PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | November, 2023

Lower Merion’s Nick Mazzeo is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week (Nov. 13-19)

The sophomore runner finished second at the PIAA 3A Boys Cross Country State Championships Nov. 4, clocking 15:44 on the Hershey course. One week earlier, at the PIAA District 1 3A Cross Country Championships , he finished first with a time of 15:07.40 at Lehigh University (his twin brother Alex placed third at Districts, clocking 15:13. 40). Lower Merion boys cross country head coach Dallas Alexander said, “Nick is an enthusiastic first-year competitive runner with strong instincts; together with Alex, they set a standard for LM training sessions. Because of their involvement in other activities, Nick and Alex are fan favorites for younger student-athletes coming up from middle school.” Nick Mazzeo competes in winter and spring track for Lower Merion, and off the track, participates in the school’s Technology Student Association, is a member of the Ronald McDonald House Club at LM and plays five musical instruments — piano, drums, trumpet, tuba and bass.

Fun facts – Nick Mazzeo

Favorite book: Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese.

Favorite author: Fredrik Backman.

Favorite TV show: Severance.

Favorite movie: The Grand Budapest Hotel.

Favorite athlete: Yared Nuguse.

Favorite pre-race pump-up song: Righteous Minds by Joey Bada$$.

Favorite team: Philadelphia Eagles.

Favorite place to visit: Vermont.

Favorite pre-race meal: “Pasta the night before a race.”

Person I most admire: My parents

Family members: parents Tony and Kirstin, brother Alex, dog Jet.

 

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Nick Mazzeo (photo courtesy of Nick Mazzeo)

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Plays from Ryan Whitaker’s ‘back pocket’ carry Springfield past Marple Newtown

SPRINGFIELD – Ryan Whitaker doesn’t have many opportunities to throw the football.

Whitaker is the quarterback for a Springfield team that runs the ball with a lot of success, behind one of the baddest offensive line units in Delaware County. Senior running back Mike Turner has run for 1,000-plus yards. A week ago Turner and Tanner Coll each cracked the 100-yard plateau in the Cougars’ District 1 Class 5A first-round drubbing of West Chester Henderson.

The third-seeded Cougars are so good at “ground-and-pound,” they were averaging better than 270 yards rushing per game entering Friday’s district quarterfinal against No. 6 Marple Newtown.

Whitaker showed that he can be a secret weapon. And on Friday he took the Marple Newtown defense by utter surprise with his timely passing, which proved to be a big factor in Springfield’s 20-7 victory.

Winners of 10 consecutive games, Springfield (11-1) will play another Central League foe, No. 2 Strath Haven, in the district semifinals next Friday. Strath Haven advanced with 26-21 win over No. 7 Upper Dublin.

Whitaker was 4-for-5 for 111 yards and two touchdowns. His first scoring strike was a 12 yarder to Chris Dolan in the corner of the end zone with 10:30 left in the second quarter, extending the Cougars’ lead to 13-0. Later in the quarter, with the Cougars backed up at their own 25, Whitaker executed a play-action fake to perfection. He found Ryan Johnston all alone in the middle of the field, and the senior tight end did the rest, sprinting 75 yards to the house.

Sure the Cougars can dominate teams by taking the air out of the ball. Turner was awesome once again, accumulating 186 yards on 36 carries, and scored on the opening drive of the game from nine yards out.

But opposing defenses shall not sleep on Whitaker and the Cougars’ sneaky good passing game.

“Their defense kept going for the run because we kept pounding it five yards a carry and, when you do that all the time, people are wide open by 30 yards,” Whitaker said. “The offensive line (Gus Bryan, Mike Miller, Dean Brown, Lucas Aaron, Ryan Benjamin), they are the greatest. They make everything happen. They’re fun to be around and they’re just great people. And they have great personalities and that’s what you need out of your teammates.”

Whitaker had thrown for only 406 yards before Friday’s game. His career high of 140 yards and two TDs came in the Cougars’ 22-0 win over Marple in September. So, it’s something about playing the Tigers that seems to bring out the best in Whitaker.

