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Ridgewood Crew Carries 11 crews into finals in 10 events and comes away with 8 medals

Ridgewood Crew
Photo by Terry Wittmaack Gold Medalists Girls Varsity 2x Claire Callaghan, Jordan Wittmaack Coaches: Bob O’Conner ,Boris Roque Alvarez

May 9,2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood Crew had another great weekend of racing as the boys and girls traveled down to Philadelpihia for the City Championship, a regional championship that includes high school teams from the mid-Atlantic region. Against a competitive field, Ridgewood was able to come away with many excellent results in this two day event.

The first day served as a qualifying round for crews to advance to semi-finals and finals on Sunday. 11 of the 15 entries advanced to Sunday’s racing.

Sunday featured racing that matched the intensity of the rapidly changing weather. Ridgewood rowers battled both the other crews and gusting winds down the race course.

Sunday morning, the boys junior varsity doubles rowed by Drew Johnson and Alex Melarti; and Sebastian Rivero and Walter Friedrich qualified for their finals by finishing in the top three in their respective semi-final heats.

Sunday afternoon the finals started and Ridgewood did not disappoint regardless of the conditions. Ridgewood carried 11 crews into finals in 10 events. Of the crews in finals, 8 came away with medals; 4 crews came away with bronze medals, 3 crews received silver medals, and the varsity girls double of Claire Callaghan and Jordan Wittmaack came away with gold.

IMG 1749
Photo by Claus Melarti Bronze Medalists Boys JV 2x Drew Johnson, Alex Melarti, Coach Boris Roque Alvarez
Bronze

Girls Freshman 4x (Nicole Kye, Holly Sisco, Khushi Patel, and Anna Soderlund)

Boys Junior Varsity 2x (Drew Johnson and Alex Melarti)

Girls Varsity Lightweight 2x (Maddy Phillips and Emily Gilman)

Boys Varsity Lightweight 2x (Sam Daspin and Spencer Campbell)

Silver

Girls Junior Varsity 2x (Alexandra Walton Roth and Maddie Gibson)

Boys Junior Varsity 4x (Edward Hida, Alex Saladucha, Joe O’Keefe, and Henry Koontz)

Girls Varsity 4x (Isabella DeGregorio, Chloe Young, Amanda Perez, and Melissa Dexter)

Gold

Girls Varsity 2x (Claire Callaghan and Jordan Wittmaack)

In the girls varsity double, the crew had to fight back from behind to secure the victory. According to Senior gold medalist Claire Callaghan, “the other crews went out quickly in the first 500 meters” of the 1500 meter competition, but the double “stuck to and executed our race plan and were able to move through the competition.”

“I have great memories from racing at City’s and have won 3 golds and a silver in my four years of competing here,” says Callaghan.

Select crews will travel to Lake Mercer next weekend for the USRowing Mid-Atlantic Youth Championship. There, crews will attempt to qualify for the USRowing Youth National Championship Regatta held in Sarasota, Florida this June.

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Can New Jersey’s horse in the Kentucky Derby actually win? Bet on it

Kentucky Derby

By Jerry Izenberg | For The Star-Ledger
on May 03, 2017 at 6:19 AM, updated May 03, 2017 at 2:52 PM

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Regret and Cavalcade, the names are faint echoes, hallmarks of a time in American thoroughbred racing when New Jersey was a lot more than a casual pit stop in the breeding business. They were the only Jersey-breds ever to win the Kentucky Derby — Regret in 1915, Cavalcade in 1934.

They were to New Jersey breeders what the voice of Francis Albert Sinatra was to summer romantics from Asbury Park to Atlantic City.

And now on Saturday, 102 years after Regret became the first filly to win the Kentucky Derby, a colt named Irish War Cry will try to breathe new life into the phrase “New Jersey Tough.”

https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/05/kentucky_derby_hopeful_irish_war_cry_is_all_jersey.html

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Ridgewood Taekwondo Athletes Spring Forward

Ridgewood Taekwondo Athletes
April 22,2017
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, With the turn of the new year, the competitive Taekwondo season has started anew.  What has not changed is the impressive showing by the young athletes at Taekwondo All In, a school that teaches the Korean martial art.  In three state championships -Connecticut, Maryland and New Jersey – the Taekwondo All In students earned 36 gold, 11 silver, 8 bronze, 55 in total.  Head Coach Youngmin Kim also earned Best Instructor awards at the New Jersey event.  Moreover, all competing students earned spots to compete at the National Championship to occur in July.

