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The 2017-18 Season in Review

LINKS TO ALL THE POSTSEASON COVERAGE All the numbers have been pretty well crunched and the lists made.  The writing takes a while. I can&...

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Season in Review - Coaching Performances

This has a lot of caveats.  Maybe big time sports can have a reasonable "Coach of the Year" award, with media in the locker rooms and interviewing dozens and dozens of coaches and players to really get a sense of what a particular coach or manager does to make a difference.  Maybe.  But then they give the award to whoever overachieves the perceived talent judgement they made in the preseason.

I'm not going to do that, and I'm not going to pick a coach of the year. I'm also positive that there are a dozen or more coaches out there who did an outstanding job but flew under my radar for one reason or another. What I am going to do is a short list of coaches who, from the perspective of an outsider, look like they did a remarkable job.  I also may veer into some combination of "best coaching job" and "best overall story". I may be totally wrong here- with very few exceptions, I'm not privy to any inside information nor have I ever spoken to most of these folks. Hell, there's a 50/50 chance I have at least one name wrong here, since I'm going by public information. But somebody on these teams is doing something right.

Obviously, Jeff Gelnaw of Toms River North and Doug Spishock of East Brunswick are doing a huge number of things right; managing that many talented bowlers has got to be difficult, as well as meeting the huge expectations that come from being the favorite all season. If there was a coach of the year award, I wouldn't argue against either one of them. I just wanted to look beyond the #1 teams

BOYS TEAMS

Robert Wetzel, Howell
The Boys Shore-Central-B is the toughest division in New Jersey High School bowling.  Period.  I don't mean it's got the most talent, though it does have plenty.  What I mean is that there are six teams, they're all good, and the top five are incredibly evenly matched.  It's the only league that has no off days: literally, no byes, and figuratively, every opponent can beat any other.  Throw in relatively tough scoring conditions (don't believe me?  Look at the SCB teams, boys and girls and individuals, and see what they did in the postseason compared to their averages) and that can be draining.  Howell lost the league title by one point, in a devastating last day sweep. And then they went out and destroyed the central sectional, shooting 3238 to finish second to East Brunswick and were great at states, finishing 3rd. That kind of shake-it-off ability doesn't happen by accident.

Cherie Pizzano, Linden
I think I've mentioned this team's youth once or twice. Sometimes getting a young team to buy into the fact that they're good enough to challenge for championships NOW can seem easy because they don't know any better than to believe you; sometimes it's difficult.  I don't know exactly how Coach Pizzano pulled it off this year, but to lose one of the best bowlers in the state (Michelle Dekowski) to graduation, have your top three be two sophomores and a freshman, and win the regular season title, the county tournament, and a sectional title... Something was done well, I'm sure of that.

Judy Lucia, Pascack Valley
It can't be easy to coach in a 4-man league if your team has state aspirations.  If you have exactly four bowlers, you can't develop a #5 for tournament season without sitting a very good bowler.  If you have more than four, you can't put your best lineup out there very often. Pascack Valley started the season with a brilliant top four, and got Jake Murad plenty of reps to be their #5 for sectionals.  But then they lost one of those four to injury. And then they qualified for states anyway, and shot a huge 3023 when they got there. Impressive stuff.

Joe Schuld, St. Rose
St. Rose has been building a powerhouse program as this group of seniors went through the system.  Last year didn't end with any titles, but the whole team was coming back and 2018 looked to be the year.  Then their best bowler transferred.  They didn't change their goals one single bit.  Vinny Mastria joined the lineup and grew, quite quickly, into a very good bowler, and helped them go all the way to a state title.  Along the way, St. Rose continued its practice of giving substantial opportunities to JV bowlers, despite the effect on team average.  I really respect that.

Chad Gasiorek, Sussex Tech
Maybe there is some sort of secret formula, and Gasiorek has found it.  For three years in a row, he's had a team just get steadily better all season, put up fantastic tournament performances, and then devastate the field at sectionals and win a state title. They even did it this year after graduating three starters from last year's team, including Tim Zayac and his 213-average.  Add in an exceptionally devoted and loud group of supporters, and this program is just an absolute model.

Danielle Scheuermann, Union
I may be totally off-base here.  Actually, I hope I am.  But I'm guessing that the issues a coach has to deal with on a truly co-ed team may be a little different than a single-sex team. Boys and girls act differently in mixed groups than separately, in my experience.  Anyway, whether I'm right in my assumptions or not, this co-ed team was dynamite, tossing a pair of 3000s in the postseason behind their extremely talented (female) anchor.

John Caillie, West Milford
Andrew Finke is West Milford's best bowler, but he's also a basketball player, so he's not always available.  On top of that, and the usual 4-bowler issues I mentioned earlier, WM was integrating two new freshmen, one being the sister of the star, figuring out how to bring along several other talented players into matches, compete with Fair Lawn and Wayne Hills in the toughest division in the Big North. Seems like a lot of moving parts. So getting everyone together to finish 2nd at Irwin, win the FDU Team Event, win Passaic County, and win sectionals with a 3021 set?  That's a job well done.

Amanda Small, Woodbridge
2017 did not end the way the Barrons had hoped, and they lost a superstar to graduation in Kyle Bilawsky.  The coach had to get them to focus on each match and tournament all season without looking ahead to the shot at redemption, and then make sure they were ready when the time came.  Along the way, she had to find the right combination of bowlers from the deepest roster in the state.  The fact that the TOC trophy sits (I imagine) in a Woodbridge trophy case tells you how successful she was.


GIRLS TEAMS


Hank Kuipers, Bergen Tech
The first thing I like about Bergen Tech, is that they want to bowl.  They scheduled eighteen regular season matches - along with Hackensack, that's the most in the conference. Didn't avoid the tough ones either, bowling against Holy Angels, Paramus Catholic and Wayne Valley (and winning those last two).  With only one senior bowling regularly, and no real superstar (top average is 156), they were nonetheless a true force this season, finishing second in North Group IV and going way over average with 2410 at states.  And they did that despite getting EIGHT different bowlers a chance to say they bowled in the state finals.  I love that stuff, and expect more from them in 2019.

Dave Thompson, Brick Memorial
This may be surprising, since Brick Memorial, for once, wasn't the dominant force in girls bowling. But the Mustangs have graduated six... SIX all-state bowlers in the last two years. A temporary dip may have been inevitable. There was no superstar freshman newcomer.  Lots of girls bowled well, but nobody had an earth-shattering improvement; Amanda Shelters was amazing, but we all knew that. For the first time in a while, they didn't have the talent edge in Group IV or in Shore South A.  They won the division anyway, beating Brick Township and #1 Toms River North. And they were within 7 pins of TRN for the state title going into the final game. It's relatively easy to win championships with 5 girls averaging 200, but this one took some doing.

Michael Yorke, Colts Neck
This is pretty much the same comment as the Howell boys, above. The Cougars competed all season in a nip-and-tuck battle with Freehold for the Shore-Central-B title, but came up just short. I know younger kids bounce back, and this is a very young team, but the fury with which they attacked the postseason was really wonderful.  A team that averages 157 should not generally be able to shoot 2758-2685-2748 in the postseason.  Part of that is bowling in more favorable conditions, but another big part is getting to the point where you start to believe that you're really that good.  They're really that good.

Eric Datis, Eastern
I shouldn't be, it's a prejudice, but I'm always a little surprised when teams outside Shore and GMC manage to stay near the top.  In 2017, Eastern finished the season ranked #15, averaged 161 and shot 2330 at Sectionals to finish 3rd.  They graduated two outstanding seniors in Anna Hileman and Kristina Scimone. Somehow in 2018 they were pretty much just as good?  I mean, the average was a bit lower and they're at #19, but they did better at sectionals and had a fantastic signature moment , finishing seventh at CJWC, ahead of five different teams that ended up ranked higher.  How on earth did that happen? I mean, the Vikings are good at seemingly every sport, so I shouldn't be surprised. Two new bowlers started to figure things out, two returning bowlers got better, one, Cloe Lowell, got a whole lot better, and Eastern is still right there.

Dave Angebranndt, Ewing
I really like the Ewing program and I rarely write much about them.  Since I've been covering the sport, they don't throw a lot of 600s or place high in major tournaments, or place bowlers on all-state lists. They're not in the GMC or Big North or Shore.  They just win.  A lot. I think I just have an affinity for these off-the-beaten-path programs that absolutely decimate their competition.. Ewing always seems to be good; somewhere between 'pretty good' and 'really, really good'.   It's a challenge to maintain that kind of continual excellence on an island. 2017 was a bit of a down year for them, "only" going 15-2 in matches. In 2018 they added a new freshman anchor, Jazmyn Willis and they're right back where they're supposed to be, going 16-0-1, taking 3rd at sectionals and averaging over 150 as a team without a single bowler over 160.

Jack Mahar, Lacey
Lacey has grown from a club team to a contender to a state power to the state championship over the last decade.  2018 has looked like the year to make a lot of noise for a while, with an outstanding senior class.  Managing the loss of a key player right before the season, her gradual reintegration late in the season, and making sure that the team always believed they could beat a loaded Group II field at both sectionals and states had to have been a challenge.  The trophy shows how well it was met.

Curtis Taylor, Pemberton
As I started to get into the issue of who's helped and who's hurt by the conditions they bowl in, Pemberton was offered as an example.  My knowledge of SWNJ bowling is lacking, I'll be the first to admit, so I really had no idea. I issued a challenge in the sectional preview for Pemberton to go out and prove they're better than their numbers.  And, not that it has anything to do with me at all - I doubt they bowlers even knew I wrote it - but they went out and did it, shooting 2344 on a 140 average to finish 3rd in South Group II. Bowling all season and winning matches (15-0-1) and knowing you have no realistic shot at states with Manchester and Lacey sitting there, to still go out and prove something like that... that's pretty cool, is what that it.  Well done.

Jennifer Feldman, Warren Hills
A tougher situation is difficult to imagine: the returning state champs lost three seniors to graduation including their all-state anchor, and their longtime, incredibly respected coach passed away in August. A former Warren Hills bowler herself, Feldman was elevated after one year as an assistant, put the pieces (two returning stars, two incoming freshmen and several improving JV bowlers) together, helped everybody heal, rebuilt the family, and then went ahead and won another state championship. You can't write a better story than that.


BOYS AND GIRLS TEAMS

Three teams had great stories on both sides, and the same coach running the show.


Brian Whitford, Freehold Township
The boys team survived the gauntlet of Shore-Central-B and emerged as champions.  That alone is a serious accomplishment. Then they went out and finished 4th at the Shore tournament, which is even more impressive.  Finally, a 2930 at states.  That's a great season.

On the girls side, things were even better, as the Patriots survived a very slow start and then proceeded to run down Colts Neck for the league title and put up ungodly postseason numbers.  I've never seen a team improve so much over the course of the season; they were legitimate threats to win a state title at Bowlero.  Also, they were a lot of fun to watch, with a tremendous, fun team atmosphere while still clearly wanting very badly to win. Super bright future for this program.

