Schalick signing day

Cougars recognize 12 senior athletes across eight sports who have signed to continue their academic and athletic careers in college

By Riverview Sports News

PITTSGROVE – The paperwork has long been signed, sent and filed and the high school seniors safely in place for their schools of the future. This was a day to celebrate their decisions.

Schalick High School recognized 12 seniors Wednesday who have signed with colleges to continue their athletic and academic careers.

Schalick track athletes Grace O’Neill (L) and Sophia Longo wait for their turns in the individual portion of the school’s senior signing recognition Wednesday.

The group included five for track and field – Brooke Watt (Rowan), Grace O’Neill (Monmouth), Sophia Longo (Rowan), Katie Little (Rowan) and Alivia Klancic (Stevenson) – golfer Hannah Widdifield (Kean); field hockey’s Ella Shimp (Susquehanna); swimmer Ella Price (College of New Jersey); soccer goalie Carly Hayman (Jefferson); Salem County boys cross country champion Charles Fuerneisen (Mars Hill); boys tennis No. 2 singles Jesus Espinoza Arias (RCSJ-Gloucester); and cheer’s Cianna Gaines (Rowan).

The track signees head off for one last hurrah together this weekend when the Cougars compete in the NJSIAA Group I Championship at Franklin High School.

It’ll be a bittersweet weekend for the seniors. Three of them – Watt, Longo and Little – will continue as teammates at Rowan. Klancic is headed to Stevenson and O’Neill is bound for Monmouth.

“It’s going to be emotional,” O’Neill said. “We’re going to go out there, we’re going to fight hard for whatever we have in us; it’s just going to be an amazing time. I know my last event is going to be the 4×4 and it’s going to be pretty emotional.

“A lot of us have gotten a stronger bond since the season started. It’s amazing we got to do this all together.”

O’Neill considered joining the group of Rowan, but Monmouth offered the academic curriculum she wants to pursue.

“I will miss them so much,” she said. “A lot of the girls on the track team pursuing it at Rowan are some of my best friends so I’m obviously going to be supporting them from afar and I’m sure they’ll be doing the same for me.”

Schalick golfer Hannah Widdifield (R) celebrates her college with boyfriend Ryan Johnson Wednesday. Widdifield is headed to play for Kean’s startup program, while Johnson will enroll in the PGA Golf Management program at Coastal Carolina.

O’Neill was one of the standouts in the Salem County Meet. She PR’d in every event she entered in the Salem County Meet and last weekend qualified for states in the 400 hurdles and discus, where she’s looking to set the school record. She’s on the 4×800 relay with Longo and the 4×400 relay with Klancic.

Among the other signees, Widdifield solidified her position as a trailblazer.

The 2024 county runnerup is the first girls golfer from Schalick to play college golf and one of the first signees of Kean’s start-up women’s program. The Cougars will start competing in the fall of 2024..

“(When) I feel like I’m one of the first on both teams, it just makes me feel like I really accomplished something,” Widdifield said. “I’ve strived to reach my goals and it really worked out well for me. Being the first girl, though, is kind of shocking because I never thought this would happen because I only started playing last year.”

A few hours after the signing recognition, the Cougars held their Spring Sports Award Banquet.

Tri-Cape trio

Salem County puts 3 players on this year’s Tri-Cape Carpenter Cup baseball roster, team opens play vs. Burlington County June 11; softball opens June 17

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

Schalick pitcher Luke Pokrovsky will extend a unique family legacy next week as joins his two older brothers in playing on the Tri-Cape Carpenter Cup baseball team.

Pokrovsky is joined by Pennsville teammates Peyton O’Brien and Chase Burchfield as the Salem County representatives on the 25-man Tri-Cape roster that once again is expected to contend for the Cup.

The combo league’s all-stars have been in the final each of the last three years, winning it in 2021 and ’22. This year’s team opens the tournament against Burlington County at 10 a.m. June 11 on the Richie Ashburn Field at FDR Park. A win sends them to play either Philadelphia Catholic or Bux-Mont at 12:30 p.m. June 13, with that winner heading to the Final Four in Citizens Bank Park.

Pokrovsky, a junior left-handed pitcher, is the third member of his family to play for the team, joining older brothers Staus and Jarrett in the classic.

“One of the cool things with doing this a long time, and I don’t know this to be 100 percent factual, but I don’t know if anybody’s ever gone through three sets of brothers,” Tri-Cape head coach D.J. Gore said. “This will be the third Pokrovsky who has played in the Carpenter Cup for us. I think it’s a pretty interesting fact.

“To have one son to excel in it is something. To have two is quite remarkable. But now there’s a third one. We’re looking to see him up close in person. I’ve seen him in a scrimmage, he pitched against us (Highland), but we’re looking to see in actual game-day live. He seems special. He seems like his two other brothers, but he’s also a little bit different because he’s a pitcher.”

All three Salem County all-stars had banner years for their South Jersey Group I playoff teams.

Pokrovsky made 12 appearances on the mound with 122 strikeouts and a 1.09 ERA in 57 2/3 innings. He struck out 16 three times (Gloucester, Overbrook, Paulsboro) and in one 20 2/3-, 10-day stretch fanned 44 and allowed four hits (with a no-hitter against Wildwood). He allowed one hit or less over six or more innings four times.

At the plate he batted .500 with 40 hits with six homers and 27 RBIs.

“You can play deep in this tournament because of your starting pitching,” Gore said. “Obviously over the past three years we’ve had really, really good starting pitching and that’s why we’ve been successful.”

Burchfield was the Eagles’ leading hitter with a .476 average and .707 slugging percentage. He had 39 hits, three homers and 39 RBIs. O’Brien was their second-leading hitter with a .439 average and .634 slugging percentage. He had 36 hits, 12 doubles, and 25 RBIs.

It’s the second year in a row Pennsville coach Matt Karr has had a player on the team and the first time in his tenure the Eagles have had multiple players. Luke Wood was on the team last year.

