Tag: Skyland Conference

Girls’ Holiday Tournament Roundup: Five Top Ten teams win openers, including unbeaten Hillsborough, Bernards

Holiday tournament week picked up the pace Friday, with more than two dozen teams in action, including five from the Bellamy & Son Paving Top Ten.

All of them won, including Bernards, Hillsborough, Monroe, Somerville and Spotswood.

Here’s a recap of Friday’s action:

No. 10 Bernards remains unbeaten with win in Metuchen Bulldog Holiday Tourney…

Off to a 4-0 start for the second time in three seasons, the Mountaineers led virtually wire-to-wire in a 58-33 victory over Governor Livingston. Bernards started strong, with a 15-7 first quarter, and led by 15 at the half.

Junior Aletha Reynolds led all scorers with 29 points, including six three-pointers – both career highs – while also grabbing six rebounds and blocking three shots.

Bernards will play host Metuchen Friday at 2 pm in the championship game.

The Bulldogs (2-1) got by Brearley in their opener, 57-44, behind a game-high 21 points from Vicky Zaniecki, while Kaitlyn Connors added 19, five rebounds, six blocks and four steals.

The consolation game at noon will feature Brearley and Governor Livingston.

No. 7 Falcons advance in their Monroe Holiday Tournament…

Monroe had three players in double-figures as the Falcons improved to 3-1 with a 49-39 victory over South Plainfield. Though they fell behind early, 10-4 after one quarter, Monroe rallied with a big second quarter to take a 19-14 lead, and didn’t look back. Evangelina Francisco led the way with 16 points, while Sophia Rivas added 13. Stella Sweeney had a game-high 23 for South Plainfield, which drops to 1-2.

Monroe will play Westfield Monday at 2 pm in the Championship Game, as the Blue Devils dispatched of Freehold Township, 39-32. The consolation will be Monday at 10 am between Freehold (1-2) and South Plainfield.

No. 3 Hillsborough blows past Ewing at MCCC Showcase…

Using a 25-5 first quarter to get out of the gates hot, Hillsborough topped Ewing, 69-41, to improve to 5-0 on the season. Read the full recap and listen to postgame reaction here.

The Lady Raiders will be back Saturday at 2 pm at Mercer County Community College in West Windsor to take on George (PA).

No. 6 Somerville blows out South Hunterdon in WWPS Tournament

The Pioneers advanced to Saturday’s championship of the West Windsor-Plainsboro South Tournament with a 77-34 win over South Hunterdon.

Somerville (3-1) was led by Kaylee Lauber’s 27 points and eight rebounds, while Charlotte Taylor and Molly Bohen each added 11 in a game the Pioneers controlled from the get-go, leading 25-4 after one quarter. They held the Eagles to single digit scoring in the first three quarters. Ten different Somerville players scored in the game.

The ‘Ville will play Pennsbury (PA) in the title game at 4:15 Saturday afternoon. The hosts and South Hunterdon will precede that in the consolation matchup.

No. 9 Spotswood advances at Woodbridge Holiday Tournament…

The Chargers improved to 4-1 on the season with a 38-22 win over Colonia. Gabby Hill led Spotswood with 17 points, helping her team jump out to a 12-5 lead after one quarter, and 19-7 at the half. Lizzie Calandruccio added 12 for the Chargers, who will play Saturday at 1 pm against Old Bridge in the round-robin style tournament, which features GMC Red vs. White Division crossovers.

The Knights (1-2) were 46-38 winners over their hosts, Woodbridge, behind a game-high 17 from junior Adriana Misciagna, who added 18 rebounds to give her a double-double, her first of the season and sixth in her career.

Saturday’s schedule also includes Woodbridge (0-3) taking on Piscataway (2-0) at 10 am. Colonia will play Edison at 11:30 am.

The last of the three-day event is Monday, with Edison battling Old Bridge at 10 am, Spotswood playing Piscataway at 11:30, and Woodbridge taking on Colonia at 1.