The following nine athletes won medals at the Maryland State Championship on February 25.

Jenna Slota – 2 Gold and 1 Silver medals. Liam Woods – 2 Gold and 1 Bronze medals. Audrey Kim and Emily Kam – 2 Gold medals. Lucas Woods – 1 Gold and 1 Silver medals. Blake Edmilao – 1 Gold and 1 Bronze medals. Kaylin Lee – 1 Gold medal. Elias Chi – 2 Silver medals. Ricardo Merino – 1 Silver and 1 Bronze.

At the New Jersey State Championship on March 26, the following eleven athletes gained medals:

Jenna Slota – 2 Gold and 1 Silver medals. Taelim Eum, Elliott Yi, Isaac Yi, Tyler Minn, Christina Ahn, Emily Kam – 2 Gold medals. Elias Chi – 1 Gold and 1 Silver medals. Kate Minn – 1 Gold medal. David Ahn and Ricardo Merino – 1 Silver and 1 Bronze Medals.

At the Connecticut State Championships on April 1, following eight athletes earned medals:

Jenna Slota – 3 Gold medals. Tyler Minn – 2 Gold medals. Audrey Kim – 1 Gold and 1 Silver medals. Blake Edmilao – 1 Gold and 1 Bronze medals. Liam Woods and Kaylin Lee – 1 Gold medal. Lucas Woods 2 Bronze medals.

The owner and head instructor of Taekwondo All In Youngmin Kim commented, “This a great start to a new year.  Our athletes have trained diligently all winter and it shows in how they performed at the competitions.  I am very proud of all my students.”

Taekwondo All In, located at 33 Chestnut Street in Ridgewood, is a school that dedicates to teaching the Korean Martial Art, an Olympic sport.  The benefit of learning the sport ranges from better physical conditioning to mental strength and discipline.  For additional information, the school can be reached at (201) 857-0445.

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Paterson fires coaches, athletic director as fallout from Eastside hoops scandal spreads

Paterson Eastside High School

By Matthew Stanmyre and Steve Politi | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on April 12, 2017 at 10:20 PM, updated April 13, 2017 at 8:24 AM

PATERSON — Two Paterson Eastside coaches and the high school’s athletic director were fired Wednesday night at an often-contentious board of education meeting.

The board terminated Juan Griles, the head coach of the boys team, assistant coach Alberto Maldonado and athletic director Gregory Cooper. The actions came 10 weeks after NJ Advance Media published the first article in a series of investigations into the powerhouse boys and girls teams.

The articles exposed how both teams stocked their rosters with international players, often with promises and living accommodations that have drawn accusations of human trafficking. The stories also sparked investigations by the state’s governing body for high school sports and the Division of Child Protection and Permanency.

Both the girls and boys teams abruptly ended their seasons in February, pulling out of the state tournament shortly after the coaching suspensions were announced amid the multiple investigations.

On Wednesday, Victoria Oquendo, whose son was cut from the Eastside boys team, admonished the board for a lack of oversight in allowing coaches to lure international stars to Paterson, taking opportunities away from teens who have lived in the district.

“The children were hurt by this,” Oquendo said. “My son was hurt by this. I watched my son try out for this team. I watched him have the incentive to go hard. I watched it taken from him.”

After her allotted three minutes of speaking time, many people in attendance burst into applause.

https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/04/paterson_fires_2_coaches_1_administrator_in_wake_o.html#incart_2box_nj-homepage-featured

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Broken promises & disposable players: The remarkable story behind a high school sports scandal

Paterson Eastside High School

By Matthew Stanmyre and Steve Politi | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on April 04, 2017 at 7:03 AM, updated April 04, 2017 at 5:12 PM

Andrea Aquino began her journey in Paraguay. At 6-foot-7, people in her village thought she was a freak — all arms and legs clinging to the motorcycle she and her mother sold clothes from to support themselves.

Selwyn Rodriguez and Christian Ortiz started their odyssey in Puerto Rico. Once in the mainland United States, Ortiz slept on piles of laundry and cold floors, while Rodriguez lived with a stranger who openly used drugs.