“The kids from Pennsville are both pretty special,” Gore said. “There’s always been a kid from Pennsville on there. To have multiple ones I think shows you what type of kid is down there right now.

“Statistically speaking, their numbers are off the charts and they play a really good schedule. You’re just looking to see them kind of mesh in this team environment with the 23 other guys who are on there.

“That’s the biggest thing, just getting these guys to mesh in together. For the most part we’re taking everybody’s best player off of their team and putting them into one team and just showing up for basically one day. You hope to win Game 1 that gets you to Game 2 and if you win two games you’re playing in Citizens Bank Park, which is the ultimate goal for all these kids to play there at least once.”

The Softball Carpenter Cup opens June 17. The Tri-Cape team plays Bracket B opponents Delaware South (noon), Inter-Ac (4 p.m.) and Philadelphia PCCAF (6 p.m.) the first day. The top two teams from each of the four brackets advance to the knockout round June 19.

Pennsville’s Beth Jackson and Schalick’s Rick Higinbotham will again serve on the coaching staff.

Here’s the Tri-Cape baseball roster:

PITCHERS: Matt Kouser (St. Augustine), J.P. Podgorski (St. Augustine), Travis Large (Ocean City); Tate DeRias (Gloucester Catholic), Frank Cairone (Delsea), Luke Pokrovsky (Schalick), Nate Bott (Kingsway).

INFIELDERS: Sergio Droz (Millville), Evan Taylor (Ocean City), Ethan Mitnick (Mainland), Jake Cagna (Egg Harbor Twp.), Jason Salsbery (Egg Harbor Twp.), Jack Mustaro (Gloucester Catholic), Noah Danza (Gloucester Catholic), Peyton O’Brien (Pennsville), Chris Smith (Washington Twp.).

OUTFIELDERS: Jake Meyers (St. Augustine), Ryan Manning (Cedar Creek), Hunter Ray (Lower Cape May), Jake Slusarski (Williamstown), Frank Master (Delsea), Zach Maxwell (Delsea), Chase Burchfield (Pennsville).

CATCHERS: Matt Johansen (Absegami), Tommy Popoff (Kingsway).

Salem 2nd in sectionals

Salem girls passed by Audubon; Salem County qualifies 28 athletes in individual events, 10 relays for state meet; Rams’ Davenport-White wins second event Saturday, Pennsville’s Ayers, Woodstown’s Hunt also bring home final-day gold

By Riverview Sports News

PENNSAUKEN – Karima Davenport-White won her second event in two days, Anna Buzby wound up qualifying for states in four individual events and the Salem girls track team enjoyed their best finish in the sectionals, despite losing their overnight lead in the South Jersey Group I Meet.

Davenport-White claimed gold for the second day in a row when she won the girls 100 hurdles in a school-record time of 15.30 to go with the long jump title she claimed on Friday. She was one of three Salem County athletes to win events on Saturday’s final day of competition.

The Rams held a lead in the team standings entering the final day, but were passed by Audubon, who finished with 87.33 points, and finished second. They trailed the Green Wave by 8.33 points going into the final event – the 4×400 relay – and didn’t start the race.

Their 71 points, however, were the most they had ever scored in the sectionals and was one point ahead of third-place Clayton.

“It’s always tough, going into the season you’ve got expectations, you’ve got goals,” coach Spencer Jarrett said of the runner-up finish. “It wasn’t what we wanted, but all the girls gave everything they had.”

The Rams advanced five girls in 10 individual events plus one relay, depth that should serve them well at next week’s state Group I state meet in Franklin. In addition to Davenport-White, who plans to sign with Coppin State on Tuesday, Buzby (800, 400 hurdles, pole vault and 400) and Dominique Lewis (shot and javelin) were multi-qualifiers for Salem.

“It’s good to have depth in the state because it gives us a better chance at trying to pull out the victory,” Salem coach Spencer Jarrett said. “We were bummed about not winning the sectional, but it’s OK, because if we get enough girls in the state is very attainable because everything balances out. Points that we might not (get) might come from the people in the central or the north.

“At the past couple states besides Clayton it’s been first to 60. Sixty points and you’re basically knocking on the door for a chance at holding that trophy.”

Davenport-White’s win in the hurdles was a highlight for both the runner and the team. She had been working all season to reach her goal of breaking the record (15.40) and felt it was within reach after running a top-seeded 15.48 in the prelims.

There was a lot that went into winning the race. Running at Pennsauken has always made the Salem senior a little nervous because she fell in the race there her sophomore year. And when it came time to run Saturday she had to beat the clock twice.

She almost missed the start of the race after being sent to the other end of the track. She had to sprint back down to the starting position, ripped off her warmups, collected herself with a deep breath after rushing into the blocks and off she went.

“I was a little winded,” she said. “I ripped off my sweat uniform and got right in the blocks. I took a deep breath and was like, ‘OK, Karima, let’s do this.’”

She fell behind at the start, but recovered quickly, picked up momentum, picked up speed and, eventually, picked up the gold medal blasting the school record by a full tenth of a second.

“It was really important to me,” Davenport-White said. “All season I’ve been working really hard, especially for the hurdles. I wanted to break the school record and I did even better than that, so I’m really excited and I know it’s going to help me in college. It just felt nice knowing that I pushed myself to that point and was able to do something way better and win.”

Overall, Salem County’s five track schools qualified 28 total athletes for 38 individual spots plus 10 relays.

Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield (800, 1600, 3200), Grace O’Neill (400 hurdles, discus) and Brooke Watt (110 hurdles, triple jump) were qualified in multiple events on the girls side. Penns Grove’s Khalim Smith (triple jump, high jump) was a multi-qualifier on the boys side. Every school has at least one qualifier on each side. All six of Schalick’s relays qualified.

Pennsville’s Connor Ayars and Woodstown’s Calista Hunt brought back gold to Salem County Saturday.

