Monday, June 24, 2024

The 2024 Home News Tribune Greater Middlesex Conference All-Area teams

Andy Mendlowitz
MyCentralJersey.com

Here are the 2024 Home News Tribune Greater Middlesex Conference All-Area baseball teams.

FIRST TEAM

P: Eddy Nunez, Woodbridge, Sr.

Nunez has been a big-name and a big-game pitcher since a freshman, and he ended his outstanding career with his best season. The Felican University-bound Nunez had an 8-2 record with 98 strikeouts in 64 innings, allowing just 17 walks with a 1.20 ERA. He was a big reason the Barrons won the GMC White Division. The righty graduated second in program history in career wins (24) and strikeouts (257).

P: Frank Papeo, Old Bridge, Sr.

The four-year varsity player pitched and hit in a lot of big games for the Knights, and always seemed to come up clutch in key spots. The Rider-commit launched a two-run homer to help seal an 8-5 comeback in the GMCT quarterfinals and was the winning pitcher in the GMCT final. Papeo, who battled shoulder soreness at times, also played first base and the lefty had an 0.70 ERA in 40 IP with 45 strikeouts. He hit .301 with two home runs and 15 RBIs.  

P: Cory Pascarella, Colonia, Jr.

The right-hander had an outstanding freshman season (2.23 ERA, 36 Ks) in 2022 but missed all of last year on the mound because of an arm injury. He returned this spring and allowed two earned runs in his first outing. After that — near perfect. Pascarella amazingly gave up 1 ER the rest of the season for a sparkling 0.37 ERA in 56 1/3 innings. Check out his last four starts: 25 IP, 46 Ks, 0 ER, 9 Hs, 3 BBs. In all, he struck out 86 with 18 walks and 27 hits and was 8-2 with a save.

P: Zack Wallace, Monroe, Sr.

You spell Zack with a K and that seemed much appropriate. The right-hander struck out 102 hitters in 64 2/3 innings, emerging as a lights-out ace for the Falcons. In a league with several great throwers, Wallace was voted the GMC Pitcher of the Year by the coaches. He had four complete game shutouts and finished with a 1.19 ERA, allowing just 43 hits and 28 walks. The outgoing Wallace kept things light in the dugout and loved competing and team-bonding whether it was winning bunting competitions or playing fungo golf after practice.

C: Michael Robinson, Sayreville, Jr.

Robinson made an offensive leap this season going from hitting .240 as a sophomore to .333 (20-for-60) with 21 RBIs and a .456 OBP. However, catchers need to have stellar defensive skills and Robinson was a stalwart behind the dish in handling the Bombers staff. He allowed two passed balls in 142 innings caught and threw out 31 percent of base stealers.

1B: Carter Cumiskey, Spotswood, Jr.

Cumiskey was a big bopper at the plate and an ace on the mound. In all, he gave the Chargers a star presence, along with his defense at first. He helped Spotswood repeat as GMC Blue Division champions by batting .446 (37-for-83) with six home runs, 30 RBIs, 32 runs and 20 walks. As a pitcher, the left-hander struck out 78 hitters in 46 2/3 innings with an 1.80 ERA. He has committed to play at Seton Hall.

INF: Jayden Alvarez, South Plainfield, Sr.

The third baseman had a two-year run as one of the GMC’s most feared hitters and best defenders. He was a key piece as South Plainfield captured the GMC Red Division title and reached the GMCT and North 2 Group 3 finals. The Wagner-bound Alvarez batted .360 (31-of-86) with a .482 OBP and drove in 27 runs, scored 25 times and stole 23 bases. He has 63 hits and 51 RBIs the last two springs. 

INF: Yomar Carreras, North Brunswick, Sr.

Carreras was already one of the GMC’s most exciting and top players entering the season. This spring, he added speed to his game and stole 25 bases up from eight. The slick-fielding shortstop hit .464 (32-for-69) with 20 RBIs, 23 runs and three home runs, along with 21 walks. He is committed to play at Rutgers.

INF: Zach Robinson, South Plainfield, Sr.

