Saturday wrestling

Penns Grove’s Brown finishes second in Maryland tournament; Schalick wins three, Woodstown, Pennsville in duals

By Riverview Sports News

CHESAPEAKE CITY, Md. – Anthony Brown wrestled for a title for the second week in a row and this time finished second to return home as Penns Grove’s highest-placing wrestler in the 27th annual Battle at the Bridge.

Brown lost a 13-6 decision to Ryan Sewell of Harford Tech in the 150 final. It was his first loss of the season. Brown pinned all three of his opponents on the road to the final.

Isaiah Upshur placed third, winning by injury default over Jimmy McLane of team champion Sussex Central in the consolation final. Devine Arce finished fifth at 120, pinning Keegan Allan of North East in 0:46 in the fifth-place match. 

Upshur went 4-1 in the tournament with three pins. Arce went 3-2 and all three of his wins were by pin.

Four other Penns Grove wrestlers won at least one match in the tournament – Adam Gonzales (126), Reed Clark (132), Jayden Owens (157) and Clinton Bobo (175).

The Red Devils finished 14th as a team with 82 points.

BATTLE AT THE BRIDGE
TEAM SCORES:
Sussex Central 333, Plymouth Whitemarsh 183, Harford Tech 170, Penncrest 155.5, Langley 121.5, North Caroline 118, Marple Newtown 114, Aberdeen 107.5, Conrad Science 100, North East 93.5, Queen Anne 92, Middletown 90, Havre de Grace 86, Penns Grove 82, Concord 79, Howard 58, Odessa 52, Linganore 51, Kent County 34.5, Elkton 22, Bohemia Manor 20, St. Charles 8.

CHAMPIONSHIP MATCHES
106: Austen Decker (Sussex) pinned Hunter Pettorossi (North East), 1:43
113: Tommy Arms (Conrad) dec. Zaden Tablan (Harford), 5-2
120: Malachi Stratton (Sussex) tech fall over Vincent Kirby (Havre de Grace), 4:33 (15-0)
126: Chase Murray (Sussex) dec. Tremaine Jackson (Queen Anne), 5-4
132: Evan Cordrey (Sussex) pinned Joe Bussell (Plymouth Whitemarsh), 0:54
138: Talan Savage (Sussex) dec. Scottie Ford (Kent County), 8-2
144: John Rovillard (Sussex) pinned Nikolai Chervak (Harford), 5:15
150: Ryan Sewell (Harford) dec. Anthony Brown (Penns Grove), 13-6
157: Ty Bokowski (Plymouth Whitemarsh) dec. Justin Negron (Sussex), 6-0
165: Robert Roncskevitz (Langley) dec. Zak Ettien (Concord), 9-4
175: Gabe Cannon (Sussex) pinned Chris Bruette (Penncrest), 1:15
190: Noah Reed (Penncrest) dec. Jack Ryder (Harford), SV-1 6-4
215: Liam Stauffer (Penncrest) pinned Jeremiah Eastburn (Concord), 5:10
285: Donald Kunf (Plymouth Whitemarsh) dec. Brett Cowan (Marple Newtown), TB-1 3-2

Haddon Heights Quad

HADDON HEIGHTS – There’s nothing better for a young team’s confidence than winning.

The Schalick/Cumberland co-op program has no seniors and started four freshmen and won all three of their matches in a quad meet at Haddon Heights to run their winning streak to six.

They beat Haddon Heights 47-24, Mainland 57-15 and Overbrook 62-13.

“The more we win, the more confident they’re getting, which is a good thing for a very, very young team,” SC coach Joe Frassenei said.

Caleb Jenkins (106), Ayden Jenkins (150), Koen Martin (165) and Ronald Piernikoski (215) all went 3-0. Martin scored three pins to run his record to 8-0, Piernikoski had two pins and a decision. Caleb Jenkins had two pins and a forfeit, while Ayden Jenkins had a pin, tech fall and a forfeit.

SC WRESTLING 57, MAINLAND 15
120: Gabriel McFeeley (SC) pinned Justin Mazur, 5:07
126: Chris Mazur (M) pinned Luke Silva, 3:56
132: Chase Williams (SC) dec. Michael Borini, 10-3
138: Nikko Carfagno (M) pinned Daniel Lloyd, 1:14
144: Riley Papiano (SC) dec. Yeshua Martinez, 4-2
150: Ayden Jenkins (SC) pinned Miguel Melo, 4:17
157: Ricky Watt (SC) dec. Tyler Waters, 12-6
165: Koen Martin (SC) pinned Ian Reed, 0:59
175: Eric Sulik (SC) won by forfeit
190: Chase Hoag (M) dec. Jake Magonagle, 6-4
215: Ronald Piernikoski (SC) pinned Hector Gomez, 1:42
285: Noval Jenkins (SC) pinned Oswaldo Mendoza, 5:33
106: Caleb Jenkins (SC) pinned Jaxon Serra, 0:23
113: DeAnthony Harden (SC) won by forfeit

SC WRESTLING 47, HADDON HEIGHTS 26
126: Luke Silva (SC) pinned Tajon Rivera, 1:10
132: Chase Williams (SC) pinned Benjamin Alexander, 2:35
138: Dom Azzari (H) pinned Daniel Lloyd, 0:59
144: Josh Delgozzo (H) dec. Riley Papiano, 8-1
150: Ayden Jenkins (SC) tech fall over Ryan Bailey, 17-2 (3:47)
157: Liam Wikberg (H) pinned Ricky Watt, 0:36
165: Koen Martin (SC) pinned Adam Marks, 2:52
175: Jake Magonagle (SC) dec. Louis DiNardo, 5-2
190: Eric Sulik (SC) pinned Damian Berger, 4:43
215: Ronald Piernikoski (SC) dec. Nathan Lelionis, 6-4
285: Jayden Trace (H) dec. Noval Jenkins, 5-1
106: Caleb Jenkins (SC) pinned Aniello Napolitano, 2:20
113: Cole Denning (H) pinned Jermaine Cannon, 3:07
120: DeAnthony Harden (SC) pinned Michael Ferraro, 5:07

SC WRESTLING 63, OVERBROOK 13
132: Michael Rosano (O) maj. dec. over Chase Williams, 9-1
138: Daniel Lloyd (SC) pinned Domiano Redrow, 0:29
144: Riley Papiano (SC) pinned Tymere Christmas, 0:37
150: Ayden Jenkins (SC) won by forfeit
157: Ricky Watt (SC) dec. Oscar Calderon, 9-3
165: Koen Martin (SC) pinned Ben Matos, 3:32
175: Jake Magonagle (SC) pinned Vance Elder, 1:04
190: Daniel Keyes (O) dec. Eric Sulik, 10-7
215: Ronald Piernikoski (SC) pinned Angel Martinez, 4:19
285: Noval Jenkins (SC) pinned Aydin Appley, 4:51
106: Caleb Jenkins (SC) won by forfeit
113: DeAnthony Harden (SC) pinned John Coia, 0:18
120: Gabriel McFeeley (SC) won by forfeit
126: KhyRee Hines (O) pinned Luke Silva, 3:20
Records: Schalick/Cumberland 6-1

Dan Trainer Duals

COLLINGSWOOD – Woodstown went 0-2 in the tournament, losing to Cherry Hill West (44-36) and Highland (37-27).

Individually, Travis Balback (120), Greyson Hyland (175) and Paul Banff (190) all had a pair of pins. Brett Rowand (150) and Mateo Vinciguerra (285) had two wins.

Alex Torres lost twice in his return to the Wolverines’ lineup at 132.

CHERRY HILL WEST 44, WOODSTOWN 36
106: Raheem Truluck (CHW) pinned Chance Baionno, 2:55
113: Aidan Maldonado (CHW) won by forfeit
120: Travis Balback (W) pinned Elijah Triche, 1:59
126: Otto Sanchez (CHW) dec. Carson Bradway, 4-0
132: Nate Camacho (CHW) pinned Alex Torres, 3:44
138: Josiah Canales (CHW) pinned Willem Groom, 3:36
144: Kristian Lenny (CHW) pinned Angel Hernandez, 3:39
150: Brett Rowand (W) pinned Gabe Jones, 0:57
157: Danny Market (CHW) tech fall over Zayden Donahue, 18-2 (4:13)
165: Zach Bevis (W) pinned Clayton Tyson, 3:46
175: Greyson Hyland (W) pinned Ricardo Shirley, 2:29
190: Paul Banff (W) pinned Karol Miklus, 4:31
215: JoNathan Valentin (CHW) pinned Josiah Meijas, 2:46
285: Mateo Vinciguerra (W) pinned Ross Worlds, 5:33

HIGHLAND 37, WOODSTOWN 27
106: Erek Schwinge (H) pinned Chance Baionno, 1:30
113: Chris Kulb (H) won by forfeit
120: Travis Balback (W) pinned Aidan Slimm, 1:15
126: Owen Kulb (H) maj. dec. over Carson Bradway, 16-3
132: Matt Tuttle (H) dec. Alex Torres, 9-6
138: Isaiah Garcis (H) pinned Willem Groom, 1:58
144: Michael Williams (H) pinned Angel Hernandez, 1:28
150: Brett Rowand (W) dec. Nick DiCamillo, 4-3
157: Zayden Donahue (W) def. Andrew Silvanio, SV 5-3
165: Jordan Suiter (H) dec. Zach Bevis, 7-3
175: Greyson Hyland (W) pinned Jack Conway, 2:17
190: Paul Banff (W) pinned Marquise Moss, 0:51
215: Xavier Velez (H) dec. Josiah Mejias, 7-2
285: Mateo Vinciguerra (W) dec. William Taylor, 4-0
Records: Woodstown 2-5.

Blue Devil Duals

HAMMONTON – Pennsville bounced back from a tough loss to Absegami the night before to go 2-1 with wins over Buena and Millville.

Gateway scored pins or tech falls in nine of the 14 weight classes and handled the Eagles 58-15. But Pennsville bounced back, winning each of the last four bouts to down Buena 40-30 and scored four straight pins in the middle of the match to dump Millville 48-25.

Lucas Thomas, Christopher Daniels, Joseph Maurer, Travis Hagan, Robbie McDade, Elias Lussi and Daniel Emmons all posted a pair of wins for Pennsville.

