Monday roundup: Pennsville softball holds off Gloucester Catholic to tighten Classic Division race, includes details on Salem County’s sports day
SOFTBALL Overbrook 19, Penns Grove 2 Pennsville 2, Gloucester Catholic 1 Schalick at Glassboro Salem 16, Wildwood 8
By Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – The Pennsville softball team hadn’t played a game in two weeks, but the Eagles came ready to play Monday.
The Eagles scored a big Tri-County Classic Division win when they beat Gloucester Catholic 2-1, handing the Rams their first loss in the division and pulling into a virtual tie for first place.
It was their first game since April 22. They have now won six in a row.
“I think it’s like riding a bike,” Eagles coach Beth Jackson said, not expecting to see any rust after the layoff. “You get back on the bike. You generally always know how to ride a bike. It’s just like getting right back on. You pick it up.
“You still have to hit the ball. You still have to field the ball. You still have to throw the ball. All those basic things are still there and applying them and playing the game.”
Savannah Palverento and Sierra Stultz combined to spin a four-hitter. Palvereno worked the first five and a third. Stultz came on with one out and bases loaded in the sixth and struck out the first two batters she faced to get out of it. Then she retired the side in order in the seventh with a strikeout to end it.
“She was calm, cool and collected, like she always is,” Jackson said of Stultz. “She always has a smile on her face and just comes in and does the job as she’s asked to do. That’s all of them. They have to come in and they’re ready when their number’s called.
“The two of them together work great. They’re a good team. The two of them work well together.”
The Eagles struck first with a run in the first, Kylie Harris led off with a single, advanced when the Rams misplayed Palverento’s grounder and scored on Bella Farina’s ground out.
The Rams tied the game in the second on an infield out, then the Eagles took the lead for good on Lilly Birney’s two-out single in the third. Palverento doubled with one out, Farina walked and then Birney singled.
The Rams threatened in the fifth, putting two runners in scoring position, but left them stranded.
A Gloucester Catholic win would have just about wrapped up the Classic Division for the Rams. By winning, the Eagles came share the division crown if both teams win out.
Jackson purposely didn’t bring up the importance of the game before her team played, but she laid out the possibilities afterwards. The Eagles went into the week fifth in South Jersey Group I power points, but they’re expected to gain ground when the standings are adjusted.
“I didn’t really want to put that in their head,; I didn’t want them to have to worry about that,” she said. “They know the situation now. We still have a lot of division games left and anything can happen, but you just split with them. If you win the rest of them, this is what could happen.”
SALEM 16, WILDWOOD 8: Julliana Love has been red hot at the plate in her last four games. Over that stretch she has gone 14-for-17 with 11 runs, including a second straight 4-for-5 Monday against the Warrior.
Raegan Wilson went 4-for-4 with three RBIs and pitched a complete game with 13 strikeouts. Morgan Johnson went 5-for-5 and Gianna Pelura went 4-for-5.
OVERBROOK 19, PENNS GROVE 2: The Rams scored eight runs in the first inning. . BASEBALL Overbrook 11, Penns Grove 0 Wildwood 14, Salem 2 Woodstown 7, Camden Academy Charter 1 Glassboro at Schalick, ppd.
WOODSTOWN 7, CAMDEN ACADEMY CHARTER 1: The Wolverines broke a scoreless tie with three runs in the third inning and five Woodstown pitchers combined to spin a two-hitter.
Andrew Pedrick had two doubles and two RBIs and Rocco String drove in a pair of runs. Starter Jack Holladay pitched three no-hit innings to get the win.
WILDWOOD 14, SALEM 2: The Warriors broke open the game with nine runs in the third inning. Jacob Parkell drove in the Rams’ two runs with a fifth-inning single. Andrew May and Ethan Logo had Salem’s other two hits.
OVERBROOK 11, PENNS GROVE 0: The Rams jumped out front with two runs in the first inning and then held the Red Devils to just one hit. Tommy Mattioli had Penns Grove’s hit.
BOYS TENNIS Pennsville 5, Glassboro 0 Woodstown 4, Triton 1 Penns Grove at Clayton Schalick at Bridgeton
PENNSVILLE 5, GLASSBORO 0 Gabe Schneider (P) def. Rowan Somdhal-Sans, 6-0, 6-0 Lucas Cooksey (P) def. Jesus Lopez, 6-1, 6-0 Ian Peacock (P) def. Kliche Umbafu, 6-2, 6-3 Sawyer Humphrey-Carter Willis (P) won by forfeit Locklann Hooks-Matthew Forino (P) won by forfeit Records: Glassboro 0-11, Pennsville 13-1.
WOODSTOWN 4, TRITON 1 Steve Schilder (T) def. Tim Schwienbacher, 6-4, 6-3 Drew Stengel (Wo) def. Tristyn Malone, 6-4, 7-5 Erich Lipovsky (Wo) def. William Ahrens, 6-4, 6-2 Ben Stengel-Mason Shimp (Wo) def. Cole Durham-Sean Gorski, 7-5, 6-0 Luke Shaw-Jason LaFond (Wo) def. Tirth Patel-Shrey Modi, 6-1, 6-1 Records: Woodstown 9-1, Triton 6-8.
