win their new coach Mark Maccarone’s first game with little time left on the clock.

All they had to do was make a play. But it was a high-pressure play. Fourth down and 5 yards to move the chains, 16 yards to pull off a thrilling win. A head coach couldn’t have asked for anything better in his first game back in charge in seven years..

The Red Devils got the look they wanted, but apparently Paulsboro wanted it more. The Red Raiders chased down Penns Grove quarterback Melo Erickson and sacked him with 13 seconds left to kill the threat and secure a 12-7 victory.

“Playmakers have to make plays; we didn’t make plays,” Maccarone said. “Playmakers have to make plays. Theirs made plays and we didn’t. Plain and simple. Cut and dry.”

The defense had kept the Red Devils in the game and gave the offense the chance to win it at the end. Twice during the game it turned back the Red Raiders on fourth down inside the 10.

It all came down the final drive. The Red Devils took over at the 40 with 6:52 to play and with KaRon Ceaser back in the backfield, where he was a 1,000-yard rusher a year ago, got it into the red zone with less than a minute to play.

A short pass from Erickson to Anthony Brown got them to the 16. Erickson’s third-down pass over the middle to Knowledge Young was a tad too hard leaving the Red Devils with their fourth-and-5 for the game.

The play was supposed to be a misdirection screen and Devine Arce was wide open, but it never connected. Erickson rolled to his left and was chased down by Red Raiders’ junior Jason Yandach and sacked for a 12-yard loss. All the Red Raiders had to do was take a knee and they had their first win in a season opener since 2021.

“I feel like I could’ve gotten a little bit more help on the outside, but then again I’m the quarterback so I have to step up and make that throw,” Erickson said. “We were really forcing the ball down the field, we just had to complete the passes. If we complete the passes then we’ll be in there. We’ve just got to get back in the Lab, get back at it.”

There really was no science to it on the defensive end.

“I just saw he had the ball and tackled him,” Yandach said. “That last drive was tough. We had to push it. Our D-line did good.”

Penns Grove quarterback Melo Erickson (R) rolls out looking for a receiver on the Red Devils’ potential game-winning fourth-down play in the final minute Saturday. On the cover, Mark Maccarone calls a play in his first game as the Red Devils’ head coach.

Maccarone was in his first game as a head coach since stepping down at Glassboro in 2017. He was the Red Devils’ defensive coordinator the next two years and helped them in a less formal capacity post-COVID. He was approved as their head coach in March, just their third head coach in the last 25 years.

“Like riding a bicycle,” he said of the return. “Just trying to get the kids to adapt to how it is on game day; it’s a little bit different than what they’re used to.”

Maccarone’s return got off to a balky start. The Red Devils’ first two possessions ended in lost fumbles. The second came at the 1 after their defense had just stopped quarterback Malakhai McKenzie short of the goal line on fourth down on Paulsboro’s first drive of the season.

McKenzie didn’t miss the second time around, pushing his way into the end zone on the first play. But the Red Raiders didn’t get the extra point.

Penns Grove answered on the ensuing drive and took a 7-6 lead on Erickson’s 7-yard touchdown pass to Young and Anthony Brown’s PAT. Erickson completed 8-of-13 passes for 90 yards. 

The TD pass to Young was the first of his career. He didn’t throw one in 54 passing attempts his first two seasons.

“I feel like I’m taking a lot more accountability and stepping up to be a leader,” he said. “I feel like I’m taking control of the offense more and moving the ball, as you can see.”

Paulsboro retook the lead on the next drive. KyAire Harvey took a toss and threw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Jeremiah Carr, who went over Penns Grove’s Kylee Goodson to make the grab. The Red Raiders missed the extra point again, giving the Red Devils the opening to win it at the end.

“It’s a game of who makes the least amount of mistakes wins,” Maccarone said. “We made more mistakes than they did. 

“To have the ball going in to score to win the game at the end, that’s the position you want to be in. They gave us what we were looking for defensively on that last drive, we didn’t execute. That’s about as cut and dry as it can be. We didn’t execute.”