Pick any game, and Robinson was right there in the middle of the action. The shortstop reached base in every single contest (with hits in all but two) and finished the season with a 22-game hit streak. Robinson, headed to Gardner-Webb University, laced 105 career hits and had astronomical numbers this spring, especially impressive given the tough pitching the Tigers faced. He hit .462 (43-for-93) and carried a .550 OBP with 30 RBIs, 36 runs, 16 walks and stole 28 bags. The GMC coaches voted him the Red Division Player of the Year.

OF: Jaxon Appelman, Edison, Sr.

It just seems like Appelman was around forever on the GMC varsity scene. He was a four-year impact pitcher and a three-year slugger for the Eagles. The Coastal Carolina-commit has 266 career strikeouts and a 1.95 ERA in 186 1/2 IP. This spring, the right-hander struck out 92 in 58 1/2 innings with a 1.68 ERA. At the plate, Appelman has 15 career home runs and launched six this year, including the game-winner in a 1-0 victory over Middlesex in the GMCT quarterfinals. He hit .329 (26-for-79) with 13 RBIs and 18 walks. The GMC coaches voted him the White Division Player of the Year.

OF: Nick Irizarry, South Plainfield, Jr.

This is how versatile Irizarry was — he started the season at catcher because the Tigers had a void. Once Steve Studlack emerged, Irizarry shifted to left field and made several outstanding catches and throws, including a game-saver in a win over North Brunswick. He also saw time at center field and second base. Offensively, Irizarry simply delivered. He hit .378 (34-for-90) with a .472 OBP, 22 RBIs, 31 runs and 35 SBs.  

OF: JT Meyer, Old Bridge, Sr.

Meyer gave the Knights a top defensive presence in center field and an ace on the hill. The right-hander proved you don’t need to be a high-K guy to have success. He threw in the upper 80s with a curveball and a splitter that produced soft contact and an 0.81 ERA in 43 1/2 innings (4 ER). He had 28 strikeouts and allowed just nine walks. The Kean-commit hit .295 with 14 RBIs.

UTL: Justin Hascup, Old Bridge, Jr.

Hascup was a two-way star for the Knights. On the mound, the right-hander commanded his pitches for strikes and kept the ball in the zone with few walks. He posted a 2.18 ERA in 57 2/3 innings with 66 strikeouts to 15 walks. He also played third base and hit .364 (28-for-77) and had nine RBIs and scored 12 times.

UTL: Drew Lukachyk, Woodbridge, Sr.

Lukachyk is the definition of a versatile utility player, or doing whatever is needed to help your team. He stepped up on the mound following an injury after throwing six innings in 2023. The righthander delivered with a 5-2 record (IP: 49 1/3, 1.70 ERA , 58 Ks). Oh, he was a pretty good batter, too. The Middlesex College-bound Lukachyk, who played shortstop, second base and third, hit .452 (38-of-84, 17 xbh) with a .555 OBP, 18 RBIs, 30 Rs, 17 SBs and 19 walks. He graduated as the program’s all-time hits leader with 109.

UTL: Julius Rosado, South River, Jr.         

Maybe the question is, what didn’t Rosado do? The shortstop is the Home News Tribune GMC Player of the Year and set South River career modern day records in home runs (25), doubles (28) and strikeouts as a pitcher (243). He hit .594 (38-for-64) with 14 home runs, 34 RBIs, 44 runs, seven doubles, 32 walks and 20 stolen bases. Rosado carried a .732 OBP, a 1.421 slugging percentage and an OPS of 2.153. As a pitcher, the right-hander was 5-2 with a 1.56 ERA (IP: 49 1/3, 80 Ks).

UTL: John Smith, Old Bridge, Jr.

Smith sparked the Knights’ offense as the leadoff hitter, rarely striking out and putting the ball in play. He hit .412 (35-for-85) with 12 walks, 18 runs scored and 17 RBIs. He moved from third base to shortstop this season, giving Old Bridge an athletic presence in the middle of the infield.

SECOND TEAM:

P: Bobby Bressler, Piscataway, Sr.