BOYS VOLLEYBALL Triton 2, Salem Tech 0 (25-16, 25-14)
Here is the sports schedule for Salem County high school and college teams for the week of May 6-11; all events 4 p.m. unless noted
Monday
COLLEGE BASEBALL RCSJ-Gloucester at Salem CC, 3:30 p.m. BASEBALL Glassboro at Schalick Penns Grove at Overbrook Salem at Wildwood Woodstown at Camden Academy Charter SOFTBALL Overbrook at Penns Grove Gloucester Catholic at Pennsville Schalick at Glassboro Wildwood at Salem GOLF GCIT vs. Schalick, Centerton CC, 3:30 p.m. BOYS TENNIS Glassboro at Pennsville, 3:45 p.m. Woodstown at Triton, 3:45 p.m. Penns Grove at Clayton Schalick at Bridgeton TRACK Penns Grove at Overbrook BOYS VOLLEYBALL Triton at Salem Tech
Tuesday
BASEBALL LEAP at Penns Grove Schalick at Clayton SOFTBALL Pennsville at Triton Pitman at Salem Woodstown at Gloucester Catholic GOLF Schalick, Woodstown in NJSIAA Sectionals, Cream Ridge GC BOYS TENNIS Pennsville at Schalick, 3:45 p.m. Cumberland at Woodstown BOYS LACROSSE Woodstown at Haddon Twp., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday
BASEBALL Overbrook at Woodstown Salem at Clayton Schalick at Penns Grove Wildwood at Pennsville SOFTBALL Penns Grove at Schalick Wildwood at Pennsville Woodstown at Overbrook GOLF Cumberland girls vs. Schalick, Centerton CC, 3:30 p.m. Northern Burlington boys vs. Schalick, Centerton CC, 4:15 p.m. Middle Twp. vs. Pennsville, Sakima GC, 4:30 p.m. TRACK Salem County Championships, Salem, 3:30 p.m. BOYS TENNIS Delsea at Woodstown, 3:45 p.m. Pennsville at Pitman, 3:45 p.m. Clayton at Schalick GIRLS LACROSSE Woodstown at Kingsway, 6 p.m.
Thursday
BASEBALL Woodstown vs. Schalick, Elmer LL, 6:30 p.m. SOFTBALL Clayton at Salem Glassboro at Penns Grove Pennsville at Clayton Woodstown vs. Schalick, Elmer LL, 6:30 p.m. GOLF Salem Tech, Pennsville, Clayton at The Birches, 3:45 p.m. Timber Creek vs. Woodstown, Town & Country GC, 3:45 p.m. Schalick vs. Deptford, Pitman GC BOYS TENNIS Woodstown at Haddon Heights Williamstown at Penns Grove GIRLS LACROSSE Clearview at Woodstown
Friday
BASEBALL Haddon Heights at Pennsville Penns Grove at Clayton Woodstown at Salem SOFTBALL Pennsville at Overbrook Salem at Woodstown Wildwood at Penns Grove GOLF Woodbury vs. Pennsville, Sakima GC, 3:30 p.m. BOYS LACROSSE Clearview at Woodstown BOYS TENNIS GCIT at Pennsville Schalick at Wildwood, 4:15 p.m. BOYS VOLLEYBALL Salem Tech at Washington Twp., 3:45 p.m.
Saturday
COLLEGE BASEBALL Region XIX Tournament (All doubleheaders starting at noon) Salem CC at Northampton RCSJ-Cumberland at Middlesex Ocean at Brookdale (Game 3, if necessary, Sunday, noon) BASEBALL Lee Ware Tournament Woodstown vs. Camden Catholic, 10 a.m. Paulsboro vs. Cherry Hill East, 10 a.m. Consolation game, noon Championship game, noon GIRLS LACROSSE Lower Cape May at Woodstown, 10 a.m.
Top-ranked team in JUCO Division III ends Salem CC baseball’s 15-game winning streak; Salem High softball wins big, Rams’ baseball falls
By Riverview Sports News
SEWELL – The Salem CC baseball team’s 15-game winning streak came to an end Friday as No. 1 RCSJ-Gloucester scored seven runs over the first three innings and handed the Mighty Oaks an 8-2 defeat.
The Oaks (26-21) scored a run in the top of the first that the Roadrunners answered in the bottom of the inning. The hosts then scored four in the second.
The Oaks still have won 18 of their last 20 and are still guaranteed a winning season. The series concludes with a doubleheader Saturday at the Carneys Point Rec Complex that will mark the end of the regular season.
HIGH SCHOOLS BASEBALL OVERBROOK 14, SALEM 4: Mike Rosano had two hits and three RBIs from the leadoff spot and Overbrook took control with six runs in the first inning. Chase Pompper, Caleb Clair and Ethan Longo had Salem’s hits. Terrell Robinson had an RBI.
SOFTBALL SALEM 23, LEAP 5: Kyla Henderson went 5-for-5 with three doubles and four RBIs and the Rams got hits from every player in the boxscore. Eleven of the Rams’ 27 hits were doubles.
