Pullen's Garage
3060 Quakerbridge Rd.
Hamilton, NJ
609-586-2471
pullensgarage.com
 
The World Renowned
Christmas Eve Club
of Mercer County
Route 156, Yardville
Home of the Greatest 3 Hours of the Year
John F. Bencivengo
Mayor of Hamilton
America's
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hamiltonnj.com
 

First Bank

“Welcome Home”

2465 Kuser Road
Hamilton, NJ 08690

609-528-4400

www.firstbanknj.com

Member FDIC

 

Ed Riley, Sales Manager
Davis Acura
2051 East Lincoln Highway 
Langhorne Pa.
215-943-7000 x 1301
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Mercer Oaks Catering
Jim Hines, President
Princeton Jct., NJ
609-275-9260
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2277 Highway 33

Hamilton, N.J.

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REMAX TRI COUNTY
BOB Cell 609-558-1220
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153 West Manor Way

Robbinsville, NJ

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NT Callaway Real Estate
Ruth sells in Mercer County
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Xerographic Document Solutions, Inc.
Bob & Rich Weise, Owners
117 North Gold Drive
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670 Route 33
Hamilton NJ 08619
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Team Gersh: A Professional Prudential Fox & Roach
Real Estate Team
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1004 Washington Blvd.
Robbinsville, NJ
609-448-4872
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Route 130 Car Wash 
& Express Lube
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770 Route 130 South
Hamilton Twp., NJ 08610
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Dennis Maffezzoli
Sportswriter
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
maffsports@yahoo.com
htpreps.com


Medford Strikers
Soccer Club

Rich Fornaro, President

medfordstrikers.com

 

Original's Pizza & Subs
We cater, deliver
and support local sports
450 Kuser Road
Hamilton NJ, 08610
586-6484

 

 

Universal Soccer Academy

Where Champions Are Born

James Galanis, Director

universalsocceracademy.com

 

 

 

Sound Investment
Disc Jockeys
Professional DJs since 1984
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Jo Jo's Tavern

2677 Nottingham Way

Mercerville, NJ

609-586-2678

jojostavern.com


 


Hopewell Valley
Community Bank
7 branches in 6 towns
609-466-2900
hvcbonline.com
Member FDIC
 

J&S Home Improvements
Trenton, NJ 08609
609-695-4400
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jandshome.net 

 

 

 

 

Hamilton A's Baseball
Where all the area's
stars come to play!
hamiltonas.com




Michael Dill Photography
609-588-9502
michael@
michaeldillphotography.com

Portraits, weddings, sports
michaeldillphotography.com
 

 
John Blaine Sports Photo
Specializing in
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jbsportsphoto@aol.com
Dr. Pamela Tola
Tola Foot & Ankle Center

Specializing in sports injuries
609-588-5474
hamiltonpodiatrist.com


ComputerEyes, Inc.
Bruno J Martillotti
Expert advice-reasonable rates
609-206-5607
bruno@computereyes.us

 

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 May 5 Track & Field
Things couldn’t be better for Northstars family
By Rich Fisher
Fish4Scores.com
            May 5: It was a day of laughter, a day of tears and a day of united happiness for the Nottingham High track and field program.
            The Northstars boys won their first Colonial Valley Conference Valley Division title for the first time in so long coach Leroy Peterson was unsure of when it last happened.
            The girls won their first since 1993. 
            What everyone is certain of, is that it's the first time the boys and girls team both celebrated a title in the same season.
            It happened at Princeton High today when the boys beat the Little Tigers, 79-61, to tie them at 7-1 but claim the championship due to head to head competition. The girls took a 79-59 win over PHS, which also could have won the crown had it beaten the ‘’Stars.
            “The girls work so hard and the boys feed off that and it makes for a better team at practice,” Peterson said. “They can see each other advance.”
            Thus, the fact both teams won it together made it even more special. It reminded Peterson of his days playing basketball at Clay County High School in Fort Gaines, Ga.
            “We won the first state championship for my high school basketball team, and the same year the girls won the state championship,” Peterson said. “We didn’t have JV and freshmen games. The girls would play first, they’d be like the JV game, and then the boys would play.
      
“We’d ride on the same bus to the games together. Our coach would tell us ‘You guys are gonna be the cheerleaders for the girls because they’re going to win.’ Things have a way of coming back around and this is a great, great feeling.”
        
