Delaware
Delaware Valley Regional boys basketball can’t complete game of catch-up in H/W/S semis
Delaware Valley Regional’s boys basketball team was playing a game of catch-up all Saturday afternoon.
And the Terriers couldn’t complete the game before the final buzzer.
Second-seeded Delaware Valley conceded the opening basket and trailed the remainder of the way as third-seeded Hunterdon Central earned a 45-41 victory in the Hunterdon/Warren/Sussex semifinals at Wallkill Valley.
Hunterdon Central (15-7) advances to meet fifth-seeded Vernon, which upset top-seeded Phillipsburg, in the county final 5 p.m. Friday at Centenary University.
“I don’t think we came out matching their energy and intensity from the start,” Terriers coach Mike DePaolo said. “They jump out to an [8-3] lead, and you could just tell they were playing with a little more fire underneath them than us … Every point matters in games like this. We did battle. We dug in, got stops and made plays. But ultimately, Central made a just a few more winning plays than we did.”
The Terriers (16-7) refused to go quietly.
Hunterdon Central senior Matthew Schwartz drilled a midcourt 3-pointer as the buzzer sounded to send his team into the fourth quarter with a 39-32 lead. Red Devils coach Tristen DeFazio was yelling, “No,” as Schwartz released the shot, because with 2 seconds on the clock, the senior had a chance to get closer to the basket. It didn’t matter.
“I was kind of in the moment,” Schwartz said. “… Sometimes miracles can happen, and I guess that’s what happened, I don’t know.”
Unfortunately, for the Red Devils, their 39-32 lead became a 38-32 advantage due to a discrepancy uncovered in the scorebook between quarters. The Terriers had Central with one fewer point in the third quarter, and since Del Val was providing the “official” book as the home team, the score was changed.
Del Val senior Haze Puttlitz tallied the first four points of the fourth quarter to trim Central’s margin to 38-36 with 7:16 on the clock.
“We had to grind it out,” DeFazio said. “All week we talked about how this game was going to be a bloodbath. They were going to come back. They’re a great basketball team.”
Schwartz scored a layup in transition and junior Cameron Diogene finished a strong drive to the basket to put the Red Devils ahead 42-36 with 3:09 left.
Del Val senior Francis Denvir swished a 3-pointer to make it a one-possession contest, 42-39, with 2:20 to play. The Terriers got the ball back after an offensive foul by Central, but Denvir was off the mark with a 3 and the rebound went out of bounds off Del Val.
Diogene made a pair of free throws to give Central breathing room. Terriers junior Eric Klemmer trimmed the deficit to 44-41 on a bucket with 12.8 seconds remaining, but that’s as close as it got.
Central got off to a fast start thanks to junior forward Weston Shirk, who scored 10 of the team’s first 18 points as the Red Devils opened an 18-11 lead.
“We go as he goes,” DeFazio said of Shirk. “We’ve said that all year. To quote the great Kelly Williams from TCNJ, there’s something about throwing it into your big man that just settles you down. When he gets us going early and he’s settling us down on the inside, everything else just opens up.”
Del Val adapted and limited Shirk to just two points in the second half.
“We weren’t in position to start. He was able to get position deep on us and flash to the ball,” DePaolo said. “When we went back to the board, just to show how he’s diving to the block and how they’re trying to run stuff for him, our guys made adjustments. Credit to them that they were able to get steals and limit his touches inside.”
Denvir, who entered averaging 18.9 points per game, paced the Terriers with 15 points. Puttlitz added 14.
Schwartz had a game-high 18 points for Central. Shirk finished with 12.
Saturday marked the Terriers’ first loss to Hunterdon County opposition this winter. Del Val had previously beaten Voorhees (twice), North Hunterdon (twice) and South Hunterdon (in the H/W/S quarterfinals).
The next chance for tournament success for Del Val is the Central Group 2 bracket.
“Last time we got here was 2019,” DePaolo said. “… We just talked about not letting opportunities like this slip away. As we turn our attention to states, we just have to remind ourselves of that. It’s a brand-new season, everyone is 0-0. We’ve got to take advantage of the opportunity there.”
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Kyle Craig may be reached at kcraig@lehighvalleylive.com.
Delaware
MERR responds to dead humpback whale washed up near Bethany Beach
Humpback whale beaches and dies at Delaware Seashore State Park
The Marine Education, Research and Rehabilitation Institute will perform a necropsy.