Jim Dalessio, Mahwah
I think I've repeated the legend of the Mahwah girls more than a few times, how they gave Warren Hills all they could handle before finishing 2nd at the FDU Challenge.  I don't know if I've ever mentioned that that happened on an off-day for the Thunderbirds; they only shot 2121 and they were missing a starter, but still muscled past two opponents and took the state champs to a fifth game. Real or imagined, it seemed to springboard them to a great postseason run, finishing second at sectionals and 4th at states, breaking 2400 both times.

But Dalessio's other team had a great run, too. Undefeated in conference play, they were significant favorites to advance to North Brunswick and they did, but once they got there, they outbowled three much higher-ranked teams to finish third in a very tough Group II final. If you rank every program by the state finish of each of their teams, Mahwah, unbelievably, comes in fourth. right behind Brick Memorial and Toms River South.  I know sometimes the boys and girls teams can feed off each other's success when they're doing well, and I have to believe that that happened here. And I don't think it was luck.

Robert Carnovsky & Susanne Hughes, Matawan
That program ranking I just mentioned?  The program at the top is Matawan. Not only are they top-ranked in total, they are the ONLY program to have a State Championship team whose other team even made it to states.

The Shore-North divisions are the forgotten children of the Shore Conference.  I am as much to blame for this as anyone, I expect. I am, obviously, a numbers guy.  And despite both the Matawan boys and girls completely throttling SNA, I didn't really see much there in the numbers. The girls had three players in the 150s, which, for a Group I school, is actually really good. And I had a team ranked at top top of Group I that ended up in Group II. Still; they only averaged 141 as a team and that didn't get my attention.  Even when they won at Bayshore and shot 2400 at Brick.  The Matawan girls didn't appear in the top 30, not once, all season.

The Matawan boys dominated the division even more completely, going 45-0. But... I mean, only two bowlers above 182, and they're in the low/mid 190s. I had them ranked around 5th in Group I, with their 181 average, and I didn't pay much attention.  Even when they shot 3200 at Brick.  The Matawan boys didn't appear in the top 30, not once, all season.

You all know how this ends.  The bowlers, the coaches, the parents...  everybody, I guess, just decided to believe.  The girls earned the upset victory at Sectionals.  And then they did it at states.  And then they came about a centimeter from upsetting the state's #2 team in the semifinals. The Lady Huskies were 15 pins over average, per girl per game, over the postseason.

The boys?  Well, all they did is go out and shoot 2995 at sectionals and 3048(!) at states to finish second, both times, to the #6 team in the state. The Huskies shot TWENTY pins over average, per game per bowler, over the postseason.

One of the two teams going on a run like that is amazing.  Both at the same time is unparalleled.  I have three possible explanations for this: 1. Luck/coincidence.  2. Brunswick Zone Hazlet is a legendary killer of averages that I must learn to account for.  3.  The Matawan coaching staff, Robert Carnovsky and Susanne Hughes, did a phenomenal job.

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Season in Review - Final Group Rankings

Even though I ranked a lot of teams earlier this week, it wasn't deep enough to extrapolate all the group rankings, so we'll do that here.

BOYS GROUP I
1. St. Rose
2. Hudson Catholic
3. Manasquan
4. Matawan
5. North Arlington
6. Middlesex
7. Roselle
8. Bishop Eustace
9. Johnson
10. Wallkill Valley
11. Pompton Lakes
12. Dayton
13. Collingswood
14. Keansburg
15. Hasbrouck Heights
16. Caldwell
17. Maple Shade
18. Leonia
19. Bordentown
20. Cinnaminson

BOYS GROUP II
1. Sussex Tech
2. St. Joseph-Metuchen
3. South Plainfield
4. Seneca
5. Jackson Liberty
6. Manchester
7. Ocean Township
8. Lacey
9. Colonia
10. Mahwah
11. Montville
12. Wall
13. West Deptford
14. Iselin Kennedy
15. Neptune
16. Ridgefield Park
17. Ewing
18. Union Catholic
19. Delran
20. Carteret

BOYS GROUP III
1. Woodbridge
2. Toms River South
3. Brick Township
4. Edison
5. North Brunswick
6. Linden
7. Wayne Hills
8. Morris Knolls
9. West Milford
10. Freehold Township
11. Cherry Hill West
12. Demarest
13. Manalapan
14. Indian Hills
15. Toms River East
16. Warren Hills
17. Scotch Plains
18. Sayreville
19. Camden Tech
20. Hammonton

BOYS GROUP IV
1. East Brunswick
2. Brick Memorial
3. Monroe
4. South Brunswick
5. Howell
6. Pascack Valley
7. Union
8. St. Peter's Prep
9. Lenape
10. Southern
11. Egg Harbor
12. Toms River North
13. Ridgewood
14. Fair Lawn
15. JP Stevens
16. Washington Township
17. Clifton
18. Westfield
19. Livingston
20. Hunterdon Central

GIRLS GROUP I
1.  Matawan
2.  Carteret
3.  South Hunterdon
4.  Manasquan
5.  Maple Shade
6.  South River
7.  Bishop Eustace
8.  New Egypt
9.  Collingswood
10. Bordentown
11. St. John Vianney
12. Mother Seton
13. Donovan Catholic
14. Dumont
15. Keyport
16. Keansburg
17. Mt. St. Dominic
18. Hoboken
19. DePaul
20. Gloucester City

GIRLS GROUP II
1.  Lacey Township
2.  Manchester Township
3.  Colts Neck
4.  Mahwah
5.  Colonia
6.  Holy Angels
7.  Ewing
8.  South Plainfield
9.  Pemberton
10. Ramsey
11. Ocean Township
12. Demarest
13. Wall Township
14. Barnegat
15. Indian Hills
16. Westwood
17. West Deptford
18. Deptford
19. Paramus
20. Point Pleasant Boro

GIRLS GROUP III
1. Warren Hills
2. Brick Township
3. Freehold Township
4. Toms River South
5. Teaneck
6. Woodbridge
7. Wayne Valley
8. Edison
9. North Brunswick
10. Paramus Catholic
11. Central
12. Sayreville
13. Phillipsburg
14. Gloucester Tech
15. Jackson Liberty
16. Fair Lawn
17. Westampton Tech
18. Nutley
19. Wayne Hills
20. Burlington Township

GIRLS GROUP IV
1.  Toms River North
2.  Brick Memorial
3.  East Brunswick
4.  Monroe
5.  South Brunswick
6.  Eastern
7.  Hackensack
8.  Bergen Tech
9.  Howell
10. Ridgewood
11. Washington Township
12. Kingsway
13. JP Stevens
14. Southern
15. Hunterdon Central
16. Passaic Tech
17. Kearny
18. Old Bridge
19. Bloomfield
20. Toms River East




Monday, February 26, 2018

Season in Review - Final Girls Rankings

Most of my pre-rankings whining is over on the Boys Rankings post, but I have some special whining to do about this one.

We've got two teams here that each have a very compelling argument for the #1 ranking.Toms River North's is simple: they have the best season-long numbers (187 GA) and they won the Tournament of Champions, beating Warren Hills head-to-head.  Warren Hills's argument is a) the numbers are a lot closer if you consider conditions - their GA goes up three pins just by removing three trips to their toughest location, b) Warren Hills' postseason numbers are better, and by a significant amount, and c) TRN and WH were in the same event three times: Streaks by 113, Mariners by 5 (WH won the Baker final), and Streaks by 115. TRN won a fairly close Baker final to take TOC, but does that outweigh 2 clear victories?

I've gone back and forth more than once here. Head-to-head, Warren Hills has clearly been the better team.  But the season is a marathon and TRN has probably proven that it just has slightly better bowlers, in total.  This is a tie.  And that's the only thing I would ever use TOC playoff results for, to break a tie.


THE TOP TWENTY GIRLS BOWLING TEAMS IN NEW JERSEY FOR 2017-18

1. TOMS RIVER NORTH
Shore South A    South Group IV Champs   State Group IV Champs
GA: 187.2   Postseason: 189.8
There's not much left to be said about the State TOC Champs.  They've got two of the best bowlers around in Kamerin (211) and Paige (200) Peters, and a horde of really good players around them.  Livia Spalluto (181), MacKenzie Dudas (180) and Cassidy Syrdale (178) completed the dynamite tournament lineup, and Gianna Daniele (172) and Kennedy Pfeiffer (171) made regular season contributions.  The sum total was a dominant force: the best GA in the state by over five pins, tournament titles at Mustang, Brick and Shore Conference events, as well as top qualifier at Snowball and RWTI.  This is the only girls team in the state that broke 3000 - a whopping 3111 at Brick. Finally, they dug deep and delivered when it mattered most, holding off Brick Memorial at team states and then firing seven consecutive Baker games at 199+ in the TOC. They're running away from the pack, and it's hard to imagine anyone catching them for a couple of years.

2. WARREN HILLS
Skyland   North Group III Champs   State Group III Champs
GA: 180.2   Postseason: 194.0
They weren't supposed to be this good again. But two freshmen came in and really delivered, Sam Irwin (172) who was 5th at sectionals, and Olivia Ostrander (183) who made an unbelievable run to 4th in the individual TOC.  And Kelcie Mannon was one of the best, most consistent tournament performers in the state (203 avg).  And Katie Winch took her game to another level (195 overall, 199 tournaments) as well as being the team's emotional leader.  And senior Jackie Nesbeth, after waiting three and a half seasons, jumped into the tournament lineup in mid-January and matched her team's intensity, firing three tournament 500s. The Blue Streaks won everything they entered, the FDU Team Challenge, the CJWC, Snowball, Skyland, Sectionals and Group III states - most of them by large margins - and led the state in postseason average.  Came up just short of winning TOC again, but still a very special season.

3.  LACEY TOWNSHIP
Shore South B   South Group II Champs   State Group II Champs
GA: 176.8   Postseason: 184.0
A huge year for the Lions, tying for the Shore-South-B championship, winning their second straight sectional championship and their first ever state title - and with the second highest score in the building.  Earlier, they had a bunch of good tournament results - 2nd at RWTI, 3rd at Brick, 4th at Snowball and 4th at Shore Conference. Superb depth was their superpower - one of only three teams in NJ with 4 averages over 180: Liz Schreier (192), Autumn Laird (181), Claudia Schreier (183) and Julia Muro (181), plus a very good season from Samantha Trembley (167). Three seniors might mean the end of an era at Lacey, but they go out with a boatload of accomplishments and a #3 ranking.

