PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | June, 2023

Just in time, Ryan Gorman dodges down alley, ices Marple Newtown championship

STATE COLLEGE — The most meaningful team gathering in the history of Marple Newtown lacrosse came between the first and second quarters of the PIAA Class 2A championship game Saturday at Penn State.

It did not last long. The key message took even shorter.

Said Brian Box: “All we said was, ‘enough.’”

That was the memo after the Tigers had fallen five goals behind Mars after 12 minutes. And that was the attitude with which they would roll into an 11-10 victory that avenged a loss to the Fighting Planets in the 2022 championship game.

Aware they had time to recover from the 6-1 deficit, the Tigers eventually would even have two seconds to spare. That was how much time was left when senior Ryan Gorman – one eye on the Panzer Stadium clock, the other on the back of the net – maneuvered through multiple Martians and left-handed a goal to provide the Tigers with their only lead and the desired position in the medal ceremony.

“I knew we were short on time,” said Gorman, who had scored a first-quarter goal. “So I got the ball and just took it to the cage. I knew there were about five seconds left and I started dodging. I went down the alley and I knew I had to take a shot.”

Sudden death overtime avoided two seconds later, the Tigers had improved to 20-5 with their first state lacrosse championship and just their second overall in school history. Marple Newtown won a baseball championship in 2018.

“We knew at halftime,” said Gorman, of the turning point. “We started putting in a lot of goals in the second quarter. So as soon as halftime hit, we knew: ‘We’ve got this.’ We just had to come out with the same energy in the second half.”

As for the Tigers’ energy at the top of the first half, that was barely existent. After one shot seconds into the game, Marple Newtown would be trailing, 4-0, before enjoying another possession. Three of the Mars goals were from junior Vincenzo Grieco, who would give Mars (22-3) a 5-0 lead with his fifth with 4:48 left in the first. Grieco, committed to play on that very Penn State field after next season, would not score again.

“We locked him a little bit,” said Marple Newtown coach Kevin Merchant, still dripping from a Gatorade-bucket treatment. “We challenged their other five guys to beat our five guys. And it worked out in our favor.”

The Fighting Planets had 12 first-quarter shots, but with Jake McGowan and Colin Wolk doing most of the fronting on Grieco, they managed just 11 more. And three of the fourth-quarter shots they did attempt were repelled by sophomore goalie Marco D’Alicandro, including one that kept the Tigers within a goal and in control for the final two minutes.

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EVAN WHEATON - MEDIANEWS GROUP
Marple Newtown senior midfielder Ryan Gorman, middle, cuts left and deposits a ball that will go down Saturday as the game-winning goal against Mars with two seconds left in regulation, the Tigers taking the PIAA Class 2A boys lacrosse final at Penn State University's Panzer Stadium.

EVAN WHEATON – MEDIANEWS GROUP Marple Newtown senior midfielder Ryan Gorman, middle, cuts left and deposits a ball that will go down Saturday as the game-winning goal against Mars with two seconds left in regulation, the Tigers taking the PIAA Class 2A boys lacrosse final at Penn State University’s Panzer Stadium.

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Even in a state final loss, Strath Haven’s Brian Fili thankful for the journey

When you give it your all and don’t get the feel-good Hollywood ending, it’s tough to let go and move on.

So, it is for coach Brian Fili, his staff and the Strath Haven baseball team that lost to Shaler, 9-8, on a walk-off single in the eighth inning of their PIAA Class 5A championship game Thursday at State College.

Face it. For every crazy high school championship finish like basketball’s Hoosiers, there is Friday Night Lights and Permian, stopped inches short of glory on the last play of an incredibly physically football game.

For the Panthers, life went on anyway. The upperclassmen headed to the Shore for what was left of Senior Week with the ending credits still rolling.

Days later, Fili sounded as drained as his players, in a week that began with so many possibilities.

Fili and Bonner & Prendergast coach Steve DeBarberie, long mainstays of the high school scene and the Delco League, were flirting with the idea of an All-Delaware County final. Now the best they’ll be able to do is play for the Delco League title.

