Paterson…….. The Playaz Club and Paterson Recreation sponsored” Just June” basketball tournament for highschool teams concludes this week with it’s playoffs tuesday with quarterfinals action and thursday with semifinals and finals! The league showcased 9 teams with Paterson Eastside, Hudson Catholic, Teaneck, Newark East Side, Columbia, Hackensack, Nia Prep, Englewood and East Orange all participating! The first 8 made the playoffs as the action has been tough and each team has been preparing for the season with a mixture of veteran players and incoming freshman! Newark East Side finished as the #1 seed for the playoffs!
7/9/11
Jamal Reed Led East Side In Just June League
6/6/11
Reebok Headliner Tryout Recap
6/5/11
Gym Rats Recap
17:U All-GymRat CHALLENGE TEAM
Aaron Bodie, (6-6 F) N.J. Roadrunners/East Side H.S.: An extremely high-energy player who is very active on the offensive boards. A player whose athleticism adds to his overall game. Showed a nice shooting touch here out to the foul line. Has drawn early interest from Temple, among others.
Kasim Chandler (5-11 PG) Sports U Team IZOD/Newark East Side: Tremendous end-to-end speed and can get into the lane at will. Has a yo-yo handle and is rarely out of control. Ultimate pass-first point guard who always finds open teammates at the right time. More than a capable scorer who is at his best attacking the basket. Interest from Siena, Xavier, Providence, SMU, Seton Hall.
15:U All-GymRat CHALLENGE Team
Akbar Hoffman (5-11 PG) N.J. Roadrunners/Newark East Side: Strong with the ball. Good pull-up jumper that fell often. Goes strong to the basket and showed great court vision in finding open teammates. Prolific scorer with very good point guard skills.
Ismael Sanogo (6-5 SF) N.J. Roadrunners/ Newark East Side: Long wing player who is strong enough to be his team’s best rebounder as well. Has a strong handle which made him a big match-up problem for all opponents.
5/24/11
Sports U Takes Title
In the 17 & Under championship 6-foot-6 Britton Academy NC Sr. Dustin Hogue scored on a putback with :01 remaining to give Sports U a 57-55 win. The New York native was named MVP and finished with a team high 15 points.
6-foot-7 Trenton Catholic Jr. Brandon Taylor paced Team Philly with 19 points and 4 treys.
5/15/11
Roadrunners Take Title
The Roadrunners (Jamal Reid and Aaron Bodie) emerged from a field of 24 teams. Trailing 40-37 heading into the final quarter the Roadrunners took control of the game and held onto it from the free throw line. They converted 14-17 free throw
6-foot-8 Union So. Tyler Roberson paced the winners with 17 points and 11 rebounds. 6-foot-8 Roselle Catholic Jr. Jameel Warney was high for the Hot Shots with 16.
5/13/11
Nitty Gritty Begins at IS8/Nike
Jay Mumford
NYCHoops.net Staff Writer
Panthers subdue TGT Warriors, 73-63
For the first six minutes of action, this one had the potential to get ugly. The Panthers (2 / 17U) squad employed a taxing press that turned TGT over repeatedly. The mid-range touch of Travis Flagg and the open court prowess of Tariq Carey helped the Panthers make a push at the other end of the floor, and they consequently secured an early 16-2 lead. To make matters worse for TGT, one and done offensive possessions meant they had another Achilles' Heel in the rebounding department. However, they eventually threw some of the Panthers' medicine back at the NYC unit and showed signs of life.
TGT's 2-2-1 press exploited some of the Panthers' lackluster possessions, and an 8-2 run to close the first quarter got the Bronx-based TGT back into the game. Hot-shooting senior guard Jonathan Loria began to percolate in the second quarter, and with a little help from Donte Adams, chipped the Panthers' lead to three points, 30-27. The duo would go on to score all 32 of TGT's second half points, with Loria putting on a clinic and finishing with a game high 29 points. It wasn't enough, though. Flagg and Carey drained back to back threes at the top of the second half to deflate the Warriors, and the latter drained another later in the period to bring the Panthers' lead back to double digits, 55-43. TGT were never able to get over the hump and never held a lead in the contest.
Carey and Flagg led the Panthers with 17 and 16 points, respectively. Ryan Yearwood chipped in with 9 points. Adams was the number two scorer for TGT with 24 points.
The Panthers (2) will face NIA Prep on Saturday at 9AM.

5/3/11
Panthers II Flatten Mountain Ball
In a tournament whose motto is "Bring your game, not your name", Mountain Ball came equipped only with the latter.