GATEWAY 58, PENNSVILLE 15
106: Leo Butler (G) pinned Lucas Thomas, 3:13
113: Christian Snyder (G) pinned Vincent Ciccantelli, 0:54
120: Aidan Barbato (G) pinned Christopher Daniels, 1:49
126: Tavien Benoit (G) pinned Kameron Drummond, 1:41
132: Dante Gismondi (G) tech fall over Ayden Perez, 16-0 (2:52)
138: Chase Rossi (G) dec. Travis Hagan, 9-4
144: Noah Ubil (G) pinned Joseph Maurer, 1:47
150: Andrew Cortes (G) tech fall over Maddox Efelis, 22-7 (5:44)
157: Robbie McDade (P) dec. Evan Lee, 10-5
165: Donte Nocito (G) pinned Cole Campbell, 2:32
175: Brandon Bourdon (G) dec. Connor Ayars, 4-2
190: Elias Lussi (P) pinned Nick Kircher, 4:32
215: Daniel Emmons (P) won by forfeit
285: John Morris (G) pinned Trevor Waddington, 3:09

PENNSVILLE 40, BUENA 30
113: Nicholas Panaro (B) won by forfeit
120: Vincent Ciccantelli (P) won by forfeit
126: Christopher Daniels (P) maj. dec. over Michael Pettit, 13-1
132: Gionni Sharkey (B) pinned Kameron Drummond, 5:03
138: Joseph Maurer (P) won by forfeit
144: Travis Hagan (P) dec. Lucas Gellura, 10-9
150: Dom DiGiovachio (B) dec. Sky Eppes, 8-2
157: Charlie Muzzarelli (B) pinned Robbie McDade, 2:24
165: Cole Chicchi (B) dec. Cole Campbell, 7-2
175: Louie Drogo (B) pinned Connor Ayers, 4:45
190: Elias Lussi (P) pinned Maysen Sandfort, 1:05
215: Daniel Emmons (P) dec. Brian Passamante, 6-2
295: Trevor Waddington (P) pinned Brian Ayres, 2:22
106: Lucas Thomas (P) pinned Brianna Roeder, 1:15

PENNSVILLE 48, MILLVILLE 25
120: Christopher Daniels (P) pinned Caleb Rhoads, 3:15
126: Josh Roman (M) dec. Kameron Drummond, 9-3
132: Patrick Tull (M) maj. dec. over Gabriel Supernovae, 9-1
138: Travis Hagan (P) pinned Ezair Allen, 1:33
144: Joseph Maurer (P) pinned Alexander Mendez, 0:20
150: Sky Eppes (P) pinned Jacob Jones, 3:48
157: Robbie McDade (P) pinned Ryan Tepper, 3:40
165: Marquis Allen (M) pinned Cole Campbell, 2:41
175: Connor Ayers (P) pinned Ricky Brown, 0:20
190: Xavier McBride (M) dec. Elias Lussi, SV 7-5
215: Jayden Jones (M) pinned Daniel Emmons, 1:36
285: Marcus Offer (M) dec. Trevor Waddington, 3-0
106: Lucas Thomas (P) pinned Emerson Lewis, 0:45
113: Vincent Ciccantelli (P) won by forfeit


Shut down Saturday

OLMA puts the clamps on Woodstown’s two big scorers, wins by 20; shorthanded Pennsville, Salem both fall

SATURDAY GIRLS BASKETBALL
Delsea 37, Pennsville 20
Gateway 47, Salem 34
OLMA 51, Woodstown 31

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN — The girls basketball world has seen what Woodstown can do when its two dynamic scorers are lighting up the scoreboard. On Saturday, it saw what can happen when they are not.

Talia Battavio and Megan Donelson scored most of their team’s points once again, but this time it wasn’t nearly enough to save the Wolverines from a 51-31 loss to once-beaten Our Lady of Mercy.

The two scorers were averaging 20.1 and 18.8 a game, respectively, coming into the power matinee. But the Villagers (10-1) held Donelson to 14 points and Battavio to nine and 0-for-16 shooting from the field in the second half.

They hadn’t been held down like that since Highland held them to 19 combined points last February. It’s only the fifth time in their last 31 games one or the other had been held to single digits.

What’s that mean in the big picture? Consider, over the last two season when they both score 20 in a game, the Wolverines are 6-0. When one of them goes for 20, they’re 10-1. When they both score at least 18 in the same game, they’re 9-1. When one of them is held to less than 10 points, they’re 3-4.

“We know they’re two great performers for the last two years, but we have very, very good defenders and our communication is phenomenal,” OLMA head coach Brian Coyle said. “We had a good game plan on how to take away what they want to do. It really was about communication and staying in a good stance and when they do attack, just wall off.“

Before Donelson hit back-to-back 3s early in the third quarter there was a real threat both Wolverines scorers would be denied double figures in the same game for only the second time in the last two seasons.

Woodstown coach Kara Straughn thought the double treys might have been the spark to get the Wolverines going, but they were just a brief ray of sunshine.

“We couldn’t score anything today,” Straughn said. “I told them 75 percent of those shots would have fallen any other night. Today, they didn’t. It’s gonna happen. It’s the game of basketball.”

Maddie Bernhardt was tasked with guarding Battavio and VonAsia Thompson drew the assignment against Donelson. In the first half, they held the two stars to three combined field goals and Woodstown to 4-of-24 shooting as a team. To a man, they said communication was the key to getting the job done.

“Maddie’s a phenomenal defensive player,” Coyle said. “She’s going to be a 1000-point scorer and I think people look at her as a shooter and scorer, (but) she’s probably our most intelligent defensive player. She’s great at staying in front of the girl, she knows how to read and has great instinct. She’s also our best communicator on defense.”

“I definitely take pride in defending, so I was trying to lock her down,” Bernhardt said. “I kind of keep my hand up, at eye level and kept it in their face to make it harder for them to shoot it.”

But Bernhardt had her scoring chops on, too. She had 19 points and is now only 36 away from 1,000. Savannah Prescott had 13 points and Khalia Lewis dominated the paint with 12 points and 18 rebounds. Lewis became even more effective when Wolverines post Shannon Pierman went to the bench in foul trouble.

“I told (her team) in the locker room they’re almost an identical team to us,” Straughn said. ‘‘They have two guards who are really good; we have two guards who are really good. They have a center that’s really good; we have a center that’s really good. They have so many different weapons and their weapons were just a little stronger than ours today.”

Battavio contemplated becoming one of the Villager people in the offseason, and Straughn conceded the OLMA factor probably impacted her play. The junior guard finished with two baskets — both 3-pointers in the first half – Woodstown’s first bucket of the game for their only lead and the last bucket of the first half.

“I think part of it was mental,” Straughn said. “I told her sometimes you just overthink. When she misses one or two, instead of just saying let me trust some of the other ones, I think she tries to outwork herself and just keep going, going and going. She’ll even tell you that – she’s the queen of doing too much.”

The Wolverines (5-2) did get something out of the loss and because of OLMA’s strength it’s a gift that will keep on giving – power points.

“I’d rather lose to a team like this than lose to any other type of team,” Straughn said. “Playing teams like OLMA and Eastern, they’re going to make us better. That’s why we put these teams on our schedule. Yeah, it sucks to lose, but it’s even better to get better.”

OLMA 51, WOODSTOWN 31
OUR LADY OF MERCY (10-1) –
Maddie Barnhardt 6 4-4 19, Savannah Prescott 3 7-8 13, Khalia Lewis 5 2-4 12, Adrianna Bristow 1 0-0 2, VonAsia Thompson 1 0-0 2, Katelyn Coryell 1 0-0 3, Gwen O’Hara 0 0-0 0, Katie Ricchiuti 0 0-0 0, Erin McGonigle 0 0-0 0, Erin McMahon 0 0-0 0. Totals 17 13-16 51.
WOODSTOWN (5-2) – Talia Battavio 2 3-6 9, Megan Donelson 4 4-6 14, Gianna Mairoini 0 0-0 0, Alyssa Baber 1 0-0 2, Shannon Pierman 1 2-2 4, Lauren Hengel 1 0-0 2, Emma Perry 0 0-0 0, Brea DeGregorio 0 0-0 0, Lizzy Daly 0 0-0 0, Kendall Young 0 0-0 0. Totals 9 9-14 31.

OLMA1213188 –51
Woodstown9589 –31
3-point goals: OLMA 4 (Bernhardt 3, Coryell); Woodstown 4 (Battavio 2, Donelson 2). Technical fouls: Woodstown bench. Fouled out: Pierman. Total fouls: OLMA 10, Woodstown 16. Officials: Carter, Jackson.

Delsea 37, Pennsville 20

PENNSVILLE The shorthanded Eagles felt the strain of the recent rash of injuries, putting only three players in the scoring column and scoring just six points in the second half. Marley Wood led Pennsville with 11 points.

“We could not produce anything offensively in the second half,” Eagles coach Sam Trapp said.

DELSEA (2-4) –
Maura Madden 2 0-0 6, Ali Green 2 1-3 5, Kayleigh Barndt 2 3-4 7, Elle Metcalf 1 0-0 3, Ayress Maitland 5 4-5 14, Natalie DiRaddo 1 0-0 2. Totals 13 8-17 37.
PENNSVILLE (4-4) – Calli Ausland 1 0-0 2, Nora Ausland 2 3-4 7, Marley Wood 3 5-8 11, Karson Crooksey, Izzy Saulin 0 0-0 0. Totals 6 8-12 20.

Delsea91549 –37
Pennsville7733 –20
3-point goals: Delsea 3 (Madden 2, Metcalf); Pennsville 0.

Gateway 47, Salem 34

WOODBURY HEIGHTS – Angelina Zagone scored 27 points and grabbed 12 rebounds as the Gators snapped Salem’s two-game winning streak. Ryann Foote led the Rams with a career-high 16 points.

SALEM (2-4) –
Ameriyona Hunter 1-0-2, Ryann Foote 7-1-16, Marissa Bower 1-0-2, Carlysia Pierce 2-0-4, Ava Rodgers 3-1-7, Nevaeh Hickman 1-1-3. Totals 15-3-34. 
GATEWAY (7-1) – Angelina Zagone 9 7-9 27, Gabby Gasis 1 0-0 2, Tabby Bay 0 2-2 2, Bella Fini 5 2-3 13, Sydney Hughes 0 2-2 2, Lexi Kirwin 0 1-2 1, Maggie Eliasen 0 0-0 0, Rachael Summers 0 0-0 0. Totals 15 14-18 47.