4.  BRICK MEMORIAL
Shore South A   South Group IV Runnerup   State Group IV Runnerup
GA: 181.7   Postseason: 185.0
You don't graduate the magnitude of talent that has come through Brick Memorial the last few years without losing a bit of dominance, but the Mustangs were still a really fantastic team and accomplished an awful lot.  They won the RWTI, finished second at Brick, 3rd at CJWC and 4th at Mustang.  They shot a huge 2856 at sectionals and carried the #2 GA and #3 Postseason Average.  Most importantly, they defeated the #1 team in the regular season, winning the impossibly difficult Shore-South-A league title. Amanda Shelters (210) is obviously one of the best anywhere, but Veronica Lewis (192) and Rachel Katz (185) had very strong seasons, and Maggie Neafsey, Jordan Konopada and Erica Cuccurullo each were able to contribute important sets throughout the season.

5.  BRICK TOWNSHIP
Shore South A   South Group III Champs   State Group III 4th place
GA: 180.0   Postseason: 175.8
A relatively quiet day at states was very much the exception: big scores were the rule all season, with second place finishes at Mustang, Bayshore, CJWC, Woodbridge and Shore Conference events, 2nd place in SSA (ahead of TRN) and the #4 GA in the state.  Caylin Ryan (199) and Julianna Forbes (198) did everything you could ask for as a dynamite top two, and Cristy Sharkey (183) and Christina Gonzalez (180) slipped seamlessly into the starting lineup and produced well. Only Forbes graduates, so the (arguably) most successful program in NJ over the last decade or so should continue to roll on.

6.  MANCHESTER TOWNSHIP
Shore South B   South Group II Runnerup   State Group II 3rd place
GA: 176.1   Postseason: 170.7
Among the top teams statistically all year, the Hawks came up just short in their quest to regain the State Group II title they held for a decade, but they still put together a remarkable season.  Tying Lacey at 40-5 in SSA, they actually went 14-1 in matches, taking 2 of 3 from their top rivals.  Manchester bowls in nothing but very tough tournaments, so a string of high finishes, including 3rd at Mustang, 5th at CJWC and 3rd at the Shore (deeper than Group II states, to be sure) are all very impressive.  Always, they had depth, probably the best in the state: Theresa Bedaro (188) is a star and an all-state contender, and she was joined by Victoria Shaw (179) and a trio of seniors that concluded amazingly successful careers: Kim Wolf (179), Vicki Smith (180), and Mackenzie Weber (177).

7.  FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP
Shore Central B   Central Group III Champs   State Group III 3rd place
GA: 166.3   Postseason: 180.7
Nobody improved more, from December to February, than Freehold. After a fairly slow start, the Patriots came back to win the SCB at 41-4 and went from a team averaging around 2400 to one that could shoot 2772 and threaten anyone in a tournament.  Their 2754-2667 postseason ranked 6th in the state. Sophomore Sarah Orensky shook off her own slow league start to put together a huge run in the second half of the season, raising her overall average all the way to 193 (all the more impressive based at Howell) and shoot 668-678 at sectionals and team states. She was far from alone, of course, as Kristen Pagliaro (158) and Victoria Parinello (159) got better and better and Jaden Schaefer (166) was one of 2018's breakout freshmen. Next year could be really special.

8.  TOMS RIVER SOUTH
Shore South A   South Group III runnerup   State Group III runnerup
GA: 170.0   Postseason: 177.4
You always want your team to peak at the right time, and putting up a season-high 2748 to finish 2nd at the state TOC sounds like the Indians played this perfectly.  Hannah Dalton (181) was brilliant and the two seniors, Ciani Sanchez (175) and Natalie Swindell (192) went out as well as they could hope for, with season-high sets. Jessica Ramirez (157) and Ashley Ferrara (158) also had solid seasons for TRS, who competed in a zillion tournaments and finished well in all of them, highlighted by 3rd at Bayshore, 4th at Brick and RWTI, 5th at Snowball and 6th at CJWC.

9.  COLTS NECK
Shore Central B   Central Group II Champs    State Group II runnerup
GA: 158.8   Postseason: 181.1
SCB Postseason success story #17 or so.  I had this team out of the rankings altogether in mid-January. They went out and made me look stupid for the next month, and good for them.  All things considered, these Cougars may have had the most impressive postseason of anyone.  Their averages say they should be shooting 2300s, but they closed the season shooting 2758 at the Monmouth, 2685 at sectionals and 2748 to finish 2nd at the TOC. Juliana Galano and Victoria hulse are firing 100 pins over average, Gianna Bamonte is shooting 600s on her 162.  The whole group has just been fantastic.  The constants all season were Erica Dugan, who averaged 175 overall, and Morgan Gitlitz, whose spectacular sophomore season ended with a 195 average and an individual sectional title.

10.  TEANECK
Big North National   North Group III runnerup   State Group III 6th place
GA: 168.0   Postseason: 163.2
The Highwaywomen's postseason numbers slipped just a tiny bit, but they're still the dominant force in the Big North conference and they still have top ten numbers.  Teaneck took second at the Irwin and was easily the top qualifier at the Bergen County tournament to go along with their 93-5 conference record, as well as taking second at sectionals.  Excellent young depth in sophomores Mia Aish (174) and Margaux Lesser (189) as well as freshman Shayna Jimenez (168), mean Teaneck should still be a power for years to come, but they'll miss the steady performance of Gianni Calzadilla (164).

(tie) 11.  EAST BRUNSWICK
GMC   Central Group IV 3rd place
GA: 161.4   Postseason: 164.0

(tie) 11.  MONROE
GMC   Central Group IV champs   State Group IV 3rd place
GA: 161.2   Postseason: 164.6

(tie) 11.  SOUTH BRUNSWICK
GMC   Central Group IV runnerup   State Group IV 4th place
GA: 159.9   Postseason: 163.1
I decided to let the postseason results determine the rankings of the GMC triplets here, but they flat-out refused to cooperate, so I'm calling it a three-way tie and moving on. East Brunswick has the best in-season tournament record, besting the other two at James, Baker, CJWC and winning the GMC team event.  But East Brunswick also finished 3rd behind the other two at sectionals.  Monroe had the highest finish at both sectionals and states, but lost to South Brunswick at Baker and in the GMC semis. South Brunswick had the best match record and added a win at the Woodbridge but had by far the lowest top set.  Look at their postseason scores: 2460-2464-2428-2462-2476.  Does it matter whose is whose? If they're not going to separate themselves, I'm not going to pretend to know who's better.

They all have damn fine bowlers.  East Brunswick's substantial depth was powered by Rebecca Reitano (151), Sydney Ramos (150) and Alicia McLaughlin (167) and the Bears have a true senior star in James champion and individual TOC qualifier Madison Steinbeck.  Monroe obviously has one of the top four or five 1-2 punches in the state with Victoria Stasicky (194) and Bridget Bolan (194) as well solid contributions from Nina Carey and Shannon Glynn (155). South Brunswick was the most balanced, with Rachel Guida (170), Jillian Kwock (170) and Kirsten Thorne (166) each as likely as the others to lead the team on any given day, as well as good depth from Katelyn Schwab (148) and Sanjana Senthil (149). All told, it was a really good year in the GMC, but I don't know if anything was really decided.

14.  MAHWAH
Big North Patriot   North Group II runnerup   State Group II 4th place
GA: 159.7   Postseason: 161.8
It didn't take long for Mahwah, who I left out of preseason rankings, to pop up on the radar - their win at the Irwin announced their presence with plenty of authority.  The 92-6 conference record confirmed it, and their incredibly gutsy performance at the FDU Team Challenge chiseled it into stone.  The T-Birds sure made it stick in the postseason, breaking 2400 twice to finish 4th in the state in a very strong Group II. Freshman Michaella Raab (179) led the way, but excellent seasons by Julia Colucci (152), Allie Adamski (165) and lone senior Justina Kender (156) put them on the road to contention.

15.  WOODBRIDGE
GMC   Central Group III 3rd place
GA: 160.9   Postseason: 159.5
More evenly matched GMC teams, when will it end?  Woodbridge could easily be listed with the three above, compiling the #12 GA in the state and showing up very well at the James (3rd), Baker (2nd), CJWC (9th) and the GMC (semifinalists). The Barrons might have even had the best depth of the bunch, with a solid starting five in Sarah Fail (140), Leah Gautier (157), Breanna Tolocka (160), Megan Raimondo (163) and Eliza Abreu (174). With zero seniors on that list, this may be the GMC team to beat in 2019.

16.  COLONIA
GMC   Central Group II 2nd place   State Group II 5th place
GA: 159.2   Postseason: 163.0
Oh my, there's another one. The Patriots may have been a tiny bit short on tournament resume compared to the others - though they did finish 4th at James and 3rd at Woodbridge - but that didn't show in the postseason scores, which were very solid and left them with a 5th place finish at states.  Colonia got good years from Brittany Langevin (143) and Jennifer Weber (144), a breakout year from Rebecca Hoff (189 in tournaments) and a total star turn from senior Laryssa Fiore, who averaged 192.

17.  HOLY ANGELS
Big North United   North Group II champs   State Group II 6th place
GA: 158.3   Postseason: 161.6
What a resilient program.  Last year they won their first state title, but graduated three starters.  That's gonna result in a down year in most places, but AHA got consistent seasons from Alexa Hernandez (165) and Rebecca Sicat (156), got a nice rookie year from freshman Isabelle Egan (152) and saw Amelia Brunda make a serious jump forward to a 177 overall average.  The results were another great regular season (12-2), another Bergen County championship, and another sectional championship, shooting 2562 at Bowler City.

18.  WAYNE VALLEY
Big North Independence   North Group III 3rd place   
GA: 158.5   Postseason: 159.3
The final Big North heavyweight in the top 20 - these last three are nearly as close as all those GMC teams.  Anyway, the Indians went 88-10 in the regular season and won the Passaic County tournament behind high-quality senior seasons from Melody Morris (160) and Hayley D'Alessandro (170 after a huge individual TOC run) and a superb Big North season from Marissa Cosentini, who at 208 put up the highest conference average in... I don't know.  Many years. Valley didn't bowl badly at sectionals, but having to beat two top ten teams to advance is a tall order.

19.  EASTERN
Olympic   South Group IV 3rd place   
GA: 150.2   Postseason: 160.5
One of the bigger surprises in the state, at least to me.  Eastern graduated two incredibly successful seniors in 2017, Kristin Scimone and Anna Hileman, and a rebuilding year seemed likely. No. Ryann Werner (150) and Hailey Dadi (160) had consistently effective seasons, and Cloe Lowell stepped up to an entirely new level, improving 25 pins to a 182 mark. The Vikings finished 2nd at Olympic and had a huge, eye-opening day at CJWC, taking 7th in the year's strongest field.  2407 at states is nothing to be unhappy about; it's 150 pins over average, just not enough to advance past two of the state's top five teams.