The Friars and their MLB prospect, Kevin McGonigle, didn’t take advantage of their shot as they lost to Shaler, 9-3, in the semis. The Panthers did, behind senior Alex ***, who pitched a complete-game two-hit shutout with 10 strikeouts to vault the team into the state final.

*** deserves much more respect than he’s received. The lanky lefty threw three shutouts in the state playoffs, which is unprecedented for a Delco pitcher. In the regular season, he had a 0.00 ERA in Central League games.)

“Alex, when he goes up to Penn State this year, I would love to see him play on that field again,” said Fili, who vowed to make that trip again.

Emotional as the end was for the Panthers, they had fun on their trip to the mountains. They were this close to a title, in charge of a five-run lead entering the bottom of the sixth inning.

But a home run by Miguel Hugas energized the Titans, who tore a page out of their winning semifinal formula by working pitchers for walks. They rallied to tie the game in the bottom of the sixth inning thanks to two walks, a hit batsman, a couple of timely hits and the home run.

If anybody is wondering, Fili had no intention of issuing a second intentional walk to Hugas, which occurred after he ripped a solo shot earlier in the game.

“There was nobody on base,” Fili said. “Hitting a home run there makes it 8-4. That never crossed my mind when it was 8-3 at that point. The biggest thing that happened was we had too many walks. We had nine walks, and that’s the most we’ve had the entire season. It was a smaller strike zone but both teams had to throw through it. It was a different atmosphere, a bigger stage. But yeah, that was uncharacteristic because our kids played great. They battled hard. They played hard and they gave everything they had. We just had too many walks.”

***, Sam Milligan and third baseman Nick Corritore, among other seniors, made this a season like no other for the Panthers. On the long ride home from State College, Fili thanked them for putting the baseball program firmly on the map.

“It’s hard to find a high school team in any sport at any level where everybody wants it as bad as the others including the kids who don’t get to play as much,” Fili said. “It’s hard for high school kids to be on a team and not play. There can be some unhappiness. There was nothing like that with our team. It was a unique group. The kids just kind of knew their roles. I thanked all of the kids. Even the kids who didn’t really play, they worked just as hard as everybody else. And that’s something truly special, to be a coach and have that. It was just an incredible experience.”

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Alex *** and Strath Haven manager Brian Fili while the Panthers were ahead in their state 5A loss to Shaler Thursday at State College.

Alex *** and Strath Haven manager Brian Fili while the Panthers were ahead in their state 5A loss to Shaler Thursday at State College.

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Aidan Kreydt’s seven-up outing helps Springfield survive upset bid

MECHANICSBURG — Aidan Kreydt’s high school lacrosse life didn’t exactly flash before his eyes Saturday, but the Springfield midfielder sure played like it did.

Whether or not Kreydt let himself go down the emotional rabbit hole, on some level he knew that if the Cougars played another couple of quarters as badly as they did the first against Mount Lebanon in the PIAA Class 3A quarterfinals, the long ride home from John H. Frederick Field at Memorial Park Stadium would be the season’s last.

Kreydt played like a man possessed by the desire to prevent that, scoring seven goals with his punishing brand of lacrosse to avert Mount Lebanon’s upset bid, 15-8.

“We knew that it’s win or go home at this point,” Kreydt, a Saint Joseph’s signee, said. “There’s no play-in games or anything. We knew we had to come back after that deficit and give it everything we’ve got.”

About that deficit … the Blue Devils led 3-0 six minutes in and 5-2 after one quarter. While there was some disagreement as to whether it was Springfield’s worst quarter of lacrosse this season — defenseman Nick Labutis was a firm no, coach Tom Lemieux an adamant yes – there’s no doubt it was an unexpected start. Springfield’s bench, though, didn’t descend into shellshock, dangerously close as it is to panic.

A few tweaks to defensive alignment, a little less literal dropping of the ball and a turned tide at the faceoff X kept the upset alert from activating.

“We didn’t have to change what we do,” Labutis said. “We just had to do it better.”

Better, as in Patrick Flaherty scoring twice in the first 2:25 of the second to tie the game at 5, among seven goals in the frame. Better, as in Lucas Aaron shrugging off some creative interpretations of faceoff procedure with the referees in the opening quarter to win eight of the final 10 draws of the first half and 16 of 24 total. Better, as in the defense limiting Mount Lebanon (19-4), which had 11 shots in the first quarter, to 13 the rest of the way. The three goals allowed in the final three quarters were all man-up.