P: Colin Kroner, Colonia, So.

P: Harrison Lollin, Monroe, Sr.

P: Robert Roma, Edison, So.

C: Tyler Weber, Woodbridge, Sr.

1B: Ethan Fantel, South Brunswick, Sr.

INF: Anthony Calantoni, Edison, Jr.

INF: Bobby Christensen, St. Joseph, Jr.

INF: Joseph Zammitti, St. Joseph, Sr.

OF: Akhil Penkala, Old Bridge, Jr.

OF: Jake Romanello, Sayreville, Sr.

OF: Gavin Sansone, St. Thomas Aquinas, Sr.

UTL: Will Buchan, Spotswood, Jr.

UTL: Daniel Kapsch, South Plainfield, Jr.

UTL: Shawn Kish, Woodbridge, Sr.

UTL: Colin Perna, South Brunswick, So.

THIRD TEAM:

P: Luc Acquaviva, Spotswood, Sr.

P: RJ Coleman, J.F. Kennedy, Sr.

P: Nick Kee, Carteret, Jr.

P: Louis Rizzolo, St. Thomas Aquinas, So.

C: Noah Borrero, South River, So.

1B: Thomas Schlaline, Sayreville, Jr.

INF: Xavier Diaz, Woodbridge, So.

INF: John Papaianni, J.P. Stevens, Sr.

INF: Owen Reynolds, Middlesex, Jr.

OF: Breckyn DeAngelis, Spotswood, Sr.

OF: Mark Stein, Dunellen, Jr.

OF: Jeremy Vasquez, South Amboy, Jr.

UTL: Mike Castagna, South Plainfield, Jr.

UTL: Dom Massaro, South Plainfield, So.

UTL: Anthony Ortega, Perth Amboy, Sr.

UTL: Lucas White, Monroe, Sr.

HONORABLE MENTION:

NOTE: Players that were not on the first three teams earned Honorable Mention based on two criteria: 1, They were selected All-Division by the coaches. 2, They were selected to play in either the 2024 Frank Gavigan Senior All Star Game or the 2024 GMCBCA Underclassmen Showcase.

Carteret: Justin Santana (Sr.), James Rodriguez (Sr.), Luis Hernandez (Fr.), Lucas Rivera (Fr.); Colonia: Casey Chiola (Sr.); Dunellen: Jacob Manna (Sr.), Ryan Hutchins (Jr.), Danny Watts (Jr.); East Brunswick: Lukas Meyer (Sr.), Dustin McGuinness (Sr.), Hayden Dziubeck (Jr.); East Brunswick Magnet: Nomar Carreras (Jr.), Michael Zappola (Sr.); Edison: Dom Innocenti (So.), Connor Murphy (So.); Highland Park: Seamus Mackinnon (Jr.), Luca Sheldon (Sr.), Aidan O'Connell (Sr.), Dorian Crocco (Fr.), Oscar Caraballo-Duran (Sr.), Connor Roth-Zappo (Jr.); J.F. Kennedy: Grant Lorentzen (So.); J.P. Stevens: Soham Prajapati (So.); Metuchen: Lucas Weiss (Sr.); Middlesex: Frank Berta (Sr.), Dom Parenti (Jr.); Monroe: Owen Judge (Jr.); New Brunswick: Carlos Paredes (Jr.); North Brunswick: Tim DeGaetano (Jr.); North Plainfield: Davyn Ciriaco (Jr.); Old Bridge: Luke Hagen (Sr.); Perth Amboy: Sebastian Aponte (Sr.), Justin Foy (Jr.); Perth Amboy Magnet: Nelson Concepcion (Sr.), Zachary Lenardo (Jr.), Johnkelly Jimenez (Sr.); Piscataway: Riley Wingate (Jr.); Piscataway Magnet: Jacob Lyerly (Sr.), Kyle Malchiodi (Fr.), Colton Lyerly (Fr.); St. Thomas Aquinas: Zach Diaz (Sr.), Nikash Patel (Fr.); Somerset Tech: Steven Larosa (Sr.); South Amboy: Micah Nemeth (Fr.), Diego Colon (So.), Ben Hernandez (Sr.), Ben Smith (Jr.); South Brunswick: Will Haman (Sr.), Aaron Perna (Sr.); South Plainfield: Kevin Penny (Jr.), Aldo Pigna (Sr.); South River: James Zsorey (Jr.), Sebastian Susinno (Sr.); Spotswood: Ryan Orth (So.), Mason Bitalla (Sr.); Timothy Christian: Josh Thiero (Sr.), Dylan Spivey (Sr.), Ben Wang (Sr.); Wardlaw-Hartridge: Mackias Ysaac (So.); Woodbridge: Gavin Slicner (So.)

