The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Young Perk Valley team on 4-game streak

Young PV on four-game streak after 45-36 win over Wissahicko­n

- By Owen McCue omccue@21st-centurymed­ia.com @Owen_McCue on Twitter

GRATERFORD » Perkiomen Valley essentiall­y had to hit the reboot button this offseason.

After graduating a large class of seniors who had seen the program make three Pioneer Athletic Conference championsh­ip appearance­s, two district quarterfin­als and two state playoff appearance­s during their careers, the Vikings returned just one starter and one senior for the 2019-20 campaign.

A difficult schedule paired with the inexperien­ce led to an 0-5 start for the Vikings. They started to correct that trend with two PAC crossover wins before Christmas and have since followed with two more victories at their Perkiomen Valley Shootout, including a 45-36 win over Wissahicko­n on Saturday to send themselves into the new year on a four-game win streak.

“Now we’re on a streak, we’re getting back into the flow of things, and we’re starting to find ourselves,” said junior Kameron Parks, the lone returning starter from last year’s team. “Everybody’s working the ball. We’re doing great on offense and coming back on defense and playing great defensivel­y. I think we’re starting to get into gear, and it’s really important for us.”

Perkiomen Valley coach Mike Poysden has always preached ball control and defense, but having consecutiv­e 1,000-point scorers in Justin Jaworski and Tyler Strechay allowed the Vikings to hang in some higher scoring games at times. That is not the case with this year’s group, which doesn’t yet have an establishe­d “scorer” at the varsity level. Perkiomen Valley (45) has had to rely even more on a stout defense.

The strength of this Vikings team was on display Saturday as they held Wissahicko­n (3-7) to five points in the third quarter to take control of the game then clamped down once again late, holding the Trojans to three points in the final 3:42 to secure the victory.

Parks led PV with 17 points, Tyler Lapetina followed with nine, and Aidan Gansz added eight. Harrison Williams had 10 and Matt Compas had eight for Wissahicko­n.

“This team is growing comfortabl­e down in the 40s instead of trying to get to the 70s,” Poysden said. “The way they’re guarding is going to be able to help with that. We’ve gotta be a little more efficient with the ball and some of our decision making.

“But overall I thought coming off a back-to-back, Saturday afternoon, the second game it’s always tough to find that energy and manufactur­e that. I thought we went on enough runs there, got enough stops and came out with a win.”

After Will Kunzier’s late bucket tied the game at 20 at halftime, Perk Valley scored the first nine points of the second half to build a 29-20 lead with 4:10 left in the third quarter. Stefan Lowry scored Wissahicko­n’s first points of the second half with 2:13 left in the third, and Williams knocked down a three to pull the Trojans within four, 29-25, after three quarters.

Another Williams bucket pulled Wissahicko­n within two a minute into the fourth. Two buckets by Parks and a three by Lapetina on the fastbreak extended the PV lead to 36-27 with 4:48 to go, its largest of the game to that point. Williams helped the Trojans cut the lead once again before Kunzier, who scored four of his six points in the fourth, made the score 3633 PV with 3:42 left in the game.

“We just had to start moving the ball more,” Williams said. “We were doing too many one-on-ones and isos, and we weren’t really working with each other. Once we started moving the ball, it kind of opened up shots for everyone, and I was able to find mine and start hitting them.

“I feel like that started to create momentum and allowed us to close the lead a little bit. We just struggled on defense.”

With Wissahicko­n threatenin­g, Perkiomen Valley’s defense was once again called upon to finish off the victory. A Parks steal led to a Vikings fastbreak, swinging the momentum back toward PV. Ethan Kohler, who had seven points in the game, converted an and-one off a pass from Lapetina to give the Vikings a 41-33 edge with a little more than two minutes to play.

Shortly after coming up with a block on the defensive end, Parks went to the line with 56.3 seconds and PV up 43-36. He missed both shots but came up with the offensive rebound and putback to all but seal the win.

While Parks’ offensive presence was important in a game featuring very few points, his defense from the start — blocking shots in the lane and using his long arms to poke away passes and dribbles — was a major factor in keeping Wissahicko­n’s offense uncomforta­ble throughout Saturday’s game.

“It comes with our team,”

Parks said of his defense. “Our team is very prideful on defense. We love playing defense. When we go out there and control the pace of the game, defense is a big part of that.”

“We don’t need to score,” he added. “We just need to play great on defense. Honestly, that’s the way we win games. That’s the way PV has won games in the past and that’s the way we’ll continue to win in the future.”

When PV jumps back into Liberty Division action against Boyertown on Jan. 3, the Vikings will do so riding a four-game win streak. Poysden has coached this team with a mindset for the future, hoping to get the best basketball out of his squad in late January and carry that over into next season when all but one player returns.

That doesn’t mean the Vikings feel like they can’t accomplish some things this season, and at the moment there aren’t many teams hotter than PV.

“Our goal is to keep that streak going, of course,” Parks said.

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 ?? OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Perkiomen Valley’s Kameron Parks, right, tries to break the pressure of Wissahicko­n’s D’Shan Love (1) and Harrison Williams (5) on Saturday.
OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP Perkiomen Valley’s Kameron Parks, right, tries to break the pressure of Wissahicko­n’s D’Shan Love (1) and Harrison Williams (5) on Saturday.
 ?? OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Perkiomen Valley’s Ethan Kohler (11) drives to the basket as Wissahicko­n’s Matt Compas (30) defends Saturday.
OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP Perkiomen Valley’s Ethan Kohler (11) drives to the basket as Wissahicko­n’s Matt Compas (30) defends Saturday.

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