Category: Baseball

Tremarco’s steady hand guides Watchung Hills to promised land in SCT final at TD Bank Park

“We’re built to play.”

Those four words from Watchung Hills head coach Joseph Tremarco sum up perfectly his Hustlin’ Warriors.

The certainly came to play Friday night, as the second seed in the Somerset County Tournament, with a tall task at hand: beating not only the top-seed and defending champion Immaculata, but doing it with Ryan Auten on the mound for the Spartans.

Because, heck, all he’s doing next year is going to play in the ACC at Wake Forest.

But a funny thing happened as he and Warriors’ starter Lucas Sheehan – just a sophomore by the way – locked up in a pitchers’ duel.

GAME STORY: Watchung Hills takes down defending champ Immaculata, 1-0 in extras, to win first Somerset County title in 17 years behind Lucas Sheehan three-hitter

They made Auten work, and worked out several deep counts, eventually chasing him as the game went to extra innings, with two out in the eighth, already up 1-0.

Turns out that was all Hills would need.

And behind it all was Tremarco. He is never too up, never too down, and his team feeds off that. Even if they were very, very up when the final out was recorded, a force play at second base to end the game with Immaculata threatening.

While the win gave the Hustlin’ Warriors their sixth SCT championship overall – and first since 2009 – it was the very first for Tremarco, and well-deserved.

Click below to hear Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Alec Crouthamel talk with Watchung Hills head coach Joseph Tremarco:

Early two-runs, solid pitching boost Piscataway to 3-0 win over Dunellen in Ray Cipperly GMC Invitational Final

Even when you have two of your best pitchers toss a combined two-hit shutout, it’s mathematically impossible to win a baseball game without scoring.

But on Friday afternoon in the Ray Cipperly GMC Invitational Final on Edison High School’s red turf, second-seed Piscataway took care of that part as early as they could, staking starter Sumedh Shingala to a 2-0 lead.

Shingala started, Jared Butler finished it in relief with the help of an insurance run, and the Chiefs (11-10) took their first-ever invitational title, beating fifth-seed Dunellen (18-7) to bring home Piscataway’s first county tournament hardware since winning the full tournament in 2003.

After Shingala started the game giving up a leadoff single to Dunellen, he struck out the next three batters to end the inning.

In the home half, Jason Mann walked to lead it off, then Dom Summonte slugged a triple on a 2-2 pitch to drive in Mann – who’d stole second – to make it 1-0 Piscatway. Then Patrick Novak knocked him in with a sac fly to center to give the Chiefs a 2-0 lead.

Piscatway got an insurance run in the bottom of the fifth when Novak reached on an error by the Dunellen shortstop, allowing Summonte – who’d reached on one-out single and stole second – to score.

Shingala went 4 2/3 innings, allowing just one hit, striking out 12, and got the win, improving to 5-2 on the year. Then came Butler, who only struck out two the rest of the way, but also only allowed just one more hit.

Dunellen starter Joseph Reyes took the hard-luck loss, his first of the season, going the full six innings, allowing four hits and three runs – two earned – to fall to 6-1 on the year.

Click below for postgame reaction from Piscataway starting pitcher Sumedh Shingala and head coach Rob Stoddard:

Both teams now move on to the state tournament.

Piscataway is the 15-seed in North 2, Group 4, and will visit second-seed Bayonne at 4:30 pm Wednesday, while Dunellen is the sixth-seed in Central Jersey Group 1, and will host 11-seed Florence at Columbia Park at 4 pm Wednesday.

Red-hot Faigin, Mangano lead equally red-hot Monroe into GMC Tourney final against even hotter Old Bridge squad

Note: Due to rain in the forecast, the GMC Championship game has been moved to Saturday, May 30 at 12 noon at Ray Cipperly Field at East Brunswick Magnet School.

It’s been a topsy-turvy season for Monroe, dropping 11-of-14 after a 5-1 start to limp into the Jim Muldowney GMC Tournament as the No. 9 seed. But with county supremacy on the line, the Falcons kicked it into high gear.

Three consecutive upsets – Colonia, Edison, and South Plainfield – has Monroe (13-13) in the finals, where they will third-seeded Old Bridge (17-8) for the Jim Muldowney GMC Tournament Championship next Saturday, May 30th. You can hear it live on Central Jersey Sports Radio by clicking here, or you can watch it live on our YouTube channel.

Junior Ben Faigin – currently committed to play college baseball at Rutger – has set the tone. Amidst a stellar season (6-1, 1.27 ERA), he has done his best work in the GMC Tournament. 

In the first round against Colonia, he struck out 13 in a complete game two-hitter, allowing just a couple runs. Pitching again last week in the semifinals at East Brunswick Magnet – in a 1-0 win over five-seed South Plainfield – he was even better: a complete game, one-hit shutout with 13 more strikeouts.

That’s 26 strikeouts and just three hits allowed over 14 innings.

While Faigin was expected to take the mound again Saturday with the GMC trophy on the line, it’s up in the air if he’ll do it a week later, depending on how Monroe fares in the state tournament, which begins for them next Wednesday. The Falcons are the five-seed in Central Jersey Group 4 and will host 12-seed Montgomery in the opening round.