Ayars won the javelin with a personal best 162-0 on his final throw of the competition, leading a 1-3 finish for the Eagles in the event with teammate Cole Campbell.

“It was a great finals to watch,” Pennsville coach Mike Healy said. “Connor went into the finals with the farthest throw, then Cole took the lead on his second throw in the final then got passed by (Gloucester’s Jalil Banks at 159-1) with Connor taking it on the last throw.”

Hunt won the girls triple jump with a leap of 34-9.

This story will be updated.

SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I SECTIONALS
(Salem County state qualifiers)
Saturday’s finals
BOYS
Final team scores:
 Glassboro 122, Woodbury 81, Gloucester City 63, Audubon 52, Riverside 44, Clayton 27, Paulsboro 23, Haddon Twp. 22, Woodstown 21, Burlington City 20, Salem 18, Pennsville 16, Schalick 13, Penns Grove 12, Gateway 11, Palmyra 9, Maple Shade 2, Buena 2.
100 hurdles: 2. Anthony Parker, Salem, 14.81
4×800: 2. Woodstown 8:14.38; 4. Schalick 8:32.88; 5. Salem 8:34.69
1600: 6. Matthew Tozer, Schalick, 4:40.53
4×400: 5. Schalick 3:30.75
Javelin: 1. Connor Ayars, Pennsville, 162-0; 3. Cole Campbell, Pennsville, 158-3
Long jump: 3. Khalim Smith, Penns Grove, 21-1.25
Pole vault: 6. Salvatore Longo, Schalick, 11-0

GIRLS
Final team scores:
 Audubon 87.33, Salem 71, Clayton 70, Woodbury 68, Schalick 66, Haddon Twp. 32.33, Maple Shade 29, Woodstown 29, Riverside 26, Glassboro 24, Gloucester City 20.33, Pennsville 10, Buena 6, Wildwood 6, Pitman 6, Gateway 4, Penns Grove 3.
400: 3. Anna Buzby, Salem, 59.69
100 hurdles: 1. Karima Davenport-White, Salem, 15.30; 3. Brooke Watt, Schalick, 15.74
4×800: 2. Woodstown 10:10.95; 4. Schalick 10:35.55
200: 5. Rhionna Timmons, Salem 26.63
1600: 2. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick, 5:18.57; 4. Lillian Norman, Woodstown, 5:41.27
4×400:  3. Schalick 4:13.81
Discus: 2. Grace O’Neill, Schalick, 132-0
Triple jump: 1. Calista Hunt, Woodstown, 34-9; 4. Brooke Watt, Schalick, 34-3; 6. Molly Curtis, Woodstown, 33-0
High jump: 3. Kami Casiano, Woodstown, 5-0

Salem County State Qualifiers
Boys
Connor Ayars, Pennsville: javelin
Cole Campbell, Pennsville: javelin
Joshua Crawford, Woodstown: 800
DaviYonn Jackson, Salem: triple jump
Salvatore Longo, Schalick: pole vault
Cole Lucas, Woodstown: 800
Jacob Marino, Woodstown: 3200
Ethan McLean, Schalick: discus
Anthony Parker, Salem: 100 hurdles
Khalim Smith, Penns Grove: triple jump, long jump
David Stewart, Schalick: triple jump
Matthew Tozer, Schalick: 1600

Girls
Anna Buzby, Salem: 800, 400 hurdles, pole vault, 400
Kami Casiano, Woodstown: high jump
Molly Curtis, Woodstown: triple jump
Karima Davenport-White, Salem: long jump, 100 hurdles
Allyson Green, Schalick: javelin
Jordan Hadfield, Schalick: 800, 3200, 1600
Calista Hunt, Woodstown: triple jump
Lillian Norman, Woodstown: 1600
Meely Horace, Penns Grove: 100
Dominique Lewis, Salem: shot, javelin
Megan Morris, Pennsville: pole vault
Grace O’Neill, Schalick: 400 hurdles, discus
Ava Rodgers, Salem: shot
Daivonnah Thomas, Penns Grove: 100
Rhionna Timmons, Salem: long jump
Brooke Watt, Schalick: 100 hurdles, triple jump

Relays
Salem: boys 4×800, girls 4×100
Schalick: boys 4×100, 4×800, 4×400; girls 4×100, 4×800, 4×400
Woodstown: boys 4×800, girls 4×800

Salem sound at sectionals

Rams hold slim lead in girls team standings after first day; 3 county girls win titles, 18 athletes and three relays qualify for states, meet concludes Saturday

By Riverview Sports News

PENNSAUKEN – Karima Davenport-White won the long jump, four of her Salem teammates and a relay qualified for the state meet in eight other events and the Rams grabbed a slim lead in the team standings Friday after the first day of the South Jersey Group I Sectional Track and Field Meet.

The Salem girls picked up 53 points in the nine events scored and hold a two-point lead over Audubon. Woodbury is third with 39 points. The meet wraps Saturday.

Davenport-White won the long jump by four inches with a personal best 17 feet, one-half inch.

Teammate Anna Buzby qualified for states in three individual events, finishing second in the 800 and 400 hurdles and fourth in the pole vault. Dominique Lewis finished second in the shot and sixth in the javelin.

Ava Rodgers and Rhionna Timmons qualified for state with fourth-place finishes in the shot and long jump, respectively. The Rams’ 4×100 relay team also advanced with a second-place finish.

“The girls did an amazing job,” Rams coach Spencer Jarrett said. “Their energy was unmatched. It was a team effort, everyone picking up each other’s slack — how a team should be.”

Davenport-White was one of three Salem County girls to win sectional championships Friday. Schalick junior Allyson Green won the javelin with a personal best 108-0 and Pennsville junior won the pole vault with a personal best 9-6.

Schalick’s Jordan Hadfield qualified for states in two events (3200, 800), while teammate Grace O’Neill (400 hurdles) and Penns Grove’s Meely Horace and Daivonnah Thomas both qualified in the 100. Schalick’s 4×100 relay team also qualified.