Paulsboro 12, Penns Grove 7

PG (7)PB (12)
111st Downs8
33-101Rushes-yards23-65
8-13-0Passes (C-A-I)8-15-0
90Passing yards130
2-2Fumbles-lost0-0
2-28.5Punts-avg2-35.0
7-53Penalties-yards6-45
Penns Grove (0-1)0700-7
Paulsboro (1-0)6600-12

SCORING SUMMARY
PB-Malakhai McKenzie 1 run (pass failed), 6:06 1Q
PG-Knowledge Young 7 pass from Melo Erickson (Anthony Brown kick), 7:09 2Q
PB-Jeremiah Carr 21 pass from KyAire Harvey (pass failed), 5:25 2Q

Willingboro 35, Salem 0

Willingboro (1-0)77147-35
Salem (0-1)0000-0

TOUCHDOWNS: James Pemberton (W) 2, Jamier Harper (W), Mekhi Cottle (W, 0:48 3Q), Sean Taylor (W, 2:41 4Q).

WJFL STANDINGS
DIAMONDDIVALL
Glassboro0-00-0
Penns Grove0-00-1
Salem0-00-1
Schalick0-00-1
Woodbury0-00-0
Woodstown0-00-0
PATRIOTDIVALL
Audubon0-00-0
Camden Cath.0-00-0
Collingswood0-01-0
Overbrook0-01-0
Paulsboro0-01-0
Pennsville0-00-1
West Deptford0-00-1

Eagles denied in opener

Pennsville couldn’t get anything going, shut out in season opener at Gloucester

WJFL SCORES
Patriot Division
Thursday’s Games
Gloucester City 14, Pennsville 0
Manchester Twp. 26, West Deptford 21 (BATB)
Overbrook 36, Buena 0
Friday’s Games
Collingswood at Clayton, 6 p.m.
Diamond Division
Friday’s Game
Schalick vs. Cedar Grove at Egg Harbor Twp., 9:30 a.m.
Saturday’s Games
Penns Grove at Paulsboro, 10 a.m.
Willingboro at Salem, noon

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

GLOUCESTER CITY — Football is such a momentum game. Pennsville looked like it was building some late in the first half to get back in the game, but they lost it on a crushing turnover in the end zone and never got it back again.

And once it’s gone, it’s really hard to get back unless something extraordinary happens.

The Eagles dropped their season opener Thursday night, 14-0 at Gloucester City in a rare Week Zero game.

They gave up touchdowns on the first two defensive stands of the season but kept the Lions out of the end zone the rest of the game. They just could never get anything going offensively. They had only 10 yards net rushing, quarterback Robbie McDade was sacked four times and was intercepted three others.

“We had some opportunities, didn’t take advantage of them and they were a physical football team and we didn’t match them consistently,” Pennsville coach Mike Healy said. “Just too many mistakes across the board. Across the board didn’t make great decisions today.

“We know what we’re capable of on both sides of the ball, it’s just we have to be consistent. When you play good football teams and you’re not consistent they’re going to beat you.”

The Eagles looked like they were finally gaining steam in the final drive of the first half. A score would have given them momentum going into the locker room where adjustments could be made for when got the ball to start the second half.

They drove it all the way down to the Lions’ 2, thanks in part to a 45-yard catch and run by Luke Wood, and had it fourth-and-goal with 25 seconds left in the half, but linebacker Ryan Coffigny intercepted McDade a couple yards deep in the end zone with Malik Rehmer and Wood in the area to kill the threat.

“You score there and all of a sudden we get a little more confidence on offense, feel more confident getting the ball,” Healy said. “You score there and now it’s a one-score game and the defense is starting to settle down some and it just completely changes the game.”

“I definitely think it was a huge setback because we just made our first great drive down the field that unfortunately ended on a pick,” Wood said. “That’s something we can’t let affect us. Today we did and later on down the road, next week, the next week after that, that’s something we’re going to try to not let affect us because we have the talent to win.”

