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  • Beloved coaching figure Bill Courtney remembered as ‘an incredible connector’

    Beloved coaching figure Bill Courtney remembered as ‘an incredible connector’

    Jimmy Polisi lived a few houses away from Bill Courtney, while the two were on the men’s basketball staff at the University of Miami. Some nights, Courtney, then an assistant coach, would call the graduate assistant to hang out.

    “Throughout time, we kind of got close,” said Polisi, who spent two years at Miami. “He was just a great guy, to be like a fly on the wall to see how he did everything.”

    Temple hired Courtney last summer as an assistant coach. He reunited with Adam Fisher, whom he coached with at Miami, and Polisi, the Owls’ director of player operations. The Temple head coach viewed Courtney as a mentor and knew he would be a valuable member for his team.

    On Jan. 13, Courtney unexpectedly died at age 55. He was a beloved figure, who spent 30 years in the college basketball coaching scene and “made people feel special.”

    From each of his coaching stints — which included 10 schools — he formed genuine relationships with players and staff members. Those relationships went beyond the court as many looked up to him.

    “He did such an amazing job of making everybody feel special, but it was genuine,” Fisher said. “He wanted to know that when he recruited somebody, he would know the aunt, the uncle, the mom, dad. He found every connection and then knew something about each one of them to connect things. He’s just an incredible connector of people.

    “He had this way about him. That’s why so many people are going through such pain right now, because a lot of people consider him a close friend, because he was, that’s the way he made you feel and it was genuine,” Fisher said.

    Added Polisi: “He brought such a positive light to both Miami and here that it was so needed. The way he made a difference in this program in a short amount of time is huge. In this day and age of college basketball, people come in and out, but you could really tell how much of a difference he was making this program in just a short amount of time.”

    Temple’s players voted to play its game against Memphis the next day. The Owls then got shirts to honor Courtney ahead of their game against Florida Atlantic on Jan. 18.

    The team has since worn a patch on its jerseys and warmup shirts with Courtney’s initials. They still announce Courtney as an assistant coach to honor his legacy during each game.

    Warm welcome

    Most people who met Courtney had a shared a similar phrase about him — he never had a bad day.

    That was what former American assistant coach Bruce Kelley told Jim Larrañaga, who was the head coach at Bowling Green at the time and was searching for a new assistant coach in 1996. He reached out to Courtney, and it wasn’t long till he flew out to the midwest to meet with Larrañaga.

    Courtney stayed in his future boss’s house.

    Jim Larrañaga started working with the late Billy Courtney when he hired him as an assistant at Bowling Green in 1996.

    “I got a feel for Bill, how he interacted with my sons, how he played the game,” Larrañaga said. “I said, ‘We’re going to go back to the house and my wife’s fixing [lunch], there’s going to be a few players over there.’ … I just knew from the way he behaved the whole day. How honest he was and how comfortable he was around people, around me.”

    Courtney got the job. His relationship with Larrañaga spanned over five decades. Larrañaga loved going to the movies. When his wife didn’t want to go see a particular film, she said to “ask Bill,” so Larrañaga did. That became a tradition for them as they went from Bowling Green to George Mason, where Larrañaga became the head coach in 1997.

    Courtney organized pickup basketball games and often invited his boss. Courtney would put Larrañaga on the better team to give him a quality workout. One day, the team Larrañaga played on lost, which prompted him to wonder if Courtney was upset with him.

    The next day at work, Larrañaga asked Courtney if it was true — getting laughter at the thought of that being a possibility.

    “I went into the office the next day. I said, ‘BC, are you mad at me for something?’” Larrañaga said. “He said, ‘No, why would you even suggest that.’ I said, ‘You put me on a terrible team last night. We lost the first game.’ He started laughing ‘You got to be kidding me.’ That’s just our relationship, the way we were.”

    A helping hand

    Courtney landed his first head coaching position at Cornell in 2011, a team fresh off a Sweet 16 appearance.

    During games he cracked jokes to Jeremy Hartigan, Cornell’s senior associate athletic director. Courtney made an effort to get everyone on staff a gift for Christmas during his first season with the Big Red, and he didn’t expect anything in return.

    “We were all kind of embarrassed that Bill had gotten us something and that we didn’t get him anything,” Hartigan said. “I just remember he said, ‘I don’t care if you ever get me anything. I just wanted to show how much I appreciate you guys.’”

    During his time in upstate New York, he met David Metzendorf, who was then at Ithaca College. Injuries spoiled Metzendorf’s playing career, but Courtney brought him on as a manager. When Metzendorf graduated in 2013, a role on staff opened for him.

    He became Courtney’s right hand man.

    “The amount of people in my life who reached out about him afterward, not just because they knew how close we were, but because he had touched them was unbelievable, in terms of, my friends from back home who would come visit me in Ithaca, he would make them feel like part of the crew,” Metzendorf said. “My college buddies who he got to know well because they were at Ithaca College and were right there, they’d come around and he made them feel part of the crew and loved and welcomed.”

    Reuniting with an old friend

    Eventually both went their separate ways as Metzendorf climbed up the coaching ranks. Cornell fired Courtney in 2016. He went to DePaul before reuniting with a familiar face in 2019; Larrañaga, who was the head coach at Miami.

    There, he met Fisher, who had gone from director of player operations in 2013 to assistant coach by the time Courtney joined the staff. They immediately clicked.

    Adam Fisher with his wife and daughter, with the late Bill Courtney and Jim Larrañaga.

    Fisher and Courtney became close friends. They often got lunch together, and Fisher went to Courtney for advice. When his wife, Rebecca, gave birth to their daughter, Fisher asked Courtney how to balance being a father and coach. Courtney was one of the people who met Fisher’s daughter during Thanksgiving, a month after she was born.

    When Courtney joined the staff this summer all the coaches were at the practice facility. As Fisher and Rebecca watched from the window, their daughter, Alivia, organized all the coaches to play duck-duck-goose.

    “I’m looking through the window thinking, ‘Are they playing duck duck goose?’” Fisher said. “BC came in, he’s exhausted. She chased him down the hallway ‘Get back here, BC.’ He goes, ‘I got to go play.’”