On the boys side, Woodstown’s Cole Lucas and Salem’s Pop Jackson were the highest Salem County finishers and the triple jump was clearly the best event.

Lucas finished second in the 800 (1:59.66) and Jackson finished second in the triple jump (45-0).

There were three Salem County athletes qualifying for state in the triple jump. In addition to Jackson, Penns Grove’s Khalim Smith was third (44-8) and Schalick’s David Stewart was fifth (44-4).

Woodstown’s Joshua Crawford (400) and Jacob Marino (3200) and Schalick’s Ethan McLean (discus) and 4×100 relay team also qualified for the state meet.

Glassboro leads the boys team standings with 64 points. Woodstown is sixth (13), Salem is T-10 (8), Penns Grove is T-12 (6) and Schalick is 14th (5).

SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I SECTIONALS
(Salem County state qualifiers)
BOYS
Team scores:
Glassboro 64, Gloucester 31, Woodbury 29, Riverside 24, Audubon 17, Woodstown 13, Paulsboro 12, Clayton 11, Burlington City 10, Salem 8, Gateway 8, Penns Grove 6, Palmyra 6, Schalick 5, Haddon Twp. 2, Buena 2.
4×100: 5. Schalick 43.59.
800: 2. Cole Lucas, Woodstown, 1:59.66; 4. Joshua Crawford, Woodstown, 2:01.59
3200: 6. Jacob Marino, Woodstown, 10:23.29
Discus: 6. Ethan McLean, Schalick, 136-2
Triple jump: 2. DaviYonn Jackson, Salem, 45-0; 3. Khalim Smith, Penns Grove, 44-8; 5. David Stewart, Schalick, 44-4

GIRLS
Team scores:
 Salem 53, Audubon 51, Woodbury 39, Schalick 30, Clayton 29, Haddon Twp. 19, Glassboro 12, Riverside 10, Pennsville 10, Maple Shade 9, Buena 6, Wildwood 6, Penns Grove 3, Gloucester City 2.

4×100: 3. Salem 50.85; 4. Schalick 51.70
800: 2. Anna Buzby, Salem, 2:20.17; 3. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick, 2:22.33
400 hurdles: 2. Anna Buzby, Salem, 1:06.15; 5. Grace O’Neill, Schalick, 1:08.36
100: 5. Meely Horace, Penns Grove, 12.65; 6. Daivonnah Thomas, Penns Grove, 12.68
3200: 2. Jordan Hadfield, Schalick, 11:10.90
Shot: 2. Dominique Lewis, Salem, 35-7.5; 4. Ava Rodgers, Salem, 33-2
Javelin: 1. Allyson Green, Schalick, 108-0; 6. Dominique Lewis, Salem, 100-8
Long jump: 1. Karima Davenport-White, Salem, 17-0.5; 4. Rhionna Timmons, Salem, 16-7.25
Pole vault: 1. Megan Morris, Pennsville, 9-6; 4. Anna Buzby, Salem, 8-6

Semis showdown set

Pennsville headed to another epic showdown with Pitman looking to finally solve the Panthers in the South Jersey Group I semifinals Friday; Woodstown, Schalick both fall in the quarterfinals.

SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I BOYS TENNIS
Wednesday’s Quarterfinals
(1) Haddon Twp. 5, (8) Overbrook 0 (Tues.)
(4) Middle Twp. 5, (5) Woodstown 0
(3) Pennsville 5, (6) Buena 0
(2) Pitman 4, (7) Schalick 1
Friday’s Semifinals
Middle Twp. (14-7) at Haddon Twp. (15-5)
Pennsville (18-3) at Pitman (17-7)

MIDDLE TWP. 5, WOODSTOWN 0
Simon Hardin (M) def. Tim Schwienbacher, 6-1, 6-1
Justen Wen (M) def. Drew Stengel, 7-5, 6-2
Tommy Barber (M) def. Erich Lipovsky, 7-6 (7-2), 6-4
Jack Morton-Jake King (M) def. Ben Stengel-Joseph Kurpis, 7-5, 6-3
Brandyn Acevedo-Miles Stafford (M) def. Luke Shaw-John Farrell, 7-5, 6-2
Records: Woodstown 13-7, Middle Twp. 14-7.

PENNSVILLE 5, BUENA 0
Gabe Schneider (P) def. Donimic Longona, 6-0, 6-2
Maddox Efelis (P) def. Stephen Pepper, 6-2, 6-0
Brody Wiggins (P) def. Jonas Regnaert, 6-0, 6-0
Noah Flitcraft-Noah Bohn (P) def. Gabe Ridolfo-Matthew Lillia, 6-2, 6-2
Luke Chamberlain-Sawyer Humphrey (P) def. Michael Letushko-Joshua Sharpe, 6-3, 6-2
Records: Buena 18-4, Pennsville 18-3.

PITMAN 4, SCHALICK 1
Maddox Marker (P) def. George Gould, 7-5, 6-0
Chase Rollins (P) def. Jesus Espinoza, 6-0, 6-3
Cole Kelly (P) def. Conor O’Toole, 6-3, 6-1
Rocky Monticolo-David Santana (S) def. NA, 6-2, 4-6, 10-8
Michael Fisicaro-Max Pappalardo (P) def. Kaden Barnes-Cayden Brzozowski, 6-1, 6-1
Records: Schalick 16-8, Pitman 17-7.

Stomping into the semis

Woodstown hits back-to-back jacks in first inning, slams door on Pennsville, advances to SJ Group I baseball semifinals; Schalick falls under weight of errors

SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
Wednesday’s Quarterfinals
(1) Audubon 11, (8) Haddon Twp. 1
(5) Woodstown 8, (4) Pennsville 3
(3) Pitman 6, (6) Schalick 2
(2) Gloucester 8, (7) Wildwood 4
Friday’s Semifinals
Woodstown (17-9) at Audubon (19-9)
Pitman (20-6) at Gloucester (20-7)

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – The official height of home plate (not that anyone cares to measure it) is one inch and it is supposed to be planted level with the batter’s box.