And Blessing Ejiofor landed in the U.S. on the fast track to college, via Nigeria, but her dreams were crushed by the adults she trusted most. That trust has cost her a scholarship to Vanderbilt and forced her back to Africa, where she remains a prisoner of immigration rules.

Four players from three continents — all bound by the same dream and pitch: Leave your friends and family behind, travel thousands of miles and use basketball to find a better life.

https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/04/hollow_promises_and_disposable_players_how_hs_hoop.html?ath=a661ed5d8cb41fa9dc524c06f451a07d#cmpid=nsltr_stryheadline

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They Can Hit 400-Foot Homers, but Playing Catch? That’s Tricky

baseball_layout

By BILL PENNINGTONAPRIL 1, 2017

In the 40 years that Jack Thomson has been coaching high school baseball, he has seen a noticeable rise in the talent of players trying out for his team.

They scorch line drives, they hurl blazing fastballs.

But something is often missing.

“They can’t play catch,” said Thomson, a coach in California, one of the more fertile grounds for future major leaguers. “They’re bad at it. You’d be surprised how bad it looks. We have to teach them how to play catch.”

In modern youth baseball, where the culture has been transformed by the pursuit of the holy grail, a college athletic scholarship, the fundamentals are falling by the wayside in favor of flashier skills like big-league-style hitting and pitching.

Private coaching and specialized camps are proliferating along with travel teams whose primary goal is putting players in a position to display their batting and pitching skills at college recruiting showcases. These events are cattle calls, with everyone trying to impress.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/01/sports/baseball/they-can-hit-400-foot-homers-but-playing-catch-thats-tricky.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=0

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Girls lacrosse: Ridgewood beats Summit in TOC rematch

RHS_Girls_Lacross_therigdewoodblog

file photo

Sean Farrell , Staff Writer, @seanfarrell927:49 p.m. ET April 1, 2017

RIDGEWOOD – The captain needed a moment.

The emotions hit Hannah Cermack in the huddle when her turn came to offer closing remarks on one of the most meaningful wins of her career.

An opening week victory felt more like a playoff one for Ridgewood. The top-ranked Maroons (2-0) knocked off the team that ended their last two seasons. They passed their first early test with a hard-fought 7-4 win over Summit on Saturday.

https://www.northjersey.com/story/sports/high-school/lacrosse/2017/04/01/girls-lacrosse-ridgewood-beats-summit-toc-rematch/99880118/

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LAX: Championship rematch: No. 7 Summit and No. 1 Ridgewood to face off Saturday after memorable T of C final

RHS_Girls_Lacross_therigdewoodblog

file photo

By Evan Slavit | For NJ Advance
on March 31, 2017 4:12 PM, updated March 31, 2017 6:53 PM

Last year’s Tournament of Champions final was as good as it gets.

Both Summit, No 7 in the NJ.com Top 20, and No. 1 Ridgewood had improbable comebacks late in the game, and it took to double overtime to decide a winner after the two New Jersey powers battled to a one-goal game earlier in the season.

Summit ultimately prevailed by an 11-10 score, winning its first Tournament of Champions title and keeping Ridgewood from winning its third and first since 2011, thanks to a three-goal comeback late in the second half. Ridgewood’s heroics was a goal from Lillie Kloak, who tied the game with 18 seconds left after Summit took the lead in the final few minutes.

Now, with the rain unlikely to postpone Saturday’s noon contest, the two are set up for another classic.

It’s not exactly the same cast of characters, with Summit losing one of the more talented senior classes that included NJ.com Player of the Year Sara Syznal, as well as Catherine Cordrey, Julia Persche, Callie Humphrey, Maggie Moriarty and Teia Ross.

There’ll still be plenty of firepower on both sides, though.

https://highschoolsports.nj.com/news/article/-8704601164900982147/championship-rematch-no-6-summit-and-no-1-ridgewood-face-off-after-a-memorable-toc-final/

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School forged transcripts in Paterson hoops scandal. See the documents

Paterson Eastside High School

By Matthew Stanmyre and Steve Politi | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on March 08, 2017 at 7:33 AM, updated March 08, 2017 at 7:40 AM

Multiple basketball players at the center of a broadening scandal at Paterson Eastside High entered the school with transcripts that were incomplete, altered or fraudulent, NJ Advance Media has learned.