Other area scores:

Blue Devil Holiday Tournament at Shore Regional:
Sayreville 51, Matawan 32

Cougar Classic at Montgomery:
Watchung Hills 49, Bridgewater-Raritan 43
Belvidere 40, Montgomery 38
Monday schedule:
Watchung Hills vs. Belvidere, 10 am
Montgomery vs. Bridgewater-Raritan, 4 pm

Crusader Classic at Bound Brook:
Bound Brook 57, Columbia 41
Union Catholic 87, Timothy Christian 54
Saturday schedule:
Timothy Christian vs. Columbia, 1 pm
Bound Brook vs. Union Catholic, TBA

MCMS Holiday Tournament:
New Brunswick 37, East Brunswick Magnet 14


Middlesex/Shore Holiday Tournament at Highlands:
South Amboy 29, Henry Hudson 24

Millburn Holiday Tournament:
Snyder 56, Millburn 46
Morristown-Beard 50, JFK 34

Rico Parenti Showcase:
Plainfield 48, Immaculata 45

Ridge Holiday Basketball Tournament:
Randolph 53, Ridge 35
South Brunswick 47, North Hunterdon 30
Saturday schedule:
Championship: South Brunswick vs. Randolph, 11:30 am
Consolation: Ridge vs. North Hunterdon, 10 am

Robbinsville Winter Classic:
Allentown 44, Timber Creek 36
Robbinsville 47, North Brunswick 42

Roselle Park Tournament:
Championship: Roselle Park 61, Carteret 51
Consolation: Perth Amboy 65, Keyport 29

Other games:
Keansburg 49, South River 10

Boys’ Holiday Tournament Roundup: Middlesex rallies to take Holiday Hoopsfest, No. 5 Ridge advances to third straight Whitey Dukiet final, No. 1 Colonia takes first loss of season

It was Day Two of the holiday tournaments across New Jersey, and dozens of boys’ basketball teams were in action in and out of the area.

Here’s a closer look at Friday’s action:

Middlesex wins Holiday Hoopfest at Roselle Park…

The Blue Jays improved to 4-1 as they took home the trophy from the Roselle Park Holiday Hoopfest with a 53-51 win over Piscataway Magnet.

It wasn’t an easy one, as Middlesex (4-1) had to rally from a 33-24 halftime deficit after the Raiders (3-2) were in control through the first 16 minutes. But they did so with a big third quarter that saw them take a 47-45 lead. And the teams played an even fourth-quarter with the Blue Jays hanging.

Owen Reynolds led all scorers with 20 points for Middlesex – including three three-pointers, while Dom Parenti added a dozen.

Keyport beat host Roselle Park in the consolation game, 61-55.

Click below to hear Middlesex head coach Jared Goldstein talk about the win with Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Mike Pavlichko:

Ridge tops Morris Knolls in Whitey Dukiet All-American Classic opener…

For a third straight year, Ridge will be in the finals of the Whitey Dukiet Classic up at Livingston High School, after the No. 5 Red Devils dispatched of Morris Knolls handily Friday, 68-30.

It was their second straight blowout win, following a 52-20 win over Summit at home Monday afternoon. Off to a 5-0 start – their best in almost a decade – Ridge is allowing just over 37 points a game through five games.

Senior Luke Kreitz led Ridge in scoring for a third straight game, putting up 17 points – including three treys – along with six rebounds. Quinn Dashefsky added 12 points, six boards, five assists and five steals in the win.

The Red Devils now will play Livingston (3-0) for the title Saturday afternoon at 3 pm. Pingry and Morris Knolls will play in the consolation game at 1 pm, after the Big Blue fell to host Livingston, 57-41, to drop to 1-3 on the season.

Joe Silver Holiday Tournament at Hillside

Piscataway improved to 3-1 with a win in its opener of the Joe Silver Holiday Tournament at Hillside, beating College Achieve Asbury Park’s regional team, 86-59.

Two Chiefs logged double-doubles, including game-high scorer Vaughn Turner, who finished with 19 points and 11 rebounds, while Donald Nwaigwe added 14 points and ten boards, while also grabbing four steals.

Piscataway will face Orange (2-2) Friday at 11:30 am in the semifinals, with Marion P. Thomas – which beat Great Oaks Charterm 63-13 – playing Hillside at 1:00. The winners of those two games play in Monday’s 2 pm championship game. The consolation game will be at noon.

Colonia falls in opener at LeGrand Holiday Jubilee

No. 1 Colonia suffered its first loss of the season, falling on Day One of its own round-robin, three-day LeGrand Holiday Jubilee, 53-47 to Westfield.

Aiden Derkack led all scorers with 26 points, but the rest of the team only managed 21, with just three other players getting in the scoring column.

The Patriots led 11-8 after one, but trailed at the break 19-17 before the Blue Devils doubled up the Pats in the third quarter en route to a 13-point lead they would not relinquish.

In the opener, Scotch Plains-Fanwood beat Franklin 79-64.