The athletes themselves, particularly the girls, were ecstatic as they screamed and yelled and hugged each other.
         
“This is the first year we both get banners at the same time,” said James Cole, who won the 800, took second in the 3200 and third in the 1600. “It’s a really big deal.
        
“All the teachers in our school are with it, obviously all our coaches. We’re all supporting each other.” 
         "As s
oon as the girls won, we said ‘Now we gotta get one,’” said Robert Wiggs, who won the long jump, anchored the winning 4x400 relay and took two seconds. “It wouldn’t have felt right if the girls got one and we came home empty handed. We had to bring one home.”
        
Nor would it have felt right, had it happened the other way around and the boys won while the girls didn’t.
         
“We’re like a big family,” said Stephanie Hicks, who helped lead a sweep of the 100 hurdles with a first-place finish in 14.5.
      
Wiggs seconded that motion.
       
“We all hang out at school, hang out after at track practice,” the junior said. “We go out and eat together. Now we both have the same record, we’re both champs, we’re pretty satisfied where we’re at now.”
      
Pretty satisfied?
      
Just think what they’ll do, to be really happy.
Girls enjoy their rags to riches story
            A year ago, the girls were 0-8, so it’s amazing they’re not plain dizzy from such a quick and extreme turnaround.  
           Hicks, who has enjoyed individual success even through the losing seasons, thinks this way is better.
          
“It’s so much more fun,” Hicks said. “I feel as if I bonded with the girls more and that’s made our team stronger. Everybody’s doing their best cos we want to be good this year. I’m just really excited.
            “It feels amaaaazing. It doesn’t feel real right now, to come so far in a matter of one year. It’s a tremendous feeling. When got to the last straightaway (in the 4x400), everyone was yelling ‘Banner! Banner!’ and that made me go faster. I had to get this.”
            Actually, she didn’t, as the dual meet win was already locked up. But just as Peterson did with the boys, girls coach Lenny Carmichael didn’t tell his troops it was in the bag since he didn’t want them easing up.
            And besides, Hicks’ effort helped Nottingham break the school record for the second time in two weeks as it clocked a 4:07. Hicks also won the long jump (16-5-1/2) and high jump (5-2).
            Aside from its superstar, Nottingham got contributions from throughout the lineup. According to assistant coach Melissa Foley, a huge key was sweeping the hurdles, as Brianna Perea and Sarah Hackman followed Hicks in the 100 highs, and Hackman, Perea and Brittany Shipley were 1-2-3 in the 400 intermediates.
            “Brittany’s only a freshman, I told her we had to have her come through today,” Foley said. “She did an unbelievable job.”
            Also coming up with key points were Melissa Bauerle (second, 3200, third, 1600) and Rosa Colon (2nd, 800).
           Then of course, there is senior Hafsatu Kamara (pictured at right), who won the 100 and 200 meters in 12.1 and 26.8. She also ran the relay with Hicks, Colon and Lindsay Jones, while Jones took second in the 400.
         
Kamara, who struggled through injuries and losing seasons, spent the day dancing and crying.
        
“It is amazing,” she said. “It brought me to tears. Four years since my freshman year I’ve been waiting for this. It’s wild.
         
“I woke up excited today. I woke up dancing, literally. I was so excited the whole time. During the last period of the day my stomach started hurting, I was like ‘Oh my gosh, this is it.’ It started getting to me. I just came out her and said “I’m just gonna run this as best I can.”
         
Kamara, who will be worth watching at Saturday’s Mercer County meet, says that she was pushed into overdrive by Nottingham’s strong crop of underclassmen.
        
“They inspired me to run even faster in my races,” she said. “It’s nice to know we all did this together, as a family.”
            A family that will have plenty to talk about at its reunions.
Strong, talented mix returns boys to glory
            Peterson knew that for the boys, if things broke right, this could be a nice season after the ‘’Stars went 4-3 in 2009.
            “We set our goals high,” the coach said. “This was a unique bunch of kids and I was depending on the underclassmen, but I knew the leadership of the upperclassmen would make a difference.
          