In two cases, transcripts for Nigerian student-athletes did not match their previous stop at a private school in northern Idaho, according to documents obtained by NJ Advance Media and interviews with school officials.

The most brazen example shows a player’s transcript from 2012-13 — when he would have been in the equivalent of the sixth grade — was crudely forged and presented as his work for the 2015-16 school year in Nigeria, even though he was enrolled in Idaho. While the class year on the barely readable transcript was changed, the player’s classes, grades and academic standing were all left the same.

https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/03/forged_transcript_raises_more_paterson_eastside_co.html?ath=9c46bfc08d76232bb5a5e00eeaf0bfa2#cmpid=nsltr_stryphoto

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Hoops scandal ‘just tip of iceberg,’ senator says in demanding probe

Paterson Eastside High School

By Matthew Stanmyre and Steve Politi | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on March 02, 2017 at 2:02 PM, updated March 02, 2017 at 2:26 PM

Sen. Richard Codey (D-Essex) formally called on state Attorney General Christopher Porrino Thursday to investigate the actions of the Paterson Eastside High Schools boys and girls basketball teams, which have been embroiled in controversy surrounding an influx of international and overseas players to the programs.

In a letter written by Codey and obtained by NJ Advance Media, the Senator asks Porrino to explore whether immigration laws have been violated by the district or players and if school documents were forged to make the players eligible to compete. Codey also is asking for an examination of the housing and living environments of the players.

https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/03/lawmaker_calls_on_state_attorney_general_to_invest.html?utm_campaign=new-jersey-politics&utm_content=2017-03-03-9029286&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=New%20Jersey%20Politics#incart_river_home_pop

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Baseball Scorekeeping Joins the 21st Century with GameChanger

20120330_baseball_33

February 26,2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, There was a time when nothing was more sacred than going to a baseball game, getting a hot dog and keeping score in the stands. Children from past generations would enter the gates at their favorite baseball stadium and immediately ask their parents to get a scorecard and pencil, so that they could track every play. In the days before YouTube, Wikipedia and baseball reference sites, keeping score was one of the only ways to look back on games and remember what happened – batter to batter.

As technology advanced the art of scorekeeping faded from popular use, and now many fans don’t know what a backwards “K”, “HPB” or a “6-4-3 DP” means. To help bring scorekeeping back to the 21st Century, GameChanger has launched apps for iOS and Android. GameChanger, available for free, is the leading digital scorekeeping app that also helps amateur baseball and softball teams stay organized and informed.

GameChanger features an easy-to-use tutorial that guides even the most inexperienced users step-by-step and pitch-by-pitch. With one click, users simply have to select the virtual field on the screen and a set of dropdown menus will allow them to input the play. The app keeps track of all the action, so that users can review the game anytime, anywhere. In-game stats include everything from pitch counts to first-pitch strike percentage.

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New questions, including human trafficking concerns, broadside N.J. basketball power

Paterson Eastside High School

By Matthew Stanmyre and Steve Politi | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on February 24, 2017 at 7:30 AM, updated February 24, 2017 at 2:39 PM

UPDATE, Feb. 24, 1:35 p.m.: The Paterson Public School District has announced wide-ranging penalties to its athletics department, including the suspensions of three district employees and the withdrawal of the Paterson Eastside High School girls basketball team from next week’s state tournament. For details click here.

PATERSON — At least eight international boys and girls basketball players have shown up seemingly out of nowhere to play for Paterson Eastside High School’s powerhouse teams over the past four years, broadening state investigations and drawing the attention of federal agencies, NJ Advance Media has learned.

The discovery of the international pipeline comes a little less than three weeks after an NJ Advance Media report found as many as six players living with Eastside boys coach Juan Griles. Three of the boys were from Puerto Rico and not among the eight who may have violated federal immigration laws.

https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/02/new_questions_including_human_trafficking_concerns.html#incart_2box_nj-homepage-featured

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Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the Archbishop of Newark, believes that the Saint John’s JV Black team should not have been penalized for mistakes that adults have made

Cardinal Tobin

Statement on CYO Sports Issues

February 15, 2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, The following is a statement from James Goodness, Vice Chancellor and Director of Communications for the Archdiocese of Newark.