“I’m just happy we won,” he said. “It feels great. (Marple) is a great team, so to come out and beat them again feels amazing.”

Turner has run for more than 100 yards in six of Springfield’s 12 games. Fullback Nate Romano added 58 yards Friday, running over would-be tacklers at will. Springfield amassed 248 yards on 44 carries (5.6 yards per carry). While the Cougars didn’t find the end zone in the second half, their ground game successfully quieted Marple’s physical defensive front.

“Obviously we are a run-heavy team, but when we have the throwing game in our back pocket, we have plays that we can execute and it’s such a big help,” Turner said. “You saw it, the two passing touchdowns, that is huge in a game like this. We don’t do that every game. There’s some games where we throw the ball less than five times, but to have those passing plays in our back pocket, it’s huge.”

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Springfield quarterback Ryan Whitaker, left, gets rid of a pass while under pressure from Marple Newtown's Luke Moyer Friday. Whitaker threw for two touchdowns as the Cougars went on to a 20-7  victory in a District 1 Class 5A quarterfinal game. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Springfield quarterback Ryan Whitaker, left, gets rid of a pass while under pressure from Marple Newtown’s Luke Moyer Friday. Whitaker threw for two touchdowns as the Cougars went on to a 20-7 victory in a District 1 Class 5A quarterfinal game. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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James Fisher’s big plays help Strath Haven survive Upper Dublin’s challenge

NETHER PROVIDENCE — James Fisher went into the locker room Friday night with four carries to his name in the first half of Strath Haven’s District 1 Class 5A quarterfinal. The senior all-purpose star, though, knew it would only take one to get back on track and get the Panthers into a district semifinal.

Fisher’s 59-yard score on the first series of the second half added valuable cushion, and Strath Haven’s defense came up with two fourth-quarter turnovers to put down the resistance of seventh-seeded Upper Dublin, 26-21, in a bruising postseason affair.

Fisher wasn’t invisible in the first half. One of his five touches was a 66-yard touchdown catch from Jake Kitchin, the game’s first first-down play after the teams traded five punts.

But Fisher had been bottled up in the run game, with just two yards in the opening half. The No. 2 Panthers (11-1) carried a 13-7 lead into the break, but Fisher’s first-half frustration was emblematic of the job the Cardinals (7-5) did defensively.

Fisher quickly made the wait worthwhile, taking a third-down carry on the first series of the second half off right end, getting the authoritative seal block of end Sean Henry and jetting down the sideline.

“It was about being patient and waiting my turn,” Fisher said.

The win sends the Panthers into the District 1 semifinals for the third straight season. They take on third-seeded Springfield, which handled Marple Newtown, 20-7, on Friday. Strath Haven won at Springfield on Sept. 1, 19-15.

Fisher also applied his stamp defensively. Upper Dublin fought a battle of attrition in the second half, with its top two playmakers helped off the field on the same series. Chris Kohlbrenner, who fought cramps and was leveled in the ribs by Fisher later in the second half, would return. Feature back Shyne Roberts didn’t after his 14th and final carry went for 34 yards, taking him to 96 for the game.

“Shyne’s a great player, a great athlete, does a lot for this team,” Kohlbrenner said. “Him going down was very tough for our team. We know it’s going to be a lot harder to win, but we know we’ve got the guys that can step up and help make a play.”

Fisher delivered three punishing hits in the third, the last flagged for a questionable targeting call. The physicality would pay off in the fourth.

Without Roberts, Upper Dublin had to go to the air. Junior quarterback Kevin Etkin ably ran the possession passing game, if big plays were in short supply, going 17-for-29 for 112 yards. He found Ben Ravitz for a four-yard score on third-and-goal in the second quarter. He then hit Kohlbrenner in the back corner of the end zone on third-and-14 from the 15, coach Bret Stover dialing up a pre-snap audible.

When Shane Green barreled in for a 12-yard touchdown to restore the two-score bump with 9:39 left in regulation, Etkin answered within three minutes, tossing a six-yard quick slant TD to Ryan O’Sullivan.