Saturday’s action features Westfield and Franklin in the 11 am opener, while Colonia and Scotch Plains-Fanwood tip off at 1 pm.

Other area scores:

Albert E. Martin Buc Classic Holiday Tournament at Red Bank:
Hightstown 60, East Brunswick 56
Ranney 75, Old Bridge 61
Freehold 57, Marlboro 48
Red Bank 70, Long Branch 37
Friday schedule involving CJSR-area teams:
East Brunswick vs. Long Branch, 12:30 pm
Old Bridge vs. Marlboro, 2 pm

Anthony J. Cotoia Tournament at South Plainfield:
South Plainfield 63, McNair 53
Edison 63, JFK 55
Championship: South Plainfield vs. Edison, 3 pm Saturday
Consolation: JFK vs. McNair, 1 pm Saturday

Battle at the Bomb Shelter at Sayreville:
No. 8 Sayreville 61, Tottenville (NY) 42
Union 52, New Brunswick 17
Championship: Sayreville vs. Union, 1 pm Monday
Consolation: New Brunswick vs. Tottenville (NY), 11:30 am Monday

Cougar Holiday Classic at Montgomery:
Bridgewater-Raritan 61, North Hunterdon 44
No. 3 Montgomery 68, Princeton 35
Monday Schedule:
North Hunterdon vs. Princeton, noon
Montgomery vs. Bridgewater-Raritan, 2 pm

Falcon Holiday Tournament at Monroe:
Monroe 45, South Brunswick 35
Matawan 54, No. 10 Timothy Christian 41
Championship: Monroe vs. Matawan, 4 pm Monday
Consolation: South Brunswick vs. Timothy Christian, noon Monday

Middlesex/Shore Tournament at Highlands:
South River 77, Keansburg 54
Henry Hudson 61, South Amboy 34
Saturday schedule:
South River vs. Henry Hudson, 11:30 am
Keansburg vs. South Amboy, TBA

North Warren Holiday Extravaganza:
Central Jersey College Charter 52, Perth Amboy Magnet 45

Oratory Holiday Tournament at Oratory Prep:
No. 7 Hillsborough 57, Morristown-Beard 27
Oratory Prep 68, Newark Academy 38
Championship: Hillsborough vs. Oratory Prep, 6pm Saturday
Consolation: Newark Academy vs. Morristown-Beard, 1 pm Saturday

Paramus Catholic Holiday Tournament:
No. 6 Gill St. Bernard’s 72, Paramus Catholic 69

Pete Tierney Memorial Holiday Tournament at Summit:
Watchung Hills 70, Millburn 62
Summit 59, Governor Livingston 50
Championship: Watchung Hills vs. Summit, 6:45 pm Saturday
Consolation: Millburn vs. Governor Livingston, 3:45 pm Saturday

Robbinsville Winter Classic:
Deptford 45, North Brunswick 41
Robbinsville 61, Bordentown 58
Championship: Robbinsville vs. Deptford, 11 am Saturday

West Windsor-Plainsboro Holiday Tournament:
Somerville 48, West Windsor-Plainsboro South 30
Spotswood 69, South Hunterdon 40

Other Games:
Parsippany Hills 67, Somerset Tech 28
Pioneer Academy 97, East Brunswick Magnet 34
No. 4 St. Thomas Aquinas 69, Port Richmond (NY) 27

No. 3 Hillsborough girls use stifling defense, transition play to blow past Ewing, 69-41

The Hillsborough girls’ basketball team allowed Ewing just two field goals and a made free throw in the entire first quarter Saturday afternoon to build a 25-5 lead after eight minutes of play, en route to a 69-41 win in their MCCC Showcase game at Mercer County College in West Windsor.

They got it done with stifling defense, forcing the Blue Devils into bad passes, and picking off others, then scoring back down the other end. But ‘Boro also worked it well in the half-court offense, getting good looks down low, and getting a pair of first-half threes from senior Reghan Bice.

The Lady Raiders – who won their first-ever state sectional title in 2024 – have continued their strong play this season. At 5-0, it’s their best streak to start a season since 2006-07, when they went 19-6, following two straight Somerset County Tournament titles in 2006 and 2005.

Senior Francesca Schiro led Hillsborough with 15 points, while fellow senior Mya Loniewski had 13. Sophomore Isabella Ruh added ten points.

Eight different players scored for the Raider, who emptied the bench at the start of the fourth quarter with the game well in hand.