Obviously virgins in the tournament, up against the NY Panthers who've won multiple chips in event, the outcome became clear early on. Even though it was the junior Panthers squad, Mountain Ball would still end up losing, 73-40, in a game that literally turned into a practice session.
The final pool play game for both teams was played at Variety Boys & Girls Club. It would be the Panthers who would strike first, jumping ahead 11-3 as Tariq Carey and Eddy Guisarry put up transition points. Mountain Ball did manage some interior points as big man Keon Scott and JaQuan Bryant showed some offensive prowess.
Ahead 19-9 as the second quarter began, another 8-0 run with points in the paint by Travis Charles pushed the Panthers lead to 18 points midway thru the quarter and 43-16 at halftime.
Down by 30 at the end of three quarters, Panthers head coach Paul Ruddock used the fourth quarter to teach his students the art of playing keep away.
Without a shot clock, Mountain Ball was defenseless against the Panthers ability to run time off the clock. Even though the Panthers tried not to score, they still managed to increase their lead to thirty-three before the refs mercifully called the game.
Carey and Charles led the way for the Panthers with 13 points apiece while Bryant was the high man for Mountain Ball with 12 points followed by Scott with 8 points.
At 3-1, the Panthers are in a three way tie for first place in their pool while Mountain dropped to 1-3 excluding themselves from playoff contention.
iS8/Nike
Two games were scheduled on Thursday and although each game took a different path, the out was the same, a blowout. In the opening contest, the NY Panthers (2) took on the MetroHawks followed by Playaz Club Jrs. versus Royalty.
Panthers Eat MetroHawks, 52-30
Carlos de Jesus, rising senior from J.F.K Campus got the ball rolling got the Panthers, spearheading an 11-3 run from the perimeter. Jeff Neverson would cut the Panthers lead to 5 points with 2 minutes left in the quarter but a late surge left MetroHawks down 19-7 to start the second quarter.
The Panthers lead extended to 16 point before Leroy Fludd began to do some work in the interior but Tariq Carey finished strong keeping the Panthers advantage steady. Addition buckets by De Jesus and Eddy Guisarry would keep the point spread at 34-17 at the half.
The third quarter was a mirror image of the second as the MetroHawks' deficit remained at 16 points at throughout. At the bottom of the fourth quarter, the MetroHawks had all but checked out as runner by Travis Flagg extended the Panthers lead to 20 points. If this were a movie, the credit would've begun to roll as the Coach Paul Ruddock and his Panthers would close out the MetroHawks.
Carry led the Panthers with 16 points with De Jesus and Guissary dropping 8 points apiece. Neverson and Fludd would lead the MetroHawks with 11 points and 10 point respectively.
4/15/11
NJ Hoops 2010-11 All-Essex County Team
6-foot-2 Sr. | 6-foot-7 Sr. |
![]() Wing Pat Cole Newark Central 6-foot-4 Sr. | Post Ramon Johnson Newark Central 6-foot-8 Sr. |
6-foot-2 Jr. |
4/5/11
Essex County boys basketball season in review, 2010-11
All-junior
First team: Tariq Carey, East Side.
Second team: Kasim Chandler, East Side
All-soph/frosh
Second team: William Joyce, East Side (so.)
All-Newark
First team: Tariq Carey, East Side
Third team: Kasim Chandler, East Side
All-skinned knee: Omar Martinez, East Side
All-Windex: William Joyce, East Side; Aaron Bodie, East Side
All-clutch: Kasim Chandler, East Side
All-versatile: Tariq Carey, East Side
All-passing: Kasim Chandler, East Side
And NJ Hoops felt
1st Team All Essex County: Tariq Carey
3/26/11
Best Basketball Players in NJ & NY Area at Hoop Group Top 100
Sophomores
William Joyce- 6’4 guard from Newark Eastside is blossoming into a complete player. He is a very good athlete who does everything very well. A coach’s dream.
Freshman
Akbar Hoffman- 6’0 point guard from Newark Eastside had senior like poise running an offense. Already very physically developed Hoffman defended on the ball well and made plays offensively.
3/15/11
COACHES ALL-SUPER ESSEX TEAMS
Kasim Chandler, East Side
Tariq Carey, East Side
SECOND TEAM
Aaron Bodie, East Side
HONORABLE MENTION
William Joyce, East Side
3/1/11
Newark's East Side High basketball personifies team effort heading into state tournament
His forehead is doused with sweat.
His voice is grinding its way to oblivion.
And during timeouts, he crouches in front of the players, his head swiveling from face to face as he barks instructions.
