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An ACIT throwback:In 2016, talking with Immanuel Quickley, and his mother Nitrease. He was a Sophomore in this picture, ...
01/02/2024

An ACIT throwback:

In 2016, talking with Immanuel Quickley, and his mother Nitrease. He was a Sophomore in this picture, before all the hype. He was traded yesterday, from the Knicks to the Raptors. Look for him to make $25-30 million next year! Time flies!

08/30/2023

ACIT, Philly: It all started with hello

MIKE BURKE
Allegany Communications Sports

In the time I began attending the Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament as an 11-year-old kid through the 2019 ACIT, the final one I covered for the Cumberland Times-News, two things stand out as the most impactful storylines of tournament history: The dominance of the DeMatha Catholic Stags, who won a record 27 ACIT titles, and the 2007 ACIT once we learned the Philadelphia Catholic League schools would no longer be able to participate in the ACIT.
DeMatha of Hyattsville, of course, put the ACIT on the map – a national school and basketball power coached by the late Morgan Wootten, perhaps the greatest basketball coach of all-time on any level – John Wooden’s words, not mine. Whether the Stags were coached by Wootten or Mike Jones, who succeeded his former coach, DeMatha was always sublime, as kind, classy, generous and gentlemanly off the court as it was dominant and superb on the court.
The Philadelphia Catholic League schools and the entourage of family, alumni and friends who followed them here each year, thanks in largest part to former Roman Catholic, LaSalle University and St. Joseph’s Prep head coach William “Speedy” Morris, quickly became our family here in Cumberland, and we theirs, as an immediate bond between the City of Brotherly Love and the Queen City went from immediate to everlasting.
The Philadelphia schools had been coming here since the late 1960s, and for 40 years it was love at first sight between Philly and the ACIT.
In fact, one of the grandest traditions of the ACIT was the Roman Catholic hospitality room in the Downtown Holiday Inn each March, where more lifetime friendships were forged over the years than at likely any other single spot in the city of Cumberland. Roman Catholic alum and longtime booster, the late John Hoban, along with Speedy and Cumberland’s own legend, the late Bob Schubert, began that tradition in 1976, the year Morris’ Cahillites won their second straight ACIT.
In October of 2007, though, an idea that had been discussed for two years finally came to fruition when it was decided that all high schools in Pennsylvania -- public and private – would join the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA), meaning their athletic teams were bound to the PIAA state tournaments -- meaning basketball teams from Philadelphia would no longer be permitted to play after the state tournament in invitational tournaments such as the ACIT.
The following March on the Wednesday evening of the annual ACIT Welcoming Dinner at the Holiday Inn, with three Philadelphia schools in attendance, the mood of the hotel lobby was a “Happy to be here with melancholy knowing it will be the last time we’ll be here.”
“This is it,” said Philadelphia's legendary statistician Tom McKenna, who had been coming here every March since 1973. “It's hard to believe this is the last one.”
“I'm disappointed,” said Speedy Morris, who was coaching The Prep. "We're all disappointed. What this tournament means to young people ... nothing compares. Nothing comes close.”
Morris began coming to the ACIT in 1969 as the coach of Roman Catholic and he built a bond with the ACIT like no other person had because if Speedy Morris and the late Joe Divico, the father of the ACIT, had not been best friends, they were brothers.
“I wasn’t for it,” Speedy said in a prickly tone of the Catholic schools joining the PIAA. “Most of the people I talked to weren’t for it. But things happen for a reason.
“We'll miss Cumberland ... a lot of great people. A lot of great memories.”
The Roman Catholic coach, Dennis Seddon, had been coming to the ACIT for 30 years himself, first as an assistant and then during his great run as the head coach of the Cahillites, coaching them to the ’90, ’93, and ’95 ACIT titles.
“Bittersweet is the word," Seddon said as he took time away from catching up with old friends. "It's bitter, obviously, because it's the last time. It's sweet, obviously, because being here means we had a great season.”
Roman indeed had a great season, finishing 28-3, and Seddon said he would love nothing more than to return to Philadelphia Sunday morning as ACIT champion for the fourth time, which he did. But for Seddon, like everybody else who used to count the days year-round for ACIT weekend, there was something more.
“It's obvious we love the people of Cumberland," Seddon said.
"It's obvious," he was told, "the people of Cumberland love you."
“Well," he said after clearing his throat, "I don't want to say the basketball is secondary this weekend, but it's all about the friendships here. We love Cumberland. We always have and we always will."
"We're still praying something can be settled," he said about the possibility of coming back. "There's a chance ... but it's very slight that it can be worked out.
“And then we go by their rules.”
Later in the evening, one of Speedy Morris’ friends from Cumberland stopped by to say he hoped Speedy’s team would win the final ACIT for Philly. If not The Prep, the friend said, one of the other Philly schools.
“Oh, it would be great," Speedy said. “Honestly, we're a little under-manned since we're without our leading scorer Larry Loughery. But Roman is good enough. Neumann-Goretti is good enough. If we can't win, those two are good enough to do it, and it would be great ...
“But you can't come back. The best part about winning the ACIT is you're automatically invited to come back next year. It would be ... the first defending champion not to come back," he said, as his voice tailed off.
"It's great to be here,” he said as he went into the dinner. “I never want to leave.”
As it turned out, Roman Catholic did return to the ACIT in 2008, but only on a PIAA grant as defending champ, as the Cahillites won the 2007 ACIT title by beating SS. John Neumann-Goretti in an all-Philly final in what was an absolutely beautiful stroke of poetic justice.
It was as though somebody up there had willed it to finish that way. And you never really do know, do you? After all, the ACIT was nothing but 63 years of magic.