It wasn’t vintage Springfield defense, but the Cougars adapted to conditions. In the second, that meant controlling the ball, limiting Mount Lebanon to two shots. In the third, it meant withstanding a six-minute possession to start the quarter, Jackson Kennedy fighting off a pair of shots on goal and four others missing the cage in a sequence so long that Springfield (21-2) called a timeout to get the defense a breather. The Cougars still kept a zero for the frame.

“I was pleased with how we responded,” said Labutis, who caused four turnovers. “It’s a credit to hanging in there and playing our hardest even when the scoreboard may not be in our favor.”

It’s a credit to the offensive players who stepped up. Without Tyler Gougler, who tore ligaments in his knee in the District 1 final, Flaherty was again impressive, with four goals and two assists. His two goals in the second quarter were not-to-be-denied moves on the crease.

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Springfield’s Aidan Kreydt readies to shoot in a districts game against Conestoga. Kreydt scored seven times in a state quarterfinal win over Mount Lebanon Saturday. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group).

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When Penncrest needed her, Reese came up Big(ler)

MECHANICSBURG — Saturday’s first half wasn’t the cleanest of the season for Penncrest’s girls lacrosse team, the Lions would agree at the break. But in the chaos wrought by all the turnovers and hectic back-and-forth, Reese Bigler seems to thrive.

The sophomore can impact the game just about anywhere on the field. As she showed Saturday, that can often come in multiple phases of the game one after another.

Penncrest scored three goals in its PIAA Class 3A quarterfinal with Pine-Richland that started directly from Bigler caused turnovers, and Bigler’s athleticism was emblematic of Penncrest’s general open-field advantage in running past the Rams, 21-12, and into the state semifinals.

Bigler wasn’t alone in turning turnovers into goals at John H. Frederick Field at Memorial Park Stadium. But in a game with too many giveaways for either coach’s liking, Bigler supplied consistency, and not just as the streak dashing past Pine-Richland defenders like they were standing still.

“It starts with me and my teammates carrying it through,” Bigler said. “I rely on my teammates so I know if I do that, they’ll finish it off and they’ll complete the play.”

Penncrest (20-4) gradually inflicted its superiority. Twice in the first half, Bigler turned groundballs into transition chances that ended with Adisyn Bernhardt goals. She did so again midway through the second half, Pine-Richland winning a draw before Bigler made them cough it up. Seconds later, Kathryn Harding rifled an eight-meter shot into the net.

“It’s huge because it kind of boosts up our team,” Penncrest’s Cara Childs said. “When we finish a goal off of that, it kind of sets a pace where we win the draw and we do it again.”

Bigler wasn’t alone in that. Mira Kuttymartin had one second-half sequence where she jumped a passing lane like a cornerback getting underneath a stop-route, which led to a Kaitlyn Roth goal. That proved necessary, with the Rams (19-4) not going quietly.

The District 7 champ trailed 2-0 out of the gates but tied the game within three minutes. Bernhardt made it 10-4 with 8:08 left to half, but Hannah Young scored three straight goals to halve the deficit.

Bernhardt would restore an 11-7 margin at the break. Penncrest scored the first four goals of the second half, three from Childs, to relieve any upset drama. However, Pine-Richland stalemated the draws at 17 apiece, led by eight for Madeline Mill, despite Harding’s early edge.