The scene at Newark’s East Side High is similar to that of most boys basketball teams except for one detail: Tavares is an assistant coach. The

This quirky coaching configuration seems to be working at the school in Newark’s Ironbound section. In a decade together, Tavares and Grant have won two Essex County championships, two sectional titles and a state crown, making East Side arguably the most consistent team in Newark. Today, the Red Raiders (17-8) open the state tournament as the No. 2 seed in North Jersey Section 2, Group 3.
“They absolutely do not have the ego,” said Liz Aranjo, the former East Side athletic director who now is director of health, physical education and athletics for Newark public schools. “The players are definitely the focus, and that’s what these guys care about.”
Tavares, Garvin and the six other coaches in the East Side program each has a specific job. Dan Sharpe sets up the SAT tutoring program. Troy Long handles college recruiting. Robert Cole oversees feeder programs. Uron Hawkins keeps track of grades. John Thomason and James May coach the freshmen.
And no coach is more important than the next, prompting them to pool together their coaching stipends and split the money evenly eight ways, Tavares said.
To see Tavares, 32, and Garvin, 40, during a game is to see something that feels like a perfectly timed symphony of shouts and screams. They often instruct in concert — Garvin, from his chair, often using one-word instructions between Tavares’ constant chatter.
“It’s kind of natural for us because we just have to listen to both coaches,” East Side center Aaron Bodie said. “Coach Gar inspires us and Coach T motivates us. It’s like a team effort.”
• • •
As crisis counselor at East Side, Garvin has seen his share of altercations in the hallways, but the one in 2000 was different. A student believed to be under the influence of drugs and alcohol was attacking his father.
Garvin, a former college football player, tried to restrain the student, but felt something almost immediately as they tangled. He had collapsed two vertebrae that pinched against nerves in his spine, causing him to lose feeling in his legs.
Four screws would be inserted in his back to stabilize his spine and Garvin missed almost four months of work. The injury changed his lifestyle.
“If I do anything wrong, moving the wrong way, I can have some major issues where I could be out for a while,” said Garvin, who still looks fit and trim but moves with a slow gait. “I have to keep myself still and keep my blood pressure low.”
Despite his back problems, Garvin took the job in October 2001 at the urging of the East Side administration, which thought his stern approach would help quell the negativity surrounding the program. Garvin knew he would have to sit during games because of his back, but that was only one of the challenges he would face trying to turn around a program mired in scandal.
Ed Leibowitz, the previous coach, had been suspended indefinitely and the program was put on two years’ probation by the state’s governing body for high school athletics after an investigation into the sudden appearance of foreign basketball players at the school.
“There was just no order. There was a lot of chaos,” Aranjo said.
When Garvin was hired, Aranjo urged him to bring on board Tavares, a former East Side player. First Garvin wanted to meet Tavares.
“He sat down with me and he said, ‘I’ll do anything and everything you want,’ ” Garvin said. “I told him if we’re going to do this, we’re going to do this together.”
In their second season, Garvin and Tavares led East Side to the Group 4 state championship.
• • •
During a Feb. 15 game against Columbia, the animated Tavares earned a technical foul for arguing, restricting him to the one place he never wants to be: the bench.
Even though it’s mandatory for coaches who earn technicals to sit the rest of the game, Tavares crept out of his seat several times, sometimes crouching low and slamming his chair against the ground to get his players’ attention.
“If Coach Garvin wants you to do something, he’ll pull you to the side and talk to you about it and make sure you try and apply it,” Bodie said. “Coach T, he just tells you in front of everybody. He’s just always amped.”
Garvin, on the other hand, is a man of few words and his players know it’s important when he speaks. It’s all part of the plan at East Side.
“It takes a village to raise these kids and we definitely have a nice support system,” said Tavares, who is now a vice principal at East Side. “We’re all in the building. We all stay on top of the kids so they can be role models for all the other kids in the building.
“All eight of us complement each other tremendously. There’s no ego. It seems to work pretty well.”
2/11/11
Villanova to retire jersey of Newark native Randy Foye
Foye was a consensus All-American and the Big East's player of the year as a senior in 2005-06.
"I'm honored to be joining the elite company of Villanova Basketball players with their jersey retired," Foye said in a statement. "My four years on campus were extremely memorable and I appreciate everyone in the Nova Nation for their support. I'd like to thank Coach (Jay) Wright, my teammates and the entire staff who were instrumental in creating successful seasons during my career. Villanova Basketball is built on a tradition of hard work, togetherness and pride, and I've carried this positive attitude with me throughout my NBA career."
Foye was part of Villanova head coach Jay Wright's first full recruiting class.