The top five batters in the Rams’ lineup were a combined 19-for-22 with 16 RBIs. Julliana Love had four hits and four RBIs, Raegan Wilson was 4-for-4 with two RBIs, Morgan Johnson and Ava Ortiz both had three hits and three RBIs.
Cimiyyia Corbin had two hits and three RBIs and Destiny Carr had two hits and two RBIs.
The Rams already had a 4-0 lead, then broke it open with 11 in the second.
Six Salem County athletes score top eight finishes at the NIKE SJTCA Elite Meet
By Riverview Sports News
FRANKLINVILLE – Four from Salem led a group of six Salem County athletes who scored top eight finishes at the Nike SJTCA Elite Meet at Delsea High School Thursday.
Three Salem girls posted PRs in their events. Anna Buzby finished sixth in the 400 hurdles (1:05.42). Dominique Lewis was fifth in the shot (37.4) and Rhionna Timmons was eighth in the long jump (17-0.75).
Timmons also PR’d in the 100 (12.62, ninth) and 200 (26.65). Lewis finished in the top 20 in the discus and javelin; Buzby was top 20 in the 400 and 800, and Karima Davenport-White was 12th in the long. Davenport-White committed to Coppin State easlier in the week.
Buzby (800) and Timmons (200 and long jump) sit atop the South Jersey Group I rankings in their events. Davenport-White is third in the long jump and second in the 100.
“They stepped up and competed against some of the best runners, not only in New Jersey, but in the country,” Salem head coach David Hunt said.
On the boys side, Salem’s DaviYonn Jackson finished fifth in the triple jump (44-7.50). Woodstown’s Cole Lucas was sixth in the 800 (1:58.89), improving six spots on the final lap. And Pennsville’s Connor Ayars was seventh in the javelin (152-7).
“It was a great day overall,” Salem assistant coach Spencer Jarrett said. “The heat really helped open up a lot of things for PRs. Most of the kids were going against some of the best in South Jersey from all groups and we got a lot of top 10 finishes and a lot of movement in the rankings in South Jersey Group I.”
Pennsville’s Burchfield makes first varsity appearance on mound, assistant McAllister gets first varsity coaching win; includes rest of Wednesday’s Salem County roundup
WEDNESDAY COUNTY BASEBALL Pennsville 17, Salem 2 Schalick 24, Bridgeton 4
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
SALEM – Chase Burchfield won’t soon forget the first game he’s ever pitched in high school. And neither will Aaron McAllister.
Burchfield had been begging to pitch in a game for the last couple weeks and the Pennsville coaches finally granted his wish Wednesday, giving him the fifth inning to finish off a 17-2 win over Salem for McAllister’s first varsity coaching win.
McAllister has been running the team while Eagles coach Matt Karr has been recovering from a surgical procedure last week. It was hoped Karr would return to the team in some capacity by the weekend, but McAllister is moving the pieces in the meantime.
In his first two games over the weekend, the Eagles lost to Cedar Creek in Mainland’s Coaches vs. Cancer Classic and Rancocas Valley in the Diamond Classic.
“It’s good to get back in the win column,” McAllister said. “We preach to these guys from Day One that we’ve got pretty lofty goals for this program and it’s about the program and not who gets it. We talk about be ready for your opportunity and next man up. Whoever gets the hit, whoever gets the RBI, it’s where we’re trying to be in June what we’re really about.”
That next man up on this day was Burchfield. With the Eagles running short of pitchers for various reasons, the coaches thought it was a good time to grant Burchfield’s wish to pitch.
The junior right-hander entered in the fifth inning with a 15-run lead and faced four batters. He threw 11 pitches, seven for strikes. He struck out the first batter he faced as a pitcher since eighth grade, had the next one reach on an infield error and balked that runner to third for not pausing between two fly outs to end the game.
“I was begging them to let me pitch since the Buena game (April 20),” Burchfield said. “They let me warmup in the Williamstown game (the day before) and I’ve been waiting. I finally got them to let me pitch today and I was just trying to throw some gas.
“I did not think I was going to step foot on the mound ever again, but I was able to get back out there. It felt pretty good. It was the first time since eighth grade, but hopefully I can get out there more.”
Although he left the field with a career ERA of 0.00 Burchfield thought he could have done better. He promised the next time he gets out there he’ll throw even more strikes.
Is there going to be a next time?
“His opportunity might come again,” McAllister hinted. “We’ve got a lot of games and our schedule is so compact and condenses that there may be another opportunity where he gets to come in a situation to close out a game. I wouldn’t say it’s a one-and-done. I’d say it’s a potential he could get back out there … without having to beg.”
Burchfield came in to finish up for Logan Streitz, who was making his second start of the season and first since Opening Day. Streitz allowed one hit through four innings – a triple by Caleb Clark in the third inning – walked three and struck out eight. He struck out the side in his final inning.
“I figured out I was going to start on the bus,” Streitz said. “They didn’t tell me from yesterday and on the way here they mentioned I was pitching. Sometimes I like knowing before I’m going to pitch, like the day before, so I can prepare. Today I just had to switch my mentality that I was going to pitch.”
Throwing just 73 pitches with velocity McAllister said was as good as he has seen from him and feeling “pretty good,” the sophomore could have gone out to finish his first complete game. But the score being what it was, the situation was good to grant Burchfield’s wish.