    Courtney was at Temple for seven months, but made his presence felt on the team, and it meant a lot for Fisher to work with his friend again.

    “Just being able to work alongside him was an honor,” Fisher said. “I loved every second of it.”

  • Breaking down Sixers’ final 20 games: Paul George’s (and Jared McCain’s) return, Joel Embiid’s injury, and more

    Breaking down Sixers’ final 20 games: Paul George’s (and Jared McCain’s) return, Joel Embiid’s injury, and more

    Nick Nurse recently described the teams in the middle of the Eastern Conference standings, including his 76ers, as “tightly squeezed.” And even though veteran guard Cameron Payne vows to go 1-0 every day rather than looking too far ahead, he acknowledged that the Sixers “need to win every game we possibly can.”

    “That’s kind of the situation we’re in,” Payne said. “We need wins.”

    Such is life with the 34-28 Sixers clinging to the East’s sixth seed — which avoids the play-in tournament — with 20 games remaining, starting with Saturday’s road contest at the Atlanta Hawks. The Sixers enter Friday a half-game ahead of the seventh-seeded Orlando Magic (33-28) and eighth-seeded Miami Heat (34-29), and one game behind the fifth-seeded Toronto Raptors (35-27). The Sixers rank 17th in remaining strength of schedule, per Tankathon, though the next week includes challenging road games at the Cleveland Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons.

    While attempting to maintain their positioning (or move up) during the stretch run, the Sixers will be tasked with rapidly reacclimating the suspended Paul George with 10 games to go. They will deal with uncertainty regarding Joel Embiid, who enjoyed a dominant month but is now hobbled again by shin and oblique injuries. And will they ever reach circumstances that allow some rest for All-Star point guard Tyrese Maxey, who entered Friday leading the NBA in minutes played?

    Here is a breakdown of Sixers’ final 20 games:

    March 9 at Cleveland Cavaliers

    The Cavaliers made arguably the most impactful deadline trade, acquiring former Sixer James Harden to boost the backcourt anchored by All-NBA contender Donovan Mitchell. That automatically adds spice to the final regular-season clash between these teams. But Harden’s addition has fueled a Cleveland turnaround from a disappointing start to the season. The Cavaliers have ascended to the East’s fourth seed and enter Friday one game back of the third-seeded New York Knicks, making Cleveland a potential first-round matchup for the Sixers.

    March 12 and April 4 against Detroit Pistons

    The Sixers have two games remaining against the East’s bona fide top seed, including a visit to Detroit on Thursday. The Sixers must be ready for the Pistons’ rugged playing style, along with MVP contender Cade Cunningham. These matchups always have Philly ties, with former Sixers Tobias Harris and Paul Reed now in Detroit and Sharon Hill native Jalen Duren, who became a first-time All-Star this season. That April 4 home matchup is the second game of a challenging back-to-back, which also includes an intriguing rematch with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

    Sixers center Joel Embiid has missed time recently for shin and oblique injuries.

    March 17 at Denver Nuggets

    Will we finally get another matchup between Embiid and Nikola Jokić, who previously jostled for MVP awards? Embiid has not played in Denver since 2019, including a 2024 absence when he was an extremely late scratch with a knee issue days before Jonathan Kuminga inadvertently fell on that knee, which prompted multiple surgeries. Jokić, meanwhile, remains a basketball wizard but has not quite looked like himself since returning from a knee injury. Still, the Nuggets are viewed as a primary playoff threat to the Oklahoma City Thunder’s title defense.

    March 23 vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

    The Thunder’s lone visit to Philly this season was always going to be a high-profile matchup. But it also will be the return of Jared McCain, whom the Sixers dealt to the Thunder at the deadline, a move that has become wildly unpopular with Philly fans. McCain has thrived with the Thunder so far, averaging 11.9 points and shooting 41.1% on 4.7 three-point attempts in 12 games entering Friday.

    March 25 vs. Chicago Bulls

    This will be George’s first game back following a 25-game suspension for violating the NBA’s antidrug policy. Nurse and teammates have raved about George’s work as an individual and teammate during this time, when he is permitted to be around the Sixers for all practices and shootarounds but must be away from the arena during games. But how quickly he reintegrates on both ends of the floor will be crucial to the Sixers’ postseason outlook.

    March 28 at Charlotte Hornets

    Remember when the Hornets absolutely obliterated the Sixers in late January? Turns out they were just one victim of the Hornets’ surge into the playoff contention while becoming arguably the NBA’s most entertaining team. Though it would be foolish for the Sixers to overlook this opponent again if they want to stay out of the play-in tournament, they must win games like this. This game will also pit two of the NBA’s top rookies in VJ Edgecombe and Kon Knueppel, now the front-runner for Rookie of the Year.

    March 30 at Miami Heat

    After the Sixers and Heat split their first two meetings this season, this matchup will decide what could be a crucial tiebreaker. A scheduling advantage for the Sixers? The Heat will be on the second night of a back-to-back and coming off a three-game road trip.

    April 6 at San Antonio Spurs

    After the Spurs embarrassed the Sixers at home earlier this week, they get another crack at the West contender and superstar Victor Wembanyama about a month later. Will Embiid, who missed Tuesday’s matchup, be healthy for this one? One potential silver lining for the Sixers: This could be late enough in the season that if the Spurs’ seeding is locked up, they could begin resting their top players. Ditto for the Sixers’ visit to the Houston Rockets three days later.

    April 12 vs. Milwaukee Bucks

    This is the regular-season finale, against a Bucks team that could be desperate to keep its postseason hopes alive. Every NBA team plays on this day, which could cause some last-minute seeding shifts.

    Games against the ‘tankers’

    Wednesday’s closer-than-expected win over the Utah Jazz underscored how crucial it is for the Sixers to take advantage of all perceived “gimmie” wins.