Hillsborough senior Francesca Schiro goes up for a basket against Ewing in the MCCC Showcase at Mercer Community College in West Windsor on December 27, 2024. (Photo: Mike Pavlichko)

Hillsborough will be back at the MCCC Showcase at 2 pm Saturday, taking on George (PA), which lost to Thrive Academy in Friday afternoon action.

Click below for postgame reaction from Hillsborough’s win over Ewing, presented by Sportsplex at Metuchen:

Holiday hoops tournaments are an annual tradition, but who are they named after?

Mike Shello.

Anthony J. Cotoia.

Clem Santy.

The names have become familiar to many over the years for the Holiday Tournaments held the week between Christmas and New Year’s, a bridge from the first week or two of the season to January first, when things really start to heat up for the month or so sprint to the county tournament seeding meetings.

But, to paraphrase Jerry Seinfeld, “Who are these people?”

Everyone knows who Eric LeGrand is, the namesake of Colonia’s holiday tournament, the LeGrand Holiday Jubilee. The former Rutgers standout was an excellent student-athlete for the Patriots, and has been well-known for his philanthropy with the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, his Walk to Believe Fundraiser, and various other organizations, in addition to being an analyst on Scarlet Knight football radio broadcasts.

The event is a four-team, three-day round robin showcase. Friday features Scotch Plains-Fanwood taking on Franklin at 11 am, with Westfield and homestanding Colonia tipping at 1. Saturday has the same game times, with Franklin and Westfield first, then the Patriots and Raiders. Everything wraps Monday with Scotch Plains-Fanwood and the Blue Devils at 11 am, then the Warriors and Colonia at 1.

Here’s a look at some of the other area tournaments named after folks you might not know about if you were born after a certain year.

Anthony J. Cotoia Tournament at South Plainfield

Every year since 2009 – except 2020, the COVID year – this event has been held at South Plainfield, who was the first basketball coach in the history of the school, and piloted the Tigers to their first and only state title in school history, as they beat Summit 67-54 for the 1964 Group 3 championship. (They beat Piscataway to win the Central Jersey Group 3 title.)

Former South Plainfield coach and Athletic Director Anthony J. Cotoia (Source: obituary)

Cotoia actually was born in Italy, and he came to South Plainfield via a circuitous route. His family came over from Panni in 1938, and they settled in New Canaan, CT, where he attended high school, and was president of his class, in addition to starring on the gridiron and the hardwood.

He served in Korea in the U.S. Army, and when he returned, went to the University of Delaware on the G.I. Bill. With a master in education and a minor in history, he earned a bachelor’s and a master’s degree, and spent two years in Vineland schools before taking a teaching position in South Plainfield in 1955.

According to his obituary, few athletic programs were available at South Plainfield High when he arrived. It reads: “After he was hired as the high school’s first basketball coach, he drove through town trying to get a sense of how popular the game was. To his dismay, he saw only one basketball hoop, behind Delayo’s Market. Even worse, the boys playing there that day went to parochial school.”

Two years after beginning the program from scratch – including youth leagues in town – the Tigers went undefeated in 1959. They won three sectional championships, and he was 177-63 in his time coaching the Tigers.

He later became the South Plainfield Athletic Director, expanded sports offerings – he was instrumental in getting the football field and athletic complex at Frank Jost Field built – and brought girls’ sports on more of a par with the boys’. He was also a vice principal at the high school and middle school, retiring as principal there in 1992 after 37 years in the district.

He also passed away in 2009, at the age of 81.

Mike Shello Holiday Tournament at Dunellen (Boys)

Former Dunellen coach and Athletic Director Mike Shello. (Source: obituary)

Played at the Faber School in Dunellen, this event honors Shello, who was the coach of the Destroyers in the 1960s. In ’68, he helped lead Dunellen to the Central Jersey Group 2 championship.

He was born in Bound Brook, and attended high school there, graduating in 1935 before moving on to West Chester University in Pennsylavnia. He also attended Penn State and got his master’s at Columbia.

His time at Dunellen was split by World War II. He taught in Lititz, PA from 1939 to for before taking a job at Dunellen in 1940. But he went into the service in January of 1942 – and was a 2nd Lieutenant in the Army for five year – returning to coach football and basketball from 1946 until he retired in 1983. He was also a football official for many years.

His son, Rich, was the athletic director at Ridge from 1998 until his retirement at the end of the 2022-23 year, overseeing and helping expand sports programs as the school doubled in size under his tenure.