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Penncrest’s Reese Bigler, right, seen in a PIAA Class 3A game against Hempfield last Tuesday, came up big with turnovers in the Lions’ state quarterfinal victory Saturday over Pine-Richland. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Conesotga puts together all the pieces to knock off Radnor in PIAA quarterfinals

West Goshen >> They say to beat a team three times in a season is one of the toughest things in sports. The Conestoga girls lacrosse team hopes to prove that adage.
Kiki Liebezeit had four goals and Kate Galica added three and the Pioneers played one of their more complete games of the season to down Central League rival Radnor, 13-6, in the quarterfinals of the PIAA 3A Championships at West Chester East’s Zimmerman Stadium on Saturday.
The win puts the Pioneers (19-5) into the semifinals Tuesday, where they will meet Owen J. Roberts for the third time this season. The Wildcats have won the first two meetings, including a 7-4 victory in the District 1 semifinals.
“That’s exactly what we want and we’re so fired up,” Leibezeit.
Conestoga’s defense made life difficult for the Raptors, and they didn’t allow many quick-strike goals. Every possession tested Radnor’s patience as they tried to find openings for shooting opportunities. Conestoga forced three turnovers in the first half and goalie Alex Lepore made a couple of stellar saves, including diving across the crease to stop an effort from Angela Esgro.
“I feel like our D was communicating well out there and we had each other’s backs,” Liebezeit said.
Leibezeit scored twice in the first 25 minutes as the Pioneers took a 5-2 lead into the halftime break.
Radnor scored first on a free position from Sarah Kelley. Piper Kienzle answered for ‘Stoga to make it 6-3.
Radnor closed to gap to two again as Grayson Buono scored with 15:21 left.
But, Stoga closed the game on a 7-2 run to put the game away. Chloe Brown started the spurt by firing in a one-timer. Galica scored twice during the run and could’ve added more, but hit the post three different times.

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Marple’s Kostack, Yukenavitch and Keating out-trick Cocalico

A balanced scoring attack helped Marple Newtown advance to the final four the PIAA Class 2A tournament.

Evan Kostack, Joey Yukenavitch and Ryan Keating recorded hat tricks as the Tigers crushed Cocalico, 13-5, in a quarterfinal-round matchup Saturday afternoon at Exeter High School.

Yukenavitch provided three assists, while Kostack and Keating each supplied one helper. Marple raced out to a 5-1 advantage after one quarter and scored four times in the second to take a comfortable 9-3 lead into halftime.

Brian Box chipped in with two goals and an assist for the District 1 runners-up. Jace Kostack and Brett Wolski both had a goal and an assist.

Alex Chambers went 9-for-21 in the faceoff circle and also dished one assist. Goalie Marco D’Alicandro registered 11 saves.

Marple Newtown (18-5) will meet West Chester Rustin (18-5) in a rematch of the District 1 championship Tuesday at a time and location to be determined. Rustin captured its first district crown with a 9-4 victory over the Tigers, who were the defending Class 2A champs.

Marple Newtown’s Jace Kostack moves the ball in the second half as ofthe Tigers’ District 1 Class 2A final loss to W.C. Rustin. (PETE BANNAN-DAILY TIMES

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Erin DeStefano’s late goals, offside call clinch Springfield win

EXETER — Erin DeStefano twirled her stick as she stood in place from eight meters in front of the cage, waiting for the sound of the whistle. Weighted on the senior attacker’s shoulders was the opportunity to score the game winner in the state quarterfinals, and to bring Springfield one step closer to accomplishing its ultimate goal.

She stared at the intimidating force that is Manheim Township goalie Maddie Eckert, who was excellent. For the better half of the game Eckert stymied the Cougars’ every shot on goal.

But after the Cougars recovered from a frustrating first half in which they were held to two goals, there stood DeStefano, with the game in her hands.

“Starting from down in the game, I felt like we had to work more as a team if we wanted to win,” DeStefano said. “When there was like five minutes left, and we were tied, I felt that the whole team was really calm. We didn’t rush passes or rush transitions. We took our time, we got the ball and we possessed it, which was the most important thing for us.”

DeStefano is good at so many things on the lacrosse field. Her excellence on the draw in the second half enabled Springfield to climb out of a hole. She is the central figure on attack.

Keith Broome wasn’t surprised to see DeStefano be the hero. Her goal with 21 seconds left in regulation gave Springfield the 8-7 lead and eventual victory over Manheim Saturday at Exeter High. Springfield will meet Central League rival Penncrest in the semifinals Tuesday at a time and location to be determined.

“She has been ******* it this year,” Broome said. “She is a calming influence. You saw they were doubling her on the crease, but she’s our best feeder, too. She’s great. And she’s quicker than you think.”