Salem88108 – 34
Gateway189911 –47
3-point goals: Salem 1 (Foote); Gateway 3 (Zagone 2, Fini).


Friday roundup

Woodstown basketball falls to Delsea; Penns Grove wrestling battles in Maryland, Pennsville suffers first duals loss

By Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – Woodstown was looking to purge the bad taste left by the upsetting loss to Penns Grove the night before, but instead lost another close game.

The Wolverines held Delsea to its season-low in points and hit seven 3-pointers Friday, but their fourth-quarter rally came up just short and they fell to the Crusaders 40-37.

Blake Bialecki and Alejandro Vazquez combined for five of the Wolverines’ 3-pointers and had nine points apiece. Delsea’s Chase Ambrosius led all scorers with 17 points, going 11-of-13 from the free throw line.

It was Delsea’s sixth win in a row. It’s the Crusaders’ longest winning streak since winning eight in a row in 2018-19.

DELSEA 40, WOODSTOWN 37
DELSEA (7-1) –
Luke Van Auken 4 2-2 10, Frank Master 1 0-0 2, Chase Ambrosius 2 11-13 17, Mike McGinley 5 0-0 11. Totals 12 13-15 40.
WOODSTOWN (4-2) – Manny Ortega 1 0-0 3, Blake Bialecki 3 0-0 9, Alejandro Vazquez 3 1-1 9, M.J. Hall 1 0-0 3, Garrett Leyman 2 1-2 5, Anthony Bokolas 0 0-0 0, Max Webb 1 0-2 2, Rocco String 3 0-3 6. Totals 14 2-8 7.

Delsea18985 –40
Woodstown117811 –37
3-point goals: Delsea 3 (Ambrosius 2, McGinley); Woodstown 7 (Ortega, Bialecki 3, Vazquez 2, Hall).

Wrestling

CHESAPEAKE CITY, Md. – Three Penns Grove wrestlers scored second-round pins Friday to stay alive in the championship bracket of the Red Devils’ annual pilgrimage to the Battle at the Bridge tournament.

Devine Arce (120), Anthony Brown (150) and Isaiah Upshur (190) all reached the quarterfinals. Arce scored his second round pin in 1:50, Brown scored his in 1:07 and Upshur scored his in 3:37.

The Red Devils, who’ve been coming to the tournament regularly since 2012, brought 11 wrestlers to the event and are currently 16th in the team standings. Plymouth Whitemarsh (Pa.) leads the field.

Clinton Bobo (175) has scored 10 points for the Red Devils win pins in the first round and the consolation second round.

BATTLE AT THE BRIDGE
TEAM SCORES:
 Plymouth Whitemarsh 92, Sussex Central 75, Havre de Grace 66, Aberdeen 58, Harford Tech 57, Conrad Science 56, Langley 55, North Caroline 54, Linganore 51, Marple Newtown 51, Penncrest 44.5, Howard 44, Odessa 44, Queen Anne 41, Concord 36, Penns Grove 33, North East 32.5, Middletown 31, Elkton 19, Kent County 15.5, Bohemia Manor 8, St. Charles 8.

Eagles drop first duals

PENNSVILLE – Absegami won six of seven bouts in the middle of the match to hand Pennsville its first dual match defeat of the season 45-26.

Robbie McDade’s pin at 165 got the Eagles (4-1) to within 33-20 with four bouts remaining, but Julian Rivera scored a pin in the next bout to close out the match.

Travis Hagan (138) and Trevor Waddington (285) also scored pins for Pennsville, while Christopher Daniels and Gabriel Supernavage scored major decisions.

The Eagles are currently No. 2 in the South Jersey Group I power points standings, 0.33 points behind undefeated Gloucester.

ABSEGAMI 45, PENNSVILLE 26
106: Liam Kisby (A) pinned Lucas Thomas, 2:31
113: Amelia Taylor (A) pinned Vincent Ciccantelli, 3:02
120: Christopher Daniels (P) maj. dec. over Tristan Brown, 14-1
126: Gabriel Supernavage (P) maj. dec. over Michael Famelio, 14-2
132: Nathaniel DeStefano (A) pinned Ayden Perez, 2:43
138: Travis Hagan (P) pinned Brendan Ross, 1:25
144: Johnny Font (A) pinned Joseph Maurer, 5:11
150: Christopher Eaton (A) won by forfeit
157: Ibn Russell (A) dec. Sky Eppes, 4-3
165: Robbie McDade (P) pinned Joshua Herring, 1:00
175: Julian Rivera (A) pinned Justin Oldaker, 0:36
190: Brayden Wright (A) dec. Elias Lussi, 5-0
215: Thomas Appello (A) dec. Daniel Emmons, 3-0
285: Trevor Waddington (P) pinned Brandon Miller, 2:58
Records: Absegami 1-2, Pennsville 4-1

Challenge met

Woodstown passes its first major test of the season, Pennsville overwhelms Schalick in a battle of teams fighting the injury bug, Salem gets second straight win

THURSDAY GIRLS SCORES
Woodstown 61, Penns Grove 53
Pennsville 52, Schalick 14
Salem 45, Salem Tech 19

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNS GROVE – As almost everybody’s favorite to win the Tri-County Diamond Division and then some in South Jersey, the Woodstown girls basketball team knows it’s going to get everybody’s best shot every night.

The Wolverines faced their biggest test of the young season Thursday night and answered the bell like the favorites they are.

In a battle between the two best teams in the division, Woodstown grabbed the lead late in the first quarter, endured some anxious moments near the end of the first half and then finally pulled away in the second half for a 61-53 victory over Penns Grove.

“This is probably the biggest challenge we’ll have in all of our division games,” Wolverines coach Kara Straughn said. “They’re athletic, they’re quick, they’re the second-best team in our division, but I’ve got 10 girls who play together. There’s nobody in my opinion in our division who has as much of a team as I do.”

While Megan Donelson (25 points) and Talia Battavio (20) did most of their scoring as usual, the Wolverines (5-1) got contributions from throughout the lineup. Shannon Pieman grabbed 16 rebounds and blocked three shots. Alyssa Baber had 10 boards.

And they needed every bit of it. They took the lead midway through the first quarter, but Penns Grove never let them get comfortable. 

The Red Devils were out of sorts during their two games in Wildwood after Christmas, but they were determined to play their game and not get caught up in the early-season enormity of the game. They pressed from the jump and made the Wolverines work for everything they got.

Donelson and Battavio combined for all of Woodstown’s points in the first quarter and 28 of their 30 in the first half.

Penns Grove is a team that likes to drive and attack the basket. But as the first half worn on, the Wolverines’ defense kept forcing the Red Devils farther out for shots and it produced the predictable results.

Woodstown led by 12 with less than two minutes left in the first half, but Penns Grove rallied and things got real intense in the final minute of the half. With 25.8 seconds to go in an eight-point game, Penns Grove’s RiNiyah Wilson was fouled by Battavio driving to the basket and the reaction led to a technical foul on the Wolverines guard.

Wilson hit three of the four free throws to make it a five-point game and the Red Devils had the ball with a chance to cut it to two or three. But Gianna Maiorini thwarted those plans when she stole the possession and fed Donelson who banked in a short jumper in the lane with six seconds to go. Donelson then stole the next inbounds pass and the Wolverines ran out the clock to take a seven-point halftime lead.

“If they would’ve gotten the lead I think it would’ve been a different game,” Straughn said.

The Red Devils got to within four several times early in the second half, but the Wolverines pushed it back out to 10 . They kept the Red Devils at arm’s length the rest of the game to win their fifth in a row while sending their hosts to their third straight loss.

“I think we could’ve done a little bit better than what we actually did, but we ended up pulling out the win and that’s just all that matters,” Donelson said.

While Donelson and Battavio were the big producers for Woodstown, Wilson did all she could to keep Penns Grove in it. The transfer from Kingsway led all scorers with a career-high 33 points and she grabbed nine rebounds.

“My coach talks about mental toughness, fight through the game, if we’re down pick my teammates up, keep going, keep fighting,” Wilson said. “I like playing in big games. I like competition.”

WOODSTOWN (5-1, 2-0) – Talia Battavio 6 6-8 20, Megan Donelson 11 2-2 25, Alyssa Baber 3 2-5 8, Gianna Maiorini 0 0-0 0, Shannon Pieman 2 2-2 6, Lauren Hengle 0 0-0 0, Emma Perry 1 0-0 2. Totals 23 12-17 61.
PENNS GROVE (4-3, 1-1) – Syanna Robbins 0 0-0 0, Brianna Robbins 0 1-2 1, RaNiyah Wilson 14 3-7 33, Arianna Dowe 1 0-2 3, Amani Taylor 0 0-0 0, Meely Horace 6 2-4 14, Rolande Delva 1 0-0 2, Zoey Caesar 0 0-0 0, JaNiyah Cummings 0 0-0 0. Totals 22 6-15 53.

Woodstown18121714 –61
Penns Grove12111416 –53
3-point goals: Woodstown 3 (Battavio 2, Donelson); Penns Grove 3 (Wilson 2, Dowe). Technical fouls: Battavio. Fouled out: Taylor. Total fouls: Woodstown 16, Penns Grove 19.

Pennsville 52, Schalick 14

PENNSVILLE – The Eagles had the best of it in this battle of teams fighting through injuries. They opened a 24-7 halftime lead, then erupted for 21 points in the third quarter and shut out the Cougars in the fourth quarter.

The Eagles were down to four core players because of the injuries and brought up several players from the junior varsity to replenish the ranks. Veterans and newcomers alike got together for a film session before the start of the night’s JV game to hammer out a game plan for the main event.

They got the bulk of their scoring from Marley Wood (20 points) and Nora Ausland (18) while the others help keep it in the road. Wood and Ausland combined for all of Pennsville’s points in the first half.

“The girls who got pulled up stepped up and played the role we needed them to play,” Pennsville coach Sam Trapp said. “Izzie Saulin really stepped up on the defensive end. She had some great blocks and solid rebounding.”

SCHALICK (1-4, 0-2) – Cali Fisler 2 1-1 6, Ava Scurry 2 0-0 4, Gianna Gaines 1 0-4 2, Carly Vicente 1 0-0 2, Katie Little 0 0-0 0, Madison Brown 0 0-0 0, Virginia Basich 0 0-0 0, Olivia Lunemann 0 0-0 0. Totals 6 1-5 14.
PENNSVILLE (4-3, 2-0) – Calli Ausland 1 0-0 2, Nora Ausland 8 0-2 18, Sophia Belitsas 0 0-0 0, Karsen Cooksey 0 0-0 0, Kylie Harris 0 0-0 0, Malani McGee 2 0-0 6, Izzy Saulin 3 0-0 6, Avery Watson 0 0-0 0, Marley Wood 8 3-3 20, Fredo 0 0-0 0, Lily Edwards 0 0-0 0. Totals 22 3-5 52.