While the unfortunate situation at Saint John’s School in Clark has affected many, the Archdiocese of Newark has special concern for the students involved – the two girls and the boys on the Saint John’s JV Black team, and all other students participating in the league – who have been upset through no fault of their own. The CYO basketball program is organized not only for the enjoyment of the students involved, but also to teach them the importance of fair play, good and healthy competition and how faith can be expressed through sports and in community.

By their very nature, competitive sports call for rules and regulations. What is more, the educational purpose of CYO athletics needs policies that create a safe and healthy environment for the athletes, while serving the goals of the Catholic Youth Organization.

For more than two decades, the rules and practices in the Archdiocese of Newark CYO call for boys-only and girls-only teams in older grades. The rule recognizes that some sports, like basketball, feature greater physical contact and aggression as student players age and mature. The logic is similar to the rules requiring the separation of players by age groupings. Both rules seek to reduce the possibility of injury to a younger, smaller child by older and more physically developed athletes.

While he recognizes that the recent decisions by CYO officials were aimed at an appropriate and consistent application of the organization’s rules, Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the Archbishop of Newark, believes that the Saint John’s JV Black team should not have been penalized for mistakes that adults responsible for following the league rules may have made.

Consequently, the Cardinal has directed that the Saint John’s JV Black team may retain its current team roster as a co-ed team for the remainder of the current season, and have its win/loss record restored. The league will attempt to reschedule the final two games of the season that the JV Black team had forfeited, and the team will participate in the league playoffs.

Further, the Cardinal has directed that CYO officials, under the aegis of the Archdiocesan Secretariat for Catholic Education, convene a working group to study the current league rules regarding participation and team makeup in all age groups.

“We want the children to play for the very reasons CYO sports leagues were established: to provide a source of both recreation and reaffirmation of our Christian faith,” Cardinal Tobin said.

We regret the difficulty, disappointment and discouragement that have affected the children, whose growth remains our highest priority and concern.

In a separate matter dealing with litigation brought by a family against St. Theresa School in Kenilworth, Cardinal Tobin has directed Archdiocesan legal counsel to cease seeking to enforce the school’s Parent/Student handbook provision about removal of students because of litigation.  The two girls in this matter will continue to attend St. Theresa for the remainder of the year. It should be noted, however, that St. Theresa Parish and School will continue to defend itself in the lawsuit brought against it by the family.

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Ridgewood wrestling team rides winning momentum

wrestling_greek

George Thompson, Correspondent11:27 p.m. ET Feb. 6, 2017

Since defeating Northern Highlands on Jan. 25, the Ridgewood Maroons wrestling team has picked up several victories. These included wins over NV/Demarest, Bridgewater-Raritan and Ramapo.

Following the victory over the Highlanders, the Maroons traveled to NV/Demarest to take on the Norsemen on Jan. 27. By the time the final weight class had been wrestled, it was the Maroons who had earned a 45-32 victory.

https://www.northjersey.com/story/sports/high-school/wrestling/2017/02/06/ridgewood-wrestling-winning-momentum/97579570/

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Tom Brady, Patriots rewrite Super Bowl record book with epic, 34-28 OT win

Patriots

“What an amazing comeback and win by the Patriots. Tom Brady, Bob Kraft and Coach B are total winners. Wow!” President Donald Trump

Jeff Howe Sunday, February 05, 2017

HOUSTON — Forget the redemption tour. Forget the revenge. Forget the vitriol against the NFL and its commissioner.

Tom Brady and the Patriots rewrote the history books and the storylines last night with their epic, 34-28 victory against the Falcons in Super Bowl LI. They trailed 28-3 midway through the third quarter before ripping off the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history. Prior to this, the Pats’ 10-point comeback two years ago against the Seahawks had set the bar.

Tom Brady completed 43 of 62 passes for 466 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, and he was 12 of 16 for 150 yards on the tying and winning drives in the fourth quarter and overtime. The five-time champion led his 51st game-winning drive in the 51st Super Bowl.

https://www.bostonherald.com/sports/patriots/the_blitz/2017/02/tom_brady_patriots_rewrite_super_bowl_record_book_with_epic_34_28