Faigin’s battery mate, senior Justin Mangano, has been Monroe’s catalyst on offense. Hitting .402 in a terrific senior year, Mangano has also been at his best in the GMC Tournament. He is 8-for-13 with 4 RBIs, collecting multiple hits in every game. The shining moment so far? The go-ahead RBI double with two outs in the 7th inning against South Plainfield, ultimately sending the Falcons to the GMC title game.

It’s Monroe’s first trip to a GMC title game since 2017 – a loss to St. Joe’s. Monroe’s last GMC championship was in 2015, a 1-0 win over Sayreville.

Click below to hear Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Justin Sontupe talk with Monroe head coach Sean Field:

Well-balanced, battle-tested Old Bridge set for GMC final – whenever it is – seeking second title in three seasons

Note: Due to rain in the forecast, the GMC Championship game has been moved to Saturday, May 30 at 12 noon at Ray Cipperly Field at East Brunswick Magnet School.

Look for one particular star, one who rises far above the talent of everyone else on the ballclub, and you won’t find one on the Old Bridge baseball team.

And that’s perfectly fine with head coach Matt Donaghue.

He’s had teams like that in the past, and those have been fine, too. They won the GMC in 2024 and Central Jersey Group 4 in 2023, with ace pitchers like Justin Hascup J.T. Meyer, and Frank Papeo, all of whom had ERAs under two.

But this year’s team is a different story. Any pitcher could win on any given day, and though they’re hitting just .278 as a team there’s balance top to bottom, and every grade seems to be participating, too.

Sophomore Matt Chin leads the lineup, hitting .429, with junior Jared Volpe at .317, and senior Chris Crosta at .293. Balance.

Next Saturday afternoon, May 30th – a week’s delay due to rain in the forecast for this Sunday – the third-seeded Knights will play nine-seed Monroe in the Jim Muldowney GMC Tournament Championship game.

First pitch now is set for noon at East Brunswick Magnet School’s Ray Cipperly Field. That was the original site until about a week ago, when the GMC worked out a deal to move the finals to Rutgers, at last for one year. You’ll be able to hear the game live on Central Jersey Sports Radio, with Mike Pavlichko and Justin Sontupe on the call. Listen at this link, or watch the game live on our YouTube channel.

Junior Brady Meyer is expected to get the start for Old Bridge, coming in at 3-1, with a 2.95 ERA. He got the start in the semifinals for the Knights, tossing 6 2/3 innings of six-hit ball, allowing two earned runs.

Old Bridge led 3-0 until the seventh, when Middlesex got three in the home half of the inning to send it to extras, only to see Old Bridge score six times in the top of the eighth to emerge with a 9-3 victory, and a ticket to the championship.

The Knights swept Monroe two games this year – getting a 9-5 home win April 23rd, and a 12-1 road win six days later. the first of those matchups was the one where Saturday’s original starting pitchers met, and neither had particularly great starts.

Meyer went 3 2/3, but threw 75 pitches, allowing just three hits and one earned run, but he walked six and struck out four, while Ben Faigin of Monroe went 2 2/3 and allowed four hits, six runs, five earned, walking three and striking out four.

But if the way they both pitched in the semis is any indication – Faigin threw seven one-hit, shutout innings in a 1-0 semifinal win over five-seed South Plainfield last weekend – this one will look a little different if they face each other again.

With the final moved, Old Bridge’s next game – after winning their ninth straight on Friday, a 1-0 Senior night victory over Sayreville – will be in the state tournament, where they open up Central Jersey Group 4 play Wednesday as the top-seed against 16th-seed East Brunswick, a team they swept in the regular season.

Click below to hear from Old Bridge head coach Matt Donaghue on the GMC title game with Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Mike Pavlichko:

Ray Cipperly GMC Invitational Finals Preview: Dunellen, Piscataway looking to scrap their way to a title

A Championship Friday is descending upon New Jersey baseball this weekend.

One of them, the Ray Cipperly GMC Invitational, will have its final on Friday at 4pm at Edison High School, between second-seeded Piscataway and fifth-seeded Dunellen.

Both teams have taken different paths to reach the meeting point. After respective first-round byes, the Chiefs defeated the seven-seed South Amboy, aided by a seven-run sixth inning, including a grand slam from Dominick Summonte. The Destroyers put up big-time runs across the board in a 14-3 win over four-seed East Brunswick Magnet.

In the semifinals, Dunellen kept its offensive attack at a ten in a wild 22-17 win over top-seeded Perth Amboy that took four hours, while Piscataway once again got some clutch hitting in a 5-4 walk-off victory over third-seeded North Brunswick.

But both have the same goal in mind, winning a title on Friday.

Each team brings its best to the bump. For the Chiefs, they have two, top junior Sumedh Shingala — the team’s leader in wins and strikeouts — will start, with No. 2 arm Jared Butler ready and waiting, who head coach Rob Stoddard described as “a bulldog” in both starting and high-leverage relief spots. For the Destroyers, Joe Reyes will get the ball as the leader in wins and ERA among the main rotation arms.

They both have battled through respective stretches of up-and-down play — as nearly every team does — but they’re playing their best ball as of late, and will do battle for the GMC Invitational title in Edison.