Strath Haven would get to him eventually. Two of Etkin’s last three passes were picked off. The first came from a buildup of pressure, Jahi Curtis sacking Etkin on first down. Curtis, who deflected a pair of passes, was in the backfield again on second down. He had Etkin wrapped up, and the QB’s attempt to throw it away found lineman Cole Miller, who snapped up the interception.

“All the other guys have such a good pass rush, so I was able to stay back a little bit,” Miller said. “I was able to stay back, and I don’t think it was a screen, but he was just getting sacked and threw it. I saw the ball, I dove at it and got lucky.”

Taking over at the UD 42 with 4:18 left and up a score seemed to be the game for the Panthers. But Upper Dublin continued to do what it did all night in shackling Haven’s run game. The Panthers had 314 yards of offense, yet 125 of that came on two Fisher plays.

Kitchin capped a 14-play, 74-yard drive in the second quarter with a one-yard score, and Green’s dozen-yard drive ended a 15-play, 63-yard march. But otherwise, the Cardinals felt pretty good about holding Haven to 49 carries for 248 yards and forcing five punts.

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Strath Haven's James Fisher runs is on the loose via a 66-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter of what would turn out to be a 26-20 Panthers victory over Upper Dublin in the District 1 Class 5A quarterfinal round. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Strath Haven’s James Fisher runs is on the loose via a 66-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter of what would turn out to be a 26-20 Panthers victory over Upper Dublin in the District 1 Class 5A quarterfinal round. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Penncrest freshman Carr leads six Delco medalists

Four Delaware County boys runners rode back from Hershey Saturday with new, shiny cross country states medals Saturday.

Penncrest freshman Rowan Carr finished eighth at the PIAA Class 3A cross country championships Saturday, the first of four medalists on the boys side.

Carr clocked in at 16:08. He was seven seconds ahead of Radnor senior Luke Bodden, who grabbed another of the 25 medals in each race. Bodden had been agonizing close as a junior, finishing 28th.

Both were well behind the winner, Butler’s Drew Griffith, who went 15:23 at the Hershey Parkview 5K course. Lower Merion sophomore Nicholas Mazzeo finished second.

Carr was the top freshman and one of only three rookies in the top 50. He helped the Lions finish 10th in the team category. Edomias Mulugeta was the second Lion (and fifth Delco runner) over the line in 43rd place, and Nick Fante dipped into the top 100 in 98th place.

Dan Wuenschel also snagged a medal, the Strath Haven senior finishing 19th in 16:31. He was 31st at states a year ago.

Haverford sophomore Teddy Foster ran an outstanding race to go 16:32. That earned him 21st place. He had been just 26th at last week’s District 1 Championships and finished 144th at states a year ago.

Ridley’s Jackson Kane finished 58th in his states debut, clocking in at 17 minutes even. Garnet Valley’s Michael Colavito was 75th, nearly halving his finish of 152nd from last year.

Delco’s showing in the girls Class 3A race was dampened by the fact that District 1 champion Olivia Cieslak of Haverford did not run. She would’ve challenged for a medal, her runner-up at districts, Mount Saint Joseph’s Ella Woehlcke, finishing fifth. Mount Lebanon senior Logan St. John Kletter won the race in 18:13, besting District 7 mate Eva Kynaston of team champion North Allegheny by six seconds.

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Haverford's Camryn McGeehan placed 12th at the PIAA Championships on Saturday. (Submitted Photo)

Haverford’s Camryn McGeehan placed 12th at the PIAA Championships on Saturday. (Submitted Photo)

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Jahi Curtis tips, runners’ rips boost Strath Haven past Great Valley

NETHER PROVIDENCE — The more Kevin Clancy did his homework on the Great Valley football team, the more the Strath Haven coach was convinced he had a problem and an underplayed solution.

The problem: A complicated passing attack, led by quarterback Braeden Melia.

The solution: The length and instincts of ever-improving junior defensive end Jahi Curtis.

“That was a sophisticated offense,” Clancy said. “We thought they were outstanding throwing the ball. Their quarterback is very gifted and makes a lot of plays. The receivers are good, and they spread out sideline to sideline.