Clem Santy Holiday Tournament at Dunellen (girls)

Clement J. Santonastaso, known to friends and the rest of Dunellen as “Clem Santy.” (Source: obituary)

This one opened Thursday, with Middlesex topping Manville and Highland Park getting by Dunellen. The last two games are Saturday, with the consolation at 11 am featuring the Destroyers and Mustangs. The Blue Jays and Owls face off at 1 for the championship.

Clement J. Santonastaso left high school to serve in the Navy during World War II. When he came back, he earned his diploma, then worked two jobs for many years, according to his obituary. One was in factory, the other was as Dunellen’s part-time recreation director. Eventually, that position became a fill-time gig, and “Clem” coached many generations of Dunellen athletes.

He passed away in 2017 at the age of 90. A local florist, when he passed, posted a baseball-themed flower arrangement on its Facebook page, calling him the “best recreation director Dunellen ever had.”

Whitey Dukiet All-American Holiday Classic at Livingston

Livingston High School is home to the Whitey Dukiet Classic, which features four teams at various levels – not just varsity – and once again will count Ridge among its participants. Last year, the Red Devils picked up a huge win their over St. Joseph-Metuchen on the second day of the event. This year, they get Morris Knolls, and the host Lancers.

According to a story last year in the West Wessex Tribune of Livingston, Bob “Whitey” Dukiet played at Livingston and as a senior, in 1966, was a Parade All-American and All-State pick. He was the school’s first thousand-point scorer in an era well before the three-point line. He went to Boston College, but suffered a career-ending injury there before his junior year, and went into coaching after graduating. He was an assistant at Montclair State, Dartmouth and Princeton.

Whitey Dukiet of Livingston – wearing No. 44, fifth from the right – in an undated yearbook photo.

It was with the Tigers that he learned the “Princeton Offense” from the legendary Pete Carril, and it served him well as we moved on to become the head coach at St. Peter’s College from 1979 through 1986. He later coached at Marquette, and Gannon University, a small Catholic school in Erie, Pennsylvania.

Dukiet passed away in 2009 at the age of 61.

Butch Kowal Classic at Rahway

John Butch Kowal is probably one of the few people who never coached at or ran the athletic department in their local high school, but has a tournament named after them anyway.

He graduated from Rahway High School in 1940, then founded Butch Kowal’s Tavern in the city a decade later, using the money from selling off the family’s meat marker. Kowal owned it right up until his passing in 2001 at age 78; the tavern remains open today.

He used the business to help others, and that continues to this day as well. Still in existence is the Butch Kowal Association, which he founded 64 years ago – in 1960 – which sponsors and funds local athletic teams and give gifts to needy families around Christmastime.

He later formed the Butch Kowal Scholarship Fund in 1993 for Rahway students to attend college.

In his obituary, the AD at the time, Tom Lewis, said of Kowal, “He was dynamic. You were entertained when you were with him. He wasn’t the Pope. He made mistakes but he had a soft heart and he was a genuine giver.

Who’s hot, who’s making moves in girls’ basketball as we head into holiday tourneys

The meat of high school basketball season is still in front of us.

A few teams took the opportunity from the NJSIAA to start early, and holiday tournaments will kick into gear later this week, after Christmas. Once January rolls around, it’s a sprint to county tournament seeding, then the season reaches a fever pitch with the GMC and the Somerset County tournaments, then the state playoffs.

But so far, so good, for a number of area teams. Today, we take a look at who’s hot as the weather gets colder.

Rutgers Prep no rebuilding, just reloading…

If you looked at the Argonauts when their season ended last year – with a loss in the Group B finals to Morris Catholic – you’d be forgiven if you thought this was going to be a bit of a rebuilding year in 2024-25 for Mary Klinger. After all, she’d be losing all-world guard Mikayla Blakes, along with three-point specialist Chloe Escanillas, and defensive stalwart Zahra Alexander to graduation. Later, she’d learn sophomore Gigi Battle would be moving to Florida with her family.

Down four starters, what’s a coach to do?

Well, Ava LaMonica – the only returning starter – is back as a junior, and playing he heart out, as always.

Natalia Valdez – seldom used last year except when a game was out of hand – has shown shooting prowess, scoring 13 against Gill St. Bernard’s Tuesday night, including three treys, all in the second half.

Then there are the newcomers. Junior Ava Firth is in from Manasquan, and another junior, Sophia Georgiades, is in from Ridge. She had eleven and three treys against Gill, and was named the MVP in their Shore Games She Got Game Classic win over Archbishop Molloy (NY) back on Saturday.