RAY CIPPERLY GMC INVITATIONAL FINAL AT-A-GLANCE

Teams:
(2) Piscataway Chiefs (10-10, 6-8, GMC Blue)
(5) Dunellen Destroyers (18-6, 9-2, GMC Gold)

Head Coaches:
Piscataway: Rob Stoddard (6th season, 46-81)
Dunellen: Connor Lindsay (3rd season, 45-31)

Probable Starters
Piscataway: Sumedh Shingala (4-2, 3.73 ERA)
Dunellen: Joseph Reyes (6-0, 2.65 ERA)

Date and Time: Friday, May 22, at 4 pm
Location: Edison High School

PREVIEW INTERVIEWS:

Dunellen head coach Connor Lindsay
Piscataway head coach Rob Stoddard

HOW THEY GOT HERE:

Piscataway:
First round bye
Quarterfinals: def. (7) South Amboy, 11-5
Semifinals: def. (3) North Brunswick, 5-4

Dunellen:
First round bye
Quarterfinals: def. (4) East Brunswick Magnet, 14-3
Semifinals: def. (1) Perth Amboy, 22-17

TEAM LEADERS:

Dunellen:

  • Batting Average: Juan Luis Rodriguez (.425), Michael Dow (.417), Joseph Reyes (.397)
  • RBI: Kristian Roman Lopez (34), Colin Reynolds (26), Joseph Reyes (25)
  • HR: Cesar Andres Fermin Alarcon (1), Kristian Roman Lopez (1)
  • Walks: Kristian Roman Lopez (24), Jackson Portik (18), Joseph Reyes (14), Juan Luis Rodriguez (14)
  • Stolen Bases: Juan Luis Rodriguez (38), Michael Dow (22), David Torres (17)
  • Wins: Joseph Reyes (6), Cole Mayer (5), David Torres (4)
  • ERA (min 12 innings): David Torres (2.12), Joseph Reyes (2.65), Colin Reynolds (4.77)
  • Strikeouts (Pitcher): David Torres (53), Cole Mayer (49), Joseph Reyes (28)

Piscataway:

  • Batting Average: Jason Mann (.444), Dominick Summonte (.423), Patrick Novak (.370)
  • RBI: Patrick Novak (15), Dominick Summonte (14), Kevin Kovach (13)
  • HR: Dominick Summonte (3), Jason Mann (1)
  • Walks: Kevin Kovach (20), Sumedh Shingala (12), Jason Mann (8)
  • Stolen Bases: Jason Mann (17), Bryce Payne (14), Dominick Summonte (7)
  • Wins: Sumedh Shingala (4), Jared Butler (3), Brady Gallogly (2)
  • ERA (min 12 innings): Brady Gallogly (2.51), Jared Butler (3.35), Sumedh Shingala (3.73)
  • Strikeouts (Pitcher): Sumedh Shingala (72), Jared Butler (46), Brady Gallogly (29)

TEAM NUMBERS:

Dunellen:

  • Runs Scored: 264
  • Runs Allowed: 138
  • Batting Average: .350
  • Home Runs: 2
  • Stolen bases: 124
  • ERA: 4.19

Piscataway:

  • Runs Scored: 133
  • Runs Allowed: 132
  • Batting Average: .291
  • Home Runs: 4
  • Stolen bases: 56
  • ERA: 4.59

PREVIOUS COVERAGE of the RAY CIPPERLY GMC INVITATIONAL

Old Bridge, Monroe and GMC stuck between turf and a rainy place on Jim Muldowney Championship; how did others handle it?

Sometimes, despite all the best planning and intentions, things just don’t work out.

All was right with the world when the Greater Middlesex Conference announced just a week ago that its baseball and softball tournament championship games would be held at Rutgers University, following in the footsteps of the NJSIAA, which announced in early January that the state baseball finals would be held at Bainton Field on RU’s Livingston Campus in Piscataway.

A week later, it may have just been too good to be true. But it’s not the GMC’s fault, or Rutgers.

Blame Mother Nature. As we know from this season, she can be fickle.

Big picture, many more people will have their Memorial Day Weekend plans ruined by the rain expected to come down this weekend.

But as far as high school sports in Central Jersey, he first victim was the GMC Softball final, scheduled to be held at Rutgers Wednesday evening. Thunderstorms in the forecast moved that game to Friday at 7 pm, but had to move it to a different venue.

Now, it’ll be Sayreville and St. Thomas Aquinas playing for the trophy at East Brunswick High School. That game will air live on the King James Radio Network with veteran broadcaster Korbid Thompson on the call.

The Somerset County Tournament baseball final also was scheduled for Wednesday at 6 pm at TD Bank Park in Bridgewater, but that was moved as well, to Friday at 4 pm, at the same location. You can hear that game live on Central Jersey Sports Radio, and also watch it on our YouTube channel, with coverage beginning at 3:40 pm.

The good news on both of those is, none of it will really have a huge impact on the state tournament – which begins next week – for the teams involved. Softball has no pitch count restrictions.

And while baseball does, anyone who needs four days’ rest for Immaculata will get it because the top-seeded Spartans will get five days off between the SCT final and their first game in the states, in the South A quarterfinals against either eight-seed Paul VI or nine-seed Donovan Catholic. And their SCT opponent, Watchung Hills, will open next Wednesday in the first round against 14-seed Elizabeth, giving them four days’ rest. That means everyone’s pitch count should reset to zero.

But for Old Bridge and Monroe, who are in the Jim Muldowney GMC Tournament title game, it’s a different story.