Schalick4370 –14
Pennsville1212217 –52
3-point goals: Schalick 1 (Fisler); Pennsville 5 (N. Ausland 2, McGee 2, Wood). Total fouls: Schalick 8, Pennsville 12.

Salem 45, Salem Tech 19

SALEM – The Rams put together another strong defensive effort to grab their second straight win. They collected 30 steals and blocked 20 shots against the Chargers.

Ava Rogers had 10 points, nine rebounds and blocked seven shots. QwenNazha Johnson-Logan had nine points, 12 rebounds, eight blocks and had five steals. Ryann Foote had seven steals.

The Rams have recorded 59 steals and 40 blocked shots in their two-game winning streak. Johnson-Logan has had 23 blocks in the two games and is averaging 7.6 per game this season.

SALEM TECH (0-6, 0-2) – Kaylin Beardsley 2 2-2 7, Rylee Doerr 1 1-2 3, Morgan VanDover 2 1-2 6, Demajae White 0 1-2 1, Drummond 1 0-0 2. Totals 6 5-8 19.
SALEM (2-3, 1-1) – QwenNazha Johnson-Logan 4 1-1 9, Ameriyona Hunter 2 0-0 6, Ryann Foote 1 1-4 3, Ava Rodgers 5 0-1 10, Marissa Bower 3 0-0 8, Kashira Patterson 1 0-0 2, Carlysia Pierce 2 1-6 5, Zaniyah Fresno 1 0-0 2, Madison Dixon 0 0-0 0, Kaela Nichols 0 0-0 0, Lyric Hayes 0 0-0 0. Totals 19 3-12 45.

Salem Tech8236 –19
Salem10101114 –45
3-point goals: Salem Tech 2 (Beardsley, VanDover); Salem 4 (Hunter 2, Bower 2).

Tri-County Conference

CLASSICOVDIVDIAMONDOVDIV
Gloucester Cath.7-12-0Woodstown5-12-0
Wildwood5-22-0Pennsville4-32-0
Pitman4-21-1Glassboro4-31-1
Salem2-31-1Penns Grove4-31-1
Clayton2-50-2Schalick1-30-1
Salem Tech0-60-2Overbrook1-40-2

‘Gio-cashing’

Penns Grove uses 20 seconds of chaos from Giomar Conrad at the end of the first half to take the momentum from Woodstown, Salem uses a big second half to beat Salem Tech, Pennsville’s balanced attack takes down Schalick

THURSDAY BOYS SCORES
Penns Grove 64, Woodstown 54
Pennsville 57, Schalick 37
Salem 84, Salem Tech 52

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – Think of all the things you can do in 20 seconds. Maybe sprint from the easy chair to the mailbox and back on a cold winter’s day. How about a quick run to the fridge during a TV timeout of the big game. 

Some teams take longer than that to attack the basket, a situation that could be remedied with the introduction of a shot clock, but that’s a discussion for another time.

Penns Grove boys basketball coach Damian Ware isn’t sure he can do anything in 20 seconds, but he’s glad his team can.

That’s all the time Giomar Conrad and the Red Devils needed to flip the script on Woodstown Thursday night and turn a double-digit deficit into a halftime lead and an eventual 64-54 win to spoil the previously unbeaten Wolverines’ long awaited home opener.

Woodstown (4-1) led by double digits most of the first half, but Conrad scored eight straight points over the final 20 seconds to give his team a 32-30 halftime lead they never lost.

“That was crazy,” Conrad said, “but at the same time it felt good. I’d never done anything like that before.”

It started with a 3-pointer from the right side to cut the deficit to 30-27. Then in rapid-fire succession, Mekhi Ballard got a steal and fed him for a layup to make it 30-29, he put back a missed shot after another steal to put the Red Devils ahead, and then Willie Slocum picked off another rushed pass in the backcourt and fed Conrad for one final strike.

With time running out, Conrad drove wildly and appeared to lose his footing. His throw at the basket didn’t go in, but he was fouled right before the horn sounded. With no one else on the floor, he made the first of his two free throws and Penns Grove led by two at the break. If you want to extend the run even farther back, he hit two free throws inside 40 seconds that made it 30-24.

“I’m thinking, ‘finally,’” Ware said. “That’s what we did, honestly, in our heyday. Back when we won the South Jersey championship in 2020, that’s what we did all game long. We were known for that type of play, just tempo, tempo, turning teams up. And we didn’t have to come back, we just blew teams out.

“We’re trying to get this team to that same level to where they understand how they have to play, how hard we have to play and the energy we have to play with. We’re starting to get there. I’ve seen it in spurts for the last three games. Today I think was the culmination of everything and we kind of made a great run.”

The Red Devils (3-5) carried the momentum of those 20 seconds of chaos into the second half. Slocum scored the first three buckets of the third quarter to fuel a 14-3 run that gave them a 13-point lead with just over three minutes to go in the quarter. 

The Wolverines tried to come back, but never got closer than six the rest of the game. They were 8-of-27 from the field with nine turnovers in the second half.

Understandably, Woodstown coach Phil Campbell was in no mood to talk about it and declined a post-game interview request.

Conrad finished as the game’s leading scorer with 21 points. Slocum had 11 and Ballard added 10. Rocco String led Woodstown with 17 points.

PENNS GROVE (3-5, 1-1) – Brandon Robbins 0 0-0 0, Roman Gipson 1 2-2 4, Giomar Conrad 8 1-2 21, Karon Ceaser 3 1-2 8, Willie Slocum 4 3-4 11, Mehki Ballard 4 1-3 10, Camron Thompson 1 0-0 2, Khiry Higgs 0 0-0 0, Mr Peterson 3 0-1 6, Jaden Sorrell 1 0-0 2. Totals 25 8-13 64.
WOODSTOWN (4-1, 1-1) – Manny Ortega 2 1-2 7, Blake Bialecki 2 2-3 7, Alejandro Vazquez 0 0-0 0, M.J. Hall 4 2-2 11, Garrett Leyman 2 2-2 6, Anthony Bokolas 1 0-0 3, Max Webb 1 0-0 3, Rocco String 8 1-4 17. Totals 20 8-13 54.

Penns Grove9231715 –64
Woodstown1515915 –54
3-point goals: Penns Grove 6 (Conrad 4, Ceaser, Ballard); Woodstown 6 (Ortega 2, Bialecki, Hall, Bokolas, Webb). Total fouls: Penns Grove 13, Woodstown 14. Officials: Lawler, Montacalva.

Pennsville 57, Schalick 37

PITTSGROVE – Luke Wood led three Pennsville scorers in double figures with 16 points as the Eagles started the new year with a win for the second year in a row. Cohen Petrutz and Jayden Thomas both hit three 3-pointers and finished with 11 points apiece.

The Eagles trailed after the first quarter, then took the lead for good in the second quarter and steadily pulled away.

Wood is now 66 points away from 1,000 for his career. He has scored in double figures in his last 14 straight games. 

PENNSVILLE (4-3, 1-1) – Luke Wood 6 4-4 14, Malik Rehmer 1 0-1 2, Cohen Petrutz 4 0-0 11, Peyton O’Brien 2 1-2 5, Daniel Saulin 1 2-3 4, Jayden Thomas 4 0-0 11, Mason O’Brien 3 0-0 6, Logan Hitt 0 2-4 2. Totals 21 9-14 57.
SCHALICK (2-3, 0-2) – Reggie Allen 3 0-2 7, Nylan Sutton 5 0-2 10, Jordan Johnson 3 0-0 8, Dan Lis 3 1-2 9, Jake Siedlecki 0 0-0 0, Jase Volovar 1 0-0 3, Sherrod Jones 0 0-0 0. Totals 15 1-6 37.

Pennsville12131616 –57
Schalick13789 –37
3-point goals: Pennsville 6 (Petrutz 3, Thomas 3); Schalick 6 (Allen, Johnson 2, Lis 2, Volovar). Total fouls: Pennsville 6, Schalick 14.

Salem 84, Salem Tech 52

WOODSTOWN – The homestanding Chargers gave the Rams all they could handle for a half, but they changed defenses at halftime and Salem erupted for 58 points in the second half to win going away.

“Momentum killed us,” Tech coach Bryan Riley said. “(Antoine) Robinson got his third foul as soon as the third quarter started and we switched from man to zone (defense) at half.”

Jabez DeJesus and Anthony Farmer took advantage of the switch. DeJesus scored 18 of his game-high 26 points in the second half while Farmer had 10 of his 12.

Salem, meanwhile, held Tech’s two main scorers, Robinson and Haneef Frisby, to eight points apiece, but the Chargers got 13 from Tyler Zampino and 12 from Chase Wills.

Zampino had eight in the first quarter. Robinson scored six of his points in the second quarter as the Chargers took a 31-26 halftime lead, but he picking up his third foul early in the second half limited his effectiveness the rest of the game.

SALEM (3-3, 1-1) – Anthony Farmer 4 4-8 12, Ramaji Bundy 3 3-4 9, Jabez DeJesus 11 2-2 26, Paul Weathers 6 0-0 13, Tymear Lecater 4 0-0 9, Xavier McGriff 3 0-0 7, Antwan Rodgers 3 0-0 6, Donaven Weathers 0 0-0 0, Davonte Jackson 1 0-0 2, Joey Tunis 0 0-0 0. Totals 35 9-14 84.
SALEM TECH (0-7, 0-2) – Antoine Robinson 4 0-4 8, Chase Wills 5 2-5 12, Tyler Zampino 6 0-3 13, Josh Muntz 0 0-2 0, Haneef Frisby 3 2-5 8, Joseph Hayes 1 0-0 2, Gio Holmes 2 0-0 4, Charlie Brown 0 0-0 0, Chase Ayers 0 0-0 0, Daviontae Russell 2 1-1 5. Totals 23 5-20 52.

Salem1882830 –84
Salem Tech1714912 –52
3-point goals: Salem 5 (DeJesus 2, P. Weathers, Lecater, McGriff); Salem Tech 1 (Zampino). Total fouls: Salem 15, Salem Tech 12.