A dead humpback whale washed up near Bethany Beach on Jan. 8, according to the nonprofit Marine Education Research and Rehabilitation Institute.
The juvenile male was first seen Jan. 6, floating at sea about 2 miles off the Indian River Inlet, a MERR Facebook post said. The bloated 30-foot whale ultimately beached near a private community in the early afternoon of Jan. 8, the post said.
MERR is attempting to coordinate with the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control to get equipment to move the whale out of the water and onto the beach to perform a necropsy, the post said. Right now, there isn’t enough information to determine a cause of death.
Delaware saw at least three dead whales last year, in the Indian River Bay, at Delaware Seashore State Park and at Pigeon Point. The first two were humpbacks, while the Pigeon Point whale was a fin whale.
A necropsy on the Delaware Seashore whale found blunt force trauma across its back, indicating it may have been struck by a ship, MERR Director Suzanne Thurman said.
Recently, on Jan. 4, a dead fin whale was found on the bow of a ship at the Gloucester Marine Terminal in New Jersey, which is located in the Port of Philadelphia on the Delaware River.
Shannon Marvel McNaught reports on southern Delaware and beyond. Reach her at smcnaught@gannett.com or on Facebook.
Delaware
Pa. man accused of stealing more than 100 skeletons from Delco cemetery
A Pennsylvania man is accused of stealing more than 100 skeletons from a cemetery in Delaware County.
Jonathan Gerlach, 34, of Ephrata, Pennsylvania, is charged with abuse of corpse, criminal mischief, burglary and other related offenses, Delaware County District Attorney Tanner Rouse revealed on Thursday, Jan. 8.
Léelo en español aquí
Between November 2025 and Jan. 6, 2026, 26 mausoleums and underground burial sites had been burglarized or desecrated at Mount Moriah Cemetery, which stretches from Yeadon Borough, Pennsylvania, to Philadelphia, investigators said.
As police investigated the thefts, they caught Gerlach desecrating a monument at the cemetery on Tuesday, Jan. 6, according to officials. Gerlach was taken into custody and investigators executed a search warrant at his home in Ephrata.
During the search, investigators recovered 100 human skeletons from Gerlach’s home as well as eight more human remains inside a storage locker, according to Rouse.
“Detectives walked into a horror movie come to life the other night guys,” Rouse said. “This is an unbelievable scene that no one involved – from myself to the detectives to the medical examiners that are now trying to piece together what they are looking at, quite literally – none of them have ever seen anything like this before.”
Rouse said some of the stolen skeletons are hundreds of years old.
“We are trying to figure out exactly what we are looking at,” Rouse said. “We quite simply at this juncture are not able to date and identify all of them.”
Rouse also said some of the skeletons are of infants and children.
“It is truly, in the most literal sense of the word, horrific,” Rouse said. “I grieve for those who are upset by this who are going through it who are trying to figure out if it is in fact their loved one or their child because we found remains that we believe to be months old infants among those that he had collected. Our hearts go out to every family that is impacted by this.”
Sources also told NBC10 the thefts are related to a similar case in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. Investigators said they are looking at Gerlach’s online community — including his social media groups and Facebook page — to determine if people were buying, selling, or trading the remains.
Gerlach is currently in custody at the Delaware County Prison after failing to post $1 million bail. Online court records don’t list an attorney who could speak on his behalf.
Delaware
Delaware woman charged in Jersey shore hit-and-run that injured 92-year-old man
VENTNOR, N.J. (WPVI) — A Delaware woman is behind bars in connection with a hit-and-run crash in November at the Jersey shore.
(The video in the player above is from previous coverage.)
The incident happened around 6:16 p.m. on Nov. 20 in Ventnor, New Jersey.
READ MORE | Video shows Jersey shore hit-and-run crash that left 92-year-old injured
Police said the 92-year-old victim was struck at Ventnor and Newport avenues. He sustained serious injuries and was transported to an area hospital.
Investigators said the driver, Leslie Myers, 51, of Weldin Park, Delaware, fled the scene after the crash.
She was arrested Wednesday on charges of assault by auto, leaving the scene of an accident and other related offenses.
Myers is being held in the Allegheny County Jail in Pennsylvania, awaiting extradition to New Jersey.
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