After Andrew Pedrick and Rocco String stomped their big shoes on the dish to celebrate back-to-back homers in the first inning of their South Jersey Group I quarterfinal with Pennsville Wednesday, instead of dusting off the plate somebody probably needed to remeasure and replant it.

Pedrick and String went back-to-back to give the Wolverines a three-run lead right out of the gate and set the tone in an eventual 8-3 victory. Pedrick dropped his size 12 on it first and then, just as the plate was returning to its original shape, String put his size 15 right on top of it with flourish.

“I do it all the time, but here I just needed to do it because I needed to make a statement to these guys,” String said. “Losing to them (earlier in the season) I really wanted to beat them real bad, so I needed to make something.”

If the Wolverines wanted to “let ‘em know you’re here” as someone shouted from the dugout after String’s shot, call it mission accomplished. They probably heard it all the way to Elmer with the energy the home runs injected to an already electric atmosphere.

The homers came after Brent Williams brought Jack Knorr home from third with a sacrifice fly. Knorr opened the game with a double.

It was the second time in their careers Pedrick and String have homered in the same game – they did last year against Salem – but it was the first time they’ve gone back-to-back. String has now homered in back-to-back playoff games.

“I think that’s what really got us up,” Pedrick said. “We’re not really a home run-hitting team, so when we got three runs in the first inning, two off two bombs, it’s just crazy, especially back-to-back like that. I was going nuts. I was jumping up and down.

“I just think we wanted to let them know we were here early. We don’t usually come out firing like that, so getting those three runs in the first inning that really put them down and got us up.”

Woodstown coach Marc DeCastro didn’t read anything more into the back-to-back homers other than it gave his team a 3-0 and a little cushion to play with “a little more freedom so if they scored a run it wasn’t the end of the world.”

The Eagles (17-10) got that run in the second inning on Jacob Grant’s sacrifice bunt and it wasn’t the end of the world for the Wolverines. Grant’s shoulder injury kept him from swinging away, but nothing was going to keep the Eagles’ only senior from playing in the biggest game of the year.

After the initial energy from both teams, the game settled into the intensity of a typical game between rivals. That is, until Woodstown broke it open with five in the top of the top of the fifth.

The Wolverines sent eight men to the plate. Williams brought home a run with a single that got through the leftfielder, String brought two home with a single that got through the centerfielder and Ty Coblentz and Caiden Spinelli drove in runs with ground outs to the right side of the infield.

Pennsville got two in the bottom of the fifth on Cohen Petrutz’ two-run single, but it wasn’t nearly enough to catch up to the Wolverines.

“They came out and set the tone,” Pennsville coach Matt Karr said. “They barreled up some balls. It’s a tough pill to swallow and it’s kind of indicative of how the rest of the game went. They set the tone and they tacked on, did the little things they needed to do.

“Like I told those guys, we got beat today. There was no one call. They hit better, they threw better and they won a baseball game and sometimes that happens.”

The fifth-seeded Wolverines (17-9) will now travel to top-seeded Audubon (19-9) Friday for one of the South Jersey Group I semifinals. They beat the Green Wave earlier this season, 8-3.

Knorr started the game on the mound for Woodstown Wednesday, but was lifted after walking two of the first three batters he faced. Aaron Foote stomped out that fire and pitched into the fifth to get the win. Michael Valente and Dante Holmes finished it up. Peyton O’Brien took the loss for Pennsville.

Knorr, Valente and Holmes all will be available “in some way, fashion or form” to pitch in the Audubon game. The starter, DeCastro said after the game, is to be determined.

Woodstown’s Andrew Pedrick stomps on home plate after his home run in the first inning Wednesday. On the cover, Rocco String stomps even harder after he went back-to-back with Pedrick.

PITMAN 6, SCHALICK 2: The Cougars picked the wrong time to have a difficult day in the field.

Pitman took advantage of six Schalick errors to either score runs or extend innings in their South Jersey Group I playoff game. The Panthers (20-6) advance to play at second-seeded Gloucester in Friday’s semifinals.

The Cougars (15-11) led twice in the game, but each time lost it under the weight of the miscues.

Luke Pokrovsky gave them a 1-0 lead with a homer in the first inning, but Pitman tied it in the home half on one of three errors in the inning.

Ricky Watt gave them a 2-1 lead with a RBI single in the third, but Pitman took the lead for good in the bottom of the inning when two runs scored on an infield error. Two more errors helped along a three-run sixth that put the game away.

Pokrovsky pitched the whole game for Schalick. The junior lefthander gave up six hits, three earned runs and struck out nine to finish the season with 122 strikeouts and a 1.09 ERA.

Love on the links

Kingsway’s Parrish, Kuminka, dating off the course, medalists in Tri-County Showcase; Williamstown boys, Kingsway girls win team titles

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PITMAN – The next time Christopher Parrish and Carly Kuminka are in their favorite Italian restaurant together for a night out, they’ll have a little bit more to talk about than how things went at school that day.

The two Kingsway underclassmen won their respective medalist prizes Tuesday in the Tri-County Showcase at Pitman Golf Course. While it’s not the first time either of them have won, it’s the first time they’ve won on the same day since they’ve started dating.

Parrish, a sophomore, posted a 1-over-par 71 to win the boys title by a shot over Gloucester Tech’s Jamie Ciesielka and two over Justin Forman of Washington Twp. Kuminka, a junior, shot 83 and defended her girls title by five shots over two-time Salem/Cumberland girls champion Nicole Tarquinio of Cumberland Regional. 

“It’s cool,” Parris said. “I was watching when we finished and she was like four ahead and I was like, Wow, we could actually both win this. It’s a great way to go into next year.”