    Those games are:

    March 10 vs. Memphis Grizzlies

    March 14 vs. Brooklyn Nets

    March 19 at Sacramento Kings

    March 21 at Utah Jazz

    March 25 vs. Chicago Bulls

    April 1 at Washington Wizards

    April 10 at Indiana Pacers

  • A leaner Andrew Painter is moving better than ever. One reason is ‘fewer trips to the Dairy Queen’

    A leaner Andrew Painter is moving better than ever. One reason is ‘fewer trips to the Dairy Queen’

    CLEARWATER, Fla. — Andrew Painter likes to eat. It has never been much of an issue. The Phillies’ top prospect has a fast metabolism and stands 6 feet, 7 inches.

    If anything, it is hard for him to add weight. So, the occasional — or frequent — ice cream cone doesn’t hurt. But this offseason, while training at Cressey Sports Performance in Florida, the lanky pitcher noticed something.

    It was early November, and Painter was reviewing video of his 2025 triple-A season with coach Spencer Stockton. He hadn’t felt a difference on the mound, but could see one on the screen.

    The prospect had put on some extra pounds — topping out at 240 at one point — and was moving slower. He’d get fatigued by the fourth or fifth inning.

    His delivery was impacted, too. Instead of driving off the mound, Painter was “falling” off it.

    Stockton and Painter looked back at his delivery in 2022, before he got Tommy John elbow surgery. It was quicker and more up-tempo.

    They decided they’d try to get back to that. The coach and the pitcher made some slight changes to Painter’s offseason program, adding more “movement days” of sprints and agility work.

    Phillies pitcher Andrew Painter greets Little Leaguers before a game against the Yankees on Sunday at BayCare Ballpark in Clearwater, Fla.

    They also made some tweaks to his diet. Painter’s weight in 2022 was 225 pounds.

    To get back to that number, he’d have to make some sacrifices.

    “Fewer trips to the Dairy Queen,” he said with a laugh.

    This would be a challenge. Painter’s house in Pompano Beach, Fla., was a block away from the fast-food restaurant. It was easy — perhaps too easy — to order an Oreo Blizzard or milkshake.

    His teammate and longtime friend, Phillies lefthander Jesús Luzardo, described Painter’s eating habits as “notorious.” Former Phillies minor league pitching coordinator Vic Díaz recalled that he had a “big sweet tooth.”

    “I’m almost positive he would go to Publix and just pick up a pie,” Díaz said.

    But nevertheless, Painter got it done. He’s at 225 pounds, his “ideal weight.” His leaner physique is part of the reason he showed dominance in his one game so far this spring — no hits, no walks, no runs in two innings — as he prepares for a starting job on the big league club. He is scheduled to pitch on Saturday.

    “All offseason he’s looked great,” Luzardo said. “He looks strong, he looks athletic, the way he’s pitching, moving down the mound. His body is moving cleaner, is the way I would describe it.”

    ‘Sorry, I ate a whole pumpkin pie’

    Painter has never been shy about his proclivity for dessert. In September 2021, months after he was drafted in the first round, he was sitting alongside Díaz at the Bobby Mattick Complex in Dunedin, Fla.

    The highly-touted prospect was minutes away from his final start of the year, against the FCL Blue Jays. But there was one problem.

    His stomach hurt.

    Díaz asked what was wrong.

    “He just looked at me and said, ‘Sorry, I ate a whole pumpkin pie last night,’” Díaz said.

    Painter ended up having his best FCL outing to date. He pitched two innings, struck out five, and allowed just one hit.

    But Díaz wasn’t about to let him off the hook.

    “He called me out at the end of the [pitchers] meeting,” Painter said. “We were wrapping up and he says my name. And I’m like, ‘What did I do?’

    “And he’s like, ‘Just wanted to let you all know, Painter ate a whole pumpkin pie.’”

    Andrew Painter pitched two scoreless innings in his spring debut on Sunday.

    The minor league coordinator started regularly asking the prospect what he’d eaten the night before. And Painter was happy to divulge.

    Even as a teenager, he was unapologetically himself. Painter would shag fly balls left-handed in the outfield during batting practice. He relished Beach Dog Fridays at single-A Clearwater, picking out his favorite mutts in the crowd.

    So, it was no surprise to Díaz that Painter also had a light-hearted approach to his diet.

    “In Clearwater, he and Alex Garbrick had a thing where they would go to BJ’s Restaurant once a week,” Díaz recalled. “When it was two-for-one Pizookies.”

    (For those unfamiliar, a Pizookie is a cookie skillet with ice cream on top).

    Luzardo, who also has a sweet tooth, was not familiar with the pumpkin-pie fiasco or the weekly Pizookies. But he was aware that his friend liked to eat.

    “I didn’t know about that,” Luzardo said. “But I saw him do a — he did do a hot dog eating contest here last year.”

    Of course, there is a balance to all of this. Painter doesn’t want to reach 240 pounds again, but he also doesn’t want to dip below 220, which was where he was in 2023, before he got Tommy John.

    “It’s trying to find that middle spot of where I’m light, but I’m not injured, too,” he said. “Because you get to a certain point where you’re too skinny and there’s not enough fat in your body to stay healthy.

    “And everyone always says, ‘You can’t tear fat.’ So, it’s trying to find that middle point.”

    Around 225 seems to be it. Painter feels great. He isn’t as sluggish as he was last year. He’s fluid and agile.

    Coupled with a higher arm slot, and a lengthier long toss routine, it’s just another reason why he’s looked — and felt — so good this spring.

    And as long as he isn’t anywhere near a pumpkin patch come October, it should stay that way.

    “I’d say, probably less sweet treats,” he said.

  • The Big Picture: Fists — and home runs — fly in our best Philly sports photos of the week

    The Big Picture: Fists — and home runs — fly in our best Philly sports photos of the week

    Each Friday, Inquirer photo editors pick the best Philly sports images from the last seven days. As the calendar flips to March, we’ve got nearly every sport covered, with the exception of football — but don’t worry, NFL free agency starts next week. From the Sixers and Flyers getting physical in Philly to the Phillies heating up in Clearwater, here’s a look at our best shots of the week.