DeStefano was responsible for half of her team’s scoring output. Three of those goals came in the second half, including back-to-back tallies to pull the Cougars even at 5-5 after they had trailed 5-2 at intermission. On the game-winning sequence, she was determined to get to the net, and if a physical (and at times, too aggressive) Manheim team sent her falling, then so be it. She was more than happy to take a free shot.

“I like eight meters and I feel like I am confident shooting them,” DeStefano said. “I mean, we practice them all the time. (Assistant coach) Kathleen (Geiger) always wants us to run it in, but I’m too slow and always get checked. I get kind of nervous, but it worked out OK.”

The Blue Streaks won the ensuing draw control. Calli Campagna sprinted to the cage and sent a quick shot past Springfield goalie Geena Augello with 3.5 seconds to play. The Blue Streaks celebrated as if they had sent the game to overtime. However, the officials ruled that Campagna was offside, negating the goal. The Cougars regained possession with three seconds to play and ran the clock out with ease.

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Springfield’s Erin DeStefano attacks the goal in a game last season. (PETE BANNAN- DAILY TIMES

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Matt Kane’s homer only adds to Strath Haven’s fun

PINE GROVE — Matt Kane hammered a pitch to right field and Strath Haven’s players jumped to their feet inside the miniature-golf- sized dugout at Walter Stump Stadium.

The ball doinked off the top of the fence and went over for a three-run homer, extending the Panthers’ lead to eight runs in the sixth inning.

“It felt great,” said Kane, the team’s catcher and leadoff hitter. “We needed more runs. We were up a little bit, but they were hitting the ball. I felt that it was a back-and-forth game, but I felt (the home run) changed the momentum.”

Senior captain Sam Milligan wasn’t sure what he had witnessed.

“We all thought it was a Canseco,” Milligan said, referring to that time when a fly ball clanked off the top of Jose Canseco’s dome and went over the wall for a homer. Kane’s dinger was clean.

“I asked the umpire and he said it hit the top of the fence,” Milligan added. “I was kind of hoping it didn’t so I could mess with him about it. He definitely got into one.”

Can you tell that Strath Haven is having fun? Kane’s long ball was the dagger in the Panthers’ 14-3 shellacking of Selinsgrove in the quarterfinals of the PIAA Class 5A tournament. They will meet Greencastle-Antrim in the semifinal round Monday at a time and place to be determined.

The District 1 champions continued their torrid streak with the bats during the district and state playoffs. In two state tourney game they have scored 24 runs. In Tuesday’s bludgeoning they collected 16 hits and eight of the nine starters reached base at least twice.

“It’s all hard work and preparation and I also think that it’s just getting hot at the right time,” said Kane, who had two hits and four RBIs. “That’s what baseball is. We struggled a lot this year hitting the ball, but we’re hot at the right time and, with our great pitching, good things happen.”

Selinsgrove started Tyler Swineford two days after he threw 70-plus pitches. Swineford looked sharp in the first inning, but the Panthers eventually went into attack mode against a tiring hurler. Milligan led off the second with a single and eventually scored on a grounder off the bat of Zane Malarkey. In the third the Panthers erupted for six runs highlighted by Ben Milligan’s two-run triple. Swineford was pulled after recording seven outs on 67 pitches.

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Strath Haven's Sam Milligan, shown in a game last month, had four hits to help the Panthers cruise into the Class 5A state semifinals with a 14-3 win over Selinsgrove on Thursday. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Strath Haven’s Sam Milligan, shown in a game last month, had four hits to help the Panthers cruise into the Class 5A state semifinals with a 14-3 win over Selinsgrove on Thursday. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Conestoga defeats Wilson in first round of PIAA Class 3A girls lacrosse playoffs

Conestoga scored early and often on Thursday night against Wilson.

Nine players scored for the Pioneers, who cruised to a 17-7 win over the Bulldogs in the first round of the PIAA Class 3A girls lacrosse playoffs at West Lawn.

“We had a total team effort out there,” Conestoga coach Amy Orcutt said. “We’ve just been really jelling, really meshing and I think a lot of people are gaining confidence that may not have had some before.”