Tri-County Conference

CLASSICOVDIVDIAMONDOVDIV
Pitman7-12-0Overbrook5-12-0
Gloucester Cath.6-12-0Woodstown4-11-1
Wildwood5-32-1Pennsville4-31-1
Salem3-31-1Glassboro3-31-1
Clayton1-70-3Penns Grove3-51-1
Salem Tech 0-70-2Schalick2-30-2

Getting closer

Woodstown wrestlers start the new year with a win over Pitman that wasn’t as taxing as their post-Christmas gauntlet

WEDNESDAY WRESTLING
Woodstown 46, Pitman 26
Schalick/Cumberland 58, Sterling 18

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – The Woodstown wrestling team needed a breather.

After putting themselves through a gauntlet of nail biters in their three matches after Christmas, the Wolverines clinched their first match of the new year in the middle part of the proceedings Wednesday night and went on to put away Pitman 46-26. 

POLK

It was a lot less stressful than their last three matches. In those exercises, they lost to Northern Burlington and Cinnaminson and beat Audubon, and all three matches went down to the final bout.

“We want to win matches, but I thought we wrestled well tonight,” Woodstown coach Adam Hyland said. “I thought over the weekend we didn’t wrestle up to our capabilities. We just didn’t wrestle well.

“I thought tonight our performance was better. That’s what we really focus on – how well are we performing, not necessarily if we win or lose. I thought we performed a lot better.”

Speaking of performing, Ryan Polk turned in one of the Wolverines’ better individual ones. With forfeits locked up in the final two weights on the night, Polk’s first pin of the season, over Ayden Epley at 132, provided the points to clinch the match.

Polk is somewhat a man on a mission, trying to earn a spot back in the varsity lineup. The junior wrestled with the varsity at 126 as a freshman, but was relegated to the JVs last year with the emergence of Alex Torres. He was getting his shot at 132 this winter with Torres injured and made the most of it.

“We need to get Polky going,” Hyland said. “He’s had some tough losses recently for us. Tonight he hit the technique we work on in practice. He did his job. I’m really proud of him.”

It was a breakthrough night for Polk. He pulled off a cross-face cradle he’d been working to perfect all season to set up his pin and second win of the season.

“It meant a lot,” Polk said. “Last year I only had one win on the varsity (in three matches).”

Polk’s pin made it impossible for Woodstown to lose, then Brett Rowand pinned Robert Graves in 1:14 at 150 to slam the door. The Wolverines also got a pin from Travis Balback (120) and a major decision from Paul Banff (190) to open the match.

“We’ve been working hard all season,” Hyland said. “I tell them we’re concerned with the end of the season, not the beginning of the season, so it’s a process and in terms of where we are in that process we’re about where we need to be. We’ve still got a ways to go, but we’re getting closer.

“We just need to get matches and get them in the groove. We just haven’t been competing very much, so I think as we progress through the season, get more matches under our belt, get more experience and get some guys back from being out, we’re going to get better as the year goes on.”

WOODSTOWN 46, PITMAN 26
190: Paul Banff (W) maj. dec. over Dom Saffioti, 10-2
215: Aiden Milward (P) maj. dec. over Josiah Mejias, 9-1
285: Mateo Vinciguerro (W) won by forfeit
106: Chase Blandino (W) won by forfeit
113: Skylar Nicola (P) won by forfeit
120: Travis Balback (W) pinned A.J. Starr, 0:12
126: Adriano Platt (P) maj. dec. over Carson Bradway, 10-0
132: Ryan Polk (W) pinned Ayden Epley, 1:29
138: Jacob Lawrence (P) dec. Will Groom, 7-4
144: Jon Bruno (P) pinned Angel Hernandez, 3:01
150: Brett Rowand (W) pinned Robert Graves, 1:14
157: Chase Rollins (P) dec. Zayden Donahue, 7-3
165: Zach Bevis (W) won by forfeit
175: Greyson Highland (W) won by forfeit

SCHALICK/CUMBERLAND 58, STERLING 18
120: Kamrin Johnson (S) pinned Gabriel McFeeley, 3:21
126: Luke Silva (SC) pinned Joseph Rogers, 0:37
132: Chase Williams (SC) pinned Alexander Mexica, 0:12
138: Daniel Lloyd (SC) pinned Jayden Williams
144: Declan Winters (S) dec. Riley Papiano, 6-3
150: Ayden Jenkins (SC) pinned Jermaine Stewart, 2:31
157: Ricky Watt (SC) maj. dec. over Brandon Rebecca, 17-7
165: Koen Martin (SC) pinned John Beasley, 3:23
175: Jake Magonagle (SC) pinned Rene Camacho, 2:43
190: Kenny McArdle (S) dec. Eric Sulick, SV-1 3-1
215: Ronald Piernikoski (SC) won by forfeit
285: Nick Gellien (S) pinned Logan Hancock, 1:33
106: Caleb Jenkins (SC) won by forfeit
113: DeAnthony Harden (SC) won by forfeit

It takes a team

Pierman plays through illness, plays big role in supporting cast lifting Woodstown past Highland to win tournament title

WOLVERINE HOLIDAY TOURNAMENT
Bridgeton 41, Paulsboro 35
Woodstown 51, Highland 32

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN — Whenever teams play the Woodstown girls the focus always has to be slowing down Talia Battavio and Megan Donelson and making the other three players on the floor beat you.

The Wolverines know that going in and it’s their job to get the other three involved.

They did that Friday and it paid off in a 51-32 win over Group III Highland Regional to win the Wolverine Holiday Tournament title.

The Tartans did a nice job in their triangle-and-two on Battavio and Donelson, who went for 28 and 29 Thursday. And while they both ended up scoring in double figures — 15 and 13, respectively — it was the supporting cast that made all the difference.

“That’s how we won the game,” Woodstown coach Kara Straughn said. “I mean, Shannon Pierman stepped up. Alyssa Baber stepped up on offense. Gianna Maiorini was phenomenal on defense.

‘That’s what I tell them — it’s five of you; it’s not one or two. If they’re going to take one or two of them out of the game, OK, that’s why we have five on the floor. That’s why it’s so important that they’re all involved in the offense because in games like this I’m going to need two or three of the other ones to step up, and that’s exactly what they did today.”

Pierman had the biggest impact. The senior post kept the ball moving through the paint, she rebounded and she made almost every layup she took. She finished with 11 points, eight in the first quarter as the Wolverines (4-1) were trying to get the upper hand.

She scored Woodstown’s first and last baskets of the first quarter and battled Highland bigs London Sutton and Alonsa Thomas in the paint all day.

“She is such a fantastic person on their team,” Highland coach J.W. Senft said. “She’s willing to do all the hard stuff. She rebounds. She sets screens. She makes just about every layup. You’ve got to love a kid like that on your team.

“She doesn’t get as much of the press as Battavio and Donelson, and they deserve it, but I’ll tell you what, that team isn’t as good without (Pierman). She does a fantastic job.

“The other two kids do a nice job, too. They know their role and they’re fine with their role. As a basketball coach you love when you see kids who are willing to play their role and take the team glory instead of my own, so good for her.”

Shannon Pierman (32) pushed herself through illness to play a big role in Woodstown’s win over Highland Regional.

Actually, the Wolverines almost didn’t have her Friday.

Pierman called Straughn earlier in the morning complaining of a sore throat and just not feeling good. It wasn’t altogether certain if she was going to make it. She took some medicine and about 90 minutes before the noon tip she decided to give it a shot and wound up giving an MVP type performance.

She said she would have regretted not playing if she had stayed home.

“It feels so much better,” she said. “I felt like I had it in my mind like I don’t feel good; I’m just going to relax at home. But then around 10:30 I was like I can do this, I feel like I have it in me. I’m glad I was able to push myself and was able to come out.”

Battavio and Donelson both went for 20 in each of the Wolverines’ previous two games, but the Tartans locked onto them with Katie Punch on Battavio and Dacia Mack on Donelson and they just made it difficult for the two Woodstown aces to get comfortable. While they were doing other things to stay engaged, they only had one basket each in the first quarter and had 11 combined points at halftime.

“I thought they played really good defense, but I played tough and I think I did everything I could have done,” Battavio said. “When other teams face guard us we have three other players who can put the ball in the basket, so it’s pretty hard to defend us.”

It was a close game early with six ties and three lead changes, but things changed about two minutes into the second quarter when Battavio and Donelson started to recognize what had to happen as they were being covered up by the Tartans.

The Wolverines went on a 12-4 run the rest of the quarter to take a 26-18 halftime lead they never relinquished. They held the Tartans scoreless on 10 of their last 12 possessions of the half, forcing it into 2-of-7 shooting from the floor and four turnovers.

“I think we just figured out a more effective way to beat that triangle-and-two,” Straughn said. “That’s when I think Megan and Talia kind of clicked, like, OK, we’re not getting everything we’re used to getting, so let’s just hammer it home underneath. Those blocks were wide open and I think it finally started to settle with them.

“They were forcing it a little bit in the beginning and I told them be OK with the assist, be OK with the rebound, you don’t have to go, go, go all the time, and I think once they kind of settled into that it made a big difference. They like to just go. You don’t need to go all the time. Trust the other three and they did and we won the game.”

WOLVERINE HOLIDAY TOURNAMENT
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
WOODSTOWN 51, HIGHLAND 32
WOODSTOWN (4-1) –
Talia Battavio 5 2-4 15, Alyssa Baber 2 1-2 5, Emma Perry 1 0-0 2, Talia Guardascione 0 1-2 1, Lauren Hengel 1 0-0 2, Gianna Maiorini 1 0-0 2, Brae DiGregorio 0 0-0 0, Shannon Pierman 4 3-4 11, Megan Donelson 6 1-2 13, Lizzy Daly 0 0-0 0, Jala Thomas 0 0-0 0. Totals 20 8-14 51.
HIGHLAND (4-3) – Katie Punch 0 2-2 2, Sejeida Jordan 0 1-2 1, Tajai Webb 0 0-0 0, Breelynn Leary 4 0-0 9, Jalena Lee 0 0-2 0, Dacia Mack 4 0-0 8, Yoselin Basantes 0 0-0 0, Hanilyah Williams 1 0-0 2, London Sutton 2 0-2 4, Alonsa Thomas 3 0-2 6. Totals 14 3-8 32.