“That’s something we’ve been wanting to do for a while,” McAllister said. “Burchfield has always let us know that he’s ready, always ready. He told me pregame today he’s ready, what’s the situation gpnna have to be for me to get into the game. I said you just do your job and you stay ready and when it’s time for your number to be called you’ll know.
“Luckily these guys came out and swung the bats and did what they were supposed to do to get us in a position to get him on the mound today.”
Salem countered with Colin Finney, who was starting for the second day in a row. He threw 28 pitches in two innings against Camden Eastside on Tuesday, but threw 24 in the first inning against a vastly different team.
Rams coach Eric Fizur gave him the choice of staying in and not be able to pitch again until the middle of next week or coming out and have an earlier return. The right-hander opted for the early exit so he could pitch again Monday.
The Rams ran out three pitchers behind him, but the results were the same. The Eagles scored in every inning. Every spot in their order reached base at least twice and seven spots had at least one hit. Mason O’Brien, Peyton O’Brien and Streitz had two hits apiece. Burchfield and Cohen Petrutz each had three.
“They were what we thought they were as Dennis Green said before,” Fizur said. “You could see why even missing three or four of their top guys that’s the No. 1 Group I South right now; you could easily see that.
“(Colin) threw well. He didn’t change anything (from Tuesday). We just saw a team that knows how to play the game versus a team that is young and developing.”
Pennsville right-hander Logan Streitz looks in for a pitch in his first start since Opening Day. On the cover, Chase Burchfield delivers a pitch in his first mound appearance since eighth grade.
SCHALICK 24, BRIDGETON 4: Playing under the lights at Elmer LL, the Cougars erupted for 23 hits and scored their most runs in a game since putting up 24 in a game last May for their fourth win in a row.
Luke Pokrovsky led the hit parade going 4-for-4 with five RBIs. Jamari Whitley went 3-for-4 with four RBIs and Wyatt Cushane went 3-for-3 with three RBIs. J.T. Fleming, Jake Siedlecki and Elijah Cummings also had three hits.
The Cougars actually trailed 4-1 after the first inning, but they took control with 12 in the second. Seventeen batters came to the plate in the inning with the first 11 all reaching safely. Siedlecki’s bases-loaded walk tied the game and Lucas D’Agostino’s hit by pitch put the Cougars in front for good.
SOFTBALL CUMBERLAND 12, SCHALICK 1: The bottom four hitters in the Colts’ lineup combined for six hits, five runs and seven RBIs. Shayla Richmond was 2-for-3 with two RBIs and Storylynn Dagostino was 2-for-3 with three RBIs. The Colts broke it open with an 11-run third inning.
Taylor Sparks drove in Schalick’s run with a two-out bases-loaded walk in the fifth inning as the Cougars tried to extend the game. Addy Shimp had two of Schalick’s three hits.
BOYS TENNIS SCHALICK 4, GCIT 1 George Gould (S) def. Luke Clodfelter, 6-2, 6-0. Jesus Espinoza (S) def. Jeffrey Smith, 6-2, 6-3 Conor O’Toole (S) def. Lorenzo Miglino, 6-1, 6-2 Rocky Monticolo-David Santana (S) def. Rory Guice-Liam Masusock, 6-0, 6-2 George Gould-James Helder (G) def. Kaden Barnes-Cayden Brzozowski, 6-0, 2-6, 10-6 Records: Schalick 8-4, GCIT 4-8.
SALEM – Salem High School track coach David Hunt likens senior runner Anna Buzby to the Energizer Bunny. She keeps going and going and going. And she certainly has a lot going on.
BUZBY
When she’s not in school or chasing school records on the track, Buzby is a competitive mountain bike rider and just as she is in track, she’s one of the top high school girls in the state at that, too.
In one recent weekend, she ran four events at the Woodbury Relays, helped the Rams set a meet record in one of them and the next day put together a top five finish in a 15-mile mountain bike race. Because of the academic path she’s pursued the 4.0 student will enter the college of her choice already a sophomore.
Whatever activity she undertakes she goes about it with maximum effort, a quality she gained growing up and working on the family farm.
“She’s pretty elite,” Hunt said. “She definitely has natural gifts, but her work ethic is one of the best I’ve ever had, so when you combine both it’s the result you get. Regardless of her ability her effort and willingness to do everything she’s asked to do is like the top two percent.”
Buzby sat down with the Riverview Sports News earlier this week and talked about all things track, mountain biking and life down on the farm.
Coaches, if there is an athlete in your program with an interesting background or back story the community would be interested in “Getting to Know,” forward the details to Riverview Sports News at al.muskewitz@gmail.com.
RIVERVIEW SPORTS NEWS: It’s Buzby with a Z, correct? How many people put the S in there and do you have to correct them a bunch?
ANNA BUZBY: It’s a Z. Whenever they mess it up, it’s not really anything important that needs to be corrected. I don’t know if any interviews or newspapers ever messed it up. They usually get it right for that.
RSN: What is it that attracted you to track and field? I don’t know if you do other sports, but to me you’re the track athlete.