NJ Baseball: The 2024 Home News Tribune All-Area teams (mycentraljersey.com)

HNT Coach of the Year is South Plainfield's Scott Gleichenhaus

Andy Mendlowitz
MyCentralJersey.com

You can just hear the pride and enthusiasm burst out of every sentence when Scott Gleichenhaus talks about the South Plainfield baseball team.

“It’s personal for me,” the Tigers coach said. “I grew up in town. A lot of the kids that are coming through, I grew up with their parents. Played ball with their parents. We went through the school system together. We went through the high school program together, so to me it’s personal.”

While Gleichenhaus could coach anywhere, putting on those green and white colors makes it extra special and the team’s success this spring makes it that more meaningful to him.

It’s personal.

Gleichenhaus is the Home News Tribune Greater Middlesex Conference Coach of the Year. The fourth-year skipper guided the Tigers to the tough Red Division pennant in a 22-6-1 season that saw South Plainfield reach the GMC Tournament and the North 2 Group 3 finals.

The team culture reflects their coach’s personality as the players had a loose atmosphere from smiles in the dugout to fun social media posts.

South Plainfield baseball coach Scott Gleichenhaus talks with senior Zach Robinson during the GMCT Final on May 18, 2024 / Alexander Lewis MyCentralJersey

Senior captain Jayden Alvarez noted earlier in the year, “I think we all love each other and work hard for each other. So I knew we were going to come together. We all really pretty much grew up with each other, so it makes it easy.”

“We have a great time,” Gleichenhaus said. “We enjoy each other. I don’t yell at kids. If kids make a mistake, I know they feel worse than anybody. There’s never, in my opinion, a need to ever have to yell. I have quiet conversations with them.

“Some people may think that I’m not hard enough on these guys but when all’s said and done, I think they appreciate the style or my brand if you want to call it that. 'Hey, you make mistakes, forget about it. We make mistakes let’s just keep plugging ahead. Keep moving forward, you’ll get another opportunity.'”

When Gleichenhaus took over in 2021, he identified several freshmen as potential varsity players. The same thing a year later. Those guys developed as impact players with talented underclassmen filling in roles. They put pressure on opponents and set a program record with 123 stolen bases.

Gleichenhaus noted the one through five hitters were the best stretch he’s had in a lineup. Dom Massaro (.310, 24 runs 14 SBs), Dan Kapsch (.376, 38 hits, 31 runs), Zach Robinson (.462, 43 hits, 30 RBIs), Alvarez (.360, 31 hits, 27 RBIs) and Nick Irizarry (.378, 34 hits, 22 RBIs) provided a fearsome presence.   

The balance got extended to Aiden McCarthy (.284, 11 RBIs), Brandon Bickunas (.277, 18 RBIs), Ryan Balent (10 RBIs) with Steve Studlack emerging at catcher. Kevin Penny (.290, 10 RBIs) also contributed offensively and was a key member of the pitching staff along with McCarthy and Mike Castagna, Andrew Csordos, Chase Donovan, Balent and Aldo Pigna.

“There wasn’t an easy out in our lineup,” Gleichenhaus said. “As a coach it just makes you proud knowing that all right, number one we got the right guys. Number two, all the work that these guys put in in the offseason has paid off and I tip my cap to those guys. I tip my cap to those parents, whoever they work with in that offseason, that motivation, that work ethic – it pays off.”  