20.  EDISON
GMC   Central Group III 4th place
GA: 157.4   Postseason: 159.5
GMC... sextuplets?  Septuplets, really, since Carteret is right in the same narrow range but just missed the top 20.  Anyway: Edison. Another resilient program.  After graduating two players with storied careers in Touri Holmes and Samantha Salzone, the Eagles got huge improvements from Tori Johnson (186), Samantha Osiadacz (168) and Faby Jean-Denis (173), all moving up by 15-25 pins. The team stats are right in line with the rest of the GMC teams, including an 11-2-1 league mark and a 2392 mark at sectionals, one pin behind Woodbridge. The Eagles did have some issues with consistency, especially in tournaments, but put up 2nd place at James.

and the next ten:


21.  MATAWAN
Shore North A   Central Group I champs   State Group I champs
GA: 144.7   Postseason: 157.5

22.  CARTERET
GMC   Central Group I runnerup   State Group I runnerup
GA: 154.6   Postseason: 154.3

23.  EWING
Olympic   Central Group II 3rd place
GA: 149.8   Postseason: 160.9

24.  HACKENSACK
Big North Freedom   North Group IV 3rd place
GA: 153.3   Postseason: 153.7

25.  NORTH BRUNSWICK
GMC   Central Group III runnerup   State Group III 5th place
GA: 143.4   Postseason: 164.9

26.  PARAMUS CATHOLIC
Big North United   North Group III 4th place
GA: 149.0   Postseason: 154.2

27.  BERGEN TECH
Big North Liberty   North Group IV runnerup   State Group IV 5th place
GA: 147.7   Postseason: 158.3

28.  SOUTH PLAINFIELD
GMC   Central Group II 4th place
GA: 149.6   Postseason: 154.1

29.  PEMBERTON
BCSL   South Group II 3rd place
GA: 140.7   Postseason: 156.3

30.  RAMSEY
Big North Patriot   North Group II 4th place
GA: 153.1   Postseason: 145.5

aaand the next thirty:

31. Howell
32. Ocean Township
33. Ridgewood (North Group IV champs, 6th in state)
34. Central
35. Washington Township
36. Sayreville
37. Kingsway
38. South Hunterdon
39. JP Stevens
40. Southern
41. Hunterdon Central
42. Phillipsburg
43. Manasquan
44. Demarest
45. Passaic Tech
46. Maple Shade (South Group I champs, 3rd in state)
47. Kearny
48. Wall Township
49. Barnegat
50. Indian Hills
51. Old Bridge
52. South River
53. Gloucester Tech
54. Westwood
55. West Deptford
56. Jackson Liberty
57. Bishop Eustace
58. New Egypt
59. Fair Lawn
60. Collingswood










Sunday, February 25, 2018

The 2017-18 Season in Review

LINKS TO ALL THE POSTSEASON COVERAGE

All the numbers have been pretty well crunched and the lists made.  The writing takes a while. I can't say I'm sure exactly what order everything will go up, but I'll add links to this page as they do.

Here's a full list of Postseason Posts, Articles, Rankings, Lists and Whatnot, with links to what's up.

Team State TOC - Boys
Team State TOC - Girls
Individual State TOC - Boys
Individual State TOC - Girls

Final Boys Rankings
Final Girls Rankings
Final Group Rankings
Top Coaching Performances

Top Individual Series
Top Conference Averages
Top Tournament Averages
Top Overall Averages
Most Improved
Tournament Specialists

Top Freshmen
All-State - Boys
All-State - Girls
All-State Teams by Group

2019 Projections
Acknowledgements & Thanks


Season in Review - Final Boys Rankings

This was fairly brutal.

A few notes.  I got some reasonable criticism last year for not respecting winning quite enough in the final rankings, particularly the winning of championships.  While I continue to try to respect season-long accomplishments, championships certainly matter. I'm trying to balance regular season accomplishments, tournament performances - particularly involving teams with similar resumes in the same event, postseason scores and overall stats.  It's complicated.  I took a shot.

Some rankings are substantially different than regular season, and it's not just sectional and state results.  During the season, I look at Game Average and T5, because T5 gives us an idea of how the team will perform when it's just the best five bowling in a tournament.  Now that the tournaments have happened, the predictive nature of T5 isn't really all that relevant; now it's about what you did.  Also, I always do the rankings from scratch without looking at past rankings; I never think in terms of "dropping" teams.

Finally, I want to say that I love Baker-style bowling.  It's been a great thing for competitive bowling, particularly in college, where it's 2/3 of the action.  It's exciting, it's team-oriented, it's spectator friendly.  It's a great way to decide a champion that doesn't take another three hours.  It's also like 3% of high school bowling, so one very close Baker result is never going to be more important than the hundreds of games that came before it, even if it's how we decide who gets the biggest trophy.  You can probably guess where I'm going with this.

THE TOP TWENTY BOYS BOWLING TEAMS IN NEW JERSEY FOR 2017-18

1. EAST BRUNSWICK
GMC    Central Group IV Champs   State Group IV Champs
GA: 218.7   Postseason: 217.8
THE dominant force in New Jersey bowling.  It's not close. Biggest sectional score in the state, best GA by over nine pins and best postseason average by over five.  Won the Bob James to open the season and states to end it.  Shot 3258 to finish second at CJWC.  Put up a state-best 3542 match score, which wasn't even the only time they broke 3500.  15-0-1/56-6 against a brutal GMC schedule. Led by an insanely talented 1-2-3, all lefties: Daniel Lenk (242! overall average), Sam Bortnick (225) and Armen Shamim (208), and also got huge numbers from Jack Deruvo (over 200 in tournaments), Andrew Mai (217 in tournaments) and Matt Mai. Yes, the Bears were upset in the GMC semifinals and the TOC. They also went 5-0-1 against other top-15 teams in the regular season. This is 2018's time capsule team.

2. WOODBRIDGE
GMC   Central Group III Champs   State Group III Champs
GA: 209.4   Postseason: 211.8
Pretty good year at the top of the Greater Middlesex Conference, huh? The Barrons were absolutely loaded: a top three of James Stoveken (228 conference average), Jason Bilawsky (212 overall) and John Drost (209 in GMC)  can hang with anyone, Alex Silva and Giovanni Santiago averaged over 200, and Joe Palmer, Nicholas Simone and Jeremy Soto all threw multiple 600s.  Woodbridge's B-team would be in the top 20. 2017 had ended in disappointment, falling short at both sectionals and states, but that sure didn't happen in 2018, with huge sets of 3170 and 3185 to take out very strong postseason Group III fields. Woodbridge also won the Wheeler, finished 3rd at CJWC, put up a top set of 3426, went 15-1-1 in conference play with the only loss to East Brunswick, and survived an epic TOC final four to win the overall state title.

3. SUSSEX TECH
NJAC-North   North 1B Group II Champs   State Group II Champs
GA: 198.1   Postseason: 212.4
I will never question Sussex Tech again.  I though about just repeating that like seven times as the whole comment.  I knew they were talented coming in, but I let the relatively low scores affect me.  When you are much, much better than the rest of your conference (they went 119-0), it's hard to have the whole team at the top of their game for every match, and you can freely substitute to give more bowlers a chance. But when there's real competition, or when there's something really on the line, the Mustangs are as good as anybody.  Won the Sparta NYE tournament with a 3118, easily.  Won the Falcon Frenzee, easily.  Won the HWS with a 3092, easily. Joey Steele had a fantastic season, averaging over 221.  Pat Danielson was just over 200, Matt Grey just under, with Matt Danielson improving all season and Danny McNeilly (671 at Team States) putting up huge tournament scores. Any lingering questions were answered with a massive 3294 at sectionals, the highest mark in the state, before what now seems inevitable, another state title, holding off an impressive field.  I will never question Sussex Tech again.

4. BRICK MEMORIAL
Shore-South-A   South Group IV champs   State Group IV Runnerup
GA: 206.4   Postseason: 207.8
The Mustangs have a pretty solid argument to be ranked #2 here; they sure had a hell of a season. Five starters claim averages over 200 - Alec Hehir (215), John Boughton (208), Michael Guzman (206), Cameron Waldheim (203) and Andrew Varela (206). Boughton in particular was deadly in tournaments, winning a RWTI and Snowball. The whole team was great in tournaments, truly: wins at RWTI, Brick, Snowball, and CJWC (season high 3352 set to beat Woodbridge). Comfortably regained their sectional crown and staged an inspired comeback in the state finals that came up just 40 pins short, but still gave them a 207  Postseason average.  They did finish behind TRS in conference play, but outperformed them at seven of eight tournaments, so they get the spot.

5. TOMS RIVER SOUTH
Shore-South-A   South Group III runnerup   State Group III runnerup
GA: 205.1   Postseason: 203.4
The "these guys are as good as anyone" cliche definitely extends at least to here. A deep talented lineup including Jim Breslin (197), Nick Brescia (203), South Jersey Singles champ Andrew Xiques (207), Kevin DiBernardo (209) and Individual stepladder finalist Kyle Oliveri (215), the Indians were never outgunned and seemed to break 3000 effortlessly.  Winning the Shore-South-A is as big an accomplishment of anything outside a state title, and TRS made it stick by winning the Shore Conference tournament as well. They finished in the top three of seven tournaments in total, every one of them a strong field, including second at RWTI, Bayshore, Sectionals and States, where they fell to Woodbridge despite a strong 3079.

6. ST. ROSE
Shore-Central-A   Central Group I champs   State Group I champs
GA: 197.5   Postseason: 207.0
It was a hell of a year for the senior-laden Purple Roses.  They won the SCA with a 39-9 record against very, very strong competition.  They put up a division-record 3337 in a dual match. The numbers were great (true GA is probably about 203; long story), the bowlers were great: David Schuld (201), Carter Vanderslice (208), Jarrett Toth (209), and Joey Chiusano (216) formed a deep and powerful core, and the emergence of Vinny Mastria (203) helped them to another level.  The only thing missing was a signature tournament performance after finishing behind some of the Shore big boys early in the season.  So, the Roses finished the season with a runnerup finish in the Shore Conference tournament, won the Monmouth (3146), won at Sectionals (3073) and won their first ever state Group I title (3138).  So... no more holes in that resume. Fantastic season they've been building toward for a few years.

7. ST. JOSEPH - METUCHEN
GMC   Central Group II champs   State Group II runnerup
GA: 206.0   Postseason: 202.6
You really need to have (at least) five big threats in your lineup to earn a ranking this high.  That's been St. Joe's whole game for the last few years: insane depth, and whoever's in the lineup is going to deliver.  In 2018, John Hoban (207 overall) was probably the best, but there were six more options on any given day: Conor Quigley (202), Brendan Sosinski (201), John Reggio (201), Justin Biancamano (199), Joey Maurer (195) and Zack Abbey (192). The Falcons were good coming in, but the performance at CJWC - 3213 for third place - served notice that they weren't just deep, they could throw big numbers with the best, which they continued to do all season, including a season-high 3320 set.  Five of the top seven are seniors, and they had a fantastic run.