Woodstown14121510 –51
Highland10895 –32
3-point goals: Woodstown 3 (Battavio 3); Highland 1 (Leary). Total fouls: Woodstown 12, Highland 12. Officials: Kahlbom, Rosenberger, Johnson.

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM: Brookelyn Graham (Paulsboro), Jayla Bowman (Bridgeton), Adelina Wilks (Bridgeton), Breelynn Leary (Highland), London Sutton (Highland), Talia Battavio (Woodstown), Megan Donelson (Woodstown), Shannon Pierman (Woodstown).

Finding themselves

Salem salvages first overnight tournament trip with consolation win, Woodstown wins New Egypt title, Pennsville bounces back and more

THURSDAY’S BOYS BASKETBALL SCORES
Marty Derer Showcase
Vineland 41, Penns Grove 27

Battle at Buena
Consolation: Pennsville 73, Buena 43
Championship: Camden Academy 76, LEAP 60

Warrior Classic, New Egypt
Consolation: Steinert 47, Pinelands 45
Championship: Woodstown 53, New Egypt 46

ACIT Holiday Showcase
Consolation: Atlantic Tech 67, Salem Tech 44
Championship: GCIT 42, Camden Tech 24

Bayonne Holiday Classic
Consolation: Salem 60, West Orange 56
Championship: Charlestown (Mass.) 74, Bayonne 50

By Riverview Sports News

BAYONNE – Salem basketball coach Anthony Farmer knew his team’s holiday tournament trip to North Jersey would be good for a lot of reasons.

It didn’t necessarily start out in the best of ways, but the Rams learned a lot about themselves and dealing with adversity. They even got a win out of it, holding off West Orange 60-56 in the consolation game of the Bayonne Holiday Tournament to snap a three-game losing streak.

“I thought this holiday tournament we grew up,” Farmer said. “My young guys stepped up and we are looking to make a run in January.”

As much as the Rams (2-3) were looking forward to the program’s first overnight tournament trip, things started stacking up against them quickly.

They were on the bus three hours getting there and caught a flat along the way. Then they had to play a strong team out of Boston in the opening round and lost by 20. And then their best player, senior guard Anthony Farmer, rolled an ankle in the game and didn’t play in Thursday’s consolation game.

But the Rams got through it. They put three scorers in double figures and held on down the stretch after the Mountaineers (1-6) had cut an 11-point Salem halftime lead to four going into the fourth quarter.

Seniors Paul Weathers and Jabez Dejesus led the Rams with 21 and 19 points, respectively. Freshman Tymear Lecator had 12. 

Dejesus went 4-for-4 at the free throw line in the fourth quarter and 9-of-10 for the game. Weathers had nine points in the fourth quarter.

“To win without one of your best players (is encouraging),” Farmer agreed. “The other guys had to step up and they did. That’s what we have been missing the last few games.”

Warriors Classic

WOODSTOWN 50, NEW EGYPT 46: The undefeated Wolverines got on top early, then spent the rest of the game trying to stay there before finally putting the hosts away in the Warriors Classic title game.

Garrett Leyman, who’s three-point play in the final 10 seconds gave the Wolverines the lead in the semifinals, hit a pair of 3-pointers in the final, scored 15 points and earned a spot on the all-tournament team. Max Webb also made the all-tournament team.

Rocco String was Woodstown’s leading scorer with 17 points.

The Wolverines carried a three-point lead into the fourth quarter, then stretched their lead to eight with 1:26 to play.

WOODSTOWN 50, NEW EGYPT 46
WOODSTOWN (4-0) –
Blake Bialecki 3-0-7, M.J. Hall 0-2-2, Garrett Leyman 5-3-15, Max Webb 3-1-7, Rocco String 8-1-17, Zyaire Caesar 0-2-2. Totals 19-9-50.
NEW EGYPT (2-4) – Nolan Arnold 8-3-20, Jack Burr 1-0-3, Connor Fischer 2-0-5, Tommy Merlucci 1-0-3, Clyde Ferris 5-0-11, Evan Goldberg 1-0-2, Ryan Reynolds 1-0-2. Totals 19-3-46.

Woodstown13131116 –53
New Egypt8111512 – 46
3-point goals: Woodstown 3 (Bialecki, Leyman 2); New Egypt 5 (Arnold, Burr, Fischer, Merlucci, Ferris).

Battle at Buena

PENNSVILLE 73, BUENA 43: The Eagles would like to have a little better record heading into the new year, but a 3-3 they’re really not complaining. They got back on the winning track after being routed in the tournament opener by taking control early, spreading the wealth and opening it up with a 27-point third quarter.

“As a program I’m just happy we can be disappointed at 3-3,” Eagles coach Joe Mecholsky said. “I wanted to be 5-1, 4-2, maybe yesterday’s game is one I’d liked back if we started a little bit fresher, but (we’re) 3-3 heading into the conference schedule, so … moving forward. Good win today. Three wins in another year may have been the whole season, so three before the new year is good.”

Eight players scored for the Eagles, three in double figures. Luke Wood led the Eagles with 24 points and is now 82 points shy of 1,000 for his career. He was 10-of-15 from the free throw line.

Daniel Saulin had his third double-double in six games — 16 points (on 8-of-10 shooting) and 11 rebounds – and blocked five shots. Cohen Petrutz scored 10 points and Jayden Thomas had eight points and six assists.

“That’s what everything was today – balanced,” Mecholsky said. “We were just looking to execute on offense, we didn’t care who scored. We knew if we put the ball in the basket then the score would turn out the way it did. Everybody was looking for the extra pass and it worked today.”

PENNSVILLE 73, BUENA 43
PENNSVILLE (3-3) –
Luke Wood 6 10-15 24, Peyton O’Brien 3 2-2 8, Daniel Saulin 8 0-116, Jayden Thomas 3 2-4 8, Malik Rehmer 0 0-0 0, Cohen Petrutz 3 3-4 10, Mason O’Brien 1 1-2 3, Connor Starn 0 0-0 0, Logan Hitt 1 1-2 3, Carlos Merendino 0 0-0 0, Cole Johnston 0 1-4 1. Totals 25 20-34 73.
BUENA (0-6) – Vincent Dalponte 3 0-2 7, Josue Cuadrado 3 1-1 8, Avery Benjamin 1 0-2 3, Troy Gregory 0 2-4 2, Kaden Bryant 1 2-4 4, Ethan Wiker 3 0-0 9, Carlo Spreng 0 0-0 0, Michael Ketushko 0 0-0 0, Jaevon Alexander 1 0-0 2, Richie Wilson 3 0-0 7. Totals 15 5-13 43.

Pennsville17132716 –73
Buena810916 – 43
3-point goals: Pennsville 3 (Wood 2, Petrutz); Buena 8 (Dalponty 2, Guadrado, Benjamin, Wiker 3, Wilson). Fouled out: Spreng. Total fouls: Pennsville 9, Buena 23.

Marty Derer Showcase

VINELAND 41, PENNS GROVE 27: When the horn sounded to end the third quarter it was like a switch that flipped the script.

The Red Devils carried a three-point lead into the fourth quarter of their Marty Derer Showcase at Delsea and held their opponent to less than 20 percent shooting from the floor.

But in the fourth quarter everything that could go wrong for the young Red Devils did. They hit only one of 10 shots from the floor, committed seven turnovers and were outscored 19-2.

It was more a change in chemistry than strategy that did in the Red Devils. They played mostly freshmen Karon Ceaser, Neziah Spence and Will Roy in the third quarter with Luis Colon and Mr Peterson alongside senior Willie Slocum and the group got them the lead.

They reinserted veterans Giomar Conrad and Mekhi Ballard in the fourth quarter and it fell apart.

“I should have kept the young guys in because they were making it happen,” coach Damian Ware said.

Karon Ceaser scored the Red Devils’ only basket of the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, Jack Baruffi and Ernie Bernhardt teamed up for 11 of their combined 16 points in the fourth quarter for Vineland.

It was Bernhardt’s bucket three minutes into the fourth quarter that gave Vineland the lead for good.

VINELAND 41, PENNS GROVE 27
PENNS GROVE (2-4) –
Giomar Conrad 4 0-0 8, KaRon Ceaser 3 1-8 7, Willie Slocum 1 0-0 2, Neziah Spence 1 0-0 3, Mr Peterson 1 0-0 2, Will Roy 1 0-0 3, Brandin Robbins 0 0-0 0, Mehki Ballard 1 0-1 2, Camren Thompson 0 0-0 0, Jaden Sorrell 0 0-0 0, Luis Colon 0 0-0 0, Khiry Higgs 0 0-0 0. Totals 12 1-9 27.
VINELAND (5-2) – Chris Gainey 2 2-2 6, Alex Reyes 2 0-0 4, Chris Thomas 2 3-4 7, Sencere Chandler 3 2-2 8, Jack Baruffi 2 5-10 9, Ernie Bernhardt 3 1-2 7, Noah Sarnoff 0 0-0 0, Alex Domboski 0 0-0 0, James Lawson 0 0-0 0. Totals 14 13-20 41.

Penns Grove95112 –27
Vineland124619 –41
3-point goals: Penns Grove 2 (Spence, Roy).

ACIT Holiday Showcase

ATLANTIC TECH 67, SALEM TECH 44: The every-other-game pattern of Haneef Frisby and Antoine Robinson leading the Chargers in scoring was back in Frisby’s court Thursday.

Frisby scored 18 points in the consolation game of the tournament to led the Chargers in scoring. Curiously, he has been leading them in scoring in all the even-numbered games, while Antoine Robinson has led them in the odd-numbered games. When they come through together consistently, coach Bryan Riley knows he’ll have something special.

“They’re sophomores,” he said. “They’ll figure it out.”

The Chargers were in the game in the first half, trailing by only three at the break with Frisby scoring 14 points. But ACIT outscored them 20-7 in the third quarter and continued to pull away in the fourth.

Tyler Zampino scored nine of his 14 points in the fourth quarter for Salem Tech.

