By Tony Zonca — MikeDragoSports.com senior contributor
For longtime Reading High basketball fans, one team has caused the most heartaches — Chester.
The Clippers always seemed to be the roadblock on the path to gold. In fact Reading is 2-6 against the Clipper in state competition.
When Reading prevailed 67-63 Wednesday at Chester it ended a 13-year drought at the home of perhaps the most storied high school basketball program in the state. It took overtime to win 76-72 in 2009 previous to Wednesday.
You have to go back to 1985, a 45-42 decision, to find the Red Knights’ previous victory at Chester. In 1983 Reading won 49-47 on Rodney Hodge’s layup at the buzzer.
Overall Chester leads the series 21-20. Only Jim Gano, who went 8-2 vs. the Clippers, enjoyed success against the longtime rival.
In 1972, when Stu Jackson was a junior, Chester won 52-46 in the state quarterfinals. Rick Binder was the point guard. His 1983 team would lose to the Clippers 63-53 in the Eastern finals.
In 1973 — that was the game where Jackson was tossed early in the fourth quarter for fighting — Reading survived 59-53 before running into General Braddock in the finals. Talk about a broken heart.
As magnificent a program as Chester is — it has won eight state titles — it too has known its heartbreak. For example it lost its first seven in the state title matchups. In 1972 it lost to Farrell, a western powerhouse, 56-55 in the finals. After losing to Reading in 1973 it lost to Ringgold and Joe Montana 74-65 in the consolation game.
It always seemed to run into great players — Jackson, Kobe Bryant of Lower Merion, Billy Owens of Carlisle, Rasheed Wallace of Simon Gratz. Not to mention Glen Mills, whose recruiting territory was . . . well, the USA.
Chester, of course, also boasted individual greatness — Horace Walker, Mike Marshall, Herman Harris, Zane Shaw, Jameer Nelson, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson and perhaps the greatest Clipper of them all, Emerson Baynard. Along with a score of others.
No wonder Reading High fans couldn’t sleep during basketball season; they were counting Clippers in their sleep.
The worst part for long-suffering Reading High fans was, because of COVID-19 concerns, they weren’t able to be there Wednesday to celebrate the rare road win.