Mike Burke writes about sports and other stuff for Allegany Communications. He began covering sports for the Prince George’s Sentinel in 1981 and joined the Cumberland Times-News sports staff in 1984, serving as sports editor for over 30 years. Contact him at [email protected] and [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter

08/24/2023

Goodbye, dear old ACIT; we’ll miss you

MIKE BURKE
Allegany Communications Sports

I was told and I understood it could happen, and happen soon, but that there was a chance some adjustments could be made. Either way, the possibilities were not promising and nothing would come as a surprise. Yet when I woke up on Wednesday and checked the newsfeed first thing in the morning and it was there, I jumped out of bed and put on my pants as though I should go somewhere or do something to change what had been inevitable.
It was no longer the night before Christmas. It was the morning a treasured community and national celebration had called it a day.
All things come to an end. They just stop, sometimes unexpectedly; sometimes inevitably, neither of which as a means to failure. All things and all people just stop one day, and that day came on Wednesday after 63 years and 61 glorious and heartfelt weekends for the Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament.
According to a release from ACIT chairmen Alex Brant and Andrew Farrell, the ACIT, long considered the most prestigious Catholic high school basketball tournament in the country, “has been placed on indefinite hiatus by Cumberland-based Wamba Caravan No. 89 of the International Order of Alhambra ...
“After discussions over the past several months following the 2023 event, Wamba Caravan leadership made the decision because of tournament production costs, the rapidly changing landscape of high school basketball, an increasing amount of national postseason events, state athletic association regulations and school scheduling philosophies that made securing the traditional eight-team field for the ACIT difficult in recent years. While on hiatus, the Caravan will consider re-envisioning the ACIT in various formats, including as an in-season showcase event in the future.”
Is it a time for sadness? Perhaps, but more so it is a time for reflection, because it has become more and more evident that we were closer to the conclusion than we were the introduction or even the body of work. The landscape of high school basketball, nationally and internationally, indeed has become so mercurial that it became impossible to keep pace, because it changes almost daily.
Consider, the ACIT, as it is for charity, is the only invitational tournament that schools pay their own expenses to take part in. Yet, they gladly pay to be here.
As veteran Roman Catholic head coach Dennis Seddon said in 2007 during what was to be Philadelphia’s final ACIT appearance, “It really does feel like home here. Our goals as a team each year are to win the Philadelphia Catholic championship and to be invited to the ACIT.
“Roman Catholic has been around for a very long time and traditions are important to us. The people of Cumberland have become a big part of our tradition.”
Seddon then pointed to his lapel pin that had been presented to him by the Cumberland City Council and he said, “I am very, very proud to have been made an honorary citizen of Cumberland.”
St. Pete’s Gym marked the beginning, the move to Allegany High School and then Frostburg State University marked the end of the beginning and losing the Philadelphia Catholic League to the PIAA state tournament in 2007 marked the beginning of the end.
Roman Catholic did return to the 2008 ACIT on a waiver by the PIAA to defend its ACIT title, but having the Philly Catholic League, which was so instrumental in helping to build the history of the ACIT, would be no more. The losses of Chicago and New York years before stung, but the ACIT was still able to thrive, due in large part to the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference, the Baltimore Catholic League and teams from Canada, Utah, Virginia, New Jersey and Texas.
Yet the loss of Philly was a heartbreaker, and though it was 16 years ago, it was a harbinger of things to come nationally and for Mom and Pop tournaments such as the ACIT.
On top of that, in case you haven’t noticed, we aren’t as many as we used to be and for a variety of reasons, the volunteer force of Wamba Caravan No. 89 has thinned. Putting on the ACIT is hard work; it’s a labor of love and is essentially a year-round job. A nationally prominent event such as the ACIT, after all, isn’t thrown together in a week.
It does feel rather like a death in the family, even though it is a hiatus, because hundreds of families were involved in running it, attending it, growing up with it and growing old with it. The different players, coaches, teams, cities, gyms and eras have marked the passage of time; yet the fellowship, the kindness and generosity and always the love will remain timeless in our hearts because it will be there forever.
We care about the people who were the ACIT, the volunteers who produced the event, the players, coaches, officials and fans who came to town each year from all over the country and from Canada. And that care was returned to us, because an extended family began to form there over 60 years ago, and it continued to extend with nearly every new team, and nearly every new player, coach, official and fan to walk through the doors.
There will certainly be an absence, an emptiness that every single one of us will feel every March when we are instinctively ready for the ACIT to usher us into glorious spring.
Lifelong friendships have been formed and sustained through the ACIT with those whose paths we would never cross in any other circumstance. As Sean Franklin said so perfectly so many years ago, “They come as friends and they leave as family.”
Like home, the Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament gave us security, trust, consolation and love -- all the intangibles.
It is and will be a tremendous void for us, but the thoughts, the joys, the thrills and the laughter; the tears, the memories and the lifelong friendships will fill our hearts and be a blessing to us.