AB: I do play field hockey (left mid) and I do race mountain bikes. I joined a track club in elementary school for a little bit because I had just quit gymnastics and my parents wanted me to do something to not sit around and do nothing, so me and my little brother joined the Rising Stars Track Club (in Penns Grove). That was fun.
I sort of had forgotten I did that once I got to high school. My older brother, Trevor, did track all through high school and he had a really great time. He was a senior my freshman year and I was really nervous to join the track team, but I did it and it was fun to be on a team with my brother. I just kind of picked it up where I left off and just liked it.
RSN: What’s the earliest memory you have of getting a ribbon or medal and how did that influence you wanting to continue?
AB: I remember my first meet. It was a Polar Bear Meet at Clayton. I ran the 800, it was my first race and I didn’t know how far 800 was. No one told me what the distance was, how many laps; what did 800 mean? I just go and line up and I was very nervous and I just booked it. I had no idea how to do this.
I stopped and turned around and all the girls were still running and I was like, Oh crap,’ so I kept running. I didn’t know how far it was. I ran the whole thing and I won. I definitely did not pace it right.
RSN: And now it’s one of your best events. How neat was that to know nothing and now it’s your best?
AB: It seems kind of silly that I didn’t know what the distance meant now. It was definitely kind of nerve-wracking to win.
I don’t know if I use it as a lesson, but it’s always a funny story to tell people and I make sure all the new runners know what the distance is – one lap is 400, two laps is 800 and four miles is 1600.
RSN: You have placed and won a lot of events in your career. Do you keep all your trophies, ribbons and medals and are there any in particular that holds a special place for you?
AB: I do have a shelf. On the top are the awards I get from the school and it has a bar and I loop all my medals on it. I haven’t counted them recently. It’s kind of crowded. I might need another bar. I have another shelf for my bike medals, too.
RSN: This year’s team is having a bang-up season. I know you’ve been together for a while. Is this the year you all have been waiting to happen and what’s it feel like to see it all come to fruition?
AB: I would say this is the year we’ve been waiting for. My sophomore year we were so close to winning the division and last year we were very close to winning it. The dual meets mean a lot to us. For the girls, we haven’t won the division, so we’ve been trying and trying. That felt good.
We always knew we could do it. Me, personally, and some of my teammates have been really trying their best. Not everyone on the track team is there to, I don’t know, actually compete and be the best they can be (in an event), but there to keep in shape. But I know there’s a good handful of us who have been wanting this win since freshman year.
RSN: Tell me about your relay teams and what makes them click? The sprint medley team set a record at the Woodbury Relays, the 4×200 team won there, your 4×400 team finished fourth in the high school small schools division at the Penn Relays.
AB: Our sprint medley got watches this year at Woodbury and the 4×200 won. I think our sprint medley team works really well together. It’s not all our track team has only good sprinters or only good distance runners; we have a well-rounded team, someone in each event who’s good and when we all come together we can do some great things.
RSN: What is the Penn Relays experience like?
AB: It’s just so fun. Everyone’s so positive. It’s just a good time. It’s kind of surreal because you’ve never been on a track that big until you’re there and in the stadium there are so many eyes watching you. It’s just really fun. It’s just different from any other meet.
I don’t really get overwhelmed at Penn Relays because I know it’s supposed to be fun and it is fun. I really enjoy it.
Salem’s Anna Buzby is an accomplished athlete on the track, but when she’s not chasing down school records or down on the farm, she’s competing for the Salem County Reactors mountain biking team. (Photos courtesy of Anna Buzby)
RSN: Coach Hunt says you’re like the Energizer bunny, always on the go. After the Woodbury Relays you rode in a 16-mile mountain bike race? What’s that part of your athletic life like? I remember Schalick soccer goal scorer Emily Miller rides dirt bikes, too.
AB: She used to be on our mountain bike team (Salem County Reactors of the New Jersey Interscholastic Cycling League) and we were really close friends. (Miller races motocross now).
Woodbury was all day, it was exhausting, then the next morning we got up early and went to Chester. I’ve just been doing that since sixth grade. I race varsity, which is five laps of the course, so it ends up being 15 miles every week. It’s kind of a long day, but I’ve just been doing it. This is my last year to be able to do it, so I just want to get through all five races.
(Buzby has competed in two bike races this season, with a fourth-place at Camp Edge and a third-place at Chester. Last year she finished third at Camp Edge, second at Chester, fifth at Lewis Morris and fourth at Rowan.)
RSN: What do you like that that sport?
AB: I just have always been on a bike for my whole life. My dad loves biking, so we’ve always had bikes, always gone on bikes rides; we’re pretty active people, we bike around the farm. We did do BMX racing for a little bit before sixth grade, then my older brother’s friends got into mountain biking and he got into it, so I just hopped onto it and I liked it. Biking is really fun. I like using my technical skills in the woods.
There is an option of doing it college but I don’t think I’m going to do that. There are some races adults can sign up for, but not outside the league, I could probably do if I wanted to.
RSN: You live on a working farm in Mannington. They tell me that’s where you developed your work ethic. What it’s like down on the farm, what do you raise there, what’s a typical day like?