    Sixers guard VJ Edgecombe falls hard and injures his back after being fouled by Spurs forward Carter Bryant on Tuesday. Edgecombe missed Wednesday’s game against the Jazz with a lumbar contusion.
    Phillies second baseman Bryson Stott is 7-for-10 with two home runs through his first six spring training games.
    Phillies right fielder Brandon Marsh misses a foul ball during the second inning of Tuesday’s spring training game against the Tampa Bay Rays in Port Charlotte, Fla.
    Phillies pitcher Andrew Painter greets Little Leaguers before Sunday’s game against the New York Yankees at BayCare Ballpark in Clearwater, Fla.
    Flyers winger Nic Deslauriers and Bruins forward Tanner Jeannot tangle during the Flyers’ 3-1 win over Boston on Sunday.
    Bruins defenseman Mason Lohrei takes down Flyers forward Nikita Grebenkin, drawing a holding penalty in the first period of Saturday’s game.
    New York City FC goalkeeper Matt Freese catches a corner over Union midfielder Danley Jean Jacques during the first half Sunday’s loss at Subaru Park.
    Drexel guard Amaris Baker (left) is fouled by North Carolina A&T Aggies guard Crystal Hardy (right) during the Dragons’ 65-63 overtime win at the Daskalakis Athletic Center Sunday.
    Penn guard Jay Jones is fouled while driving to the basket against Harvard guard Ben Eisendrath (left) and forward Thomas Batties III in the first half Saturday. Penn won, 64-61, and will face Harvard again in the first round of the Ivy League Tournament.
    Saint Joseph’s Hawks guard Kaylinn Bethea (left) and Richmond Spiders guard Aneisha Scott (right) scramble for the ball during the fourth quarter at Hagan Arena on Saturday. Richmond won, 72-61,
    The Friends Central girls celebrate winning the PAISAA girls’ basketball final over Westtown.
    Friends Central head coach Vincent Simpson and assistant coach Joy Morton (far right) get a celebratory water bath after the team won the PAISAA girls’ basketball final last Friday night.
  • 🏒 Making moves? | Sports Daily Newsletter

    🏒 Making moves? | Sports Daily Newsletter

    If this year is anything like the previous two, expect the Flyers to make some noise ahead of Friday’s 3 p.m. deadline.

    General manager Danny Brière has a history of making trades in the hours leading up to the deadline, and this year could be a similar case, with players such as Rasmus Ristolainen rumored to be on the move.

    Jackie Spiegel takes a look back at the last two years and what Brière did in the week leading up to the previous trade deadlines.

    But let’s evaluate where this team currently stands. Entering Thursday’s game against Utah, Rick Tocchet’s club was on a sudden upswing and just six points out of a playoff spot with 22 games to play.

    Their playoff odds was 11%, but dropped to 7.7% after a 3-0 shut out loss to the Mammoth. So, how are Brière and Keith Jones approaching the deadline? Are they still taking the long-view approach to rebuilding or has patience worn thin?

    While the Flyers are desperate to reach the playoffs for the first time in six seasons, they should avoid the temptation and sell off, writes Gustav Elvin.

    — Isabella DiAmore, @phillysport, sports.daily@inquirer.com.

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    ❓What moves would you like to see the Flyers make ahead of the deadline? Email us back for a chance to be featured in the newsletter.

    Free agency roundtable

    Trading for Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby would be a bold move for the Eagles, but Vegas is said to want two first-rounders and a player in return.

    The 2026 NFL free agency period begins on Monday when “legal tampering” negotiation window opens. The Eagles are not expected to be among the NFL’s most active teams — but big things could happen nonetheless.

    The Inquirer’s Jeff McLane, Olivia Reiner, and Jeff Neiburg got together for a roundtable ahead of next week’s festivities and weighed in on some of the realistic targets and moves we could see the Birds make.

    What we’re …

    🔍 Following: A woman hit in the face by a foul ball at Little League Classic field is suing MLB, Williamsport, and the Crosscutters for carelessness and recklessness.

    🤔 Wondering: Twenty-four Iowa State players transferred to Penn State. Why did so many follow coach Matt Campbell to Happy Valley?

    🎉 Celebrating: After more than six months of searching, The Stoop Pigeon, a women’s sports hub and cafe, has a new location with plans to open in June.

    📰 Reading: TJ Power never found a home on the court at Duke and Virginia. At Penn, he’s tougher, more mature, and has rekindled his love for the game.

    Crawford gets helping hand

    Phillies outfielders Justin Crawford (left) and Brandon Marsh during spring training.

    The Phillies have done their best to make 22-year-old center fielder Justin Crawford feel comfortable. It started with manager Rob Thomson calling him this winter to encourage Crawford to “be himself” and to get ready to compete for a starting job. And it has continued during spring training with 28-year-old left fielder Brandon Marsh, who has tried to pay it forward by offering advice, friendship, and springing for a custom made black suit so the rookie can “look good” for a playoff run this fall.

    Jesús Luzardo said “maybe a little bit of adrenaline” contributed to an uptick in his velocity, but he was pleased with his first spring start.

    Next: The Phillies will play a split-squad game against the Pirates in Bradenton, Fla., at 1:05 p.m. Friday. Jean Cabrera will start for the Phillies.

    Breaking down final 20 games

    Sixers head coach Nick Nurse called the middle of the Eastern Conference “tightly squeezed.”

    Jabari Walker was one of the 76ers’ lone standouts in their 40-point loss to the San Antonio Spurs. The next night he starred again in the Sixers’ win over the Utah Jazz. They’ll need those types of performances down the stretch of the final 20 games of the season. The Inquirer’s Gina Mizell took a look at that stretch, focusing on Paul George’s return, Joel Embiid’s injury management, and playoff positioning.

    Overwhelmed by the moment

    “We’ve expected more out of ourselves in terms of being sharp, mentally and cognitively,” Union manager Bradley Carnell said.

    With no midweek game this week, Bradley Carnell had time to reflect on the Union’s loss to New York City FC on Sunday. He suggested that “sometimes the moment gets to us a little bit.”