The defending champion Pioneers took a 4-0 lead early in the first half and remained in control the rest of the game. They led 6-1 at the half.

“We tried to slow the game down,” Wilson coach John Spleen said. “Conestoga’s just a great team. You play a team like that, you can’t afford to have anything go wrong. We had a couple of missed shots, a couple of posts were hit.”

Each team scored three goals in the opening minutes of the second half, and the Pioneers led 9-4 with 20 minutes remaining. Senior Kate Galicia, a Virginia commit, scored twice in the early part of the second half and finished with four goals.

“We really want this title again,” Galicia said. “Every single minute we’re playing, we don’t want it to be our last. We’re playing our hardest.”

The fourth-place team from District 1, Conestoga (17-7) extended its lead to 15-5 late in the second half, which put the running-clock mercy rule into effect. Junior Ellie Wisch scored the 100th goal of her career in the second half, and finished with four goals.

“It was good,” Wisch said about reaching the milestone. “I didn’t really expect it.”

The District 3 runner-up Bulldogs (16-7-1) were led by junior Alexa Kairis, a Penn State commit, who finished with three goals and one assist. Senior Jenna Facciolli had two goals.

“I was happy that they fought all the way to the end,” Spleen said. “They did play hard.”

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Wilson’s Alexa Kairis is pressured by Conestoga’s Kate Galica, left, and Brooke Braslow in a PIAA Class 3A first-round game Thursday at West Lawn.  (BILL UHRICH – READING EAGLE)

Wilson’s Alexa Kairis is pressured by Conestoga’s Kate Galica, left, and Brooke Braslow in a PIAA Class 3A first-round game Thursday at West Lawn. (BILL UHRICH – READING EAGLE)

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Without Gougler, Springfield doesn’t miss a beat in opening rout

SPRINGFIELD — By faceoff Wednesday evening, Jimmy Kennedy and his Springfield teammates had internalized a postseason truth. If the Cougars want to add a state title to the District 1 crown they won last week, they’ll have to do it without Tyler Gougler, a knee injury ruling the junior attackman out for the playoffs.

Consider the first Gougler-less test aced.

Kennedy led the way with five goals and two assists as the Cougars thumped Pennridge, 17-3, in the first round of the PIAA Class 3A championships.

“It’s always tough to see someone go down,” Kennedy said. “As great of a player as Tyler is, he’s done so much for us. He doesn’t have bad games. I’ve never seen him have a down game. But preparing, we’re just taking it one day at a time, seeing what he’s doing. It definitely hurts, but we’ve got 45 guys. Everyone has their job. We get it done as a team.”

You’d have to look hard to notice a difference Wednesday, as Gougler’s absence didn’t matter against a Pennridge team making its states debut and trying to bridge a chasm in talent. The Cougars (20-2) led 6-0 after a quarter and 12-0 at half, scoring three times in the final minute of the opening half to ensure the entire second half proceeded with a running clock.

The tactical changes were minimal to cover for Gougler, who tore an ACL late in the fourth quarter of a district final in which he scored four times to lead the Cougars past Radnor. Tyler Henderson bumped up from midfield depth to the attack line, joining Kennedy and Patrick Flaherty.

The latter two had the run of the shop. By halftime, Kennedy had scored five times, including a superb behind-the-back number upon getting a feed from Flaherty. One of Kennedy’s assists came on one of Flaherty’s three goals. He added four helpers.

Aidan Kreydt chipped in a goal and two assists. Henderson scored in the first quarter and the first goal of the third. Sean Donaldson added a pair of markers.

“We’re definitely patient, but I think we go into every game thinking this team is going to give us a good game,” Kennedy said. “Even at the start, if it doesn’t look like that, we still take our time getting good looks and putting the ball in the back of the net.”

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Springfield's Sean Donaldson is about to unleash a shot that finds the back of the net for a first-half goal against Pennridge in their PIAA Class 3A first round game Wednesday. (Mike Cabrey - MediaNews Group)

Springfield’s Sean Donaldson is about to unleash a shot that finds the back of the net for a first-half goal against Pennridge in their PIAA Class 3A first round game Wednesday. (Mike Cabrey – MediaNews Group)

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