Initially, the plan was as it had always been: the semifinals and finals on back-to-back Saturdays at East Brunswick Magnet’s Ray Cipperly Field, a great natural grass surface that would make some minor league baseball teams jealous. (The late Ray Cipperly, the school’s one-time baseball coach and AD, created that field, and later became the Somerset Patriots’ first groundskeeper.) The rain date was to be Sunday, as always.

Then came the news last week that Rutgers would be hosting the baseball final, same day as previously scheduled, same time.

And as of Thursday evening, that game is still on. The GMC is going to wait as long as it can, we’re told, even until Saturday morning, before making a call on postponing it, which is the right call. If you can get it in Saturday, go for it. MAybe they can move it a bit earlier? Currently, the best chance looks like between noon and 4 pm.

The problem is, Sunday’s weather looks even worse. Rutgers has told the GMC Bainton Field wouldn’t be available Sunday. But even if the GMC hadn’t gone there, East Brunswick Magnet would still be soaked from all the rain to play a game there Sunday. Having it at another high school site on Memorial Day weekend, when everyone is away, would just be impossible from a logistics standpoint.

And don’t even think about moving it to the actual holiday on Monday, which may be the only decent day of the three-day weekend.

So, the GMC – if it reschedules – would move the finals to Saturday, May 30, which happens to be smack dab in the middle of the state sectionals, with Friday, May 29th – the day before – being the quarterfinal round, and Wednesday, June 3rd being the sectional semifinals.

But that’s going to leave both teams figuring out what to do with their pitching. Assuming the two starters this weekend would be Brady Meyer for the third-seeded Knights and Ben Faigin for the ninth-seeded Falcons, they will have to choose between starting them when they want in the state tournament – typically, but not always, top pitchers start in the second round, to line them up for a potential title game – or starting them in the GMC Tournament final, if indeed it gets moved to a week later.

It’s not an enviable position to be in, but it’s not without precedent. In fact, through 2018, that’s the way the tournament was set up, with the finals on a weekend during a break in state tournament play. The GMC went to the current format, moving everything a week later, in 2019, with the goal of ensuring divisional play could get wrapped up before the seeding meeting.

In 2018, South Plainfield – then led by head coach Anthony Guida – was a 14-seed and played in the first round of the GMC Tournament on Monday, May 14, then the quarters on Thursday, May 17, and the semifinals on Sunday, May 20. But the state tournament was scheduled to start on Monday, May 21. The Tigers beat AL Johnson in the first round of Central Jersey Group 2, then had a very good Governor Livingston team coming up – on the road – in the quarterfinals.

“I was talking to my pitching coach, Mike Battista,” Guida told Central Jersey Sports Radio Thursday night, “and he said ‘We have five more games in the state if we went all the way to the final, but we have one more game to win to be [GMC] Champions.”

But Guida added he had three legitimate starters that year, so it wasn’t that big an issue. “We knew that we wanted to put our best, Chris Shine, on the mound in the county final, knowing Amboy had two studs on the mound, too.”

“We made the decision to go for the county tournament win,” Guida said.

South Plainfield would fall on Thursday to the Highlanders in the quarterfinals, 11-2, before coming back Saturday – just two days later – to beat 12-seed Perth Amboy, 2-1 in 12 innings, to claim their first – and only – GMC Tournament title to date. Shine went 8 2/3 innings and scattered nine hits, allowing one earned run, with Billy Keane closing it out with 3 1/3 shutout innings.

The Panthers were in a similar boat, getting knocked out in the same round of the North 2, Group 4 section by Bayonne, 8-0, before falling to South Plainfield in the final.

Even three years later, St. Joseph-Metuchen was in a similar situation due to weather. The semifinals of the GMCT got moved to Monday, May 31, and the finals a week later to Sunday, June 6. The NJSIAA fifth-seeded Falcons had to open the state tournament on Friday, June 4 against fourth-seed Red Bank Catholic. But head coach Mike Murray says they “punted on RBC” figuring they had a better chance to win the county tournament, and saved their ace Andrew Goldan for the GMC final.

They would lose to the Caseys, 4-0, but the GMC second-seeded Falcons were 2-0 winners over five-seed South Brunswick, and the gamble paid off.

What’s interesting to note this year is that Monroe is a five-seed and Old Bridge the top-seed in Central Jersey Group 4, meaning they’re in the same half of the 16-team bracket. If they can both get past the first two rounds, they’ll play each other in the semifinals, and that would at least put them back on equal footing, pitching-wise. That is, if both coaches are thinking in a similar fashion.

Say the top starter for each team goes Wednesday in the CJ4 opening round, they could go up to 69 pitches and still be able to come back Saturday for the GMC final, and have 81 left in the tank. That could work. They’d also have three days off until the sectional semis, and could throw another 69 pitches then.

If the top-starter goes Friday in the state sectional quarters, they likely would have not pitched Wednesday either, although they could throw a maximum 49 pitches Wednesday, perhaps in relief, then have 101 for Saturday, but they’d be limited to 49 again the following Wednesday in the CJ4 semis, and wouldn’t be able to go in the county final.

Both teams have a legitimate shot at a state title, but to go back to Guida’s thinking, they still have to win three games to even get a crack at it, and nothing is a sure thing. What is a sure thing is that both teams can win a title with one win in the GMC final, whether it’s this Saturday or next.