    His club is off to a 0-2 start in Major League Soccer. Carnell is looking address that and make adjustments, starting at the attacking end of the field.

    Sports snapshot

    Kevin Willard and Denise Dillon are leading Villanova men and women to the NCAA Tournament.

    The Big Picture

    Adem Bona falls to the floor after being fouled by Spurs’ Luke Kornet on Tuesday.

    Each Friday, Inquirer photo editors pick the best Philly sports images from the last seven days. As the calendar flips to March, we’ve got nearly every sport covered, with the exception of football — but don’t worry, NFL free agency starts next week. From the Sixers and Flyers getting physical in Philly to the Phillies heating up in Clearwater, here’s a look at our best shots of the week.

    What you’re saying about the Big 5

    We asked: Do you have a Big 5 hoops memory? Among your responses:

    The La Salle University Explorers were NCAA national champions in 1954, with Tom Gola being named the MVP. I was in 9th grade back in the days and basketball was the “In Sport” in Philly. The entire sporting world knew about Overbrook High School with Wilt and this small LaSalle College now a University at Broad & Olney. Waiting for the Evening Bulletin & Daily News newspapers to be delivered was always exciting so we could read the stories. Guess I’m one of the lucky ones that at 86 my memory immediately flashed back to Tom Gola & Wilt. — Ronald R.

    I am a Temple University graduate. I remember going to lots of “big 5” games at the palestra. It was an outstanding venue. Win/loss records did not matter for big 5 games. They were always hard fought. One game stands out because my future wife and I were photographed and appeared in the Inquirer sports page. — Richard P.

    It’s always the streamers, the rolls of toilet paper thrown after first basket score and the drums. We’re talking the 1960’s. Villanova – St Joe’s always the best. — Charlene C.

    Grew up loving the Big 5 and going almost every Sat night in the late 60’s. I say the Palestra had charisma! Best memory was in 1969 (?) when LaSalle played Villanova in game 2 and Penn v Columbia in game 1. The nightcap featured Ken Durrett (L) vs Howard Porter (V) but LaSalle also had future NBA /ABA players Larry Cannon (my Lincoln HS), Roland Taylor and Bernie Williams. Columbia had Jim McMillan who played for the Lakers. Amazing talent in the building that night. LaSalle was ranked #2 in the polls, but couldn’t go to the NCAA’s because of probation. The crowd noise, streamers, rollout banners are still great memories. Now I suffer in a basketball coma in State College with Penn State. — Gary P.

    Villanova Wildcats mascot and St. Joe’s Hawks mascot stand on court during this year’s Big 5 women’s basketball championship.

    Saturday afternoon doubleheaders at the Palestra. The first game would be a Big 5 match and second game involved another Big 5 team. Good times. Really miss the streamers. — Brad L.

    My favorite Big 5 memories are many Villanova/St. Joe’s games. This has always been a special rivalry resulting in memorable games. Unfortunately, these games have lost something in intensity and just overall atmosphere since they have moved from the Palestra. — Tom E.

    Used to love the Palestra. Penn would win the first game, then the Big 5 game would go. Got in on a St Joe’s ID for years. All games were competitive. Seems to me Rollie Massimino screwed it up, because the other Big 5 teams were as good as Villanova and he was such a big baby he didn’t want to lose to any of them. Bill M.

    Mike Sielski’s story about the decline of the Big 5 was very interesting and the reasons very logical. When growing up in the Philly area I was always a big fan of the Big 5 teams, but rarely ever saw them in person. I was much more interested in going to see the Philadelphia Warriors first and later the 76ers. Of course many of the Philly pros came from the Big 5 including Arizin, Gola, Wali Jones, Guy Rodgers, Melchonni, Goukas, Mike Bantum and more. — Everett S.

    Loved the Palestra doubleheaders along with the creative signs that were rolled open, passes down the student section and shredded by the first few rows. The best times were when Penn made the Final 4, Temple made it to several elite 8s and St Joe’s was #1 for part of a season. — Bob C.

    We compiled today’s newsletter using reporting from Jackie Spiegel, Gustav Elvin, Olivia Reiner, Jeff McLane, Jeff Neiburg, Jonathan Tannenwald, Ariel Simpson, Sean McKeown, Greg Finberg, Owen Hewitt, Dylan Johnson, Alex Coffey, Colin Schofield, Inquirer Staff Photograpers, and Gina Mizell.

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

    As always, thanks for reading. Have a wonderful weekend, we’ll be back in your inbox on Monday. — Bella

  • Villanova’s teams are going to the NCAA Tournament. Will they have any company from the Big 5?

    Villanova’s teams are going to the NCAA Tournament. Will they have any company from the Big 5?

    The three-year drought with no men’s team from the Big 5 in the NCAA Tournament will end, finally, with Villanova seemingly locked into the field of 68 for the first time since 2022.

    Kevin Willard’s Wildcats (23-7, 14-5 Big East) finish their regular season Saturday at home against Xavier before embarking on their postseason run beginning next week at the conference tournament in New York.

    Villanova’s women, too, appear on their way to the dance after a two-year drought. The Wildcats (23-6, 16-4) were projected as a No. 9 seed in ESPN’s latest women’s bracketology, and it’s hard to imagine that an opening-round loss in the Big East tournament would slide Denise Dillon’s team back to the bubble.

    Will Villanova have any local company?

    The contenders

    St. Joseph’s men: The Hawks may not have the best mathematical chance among the rest of the pack (more on that soon), but it’s worth starting here because they pulled off a pretty impressive road win Wednesday night at Davidson and secured their first double-bye and top-4 seed in the Atlantic 10 tournament since 2018.

    St. Joe’s coach Steve Donahue has his team in the Atlantic 10 tournament with a double-bye and top-4 seed for the first time since 2018. Could the Hawks make a run and reach the NCAA Tournament?

    This has been a pretty remarkable season on Hawk Hill considering all of the context. Former coach Billy Lange bolted for the NBA in the fall. Steve Donahue, whom Lange hired as an assistant after Penn fired him, was given the keys.