Mike Burke writes about sports and other stuff for Allegany Communications. He began covering sports for the Prince George’s Sentinel in 1981 and joined the Cumberland Times-News sports staff in 1984, serving as sports editor for over 30 years. Contact him at [email protected] and [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter

08/23/2023

Wamba Caravan 89 has announced that the ACIT is on an indefinite hiatus, possibly putting an end to tradition that dates back to 1961. The Alhambra cited several factors in the decision, including costs, changes in high school basketball state regulations, and competing tournaments.
The Alhambra is hoping to repackage the ACIT, after a year off, and move it closer toward Christmas while making it a showcase tournament.
Thank you to everyone who listened to us over the years, this tournament was something we looked forward to every year.

03/11/2023

Bishop Walsh-63
Bullis-57

03/11/2023

The final day of the 2023 ACIT is here! The matchups tonight are:

Battle for #7 and #8
Goretti vs. Catholic (3pm)

Battle for #5 and #6
Bishop Walsh vs. Bullis (4:45)

Battle for #3 and #4
St. John's vs. Gonzaga (6:30)

The 2023 ACIT Championship!
Bishop McNamara vs. Dematha at 8:15pm

Results from last night:
03/10/2023

Results from last night:

The ACIT starts today! The matchups for Night One:4PM- Bishop McNamara/ Bullis5:45- Gonzaga/ St. Maria Goretti7:30- St. ...
03/09/2023

The ACIT starts today! The matchups for Night One:

4PM- Bishop McNamara/ Bullis

5:45- Gonzaga/ St. Maria Goretti

7:30- St. John's/ Catholic Virginia Beach

9:15- Bishop Walsh/ Dematha

Tune in to Magic 100.5, or stream us at

WDYK-FM

Tonight On Magic 100.5:High School Girls Basketball, as the Allegany Lady Campers travel to Fort Hill to face the Lady S...
01/31/2023

Tonight On Magic 100.5:

High School Girls Basketball, as the Allegany Lady Campers travel to Fort Hill to face the Lady Sentinels in a inner-city rematch!

Pregame at 6:45pm, Tipoff .

Tune us in, or stream us at:

WDYK-FM

01/20/2023

Final:

Frankfort- 51
Petersburg- 35

Player of the Game: Cameron Layton

Congratulations Mr. Layton!

01/19/2023

Boy's Hoops Tonight on Magic 100.5:

Petersburg at Frankfort!

Pregame at 7:15, Tipoff @7:30.

Stream us at:

www.cumberlandsmagic.com

Address

Frostburg, MD

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