Wood, a college prospect in baseball and a 1,000-point scorer in basketball, was playing football as a senior for the first time since youth and caught three passes in the game for 67 yards. He looked a little uncertain after his first career catch, an 8-yard gain in the second quarter that put Pennsville back into positive net yardage, but the 45-yarder was the Eagles’ biggest offensive play of the game.

“It was fun,” he said. “It’s just a completely different atmosphere than baseball or basketball. This is the ultimate team sport. This is 11 guys playing all for the same goal. We’re really a family, we’re really a brotherhood, which you really don’t feel like that in other sports, as much as you do in football.”

Gloucester pounded the ball on the ground and racked up 108 yards of offense on its first two possessions. Touchdown runs by Trevin Burkhardt and Mason Widman gave the Lions a 14-0 lead early in the second quarter, but they Eagles’ defense tightened and held held them to minus-1 yard net the rest of the half and only 61 more yards in the third quarter.

Twice in the fourth quarter the Lions penetrated into the red zone – the second time after Pennsville went for it on fourth down from its 33 – but the Eagles kept them off the board.

“We got humbled,” senior Connor Ayers said. “The first two scores, we took that to heart. Me, personally, I’ve never been scored on like that on defense, but after the first two scores I think our defense held our own.”

SCHALICK ‘MORE THAN READY’: Every team will tell you they’re as ready as they can be heading into their season openers, but with expectations for his team this year through the roof Schalick quarterback Kenai Simmons, for one, can’t wait to get started.

“Ready isn’t the word,” the senior said as the Cougars prepare to meet Cedar Grove to open Day Two of the Battle At The Beach. “What is the word? I can’t find the word, but ready isn’t the word.

“I wouldn’t even use ready. I’d use a crazy word that means … ready to the highest point.”

Expectations are high for the Cougars this season. They return virtually their entire team that started 11-0 last year, built momentum with several close wins early and lost in the Central Jersey Group I title game.

Given that backdrop, this year’s theme, of course, is unfinished business. There are a lot of observers who expect the Cougars and Glassboro to play for the South Jersey spot in the Group I state championship game.

“I think the kids earned the expectation,” coach Mike Wilson said. “We’re motivated because we didn’t finish the deal last year; you can see it on our shirts. Last year it was ‘Burn the boats.’ This year it’s ‘Unfinished Business.’ We still have expectations, but we’re still not getting our due.”

The key to managing those expectations, Simmons said, is to “ignore the noise.” Last year as they were trying to grab a foothold in the South Jersey football landscape they truly embraced the notion of one play at a time, one game at a time, and this year it’s more of the same. They certainly won’t sneak up on anyone, especially as they move into the tougher WJFL Diamond Division.

“You still have to be confident, but not too confident,” safety Dylan Sheehan said. “It’s all a mindset with us. As long as our guys believe we’ve got it, we’ve got it.”

EXTRA POINTS: Schalick and Cedar Grove are 124 miles apart. It’s the second-farthest matchup in this year’s BATB behind only Bergen Catholic-IMG (1,184 miles). The 13 matchups outside the headliner combined have a total of 939 one-way instate miles … The Cougars are working on a 10-game regular-season winning streak.

Pennsville’s Malik Rehmer hauls in a catch before taking a hit from Gloucester’s Mason Widman. On the cover, Gloucester’s Rylan Coffigny snags an interception in the end zone to end a Pennsville threat.

Gloucester 14, Pennsville 0

PMHSGHS
101st Downs14
27-10Rushes-yards44-237
9-21-3Passes (C-A-I)1-5-0
117Passing yards5
0-0Fumbles-lost0-0
4-34.8Punts-avg4-26.8
3-25Penalties-yards8-65
Pennsville (0-1)0000-0
Gloucester (1-0)6800-14

SCORING SUMMARY
G-Trevin Burkhardt 2 run (kick failed), 6:48 1Q
G-Mason Widman 16 run (Trevin Burkhardt run), 10:40 1Q

WJFL STANDINGS
DIAMONDDIVALL
Glassboro0-00-0
Penns Grove0-00-0
Salem0-00-0
Schalick0-00-0
Woodbury0-00-0
Woodstown0-00-0
PATRIOTDIVALL
Audubon0-00-0
Camden Cath.0-00-0
Collingswood0-00-0
Overbrook0-01-0
Paulsboro0-00-0
Pennsville0-00-1
West Deptford0-00-1




This week’s schedule

Here is the high school schedule for Salem County sports teams for the week of Aug. 26-31; x-scrimmage

AUG. 26
GIRLS TENNIS
x-GCIT at Pennsville, 9 a.m.
Mainland at Schalick, 9 a.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
x-Salem at Maple Shade, 9 a.m.
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
x-Winslow at Salem Tech, 11 a.m.