Ultimately, Matt Donaghue of Old Bridge and Monroe’s Sean Field could have some tough decisions to make.

Troublesome forecast, scheduling conflicts force changes to Somerset County, GMC Invitational schedules

Weather forecasts and scheduling issues have now resulted in two of the three baseball county championship games in the Central Jersey Sports Radio Coverage area being moved, and a third could be on the way.

The first of those – the Somerset County Tournament championship game between top-seed and defending champion Immaculata and second-seed Watchung Hills – has been postponed due to the threat of thunderstorms tonight. The Somerset Patriots, who play at TD Bank Park in Bridgewater, the site for tonight’s final, told CJSR the final has now been moved to its pre-determined rain date, this Friday at 4 pm.

Central Jersey Sports Radio will have live coverage of the game, with an audio feed here, and a video stream as well on our YouTube channel. Both are free, and not behind a paywall.

Friday was supposed to be the Ray Cipperly GMC Invitational title game, originally scheduled for 2 pm, featuring second-seed Piscataway and fifth-seed Dunellen. But due to a scheduling conflict at Edison High School, which was hosting the game, the GMC announced today it would pushed two hours later to 4 pm.

CJSR was supposed to broadcast that game as well, but with it falling in direct conflict with the new date and time for the SCT final in Bridgewater, we will no longer be able to bring you a live broadcast of the game.

According to AccuWeather, the 6 pm (original game time) forecast for Wednesday night is 85 degrees, with a 47 percent chance of rain, and slightly higher in the 7 pm hour, with a chance of thunderstorms around 51 percent, all the way up through the 9:00 hour. And at 2 pm, the National Weather Service issued a Severe Thunderstorm Watch effective immediately through 9 pm, along with a Heat Advisory through 8 pm. A “Watch” means severe thunderstorms are possible, but not necessarily imminent.

The current Friday forecast at 4 pm is a lot cooler, with temps in the mid- to low-60s, mostly sunny skies, and just a two percent chance of rain, good for both title games.

Meanwhile, Saturday’s Jim Muldowney GMC Championship game set for 2 pm at Rutgers University’s Bainton Field in Piscataway between third-seed Old Bridge and nine-seed Monroe, also could be affected.

Saturday’s forecast is for a 75 percent chance of rain most of the day, with temps in the mid 50s. Sunday doesn’t look much better either: 59 with a 91% chance of rain throughout the day.

This Sunday had always been the rain date when the game was scheduled for Ray Cipperly Field at East Brunswick Magnet School, which has natural grass. Rutgers has turf, but with the final now there, the University has told the league that Bainton Field is not available Sunday. The forecast might make have made that a moot point anyhow.

GMC President Mike Pede – tournament co-chair with Middlesex Athletic Director Mike O’Donnell – said Wednesday afternoon that if the finals can’t be played this Saturday, they will be held a week later on Saturday, May 30 at Ray Cipperly Field at East Brunswick Magnet School at noon.

While playing a county final in the middle of the state tournament is not without precedent, that would be the day after a potential state sectional semifinal game for both teams. The NJSIAA state tournament starts next Wednesday for public schools with sectional quarterfinals, and the semis would be Friday.

Old Bridge is the top-seed in Central Jersey Group 4, and will host 16-seed East Brunswick in the opening round, while fifth-seed Monroe is in the same section, and hosts 12th-seed Montgomery. Both would be considered favorites to move on to Friday, meaning they may have to choose which tournament to prioritize: winning a county championship, or advancing in the states.

TD Bank Park in Bridgewater will host the 2026 Somerset County Tournament championship game tonight. (Photo: Mike Pavlichko)

SCT Finals Preview: Immaculata seeks back-to-back titles, while Watchung Hills aims for first since 2009

Who will win the 2026 Somerset County Tournament baseball championship – two days later than originally scheduled, due to inclement weather – is anyone’s guess.

Sure, Immaculata, the top seed, is the favorite. They’ve won more titles than any other school in Somerset County history with 15, the bulk of them during an amazing run from the late 1990s through the 2000s.

But Watchung Hills, the second-seed, is quite the talented, resilient group, too. And they split with the Spartans in their two meetings this year, with the Warriors taking a 10-0 decision on the day of the seeding meeting, which likely helped propel them to the No. 2 seed, even though they were third in the Skyland Conference Delaware Division behind Ridge, which they lost to twice.

And the Hustlin’ Warriors proved the coaches in the seeding meeting right, knocking out third-seed Ridge in the semifinals Monday, with a 4-2 win, behind a two-hitter from ace Rob Centamore, who struck out a career-high 13 in the win.

Immaculata didn’t have an easy time in the semifinals either, needing three in the bottom of the sixth to pull out a 7-6 victory over the fifth-seed Bridgewater-Raritan.

