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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Saturday / December 14.
  • PISCATAWAY, N.J. — This may have been the end of the line for the storied St. Anthony’s basketball program.

    In what potentially could have been the school’s last boys basketball game ever — and the final game coached by the Naismith Hall of Famer Bob Hurley — Hudson Catholic downed the Friars, 64-61, to win the New Jersey North Non-Public B title at the Rutgers Athletic Center.

    St. Anthony’s faces a financial crisis and needs approximately $500,000 to avoid closing its doors after this school year. SHOWTIME Sports is documenting St. Anthony’s season and its cameras covered the game.

    Hudson Catholic’s “Big Three” of high-major Division 1 recruits was simply too much — even for Hurley’s legendary defense — as they combined for 60 points.

    Junior point guard Jahvon Quinerly scored a game-high 25 before fouling out and junior small forward Louis King scored 20 points for the Hawks, whose coach, Nick Mariniello, had never before beaten St. Anthony’s. Junior guard Luther Muhammad added 15 points.

    “This is just a great feeling right now, I can’t even explain it,” Quinerly said. “But our season’s not over. We got I think St. Pat’s next so we looking onto that but we’re excited right now. It’s our first time beating them. This is my first time beating them. Ever. It’s a great feeling.”

    Hudson Catholic — and not St. Anthony’s — will meet The Patrick School in the Non-Public B final on Saturday at 5 p.m. at the Ritacco Center in Toms River, N.J.

    It’s a rematch of a game played Dec. 18 at the City of Palms Classic in Fort Myers, Fla., in which The Patrick School prevailed, 65-63.

    Kentucky-bound Nick Richards scored a career-high 28 points and 16 points to lead The Patrick School to a 71-62 victory over Roselle Catholic in the South B final at Jackson Liberty earlier Wednesday.

    Ithiel Horton led St. Anthony’s with 17 points and Howard-bound guard R.J. Cole added 16 for St. Anthony’s.

    Hurley did not want to speculate on the school’s future after the loss.

    “The last thing in the world, you’d be sitting in a press conference after losing the North Jersey final, and be thinking about like something outside of what just happened to us,” Hurley said. “The expression my father used to use all the time, there’s a time and a place for everything. And discussing that right now is just not appropriate. We’re dealing with what just happened on the basketball court. There’s enough emotion for us going through that because we gave ourselves a chance to go to Saturday. We had the opportunity to go to Saturday and didn’t play well enough. And that’s hard.”

    Mariniello estimated his school hadn’t beaten St. Anthony’s since the 1976-77 season, and he hopes it’s not the end of the run for the the storied program.

    “You know what, I don’t want them to close,” Mariniello told me Tuesday. “We don’t want to see any Catholic schools close, and especially them because it’s a storied institution with a storied coach and we want to be able to compete against that.

    Hudson Catholic coach Nick Mariniello has never beaten St. Anthony’s and legendary coach Bob Hurley.

    The two Catholic schools are Jersey City rivals and will meet Wednesday night in the highly anticipated North Non-Public B final at 8 p.m. at the Rutgers Athletic Center. The Friars are the No. 1 seed in the bracket and the defending New Jersey Tournament of Champions, while the Hawks are the No. 2 seed.

    Because of the school’s dire financial situation, the next game St. Anthony’s loses could be the final game ever played by the school’s basketball team. The potential final season is being documented by SHOWTIME Sports.

    “You know what, I don’t want them to close,” Mariniello said Tuesday by phone. “We don’t want to see any Catholic schools close, and especially them because it’s a storied institution with a storied coach and we want to be able to compete against that.

    By DENNIS CHAMBERS

    ROSELLE, N.J. — The inaugural New Jersey vs. D.C. Collision kicked off Saturday at Roselle Catholic High School in an effort to showcase the talents of the two basketball-rich breeding grounds.

    Eight teams participated in the event hosted by Jimmy Salmon and the EYBL NJ Playaz to put to rest the debate of which area reigns supreme for high school basketball.

    For New Jersey, the representatives boasted an impressive lineup of Hudson Catholic, Immaculate Conception (NY), Roselle Catholic, and The Patrick School.

    The nation’s capital sent Bishop McNamara, St. Mary’s Ryken, Paul VI (VA), and DeMatha Catholic.

    SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Jahvon Quinerly and Luther Muhammad made it 2-0 for the Jersey Boys on Saturday.

    The 6-foot-1 Quinerly went for 25 points, 5 rebounds and 4 assists en route to game MVP honors as Hudson Catholic beat Charles Bassey and St. Anthony (TX), 62-53, to help the New Jersey schools go 2-0 on the day at the Hoophall Classic. Earlier, Roselle (N.J.) Catholic beat Weaver (TX).

    The 6-5 Muhammad also had a strong game in the win, going for 24 points, 2 rebounds and 2 steals.

    “I feel like Jersey has the toughest basketball in the country, that’s just my opinion,” Quinerly said.

    Three other Garden State teams — Blair Academy, St. Anthony’s and The Patrick School — will also play at the Hoophall this weekend.

    Bob Hurley remembers his St. Anthony’s team playing on the grand stage of the Hoophall Classic against Malik Monk and Bentonville (AR) a year ago.

    Monk, who had signed with Kentucky, scored 22 points in a loss in front of Wildcats coach John Calipari, but it was St. Anthony’s junior guard R.J. Cole who really made a name for himself.

    “It’s a big, big stage and when a kid plays on that stage and plays well, it’s something that you remember,” Hurley, whose team has won 41 straight games, said Thursday on The 4 Quarters Podcast. “Last year Malik Monk scored [22] points, R.J. Cole scored 23. R.J. scored the first 16 points of the game, and after that game he and his family knew he was going to get a scholarship because he had done that on a stage that’s even bigger than when you play in the state final.”

    Cole ultimately chose Howard over Monmouth and Boston University, but a whole new crop of young New York and New Jersey stars will get a chance to impress college coaches this weekend at the Hoophall Classic.

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