AUG. 27
FIELD HOCKEY
x-Schalick at Cumberland, 9 a.m.
BOYS SOCCER
x-Woodbury at Penns Grove, 9 a.m.
x-Schalick at Clearview, 9:30 a.m.
x-Lower Cape May at Salem, 10 a.m.
x-Salem Tech at Pennsauken Tech, 3:45 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
x-Clearview at Schalick, 9 a.m.
x-Penns Grove at Paulsboro, 9 a.m.
x-Salem at Cumberland, 10 a.m.
GIRLS TENNIS
x-Penns Grove at Deptford, 10 a.m.
x-Salem at Lower Cape May, 10 a.m.

AUG. 28
GIRLS TENNIS
Pennsville at West Deptford, 10 a.m.
BOYS SOCCER
x-Cumberland at Woodstown, 10 a.m.
x-Pemberton at Salem Tech, 10:30 a.m.

AUG. 29
FOOTBALL
Collingswood at Clayton, TBA
West Deptford vs. Manchester Twp., 10 a.m. (at Ocean City)
Pennsville at Gloucester City, 6 p.m.
x-Pitman at Woodstown, 6 p.m.
FIELD HOCKEY
x-Woodstown at Collingswood, 10 a.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
x-Bridgeton at Penns Grove, 9 a.m.
x-Schalick at Cumberland, 9 a.m.
x-Woodstown at Haddon Twp., 9 a.m.
x-Pennsville at Woodbury, 10 a.m.
BOYS SOCCER
x-Penns Grove at Bridgeton, 9 a.m.
x-Woodbury at Pennsville, 10 a.m.
x-Highland at Salem, 3:30 p.m.
GIRLS TENNIS
x-Penns Grove at Bridgeton, 9 a.m.
Pennsville at Cumberland, 10 a.m.

AUG. 30
FOOTBALL
Schalick vs. Cedar Grove, 9:30 a.m. (at Egg Harbor Twp.)
FIELD HOCKEY
x-Schalick at Ocean City, 10 a.m.
BOYS SOCCER
x-Schalick at Moorestown Friends, 9 a.m.
x-Woodstown at Williamstown, 10 a.m.
GIRLS TENNIS
x-Lindenwold at Penns Grove, 9 a.m.

AUG. 31
FOOTBALL
Penns Grove at Paulsboro, 10 a.m.
Willingboro at Salem, noon

Classy HOF class

Salem County Sports Hall of Fame welcomes seven new members, brings all-time roster of inductees to 143

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

CARNEYS POINT – Everyone on the Davidow Theater stage was decked out in their Sunday best befitting a Hall of Fame induction, but still it was easy to pick out the baseball player in the bunch. He was one wearing the Pennsville baseball jersey that looked just as sharp as a three-piece suit.

Lex Bleckley addresses the crowd during his Salem County Sports Hall of Fame induction.

Pennsville baseball great Lex Bleckley was among the seven newest inductees into the Salem County Sports Hall of Fame. They were inducted in ceremonies on the Salem Community College campus Thursday night.

Bleckley was joined in the class by Jaymes Dennison (track), James Dickerson (track) , Nick Elmer (football), Steve Merritt (coach), Donna O’Leary (coach) and Latika Ross (basketball). In addition, the Hall board will recognize Vince Gioia and Steve Lopes for their decades of service to Salem County sports as well as eight current and previous high school state champions.

The high school honorees were headlined by Penns Grove’s three-time boys (2013-15) and two-time girls (2013-14) Group I state champions.