The Argonauts are just reloading. They may still be trying to find their identity. They didn’t press as much as they usually do, turning teams over repeatedly to go on big runs to bury teams early. That will come, but so far, they have answered the bell, off to a 4-0 start.

And so, Prep remains the No. 1 team in the Bellamy & Son Paving Top Ten, having held the position now for an astounding 40 straight weeks, the only CJSR-area team to hold that spot since our debut season in 2021.

Boro is back; Raiders still undefeated…

Last year was a historic one for the Hillsborough girls’ basketball team. They beat Elizabeth in March to win the school’s first ever sectional title in the sport, and brought back just about everyone, save for two seniors who combined to score just 22 points.

Two of them made even more history in the first week of the season. First, Francesca Schiro set the all-time Hillsborough girls’ scoring record in a 69-23 win over Linden last Saturday afternoon, topping Jinny Strawderman’s mark of 1,455 set in 1986. She now has 1,519, and could be within reach of 2,000 before things are all said and done. She averaged 20.6 points per game last year, but is scoring at a 22.3 clip through four games this year.

Then, back on Saturday, Mya Loniewski cracked the 1,000-point mark with a season-high 21-point effort in a 66-61 home win against Madison. She did it on a fourth-quarter free throw with the game well in hand.

And the Lady Raiders show no sign of slowing down any time soon.

Piscataway’s best start in years…

It’s early yet, but Piscataway is off to its first 2-0 start since they won the Greater Middlesex Conference Tournament in 2018. That year, they finished 22-5 and won their first eight games with a balanced scoring attack led by LaNiya Miller, Ariel Jenkins, Yamirah Bennett and Saniya Myers.

This year’s team has beaten two Red Division opponents already. The Lady Chiefs opened Thursday with a 61-50 win at Colonia, then were 57-43 home winners over Old Bridge on Saturday.

First-year head coach Brian Truskan’s squad is led by Sarae Croley-Battle, who has poured in 43 points in just two contests. Caelyn Cook is averaging 11 points per game.

Piscataway hopes to keep things going against Edison (3-1) in their opener in the Woodbridge holiday tournament, where they’ll play the Barrons on the second day of the event.

One of these days…

It’s been a decade – going back to 2014 – since Gill St. Bernard’s has beaten Rutgers Prep. With the Argonauts having lost four of five starters, and Gill bringing four back, the opener might have been the best chance for the Knights to catch them.

Not so much, as talked about above, but then again, last year’s regular season matchups went pretty much the same way before Gill give Prep quite the fight in the Somerset County Tournament final, even though they wound up losing by three.

Take that game Tuesday night out of the equation, and Gill would be 3-0. Two of those wins have come against out-of-state competition: a 58-31 win over Albertus Magnus (NY) in their opener on December 14th, and a 75-58 win over Virginia Academy (VA) at the Shore Games of the She Got Game Classic at St. John Vianney in Holmdel.

They also have a 69-17 Skyland Conference win over Phillipsburg.

The bottom line here: Gill St. Bernard’s is still very, very good. And don’t count them out against Prep later this year either. They have one more scheduled meeting, up in Peacpack-Gladstone on January 16th, which just so happens to come a week-and-a-half before the Somerset County Tournament seeding meeting.

Bernards battles a couple out…

The Mountaineers are 3-0 and debuted in the Week 2 Bellamy & Son Paving Top Ten as they swept their opening week. The first two were close ones: a 47-39 win over Verona, in which they led by 13 at the half and won by eight, as well as a 42-38 win over a well-coached Bound Brook team. Both the Hillbillies and Crusaders are 2-1, and those will be good wins come state tournament time.

Junior Aletha Reynolds is averaging 17.3 points per game to lead the team, and she’s also tops in rebounds with 12 per game through the first week of the season.

At 15-8 two seasons ago, and 14-14 last year, head coach Brett Bisconti might have a nice rebound year on his hands.

Undefeated Governor Livingston (2-0) awaits Friday at 12 in the first round of the Metuchen Bulldog Holiday Tournament.