All the summer ball and fall seasons and winter workouts went into the success.

“It all calculates,” he continued. “It’s all part of the formula that you get what you put in and these guys work all year round across the board. These guys were hungry and as a coach that’s all you could ask for. It’s par for the course for this program.”

That's something he knows about quite well. Gleichenhaus was a star shortstop for the Tigers and graduated in 1994. He went on to play at Long Island University and Widener University. The coaching bug came early.

The summer before entering college, Gleichenhaus and a friend coached a middle school all-star team.

“The next thing I know, I’m doing it every summer for the next couple years,” he said. “It gave you a different appreciation seeing the game from a different perspective and I think it made me a better ball player. As a player, you see things one way. As a coach, you see things another. You have the opportunity to do both, I think that just opens you up to a whole different outlook, a different approach. It just makes you smarter and makes you a better person and makes you a better player across the board. So I recommend it to any young players.”

Gleichenhaus, who teaches history at South Plainfield Middle School, heeded his own advice. He had stints as the head coach at Piscataway for four years and at Plainfield for eight seasons, as well as an assistant at Metuchen.

He returned to South Plainfield as an assistant for the 2019 season and thought about stepping away from coaching to spend time with his family and toddler. However, he decided to take over as the head coach for Anthony Guida, who resigned in early 2021.

He now has two former South Plainfield stars on his staff in Sal Esposito and Mark Rennie, who played on that 1994 all-star team in Gleichenhaus’ first coaching gig. Things sometimes tend to go full circle.

“That’s part of the allure of what I want to bring to the table,” Gleichenhaus said. “Bring in all South Plainfield guys because in my mind, at least for what it’s worth, I feel like when you’re from a community you’re just willing to do whatever it takes, bring that energy, just that extra whatever.

‘Anything. Bring it to the table and help these guys achieve that ultimate success. It’s tradition. It’s just keeping it in the family and keeping it in the community, which is a proud community when it comes to baseball.”

It’s personal.

NJ Baseball: HNT Coach of Year South Plainfield's Scott Gleichenhaus (mycentraljersey.com)

Baseball Rankings: Final Home News Tribune Greater Middlesex Conference Top 10

Andy MendlowitzMyCentralJersey.com

From wearing jackets in chilly April to putting on sunscreen in June, it was some season for Greater Middlesex Conference baseball fans. As usual, the players produced several memorable moments and much drama over the course of the spring.

This is how the teams wound up in our final Top 10.

Final GMC Top 10

1. Old Bridge (20-9) – preseason No. 1: The Knights started as our No. 1 and finished on top of the podium. In between, well, it was some ride. Old Bridge maneuvered through the typical tough Red Division tussles, placed second in the division and entered the GMC Tournament as the No. 3 seed. In the end, the Knights' talent came through, fueled by top pitching and gutsy play. Old Bridge put together four exciting wins to emerge as GMCT champs.

2. South Plainfield (22-6-1) – preseason No. 5: The Tigers can make a case for having the county’s most overall dominant campaign. South Plainfield captured the Red Division pennant with a 10-2 mark, sweeping Old Bridge in the regular season and producing a 14-game unbeaten streak at one point. Two close losses ding them to No. 2 – the 6-5 defeat to Old Bridge in the GMCT final and an 8-3 loss to Randolph in the North 2 Group 3 final (SP led 3-1 entering the sixth).

3. Monroe (16-10) – preseason No. 2: You’re going to have some tough losses in baseball and Monroe had seven defeats by three runs or less. Then, the Falcons got hot entering the postseason as the No. 5 seed in Central Group 4. Monroe scored two road upsets – a 3-0 win over fourth-seeded South Brunswick and a 6-5 win over top-seeded Old Bridge to reach the final. They took seven of their last eight and finished third in the Red Division.

4.Woodbridge (17-10) – preseason No. 4: The whole body of work counts, and the Barrons blazed through the tough White Division with an 11-1 record to capture the pennant. That includes sweeps over Colonia, Edison and Sayreville – which upset them in the GMCT quarterfinals.   