“But Jahi Curtis had a big day. He was batting balls down. And that is huge for us.”

Though Melia was as advertised, throwing for 198 yards, Curtis tipped four passes to help the Panthers make three interceptions in a 42-7 victory in the first round of the District 1 Class 5A tournament. Seeded second, Strath Haven (10-1) will host seventh-seeded Upper Dublin Friday in the district quarterfinals. Great Valley, the No. 15 seed, finished its season at 4-7.

“We think we’re getting a little better, but it’s week to week,” Clancy said. “It gets a little tougher. Another tough game next week. We have to keep improving. The team that’s going to survive this is the team that keeps getting better.”

If the Panthers had more complete games during their march to the district quarterfinals, they were few. Friday, they stormed to 413 rushing yards with six ground touchdowns while holding the Patriots scoreless until 1:56 remained.

It took Strath Haven three plays to take a lead when, after a Marco Kaufman interception, James Fisher ran 11 yards for the first of his two touchdowns. On the second Panthers possession, Shane Green blasted for 59 yards down the left side for his first of two scores.

A 57-yard Fisher run helped put Green in business for a two-yard TD hop early in the second. And 3:37 later, after the Panthers took over on a short field, Fisher charged nine yards through the middle for six. With the line continuing to dominate, Kaufman gave the Panthers a five-touchdown lead when he followed Green’s 22-yard gain with a one-yard score 4:36 before the half.

Kaufman added a three-yard touchdown in the third, and with Ben Milligan completing a 6-for-6 PAT effort, the Panthers had a 42-0 lead.

“I couldn’t be prouder,” Kaufman said. “After our loss against Marple, we just hit a different gear. It’s been a whole different mentality and we’re starting to hit everything on all cylinders right now.”

An 87-yard pass from Malia to Gavin Maslowski sent Great Valley to the 2-yard line, and Falls Johnson ripped around the right side for a late touchdown to avoid the shutout, Miles Duval providing the point-after.

“Obviously, we don’t see Strath Haven, but we know their reputation and what they have done over the years,” Great Valley coach Jeff Martin said. “Year in and year out, they’ve been a good team for such a long time. That’s the type of program that you emulate, right?

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Strath Haven's Marco Kaufman carries the ball in the first half as the Panthers cruised to victory over Great Valley Friday in a district playoff opene at George King Field. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Strath Haven’s Marco Kaufman carries the ball in the first half as the Panthers cruised to victory over Great Valley Friday in a district playoff opene at George King Field. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Wolski, Marple turn back clock to handle Penncrest again

NEWTOWN SQUARE — For football players, there are victories that are easy to remember and losses they choose to forget.

A pair of losses helped sixth-seeded Marple Newtown build up the momentum it needed to roll past No. 11 Penncrest, 48-13, in a District 1 Class 5A playoff opener Friday night.

Marple will travel to third-seeded Springfield for its second-round contest.

Many of the Tigers looked back with displeasure to the 2022 playoffs, which lasted only one game, an 18-15 defeat at Chester.

The 2023 squad had to look back only one week to a win over Penncrest which closed out the regular season. During that contest, one of their senior starters was ejected, making him ineligible for the playoff opener.

“We try to establish that we are a family,” Marple Newtown head coach Chris Gicking said. “When something happens to one of our family, we stick together. We took what happened last week personally.

“Today I thought we played well offensively, defensively and on special teams.”

Actually it was a Penncrest special teams effort that gave the Lions the first offensive series after recovering an onside kick on the opening kickoff.

The Lions picked up one first down before running out of steam. The next thing Penncrest knew, their defensive players were running down the field after Marple’s first play from scrimmage was a 36-yard completion from David Bertoline to Trey Saviour, putting the ball on the Penncrest 39. Four plays later, sophomore Brett Wolski raced 28 yards for the first of his three touchdowns.

“Our offensive line is awesome,” Wolski said, including tight end John Daddario with interior linemen Jason Bennett, Brett Cowan, Eric Janda, Andrew Kirlin and Jake McGowan as the blockers responsible for his success. “Our play-calling was outstanding all game.”