8. BRICK TOWNSHIP
Shore-South-A   South Group III champs   State Group III 3rd place
GA: 197.0   Postseason: 204.5
An immensely talented group whose only problem was consistency.  When the Dragons were on, they were really on, and could compete with absolutely anyone.  They won the Mustang, won the Bayshore, fired a 3200 set, and won the South Group III sectional going away at 3165. I tend to put that to youth, as the starting five includes just one senior, Nick Gross, who averaged 202 and shot 759 at the Shore Individual.  The younger ones, juniors Chris Shymanski (208) and Stephen Spirio (198) and sophomores Kyle Chirichello (198) and Andrew Masi (201) all have scoring ability, and will all be back to make this one of the state's very best next year. That's not to gloss over how good they were this year, taking third in Group III on an off day.

9. MONROE
GMC   Central Group IV 5th place
GA: 206.9   Postseason: 190.2
It can be really tough to rank a team that had a good season but didn't qualify for the state TOC, but I have absolutely no doubt that Monroe belongs in the state top 10.  First, look at the numbers: the Falcons had a really great year, getting so many huge scores from juniors Louis Folgore (226) and Ryley McKiernan (217), as well as Zac Waynor (202), not to mention Joseph Hoehler, Tyler Kresan and Devin Maddox. Monroe shot as high as 3403, went 52-12 in GMC matches, took 2nd at the Baker Challenge and 12th at CJWC.  They had an off day at Sectionals, shooting 2853 against a very deep and talented field.  But two days later they swept future TOC champ Woodbridge in the GMC tournament semis and the next day they swept Edison to take the GMC tournament championship.  This is a damn good team.

10. HUDSON CATHOLIC
HCIAA   North 1B Group I champs   State Group I 3rd place
GA: 198.4   Postseason: 198.8
If Hudson Catholic bowled in any tournaments before sectionals, I haven't seen results.  Because of that, I really had no idea if their performance would match what were really fantastic numbers in the regular season, including winning their league and having an excellent starting five: Geoffrey Origenes (217), Jivan Persaud (223), James Pabalonia (190), Ashook Persaud (188) and Steven Beck (196).  Would their game translate to the postseason?  Some teams can only really score at home.  Not these guys, not by a longshot.  Jivan Persaud shot 730 and the Hawks made it to states easily, where they finished a strong 3rd.

11.  SOUTH BRUNSWICK
GMC   Central Group IV 3rd place
GA: 198.6   Postseason: 204.9
Soccer's World Cup has its 'group of death', last year we had South Group IV.  This year it was Central Group IV, and South Brunswick didn't get a return trip to the TOC despite shooting 3073. A damn shame, 'cause the Vikings had a great season, finishing 3rd in the Baker Challenge, 2nd at James, 6th at Brick and 11th at CJWC. Anthony Fama (208) and Nick Delacruz (203) led the way, both excelling in regular matches and  tournaments. Chris Germain (195), Matt Marich (190) and Noah Li (185) all contributed as well.

12.  EDISON
GMC   Central Group III 5th place
GA: 199.2   Postseason: 194.9
Another sectional casualty, despite a solid 2924.  The Eagles were better than that all season, putting up really good numbers behind a spectacular top two in Jason Smith (220) and Wyatt Buchany (213), and tremendous depth highlighted by Joe Banwer (197), Raleigh Gough (186) and Jose De La Barrera (183). Not a great tournament team for much of the season, until they took first in the Woodbridge and, fresh off their sectional struggles, swept the #1 team in the state to advance to the GMC finals behind amazing bowling by Smith and Buchany. Love the resilience.

13.  HOWELL
Shore-Central-B   Central Group IV 2nd place   State Group IV 3rd place
GA: 188.0   Postseason: 210.3
This is tough; the season-long GA is good, not great.  The postseason average is tremendous, #4 in the state.  They had some really good tournament showings - 5th at James, 4th at Bayshore, 13th at CJWC, 8th at Snowball. They had some damn fine bowlers, led by Robbie Wetzel, who was at 196 in the regular season but 206 in tournaments, and Brian Garofano, who was also at 196 in conference play but brilliant in tournaments, averaging 211 and making the TOC stepladder. Behind them were a bunch of guys in the 180s, all good bowlers: Jake Hager, Gus Horvath, Joe Inserra, Mike Kortenhaus... any of them could win you a match.  I don't think the GA fairly represents how good they are; the state results may well be closer.

14. SOUTH PLAINFIELD
GMC   Central Group II runnerup   State Group II 8th place
GA: 200.5   Postseason: 189.2
Inconsistent in tournaments, but there's no denying the ability on this squad; that GA is absolutely legitimate. Shaun Boffard (208), Angelo Salici (207) and Mike Menkin (207) are a powerhouse top three, while Chris Lacasale, Tyler & Ryan Berardi took turns joining them with strong scores of their own.  The Tigers were dynamite in conference play, going 53-7, and traveled north to win the Irwin tournament in December.  A subpar day at states doesn't erase any of that.

15. NORTH BRUNSWICK
GMC   Central Group III 3rd place
GA: 198.6   Postseason: 198.7
So many good teams in Middlesex County; don't make the mistake of overlooking this one.  Fantastic numbers all season, and exceptional depth provided by David Burrows (209), Zachary Leinwohl (195), Gavin Lugo (195), Nicholas Farah (192), Mathew Liguori (188) and Alex Bursac (191).  10-6-1 against their schedule is actually pretty impressive.  Tenth at the CJWC, beating a number of very good teams showed they can compete with the best.  Unfortunately, Central Group III is brutal, and the Raiders came up a bit short despite a strong 2980 set. Still a successful season, and all but Burrows return for next year.

16. LINDEN
Union-Watchung   North 2 Group III champs   State Group III 4th place
GA: 193.1   Postseason: 193.6
Winning a fairly loaded North 2 Group III sectional was eye-opening, as was defeating a fantastic field at the Baker Challenge.  Third at the Wheeler, too.  3270 high set?  Good stuff.  James Fitz (204), Anthony Golabek (204), Matt Soto (193), Justin Peters (190) and Darius Lewis (184) are obviously a talented group.  But the most impressive thing the Tigers did this season, to me, is dominate the Union-Watchung, taking first place by 26 points.

17. PASCACK VALLEY
Big North-National   North 1A Group IV runnerup   State Group IV 4th place
GA: 195.2   Postseason: 198.1
Pascack went 14-0 in the Big North regular season behind four very talented juniors: Scott Morris (205), Henry Tipping (201), Brian Biml (209) and Trevor Lauber (205), and then became one of the best stories of the postseason when, despite losing Morris to an injury, they raised their game at states, shooting 3023 to take 4th in Group IV, with Tipping in particular bowling great.

18. UNION
Union-Watchung   North 2 Group IV champs   State Group IV 6th place
GA: 190.1   Postseason: 201.9
The Farmers had a good season, highlighted by 2nd at the Wheeler, then put on a tremendous postseason show, winning sectionals with a 3043 set and putting up a more-than-competitive 3015 at states.  Samantha Valle (180), Lacey Beall (188), Nick Melchionna (196) and Kevin Oliveira (194) formed a strong core, and anchor Kiara Powell was deadly effective in tournaments, averaging 208.

19. ST. PETER'S PREP
HCIAA   North 1B Group IV champs   State Group IV 5th place
GA: 191.3   Postseason: 199.4
Very few teams can match the firepower at the anchor position that St. Peter's had with 225-averaging Jared Ammugauan, but the Marauders needed plenty of help to put up such excellent numbers and to make a postseason run. Maverick Lindo (196), Zack Oswald (195) and Jordan Veverka (188) were very good all season and St. Peter's finished 5th in Group IV at Bowlero.

20. SENECA
Olympic   South Group II runnerup   State Group II 5th place
GA: 192.8   Postseason: 195.8
The Olympic tournament champs had a fantastic regular season at 15-1 and cracked 3000 to survive and advance in a deep South Group II sectional. Zachary Malcolm (200), Cole Ludwikowski (194), Mitch Tippin (191), Jake Walters (195) and Eddie Cashwell (190) formed a exceptionally balanced lineup that could get a big number from any position.


Alright, as you'll see, I just kept going for a while.  I think it's fair to say that the level of precision drops a bit from here out, but I tried to be as accurate as possible.


21. MANASQUAN
Shore Central A   Central Group I 3rd place
GA: 192.3   Postseason: 195.5

22. LENAPE
Olympic   South Group IV runnerup   State Group IV 7th place
GA: 191.0   Postseason: 196.0

23. WAYNE HILLS
Big North-Independence   North 1B Group III runnerup   State Group III 6th place
GA: 197.8   Postseason: 188.4

24. JACKSON LIBERTY
Shore Central B   South Group II champs   State Group II 4th place
GA: 186.3   Postseason: 199.7

25. MORRIS KNOLLS
NJAC-South   North II Group III runnerup   State Group III 8th place
GA: 194.5   Postseason: 185.5

26. SOUTHERN
Shore-South-A   South Group IV 4th place
GA: 190.9   Postseason: 197.5

27. MANCHESTER TOWNSHIP
Shore-South-B   South Group II 3rd place
GA: 191.4   Postseason: 195.9

28. MATAWAN
Shore-North-A   Central Group I runnerup   State Group I 3rd place
GA: 183.8   Postseason: 201.4

29. OCEAN TOWNSHIP
Shore-Central-A   Central Group II 5th place
GA: 193.4   Postseason: 186.2

30. WEST MILFORD
Big North-Independence   North 1B Group III champs   State Group III 7th place
GA: 189.6   Postseason: 192.2


Sure, thirty more.  Why not?


31. Freehold Township
32. Egg Harbor
33. Toms River North
34. Ridgewood (N1A, Group IV champs, 8th in state)
35. North Arlington (N1A, Group I champs, 4th in state)
36. Lacey
37. Colonia
38. Fair Lawn
39. Mahwah (N1A, Group II runnerup, 3rd in state)
40. JP Stevens
41. Cherry Hill West
42. Montville (N2, Group II runnerup, 9th in state)
43. Demarest (N1A, Group III champs, 5th in state)
44. Washington Township
45. Manalapan (Central Group III runnerup, 9th in state)
46. Clifton (N1B, Group IV runnerup, 10th in state)
47. Wall Township
48. Indian Hills
49. Toms River East
50. West Deptford
51. Iselin Kennedy
52. Neptune
53. Westfield
54. Livingston (N2, Group IV runnerup, 9th in state)
55. Warren Hills
56. Middlesex
57. Hunterdon Central
58. Jackson Memorial
59. Ridgefield Park (N1A Group II champs, 6th in state)
60. Scotch Plains-Fanwood







Friday, February 23, 2018

Season in Review - Top Series of 2017-18

THE TOP SERIES OF THE 2017-18 SEASON

I think I got them all, but let me know if there are any I missed.

