The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Remade Methacton rallies past CB South, 46-38

- By Owen McCue omccue@pottsmerc.com @Owen_McCue on Twitter

FAIRVIEW VILLAGE » Saturday wasn’t the first time Methacton’s Mike Merola was out on the floor late in a District 1 playoff game.

During the previous two seasons, district playoff routs were routine, leading to Merola coming off the bench late in games as part of the run-out-the-clock operation.

Merola was once again finishing off a Warriors’ win on Saturday. This time No. 16 Methacton, the 2020 District 1 Class 6A champions, defeating No. 17 Central Bucks South, 46-38, and Merola on the floor for all four quarters of the first round victory.

His mask drooped down with sweat to display an ear-to-ear grin, it was clear that Merola and the rest of the group that had taken a backseat to some of the stars of past seasons were appreciati­ve of their time to shine.

“I feel so good for the guys to get that opportunit­y to compete and get that win as well,” Methacton first-year head coach Pat Lockard

said. “It just feels great. We talked about preseason one of our goals was to make the district playoffs and get that win, which we’ve done so far. I told our guys I want to get greedy and get a second win too if we can at this point.”

The win set up a rematch of last year’s District 1 title game on Tuesday at top seed Cheltenham.

Juniors Cole Hargrove and Brett Byrne, the two with the most on-court postseason experience, led the way for Methacton (11-6).

Hargrove powered his way to a 23-point, 21-rebound performanc­e and Byrne chipping in 11 points.

Sophomore Tyler Meinel scored 14 and junior Michael Farley 11 for the Titans (9-7).

With their team trailing by 13 in the first half, Byrne and Hargrove powered the Warriors to a 9-0 run to end the first half down only 22-18 after a Byrne floater to beat the buzzer.

The two juniors scored Methacton’s first 24 points until senior Ryan Baldwin, who finished with eight, put Methacton ahead 26-24 with three and a half to play in the third quarter.

Methacton’s lead grew to as large as eight when Baldwin scored another basket inside to put the Warriors up 34-26 with seven minutes left in the game. The Warriors didn’t cruise to the finish, but a few defensive stops and free throws by Hargrove and Merola finished off the hard-fought comeback win.

“At the end of the second quarter we didn’t have that much energy,” Baldwin said. “Both of them started getting buckets. And Cole snagging those boards, even after a miss and still going up and finishing strong just gives everyone enough energy to propel everyone on the defensive end to lock them up and continue or run and lengthenin­g it as much as possible.”

“We just needed to play with more intensity and play the way we want to play, just keep on fighting back in games,” Hargrove added.

One of Methacton’s stars of seasons past was big man Jeff Woodward, a first team all-state selection now at Colgate University. Hargrove’s outing Saturday was Woodward-like as he was extremely impactful on both ends of the court.

In Woodward’s absence, Hargrove said he’s been surprised at the physicalit­y down low as teams focus in on him, but like the other Warriors, he’s embracing his expanded role this season.

Methacton’s coaches have tried to get the ‘monster’ out of Hargrove like he showed Saturday more consistent­ly this season. The 6-foot-7 junior forward chose the right time to do so to deliver the Warriors another postseason win. Seemingly every CB South shot down the stretch ended up with Hargrove swatting it away or pulling down the rebound.

“Me and Brett we just need to be leaders on the court and we need to conduct our offense,” Hargrove said. “It’s been fun.

Methacton travels to Cheltenham on Tuesday as an underdog for the first time in two seasons. The Warriors haven’t lost in the postseason since a state quarterfin­al loss to Pennridge two years ago after having their state playoff run halted by COVID-19 in the PIAA quarterfin­als in 2020.

This year’s group had a tough act following the best two seasons in program history, but they are hoping they can keep things rolling with a win Tuesday that would clinch a third straight District 1 quarterfin­al appearance.

 ?? OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Methacton’s Mike Merola, left, looks to pass after securing a loose ball from CB South’s Tyler Meinel.
OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP Methacton’s Mike Merola, left, looks to pass after securing a loose ball from CB South’s Tyler Meinel.
 ?? OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Methacton’s Ryan Baldwin, center, converts a basket Saturday against CB South in a District 1-6A playoff game.
OWEN MCCUE - MEDIANEWS GROUP Methacton’s Ryan Baldwin, center, converts a basket Saturday against CB South in a District 1-6A playoff game.

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