“I felt we could match or even be better than last year depending on how the kids develop.
            Wiggs was the catalyst, winning the long jump (season best 21-1-1/2) while taking second in the 200 and the triple jump and anchoring the 4x400 relay team with Donald Zephir, Ayoub and Anthony Alston. That quartet broke the school record (set at the recent Penn Relays) with a time of 3:26.  
          
“On the back turn (the Princeton runner) tried to push a little, so I tried keeping up with him,” Wiggs said. “I don’t run a lot of 400s, so down the straightaway it was all heart.”
           
The junior thought Nottingham needed to win the relay to win the meet. When told that was a little white lie, he laughed.
            “I had a feeling,” Wiggs said. “He did that last year. We should do that every meet. If that’s the case, we’ll keep breaking the record.”
            Cole, who was on the previous record-setting team, watched his day get progressively better. After letting a lead slip to third place in the 1600, he won the 800 (2:03.67) and took second in the 3200.
         
“Even though I got a point for my team in the 1600 I felt like I lost,” Cole said. “But my coach told me he knew I could come back, that’s why I’m in all those events. In the eight I just went out and did what I had to do, the same with the two mile.
             
“I knew I wasn’t going to beat the kid who came in first (in the 3200), but I was going for second anyway.”
            Nottingham also got a huge boost from its weight team, which drew praise from Jason “The Rock” Marasco. The coach was particularly excited about sophomore Jancel Nunez, who won the javelin with a personal record throw of 125-6.
            “He came up huge,” Marasco said.
            “I knew I had it in me,” Nunez said. “I’ve been practicing with a guy who went here a few years ago, he threw 170. He came in and has been teaching me. I just learned the steps and I threw real good.”
            
Like the other Northstars, Nunez was fueled not only by his own performance but by what it could do for the team.
           
“That pumped me up,” he said. “I was mentally prepared today.”
            
Miguel Colon helped out by winning the discus (126-2) and taking second in the shot, while Rafal Klos was second in the discus and third in the javelin.
           
Kamara won the 200 (22.7) and tied with teammate Jermaine Griffith for first in the 100 (11.2). Widmagner Charlot won the triple jump (42-10) and was third in the long jump, while Bill Kiernan continued his outstanding junior season by winning the high jump in 6-8.
         
Put it all together, and it spells championship.
         
“It’s been a while since we had a banner in the school,” Wiggs said. “We wanted to be the first one team break that streak.”
          
And they did so, in style, with a nice mix of young and old.  

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FISH TALES
(Also known as
Rich Fisher's blog)
Feb. 5 2012
Former GAK player
fondly remembers
coach Nick Wiener

    Feb. 5: Hamilton Township and Mercer County soccer lost one of the most influential men in their rich history this past week when Nick Wiener passed away at age 73.
    The Yardville resident coached German American Kicker teams for over 40 years and was responsible for not only winning championships, but for making better players.
       Chris “Buzz” Barlow, a producer for NFL Films, played for Hightstown High School and the University of Pennsylvania, but learned much about the game playing for Nick on the GAK.
        Chris was kind enough to share his memories of the legendary coach, which are as follows:  
 
      Mercer County lost a great man last Sunday with the passing of Nick Wiener, and the Mercer County soccer community lost a legend.
       In the late 80s and early 90s I was fortunate to play for Nick on his German American Kickers team. I had been playing for the GAK youth team for a few years when Nick decided he wanted me to join the men’s team. I don’t remember how that conversation went, but I’m sure it was something like this:
       “Chrissy…” (Yes, he called me Chrissy. No one else did but for some reason it didn’t bother me when he did it. Of course, I would come to learn that Pete became Petey, Ed became Eddie, Jim-Jimmy, Dave-Davey, and even Nick’s two sons on our team, Nick and John were Nicky and Johnny). . .

