Lower Merion High School | Articles | Game/Team Tradition

Ice hockey: Lower Merion says farewell to first senior class

When the Lower Merion boys’ ice hockey team lost 4-2 to Central League rival Springfield in a Flyers Cup Class A quarterfinal game March 5, it was the icing on the cake of a memorable career for Lower Merion’s first senior class in boys’ ice hockey. “This is the worst feeling,’ said senior Brett Katz. “It’s hard to imagine that my high school hockey career is over. I just told the guys in the locker room to hold their heads high because there is plenty to be proud of. We just need to move on because there is more to life than hockey but this definitely stings.’The senior class – Katz, Ian Yenal, Will Levin, Rex Chambers, Dylan Karivallis, Michael Forster, Matthieu Kuszyk and Jacob Fleisher were the main ingredients in Lower Merion’s success that has been building throughout their career

To read the rest of the article go to :http://www.gametimepa.com/mont-bucks/ci_25319604/ice-hockey-lower-merion-says-farewell-first-senior

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Lower Merion coach Gregg Downer the winner in USA Today ‘Best Coach in PA’ poll

Lower Merion High School boys’ basketball coach Gregg Downer, who has won three PIAA Class AAAA state titles during his time with the Aces, was the winner among the six finalists in USA Today High School Sports’ “Best Coach in PA” poll (boys’ basketball).

Lower Merion High School athletic director Don Walsh said, “Coach Downer is incredibly deserving of this honor and we’re thrilled he has been recognized. He means so much to our school and this community – not just for basketball wins, but for the lasting, positive impact he has had on so many students throughout the years. His greatest work happens behind the scenes, molding the young men he encounters into upstanding citizens no matter their background. He is a true champion for our community.”

USA Today’s High School Sports “Best Coach in the Mid-East Region” (Md. N.J., Del, Pa., W.Va., D.C., Va.) To vote in this poll, click here.

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9th annual Maroon Madness

Sixers coach Brett Brown was the featured speaker at a packed, noisy Bryant Gymnasium at Lower Merion High School’s 9th Annual Maroon Madness benefitting Coaches vs. Cancer Wednesday evening.

The evening began at 6 p.m. with live music and entertainment outside the entrance of the historic Downs Gymnasium. At 7 p.m., the school community took a walk around the entire high school building, then headed into the gym for the evening’s basketball festivities.

Highlights included the introduction of the boys and girls teams, an intra-squad scrimmage, on-court fan contests, musical entertainment and raffles for LM/Nike gear. The first 250 guests to donate $5 to Coaches vs. Cancer received an event T-shirt and glowstick.

About 1,000 community members attended the event, which serves as the official start to Lower Merion’s winter athletics season and the school’s annual Coaches vs. Cancer fundraising drive. The Lower Merion community has raised nearly $50,000 in the past three years to benefit cancer research.

 

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FOOTBALL: Lower Merion-Radnor rivalry rich in historic names

Lower Merion vs. Radnor, believed by many to be the oldest continuous public
high school football rivalry in the United States, has featured some pretty
impressive names during the past century.

 

Ted Dean, who scored the winning touchdown for the Philadelphia Eagles in the
1960 NFL championship game, competed for Radnor in the 1950s. The late Emlen
Tunnell, who was the first African American selected to the Pro Football Hall of
Fame, played for the Red Raiders in the 1940s.

 

The 117th meeting between these two teams will kick off Nov. 9 at 2 p.m. at
Radnor High School.

 

Lower Merion holds a 56-49-11 advantage. One of the reasons is the coaching
of the legendary Fritz Brennan, whose Aces beat the Red Raiders every year from
1945 to 1956.

 

In the last decade, Radnor has held the upper hand. The Red Raiders posted a
record 10-game winning streak that came to an end in 2010, when the Aces’
prevailed, 20-7. Lower Merion also won the 2011 contest, 21-14.

 

Last year, Radnor broke a two-year, 20-game losing streak with a 35-7 victory
at Arnold Field. Led by junior running back Jimmie Blake (167 yards in 24
carries), Radnor controlled the ball most of the day, grinding out long drives
that ended in touchdowns. Blake, who was named the game’s Most Valuable Player,
passed the 1,000-yard rushing mark for the season.

 

Lower Merion-Radnor is not the oldest public high school football rivalry in
the United States. That honor goes to Needham and Wellesley High Schools in
suburban Boston — this rivalry began in 1882, but has not been held every year
since.

 


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In fact, according to Wikipedia.org, the oldest public high school football
rivalry in the United States is Boston Latin School vs. English High School of
Boston, which have faced off annually since 1887.

 

When the inaugural Lower Merion-Radnor game was played (Oct. 26, 1897),
neither team wore uniforms. Players cut the grass and lined the field before the
game. Lower Merion (then known as Ardmore High School) won, 10-4.

 

One of the attendees at the 1897 contest was Barney Fischer, who came to
every Lower Merion-Radnor game until the late 1970s. Every year, he performed a
ritual in which he rubbed a silver horseshoe on the shoulders of players and
coaches to bring them luck.

 

By 1912, the Lower Merion-Radnor game was taking hold – more than 1,000 Lower
Merion fans paraded down Lancaster Avenue that year to watch the game in
Radnor.

 

In 1915, admission was charged for the first time (25 cents). The game ended
in moonlight — police had to clear the field.

 

During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the rivalry was stronger than ever,
attracting 10,000 fans. The game was moved to Villanova University’s new
football stadium (built in 1927).

 

Marquee names began to appear on both rosters. Tunnell, the first
African-American player elected to the Pro Football of Fame, played for Radnor
in the 1941 contest.Life magazine included a photo of the 1943 Lower
Merion-Radnor contest, which showed Lower Merion players emoting after the Aces
scored the game’s only touchdown.Dean starred for the Red Raiders in the 1955
contest (although Radnor lost, 27-6).

 

In 1996, the centennial contest attracted national attention. In front of
6,000 fans, Lower Merion’s Kevin Dixon intercepted a pass in the end zone with
15 seconds left to preserve a 27-20 Aces’ win.

 

 

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