5. Edison (16-12) – preseason No. 9: It wasn’t that Edison didn't have talent, just, they were so young. Well, senior Jaxon Appelman shined and up-and-comers broke out such as Robert Roma (1.66 ERA) and Anthony Calantoni (.430, 37 hits). The Eagles reached the GMCT semifinals and tied for second with Colonia in the White Division.

6.Spotswood (19-4-2) – preseason No. 8: The Chargers repeated as Blue Division champions with an 11-1 record, quite an impressive feat. The Blue featured North Non-Public B champs St. Thomas Aquinas (Spotswood had the sweep, including an incredible late comeback), as well as tough pitching across the board. The Chargers simply matched those aces and put up some big offensive numbers led by Carter Cumiskey.

7.South Brunswick (14-13) – preseason unranked: It was almost like a season of two halves, two different chapters for the Vikings. South Brunswick slugger/ace Ethan Fantel missed a month after getting hit in the face with a line drive on opening day. The Vikings went 8-3 after he returned, including a 3-2, 14-inning win over St. Thomas Aquinas in the GMCT first round.

8. St. Thomas Aquinas (19-9) – preseason unranked: They might still be celebrating in North Edison. St. Thomas Aquinas put together a memorable run in capturing the North Non-Public B title, its first sectional championship in 18 years. Gavin Sansone’s home run. Louis Rizzolo and Nikash Patel’s gutsy relief pitching. Key hits from players like Will Bethea and Donovan Epps. Yes, Trojans fans certainly won’t forget those memories.

9. Colonia (19-7) – preseason unranked: Simply, the Patriots had question marks on the mound entering the season. Well, the staff emerged as one of the best in the GMC with a 1.43 team ERA and 228 strikeouts in 171 IP. Junior Cory Pascarella (0.37 ERA, 86 Ks) and sophomores Colin Kroner (2.00 ERA, 78 Ks), Dylan Chiera (1.17 ERA) and Tyler Chiola (2.90 ERA) will all be back. Senior Anthony Singh (1.68 ERA, 43 Ks) also chipped in key innings as Colonia finished tied with Edison for second in the White Division.

10. Sayreville (12-13) – preseason No. 7: The Bombers had a slow start this spring but produced big-time in the GMCT with some redemption against White Division foes. The 10th-seed topped seventh-seeded Colonia 1-0 in the first round behind Thomas Schlaline's gem and stopped second-seeded Woodbridge 4-3 in the quarterfinals to reach the final four. The Bombers placed fourth in the White Division.   

In the Red Division, South Plainfield displayed a balanced and pesky lineup that set a program record with 123 stolen bases. Shortstop Zach Robinson led the way with 43 hits, a .462 average and 30 RBIs. Perhaps overlooked sometimes in the Tigers’ prolific offense was the deep pitching staff. No one threw over 40 innings and that kept the arms fresh.  

NJ Baseball rankings: Final HNT Greater Middlesex Conference Top 10 (mycentraljersey.com)

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Final Baseball Top 20 & Final Group Rankings - NJ.COM


Statewide Final Rankings

By 

#18 - South Plainfield (22-6-1)
2024 resume: 
Coach Scott Gleichenhaus continued to build his team this season with a strong junior class and it ended up being a fantastic season for South Plainfield. South Plainfield reached the Greater Middlesex Conference Tournament championship game and reached the North 2, Group 3 sectional final. The Tigers ended up winning the GMC Red Division, the top division in the conference, putting together and senior Zach Robinson was named GMC Division Player of the Year by coaches in the conference. Robinson had a stellar season, hitting .462 and ended the year with a 22-game hitting streak and reached base in every game this spring. Third baseman Jayden Alvarez hit .360, while second baseman Dan Kapsch hit .376 and outfielder Nick Irizarry hit .378. Mike Castagna led the pitching staff with a 5-1 record and a 1.60 ERA.


2024 NJ High School Baseball Rankings

#

School

Ovr.

Rating

Str.