    The Hawks stumbled a bit at the start of the season, and then starting guard Deuce Jones was off the team by the holidays. But a team meeting in January helped turn the tide, and Derek Simpson, Jaiden Glover-Toscano, and company have been on a roll.

    Will they cut the nets down in Pittsburgh? It’s still pretty hard to imagine, given the talent of Saint Louis and Virginia Commonwealth at the top of the conference.

    But the double-bye means the Hawks will start the tournament in the quarterfinals, needing just three wins in three days to reach the dance. Bart Torvik’s NCAA hoops analytics site gives the Hawks a 7.8% chance based on thousands of simulations. That’s not nothing.

    Penn men: While we’re on the subject of math, it’s the Ivy League tournament that makes any of its participants more likely than those in other conferences to run the table simply because only four teams are invited and only two wins are needed to win an automatic bid.

    Penn is back in Ivy Madness for the first time since 2023.

    The Quakers, under Fran McCaffery, are back in Ivy Madness for the first time since 2023. They have plenty of talent with Ethan Roberts and TJ Power leading the way. Penn is the No. 3 seed and plays Harvard in the semifinals, a team the Quakers beat at home last weekend. A win would likely mean a date with Yale, the top team in the Ivy. But the Bulldogs just lost to fourth-seeded Cornell, which is the host site for the tournament. Penn beat Cornell twice this season.

    Torvik has the Quakers at 14.7% to win the league.

    Drexel women: The Dragons have one regular-season game remaining, Saturday at Towson, and sit second in the Coastal Athletic Association with a 13-4 record. That’s certainly good enough to be labeled a contender, especially considering that Amy Mallon led a 10-8 CAA team to a conference tournament championship two seasons ago.

    Drexel guard Laine McGurk (right) celebrates with guard Amaris Baker (center) as Molly Rullo (left) joins them after they defeated North Carolina A&T on March 1.

    This year’s squad has won 11 of 12 and has two local products leading the way. O’Hara’s Amaris Baker, a senior, is second in the CAA in scoring with 19.0 points per game, and her backcourt mate, West Chester Rustin’s Laine McGurk, was at 13.2 points and 4.1 rebounds per game.

    The long(er) shots

    Drexel men: The CAA tournament is usually wide open. Twelfth-seeded Delaware reached the final game last season, a year after seventh-seeded Stony Brook took top-seeded Charleston to overtime in the final. Two years before that, Delaware took a 10-8 conference record and the fifth seed and went all the way to the NCAA Tournament.

    That’s where Drexel stands ahead of its first conference tournament game Saturday, at 10-8 and the No. 5 seed. The Dragons started 0-3 in conference and are 10-5 since. And though they haven’t beaten any of the four seeds ahead of them, weird things tend to happen at the CAA tournament. Torvik says this weird occurrence has a 4.5% chance of happening. So, not all that different from the Hawks running the table in the A-10.

    La Salle coach Mountain MacGillivray has led his team to go 10-8 in the conference.

    La Salle women: Mountain MacGillivray should be getting some coach of the year love both in his conference and locally in the Big 5. The Explorers won three A-10 games last season and five the year before. They went 10-8 this year. They faced Richmond in a tournament quarterfinal Friday night.

    Better luck next year

    La Salle men: Darris Nichols’ first season in Olney was marred by injuries, and though the Explorers have been a tough out at times, it’s bordering on impossible for them to get through the gauntlet that would be five wins in five days. (Torvik chances: 0.1%)

    Temple men: The Owls went from vying for the No. 2 seed and a bye to the semifinals in their conference tournament to needing a win Thursday just to qualify for it. They got that, but the prospect of running the table and winning five games in five days seems too daunting for a team that has seemingly been running out of gas. (Torvik chances: 1%)

    St. Joe’s women: Like La Salle, the Hawks went 10-8 in the A-10 and owned the tiebreaker to get the fifth seed. They lost in the quarterfinals Friday night to Davidson, 64-59, after a 66-45 win over 12th-seeded Duquesne on Thursday.

    Temple women: Temple is 7-10 entering its final regular-season game Saturday at home against Florida Atlantic. The Owls are minus-97 in point differential in seven games against the top four teams in the conference.

    Penn women: The Quakers are 6-7 in the Ivy and have one game remaining, Saturday at home against Brown, but they will not qualify for the four-team league tournament.

  • The swing of things

    The swing of things

    Covering Phillies spring training offers sports photographers an opportunity to stretch beyond everyday game coverage. On one of my first mornings at the training facility in Clearwater, Fla., I noticed pitcher Taijuan Walker stretching behind a palm tree. I knew it could make a picture, but it didn’t line up naturally. Every morning, he stretched. Every morning, I tried again. Finally, I made the picture on my last day in the Sunshine State. When I made the photo of bench coach Don Mattingly, I looked for a way to eliminate all other visual distractions. The morning light created a unique pattern on the tarp that put the attention on Mattingly. Using red as the dominant color holds the image of pitcher Kyle Backhus together. I again took advantage of the morning light to capture the shadow and fill the negative space. The portrait of manager Rob Thomson was a combination of a little planning and a lot of luck. I knew there would be a small window at sunrise when the sky would add some visual drama. Luckily, it was when Thomson was ready for his photo. The Phillies outfielders are seen through palm fronds during a game. The contrast of the mostly green palette with the red in the Phillies uniforms encourages the viewer to search into the image. For the photo of catcher Rafael Marchán jogging from the clubhouse, the pattern on the background caught my eye first. I then waited for someone to come into the space. The bubble gum gave the photo an extra pop.