        “Chrissy, we have a game Sunday at 2, you’ll be there.” I wasn’t sure if it was a question or a command, and even though I was living in Philadelphia at the time going to school, I made sure I was at the game. I couldn’t say no to Coach Nick, but then again, why would I want to? I would be playing for a coach with a masterful knowledge of the game, and be playing with guys whom I’d admired and emulated for years.
        Nick was a coach who trusted his players and treated them like men. He saw no need to run up and down the sidelines yelling (unless he was after an official). And Nick could say just as much with a glance or a look as with a phrase. But either way, he was going to get his point across, and if personnel changes needed to be made, he didn’t hesitate to make them. It was so obvious how much the game meant to him and how much he cared. You couldn’t let him down.
        When you played for Nick, you would play anyone, anywhere. And for many years, it seemed like we did--from Farcher’s Grove in Union, (which did not have a blade of grass on it) to Perth Amboy—where we played underneath the Outerbridge Crossing, from Kearny to Newark to East Orange. It seemed like we spent most weekends going up and down the Jersey Turnpike.
        But there was nothing like a home game at the GAK club on Uncle Pete’s Road. It was soccer Camelot, and with Nick serving as our King Arthur, we hardly ever lost there. But there was so much more than just the game. After each win we’d be treated to dinner inside the club. We’d replay the game, tell tall tales, and think about the next time we’d be lucky enough to play there.
       My most vivid memory of playing for Nick came the year that we made a deep run in the State Cup and found ourselves in the final at Thompson Park in Lincroft. We gave up an early goal and then had a player sent off with a red card, so we had to play the remainder of the game a man down. Nick never panicked though, and because he didn’t, we didn’t. We managed to tie the game and won in penalty kicks.
       Eventually, Camelot had to end for me. Real world responsibilities like a job and family took precedent over soccer.    
      But I’ll never forget what I learned from Nick Wiener and how much fun I had playing for him with GAK.
    And I’m sure that right now, Nick is in a perfect place, preparing a side to play a game on the perfect pitch. In my mind, that place looks exactly like GAK, and Nick is standing at midfield ready for kick off.
    Rest in peace, Coach Nick.