“It’s really cool, it’s nice; I’m happy for him,” Kuminka said. “There’s not a lot of tournaments we both play in together.”

The two met through high school golf and have been an item now for about a year. They play “a lot” of golf together, which Carly says is “really fun.” She said Parrish usually gets the better of their competition “because he’s really consistent.”

Pulling off his win brought Parrish a measure of revenge after losing the Gloucester County Tournament here Thursday in a sudden-death playoff to Forman, one of his foursome partners Tuesday and one of the players he was battling with down the stretch.

Five days ago, Parrish and Forman both got around in regulation in 72. Forman was leading by two going to 18, but Parrish birdied and Forman three-putted for bogey to force the playoff. Forman won it when Parrish missed an 18-finch par putt on the second extra hole.

“After getting second Thursday in a playoff, to win today and beat Justin, who I love playing with because we play so close, felt great,” Parrish said. “I really wanted to get back at him today … I wanted to definitely make sure I won today. Shoot a good number and see if I win today.”

Parrish had no such misadventures on the greens this day. In fact, he made three mid-range birdies in a row at 12, 13 and 14 to climb into contention, but perhaps the biggest putt of his round was the one he made on 15 to save par.

“I think it’s only the second time in my life I made three birdies in a row,” he said. “It’s definitely not something I do often. But after I bogey 11, a hole I tripled on Thursday, it was like a win, but (with the holes coming up) if I can just hit greens and I can get my line and hit a good putt I can easily make birdies on these holes. That’s what I did.

“I knew I had to get something going because I was hitting the ball great, I was hitting a lot of greens, so I was like on the back if I could just get the putter going and keep hitting greens, get up and down a few times, I can definitely score pretty well on the back.”

On Tuesday, he ultimately was locked in a three-way battle down the stretch with Forman and Ciesielka, who was playing in the group ahead of him.

Forman was even through 12 holes, but fell back with a double-bogey on the par-3 on 14, the victim of some wicked backspin that brought his tee ball into the par-3 all the way back off the green. He bounced back with a birdie on 15, but bogeyed two of his last three holes.

Ciesielka was 2-under through his first seven holes and held a one-shot lead after No. 16, bur he bogeyed 17 and 18 and needed to make a 30-foot birdie on No. 1 to force a playoff. He finished second for the second year in a row. Forman finished third.

“I’m bummed I didn’t shoot where I thought I would, but all in all it’s a better score than Thursday (81 in the Gloucester County Tournament here); it’s really what I wanted,” Ciesielka said.
Pennsville’s Jacob Isaac posted the low round from a Salem County golfer. He posted a 10-over 80 on his first trip seeing the course that tied for sixth. His round featured a chip-in birdie on No. 17 and “six or seven” one-putts that kept him in the game.

Salem/Cumberland runner-up Jeffrey Covely of Woodstown also had a top 10 (T-9) with an 84 highlighted by birdies on 7 and 13.

Williamstown’s boys and the Kingsway girls (Kuminka and Ava Volpe) won the team titles.  The Braves counted fourth-place Cole Gaetens’ 77 and three 84s. Woodstown finished third in the boys race, six shots ahead of fourth-place Schalick.

TRI-COUNTY SHOWCASE
At Pitman Golf Course

BOYS TEAMSCOREGIRLS TEAMSCORE
Williamstown329Kingsway180
Triton351Clearview184
Woodstown364Washington Twp.193
Schalick370Cumberland206
Gloucester Cath.391Schalick224
Pitman411GCIT224
Williamstown225
Delsea255
Wildwood273
Boys best four of five; girls two-player teams
BOYS TOP 15SCHOOLSCORE
Christopher ParrishKingsway37-34–71
Jamie CiesielkaGCIT34-38–72
Justin FormanWashington Twp.36-37–73
Cole GeatensWilliamstown37-40–77
Enrique AltmannGCIT37-41–78
Jacob IsaacPennsville39-41–80
Luke CaninoWashington Twp.39-41–80
Nick RenzGloucester Cath.40-43–83
Bradyn SkokowskiTriton41-43–84
Andrew MichalskiWilliamstown44-40–84
Brady GeatensWilliamstown43-41–84
Julian BoyerDeptford42-42–84
Jeffrey CovelyWoodstown45-39–84
Gavin McClaskeyWilliamstown42-42–84
Isaiah GarciaTriton43-43–86
GIRLS TOP 15SCHOOLSCORE
Carly KuminkaKingsway41-42–83
Nicole TarquinioCumberland45-43–88
Tessa ReilleyWashington Twp.46-45–91
Lydia BernardiClearview46-46–92
Stella BernardiClearview46-46–92
Sarah KaestnerClearview45-49–94
Ava VolpeKingsway48-49–97
Delaney SchwartzWashington Twp.52-49–101
Alivia WirtzGCIT53-50–103
Sienna LongoClearview52-52–104
Kaci AdamsWilliamstown49-56–105
Sophia StultzOLMA53-57–110
Julie SwierczynskiWoodstown54-57–111
Casey WiddifieldSchalick53-58–111
Hannah WiddifieldSchalick58-55–113

TCC pairings

Here are the pairings for Tuesday’s Tri-County Conference Showcase golf tournament at Pitman GC