Bertoline (11-for-17 for 180 yards) started the next MN possession throwing to Saviour. This time the gain was 45 yards to the Penncrest 25 before a third-down pass to Joey Yukenavitch became a 13-yard score late in the first quarter.

Marple Newtown (9-2) made it 3-for-3 on scoring drives after taking over at the Penncrest 46. Bertoline’s completion to Aidan Curran moved the ball to the 16, and Brian Box scored on the next play.

Despite a pair of holding penalties, the visiting Lions (5-6) put together an 11-play drive that included a 50-yard completion from Nico Tozzi to Blaise Persichetti to the MN 5. Matt Ferry scored on a short third-down run.

Wolski gave the home fans something to shout, claiming the ensuing kickoff at his 35 and escaping would-be tacklers on the sideline before cutting back and refusing to stop until he reached the end zone.

When Marple got its hands on the ball for the first time in the second half, the Bertoline-to-Saviour passing duo got together on a 22-yard third-down completion to Penncrest’s 15. Two Wolski carries ate up those 15 yards for another score.

Lou DiLuzio, who had been making things miserable for Penncrest ball carriers at middle linebacker, made the most of the second of his three rushes with a 28-yard burst up the middle for a score in the final minute of the third. Josh McMenamin’s conversion kick turned on the mercy clock.

“We changed some things up and moved some people around on our defense,” DiLuzio said. “We knew they were going to want to pound the ball (on the ground) and we wanted to pound them right back.

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Marple Newtown's Brian Box, seen in last week's regular season finale against Penncrest, ran for a touchdown in Friday's District 1 Class 5A playoff win over the Lions, 48-13. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Marple Newtown’s Brian Box, seen in last week’s regular season finale against Penncrest, ran for a touchdown in Friday’s District 1 Class 5A playoff win over the Lions, 48-13. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Tanner Coll, Mike Turner help Springfield keep churning up yards and wins

SPRINGFIELD — Third-seeded Springfield shook off a sluggish start Friday to dominate West Chester Henderson, 48-14, in the first round of the District 1 Class 5A playoffs.

It was the ninth straight victory for the Cougars (10-1), who rolled up more than 300 rushing yards with sophomore Tanner Coll collecting 139 on seven carries, including a 64-yard touchdown and senior Mike Turner adding to his 1,000-yard season with 10 rushes for 125 yards and a score.

Junior Nate Romano punched the ball into the end zone three times for the Cougars, who host sixth-seeded Marple Newtown next week in the quarterfinals.

Coll said the Cougars were inspired by the senior-laden offensive line of Gus Bryan, Dean Brown, Mike Miller and Lucas Aaron. Tight end Ryan Johnston was a beast as well for the Cougars, who took over after entering the second quarter with a 6-0 lead.

Romano, Johnston (on a 46-yard scoring pass from Ryan Whitaker) and Coll all got into the end zone to give the Cougars a 26-0 lead by the intermission.

“Our whole O-line has done a great job and really that’s the reason for our success running the ball,” Coll said. “We practiced hard all week. We knew (Henderson was) going to pass the ball, so we tried to get on them as quickly as possible. We had a bunch of interceptions that shut them off right away.”

Coll and Turner picked off quarterback Braeden O’Connell on back-to-back possessions in the first half to slam the door on the Warriors (4-7), who didn’t score until O’Connell threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to Evan Kearney in the last minute of the third quarter.

O’Connell threw for 163 yards, including a two-yard TD to Evan Miles in the fourth quarter but was also picked off by Brian Delaney.

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Springfield's Mike Turner, seen in a game earlier this season against Marple Newtown, gained 125 yards and bowled in for a touchdown Friday night as the Cougars beat West Chester Henderson in the district playoff opener. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Springfield’s Mike Turner, seen in a game earlier this season against Marple Newtown, gained 125 yards and bowled in for a touchdown Friday night as the Cougars beat West Chester Henderson in the district playoff opener. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Lassik, Garnet Valley take to the air to get past Owen J. Roberts

CONCORD TWP. — Garnet Valley has carved its way into Southeastern Pennsylvania lore with a hard-nosed running attack.