AB: It’s A.T. Buzby Farm, after my grandfather Andrew Thomas Buzby. I always forget how many acres the farm is – it’s a good amount (190 acres) – and it’s a produce farm. We do corn, tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, watermelon, cantaloupe, like everything. I work there in the summer with my family. I go to farmer’s markets. I drive the truck to the auction.
Work starts at 6 (a.m.). The first thing we do every morning is pick corn because you want to do it when it’s not too hot out. A bushel of corn is 50 pounds – an ear a pound – you’ve got to pick it, you’ve got to carry it and then place it onto the wagon. It’s pretty labor intensive so you get sweaty so you don’t really want to be out there in the sun, so we do that first thing. Sometimes it takes two hours, sometimes it takes more, depends on how much people are ordering that day.
Then we have workers picking all the other produce. I’ll be in the packing house packing it. We also do a CSA, community supportive agriculture, which people can sign up and customize a box and they come pick it up on a certain day of the week, so we have to pack those. Sometimes I’ll be out in the field fixing irrigation or weeding, all sorts of things. I do a lot of stuff.
RSN: What has that experience done for shaping you as a person and an athlete?
AB: It’s just showing me (the importance of) hard work. Watching my dad work from sunrise to sunset, it’s just given me an example of what hard work looks like and what no days off look like. I carry the work ethic that I’ve picked up from the farm into my sports. I always try my best no matter what.
RSN: How is the farming business doing these days? There are so many stories in the national news about family farms, what the story from someone with boots on the ground?
AB: I’d say it’s good. We have a reputation and people know that we will deliver. Some people say we have the best sweet corn in New Jersey, which I believe. I think we have a good reputation. Everyone loves our tomatoes, too.
RSN: What’s the hardest part of being a farmer?
AB: I feel like since I’ve been doing this my whole life sometimes I feel like I get left out of what my other friends are doing because summer is their time off and summer is my time on. I do get to go camping in the summer for a week with my grandmom and I’ll steal a day to go down to the beach every once in a while, but I feel like there’s no day off. That can be hard sometimes especially when you’re a kid and you just want to play. Our busy season is from now until early October.
RSN: Is farming something you think you’ll stick with after you finish school or will you get out the first chance you get?
AB: Sometimes you need a break from the farm, but you always come back.
RSN: What do you want to be when you grow up?
AB: I don’t know. I want to go to college for nutrition and public health. I don’t really have a certain job in mind, but I’m just interested in nutrition. I’m around food and I like it.
RSN: How have you found the recruiting process? Which schools have shown the most interest in your and which ones are you most interested in?
AB: Liberty, Rowan and West Chester are on my short list. For Liberty, I would be a walk-on if I went there. I’m really indecisive. This is really a hard decision. It was coming down to financials, but now they all cost about the same, which is not helping my decision. One’s a little closer, Liberty’s kind of far. They’re all really good options. I feel like I can’t make a wrong decision, which just makes it even harder to make the decision. I have a hard time making plans.
Salem ace Finney was ready to go seven, but only went two in a rout so he can start Wednesday against Pennsville
TUESDAY SALEM COUNTY BASEBALL Salem 15, Camden Eastside 0
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
SALEM – When Colin Finney arrived at the ballpark Tuesday afternoon he and Salem baseball coach Eric Fizur were fully prepared for the pitcher to go all seven innings and give the Rams everything he had.
After two innings and an 11-run lead that plan went out the window, but that wasn’t necessarily a bad thing.
Finney was off the mound after 28 pitches, which lets him start Wednesday against Pennsville, and the Rams went on to beat Camden Eastside 15-0 for their second win in a row. It’s the first time the Rams have won back-to-back games since a three-game winning streak in late May 2022.
“I was absolutely fine with that,” Finney said. “Since Day One freshman year I was willing to sacrifice anything for this team. To see the younger guys stepping up is incredible to watch. Just being able to sit back and watch them improve is good.”
Finney, coming off six days pitching rest, said he felt “great” after his two innings against the Tigers and could have gone longer if necessary, but it wasn’t required. During his 28 pitches, he gave up a single through the box, a walk and struck out two.
“The first inning there were four batters and I think he threw three first-pitch strikes and I think he only threw two balls,” Fizur said. “I think he got hit hard once, and that was a pop up in the infield. He did exactly what I asked him to do – throw hard, throw well and trust the guys behind you.”
Finney’s fate on the mound was probably sealed after he belted a bases-loaded triple in the first inning that give the Rams (4-7) a 4-0 lead with nobody out. They ended up scoring nine in the inning. Andrew May had a two-run double and Chase Davis a two-run triple before it was over. Every spot in the lineup scored at least one run in the game.
“I’ve been put in big situations before,” Finney said. “I’m one of those guys (who believes) pressure makes diamonds and you build off that. To see everyone on base and all of them cheering you on, it was like let’s get this ball on the ground so where it’ll go deeper in the outfield and as soon as I saw it in that gap I was already going for third.”
Three relievers followed him to the mound – Jacob Parkell, Bryce Harris and Josthen Jimenez – and held the Tigers (1-5) hitless.