TRI-COUNTY CONFERENCE SHOWCASE
At Pitman GC
8 a.m. shotgun
BOYS PAIRINGS
1: Christopher Parrish (Kingsway), Julian Boyer (Deptford), Justin Forman (Washington Twp.), Brady Geatens (Williamstown).
2: Lyle Petersen (Kingsway), Cole Geatens (Williamstown), Jamie Ciesielka (GCIT), Luke Canino (Washington Twp.).
3: Gavin McClaskey (Williamstown), Jacob Isaac (Pennsville), Lance Creighton (Schalick), Jacob Schermerhorn (Woodstown).
4: Andrew Michalski (Williamstown), Enrique Altmann (GCIT), Jaxon Weber (Schalick), Jackson DeAngelo (Clearview).
5: Isaiah Garcia (Triton), Ryan Johnson (Schalick), Kyle Brainard (Woodstown), Thomas Luu (Clearview).
6: Dylan Convery (Timber Creek), Bradyn Skokowski (Triton), Seth Fisher (Schalick), Jeffrey Covely (Woodstown).
7: Hunter Cannon (Delsea), Mac Weldon (Highland), Billy Stuski (Gloucester Catholic), Sean Costello (Deptford).
8: Daniele Sanzone (Wildwood), Gabriel Smith (Delsea), Connor Marvel (Highland), Nick Renz (Gloucester Catholic).
9: Joey Zubert (Pitman), Aidan Young (Timber Creek), Luke Venuto (Clayton), Mason Griffith (Salem Tech).
10: Luke Discoll (Pitman), Mikey Joyce (Triton), Stephen Wilchensky (Cumberland), Max Webb (Woodstown).
11: Owen Boulton (Pitman), Samuel Thompson (Cumberland), Dylan Waller (Pennsville), Billy Ginipro (Gloucester Catholic).
12: Logan Sharpnack (Pitman), Leo Impagliazzo (Triton), Jeffrey Boyd (Overbrook), T.J. Pisano (Gloucester Catholic).
13: Vance Elder (Overbrook), Austin Short (Salem Tech), John Shoemaker (Wildwood).

GIRLS PAIRINGS
14: Stella Bernardi (Clearview), Nicole Tarquinio (Cumberland), Carly Kuminka (Kingsway), Tessa Reilley (Washington Twp.).
15: Sarah Kaestner (Clearview), Hannah Widdifield (Schalick), Ava Volpe (Kingsway), Delaney Schwartz (Washington Twp.)
16: Lydia Bernardi (Clearview), Kaci Adams (Williamstown), Alivia Wirtz (GCIT), Maahishee Patel (Cumberland).
17: Sienna Longo (Clearview), Isabella Gordon (Williamstown), Julia Swierczynski (Woodstown), Lilianna Himstedt (OLMA).
18A: Casey Widdifield (Schalick), Lindsey Harris (GCIT), Jessica Johnson (Wildwood), Brooke Prager (Delsea).
18B: Leigh Ann Nage (Clayton), Cheyenne Cope (Wildwood), Sarah Mathiesen (Delsea), Sophia Stultz (OLMA).

Cover photo: Schalick’s Ryan Johnson (L) and Woodstown teammates Jeffrey Covely (C) and Jacob Schermerhorn on the green of the first hole of a sudden-death playoff in last week’s Salem/Cumberland county tournament. All three will be playing in Tuesday’s Tri-County Conference Showcase..

Tough time for tough inning

‘Tougher’ inning dashes Penns Grove’s hopes in baseball playoffs, all favorites win, also includes golf, SJ Group I tennis

SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
Thursday’s results
No. 1 Audubon 14, No. 16 Camden Academy Charter 3
No. 8 Haddon Twp. 8, No. 9 Buena 1
No. 5 Woodstown 3, No. 12 Maple Shade 1
No. 4 Pennsville 10, No. 13 Gateway 0
No. 6 Schalick 3, No. 11 Paulsboro 1
No. 3 Pitman 13, No. 14 Glassboro 0
No. 7 Wildwood 2, No. 10 Cape May Tech 1
No. 2 Gloucester 16, No. 15 Penns Grove 3

SECOND ROUND (May 29)
Haddon Twp. at Audubon
Woodstown at Pennsville
Schalick at Pitman
Wildwood vs. Gloucester

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

GLOUCESTER CITY – After battling their way through the final week of the season just to make the field, Penns Grove was hoping to keep its first playoff game since 2021 close, but one big inning proved its undoing.

Gloucester scored a run in the first inning, then erupted for 10 in the second to set the stage for a 16-3 victory over the Red Devils Thursday in the first round of the South Jersey Group I playoffs.

The Lions sent 15 batters to the plate in the inning. They collected six hits, including a two-run homer by Seth McCormick, and took advantage of three errors, a dropped third strike that would have been a second out, a hit batsman and a walk.

“The second inning has to be one of our … tougher innings of the year,” Penns Grove coach Chuck Weigle said. “We made a few mistakes, they capitalized on it and we ended up falling behind big.”

The Red Devils had one hit through the first three innings, but they avoided being shut out on Bristoll Scott’s RBI single in the fourth. They scored twice in the fifth after loading the bases with none out. Ryan Hyatt had an RBI single and Chase Wills scored on a passed ball.

Elijah Crespo and Hyatt had two hits apiece for the Red Devils. 

“I don’t think it was what we were looking for,” Weigle said of the playoff experience. “We were hoping for a different result. We were hoping for it to be a little bit closer than it was. It just wasn’t the result we were looking for.

“Coming in as the 15th seed you’re not expected to necessarily win the game, but we were hoping to keep it close and just hoping to play a good game overall.”


TENNIS
SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I TOURNAMENT
Thursday’s matches
No. 1 Haddon Twp. bye
No. 8 Overbrook 4, No. 9 Lindenwold 1
No. 5 Woodstown 5, No. 12 Wildwood 0
No. 4 Middle Twp. bye
No. 3 Pennsville bye
No. 6 Buena 5, No. 11 Penns Grove 0
No. 7 Schalick 3, No. 10 Palmyra 2
No. 2 Pitman bye
SECOND ROUND (May 29)
Overbrook at Haddon Twp.
Woodstown at Middle Twp.
Buena at Pennsville
Schalick at Pitman

WOODSTOWN 5, WILDWOOD 0
Tim Schwienbacher (Wo) def. Giorgio Palesano, 6-3, 6-1
Drew Stengel (Wo) def. Christopher Olivera, 6-0, 6-1
Eric Lipovsky (Wo) def. Cristopher Hernandez, 6-1, 6-1
Joseph Kurpis-Luke Shaw (Wo) def. Simon Palacias-Miguel Amendondo, 6-2, 6-1
John Farrell-Jake Lewis (Wo) def. Kevin Damian-Brian Damian, 6-0, 6-0
Records: Woodstown 13-6, Wildwood 4-11.