And now, it’s time for the championship.  Once again, it’ll be No. 1 vs. No. 2

SOMERSET COUNTY TOURNAMENT FINALS AT-A-GLANCE

Teams:
(1) Immaculata Spartans (19-4, 9-1, Skyland Conference Delaware Division Champions)
(2) Watchung Hills Warriors (14-7, 7-3, Skyland Conference Delaware Division, 2nd place)

Head Coaches:
Immaculata: Kevin Cust, 14th year, 13th season (187-142)
Watchung Hills: Joe Tremarco, 12th year, 11th season (168-146)

Probable Starters:
Immaculata: Ryan Auten (6-0, 0.83 ERA)
Watchung Hills: Nick Minetti (3-2, 3.82 ERA) or Lucas Sheehan (5-2, 5.96 ERA)

Date and Time: Friday, May 22, 4 pm (Pregame at 3:40 pm)
(Note: Game was postponed from Wednesday, due to thunderstorms in the forecast)
Location: TD Bank Park, Bridgewater
Listen: Central Jersey Sports Radio
Watch: CJSR’s YouTube channel
Announcers: Mike Pavlichko & Alec Crouthamel

PREVIEW INTERVIEWS:

Immaculata head coach Kevin Cust
Watchung Hills head coach Joseph Tremarco

HOW THEY GOT HERE:

Immaculata:
Double-bye to quarterfinals
Quarterfinals: def. (8) Montgomery, 11-1
Semifinals: def. (5) Bridgewater-Raritan, 7-6

Ridge:
Double-bye to quarterfinals
Quarterfinals: def. (10) Franklin, 9-5
Semifinals: def. (3) Ridge, 4-2

TEAM LEADERS:

Immaculata:

  • Batting Average: Luca Catanzerite (.449); Owen Schilling (.394); Brian Cilento (.372)
  • RBI: Owen Schilling (19); Bryson Auten (15); Luca Catanzerite, Owen Rivenbark (14)
  • HR: Owen Schilling (3); Luca Catanzerite, Andrew Wheeler, Owen Rivenbark, Bryson Auten (1)
  • Walks: Justin Labrador (13); Owen Rivenbark (12)
  • Stolen Bases: Luca Catanzerite (16), Jackson Lewis (12)
  • Wins: Ryan Auten (6); Cole Raymond (5)
  • ERA (min 12 innings): Ryan Auten (0.83); Jackson Trego (2.33)
  • Strikeouts (Pitcher): Ryan Auten (85); Cole Raymond (40)

Watchung Hills:

  • Batting Average: Jacob Jaconski (.485); Rob Centamore (.353); Chris Dorsi (.341)
  • RBI: Max Payne (22); Rob Centamore (13); Jacob Jaconski (12)
  • HR: (Rob Centamore (3); Chris Dorsi, Max Payne (2)
  • Walks: Brody Griffith (11); Brady Simo, Jacob Jaconski Rob Centamore (8)
  • Stolen Bases: Landon Pudlak (14); Stefano DiGeronimo (11); Brody Griffith (10)
  • Wins: Rob Centamore (6); Lucas Sheehan (5)
  • ERA (min 12 innings): Jacob O’Sheal (1.11); Rob Centamore (1.26)
  • Strikeouts (Pitcher): Rob Centamore (54); Lucas Sheehan (24)

TEAM NUMBERS:

  • Runs Scored: Watchung Hills 139, Immaculata 134
  • Runs Allowed: Watchung Hills 110, Immaculata 61
  • Batting Average: Immaculata .324, Watchung Hills .317
  • Home Runs: Watchung Hills 8, Immaculata 7
  • Stolen bases: Watchung Hills 70, Immaculata 55
  • ERA: Immaculata 2.72, Watchung Hills 3.91

PREVIOUS COVERAGE

Immaculata

Watchung Hills

NOTES AND NUGGETS:

Among the winningest SCT programs…

Last year’s final was between the two teams that had won the most Somerset County titles: Immaculata and Ridge, combining for 14 and seven, respectively. This year, it’s between the Spartans and Watchung Hills, and the Warriors third on the all-time list with five championships.

Immaculata has won 15 times in 23 appearances, with ten of those coming in a 12-year span from 1998 to 2008, the most successful run in school history. They won from 1997 through 2002, again in 2004, and three more from 2006 through 2008. Watchung Hills

A little history between them…

These two teams have met twice before in the Somerset County Tournament, in back-to-back years: 1993 and 1994. And in both meetings, the lower seed won.

The Warriors were the third seed in 1993, and upset the top-seeded Spartans, 5-4. Starting pitcher Ben Matsil went the distance striking out the side in the seventh to secure the win, and the offense benefitted from nine walks in the first five innings, with four of those resulting in runs. Brett Chuffo’s two-run double in the fifth gave the Warriors a three-run lead, and some insurance they would need after Immaculata got two in the fifth on a pair of RBI singles.

With the seeds reversed in 1994, Immaculata returned the favor, winning 5-2. Spartans’ ace Jason Ryan was the star that night, giving up three hits and striking out 14, tying the record for strikeouts in an SCT title game. And it was a sloppy game on a night that was dry, but the field was wet from earlier rain, and each team scored two unearned runs in the contest. Immaculata became the sixth team in tournament history at that point, to lose in the final one year, then win it the next.

Also notable, the 1994 final was the first time in Somerset County Tournament history that the same starting pitchers rematched the following year: Ryan for Immaculata and Matsil for Watchung Hills.

’94 SCT meeting was overshadowed by another big game…

Surely, both of those games were huge to anyone who played in it, or had an interest in it, but it wasn’t the biggest game of the sports night by far. Just 30 miles away at Madison Square Garden was a pretty big hockey game: Game Seven of the NHL’s Eastern Conference Finals between the New Jersey Devils and New York Rangers, the one Valeri Zelepukin of the Devils tied up at three with 7.7 seconds left in regulation, and which the Rangers won in overtime on Stephan Matteau’s goal.

