The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Historic night for Warriors, Eagles and PAC

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

Tickets for Tuesday’s District 1 Class 6A boys basketball semifinal sold out in 15 minutes.

The home team Methacton’s supporters squeezed in next to the Norristown faithful who made the short trip up Germantown or Ridge pikes in a capacity gym because for one night, the eyes of District 1 basketball resided in a small town called Eagleville where two border league rivals battled for a spot in the championsh­ip game.

The contest marked a big moment in two programs with strong basketball histories — one dating back to the 1920s and the other with most of its accomplish­ments in the last decade — and a monumental night for the conference they reside in.

On Tuesday, night No. 12 Norristown knocked off top-seeded Methacton 51-36 in a District 1 Class 6A semifinal that for many reasons felt like the most highstakes boys basketball game in this area for many, many years. It without question was for the Pioneer Athletic Conference, which hadn’t had a matchup of league opposition this late in the postseason since 1998.

Both programs were on this district stage before, but their histories couldn’t be more different.

Norristown has a basketball history that can match most programs in the state and dates back to winning the first District 1 championsh­ip game in 1924, while Methacton didn’t open until 1961.

The Eagles’ motto is “We play for those who played before us.”

Norristown won the first District 1 championsh­ip in 1924 and totaled 16 more championsh­ip game appearance­s and nine titles (1924, 1947, 1948,1971, 1980, 1984, 1990, 2009). At the state level, the Eagles have one championsh­ip (1948) and four other finals appearance­s (1962, 1971, 1976, 2008).

Methacton’s lone District 1 crown and title-game appearance came just two seasons ago.

“Basketball is a staple to this town, it really is,” Norristown senior guard D.J. Johnson said after a win over Wissahicko­n in the Eagles’ playoff opener.

Norristown returned to the district quarters in 2011, 2012,

2018 and 2019, but Tuesday night’s game was the first semifinal trip for the program since Temple University legend Khalif Wyatt led the program to District 1 and PIAA runner-up finishes in 2008 and a district championsh­ip in 2009.

Johnson’s father and Norristown head coach Binky Johnson was on the 1990 Norristown district title team and in the stands for the 1984 championsh­ip team and knows seasons like those and the one his current group is in the midst of are not common, even at a program with such history.

“This is what we’re known for,” Binky Johnson said. “It’s a point that most people (in Norristown) expect to happen every year, but it doesn’t. It’s a really special moment and a special group.”

“We’re talking about rare air,” he added. “People don’t just get here. Schools really need to really embrace the fact that this doesn’t happen often that teams get to the Final Four of District 1.”

The barometer for boys basketball success when Methacton Athletic Director Paul Spiewak —who noted he assumed Methacton was out in the middle of nowhere despite his alma mater Cheltenham being rivals with nearby Norristown — arrived at Methacton in 2001 was just to get to the district playoffs.

Two decades later the Warriors are accustomed to occupying one of the top seeds in the tournament and entering with eyes of a deep playoff push, not unlike some of those past Norristown runs .

“I’m lucky to be a part of a program where the winning bar is expected and everybody gets what they want in the end basically,” Methacton senior Brett Byrne said after the Warriors won their fourth basketball championsh­ip in five seasons earlier this year.

It started with the team’s first PAC title in 2012, then the school’s first state playoff appearance a season later. They were the second overall seed in 2015 before a second trip to the district quarters.

From 2013 to 2020 there were four district quarterfin­al trips, breaking through for the program’s first championsh­ip in 2020 when no team in District 1 came close to matching the Warriors.

Now, just two seasons

later, the Warriors were right back in district title contention.

“For them to be in position to go to another district title game so soon after it happened, considerin­g the history of the high school, this is not just an impressive run, but a humongous, humongous game in terms of the legacy this whole run could leave on the program,” Spiewak said before the semifinal. “This is really the first time Methacton’s consistent­ly been on the map for boys basketball.”

The Eagles and Warriors competed in the Suburban One Conference together for many years — although for the most part in different divisions despite their proximity. With Methacton a smaller school at the time, a postseason matchup between the two programs would have seemed unfathomab­le when Binky Johnson was at Norristown.

When he told some of his former teammates the Eagles’ semifinal opponent, they asked “‘Who are you playing?’” Johnson said. “Because they haven’t been around the game in a while.”

“It was unheard of for Norristown to be competing against a Methacton (at this stage of the postseason) when we played,” he added.

The Warriors left for the PAC in 2008 before Norristown and Upper Merion followed nine years later in 2017.

Their boys basketball programs maintained a non-league rivalry in the seasons they were in different leagues that has since amplified as they make the annual trek to each other’s gyms.

Tuesday’s matchup carried significan­ce that extended beyond that division rivalry between two

programs whose players often grow up playing with or against each other in various teams and leagues before getting to the high school.

For a league with many other sports competing for championsh­ips at the district and state levels year-after-year — namely girls basketball, softball, field hockey, wrestling and baseball — a matchup of two PAC boys basketball schools at this stage is somewhat unheard of since the league was establishe­d in 1985.

Pottstown beat Lansdale Catholic for a Class 2A championsh­ip in 1993 and Phoenixvil­le topped LC for a 3A championsh­ip in 1998 but neither were at the district’s largest classifica­tion.

“When things like this happen, it’s certainly something the league can really hang their hat on in terms of how competitiv­e that sport is in the conference,” Spiewak said.

The Pottstown and Phoenixvil­le boys basketball teams won consecutiv­e District 1 Class 3A crowns in 2008 and 2009 and Upper Merion reached the Class 5A title game in its first season in the PAC in 2017.

But prior to Methacton’s run in 2020 the only large school representi­ng the league to reach a District 1 title game was Owen J. Roberts in 1996.

“That was a groundbrea­king moment for the league,” former SpringFord coach Dave Caldwell said of the Warriors’ 2020 run.

Tuesday night’s contest was another groundbrea­king occasion for the PAC and its boys basketball standing amidst the rest of District 1.

 ?? OWEN MCCUE — MEDIA NEWS GROUP ?? Methacton’s student section holds its hands up for a Warriors’ free throw during Tuesday’s District 1-6A semifinal against Norristown at Methacton.
OWEN MCCUE — MEDIA NEWS GROUP Methacton’s student section holds its hands up for a Warriors’ free throw during Tuesday’s District 1-6A semifinal against Norristown at Methacton.
 ?? OWEN MCCUE — MEDIA NEWS GROUP ?? Methacton’s Brett Byrne puts in a layup during Tuesday’s District 1-6A semifinal at Methacton.
OWEN MCCUE — MEDIA NEWS GROUP Methacton’s Brett Byrne puts in a layup during Tuesday’s District 1-6A semifinal at Methacton.

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