When this season’s version of the Jaguars needs to air it out, though, they can open up a game in a hurry. Just ask Owen J. Roberts.

Garnet Valley used a tricky aerial attack to fluster the Wildcats and secure a 28-21 victory in the opening round of the District 1 Class 6A tournament Friday.

For Jaguars coach Erik VanWyk, the offensive line was a big key in helping power the No. 8 Jaguars’ passing game.

“Joe Anzalone, Lucas Possenti, Dylan Bledsoe…all those guys up front. They did a great job,” VanWyk said. “(Owen J. Roberts) brought a ton of pressure, but because they were able to keep those blocks and give us time, we were able to make some plays through the air.”

The win sends the Jaguars (9-2) into the second round to visit No. 1 seed C.B. West. The unbeaten Bucks defeated Garnet Valley in the opening week of the season, 17-13. Garnet Valley topped C.B. West, 35-7, in last year’s district final

Quarterback Tyler Lassik was perfect in the first half as he connected on all six of his passes for 148 yards and two touchdowns.

“We take pride in the run and teams get to know that,” Lassik said. “If they want to send that many guys to our run game, then we’re going to take advantage of them with our passing game.”

Lassik hit Luke O’Donoghue with a 50-yard scoring strike and later lifted a beautiful ball to Caden Olinger that the tight end hauled in over his shoulder to put the Jaguars up 21-7 in the second quarter.

It was just a few weeks ago that O’Donoghue was under center, filling in for Lassik when the quarterback was out injured. Whether it’s Olinger or O’Donoghue, Lassik has built up a connection with both.

“Being injured, I had to build those relationships back up,” Lassik said. “We’ve worked on it so many times that it’s become something where I just trust in (Olinger). (O’Donoghue) played amazing when I was out. When I throw him a touchdown pass and I go into the end zone and see him, I just smile and say, ‘Why am I throwing you touchdowns? What is going on?’ It’s really crazy.”

For the Wildcats, it was a tough first 24 minutes.

“We made too many mistakes, including a couple in the first half that really hurt us,” OJR coach Rich Kolka said. “If we don’t make those, it might have been a different game. I thought we were just as good as they were.”

Garnet Valley took advantage of one of those miscues when Chase Wilt hopped on a fumbled punt, which set the Jags up nicely at the Owen J. Roberts 20-yard line. Ronnie Leraris dashed into the end zone for an early 7-0 lead on the next play.

For Jags lineman Dylan Bledsoe, dealing with the aggressive Owen J. Roberts defense was a street fight, especially in the passing game.

“It was a battle in the trenches,” Bledsoe said. “They were tough, strong, and physical, but we just had to stand our ground and battle through the hard times.”

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Garnet Valley quarterback Tyler Lassik throws for a first down in a game against Marple Newtown last month. (Pete Bannan - MediaNews Group)

Garnet Valley quarterback Tyler Lassik throws for a first down in a game against Marple Newtown last month. (Pete Bannan – MediaNews Group)

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Wozniak hat trick lifts Conestoga past Boyertown

BERWYN>>No. 4 Boyertown gave undefeated and top-seeded Conestoga all they could handle, but paced by a hat trick from Shae Wozniak, the Pioneers pulled away in the end to post a 4-2 victory in the District 1, Class 3A field hockey semi-finals Wednesday at Teamer Field.

With the win, Conestoga (21-0) moves on to Saturday’s championship game for the third straight year, where they will square off against Downingtown West, a 2-1 double overtime winner over Central Bucks West in the other semi-final. It will be a re-match of last year’s finals, won by the Whippets.

“This was a perfect game to play heading into Saturday,” said Conestoga coach Regan Marscher. “It’s great to get a good challenge before a championship game. Kudos to Boyertown, they played a great game, especially defensively, and those are the kind of games you want to be in as you move through the post season.”

The Bears struck first, with Hannah Ulrich finding the back of the cage at the ten minute mark, with an assist to Emily Ulrich.

“I cannot even begin to tell you how proud I am of this team today,” said Boyertown coach Alicia Terrizzi. “Conestoga is a tough, tough team, and we didn’t back down, and battled them to the end. And we’re not done yet.”

