Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Yabba Dabba Doo! ... Jerome’s season isn’t history yet

- By Terry Toohey ttoohey@21st-centurymed­ia.com @TerryToohe­y on Twitter

HOLLAND » Daetrel Jerome was at home Friday, having lunch, when he noticed he had a text message from Radnor wrestling coach Justin Schellenge­r.

“He told me to call him ASAP,” Jerome said.

He immediatel­y phoned Schellenge­r and found out his wrestling season was not over. Strath Haven’s Ben Farabaugh had to pull out of the PIAA Class 3A South East Regional due to COVID-19 contract tracing, and his misfortune opened up a spot for Jerome.

“(Coach Schellenge­r) asked me, ‘Are you ready to wrestle?’” Jerome said. “I said, ‘Yeah, I’m ready. Let’s do it.’”

First, though, Jerome had to finish his lunch, which was a typical teenage feast.

“I was having a bowl of Fruity Pebbles,” Jerome said. “It was a big bowl. It hit the spot.”

Jerome wasn’t about to let his sugary cereal go to waste, even though he had to lose at least six pounds in the next 20 hours to make weight to able compete in the tournament at Council Rock South High School Saturday morning.

Jerome had to get down to at least 287 pounds to compete in the heavyweigh­t division. He did so with a pound to spare and then went out and finished fourth to earn a trip to next week’s Class 3A East Super Regional at Quakertown High School.

“I wasn’t worried (about making weight) because I’ve done it a lot this year,” Jerome said. “I hopped on the (stationary) bike for 40 minutes, maybe more than 40 minutes and I was able to do it.”

Jerome was one of 10 Delco wrestlers to advance. Haverford’s Cole McFarland (106), Garnet Valley’s Matt Ricci (120) and Sam DiTrolio

(189), Interboro’s Nate Shippey

(126) and Dom D’Agostino (152), Strath Haven’s Kelton Brunner

(132) and Chase Barlow (152), Sun Valley’s Ryan Catka (215) and Upper Darby’s Julien Laventure (285) also kept their respective seasons alive.

Catka won his second straight regional title. He was the 189-pound champion a season ago. Laventure claimed his first regional crown. Shippey, D’Agostino and DiTrolio finished second. Barlow placed third, while McFarland, Ricci and Brunner all finished fourth.

Jerome took the hard way to the Super Regional. He was pinned by Council Rock North’s Max Harar late in the second period of his opening match. He bounced back and pinned Pottsgrove’s Manny Allen in 2:26 in the first round of consolatio­ns, and then decked Mike Miller of Plymouth Whitemarsh in overtime to punch his ticket to Quakertown before getting pinned by Frederick Retter of Quakertown in the third-place match.

“That’s the first time he’s ever wrestled an overtime match,” Schellenge­r said. “It’s just amazing.”

Jerome was driven to succeed, even though he only had two workouts during the week, one on Monday and then again on Friday after he received the news that he was a last-minute replacemen­t.

“I didn’t make it to states last year,” said Jerome, who missed a trip to Hershey by one spot. “I feel like I’m at the point where I can make it.”

Schellenge­r wouldn’t be surprised if Jerome made his way to Hershey.

“He’s like a home run hitter,” Schellenge­r said. “He always has something in his back pocket to win a match.”

One of the highlights of the meet was D’Agostino’s 9-7 victory over Barlow in the semifinals. It was a matchup of two returning state qualifiers and the first time they wrestled against each other.

“My main goal was to stay on my feet,” D’Agostino said. “That’s where I wrestle the toughest. I wanted to get to my feet even when I was on the bottom, getting to my strong position and I think that’s where I won.”

Barlow bounced back with a 5-1 win over his second cousin, Josh Barlow of Kennett. It was the first time the cousins squared off in a match.

“It was a little weird, but nothing changed,” said Chase Barlow, who then beat Spring-Ford’s Zach Needles, 8-2, to take third place. “I went out there and wrestled the same.”

Ricci was not satisfied with just making the regional, something the junior failed to do as a freshman and sophomore. He wanted more and made his presence felt early with a 10-3 victory over Todd McGann of Quakertown in the first round. It was Ricci’s third career victory over McGann.

“It was awesome to see all the hard work pay off and take it to the next level,” Ricci said. “I knew I had to get some big wins and I was able to get it done. Winning the first one is nice. Last week I had to wrestle all the way back. I was confident in myself and I knew I could beat him.”

Catka put on a dominating display. He won by technical fall over Truman’s Chase Moeller in the first round, scored a 17-5 major decision over Carl DiGiorgio of C.B. West in the semifinals and then beat Quinn Collins from C.B. East in the final,

5-1.

Laventure won in workmanlik­e fashion. He beat Retter, 5-3, in the quarterfin­als, knocked off Miller,

6-1 in the semis and then pulled away for a 12-6 victory over Harar in the final.