Aces went in regular season meetings…

In the first regular season meeting between the teams, Watchung Hills took a 10-0 victory on the day of the SCT seeding meeting, propelling them to the second-seed over Ridge, the second-place team in the Delaware Division of the Skyland Conference. The Red Devils had been swept by the Spartans, and Hills had lost both meetings with Ridge, but that was Immaculatta’s only conference loss. Rob Centamore got the win for Hills, but a few days later, when ‘Lata’s ace Ryan Auten got the nod, they picked up a 6-0 win.

In eleven meetings since COVID, Watchung Hills has won eight meetings, all in regular season play, while the Spartans have won only three.

CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY

Immaculata (15-8):

  • 1981: Manville def. Immaculata, 4-1
  • 1984: Ridge def. Immaculata, 2-0
  • 1985: (2) Ridge def. (1) Immaculata, 5-0
  • 1991: (1) Immaculata def. North Plainfield, 11-3
  • 1993:  (3) Watchung Hills def. (1) Immaculata, 5-4
  • 1994: (3) Immaculata, def. (1) Watchung Hills, 5-2 
  • 1996: (6) Bridgewater-Raritan def. (1) Immaculata, 7-5
  • 1997:  (2) Immaculata def. (1) Bridgewater-Raritan, 2-0
  • 1998:  (3) Immaculata def. (1) Bridgewater-Raritan, 3-2
  • 1999:  (1) Immaculata def. (6) Hillsborough, 8-0
  • 2000:  (1) Immaculata def. (2) Ridge, 2-0
  • 2001:  (2) Immaculata def. (5) Montgomery, 6-1
  • 2002:  (1) Immaculata def. (2) Ridge, 10-0
  • 2004:  (3) Immaculata def. (1) Hillsborough, 1-0
  • 2005:  (2) Hillsborough, def. (1) Immaculata 5-1
  • 2006:  (1) Immaculata def. (7) Pingry, 8-0
  • 2007:  (1) Immaculata def. (3) Hillsborough, 12-11 (10 inn.)
  • 2008:  (1) Immaculata def. (2) Hillsborough, 9-1
  • 2010:  (2) Montgomery def. (1) Immaculata, 13-3 (ten-run rule)
  • 2013:  (6) Bernards def. (5) Immaculata, 6-5
  • 2018:  (3) Immaculata def. (9) Montgomery, 6-5
  • 2019:  (2) Immaculata def. (5) Ridge, 6-5 (12 inn.)
  • 2025: (1) Immaculata def. (2) Ridge, 3-0
Immaculata poses for a team photo after claiming its record 15th county championship in a 3-0 win over Ridge at TD Bank Park in Bridgewater on May 21, 2025. (Photo: Alec Crouthamel)

Watchung Hills (5-5):

  • 1975: Watchung Hills def. Hillsborough, 6-4
  • 1976: Ridge def. Watchung Hills, 4-3 (10 inn.)
  • 1982: Watchung Hills def. Bridgewater-Raritan West, 15-0 (ten-run rule)
  • 1983: Watchung Hills def. Hillsborough, 2-0
  • 1992: (2) Somerville def. (1) Watchung Hills, 9-2
  • 1993: (3) Watchung Hills def. (1) Immaculata, 5-4
  • 1994: (3) Immaculata, def. (1) Watchung Hills, 5-2 
  • 2009: (2) Watchung Hills def. (9) Montgomery 4-0
  • 2015: (6) Hillsborough def. (9) Watchung Hills, 3-1 
  • 2016: (1) Montgomery def. (6) Watchung Hills, 2-1

The Last Time…

  • The top-seed won the SCT was in 2024, when Bridgewater-Raritan beat third-seed Ridge, 10-7.
  • The second-seed won the SCT was last year, when Immaculata knocked off top-seed Ridge, 1-0, in a battle of Skyland Conference Delaware Division co-champs.

Dunellen wins marathon in GMC Invitational semis, topping Perth Amboy 22-17 to gain Friday finals berth

Reporters – whether print or broadcast – hardly are at a loss for words.

But they might be after this one.

In the second Ray Cipperly GMC Invitational semifinal game – following second-seed Piscataway’s win Monday night – fifth-seed Dunellen beat top-seed Perth Amboy Tuesday night.

Hold on to your hats… 22-17.

That’s not a typo, folks.

It was a game that took four hours, starting at 6 pm and ending around 10:00 under the lights at Rudyk Park.

Perth Amboy (5-19) used eight pitchers, who walked 17 Destroyer hitters, and another intentionally. The Panthers worked out nine walks off three pitchers, and had two batters get hit. Perth Amboy plunked eight Dunellen hitters.

And the scoring. Each team put up a five-spot in the first, starting with Dunellen (18-6), which – believe it or not – never trailed in the game. They led 9-6 after three, Perth Amboy cut it to 9-8 in the third, but the Destroyers got fur in that next at bat, and led 13-9 after four. Again, each team scored five runs in the sixth to make it 18-15, and for good measure, Dunellen added four more insurance runs in the seventh, then allowed two Amboy runs in their final at bat to win by five.

With freshman starter David Torres going down to injury last week, Dunellen head coach Connor Lindsay knew his team would have to piece it together on the mound.