SOFTBALL PAULSBORO 16, SALEM 3: Alexis Morrison went 4-for-5 with three doubles and six RBIs and pitched a complete game in the circle for the Red Raiders. The first four hitters in the Paulsboro lineup were a combined 12-for-16 with 12 RBIs.
Julliana Love went 3-for-3 at the top of the Salem lineup and Destiny Carr went 2-for-2 from the nine spot. Love, Kyla Henderson and Ava Ortiz drove the Rams’ runs home.
BOYS TENNIS SCHALICK 5, WILDWOOD 0 George Gould (S) def. Giorgio Palesano, 6-0, 6-0 Jesus Espnoza (S) def. Justin Damian, 6-2, 6-1 Conor O’Toole (S) def. Brian Damian, 7-5, 6-1 Rocky Monticolo-David Santana (S) def. Christopher Olivera-Christopher Hernandez, 6-0, 6-0 Kaden Barnes-Cayden Brzozowski (S) def. Yahir Reyes-Simon Palacias, 6-1, 6-0 Records: Wildwood 3-6, Schalick 7-4.
Cover photo: Salem pitcher Colin Finney delivers a pitch in his second inning against Camden Eastside.
Schalick junior Luke Pokrovsky spins no-hitter against Wildwood, fans 15 to reach 200 career Ks; includes highlights from Monday’s Salem County sports calendar
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PITTSGROVE – It was red letter day for Luke Pokrovsky all the way around Monday.
The junior left-hander threw the first no-hitter of his high school career and collected his 200th career strikeout during Schalick’s 8-0 victory over Wildwood.
He threw 96 pitches in the complete game (64 for strikes), struck out 15 and walked three – the only base runners he allowed. He called it one of his top pitching game after his 16-strikeout, one-hit near-complete game against Gloucester on April 19.
In his last three starts he allowed one hit with 16 strikeouts against Gloucester, three hits with 13 strikeouts with 13 strikeouts in a complete game against Lower Cape May and then Monday.
“He’s been locked in, especially the last three starts where he’s been all around the strike zone, getting ahead of guys, finishing guys off,” Cougars coach Sean O’Brien said. “It’s been fun to watch.
“It’s been easy for our guys playing defense behind him, but he really has been ahead of every batter and attacking batters and not really walking that many guys.”
O’Brien couldn’t remember having a no-hitter in his tenure at Schalick and even this one caught him a little by surprise.
“I heard someone mention it to me, so it was around there, but I didn’t realize it until later in the game,” O’Brien said someone. “We were looking at the pitch count and then I realized they hadn’t had any hits.”
Pokrovsky was so sharp he didn’t allow a ball out of the infield. The closest the Warriors came to a hit was Logan Totten’s sharp grounder to second baseman Evan Glaspey for the first out in the seventh.
He retired the first eight batters he faced and 13 of the first 14. He hit the milestone strikeout on the number, fanning the last two batters of the game.
“I was going into the game knowing 15 Ks is a lot to get,” Pokrovsky said. “Wildwood is a good team after looking at the stats. I knew they were going to compete and look to jump on the fastball. I tried to mix up my off-speed pitches early in the count and then come back with the fastball hoping to get it past them.
“When I got into the dugout after the sixth inning, a teammate came up to me saying I needed two more (for 200). I got excited knowing I could get my 200 strikeouts. They had their top hitters up the next inning. After walking the third hitter and grounding out the fourth I knew the lineup kind of dropped off so I just tried to blow my fast by them and it ended up working out.”
The pitcher got a lot of support from his teammates. J.T. Fleming went 3-for-3, Evan Glaspey went 2-for-3 with two RBIs and Lucas D’Agostino had a pair of hits. Pokrovsky also had two hits, giving him 79 for his career in that department.
Rancocas Valley 7, Pennsville 1: The Red Devils scored all their runs in the first four innings and held the Eagles to just two singles. Jeff Wagner and Peyton O’Brien had Pennsville’s two hits and Mason O’Brien drove in the Eagles’ run in the second inning to make it a 2-1 game. SOFTBALL Schalick 17, Wildwood 0: The Cougars erupted for eight runs in the first inning and Addy Shimp and Annie Podhel split a four-inning one-hitter. Cayla Sbrana had a two-run single in the first inning and had four RBIs in the game. Cloe Elliott, Maddie Brown and Lucy Virga all drove in three runs.
Salem 8, Cape May Tech 7: The Rams scored two runs in the sixth inning to snap a 6-6 tie and then held on to snap an eight-game losing streak. Ava Ortiz and Julliana Love scored the decisive runs stealing home.
CMT made it 8-7 with two outs in the bottom of the seventh and had the tying run at third, but the game ended with offensive interference.
Morgan Johnson had a bases-loaded triple in Salem’s five-run second inning and had four RBIs in the game. Love had three hits, Johnson, Ortiz and Kyla Henderson had two hits apiece.
GOLF Woodstown 174, Wildwood 196: Grant Prater shot 38 at Union League National to lead the Wolverines (11-3).
Clearview girls 170, Schalick 209: Clearview’s Stella Bernardi won medalist honors at Centerton CC with a 41. Hannah Widdifield posted Schalick’s low score (46).