BOYS

826  Daniel Lenk, East Brunswick
824  Ryan Carlisi, Steinert
815  Daniel Lenk, East Brunswick
804  Michael Liu, Livingston
803  Ryan Carlisi, Steinert
801  Sam Bortnick, East Brunswick
790  Wyatt Buchany, Edison
787  Nick Greco, Fair Lawn
785  Joey Ocello, Neptune
785  Daniel Lenk, East Brunswick
783  Shaun Boffard, South Plainfield
782  Justin Korman, Manalapan
781  James Stoveken, Woodbridge
780  Ryley McKiernan, Monroe
778  James Qualiarieloo, Manalapan
777  Jason Bilawsky, Woodbridge
773  Preston Williams, Jackson Liberty
772  Will Orak, Colonia
771  Daniel Lenk, East Brunswick
771  Michael Liu, Livingston
771  Louis Folgore, Monroe
770  Evan Weinberg, Dayton
770  Dan Kenny, Maple Shade
769  Joey Ocello, Neptune
767  Cameron LaPlant, JP Stevens
766  Daniel Lenk, East Brunswick
766  Sam Bortnick, East Brunswick
764  Evan Weinberg, Dayton
764  Derek Lewandowski, Ridgefield Park
762  Louis Folgore, Monroe
760  John Boughton, Brick Memorial

unofficial sets:
790  Daniel Lenk, East Brunswick
773  Wyatt Buchany, Edison
770  Johann Gamo, Clifton

GIRLS

767  Paige Peters, Toms River North
754  Lanasia Neal, South Plainfield
751  Amanda Shelters, Brick Memorial
747  Goldera Surles, Union Catholic
740  Kamerin Peters, Toms River North
739  Lanasia Neal, South Plainfield
738  Brittany Lucci, Hamilton West
734  Rhianna Smith, Hopatcong
728  Kamerin Peters, Toms River North
728  Amanda Shelters, Brick Memorial
724  Kamerin Peters, Toms River North
720  Katie Robb, Kingsway
717  Lanasia Neal, South Plainfield
716  Paige Peters, Toms River North
713  Jamie Paddock, Montville
712  Alexa Tieto, Ocean Township
712  Amanda Shelters, Brick Memorial
712  Kamerin Peters, Toms River North
711  Rhianna Smith, Hopatcong
711  Veronica Lewis, Brick Memorial
711  Paige Peters, Toms River North
708  Kamerin Peters, Toms River North
707  Victoria Stasicky, Monroe
707  Katie Robb, Kingsway
707  Kelcie Mannon, Warren Hills
705  Katie Robb, Kingsway
705  Marissa Cosentini, Wayne Valley
705  Lanasia Neal, South Plainfield
704  Katie Winch, Warren Hills
704  Rhianna Smith, Hopatcong
703  Rhianna Smith, Hopatcong
700  Bridget Bolan, Monroe


Wednesday, February 21, 2018

State Finals Wrapup - Girls Team TOC

TOMS RIVER NORTH: THE DYNASTY BEGINS

nj.com article here

northjersey.com article here

Twenty-four teams, four state titles on the line, and one overall champion.  You know how this works. Plenty of drama, with three of the Groups extremely competitive and the fourth providing the lion's share of big scores.

GROUP I

So, two big favorites in Group I, but Maple Shade, led by Dakota DeNoto's 180, was having exactly none of that, shooting eighty pins over average, 746, to sit just thirty pins behind co-favorite Matawan. Game on.

But #18 Carteret was ready, willing and able to make a game of it, and the Ramblers and Angela Baginsky (217) came out hot in game two, dusting the Group I field by 89 pins at 834 and taking a narrow ten pin lead over Matawan into the final game, with Maple Shade stubbornly hanging on, sitting just 55 pins behind the leaders after a solid 730.

It did end up being a two-team race after all, with Carteret putting up another very strong game, 810 to post a solid 2341 set.  But the Matawan Huskies continued their fantastic postseason run, with Laura McConnon (225) and Samantha Siragusa (202) fueling an amazing 896 game under huge pressure to take the Group I state title.

Carteret came up just short of their goal, but they bowled well; Ashley Espy posted a 529 set, Amanda Medvetz 484, and Baginsky shook off a rough to start to finish 217-224 for a 558 set.  They left it all on the lanes. Maple Shade finished third after a very good day, with nice numbers thrown by DeNoto (488) and Juliana Lotierzo (475).

Mother Seton, Bordentown and Dumont really made their seasons at sectionals, as qualifying for states at all is a huge accomplishment. Mother Seton's top sets came from Alex Anton (448) and Dominique Liantonio (443), Colleen Kotch led Bordentown with a 471 set, while Dumont was paced by Shanna Bucheister's 463.

Matawan earned their state title by elevating their game in the postseason as well as any team in the state, boys or girls.  After putting up a 143 GA during the season, the Huskies raised their postseason average to an impressive 157, right in line with teams in the top 20.  At the state finals, Siragusa (510) and McConnon (506) were joined by Katie Devoe (500) and Faith Smith (492); this was a fantastic team effort.  And... they weren't done just yet.

GROUP II

With all six competitors in the state's top 17, the most wide-open state final totally lived up to the hype in game one. #17 Colts Neck got out to an early lead with an opening 865 , but #5 Lacey, #14 Colonia and #6 Manchester were all within 41 pins, and #16 Holy Angels and #15 Mahwah not far behind.

Lacey did its best to take control of the tournament with a huge 993 in game two (Trembley, Liz Schreier and Laird were all over 210), but Manchester very nearly kept pace with a 949, and Colts Neck also broke 900.  All three teams were within 67 pins and the championship was very much still in doubt.

Really, nobody blinked.  Each of the top four teams broke 900, but Lacey (970) and Colts Neck (978), who got a big 238 from Morgan Gitlitz and had all five bowlers at 180+, were on a slightly higher level, and the Lions lead from game two enabled them to walk away with the trophy.

Colts Neck, as they have been all postseason, was truly excellent in the finals.  Their 2748 total would have been good for at least second in any of the four groups. Gitlitz, as she has many times, was the star, finishing at 624, but Cougars Gianna Bamonte (606), Erica Dugan (558) and Victoria Hulse (514) all scored well. With no senior starters, they'll be back in a big way next season.

Manchester certainly bowled well, with Mackenzie Weber (555), Kim Wolf (542), Theresa Bedaro (540) and Victoria Shaw (531) scoring; there really isn't very much separation in the talent levels of these teams, and the Hawks 2682 could have easily been the best mark. The Hawks' three seniors graduate with two state titles and two near-misses, which is not bad at all.

Mahwah's tournament performances in 2018 were universally good, and their 2405 here was no exception. Michaella Raab put up two fantastic games (236 & 243) sandwiched around one bad game, totaling 599 on the day, and Julia Colucci pitched in with a 485 series.

Colonia and Holy Angels were just a step below the contenders on this day, but both teams had excellent seasons. Laryssa Fiore (567) and Rebecca Hoff (570) led Colonia, as they have all season. Holy Angels was led by Alexa Hernandez's 484 set.

Lacey's first-ever bowling state championship was built over several years and forged in the amazing rivalry they have with Manchester.  The two teams have been so even the past two seasons, with nearly identical stats and equal portions of talent.  The key to Lacey's emergence may have been Claudia Schreier's return from an injury sustained before the season started; right at that point, the Lions seemed to reach another level, from placing fourth in the Snowball and the Shore Conference tournament to firing a huge 2893 set. At the state finals, the whole lineup bowled well, taking the title without a single huge individual score: Samantha Trembley (587), Liz Schreier (579), Autumn Laird (576), Claudia Schreier (533), and Julia Muro (532) all showed up. The best Group II team won here, I think, and they all contributed.

GROUP III

With five of New Jersey's top nine teams competing, it's not surprising that Group III produced the highest scores of the TOC.  But, given the talent all across the event, Group III having the top five individual performances and eight of the top ten?  That was surprising. The girls of Group III threw a LOT of numbers.

The team race, however, certainly seemed to be over quickly.  #2 Warren Hills attacked the state finals with devastating force, firing four game-one 200s, led by Kelcie Mannon's 232, and posted the best score any team would attain on the day at 1021. #7 Toms River South, #9 Freehold Township and #3 Brick Township all broke 830 and were tightly grouped in spots 2-4, but they were 162 pins behind the Blue Streaks.

But in game two, four other teams bested Warren Hills to narrow the gap, led by Toms River South's 921 and Freehold's 904.  Even so, Warren Hills took a 103-pin lead to the final game.

The defending champs reasserted themselves in game three, and the outcome was never really in doubt, as Katie Winch's 235 led to a 987 game (best in the building for game 3) and a tournament-best 2870 total.

Warren Hills' runaway obscured a really wonderful performance by runnerup Toms River South. The Indians' top three was absolutely unconscious: Hannah Dalton fired three 200s en route to a 649 series, Ciani Sanchez finished the afternoon with an eleven-strike 280 for a 651 set, and Natalie Swindell finished up her career with a sparkling 231-246-213=690, the best mark in the building. It all added up to a 2748 set, TRS's top score on the season, and a runnerup finish.

Freehold Township finished their great postseason - really, the whole second half - run with a strong 2667 set for third place.  It's been a team effort all along for the Patriots, and Jaden Schaefer finished an impressive freshman year by chipping in a 516 set, but on Friday it was Sarah Orensky standing out in bold relief, putting up a sparkling 207-211-260=678 in a valiant effort to keep her team close. Only one senior.  Incredibly bright future.

North Brunswick exceeded expectations in a big way, posting their highest series of the season at 2454. I liked this team in the preseason because I was impressed with their top two; that was especially true at states, with Carly Lodise shooting 580 and Trinity Gray posting a brilliant 670 in her final high school action.

Teaneck and Brick Township, despite Christina Gonzalez's excellent 255-649, never truly got it going, and there were just too many good teams in Group III to make it back into contention. Teaneck was led by Margaux Lesser (520) and Mia Aish (504), while Brick's Cristy Sharkey shot 522.

So, Warren Hills wins its second straight state title after finishing in second place in 2015 (in Group II) and 2016, and they did it in dominating fashion, despite 60% of last year's team graduating and losing their coach so devastatingly right at the start of the school year.  Jackie Nesbeth (500), Sam Irwin (517) and Olivia Ostrander (555) all did their jobs, with Mannon (637) throwing a top ten number and Winch (661) closing her career with a big clutch series and another title. They were loud (too loud?) and they were confident and they went out and backed it up with a big number.  Hard to argue with that.

GROUP IV

I have all the respect in the world for #12 Monroe and #13 South Brunswick; they're very good teams with some dynamite bowlers.  But it didn't take Nostradamus to predict that this would be a two-team race; it turned out to be quite an entertaining one, too.