BUENA 5, PENNS GROVE 0
Jake Harris (B) def. Alex Ramirez Martinez, 6-0, 6-0
Dominic Longona (B) def. Angel Perez Herrera, 6-1, 6-1
Stephen Pepper (B) def. Stuart Mondragon, 6-1, 6-0
Matthew Lillia-Gabe Ridolfo (B) def. Anthony Pacheco-Ricardo Vichi, 6-0, 6-0
Joshua Sharpe-Michael Letushko (B) def. Adam Gonzalez-Rene Ruiz, 6-0, 6-2
Records: Buena 18-3, Penns Grove 4-10.

SCHALICK 3, PALMYRA 2
George Gould (S) def. Julian Carlino, 6-4, 6-3
Richie Butler (P) def. Jesus Espinoza, 6-2, 6-1
Connor McCann (P) def. Conor O’Toole, 6-3, 6-1
David Santana-Rocky Monticolo (S) def. Jaden Jennings-Owen Jacobs, 6-4, 6-2
Kaden Barnes-Cayden Brzozowski (S) def. Jack Timlin-Justin Smyth, 6-4, 7-6 (7-5)
Records: Schalick 16-7, Palmyra 5-7.

GOLF
WOODSTOWN 156, HIGHLAND 169:
 Woodstown’s Salem/Cumberland runner-up Jeffrey Covely birdied the first hole and shot an even-par 36 and the Wolverines counted four of the five lowerst scores of the day to win at Town & Country CC.

The Wolverines also counted a 39 from Max Webb, a 40 from Kyle Brainard and a 41 from Salem/Cumberland medalist Jacob Schermerhorn.

Running the show

Schalick edges Paulsboro; Pokrovsky gives up one hit, fans 16, collects 100th strikeout of the season, 100th career hit

SOUTH JERSEY GROUP I BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
Thursday’s results
No. 1 Audubon 14, No. 16 Camden Academy Charter 3
No. 8 Haddon Twp. 8, No. 9 Buena 1
No. 5 Woodstown 3, No. 12 Maple Shade 1
No. 4 Pennsville 10, No. 13 Gateway 0
No. 6 Schalick 3, No. 11 Paulsboro 1
No. 3 Pitman 13, No. 14 Glassboro 0
No. 7 Wildwood 2, No. 10 Cape May Tech 1
No. 2 Gloucester 16, No. 15 Penns Grove 3

Second Round (May 29)
Haddon Twp. at Audubon
Woodstown at Pennsville
Schalick at Pitman
Wildwood vs. Gloucester

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PITTSGROVE – The Schalick Cougars won playoff game over a familiar playoff foe without playing their best baseball, but that kind of thing is a little easier to do when you have a pitcher like Luke Pokrovsky on the your side.

Pokrovsky had another milestone day Thursday in the sixth-seeded Cougars’ 3-1 win over No. 11 Paulsboro in the opening round of the South Jersey Group I playoffs.

The junior left-hander allowed one soft single over 6 1/3 innings and matched his career-high of 16 strikeouts for the third time this season and second time in three outings to surpass 100 Ks for the season. He also singled in his first at-bat for the 100th hit of his career – then was intentionally walked his next three times up.

“I was going into the game knowing that I only needed one hit for my 100th and that’s all I was trying to do at the plate, stay simple and hit the ball hard,” Pokrovsky said. “I got the first pitch off-speed and I just tried to get the barrel to the ball and it ended up working out.

“I didn’t even realize about the Ks because after I got the school record I just haven’t tried for that stuff. I just tried to lead the team to a victory by throwing strikes and getting weak contract.”

That’s what he did Thursday. He threw 68 strikeouts among his 112 pitches and the only hit he allowed came with two outs in the fourth inning when Kayden Weber threw his bat at a pitch and knocked it into left field to plate the Red Raiders’ only run. 

Pokrovsky struck out the first five batters he faced, including Matt Hill to end the first inning for his 100th strikeout of the season. He has 113 this year and 248 in his career.

The only reason he came out of the game in the seventh was because he reached his pitch limit. Lucas D’Agostino finished it off by striking out the only two batters he faced on seven pitches.

With six days between games, count on Pokrovsky starting the Cougars’ second-round game at Pitman Wednesday.

“He’s our guy,” Schalick coach Sean O’Brien said. “If we’re going to lose, we’re going to lose with him. If we’re gonna win, we’re gonna win with him. So he’s definitely a guy we have to rely on.

“I’m looking at his numbers, it’s crazy. It kind of blows you away, you’re like wow. It’s pretty awesome.”

The Cougars were playing Paulsboro in the playoff for the third time in the last four years. They knocked the Red Raiders out of the playoffs in the SJ Group I semifinals in 2021 and the Red Raiders knocked Cougars out in the 2022 semis.

Runs were hard to come by. The Cougars, who had only six hits themselves, pushed two across in the third on a wild pitch and Ricky Watt’s sacrifice fly and added an insurance run in the sixth on a bases-loaded hit batsman. Jake Siedlecki had two hits and Watt had two RBIs.

They left the bases loaded twice, but three runs was all they really needed with Pokrovsky dealing from the mound.

“We didn’t play our best, we didn’t do well offensively, but we found a way,” O’Brien said. “In other parts of the season they’re the type of games we didn’t win … we kind of folded and we ended up losing games. It felt good to kind of push through when you don’t play your best.

“It definitely showed a little bit of growth and that little bit of grit we have where we weren’t going to kind of give up because things weren’t going our way. It was good to have that moment where we struck up and found a way to get runs and having Luke on the mound is definitely a huge plus where we don’t have to do much behind him because he’s the one running the show.”