BOYS TENNIS SCHALICK 4, WASHINGTON TWP. 1 Zack Torbik (WT) def. George Gould, 5-7, 6-3, 10-6 Jesus Espinoza (S) def. Khang Nguyen, 6-0, 3-6, 10-7 Conor O’Toole (S) def. Jack Hanson, 6-0, 6-0 Rocky Monticolo-David Santana (S) def. John Ecker-Kaden Murphy, 6-2, 6-4 Kaden Barnes-Cayden Brzozowski (S) won 6-1, 6-0 Records: Schalick 6-4, Washington Twp. 1-8.
Here are the results of Saturday’s high school action involving teams from Salem County
BASEBALL HADDONFIELD 6, WOODSTOWN 2: Rocco String had two hits, drove in both of the Wolverines’ runs and pitched an inning and a third of one-hit relief. String hasn’t allowed an earned run in his last two appearances.
COLLINGSWOOD 11, SALEM 0: Jairo Mendoza went 3-for-3 with two RBIs and Chase Ladik spun a two-hit shutout with nine strikeouts over five innings. Caleb Clair and Chase Pomper had the Rams’ two hits.
The Rams loaded the bases with one out in the first inning, but couldn’t get the runs home. They also had runners at second and third with none out in the fifth with the same result.
MOORESTOWN 7, WOODSTOWN 1: The Quakers hit three home runs and pulled away with four runs in the sixth inning. Woodstown grabbed a 1-0 lead in the second inning when Hannah Hitchner scored on an error. Hitchner (double), Tulana Mingin and Ellie Wygand had the Wolverines’ three hits.
MAINLAND 9, WOODSTOWN 1: Mainland pulled away from a 1-1 tie with five runs in the second inning. Cara Delia had three hits for Woodstown, while Kayla Brown and Grace White had two hits apiece. Brown drove in the Wolverines’ run with a first-inning single.
DEPTFORD 11, SALEM 0: Annaliese Underwood homered and Grace Logue held the Rams to two hits and struck out six. Logue retired the first 13 Rams she faced before Phoenix Holland and Cimiyyia Corbin had back-to-back singles in the fifth.
TRACK PENN RELAYS: Schalick’s 4×400 relay team of Nylan Sutton, David Stewart, Reggie Allen and Michael Eberl ran a 3:33.40 and placed seventh in the high school boys race. Stewart ran a second leg of 51.50.
Here is the Salem County sports schedule for the week of April 28-May 4; all events start at 4 p.m. unless noted
Sunday
BASEBALL Mainland Coaches vs. Cancer Pennsville vs Cedar Creek, 9 a.m.
Monday
BASEBALL Wildwood at Schalick
Diamond Classic Pennsville at Rancocas Valley SOFTBALL Salem at Cape May Tech Schalick at Wildwood COLLEGE BASEBALL Salem CC at Delaware County CC, 3 p.m. GOLF Clearview girls vs. Schalick, Centerton CC, 3:30 p.m. Pennsville vs. Penns Grove, Sakima CC, 3:30 p.m. Woodstown vs. Wildwood, Union League National, 3:45 p.m. Salem Tech vs. Gloucester Catholic Clearview vs. Schalick, Centerton CC, 4:15 p.m. BOYS TENNIS Washington Twp. at Schalick
Tuesday
BASEBALL Camden Eastside at Salem SOFTBALL Paulsboro at Salem COLLEGE BASEBALL Salem CC at Anne Arundel CC (2), 2 p.m. GOLF Schalick girls vs. Delsea, Birches/Wash. Twp. GC Schalick vs. Overbrook, Kresson GC BOYS TENNIS Wildwood at Schalick BOYS VOLLEYBALL Riverside at Salem Tech, 3:45 p.m.
Wednesday
BASEBALL Pennsville at Salem Bridgeton at Schalick, Elmer LL, 6:30 p.m. SOFTBALL Schalick at Cumberland BOYS TENNIS Schalick at GCIT BOYS LACROSSE St. Joe’s at Woodstown
Thursday
BASEBALL Penns Grove at Pleasantville COLLEGE BASEBALL Lehigh Carbon at Salem CC, 3:30 p.m. GOLF Pennsville, Schalick, Woodstown in Carl Arena Tournament, 8 a.m. TRACK Salem at SJTCA Meet, Delsea
Friday
BASEBALL Salem at Overbrook SOFTBALL LEAP at Salem COLLEGE BASEBALL Salem CC at RCSJ-Gloucester, 3:30 p.m. COLLEGE SOFTBALL REGION XIX TOURNAMENT at Mercer County CC Salem CC vs. Mercer CC, 10 a.m. Delaware Tech vs. Lackawanna, noon Salem-Mercer winner vs. Del Tech-Lackawanna winner, 2 p.m. Salem-Mercer loser vs. Del Tech-Lackawanna loser, 4 p.m. GOLF Cedar Creek vs. Schalick, Centerton CC, 3:30 p.m.
Saturday
COLLEGE BASEBALL RCSJ-Gloucester at Salem CC (2), noon COLLEGE SOFTBALL REGION XIX TOURNAMENT at Mercer County CC Elimination game, 10 a.m. Championship Game, noon If necessary, 2 p.m.