Boyetown’s lead held for another five minutes before Wozniak scored twice in quick succession.

The first came with just under five minutes to play in the quarter. Wozniak grabbed a ball in a crowded cage area, slipped behind the goalie, and tapped it in for the score.

Less than a minute later, Wozniak unleashed a bullet from close range to make it 2-1 Conestoga. It was the 100th goal of Wozniak’s career, and she’s still just a junior.

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Conestoga's Shae Wozniak unleashed a bullet of a shot on goal (BILL RUDICK for MediaNews Group)

Conestoga’s Shae Wozniak unleashed a bullet of a shot on goal (BILL RUDICK for MediaNews Group)

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Second half explosion powers ‘Stoga past Downingtown East

By Neil Geoghegan
ngeoghegan@21st-centurymedia.com
@NeilMGeoghegan on Twitter
TREDYFFRIN >> The Conestoga and Downingtown East boys’ soccer coaches each have claimed, in no uncertain terms, that the district’s premier defensive unit this fall is theirs.
That assertion was put to the test during Tuesday’s District 1 4A Semifinal at Teamer Field, and ’Stoga made a strong statement with a 5-1 triumph over the visiting Cougars.
“We set it as a goal before the season to win the district, and I think (our players) fully understand the importance of getting a home game in the first round of states,” said Pioneers’ head coach Dave Zimmerman.
Still unbeaten at 19-0-1 overall, the top-seeded Pioneers advance to Saturday’s district title match against No. 6 seed Abington, to be held at Spring-Ford. Fourth-seeded East falls to 16-4 overall and will host No. 7 seed West Chester Rustin Thursday in the consolation final. Rustin lost to Abington, 2-0, Tuesday in the district semifinal.
Like Conestoga, the Cougars have already qualified for the upcoming PIAA Tournament.
“We have plenty of soccer to play, and my boys are pretty fired up about that,” said East head coach Tom Creighton. “They are holding their head up high.
“It was great for our boys to get this type of experience. It’s our first time in this position as a program. This was a state tournament-caliber game and that is huge for us.”
It’s true. The Cougars have never advanced this far in districts. But ’Stoga is a district contender every season.
“Scoring this many goals in a district semifinal is kind of unheard of,” said Conestoga senior forward Kole Wintersteen, who wound up notching the game winner.
“We were a little bit flat in the first half, but I couldn’t be happier with the way we responded in the second half,” Zimmerman added.
The two sides entered the day having a combined 26 shutouts this season. In an evenly played opening half, both defenses surrendered a single goal. But it was a different story in the second half as the Pioneers’ depth began to make a difference.
“At every position we have two or three guys that can really bring the quality every time they come in. So we’ve always been a second half team,” Wintersteen said.
“(East) didn’t substitute as much as we did, and the wind was at our backs in the second half,” Zimmerman added. “But, honestly, we just made a lot of shots. Sometimes they just go in, so the final score may be a bit misleading.”
Wintersteen delivered the difference maker about seven minutes into the second half, and then 91 seconds later ’Stoga scored again to take command. Wintersteen’s goal was out of the air with high velocity after several rebounds resulted in a loose ball.
“All I remember is that I took a shot, it bounced back, and a few seconds later I scored,” he recalled. “We were just peppering the net, and one went in.”
And it was 2-1 for a short period of time because senior midfielder Ryan Zellefrow doubled the lead moments later with a gorgeous effort slotted for the upper left corner of the net.
And then the Pioneers wrapped up a dominating half with two more the rest of the way. Senior Westin Fryberger’s long blast found its mark with 18:35 remaining, and defender Charlie Culbert hit paydirt in the final minute.
Heading into Tuesday’s game, Downingtown East had allowed a total of 11 goals in 19 outings dating back to August. But Conestoga got five in just 80 minutes.

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Conestoga's Ryan Zellefrow in action earlier in the district playoffs. (Tom Silknitter/Daily Local News)

Conestoga’s Ryan Zellefrow in action earlier in the district playoffs. (Tom Silknitter/Daily Local News)

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