Record-breaking Salem running back Jonathan Taylor, currently in training camp with the Indianapolis Colts, was enshrined in a separate ceremony last month.

The story of the Pennsville jersey finding its way on stage is a story of family love. Johnny Swiderski, one of the heroes of this year’s Pennsville Little League District 3 championship team, ran into Eagles baseball coach Matt Karr at a midget football game last week and asked if the coach had a couple of extra jerseys he could spare so the family could support their uncle at the ceremonies.

Karr came through. Young Johnny wore a blue Pennsville jersey the team wore a couple years ago and a vintage Montreal Expos cap representing the MLB team that drafted his uncle out of the University of Delaware. Bleckley had this year’s Eagles jersey, number 15. (He wore 5 when he helped the Eagles to an undefeated season).

“I was thinking about putting a piece of tape over that 1 and leave the 5,” he joked. “Close enough.”

Bleckley, who celebrated his 61st birthday Wednesday with family and friends, was a product of the Pennsville sports system, playing football and baseball. He is most proud of the baseball championships from an early age through his decorated career with the Eagles. The championships include district titles in Little League, State and Mid-Atlantic Champions in Babe Ruth Baseball and a state championship his senior year with a 25-0 record and the No. 1 ranked team in the state. The undefeated season has not been duplicated. 

“We went 25-0, but there were only so many guys who could play and there were so many guys on that team that would have been starters for anybody else – and they were busting their butts every day,” he said. “I always wished they got more recognition. I’m up there because of them.”

His personal accomplishments include three-time All-Salem County, two-time Tri-County, two-time South Jersey Group II, two-time All-South Jersey, Group II All State, All-State First Team and Today’s Sunbeam Player of the Year. He finished his career at Pennsville with a .503 batting average and a team win-loss record of 66-6. He was taken in the major league draft twice.

“When I was growing up in town, Lex Bleckley was one of the names that you heard about in baseball,” said Karr, who didn’t attend the ceremony but was on top of the happenings. “I saw that Coach (Ed) Reiger was there tonight. I had him for study hall  when I was a junior and senior and he used to share with us all his stories about teams from the past and some of those legendary teams and Lex Bleckley was definitely a big part of all that type of baseball history.”

The Kansas City Royals drafted Bleckley after his high school career, but he went to Delaware, where he was a three-year starter at shortstop. During his UD career, the Blue Hens were East Coast Conference champions twice and missed making it to the College World Series by one game. Lex came in second for the Division I batting title with a .455 average his junior year and was named ECC Player of the Year. He was drafted and signed by the Expos and spent a brief time in the minors before being derailed by a shoulder injury. After his playing career ended, he was head coach at Salem CC for two years. 

He now runs a wholesale seafood business in Florida, but keeps up with the sports happenings from home on the internet. He’s going through some health challenges, but otherwise was in good form Thursday and genuinely proud to be on the stage with the other inductees.

“This has always been home,” he said. 

JAYMES DENNISON

JAYMES DENNISON excelled in track at Penns Grove High School. A member of the Class of 2013, Jaymes was a two-time state champion. He won the 800 in his junior year and the 400 in his senior year. He helped lead the team to a Group 1 team state championship in 2013, and holds school records in the 800.

He was a three-time South Jersey champion in the 800 meters. As a senior, he finished seventh in the Meet of Champions in one of the most competitive 800-meter races in its history. “If you ran 1:54-flat you did not finish in the top 10,” Hall board member and 2011 inductee Tom Mason said in introducing Dennison. 

His post-high school accomplishments may be more impressive. In two years at Iowa State, he was a two-time NCAA All-American in 2018, Second Team All-American in the 4×400 meter relay and Honorable Mention All-American in the 800 meters. He was the Big 12 indoor champion in the 600 meters. Before enrolling at Iowa State, he was a two-time junior college indoor national champion in the 600 meters.

JAMES (JIMMY) DICKERSON graduated from Salem High School in 1964. Following high school, he enlisted in the U.S. Air Force for eight years and traveled extensively throughout Europe. While serving in the military, Jimmy was a medic.