ATLANTIC TECH 67, SALEM TECH 44
ATLANTIC TECH (2-5) – Abdul Hawkins 4 0-0 9, Lamaj Owens 3 1-2 8, Giancarlo Canayunan 9 0-0 20, Yamdry Hernandez 3 1-6 7, WayneMiller 2 0-0 4, Daniel Abea 1 0-0 3, John Carr 2 0-0 4, Bartholemew 0 0-0 0, Jaron Douglas 2 0-0 4, Logan Ruga 1 0-2 3, Kyrie Rose 0 1-2 1, Javon Lane 2 0-0 4. Totals 29 3-12 67.
SALEM TECH (0-6) – Antoine Robinson 2 1-2 5, Chase Wills 1 0-0 2, Josh Muntz 1 0-0 3, Tyler Zmpino 4 6-8 14, Haneef Frisby 8 2-2 18, Gio Holmes 0 2-2 2. Totals 16 11-13 44.

Atlantic Tech16102021 – 67
Salem Tech914714 – 44
3-point goals: ACIT 6 (Hawkins, Owens, Canayunan 2, Abea, Ruga); Salem Tech 1 (Muntz)
Fouled out: Wills. Total fouls: ACIT 12, Salem Tech 15.


Dynamite duo

Battavio, Donelson never far apart in the box score, combine for 57 as Woodstown opens its tournament with easy win; Pennsville bounces back in Buena and more

THURSDAY’S GIRLS BASKETBALL SCORES
Battle at Buena
Pennsville 49, Camden Academy 33

ACIT Holiday Tech Tournament
Consolation: GCIT 51, Salem Tech 15
Championship: ACIT 55, Camden Tech 19

Wolverine Holiday Tournament
Highland 60, Paulsboro 19
Woodstown 75, Bridgeton 41

Boardwalk Classic
Wildwood Convention Center
St. Dominic 53, Penns Grove 51

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

WOODSTOWN – Talia Battavio and Megan Donelson are two of the most dynamic scorers on any one team in any type of geography you want to name – county, conference, section, state.

Woodstown coach Kara Straughn would put them up against anyone anywhere. And when she does, they usually dominate the box score.

When they’re are on – and often when they’re not – they’re capable of outscoring any team they play by themselves. They came thisclose to scoring 30 points in the same game for the first time in their career Thursday, but settled for 28 and 29, respectively, and it was plenty as the Wolverines routed winless Bridgeton 75-41 in the opening round of the Wolverine Holiday Tournament.

They had plenty of time to get it, but they were lifted to play another day with 2:20 left in the game and the win safely tucked away.

“Mainland I believe has a set of twins this year that are seniors who are very good, Megan and Talia caliber, but I don’t know of anybody in Tri-County or maybe South Jersey,” Woodstown coach Kara Straughn said. “Gloucester Catholic has a couple, but they’re not Megan and Talia.

“The big thing is there’s no competition (between them). You have some teams who have two really great players, but it’s a constant competition. But with those two, they’re feeding each other. Together, the two of them, I don’t think there are anybody (like them).”

Battavio agreed the combination gives the Wolverines “something different.”

Donelson said “it’s like a power move for us. We just work really well together because we’ve been playing with each other a lot time. We’re like just locked in together.”

The two juniors are a lot closer than what you see in the scoring column. Sure, it might look like they’re locked in some friendly competition to see who gets scoring honors for the night, but they’re close friends that extend beyond the high school basketball court and genuinely want to see the other succeed.

In the 59 games Woodstown has played during their varsity careers, Battavio has been the higher scorer of the two 27 times, Donelson has had the better of it 26 times and they’ve wound up even six times. Their final line has been within three points of each other 32 times and only three times in the last 26 games has the difference between them been more than six points.

While they were so close to going for 30 in the same game for the first time Thursday, they’ve both gone for 20 in the same game five times and in four of the last eight games going back to last season, including the last two. Their previous best combined effort before Thursday was a 56-point night against Penns Grove (Donelson went for 31) in last year’s South Jersey Group I semifinals.

“I think we share a chemistry over the three years and also being really good friends helps,” Battavio said. “We like to push the ball and get it up to each other and I think we’re both not selfish about it. I’m willing to give up the ball to get her a layup any day. If she has 20 and I have 10, if we win, it’s a win. We’re heavy on that.”

Of course, the biggest beneficiary of it all is the team and the program.

“I think it sets the tone for not just now but the future as well,” Straughn said. “I have a lot of sophomores who are looking to those two and saying, ‘OK, I want to be the Megan and Talia in two years when I’m a junior and senior and they’re gone.’ So they’ve set a great example and a great tone for the young girls and the program overall.

“We have youth programs coming out to watch both of them. And they’re both involved in the youth program, they both help out. So, I think it doesn’t just help on the court, it helps the future of Woodstown basketball as well.”

They played a big part in the Wolverines putting this one away early. Bridgeton stayed with them early, even leading 9-8, but then the avalanche came. The Wolverines went on a 15-3 run to the end of the quarter that turned into a 27-5 spree before the Bulldogs called time with 4:21 left in the first half.

The Dynamic Duo had 25 of the Wolverines’ first 35 points and 29 points in the first half. Donelson had 11 in the first quarter.

While there is no pact for making it happen, everyone involve – Battavio, Donelson and Straughn – all agree it would be “really cool” if they both hit their 1,000th career point on the same night.

After Thursday, Donelson stands are 753 career points and Battavio is at 741. They’re projected to be the 10th and 11th members of the school’s girls 1,000-Point Club sometime around the Tri-County Tournament.

“I think that would really be the icing on the cake,” Straughn said. “I can’t even imagine that celebration.” 

WOODSTOWN 75, BRIDGETON 41
BRIDGETON (0-6) –
 Adelina Wilks 10 3-7 25, Ayianna Ridgeway 0 0-0 0, Diara McGriff 1 0-0 2, Imara James 4 0-0 8, Jayla Bowman 2 0-2 4, Sarena Parker 1 0-0 2, Kahmya Johnson 0 0-0 0, Karina Perez 0 0-0 0, TaMiyah Russell 0 0-0 0. Totals 18 3-9 41.
WOODSTOWN (3-1) – Talia Battavio 11 4-8 28, Megan Donelson 13 0-0 29, Alyssa Baber 1 1-1 4, Gianna Maiorini 0 0-0 0, Shannon Pierman 4 2-2 10, Lauren Hengel 1 0-0 2, Emma Perry 1 0-0 2, Jala Thomas 0 0-0 0, Lizzy Daly 0 0-0 0, Brae DiGregorio 0 0-0 0, Kendall Young 0 0-0 0. Totals 31 7-11 75.

Bridgeton1212611 – 41
Woodstown23161818 – 75
3-point goals: Bridgeton 2 (Wilks 2); Woodstown 6 (Battavio 2, Donelson 3, Baber). Total fouls: Bridgeton 11, Woodstown 16. Officials: Konyak, Rosenberger, Jackson.

Cover photo: Megan Donelson (20) and Talia Battavio lead the Woodstown girls basketball team out of timeout Thursday just as they usually do in the scoring column. (Photo by Collin Groom)

Battle at Buena

PENNSVILLE 49, CAMDEN ACADEMY CHARTER 33: After having what coach Sam Trapp called “a big honest conversation” about how their opening-round loss to Pemberton went down, the Eagles got back on the winning road in the consolation game, but an even bigger issue emerged.

The Eagles played through two injured and endured another during the game.

Point guard Marley Wood played through an ankle injury she sustained the day before, Taylor Bass didn’t play because of a broken finger on her left hand and Annika Macalino suffered a knee injury during the game.

“It’s just so frustrating, it feels like a curse this year,” Trapp said. “I struggled with a lot of injuries with soccer and here we are with Round 2 in basketball. The best thing I can do is just keep coaching the other girls through it and working our team strength at this point and hoping the girls will be able to recover and get back on the court quickly.”

Even with all that going on, the Eagles had enough to get past the winless Cougars. They placed three scorers in double figures and led wire-to-wire, even with a hiccup in the third quarter. Nora Ausland led the offense with 17 points, Wood came through with 12 and Bella Farina had 11.

They built a 14-point halftime lead and never lost it, unlike the day before when Pemberton rallied in the second half. The third quarter was a little interesting, though, as they were outscored 16-14. The Eagles have been outscored in the third quarter in four of their five games this season.

“I was just very honest with the girls,” Trapp said. “I just told them we’ve got to take better care of the basketball. You have to step up when you’re playing in the game. You have to do your best when you’re on the court at all times.

“It’s taking accountability for their mistakes and what they can do better moving forward. Thankfully, the girls responded to what I said. We changed our gameplan a little bit with the injuries that we had, so it all ended up shaking out all right at the end.”

PENNSVILLE 49, CAMDEN ACADEMY CHARTER 33
CAMDEN ACAD. (0-5) –
 Angel Waysome 0 0-0 0, Nashalie Lugo 0 0-0 0, Yomeidy DeLaRosa 2 2-3 7, Angelise Rodriguez 2 0-0 6, Diomeiry DeLaRosa 5 6-6 20, Nikya Smith 0 0-0 0, Mariana Garriga 0 0-0 0, Malani Taplin 0 0-0 0. Totals 9 8-9 33.
PENNSVILLE (3-2) – Calli Ausland 1 0-0 2, Nora Ausland 7 0-0 17, Karsen Cooksey 1 0-0 2, Bella Farina 5 1-4 11, Kylie Harris 1 0-0 2, Annika Macalino 1 0-0 3, Malani McGee 0 0-0 0, Isabelle Saulin 0 0-0 0, Avery Watson 0 0-0 0, Marley Wood 4 2-2 12. Totals 20 3-7 49.

Camden Acad.53`67 –33
Pennsville11111413 – 49
3-point goals: Camden Academy 7 (Y. DeLaRosa, Rodriguez 2, D. DeLaRosa 4); Pennsville 6 (N. Ausland 3, Macalino, Wood 2). Total fouls: Camden Academy 6, Pennsville 7.
Penns Grove’s Brianna Robbins (2) prepares to drive the line during Thursday’s Boardwalk Classic game against St. Dominic. (Tournament photo)

Boardwalk Classic

ST. DOMINIC 53, PENNS GROVE 51: The Red Devils staged a furious fourth-quarter rallying from double digits to tie the game, but just came up short. RaNiyah Wilson scored 15 of her 19 points in the fourth quarter to help Penns Grove come back from a nine-point deficit.

The Red Devils rallied from 12 down to tie the game, but St. Dominic went back ahead when leading scorer Alyssa Stridiron hit a pair of technical foul shots. In the final five seconds Brianna Robbins drove the length of the floor and got to the basket with contact, but didn’t get a call they thought was warranted.

Robbins, who tied the game twice in the fourth quarter, finished with 15 points.

Stridiron was 6-of-10 from the free throw line in the fourth quarter and finished with 28 points.