•••

NOTES » Only the top four finishers in each class advanced, but medals were awarded to the top six. Ridley’s Kevin Rainey (138) and Garnet Valley’s C.J. Wood (145) finished fifth, while Sun Valley’s Shane

Holefelder (126), Garnet Valley’s Griffin Hollingswo­rth (132) and Interboro’s Shalom Thomas (215) were sixth. … The East Super Regional will be conducted in two sessions. The first session is for weight classes 106-138. It starts at 8 a.m. and runs through the consolatio­n finals, which are scheduled to start at 12:30. The gym will then be cleared and the 145-285 matches will start at 3:30 with the finals and consolatio­n finals slated to begin at 7:15. The top four wrestlers in each class advance to the PIAA championsh­ips.

PHILADELPH­IA » In a season more satisfying than not, the 76ers Saturday absorbed a most unlikely defeat.

With Matthew Dellavedov­a (concussion), Andre Drummond (personal reasons), Kevin Love (calf), Larry Nance Jr. (fractured hand) and Taurean Prince (personal reasons) out, and with only nine available players, the Cleveland Cavaliers earned a 112-109 victory in overtime at the Wells Fargo Center.

Though the Cavaliers have won their last three, they’d lost their previous 10 and entered at 12-21, next to last in the Eastern Conference.

“We had a chance to win the game,” Doc Rivers allowed. “And that was a miracle with the way we played.”

While Rivers denied that his team took Cleveland lightly, he was disturbed by its energy level, particular­ly as the Cavs earned a

56-47 halftime lead.

“It looked like a walkthroug­h in the first half,” he said. “We just didn’t handle a lot of stuff well tonight.”

Joel Embiid scored 42 points and added 13 rebounds, but he missed a

14-foot jumper from the left baseline with one second left in regulation.

Collin Sexton, who scored

28 points, drained a 30-foot jumper from beyond the top of the key with 22.6 seconds left to force a 92-92 tie.

The Sixers never led in overtime, but drew to within three points on Ben Simmons’ three-point shot at the horn. They had a two-game winning streak snapped, but have won four of their last six.

Simmons shot for 24 points.

Darius Garland scored 25 for Cleveland.

“We didn’t start the game the right way,” Embiid said. “We picked it up in the third. But we have to start it that way.”

• • •

The Sixers were without Tobias Harris, who continues to recover from the bruised knee that caused him to leave a Thursday victory over Dallas early. The Sixers have said that an MRI revealed no structural damage.

“That meant a lot,” Simmons

11-for-17

said. “He’s the second leading scorer on our team. But at the end of the day, that’s a win we’ve got to get regardless of who is out.”

•••

Always recognized as a shooter, Shake Milton has been a dependable, stabilizin­g, second-unit point guard.

“It’s just kind of learning and understand­ing what the coach wants out of that second unit,” Milton said Saturday, after the morning shootaroun­d. “I just want to be locked into the passes he wants me to make.”

In his third game back after a five-game recovery from a sprained ankle, Milton provided 10 points and six assists in 19 minutes of the Dallas game.

“It’s a work in progress,” he said of his injury. “I was still dealing with some soreness and stuff like that. But for the most part, I am able to move around OK.

“It’s not really a

difficult

thing to come back from. It’s just more annoying and tedious. You have to be locked into all the little rehab stuff. But I’m feeling better.”

Milton scored 11 points in

32 minutes Saturday.

•••

Simmons and Embiid combined for 66 points, continuing to confirm one deep Rivers belief.

“One of the things I heard coming in was that they don’t fit,” he said. “But my eyes kept telling me they do fit. They fit very well, as a matter of fact, because of their skill sets. I think they now see that, and that gives them confidence.”

•••

NOTES » Furkan Korkmaz replaced Harris in the starting lineup and scored eight points in 20 minutes. … Seth Curry, who has been inconsiste­nt all season, shot

1-for-13. … The Sixers will host Indiana Monday night at 7. Utah will visit Wednesday.

 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG - MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Upper Darby’s Julien Laventure scores a takedown against Council Rock North’s Max Harar in the 285-pound final at the South East AAA Regional at Council Rock South Saturday.
AUSTIN HERTZOG - MEDIANEWS GROUP Upper Darby’s Julien Laventure scores a takedown against Council Rock North’s Max Harar in the 285-pound final at the South East AAA Regional at Council Rock South Saturday.
 ?? MATT SLOCUM – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Sixers’ Furkan Korkmaz, right, passes the ball Saturday night while Cleveland’s long-limbed JaVale McGee defends. The Cavaliers, short on players, still beat the Sixers in overtime at Wells Fargo Center.
MATT SLOCUM – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Sixers’ Furkan Korkmaz, right, passes the ball Saturday night while Cleveland’s long-limbed JaVale McGee defends. The Cavaliers, short on players, still beat the Sixers in overtime at Wells Fargo Center.

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