Starter Cole Mayer went 4 2/3 and allowed ten runs, but kept his team in it as the offense piled up runs, also helped by Mayer himself, who knocked in five runs: two on a double in the first, one on a single in the second, and two more – one each – on a pair of walks in the sixth and seventh innings.

Senior Jackson Portik – the team’s nine hitter – had two RBIs on an 0-for-1 day, working out five – count ’em – five walks.

Dunellen will now face second-seed Piscataway in Friday afternoon’s Ray Cipperly Invitational title game at Edison High School. first pitch is set for 2 pm, and Central Jersey Sports Radio will provide live coverage, with our usual audio stream at cjsportsradio.com, as well as a video stream on our You Tube channel.

Click below for postgame reaction from Dunellen head coach Connor Lindsay with Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Mike Pavlichko:

NJSIAA releases baseball brackets for state tournament; as expected, Old Bridge, Ridge, Middlesex, Immaculata gain top seeds

The NJSIAA has announced the brackets for the 2026 state high school baseball playoffs, with four Central Jersey Sports Radio-area teams gaining top-seeds.

GMC Tournament finalist Old Bridge will be the top seed in Central Jersey Group 4, while Ridge was slotted in at No. 1 in North Jersey, Section 2, Group 4. GMC White Division champion Middlesex will be the top-seed in Central Jersey Group 1, and Somerset County Tournament finalist Immaculata got the top-seed in Non-Public South A.

Overall, 35 teams from the area qualified, and of those, 19 will be playing their first game – whether in the first round of sectionals or the quarterfinals – at home, with 16 starting out on the road.

The first round for non-public public schools will be next Tuesday, May 26, the day after Memorial Day. Wednesday, May 27, will be the opening round for public schools.

Brackets become official – pending any appeals or discrepancies – at noon on Wednesday, May 20th.

Central Jersey Group 4

  • (16) East Brunswick at (1) Old Bridge
  • (9) South Brunswick at (8) Freehold Twp.
  • (12) Montgomery at (5) Monroe
  • (13) Sayreville at (4) Hightstown
  • (14) Princeton at (3) Hunterdon Central
  • (11) Marlboro at (6) Manalapan
  • (10) Hillsborough at (7) Jackson Twp.
  • (15) Franklin at (2) Edison

Central Jersey Group 2

  • (16) Holmdel at (1) Rumson-Fair Haven
  • (9) Spotswood at (8) Allentown
  • (12) Raritan at (5) Delran
  • (13) Ocean Twp. at (4) Wall
  • (14) Bordentown at (3) Johnson
  • (11) Robbinsville at (6) South River
  • (10) Manasquan at (7) Point Pleasant Boro
  • (15) Cinnaminson at (2) Governor Livingston

Central Jersey Group 1

  • (16) Highland Park at (1) Middlesex
  • (9) New Egypt at (8) South Hunterdon
  • (12) Manville at (5) Shore
  • (13) Somerset Tech at (4) Metuchen
  • (14) South Amboy at (3) Point Pleasant Beach
  • (11) Florence at (6) Dunellen
  • (10) Delaware Valley at (7) Keyport
  • (15) Henry Hudson at (2) Piscataway Magnet

North Jersey, Section 2, Group 4

  • (16) Barringer at (1) Ridge
  • (9) Columbia at (8) Phillipsburg
  • (12) Plainfield at (5) Bridgewater-Raritan
  • (13) Ferris at (4) JP Stevens
  • (14) Elizabeth at (3) Watchung Hills
  • (11) Union at (6) Westfield
  • (10) Woodbridge at (7) Scotch Plains-Fanwood
  • (15) Piscataway at (2) Bayonne

North Jersey, Section 2, Group 3

  • (16) Orange at (1) Chatham
  • (9) Middletown North at (8) Colonia
  • (12) Matawan at (5) North Plainfield
  • (13) JFK at (4) South Plainfield
  • (140 Rahway at (3) Cranford
  • (11) Summit at (6) Carteret
  • (10) Somerville at (7) Millburn
  • (15) Payne Tech at (2) North Hunterdon

North Jersey, Section 2, Group 2

  • (16) Hillside at (1) Caldwell
  • (9) Parsippany Hills at (8) Hackettstown
  • (12) Passaic Valley at (5) Rutherford
  • (13) Shabazz at (4) Madison
  • (14) Voorhees at (3) West Morris
  • (11) Bernards at (6) Lyndhurst
  • (10) Becton at (7) Mendham
  • (15) Parsippany at (2) West Essex

Non-Public North A

  • As expected, Timothy Christian has opted out.

Non-Public North B

  • (9) Hawthorne Christian at (8) Montclair-Kimberley, winner at (1) St. Mary-Rutherford
  • Bye to Quarterfinals: (5) Morristown-Beard at (4) Newark Academy
  • (10) Pope John at (7) Gill St. Bernard’s, winner at (2) Rutgers Prep
  • Bye to Quarterfinals: (6) Morris Catholic at (3) St. Thomas Aquinas

Non-Public South A

  • (9) Donovan Catholic at (8) Paul VI, winner at (1) Immaculata
  • (12) Camden Catholic at (5) Christian Brothers, winner at at (4) Union Catholic
  • (11) St. Joseph-Metuchen at (6) St. John Vianney, winner at (3) Red Bank Cathlic
  • (10) Pingry at (7) Notre Dame, winner at (2) St. Augustine