Athletes Edge beat Admixtures 85-79 on June 10, a six-point victory powered by a 27-point night from Reuben Rodriguez that tilted a tight contest toward the Edge.
Rodriguez’s scoring paced Athletes Edge throughout the game; Admixtures leaned on Pete Cavacini, who finished with 24 points in the loss. The margin never ballooned into a rout—85-79 reflects a game decided in the final minutes, with Athletes Edge holding just enough offense to fend off Admixtures’ late runs.
Two other matches that night produced contrasting outcomes. Green Valley Dental eked out a 57-54 win over Gage Personnel on the same date, led by Brady Murray’s 34 points against a 23-point effort from Keba Mitchell for Gage. In a more one-sided affair, Tompkins Bank beat Overhead Door 72-51; Malik Green scored 24 for Tompkins while Overhead Door managed 51 points total.
All three results were recorded in the west reading David Smith Memorial League on June 10 and supply concrete scoring lines: 85-79, 57-54 and 72-51. Those numbers supply the clearest takeaways — Rodriguez’s 27 and Murray’s 34 stand out as individual performances that shaped two of the finishes, while Tompkins Bank’s balanced attack produced the largest margin of the evening.
The pattern across the games matters because it reveals how uneven matchups and individual scoring bursts coexist in the same league day. Two games were decided by single digits, underscoring competitive balance, while Tompkins Bank’s 21-point margin shows some teams still find separation. Those contrasts matter to coaches and captains tracking momentum, even if the published results do not say whether any were regular-season or playoff contests.
That omission is the clearest friction in the report: the box scores and scoring leaders are specific, but the games’ stakes are not. Without confirmation of whether these results affected standings or playoff positions, the wins are notable for performance rather than immediate consequence. The close finishes for Athletes Edge and Green Valley Dental suggest league parity; the absence of scheduling or standings context leaves unanswered whether those tight wins move either team up the table or simply close out an early-season slate.
For readers following individual players, the June 10 ledger provides useful snapshots. Rodriguez’s 27 and Murray’s 34 are the kind of nights that can define a weekend and reshape a coach’s rotation. Cavacini and Mitchell offered strong counterpoints for their sides with 24 and 23 points, respectively, while Malik Green’s 24 helped convert Tompkins Bank’s edge into a comfortable victory.
The single most consequential unanswered question from these results is simple: where do these wins and narrow losses leave the teams in the league standings? The report supplies scores and leading scorers but not the table that gives those numbers meaning. Until the West Reading David Smith Memorial League publishes a standings update or a schedule showing which games count toward playoffs, the June 10 outcomes read as performance reports rather than turning points.