In addition to his medic responsibilities, he played in the European Conference, on the track and field team, where he placed first in high jump at 6-10 and excelled in the triple jump. He also made the All-Europe Football Team as a running back and kick returner. After his tour of duty, Jimmy was an OSHA inspector at BF Goodrich in Pedricktown until his retirement.

In 1976, Jimmy was invited to attend Philadelphia Eagles head coach Dick Vermeil’s tryout camp. Although not selected, he considered meeting fellow tryout attendee Vince Papale, who went on to make the Eagles’ roster from that tryout, an experience of a lifetime.

At 34, Jimmy enrolled at Gloucester County College and competed in the track and field high/triple jump. He never lost a match during his two seasons. Community focused, Jimmy is involved in coaching youth basketball and mentoring. In addition, he is an active member of his church and sings in the senior choir.

NICK ELMER was a multi-sport athlete (football, wrestling, track and field) at Penns Grove High School.

In football, he set school records for passing yards (4,580) and passing touchdowns (61). He also helped lead PGHS to a record-breaking 2012 season and a South Jersey Group 1 championship in which he rushed for a record 308 yards in the title game. The 2012 team still holds the record for most points scored in a season in South Jersey history. He earned All-State First Team honors in 2012 and was the Philadelphia Inquirer South Jersey Player of the Year.

As a wrestler, Nick amassed a school-record 137 victories and qualified for the state tournament on twice, ultimately earning a seventh-place finish in 2013. He continued his academic and athletic career in wrestling at Drexel University, where he was a varsity starter for two years, accumulating 31 wins and a spot on the podium in the 2016 Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA) Conference Tournament and earned an EIWA Academic Achievement Award in the same year.

He went on to medical school at Thomas Jefferson University, where he graduated cum laude and as a member of the prestigious Alpha Omega Alpha national medical honors society. He is currently a plastic surgery resident at NYU Langone Hospital in New York City.

His commitments in New York prevented him from attending the ceremony. John Emel, the current West Deptford football coach and former Penns Grove coach, spoke on his behalf.

Former Salem field hockey coach Donna O’Leary (L) estimated she influenced nearly 1,000 girls during her Hall of Fame coaching career.

DONNA O’LEARY graduated from Paulsboro High School and was a two-sport varsity athlete (field hockey and tennis) there. She also swam competitively year-round at the Woodbury YMCA. 

She earned a degree from Glassboro State College as a health/physical education major. Playing field hockey and swimming in college were important milestones in her path to becoming a coach. After graduation, she became the head women’s swim coach at Glassboro State. During those six years, she produced six All-Americans. 

In 1988, Salem City hired her as a full-time health/physical education teacher in the elementary school and as the field hockey head coach at Salem High School. After taking the reins from Liz Pappas, she put her heart into making the field hockey program successful and without a feeder system afforded other communities she accumulated 315 wins and seven Tri-County championships. She was a two-time Coach of the Year. 

“First of all, I never expected to be 34 years in one spot,” she said. “I figured when my kids went to high school I would leave. I loved it so much.

“Field hockey and Salem is n-o-o-o-o-t (usually in the same sentence) … We quietly made an impact and that’s what I think I’ll remember most.”

In 34 years of coaching she estimates she’s had an influence on more than 1,000 athletes – a remembers almost of them.

LATIKA ROSS

LATIKA ROSS, a 2001 Salem High School graduate, excelled in both basketball and track and field. In track, she broke the 800-meter record as a sophomore. In basketball, she became the third Lady Ram to join SHS’s 1000-point club and pulled down over 1,000 rebounds as a four-year varsity player. Latika earned numerous accolades, including All-Tournament Team and First Team for All South Jersey Group 1 and Tri-County Conference Classic Divisions for two consecutive years. Today’s Sunbeam named her Player of the Year in 2001.

Moving on to Salem CC, Latika amassed 1,130 points and 1,028 rebounds over two years, earning National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Division II Second Team honors. She holds the NJCAA Division II Women’s Basketball regular-season record for rebound average (23.2 per game in 2002-03).

