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2025-26 Berks II Girls Basketball: Top Players to Watch

  • Writer: Sean McBryan
    Sean McBryan
  • Nov 25
  • 4 min read

The 2025-26 Berks girls basketball season tips off on Black Friday. Here is a list of players to watch in Division II of the Berks Girls League.


Dylan Bossler

Junior, Conrad Weiser

The 5-7 guard was first off the bench last year for the Scouts, who were one of three (Wilson, Wyomissing) Berks girls basketball teams to qualify for the state tournament in their respective brackets last year. That experience should bode well for Bossler, a great defender and energizer who will be tasked with more duties after the graduation of Lauren Grabosky and Alex Trevena. Bossler played in all 28 games for Weiser last season and averaged 3.0 points per game.


Chayse Flood

Senior, Exeter

An all-division honorable mention last season, Flood played in all 22 games for the Eagles and averaged 4.5 ppg while hitting a team-high 17 3s. The 5-7 guard is also a key defender for Exeter, which hopes to get back to the top of Berks II after Twin Valley ended its run of two straight division crowns last year.


Grace Glass

Senior, Daniel Boone

The 5-10 center has stuck it out through a few tough seasons in Birdsboro and now returns for her final season after averaging 3.9 points per game last year with Aayla Hofer (6.1 ppg) and McKenzie Tritz (3.9 ppg) graduated. She led the team in scoring in four games last season, including a season-high 17 in the Blazers' lone win of the year over Garden Spot. Glass, along with senior guard Jessica Parrott, will be counted on for their experience and leadership as the Blazers try to right the ship under first-year head coach Kyle Osenbach.


Exeter's Addison Harper.
Exeter sophomore Addison Harper.

Addison Harper

Sophomore, Exeter

After a strong summer, Harper appears ready to make her name known on the Berks County basketball scene, if she hasn't already. An all-division honorable mention last season, Harper led the Eagles with an 8.6 scoring average. She is already a solid ball handler with a midrange game that has gradually been extending beyond the arc. If the 5-9 guard continues to improve, the Eagles could soar back to the top of the division and into the county playoffs.


Hailey Kilgore

Senior, Twin Valley

The 5-7 All-Berks guard and Shippensburg basketball and track commit enters her senior season with 769 career points coming off a year where she averaged a team-high 11.8 ppg and hit 42 3s, fifth-most in the league. She has hit 126 career 3s, 20th-most in Berks history. Kilgore has hit seven 3s in a single game on two occasions; the seven 3PM is tied for the third-most in a single game in Berks history. She's also improved as a ball handler and distributor throughout her career. After leading the Raiders to their first division title since 2022 last season, the expectations are high in Elverson.


Olivia Kilgore

Sophomore, Twin Valley

Hailey's younger sister is pretty good at basketball herself. The 5-8 wing garnered all-division honors as a freshman after scoring 6.0 ppg and hitting 17 3s. She was one of six players to play all 24 games for the Raiders last season. With Michigan lacrosse commit Ellie Kaplan deciding not to play this season, the younger Kilgore and the rest of the returning Raiders will likely see — and need — a boost in production.


Jessica Parrott

Senior, Daniel Boone

Like Glass, her aforementioned teammate, Parrott has contributed for the Blazers since her freshman season when she averaged 2.7 ppg. The 5-9 guard boosted that average to 3.8 as a sophomore and a similar 3.7 last year. She'll again be a key contributor this season and a vital ball handler as the Blazers' other main backcourt player is expected to be a freshman.


Conrad Weiser's Geniva Paul and Twin Valley's Hailey Kilgore.
Conrad Weiser's Geniva Paul being guarded by Twin Valley's Hailey Kilgore last season. (PhilMarPhoto)

Geniva Paul

Junior, Conrad Weiser

Along with Exeter's Harper, Paul is another breakout candidate in Berks II. She boosted her scoring average from 4.5 ppg as a freshman to 8.5 last year. She shot the fourth-most free throws in Berks with 109 behind Tulpehocken's Avery Baransky (130), Gov. Mifflin's Bella Super (118), and Berks Catholic's Madison Langdon (114), making them at a respectable 67-percent clip. Now as the top scorer for Chris Kline's Scouts, it wouldn't be surprising to see her numbers take another jump. Before Weiser's state playoff game last season, Peters Township (which went to the Final Four) head coach Steve Limberiou mentioned Paul as a player who impressed him on tape.


Olivia Schmittinger

Senior, Twin Valley

Schmittinger, like the elder Kilgore, has been a key contributor for the Raiders since she was a freshman. During her time in Elverson, the Raiders have gone from four wins to seven wins to 14 wins. The 5-7 forward averaged 6.0 ppg last season, but her greatest impact lies in doing the dirty work defensively, on the glass, and frankly wherever the team needs her.


Lauren Williams

Junior, Twin Valley

The 5-8 guard averaged 8.1 ppg last season, second-most on TV, over double what she averaged as a freshman (3.1). Williams' development as a ball handler was also crucial in taking pressure off Hailey Kilgore in the backcourt. She dropped a career-high 20 points in Twin Valley's loss to Gov. Mifflin in the BCIAA quarterfinals, and then led the team in scoring again in the loss to Lower Dauphin in the District 3 Class 5A first round.


Others to watch: Conrad Weiser sophomore Audrina Colon, Twin Valley sophomore Bella Crisi, Exeter sophomore Chloe Dauble, Exeter senior Ayana Freese, Twin Valley senior Emma Hahn, Exeter freshman Avrie Hassler, Exeter senior Lillie Keperling, Daniel Boone sophomore Vivian Lee, Daniel Boone freshman Talia Robinson, Conrad Weiser sophomore Lyla Robison, Conrad Weiser sophomore Nora Shade, Conrad Weiser junior Macy Snyder,


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