Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Results speak for themselves in Delco Madness tournament

- By Jack McCaffery jmccaffery@21st-centurymed­ia.com @JackMcCaff­ery on Twitter

In his many successful years as a Delaware County basketball coach, Clyde Jones never had trouble calculatin­g a basketball score. That was until he saw the Delco Madness Sweet 16 list of top high school basketball teams in county history, and thought something must have gone awry.

As the Daily Times prepares for mythical tournament­s to determine the best boys and girls teams over several decades, Jones was disappoint­ed in, yet not necessaril­y shocked by, this early result: Chester 6, Penn Wood 1.

Six Chester teams the field.

in

One from Lansdowne? “That shows me a little bit of Delco Chester bias,” Jones said. “I do know that they have had a lot of really good teams. But six was a bit much.”

So it has begun: The debate, the competitio­n, the spirit of a mock event that will play out over the next couple of weeks in the Daily Times. As for Jones, who coached Penn Wood to a 28-4 record and the big-school PIAA championsh­ip in 2009, he knows how tournament­s work. Get in.

Play.

Advance.

Let the results speak for themselves.

For that, he expects his sixth-seeded Patriots to make a statement.

“Our team that won the state championsh­ip was extremely versatile,”

Jones said. “It was easy to coach. The kids put in the work. They understood what the expectatio­ns were. And they just played. It was incredible to just see a group of kids that understood what they were playing for each and every night.”

Yet the committee placed Penn Wood behind four Chester teams, a bracket quirk Jones expected would not go unnoticed by his former players.

“You have to remember, these kids were all from the neighborho­od and they just came together at the right time,” Jones said. “We made sure we kept them in Lansdowne and didn’t let them get away. Aaron Brown had gone to Roman for a year, but he came back. Will Brown went to Bonner.

And he came back. Tyree Johnson went to Comm Tech (defunct Communicat­ions Technology High) and came back.

“Those kids just came home and realized it was something special, growing up together and playing together. They wanted it to continue.”

In the opening round, the Patriots will encounter the 11th-seeded 1958 Haverford Class A state championsh­ip team that featured, among others, Al Kaemmerlen, Danny George, Jack Juenger and Ed “Reds” McIlmoyle.

Ever confident, Jones is thrilled that his team won’t have to face the 2010 Patriots, who did not receive an at-large bid despite going to a Class AAAA state final before losing there, 58-51, to

Plymouth-Whitemarsh at Penn State.

“My 2010 team might have been better than 2009,” Jones said.

“That’s when Darian Barnes came into his own. He was 6-8, had long arms, was a great shot-blocker. We lost a lot when Duane Johnson graduated, but we gained a bit with Darian. And Aaron matured and was one of the Top 20 players in the country that year. Everywhere we went, he had fans. He just exploded.”

Brown, Duane Johnson (still a successful pro overseas), Tyree Johnson, Barnes, Will Brown, Chris Brown and XFL player Shawn Oakman will have an imaginary opportunit­y to do the same and try to give the 2009 Penn Wood state champions one more net to trim in the Delco Madness tournament.

“Delaware County has such a rich basketball tradition,” said Jones, who now oversees the Chichester varsity. “And just to have the opportunit­y to see and hear the chatted arguments that are going to start after the first upset will be great.

“I know some of my kids are already screaming.”

 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? Clyde Jones, now overseeing the boys varsity at Chichester, had a pair of superb, championsh­ip-level teams at Penn Wood in 2009 and ‘10.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO Clyde Jones, now overseeing the boys varsity at Chichester, had a pair of superb, championsh­ip-level teams at Penn Wood in 2009 and ‘10.

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