+/-

1

Gloucester Catholic (Gloucester City)

27-2

31.16

13.7

2

Bridgewater-Raritan (Bridgewater)

30-3

30.03

12.4

3

Delbarton (Morristown)

30-3

29.91

13.5

4

Morris Knolls (Rockaway)

28-5

26.84

10.1

5

Governor Livingston (Berkeley Heights)

28-5

25.37

9.1

6

Delsea (Franklinville)

27-4

25.18

9.7

+2

7

Eastern (Voorhees)

23-7

24.41

11.9

+4

8

St. Augustine Prep (Richland)

22-9-1

24.35

15.2

-2

9

Seton Hall Prep (West Orange)

25-4-1

24.17

10.7

-2

10

Cherry Hill West (Cherry Hill)

23-5

23.35

11.3

-1

11

Don Bosco Prep (Ramsey)

26-5

22.80

10.1

-1

12

Randolph

21-10

22.12

13.7

13

Livingston

22-8-1

20.05

11.0

+1

14

Shawnee (Medford)

18-10

19.83

13.0

+2

15

Ridge (Basking Ridge)

21-9

19.48

11.9

16

North Hunterdon (Annandale)

20-6

19.46

10.3

+1

17

St. Joseph Regional (Montvale)

21-6

19.43

12.0

+2

18

Cherokee (Marlton)

17-9

19.40

14.6

+2

19

Pompton Lakes

26-4

19.27

1.2

-6

20

Ridgewood

23-5

19.21

5.5

+5

21

South Plainfield

22-6-1

19.14

8.4

+1

22

Mainland Regional (Linwood)

20-6

19.14

9.8

-4

23

Rancocas Valley (Mt. Holly)

17-10

18.86

16.0

+3

24

Bishop Eustace Prep (Pennsauken)

21-7

18.80

9.0

-1

25

Christian Brothers Academy (Lincroft)

19-6

18.74

10.5

+2


Final group rankings for the 2024 season

By Luis Torres | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
Kevin Minnick | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
PJ Potter | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com


The 2024 New Jersey high school baseball season proved to be another memorable one.

The sprint to the finish line ended last week as six state champions were crowned at Bob DeMeo Field at Veterans Park in Hamilton as teams and players celebrated their winning moment.

Check out the final group rankings for the 2024 season.

Group 1
1-Pompton Lakes (26-4)
2-Point Pleasant Beach (25-5)
3-Gloucester (22-8)
4-Dayton (17-12)
5-Pequannock (19-10)
6-Woodstown (18-10)
7-Shore (16-9)
8-Brearley (17-9)
9-Pitman (20-7)
10-Wood-Ridge (16-11)

Group 2
1-Gov. Livingston (28-5)
2-Pascack Valley (23-9)
3-Lakeland (20-8)
4-Glen Rock (23-3-1)
5-Westwood (22-7)
6-Seneca (18-11)
7-Caldwell (16-16)
8-Haddon Heights (21-7)
9-Indian Hills (19-8)
10-High Point (20-7)

Group 3
1-Morris Knolls (28-5)
2-Cherry Hill West (24-5)
3-Delsea (27-4)
4-Randolph (21-10)
5-North Hunterdon (20-6)
6-Mainland (20-6)
7-South Plainfield (22-6-1)
8-Ocean City (18-8)
9-Allentown (20-9)
10-Lawrence (22-6)

Group 4
1-Bridgewater-Raritan (30-3)
2-Eastern (25-7)
3-Livingston (22-8-1)
4-Old Bridge (20-9)
5-Egg Harbor (21-7)
6-Montclair (22-8-1)
7-Ridgewood (23-5)
8-Union City (19-8)
9-Jackson Memorial (18-11)
10-Cherokee (16-9)

Non-Public
1-Gloucester Catholic (27-2)
2-St. Augustine (20-9)
3-Delbarton (30-3)
4-Don Bosco Prep (25-4)
5-Seton Hall Prep (25-4-1)
6-St. Joseph (Mont.) (21-6)
7-Christian Brothers (19-6)
8-Bishop Eustace (21-7)
9-Red Bank Catholic (18-10)
10-St. Thomas Aquinas (19-9)