The Undefeated…

Here are the undefeated girls’ basketball teams in the Greater Middlesex and Skyland Conferences:

  • Hillsborough (4-0)
  • Rutgers Prep (4-0)
  • Calvary Christian (3-0)
  • Bernards (3-0)
  • Pingry (3-0)
  • Carteret (2-0)
  • North Brunswick (2-0)
  • Piscataway (2-0)
  • Timothy Christian (2-0)
  • Woodbridge Magnet (2-0)

INSTANT REPLAY – Boys’ Basketball: No. 3 Montgomery 61, No. 5 St. Joseph-Met. 47

Junior point guard Ethan Lin set a second career high in scoring in four games this season with 27 points as No. 3 Montgomery beat No. 5 St. Joseph-Metuchen, 61-47, Saturday night in the nightcap of the Friends of South Amboy Charity Basketball Tournament.

Click below to listen to the full game broadcast as heard on December 21, 2024 from South Amboy High School on Central Jersey Sports Radio, with Mike Pavlichko and Chris Tsakonas on the call:

Back to the future: St. Joseph-Metuchen opens season of the future with a nod to its past

By any measure, the most successful run for the St. Joseph-Metuchen boys’ basketball program was the decade of the 2010s.

During that stretch, the Falcons won nine of ten Greater Middlesex Conference Tournaments, and made three straight Tournament of Champions, winning the event in 2014 led by the trio of Karl-Anthony Towns, Marques Townes, and Wade Baldwin.

Karl’s parents were at just about every game, even while his father was the coach at Piscataway Tech (now Piscataway Magnet).

Now? K-A-T is in the NBA, traded this season from Minnesota to the Knicks, and Coach Towns has taken over to lead the St. Joseph basketball program, along with assistant coach John Nessler.

While St. Joseph was the top-seed in last year’s GMC Tournament, they failed to reach the finals, falling by five to St. Thomas Aquinas in the semis. And losing top players like Jeremy Clayville – who averaged over 20 points a game last year and is scoring just over nine as a freshman at St. Francis – and Own Griffin will be a challenge.

Click below to hear St. Joseph Assistant John Nessler talk about the Falcons and Saturday night’s matchup with Montgomery:

Montgomery looks to keep rebound going after tough loss in opener with trip to South Amboy

When Montgomery tipped off the season against Hudson Catholic last Saturday, the Cougars were coming off of a season that ended with a Central Group 4 title, a run to the Somerset County Tournament final, and a 25-4 overall record.

After narrowly falling 48-44 in that season opener at the New Jersey Basketball Coaches’ Tip-off Showcase last Saturday, No. 3 Montgomery has delivered in the clutch with back-to-back single-digit wins over Pingry and Immaculata.

Tonight, the Cougars (2-1) have a chance to make it a three-game winning streak on a neutral site, as they take on St. Joseph-Metuchen in the nightcap of the 12th annual Friends of South Amboy Charity Basketball Tournament. The game tips at 8 pm, and you can hear it live on Central Jersey Sports Radio, with Mike Pavlichko and Chris Tsakonas on the call. Click here to listen.

While the high-scoring senior duo of Steve Donahue and Jack Fromelt have graduated from last year’s team, Montgomery returns two key players in junior Ethan Lin and senior Bohdan Bieketov.

Lin – who missed much of the late season, the SCT and state tournament last year with a broken ankle he suffered in a game against Hillsborough – has been the Cougars’ primary scoring option, most recently dropping 24 against Immaculata. 

Another key player for Montgomery through the first week of the season has been Christian Hill, who has developed into the Cougars’ third-leading scorer with just over eight points per game to help replace the lost production from Donahue and Fromelt.

Click below to hear Montgomery boys’ basketball head coach Kris Grundy preview tonight’s game with Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Chris Tsakonas:

As Somerset County’s top two girls’ teams get set to square off, Rutgers Prep and Gill St. Bernard’s recent alums are flying high at the next level

Two of the biggest ways of measuring success of any high school sports program are by wins and championship, and placing your student-athletes in the best college program they can find for themselves.

When the top-ranked Rutgers Prep girls’ basketball team entertains No. 2 Gill St. Bernard’s Tuesday night in the Knights’ season opener, and the Argos’ home opener, it will be a meeting of two programs who have several alums on the national scene in women’s college basketball.

Click here to listen to Tuesday’s game at 6 pm live on Central Jersey Sports Radio.

The biggest from Gill is Caileigh Walsh, who originally hails from Sparta in Sussex County. She’s averaging 9.7 points and 3.7 rebounds per game for the 5-4 Wildcats of the Big Ten.

Walsh is also a two-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree. In high school, she scored 1,312 points at Gill St. Bernard’s, but was limited to just a dozen games her senior year, the COVID-shortened season.