Jan. 6, 2012
Here’s to those
who never quit

    Before getting to the headline item, I just want to wish a Happy Birthday (two days late) to my wonderful mom, Dianne Fisher. Love ya mom! Good luck in your Super Bowl pools. From what you tell me, they can’t get any worse than the regular season!
    * * *
    I have some new heroes.
     They are athletes I’ve come to respect after a couple of years covering high school swimming (which I never did before this website). You will probably never hear of them by the time they graduate.
       At least not for their swimming exploits.  
     My heroes are the boys and girls who will never be listed in the Top 3 when (if) the results are printed in the paper. Heck, even if they printed all top-five place finishers you wouldn’t see them.
     They’re the ones who finish dead last.
     By a lot.
     Believe me, I am not trying to be witty or sarcastic or smart-assy about this.
     It’s one thing for a swimmer at the top of their craft to bust a gut trying to break a record, win a race or, in some cases, win a meet. There’s plenty of adrenaline to push them and the crowd is cheering wildly, whether they can hear it or not.
      It’s an entirely different matter when the race is over where points are concerned, and there is just one swimmer still in the pool. Everyone is waiting for that person to touch out so they can get on to the next event.
      I’m talking mostly about a distance event since that’s where a swimmer can get behind by a really lot.
      And some do. It would be sooo easy for them to just say ‘Heck with this’ and climb out of the pool before their last lap. What the heck, whether they finish or not, they still get the same zero points.
    But you know what. They don’t do that. They churn and churn and churn, determined not to give up.
    They have the pride and the guts and the conviction to see it through. What doesn’t matter one iota in the grand scheme of the meet, matters to them. They’ve done all the work in practice, they’re sure not going to just give up on it when the actual meet takes place.
    To me, there’s something darn heroic about that. I admire the heck out of it. 
    So next time one of you swimmers is dragging along in last place, thinking no one is watching and that no one cares, just know it's enough that you care.
    And keep it up.
    It will serve you well later in life.
    (Feel free to re-read this during track season, as it is applicable then as well).   
                * * *
    How about Jeff Lurie saying Andy Reid isn’t arrogant?
    During his silly Tuesday press conference Lurie said the Eagles season was unacceptable. Well Jeff, nothing in the world is more unacceptable then the ludicrous comment that Reid is not arrogant.
     All that was left was for Lurie to say "And he's not overweight either, that's just your perception."
      Some day I’m gonna find out just what incriminating pictures Reid has of Lurie.
             * * *
    Of course, there’s arrogance, and then there’s arrogance.
    Tony Mack wants more money.
    Seriously? I mean. . .seriously?
     There weren’t enough LOLs, ROFLs, LMAOs or LMFAOs in the world to describe how hard I laughed when I read that.
     And there won’t be enough oceans in the world to hold Trenton residents’ tears if they actually give it to him.
    More money?
    Seriously?
           * * *
    So, the Miami (formerly Florida) Marlins got Carlos Zambrano.
    Yikes!
    As a Phillies fan, I should fear the Marlins with all the moves they have made.
    But I can’t wait to watch how that whole situation blows up down there.
    With everyone making their (pick one – bold, fearless, outrageous) predictions for 2012, I’ll give you one that I feel pretty good about. That entire Marlins scene will be the second coming of the chaotic Bronx Zoo made popular by Yankees of the late 1970s.
    Only the Marlins won’t win back-to-back titles.
        Just look at the recipe for disaster they’ve concocted.
      First you have Hanley Ramirez, who’s not the most grounded guy to begin with and who is already upset that he has to move to third base so Jose Reyes can take over.
     Ah yes, Jose Reyes. We know about him in these parts. For all we know, he may get a leadoff single on opening day then ask to be removed from the lineup that day and ask to be used only as a ninth-inning defensive replacement or pinch-runner in order to become the first guy to ever bat 1.000 while playing 162 games.
        Now they add Zambrano to the mix.  Here’s a pitcher who hits teammates with more regularity than he hits the corners. What happens when Reyes has a bad day at the plate and dogs it in the field when Zambrano is pitching?
    Ding, ding, ding! There's a right to the jaw, and Reyes is down!  
      One of Zambarno’s most recent fights with a teammate came against the White Sox, and he and Guillen went out to dinner afterward. Guillen calls Zambrano his friend and several articles state he was a major player in getting the pitcher.
      Of course, we’ve all seen how stable Ozzie has been over the years. He has had more bleeped out post-game press conferences on Sports Center than, um, well than anybody! Managerial skills aside, Guillen is about as loose a cannon as there is among managers.
    This, my friends, is gonna be a wild scene.
               * * *
     Sticking with Fish’s Hot Stove Blog for a moment,  I’m going to set an over-under number for local baseball announcers.
    The number is the same for all three of them – 200. What that means is, I think they are going to do/say the following things once each game, and more than once in at least 38 others.  
    Here we go:
    --John Sterling will make non-Yankee fans puke.
    --A bad play will be made by either the Mets or their opponent, and Keith Hernandez will groan and say “You just can’t do that” and be sincerely offended when the game isn’t played correctly. He will do that a lot, cuz the game’s not played correctly a lot.
    --Chris Wheeler will note that it was very important that the eighth hitter in the lineup got on base with two outs, assuring that the pitcher won’t have to lead off the next inning. I’ve also set the over-under at 300 that Wheels will discuss the importance of two-out hits; the benefits of getting them and the emotional distress of allowing them.
    I’ll take the over on all of them.
    Moving onto the national scene, I’ll set the over-under at 3 for FOX’s crack team that no one seems to like:
    --Joe Buck will make an exciting call.
    --Tim McCarver will make an observation without trying to make it sound like it is the most important thing ever uttered in baseball history.
    I’ll take the under on both of them. By a lot.
    * * *.
    NFL playoffs baby. Love ‘em!

    The next two weekends are awesome. Championship Sunday is good too, but it’s cool to know you have two playoff games on Saturday and Sunday the next two weeks.       And besides, Championship Sunday is starting to bug me with the lavish halftime shows that stretch the game out forever, but not quite as long as the Super Bowl.
    I'm sure that now I've made my grievance public, the NFL will quickly move to change things.
              * * *
    Must have been a wild night in Morgantown Wednesday. About 90 minutes after West Virginia’s basketball team torched Rutgers for 85 points, the Mountaineers football team scored a bowl record 70 against Clemson.
    Having been to Morgantown before, I’m willing to bet there were more than a few guys (and girls) doing a shot for every point scored by each . . .and nobody passed out.
          I actually covered that basketball game and had to laugh at coach Mike Rice, who I think is doing a nice job and will turn things around if given the chance.
       Someone asked Rice how far away the win over No. 10 Florida felt after two straight losses. Rice looked at him and said "That's a good question."
     Then he had an expression as if he were going to give a well thought out answer, and he just kind of muttered on word: "Far."  Sometimes less is better. That pretty much told the tale.