    On Feb. 22, pitcher Tijuan Walker warms up behind the truck of a palm tree.
    Outfielders Dante Nori (from left), Dylan Campbell, and Pedro León are seen through a palm tree during a spring training game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Feb. 22.
    Catcher Garrett Stubbs with a playful pose on photo day.
    Manager Rob Thomson poses as the sun rises on photo day Feb. 19.
    Pitcher Andrew Painter poses on Feb. 19 for photo day.
    On Feb. 21, bench coach Don Mattingly watches as players warm up.
    Pitcher Kyle Backhus warms up on Feb. 17.
    Pitcher José Alvarado warms up Feb. 20.
    Alec Bohm (center) is silhouetted with teammates as they watch a drill Feb. 18.
    A light refection from a bat in the dugout casts a glow around first baseman Bryce Harper at batting practice Feb. 20.
    Aroon Escobar (from left), Dylan Moore, and Bryan Rincon leave after completing a drill Feb. 19.
  • La Salle holds off St. Louis, will face Richmond in the A-10 quarterfinals

    La Salle holds off St. Louis, will face Richmond in the A-10 quarterfinals

    La Salle advanced to the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals with a 59-51 win over St. Louis in the second round of the conference tournament on Thursday at the Henrico Sports & Events Center in Glen Allen, Va.

    The sixth-seeded Explorers (18-12, 10-8 A-10) were led Ashleigh Connor’s 16 points.

    La Salle won its 18th game of the season, the best win total for Mountain MacGillivray in his eight seasons as head coach. It is the most wins for an Explorers team since 2006-07, when La Salle finished 19-11.

    La Salle has won six of its last seven games and will make its first appearance in an A-10 quarterfinal since 2021 when the Explorers face third-seeded Richmond on Friday night.

    Statistical leaders

    Connor, who began her career at St. Louis, had eight assists, seven rebounds, and five steals in addition to her 16 points.

    Aryss Macktoon scored 15 points and pulled down 14 rebounds. The redshirt sophomore guard was recently named the A-10 Defensive Player of the Year.

    Alyssa Koerkenmeier led St. Louis with 18 points. Koerkenmeier, the A-10 Rookie of the Year, also grabbed 12 rebounds and blocked five shots.

    La Salle’s Aryss Macktoon (center) finished with 15 points and 14 rebounds against St. Louis on Thursday night.

    What we saw

    La Salle never trailed, but its lead stayed within a few possessions for much of the first half. An extended 12-2 Explorer run over the final 6 minutes, 16 seconds of the second quarter pushed La Salle’s lead to 10 at halftime.

    Macktoon scored eight points in the second quarter, including a turnaround mid-range jumper before halftime.

    Both offenses sputtered in the third quarter. St. Louis was held scoreless for a 6:43 stretch but still outscored La Salle by three in the frame. The Explorers had a 42-35 advantage entering the fourth.

    Despite going scoreless from the field over the final 2:57 of the game La Salle held on for the win.

    Nelson nullified

    La Salle led by as many as 10 points in the fourth, but the Billikens trimmed the Explorers’ lead to four with 1:13 remaining.

    With a chance to make it a one-possession game, St. Louis’ Alexia Nelson drove into the lane against Macktoon, but her shot was blocked by a rotating Amiya Moses to keep La Salle’s lead at four with 22 seconds to go.

    Up next

    No. 6 La Salle will face No. 3 Richmond in the A-10 quarterfinals on Friday (7:30 p.m., CNBC).

  • Flyers lose 3-0 to Mammoth at home with the trade deadline looming: ‘We were soft’

    Flyers lose 3-0 to Mammoth at home with the trade deadline looming: ‘We were soft’

    There were two things hanging over the Flyers at Xfinity Mobile Arena on Thursday night: the impending NHL trade deadline and extending their winning streak.

    But as the minutes continued to tick off until Friday’s 3 p.m. deadline, the Flyers’ inability to win four straight kept on going with a 3-0 loss to the Utah Mammoth.

    It is the third time this season the Flyers have been shut out, and it’s been more than two years since the Flyers strung together a four-game winning streak. The last ended with a 5-3 win against the Arizona Coyotes, who are now the Mammoth, on Feb. 12, 2024.

    From the drop of the puck on Thursday, it was a lackadaisical effort by the Flyers that saw them muster just 44 shot attempts and 16 shots on goal, tying the season low set on Feb. 5 in a 2-1 overtime loss to the Ottawa Senators. It is the 10th time this season that they have not put at least 20 shots on goal.

    “I think we’ve got to simplify our game, go to the net hard, drive to the net hard, get some bodies there, bring pucks to the net,” captain Sean Couturier said. “It almost feels like we’re trying to play on the outside and find a backdoor tap-in, which is hard to do in this league.

    “I think if we simplify things, eventually things will open up. But I think we’re too content on playing a little bit on the outside at times.”

    In the first period, the Flyers had four shots on goal, despite having a power-play opportunity.

    “I think the first 10 [minutes] kind of dictated [play]. We were soft; execution was tough,” said coach Rick Tocchet, who also said the Flyers didn’t push back.

    Added defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen: “I feel like at times we might have got a little bit outworked and outbattled, and I think that’s where we should start every game, and obviously we didn’t do that enough tonight.”

    To be fair, Utah also had only four shots in the first period, but in the second, the Mammoth broke through on two of their 14 shots.

    Lou Nolan didn’t even have time to announce the penalty before Nick Schmaltz found the back of the net to give Utah a 1-0 lead less than two minutes into the frame. Eight seconds after Noah Cates was called for holding the stick, Dylan Guenther curled off the boards and into the high slot before going against the grain to Schmaltz on the goal line for the shot.

    “Just didn’t play hard enough tonight,” defenseman Travis Sanheim said. “They’re a tough team to play against. They battle hard, hard on the walls, and make it tough on you. And we weren’t willing to play that style so hard to win when you don’t dig in and win those battles.”

    Less than seven minutes later, it was 2-0 on a goal by Clayton Keller, who just helped the United States win gold at the Winter Olympics.

    Off a faceoff, Sanheim got the puck from Matvei Michkov, who took his spot at the left point and carried the puck down and around the net, trying a wrap-around. The puck slid off his stick, and while he tried to regroup, he eventually lost the puck to Guenther.

    Utah’s speedy forward chipped the puck around Ristolainen, and as Sanheim backchecked and tried to cut off Guenther, Keller split through a hole with Michkov too far over.

    “What do you want me to say?” Tocchet retorted when asked about the play.