Mikayla Blakes, meanwhile, is flourishing at Vanderbilt, having graduated from Rutgers Prep just last year. She’s second on the team in scoring at 20.4 points per game, and is second on the Commodores with 29 steals.

The 2024 McDonald’s All-American has been named Rookie of the Week in the SEC three times already this season, and it’s not even the New Year, her most recent accolade coming on December 10th.

Rutgers Prep senior Mikayla Blakes follows through on a jump shot in the second half of the Non-Public Group B title game against Morris Catholic at Rutgers on March 8, 2024. (Photo: Dharen Faraon)

But they’re not the only ones having success at the next level.

Two other Prep starters who graduated after last season are making an impact in college, as well. Zahra Alexander is at NYU, currently the top-ranked team in the nation in Division 3. She’s averaging 8.5 minutes per game and 3.5 points, but she’s also got a former teammate with her who’s lighting it up: Belle Pellecchia is second on the team in scoring at 15.4 a contest. She’s been starting since she was a freshman, and has started in 84 of 86 games she’s played.

Belle Pellecchia – a Rutgers Prep alum – is the second leading scorer at NYU. (Source: NYU Athletics website)

And Chloe Escanillas, who was a three-point sharpshooter for the Argonauts the past several years, also is getting her feet wet at Marist, where she’s played in four of their first nine games, averaging 5.4 minutes and 1.5 points per game. She’s taken eight shots, all from behind the arc, and has hit two of them.

While Rutgers Prep lost four starters from last year’s squad, Gill has a ton back when they meet the Argonauts on Easton Avenue Tuesday evening. But they’ll be in a similar boat next year, as seniors Tessa Lozner, Sidney Quinn, Maya Abramson and Gandy Malou-Mamel will be graduating and moving on to the next level.

Abramson is headed next to Stevens Institute of Technology, where she’ll join Rutgers Prep alum Leyla Castro (’22), who’s averaging 4.9 points a game, and is scoring over 16 per this season, her junior year.

Quinn is going to Navy, Lozner to Johns Hopkins, and Malou-Mamel will be headed to UConn to play for Geno Auriemma. All made it official on the November signing day.

Brooke Baisley – a thousand-point scorer for the Knights – graduated last year, and has played in two games at Boston University this season.

A number of others for both sides also are seeing significant time in college. Gill St. Bernard’s alum Ella Fajardo is scoring just under six points a game and averaging 22 minutes per contest at Iona, while Prep’s Christina Dalce – who started her collegiate career at Villanova – is now in the Big Ten at Maryland. The Terps (10-0) are ranked No. 8 in the nation, and Dalce is averaging 9.8 points and 8.2 rebounds a game.

And don’t forget about Antonia Bates, who’s down the road at Rutgers. She played at Prep only during the 2021-22 season, having transferred in from Pennsylvania for her senior year before joining the Scarlet Knights.

New NJSIAA classifications move several GMC, Somerset schools to new sections in ’24-’25

The new NJSIAA classifications are out for the 2024-25 and 2025-26 school years for high school basketball, and there are a number of Central Jersey Sports Radio coverage area teams affected.

In all, 13 boys’ teams and ten girls’ teams will find new homes for the next two years. Six boys’ squads will be in a new group, while only two girls’ teams will change groups.

Seven of the teams are mirrored on the boys’ and girls’ side.

Edison, Franklin and Hillsborough all stay within Group 4, but move from North 2 to Central. And Carteret, JFK, Somerville and South Plainfield all stay in Group 3, but move from Central to North 2.

After that, there are some differences.

The Bound Brook, East Brunswick Magnet, Middlesex and Piscataway Magnet boys’ teams will move from Central Jersey Group 2 to Group 1. That would put them in the section dominated last year by College Achieve Asbury Park, except the school pulled out of the NJSIAA back in May, as reported by NJ Advance Media, and opted not to renew its membership. They will not be eligible to participate in the state tournament, and head coach Dave Boff told NJ Advance they will play an independent schedule.

On the non-public boys’ side, Rutgers Prep moves from South A to South B, with smaller schools, while St. Thomas Aquinas – led by first-year head coach Austin Whitehurst – will move from North B to South A with the bigger schools.

On the girls’ side, only Bound Brook is making the move down to Central 1 from Central 2, while East Brunswick Magnet, Middlesex and Piscataway Magnet will stay put, unlike the boys.

In the non-publics, the Pingry girls will move from South A to North B with the smaller schools, while Wardlaw-Hartridge stays in Group B, but moves from North to South.