#1 Toms River North got the faster start, putting up a 948 in game one behind newly crowned state champ Kamerin Peters's 225, but #4 Brick Memorial was well within range at 888.  Monroe and South Brunswick, along with a continually-overachieving Bergen Tech squad, were 150+ back and wouldn't be able to get back into it.

Memorial, however, very much got back into it, firing a 924 in game two, highlighted by Veronica Lewis's 226, and pulling to within just seven pins of the top team.  Defending champs often have some fight in them.

So it all came down to one game, and on this day, TRN was able to forge a balanced 936 to finish at 2755 as the Group IV state champions.

For a program like Brick Memorial, who's won four of the last five State Group IV championships, anything short of a title may feel like a disappointment, but this was a really talented group that had a fantastic season and came within 61 pins of knocking off the state's #1 team on, really, an off day for the Mustangs. Amanda Shelters was great, as she usually is, putting up three deuces for 646, while Lewis (589), Maggie Neafsey (515) and Rachel Katz (507) all broke five.  They'll be back in a  hurry, I'm guessing.

Monroe and South Brunswick had fantastic seasons in the GMC, but the water, much like the talent on the top two teams, was just a bit too deep. Both teams were over average here at states, just as they were at sectionals.  By that standard, and it's a reasonable one, both teams had great postseasons. Monroe got good sets from Bridget Bolan (540) and Shannon Glynn (621), and saw Victoria Stasticky close her very successful high school career with a big 650. South Brunswick's balanced effort was topped by Kirsten Thorne (511) and Rachel Guida (604)

Bergen Tech?  Wow.  By their averages, they should have been right around 2200 as a five-man group, but the Knights, behind very good series by Sam Comes (515) and Mamiko Swanson (551), and despite getting eight different bowlers into the match, shot a fantastic set of 2410 after hitting 2339 at sectionals.  Great job peaking at the right time.

Ridgewood finally ran out of tournament magic, but it was a great run while it lasted. Madison Murphy had the Maroons top series at 505.

So, the #1 team, the team with the highest averages and arguably the most talent, came through at the end.  The scores were probably a bit below their lofty standards, but it got the job done.  Peters (Kamerin) finished at 595, with Livia Spalluto close behind at 571, and Paige Peters (566) and Cassidy Syrdale (535) contributing. Last year, the Mariners stole the sectional title from Memorial but gave it back at states.  This time, it's all theirs to keep.  It's easy to forget just how young this group is, too, with only one senior in the top seven.  They're deep and disciplined and found a way to earn a title on a day when they only shot three 200 games. This is a program that is built to win for several more years.  Of course, there was one more thing to deal with this year.

INDIVIDUALS
Official awards for high series aren't given out, so I'll list the top 10 here

690  Natalie Swindell, Toms River South
678  Sarah Orensky, Freehold Township
670  Trinity Gray, North Brunswick
661  Katie Winch, Warren Hills
651  Ciani Sanchez, Toms River South
650  Victoria Stasicky, Monroe
649  Christina Gonzalez, Brick Township
649  Hannah Dalton, Toms River South
646  Amanda Shelters, Brick Memorial
637  Kelcie Mannon, Warren Hills

TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS

TRN came out just a little flat against Lacey, dropping game one 172-133.  That was the last game under 199 they would shoot all day. The Mariners took the next three games 203-153, 199-173 and 202-178 to end the Group II champs' season in what seemed like about five minutes, but that hardly seems possible.

They would be waiting for a while, because the other TOC semifinal was, somehow, epic.  Warren Hills was a huge favorite, with a much higher score in the Group finals and extensive Baker experience, winning the FDU challenge and Snowball, not to mention the 2017 TOC.  But Matawan took the Bayshore in a Baker final over Brick Township, and the Huskies had nothing to lose.

Warren Hills took game one 204-187, but four opens in the first six frames of game two forced Streaks' anchor Katie Winch to go out the door in the tenth just to earn a 156-all tie.  That would be important later, because after cruising to a 205-131 win in game three, the defending champs got sloppy, dropping 151-146 and 164-161 decisions to force a tiebreaker game six.

An early triple against a few Matawan opens ended things with a 195-174 Warren Hills win, but the Group I champs sure made Hills sweat it out.  Well done.

So, the two best teams all year got it on one more time in the TOC final - Warren Hills had won the 2-game total pins Baker final at Snowball.  Just as a side note, this was, considering crowd size, probably the loudest sporting event I've ever experienced.   I've been in quieter crowds at rock concerts.  Anyway, both teams, truly, bowled exceptionally well, but the Shore Conference champs and their superstar anchor made every shot they needed to. At one point I thought they had snuck in a third Peters sister, but it was just that Livia Spalluto was throwing some fantastic shots.  TRN took the opener 207-182 and game two 226-188 before Warren Hills unloaded with a ten-strike barrage to take game three 269-233 and stave off elimination.  But the Streaks comeback came up short in a very tight game four, and the Mariners were the queens of New Jersey bowling after a 205-200 win.

Warren Hills averaged a very healthy 209 in the final, but TRN finished with a 217 average, more than enough to earn the title, the trophy, the biggest celebration... and the beginning of the dynasty.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

State Finals Wrapup - Girls Individual TOC

KAMERIN PETERS' CHAPTER 2 HAS A HAPPY ENDING

Last season, Kamerin Peters took New Jersey high school bowling by storm, dominating the season as a freshmen.  She won nearly everything there was to win, broke records in qualifying at the state TOC but lost in the finals to an equally accomplished competitor, Aimee Sherman of Jackson Memorial, by just two pins.

Now a sophomore, Peters wasn't going to let that happen again. Six of the seven games she bowled at Bowlero on Wednesday were 227 or higher; her last three were 257-256-279, which would have been the highest set (790) thrown all season by anyone. There was a lot of good bowling going on in the girls TOC, but very little doubt about who was the best.

GAME ONE

Only sixteen of the fifty-one qualifiers broke 200 in game one.  There were some surprises at the top, Hayley D'Alessandro of Wayne Valley (251), Rachel Duncan of Indian Hills (247) and Victoria Parrinello of Freehold Township (243) led the way. Totiana Miranda of Cumberland showed her debut at sectionals was no fluke with a 237 game. Laryssa Fiore of Colonia (225), Trinity Gray of North Brunswick (222), Natalie Swindell of Toms River South (212) and Victoria Vucak of Paramus Catholic (210) were right in contention as well.

There were big changes to come.  Seven bowlers outside the cut after one would make the second round.  Three bowlers who shot under 175 in game one would make the next round; all three would finish in the top six.  It was that kind of day.  The cutline was 196 (Kaitlyn Lowey of Union Catholic and Colts Neck's Morgan Gitlitz).  It would go higher.

GAME TWO

Kamerin Peters of Toms River North got her first look at the top of the leaderboard with a 258 game to give her a 492 total after two. Amelia Brunda of Holy Angels moved into the top five with a 257, and Miranda stayed hot, shooting 242 to move into third place.

A whole bunch of bowlers came back from subpar first games to score well in game two and get themselves into contention. Warren Hills' Sam Irwin and Sarah Orensky of Freehold each broke 220 but still had some work to do. Former state champ Lanasia Neal of South Plainfield made a 53-pin improvement to 226 while Union anchor Kiara Powell jumped even higher, to 239; each was right on the cusp of the cutline, which sat at 405.

Other big games, and big improvements, came from Caylin Ryan of Brick Township and Lauren Marks from Parsippany, who each put up 246 to move into the top twelve.

GAME THREE

Gut-check time in the middle, but there were plenty of interesting stories at the top. Miranda had taken the lead at 691 with Peters in third at 687.  Between them at 689 was the biggest surprise and the best story in the tournament, as Warren Hills freshman Olivia Ostrander had come out of nowhere to shoot 233-214-242=689 and sit among the state's elite.

Brick Township's Julianna Forbes, who made last year's stepladder, was excellent in the opening session, carding 237-236-214=687 to tie Peters for third.  D'Alessandro continued bowling well after that big opener and sat in fifth at 679.

Another independent bowler who made her HS season debut at sectionals, Brittany Lucci of Hamilton West, was bowling great again; her opening set of 678 had her sixth, followed by Brunda (666) and Marks (654).  Another 2017 stepladder qualifier, Kingsway senior Katie Robb, was in ninth at 648, with Ryan right behind at 640.

Parrinello (622), Gray (614) and Neal (614) were both through to the afternoon, as was Madison Steinbeck of East Brunswick (605), who was bowling consistently well.

There were more than the usual number of game three heroes, those who throw big games to steal an advancer spot.  Jaden Schaefer of Freehold posted a 226 to move up 12 spots to 14th at 614. Montville's Jamie Paddock shot a nice 245 to complete a huge comeback, from 42nd after game one to 11th at 623. But the biggest jump came from Kelcie Mannon of Warren Hills, who went from 39th place and 54 pins behind the cutline after two all the way to 16th with a huge 257 game.

Paige Peters of Toms River North made a nice jump up from 25th, but her 603 set landed her in a tie for the 18th and final spot with Colonia's Laryssa Fiore, necessitating a two-frame rolloff.  Peters took the tiebreaker by just two pins and joined the other 17 advancers.

Some excellent bowlers just missed the afternoon session, including Warren Hills senior Katie Winch (596), Lacey's Liz Schreier (589), Gitlitz (588), Powell (588) and Duncan (585).  Marissa Cosentini of Wayne Valley made a great game three run to shoot 234, but her 599 set was just four pins short.

GAME FOUR

The scores in game four were incredible - sixteen of the eighteen finalists broke 200. Still, there wasn't a lot of movement - Parrinello shot 226 but remained 12th.  Ryan moved up one spot to 9th off her 225.  Lucci moved up into stepladder position with a 227. Schaefer's 237 pushed her up to eleventh and within 53 pins of the top five.

There were two big movers closer to the top.  Marks threw a fantastic 268 to jump from eighth place all the way into second.  And Ostrander fired a sizzling 277 game, the highest of the entire qualifying session, to both prove she wasn't going anywhere and to move into first with a 44-pin lead on the field.

GAME FIVE

Kind of the opposite of game four; only six bowlers broke 200 this time, and those that did were mostly able to do some damage.

Peters (257) and Lucci (266) were far ahead of the rest of the field and took control with huge games.  After game five, they were tied for the overall lead at 1171 with Ostrander in third.

Miranda's 212 enabled her to stay in fourth with Marks just five pins back in the final stepladder spot.

On the chase were Ryan, 32 back after shooting 225-216, and Parrinello off 226-219.

The other 200 was shot by Lanasia Neal.  The 2016 champ had thrown 226-215-218-232 after a tough opening game and had moved up to ninth place but was still 49 pins short of the last spot in the finals.

GAME SIX

High drama, as always.  But not at the very top: Kamerin Peters (256-740) and Brittany Lucci (245-738) each finished off fabulous sets to sit in the top two spots, Peters earning the #1 seed for the second straight season.  Marks's strong 225 finished a 684 set that moved her into third.