ST. DOMINIC 53, PENNS GROVE 51
PENNS GROVE (4-1) –
Amani Taylor 2 0-0 4, Meely Horace 3 4-5 10, RaNiyah Wilson 8 1-2 19, Rolande Delva 0 1-2 1, JaNiyah Cummings 0 0-0 0, Arinna Dowe 0 0-0 0, Semijah Hines 1 0-0 2, Zoey Caesar 0 0-2 0, Brianna Robbins 5 4-6 15, Syanna Robbins 0 0-0 0. Totals 19 10-15 51.
ST. DOMINIC (3-3) – Kelly Clare Hester 1 0-0 2, Kalista D’Elia 0 0-0 0, Janiyah Capers 4 3-8 12, Alyssa Stridiron 10 8-13 28, Gianna Scrpa 0 0-0 0, Julia Hester 3 1-4 7, Stella DeFilippis 1 0-0 2, Emily Matos 1 0-0 2. Totals 20 12-25 53.

Penns Grove851424 –51
St. Dominic1691117 –53
3-point goals: Penns Grove 3 (Wilson 2, B. Robbins); St. Dominic 1 (Capers). Fouled out: Taylor, Wilson. Technical fouls: Wilson. Total fouls: Penns Grove 17, St. Dominic 13.

ACIT Holiday Tech Tournament

GCIT 51, SALEM TECH 15
SALEM TECH (0-4) –
Demajae White 1-0-2, Hanna DeWitt 0-1-1, Morgan VanDover 3-0-7, Drummond 1-0-2, Amedee 1-0-2, Reed 0-1-1. Totals 6-2-15.
GLOUCESTER TECH (4-3) – Sophia Molinari 1-0-3, Maggie Duer 4-0-12, Leanne Riddick 3-2-8, Ava Friel 1-0-2, Savanna Shute 2-0-4, Reis Hartman 3-0-6, Gina Sheehan 0-1-1, Averie Clement 3-0-8, Sofia McKay 1-0-2, Octavia Adkins 5-0-13. Totals 23-5-51.

Salem Tech2571 –15
Gloucester Tech2111127 –51
3-point goals: Salem Tech 1 (VanDover); GCIT 10 (Molinari, Duer 4, Clement 2, Adkins 3). 






Pressing on

Wednesday roundup: Woodstown turns to the press in fourth quarter, uses it to fuel big comeback against Steinert

BOYS SCORES
Warrior Classic
Woodstown 53, Steinert 52
New Egypt 36, Pinelands 32

Bayonne Holiday Classic
Charlestown (Mass.) 90, Salem 70
Bayonne 69, West Orange 44

ACIT Holiday Showcase
Camden Tech 48, Salem Tech 42
GCIT 37, ACIT 30

GIRLS SCORES
Boardwalk Classic
Salem 52, Oakcrest 25

ACIT Holiday Showcase
Camden Tech 24, Salem Tech 11
Atlantic Tech 31, GCIT 30


By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

NEW EGYPT – Woodstown hasn’t rolled out the press much before Wednesday this season because, quite frankly, coach Phil Campbell wasn’t sure they were comfortable enough to make it work.

The Wolverines pulled it out late in their Warrior Classic opener against Steinert when they absolutely had to make something happen and ran it just like the coach remembers doing it during his high school playing days back in Texas.

The press helped them rally from 12 down with four minutes left and eight down two to go for an unlikely 53-52 victory to remain undefeated. They’ll play host New Egypt for the tournament title today.

Garrett Leyman’s putback and one with eight seconds left gave the Wolverines (3-0) their first lead of the game and Rocco String sealed it when he stole a skip pass with 1.5 seconds to go.

“It kind of reminded me of our opening game last year where we were down like that against Pitman and came back and beat them by one to start the season,” Campbell said. “I think this is a little bit better one.”

It was all about the adjustment they made at halftime to set up the man press and the way everyone who got on the floor played a part in making it work. They plugged it in with about four minutes left trailing 52-40 and it was so suffocating the Spartans (0-5) never scored again.

“I had a lot of faith,” Leyman said. “We just started being really aggressive, got some turnovers, started hitting our shots, doing what we knew we could. We just kept saying keep fighting. We know with our brand of basketball we know we could come back, and we did.”

It produced a couple steals right off the bat and Blake Bialecki, Alejandro Vazquez and Leyman all hit 3s to make it even more effective.

With time running out and his team down 2, Leyman picked up a loose rebound just outside the lane and confidently hit a short jumper and was fouled. His and-one gave Woodstown the lead.

The Wolverines still had two fouls to give and took them. The Spartans tried to get the ball in but couldn’t find an opening and String stepped in make the game-sealing steal.

“We pressed some last year and got away from it because the guys just were struggling to understand exactly how I wanted it to go and it got a little sloppy,” Campbell said. “This year we waited to reimplement the press. For the last week or so we’ve been slowly putting it back in, talking about we might need to press some people.

“I talked to (senior captain) Max Webb about it towards the end of the third quarter and it was like we weren’t quite there yet and I was like I agree, I’m thinking about when we need to put it in. There were about three or four minutes left and he looked over at me and I was like, yeah, it’s time. We put it in and they (Steinert) just didn’t know what to do with it.”

When Campbell was playing high school ball in Texas, his Abilene High School team pressed from the minute it got off the bus and regularly scored 100 points in a game. Even as well as Woodstown’s version worked against the Spartans, the Wolverines won’t use it that much going forward, but when they do find the ‘opportune moments’ to put it in motion Campbell will expect it to be run properly and productively.

Their defense this year has been strong without it. They didn’t press against Schalick and had 19 steals. They didn’t press Cumberland and won the turnover and rebounding battle while holding their opponent to an ice-cold percentage from the field.

Leyman was Woodstown’s leading scorer with 13 points, but the Wolverines spread the wealth. Vazquez, with three 3s, and M.J. Hall each scored nine points. Webb and String had eight apiece. String also had five blocked shots and three steals. One of Vazquez’ 3s was a half-court bomb that beat the second-quarter horn and sent the Wolverines into the half down seven instead of 10.

“Garrett had a great game overall, with 13 points he’s definitely the X factor,” Campbell said. “But everybody contributed … If it wasn’t for some great plays from Max, great shots from guys like Blake and Alejandro and M.J., some great defensive plays from M.J. and Rocco, we don’t get that win. It was definitely a team effort. Everybody who hit the court made a positive contribution towards getting that team win.”

WOODSTOWN 53, STEINERT 52
STEINERT (0-5) –
Avery Cannato 4 1-2 11, Joseph Lee 2 0-0 5, Logan Kaboski 0 0-0 0, Mert Yilmaz 3 0-2 6, Ryan Leach 1 0-0 2, Walter Connor 1 0-0 2, Joseph Ditta 4 0-0 11, Jon Weaver 0 0-0 0, Cameron Popso 5 4-4 15. Totals 20 5-8 52.
WOODSTOWN (3-0) – Blake Bialecki 1 1-2 4, Alejandro Vazquez 3 0-2 9, M.J. Hall 3 2-5 9, Garrett Leyman 5 2-3 13, Anthony Bokolas 1 0-0 2, Max Webb 3 2-3 8, Rocco String 4 0-0 8, Elijah Caesar 0 0-0 0. Totals 20 7-15 53.

Steinert16141111 –52
Woodstown10131317 –53
3-point goals: Steinert 7 (Cannato 2, Lee, Ditta 3, Popso); Woodstown 6 (Bialecki, Vazquez 3, Hall, Leyman). Fouled out: Hall. Total fouls: Steinert 15, Woodstown 12.

ACIT Holiday Showcase

CAMDEN TECH 48, SALEM TECH 42: The Chargers cut an seven-point fourth-quarter deficit to one with two minutes to go, but Camden Tech came back down and scored and Salem Tech didn’t have an answer. When the Chargers started fouling to stop the clock, the Warriors made their free throws down the stretch.

Evan Brummel hit three 3-pointers and led Camden Tech with 15 points. Salem Tech’s Antoine Robinson led all scorers with 18 points.

CAMDEN TECH (3-1) – Frankie Clas 0 0-0 0, Salvatore Algeri 2 1-2 6, Isaiah Haynes 0 2-4 2, Alex Ojeda 1 0-0 3, Evan Brummel 6 0-1 15, Jamal Sosa 1 0-0 3, Mehki Harper 0 0-2 0, Elijah Franks 3 1-2 7, Charles Banour 2 3-4 7, Shareef Cox 1 3-8 5. Totals 16 10-23 48.
SALEM TECH (0-5) – Antoine Robinson 8 0-0 18, Chase Wills 1 0-2 2, Josh Muntz 2 5-5 10, Haneef Frisby 4 1-4 9, Joseph Hayes 0 1-4 1, Gio Holmes 0 0-0 0, Daviontae Russell 1 0-0 2, Charlie Brown 0 0-0 0. Totals 16 7-15 42.

Camden Tech1481115 –48
Salem Tech971016 – 42
3-point goals: Camden Tech 6 (Sosa, Brummel 3, Ojeda, Algeri); Salem Tech 3 (Robinson 2, Muntz). Fouled out: Wills, Muntz. Total fouls: Camden Tech 12, Salem Tech 21.

Girls Games

Boardwalk Classic

SALEM 52, OAKCREST 25: QwenNasha Logan had a triple double  10 points, 11 rebounds and 15 blocked shots –.to help the Rams collect their first win of the season. She had 15 blocked shots in the first three games of the season.

SALEM 52, OAKCREST 25
OAKCREST (1-3) –
Zeriena Buckle 0 0-0 0, Aliyah Cause 4 0-0 8, Anastasia Lisojo 1 0-0 2, Natalyah Mikulak 0 0-0 0, Atrirah Mitchell 5 1-6 11, Aminah Mullins 1 2-4 4. Totals 11 3-10 25.
SALEM (1-3) – QwenNasha Logan 5 0-0 10, Ava Rodgers 4 0-0 8, Ryann Foote 3 2-4 8, Ameriyona Hunter 3 0-0 6, Carlysia Pierce 1 1-2 3, Kaela Nichols 3 3-4 9, Marrissa Bower 2 0-2 8, Naveah Hickman 2 0-0 4, Zaniyah Frieson 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 6-12 52.

Oakcrest4678 – 25
Salem10121218 –52
3-point goals: None. Total fouls: Oakcrest 14, Salem 13.