After attending Drexel University for one year on a full athletic scholarship, Latika transferred to Saint Augustine’s University (SAU), where she made the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association All-Tournament Team and averaged a double-double her senior year (10 points, 10 rebounds per game). Graduating from SAU with a bachelor’s degree in accounting and 3.9 grade point average, Latika embarked on a successful 15-year career in accounting. 

Today, she channels her talents into entertainment as an actress, producer and stand-up comedian, performing under the name Latika Sye (a family surname). 

During the ceremony it was announced Latika is the first member of a Salem CC sports team to be inducted into the County Sports Hall of Fame.

STEVE MERRITT

STEVE MERRITT was never the last to be picked for any of the seasonal schoolyard games, until he turned 12 and lost a game of “chicken” with the front end of a Buick or Pontiac. It’s not clear to this day. A significant injury cost him any speed he might have had or would have.  Nonetheless, it is difficult to temper a Type A personality and there was always some kind of competition at home with three brothers.

A single junior varsity season of baseball and senior year “cup of coffee” as a wrestler sums up his high school athletic career.  Intramural softball and volleyball were competitive outlets at Glassboro State College.

After college, long-distance running became his outlet for competition. His omnipresent opponent became the stopwatch.  No longer did he have to finish first to win. He ran the New York City Marathon twice, the Marine Corps Marathon twice and the Boston Marathon in 1992.

A combined 50 varsity seasons (tennis, soccer, basketball and softball) as a head coach at Salem High School yielded over 500 victories, four South Jersey Championships, three Tri-County Classic titles and helped to satisfy his yen for competition. Earlier this summer he was named the girls basketball coach at Pennsville High School.

COMMUNITY SERVICE HONOREES

VINCENT GIOLA JR. graduated from Penns Grove High School in 1968 and began working for DuPont Chambers Works in 1969, retiring in 2010. To say his life revolved around sports would be an understatement. 

Vince first coached in 1969 and over the next 50 years spent countless hours coaching, managing and maintaining the fields at the Carneys Point Recreation Complex for the Carneys Point-Penns Grove-Pedricktown Little League and Penns Grove Soccer Club. 

He played and coached in both the Salem County Men’s Baseball League (1969-1976) and the PG-CP Men’s Softball League (1975-2015) while also serving as a league officer and a liaison with Salem County. He coached for the PG mini-wrestling organization (1979-1986), managed for the PG-CP Women’s Softball (1978-1982), and for the PG Babe Ruth (1985-1987). Vince also coached PG Twins 130 lb. football team (1985-1991) and was head coach of the SCC’s softball team (1991-1995, 2011-2013). 

Vince has been a member of the South Jersey Officials Association (football) since 1999 and Unified Umpire Association of Southern New Jersey since 2007. He served on the Carneys Point Recreation Commission (1999-2023) and was chairman (2004-2023). He managed the CP Recreation Complex (2004-2023) and was president of the Servicemen’s Memorial Home (2015-2023). 

Today, Vince can be found on a field or in a gym in South Jersey officiating, umpiring or just watching his grandchildrens’ games or any game, for that matter.

STEVE LOPES graduated from Penns Grove High School in 1964, after playing three years of varsity basketball with coach Rudy Baric. 

For 45 years, Steve has officiated over 800 high school football games. He had the honor of officiating over 50 state playoff games, including several state championship games at Rutgers, Giants and MetLife Stadiums. Steve has served as the president of New Jersey Football Officials Association – South, the organization representing football officials in South Jersey. Additionally, he is an official for the NFL’s Girls Flag Football program and officiated the Big 33 tournament sponsored by several NFL teams. In addition, Steve has umpired high school, college and semi-pro baseball for 17 years.

For 16 years, Steve managed in the Penns Grove-Carneys Point-Pedricktown Little League and Babe Ruth League, where his teams won several league and district titles. He has played and managed a senior (ages 50, 60, 70) baseball team in Carneys Point.  For over 20 years, he has played in men’s senior baseball national tournaments in Florida and Arizona.