Ostrander's back half set was 615, giving her a very good but very vulnerable 1304 total. Miranda came up just short, her 599 in the afternoon produced a 1290 total and an impressive seventh place finish.

Jamie Paddock came up with a huge, clutch 269 game, running her afternoon set to 671 and her total to 1294, putting her between Ostrander and Miranda. That should have probably been enough to make the stepladder.

But it wasn't, because for the second straight year Lanasia Neal looked at a huge deficit after five games and calmly and methodically fired an absolute gem.  Last year it was a 278 to move up a bunch of spots, this year it was an eleven-strike 267 that completed a 717 set and catapulted the senior from 9th to 4th, earning a third career trip to the finals.

Ryan (640-632) and Robb (648-618) bowled well all day and took eighth and ninth.  Forbes slipped a bit from her morning excellence but still took tenth. Parrinello and D'Alessandro brought home eleventh and twelfth.

Mannon and Paige Peters each found a little something in game six, shooting 235 and 225 respectively to finish thirteenth and fourteenth.  Brunda, Schaefer, Gray and Steinbeck struggled just a bit in the afternoon session and ended the event fifteenth through eighteenth.

STEPLADDER

A mismatch on paper, the opening game didn't play out that way, as the freshman upstart, Ostrander, and the senior superstar, Neal, each bowled very well, with Ostrander's career day continuing via a 228-212 win.  That marked the final game of an exceptional career for Neal, who will certainly be one to watch in college competition.

Next up was a match of two relatively surprising finalists.  Neither Ostrander nor Lauren Marks could really get it going, but each threw big shots when they had to, and Marks came away with a narrow 175-174 win, ending Ostander's amazing run.

Brittany Lucci didn't give Marks much of a chance to solve the lane that had been troubling her, throwing great shots and carrying them all on the way to a huge 279 game.  Marks had a pretty remarkable tournament herself and took home the bronze.

Last year as the top qualifier with a record-breaking score, Peters wasn't quite as sharp after waiting around for over an hour for the finals.  That was, most definitely, not a problem in 2018.  At the same time Ryan Carlisi was mowing down pins en route to a 299 in his final, Peters was doing very much the same thing, burying twelve straight shots for a 279 single to take the title. Lucci struggled in the final game, but that can't detract at all from the fantastic performance she put up all day, taking home a well-earned second place.

And so Kamerin Peters ends 2018 as the state individual champion with an excellent showing from beginning to end. I don't know that we've seen someone this consistently great, especially in big spots, at such a young age.  I do know that her high school career is only halfway done and she's got some more exciting chapters to write.

Monday, February 19, 2018

State Finals Wrapup - Boys Individual TOC

HURRICANE CARLISI DOES IT AGAIN

The boys bowling season is two and a half months of practices, matches, individual tournaments, team tournaments, Baker tournaments, sectional tournaments and team state finals. Ryan Carlisi, through no fault of his own, doesn't get to be a part of any of that.  Instead, he came in right at the end, smoked the sectional individual tournament and proceeded to overwhelm the field at the State Individual TOC with the force of a tropical storm. He is the New Jersey state individual champion for the second straight year, the first bowler to ever accomplish the feat.

nj.com article here

northjersey.com article here

hs-bowling blog here

GAME ONE

It didn't take long for the fireworks to start.  Just twenty minutes into the TOC, everybody seemed to be aware that Carlisi had the front seven, front eight, front nine.  He was bowling right in the center of the lower house, giving everyone a chance to watch as he took the approach in the tenth.  Ten.  Eleven.  Twelve.  He was demonstrative and confident and throwing with ungodly power, and the 300 went into the books.

Carlisi wasn't the only boy going big right off the bat: Fifteen broke 240, including John Drost of Woodbridge and Nick Thies of Jefferson (247 each), Pascack Valley's Henry Tipping (249), James Fitz of Linden (245) and Jivan Persaud of Hudson Catholic (244).  Always-in-contention Evan Weinberg of Dayton sat in fifth at 268, with Howell's Brian Garofano continuing a red-hot postseason with a 277 game in fourth. Justin DeMartin of Hunterdon Central has also been fantastic in the postseason, and shot 278 to sit in third.  In second place was a bowler who left more than one observer marveling at his youth and power, sophomore Eddie Ross III of Absegami, who was routinely popping over 20 mph on his way to an opening 280 game.

Brian Skettini of Ridgewood sat on the cutline (top 18 move on to the second round of qualifying) with a 231 game, and there was plenty of time left for a whole lot of bowlers.

GAME TWO

Twelve bowlers broke 240 in game two, with only Carlisi (256 for a 556 total and a 44 pin lead on the field) and Maple Shade's Dan Kenny (257-245) turning the trick in each game.  Matt Turnipseed of Bishop Eustace (269) and Rob Murray of Morris Knolls (257) had huge bounceback games after rough starts. Jason Bilawsky of Woodbridge (247) and RJ Utter of West Milford (256) moved into contention with strong game twos.

The very best game two scores came from Toms River South left Kyle Oliveri, whose 277 moved him into third overall, and a pair of 279s: Tyler Klein of Mahwah, who improved nearly 100 pins from game one, and Michael Milligan of Pompton Lakes, who moved into fourth overall at 509.

Carlisi, Garofano, Oliveri, Milligan and Kenny were followed by Sophomore Preston Williams of Jackson Liberty (256-238), still hot from his 773 at sectionals.  DeMartin, Bilawsky, Weinberg and Hunter Perry of Hawthorne (254-216) completed the top ten. Derek Lewandowski of Ridgefield Park was sitting on the cutline at 452 after a nice start, but things were very, very competitive, with thirty-four bowlers within thirty pins of a spot in the finals.

GAME THREE

The pressure-cooker.  The guys at the top at trying to maintain their position, while the rest of the field is just trying to make sure they get a chance to keep bowling. Somehow, Carlisi managed to fire the biggest game in the field again, posting 268 to complete an absurd 824 series and take a substantial lead on Garofano (246-758), Milligan (247-756) and Oliveri (237-749), all of whom were lights-out themselves.

Also lights out and moving into fifth off a 257-724 was NJ's top average, Daniel Lenk of East Brunswick.  Weinberg (248-718), Ross (244-705) and DeMartin (705) all shot opening sets over 700, with Robbie Wetzel of Howell jumping eleven spots in game three to sit in ninth at 694.

Sam Bortnick of East Brunswick, who had been just outside the number after two, busted into the top ten with a 689 set, while Williams, Kenny and Perry survived the cut despite slipping a bit in game three. Johann Gamo of Clifton (667) and Klein hung on to advancer spots as well.

There are always some impressive jumps above the cutline, and this year we had, besides Wetzel and Bortnick, Park Ridge freshman Joseph Mahoney leaping 10 spots into 14th with a 235 game, 673 set, and South Brunswick's Nick Delacruz who passed eleven competitors with a final game 229 to make the cut on the number (660).

The final member of the 18-bowler advancer class was Leonia's Andy Hong, who followed up his unlikely sectional run with an equally impressive 210-245-205=660 set in the first round of states.

Bilawsky (659), Trevor Lauber of Pascack Valley (653) and Kyle Bauter of Manasquan (653) came agonizingly close to advancing, with seventeen more shooting 600 sets, headed by Kyle Cunningham of Cherokee (643), Ray Schmitt of Lakeland (642) and Livingston's Michael Liu (639).

Falling short of the cut despite excellent numbers in game three were Jeff Wilkinson of Southern (246), Matawan's Zach Grillo (243) and Demarest senior Jordan Tse (239).

GAME FOUR

Not a whole lot of movement in game four, as most of the men at the top of the standings bowled well enough to stay there.  Garofano had the second-best game in the field at 248, which pulled him within twenty pins of Carlisi for the overall lead.

But the top game in field belonged to Kenny, bouncing back from a tough game three with a huge 265 to jump from twelfth place all the way up to #6, just two pins out in the hunt for the five stepladder positions.

GAME FIVE

Lenk moved into second place with a field-leading 268, but really everyone in contention was bowling so well at this point that there still wasn't much movement. Delacruz shot a nice 247 but was nearly 100 pins out at this point.  Bortnick's 228 left him 41 pins back in ninth.

Kenny was just 20 pins out of fifth following a 225 game.  DeMartin had put together 226-234 in the back half to position himself just 19 pins off the stepladder.

While Carlisi (247), Lenk, Garofano and Oliveri (234) were all sitting above 1200 in good position, the fifth and final stepladder spot was very much up in the air, as Weinber (223-243) and Ross (232-247) were firing big games and stood in a tie for fifth.

GAME SIX

Lots of big scores among the contenders meant that a huge jump to the stepladders was nearly impossible.  Carlisi finished round two at 713, earning the top seed by over fifty pins at 1537.  Oliveri closed with a big 277, giving him a 735 set and the two seed.

Lenk was right behind, having shot 748, and Garofano's 236 kept him in the top five at #4. Finally, Weinberg gave no chance to the rest of the field, firing 264 to make the stepladder for the second consecutive season.

Kenny's 248 finished a 728 second set, putting him in sixth place.  He was followed by Ross, DeMartin, Bortnick and Gamo to complete the top ten.

Williams, Perry, Mahoney and Delacruz all shot 617+ to earn spots eleven through fourteen.  Milligan, Klein, Wetzel and Hong weren't quite able to sustain their morning momentum and took spots fifteen through eighteen.

STEPLADDER

Weinberg built a big lead on Garofano and finished it off 236-184, ending the Howell junior's brilliant postseason in fourth place.

Weinberg and Lenk put on an exciting show, with Lenk carrying one extra strike to earn the victory 230-224, and the Dayton senior's exceptional career ended with a fourth place finish.

Oliveri was as consistently brilliant as anyone all day, having shot 749-735 to qualify 2nd. But the senior from Toms River South never quite got on track against Lenk and took third place after dropping a 233-183 decison.

And so, the final was set, pitting the state's best high school bowler (Lenk) against the state's best bowler who happens to be in high school (Carlisi).  That's a distinction that may come up again.

You couldn't have asked for more from either bowler. Both Lenk and Carlisi threw perfect shots - each started with the front six, with the pressure of the moment growing with each frame.  Neither man blinked, but the lefty, Lenk, was stymied by three solid seven pins in the back half of the game, and finished with eleven of eleven in the pocket and a 248 game (which completed yet another 700).

That was never going to be enough against Carlisi, not on this day.  The Steinert senior buried every shot and looked very likely to end his day the way it started, with another 300.  A single pin on the final shot denied him that honor, but that's the only thing that didn't go his way.  The 299 in the final gave Carlisi his second consecutive state individual title and earned him a spot on a very short list of the best to ever compete in the sport here in New Jersey.  I don't think we've heard the last of him.