    “Yeah, I tried to make a play at the net,” Sanheim said. “And then as it came up, Risto goes to step up on, I think it was on Guenther, and I saw that we had an F3, so I thought I could play Guenther on the wall. Obviously misread it with Mich, and obviously don’t want to give up a breakaway at that time of the game.”

    Michael Carcone added an empty-netter for Utah in the third period.

    Now the question is, who will be here after the trade deadline at 3 p.m. on Friday?

    Flyers defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen has been a hot name in trade deadline rumors.

    Ristolainen, whose name is swirling as someone more than likely getting traded, suited up and skated more than 22 minutes in his 800th NHL game.

    “I can’t really control that,” Ristolainen said. “So I just try to come in every day, and obviously [Friday], we’ll see what happens.”

    Did the pending trade deadline impact the team?

    “Hard to say, maybe for some guys, I guess,” Sanheim said. “But we’re in the thick of it and just trying to win every hockey game and take it day by day and deal with it as it comes.”

    Breakaways

    Forward Travis Konecny missed his second straight game with an upper-body injury, and defenseman Nick Seeler, who sustained a lower-body injury in Monday’s game against the Toronto Maple Leafs, did not play. … On Thursday, the Flyers signed forward Garrett Wilson to an NHL contract to finish the 2025-26 season. A member of Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League since 2019, a team source has also confirmed the captain inked a new AHL contract for next season. Wilson, a native of Barrie, Ontario, has 16 points (four goals, 12 assists) in 51 games this season and leads the team in penalty minutes (99), which enters Thursday tied for 11th overall in the AHL. Wilson, who turns 35 on March 16, has played 751 AHL games for San Antonio, Portland, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Toronto, and Lehigh Valley. He is Lehigh Valley’s all-time leader in games played (338) and ranks fourth in goals (62) and points (148). A rugged 6-foot-3, 218-pound winger, Wilson was drafted in the fourth round of the 2009 NHL draft by the Florida Panthers and has 84 regular-season and 10 playoff games at the NHL level. His last NHL game was a playoff game on April 16, 2019, for the Pittsburgh Penguins.

    Up next

    On Saturday, the Flyers will be in Pittsburgh taking on the Penguins (5:30 p.m., NBCSP).

  • Woman hit in face by foul ball at Little League Classic field is suing MLB, Williamsport, and the Crosscutters

    Woman hit in face by foul ball at Little League Classic field is suing MLB, Williamsport, and the Crosscutters

    Every summer, Williamsport, Pa., becomes the epicenter of youth baseball as the Little League World Series hosts its annual tournament.

    And since 2017, Major League Baseball has brought in two teams to play an August regular-season game at Historic Bowman Field, giving Little Leaguers a chance to take in major league action just five miles from the Little League complex.

    But in addition to making memories for Little League ballplayers, the home of the Little League Classic has also been a hazard to fans, a new lawsuit says.

    Deborah Barbella, of Livingston, N.J., attended Bowman Field for a Penn College of Technology baseball game on May 2. She sat behind the first base dugout when a foul ball hit her in her face, breaking her jaw, nose, and eye socket, according to the complaint, which was filed Monday in the Lycoming County Court of Common Pleas.

    The suit accuses MLB, the Williamsport Crosscutters, and the city of Williamsport of carelessness and recklessness leading to the injury.

    MLB and the Crosscutters did not immediately return requests for comments regarding the lawsuit. Williamsport Mayor Derek Slaughter declined to comment on the lawsuit.

    The Crosscutters, one of six teams in the MLB Draft League, have used Bowman Field as their home stadium since 1994. The team was the class A short-season affiliate of the Phillies from 2007 until the MLB restructured its minor leagues in 2021.

    However, the injury at the center of the suit did not take place during a Crosscutters game. Barbella was struck by a foul ball during the second game of a United East Conference playoff doubleheader between Cairn University and Penn College, which used Bowman Field as its home stadium until 2026.

    Bowman Field, which opened in 1926, is owned by Williamsport and leased to MLB to host its Little League Classic games.

    Barbella was struck because Bowman Field did not comply with a 2022 dictate that all minor league baseball stadiums install protective netting that extends from foul pole to foul pole by opening day 2025, the suit says.

    The Seattle Mariners played the New York Mets in last year’s Little League Classic at Bowman Field.

    The netting at Bowman should have been extended even before to comply with major league rules because it hosts games between MLB teams, the suit says, such as the Little League Classic.

    But when Barbella attended a game at Bowman, the suit says, only those sitting behind home plate were covered by a netting canopy. The net in front of Barbella was lower and stopped at the end of the dugout.

    “Our goal is to achieve justice for a woman whose life was permanently altered by an allegedly foreseeable and preventable incident, and to hold the League and the stadium accountable for their delay,” John Morgan, founder of Morgan & Morgan law firm representing Barbella, said in a statement.

    Williamsport officials discussed the netting problem in a Feb. 13, 2025, city council meeting, according to the complaint. Council approved a contract with a construction company for the netting that day, saying the project needed to be done “very quickly,” but the work never started. The city reopened its bid for netting installation in March 2025 but couldn’t find a company that would agree to take on the project with opening day as a deadline, the suit says.

    The city decided to install a temporary netting system to allow more time for the permanent netting’s installation.

    “Despite being aware that the netting at Bowman Field needed to be changed prior to opening day in 2025, the Defendants failed to make any changes to the netting system at Bowman Field,” the suit says.

    With the exception of the 2020 season, the Little League Classic has brought a regular-season MLB game to Williamsport to open the final week of the Little League World Series since 2017. This year’s edition of the game will feature the Milwaukee Brewers and Atlanta Braves on Sunday, Aug. 23.

    The Phillies have played in two Little League Classic games. They lost, 8-2, to the Mets in the second annual Little League Classic in 2018 and lost, 4-3, to the Nationals in the game’s 2023 edition.

    When the Phillies took the field for the Classic in 2018, it was the first time the team had played at Bowman Field since it suffered a 5-1 loss to the club’s class A-affiliate, the Williamsport Grays, in an exhibition game on July 31, 1962.