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Smithtown News Sports 05 21-15

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Smithtown News Sports 05 21-15

  1. 1. The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 ~ Page 31 SportsThursday, May 21, 2015 Page 31 (Continued on page 24) GIRLS’ LAX: SUFFOLK D-I QUARTERFINAL 1 2 final No. 5 SMITHTOWN WEST 6 6 12 No. 4 SMITHTOWN EAST 6 3 9 EastatWits’end Witteck’s late hat-trick helps West’s laxstersavengepreviouselimination losses in growing intradistrict rivalry By ANTHONY LIFRIERI For 45 minutes, it was as close as close could be, but Smithtown West sophomore attacker Chelsea Witteck was not about to let the No. 4 seed Smithtown East girls’ lacrosse team end her season again. Witteck scored her team’s final three goals in its 12-9 Suffolk Class A quarterfinal on the road, sending fifth- seeded West to the county semifinals for the first time since the school district split back into two high schools in 2005. “They ended our season the last three years, and I didn’t want that to happen again,” said Witteck, who finished with a team high six points on five goals and an assist. “I just tried my best and the three goals were a result of the effort.” The win sends West to a tough matchup against top-seeded Middle Country, Friday, May 22 at 2 p.m. “I’m so super-excited for the girls,” Smithtown West coach Carie Bodo said. “This was part of their goal they set and worked hard all year for it. They did all the work and they’re the ones busting their chops, so they deserve all the credit.” Bodo is also happy to get another crack at the Mad Dogs, who defeated West 17-13 in the regular season on the strength of a 7-0 run to start the game. “Now that the girls saw them, they’ll be ready to take them on,” Bodo said of her players. “They’ll be playing a lot more aggressive than the last time. I also think that because they scrimmaged Manhasset, the No. 2 team in the country last Saturday, and played with them, they know they can EYES UP: Smithtown West junior midfielder Mackenzie Heldberg (above, #11) advances the ball, and Smithtown East senior attacker Annie Collins (below, #21) attempts to work past Smithtown West junior midfielder Natalia Lynch (below, #16) in West’s 12-9 quarterfinal win at East, Tuesday, May 19. -Anthony Lifrieri photos
  2. 2. Page 30 ~ The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 Sports Theempirestrikesout EastlaxmeneliminateformerpowerWestIslipfor thethirdconsecutiveseason,settingupsemifinal showdown against S’town West at 4 p.m. Friday By ANTHONY LIFRIERI Time and time again, the West Islip boys’ lacrosse team has tried to rebuild its dynasty. Time and time again, Smithtown East has gotten in the way. In the latest chapter of a rivalry that essentially beganwhenthen-Smithtown Central won its first county title over West Islip in 2003, Smithtown East ousted the Lions from the playoffs for the third consecutive season with a 17-5 home win in a Suffolk Class A quarterfinal Tuesday, May 19. “Any time you get to win in May it’s special, but it’s even more special against a great program like West Islip,” said Smithtown East coach Jason Lambert, who picked up his 100th career victory as head coach of the Bulls (see sidebar, page 22). “It feels great for the kids to experience that, and now we get to play in the Final Four for the third-straight year.” Senior attackman Brian Willetts, who recently logged his 300th career point (see sidebar, page 22), echoed the sentiment. “This win feels unbelievable because it’s the third year in a row we’re knocking them out of the playoffs,” Willetts said. “They were the best program for a number of years, so it shows the kind of program we’re becoming. There’s nowhere I’d rather be on all of Long Island than this team right here.” “I think we learned a lot of things from the seniors on the team that beat them in 2013. They showed us to play the game rather than the shirt [of the other team]. The hardest part is going out there and playing with a clear mind, not the big, bad West Islip. Just play the game and the right things will happen.” - Smithtown East midfielder JOHN DANIGGELIS On the Bulls’ recent dominance of West Islip(Continued on page 22) BOYS’ LAX: SUFFOLK CLASS A QUARTERFINAL 1 2 3 4 final No. 7 West Islip 2 1 2 0 5 No. 2 SMITHTOWN EAST 3 5 5 4 17 DISTRIBUTOR: Smithtown East sophomore midfielder Bobby Burns (right, #16) looks to make a pass in the Bulls’ 17-5 quarterfinal victory at home over West Islip, Tuesday, May 19. -Anthony Lifrieri photo
  3. 3. The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 ~ Page 29 Quandary of quarterfinals How single-elimination round is disadvantagetoleaguechamps Trench Coat’s take Section XI nearly nailed it. While ther e wasn’t anything terribly wrong with the then-double- elimination format for the Suffolk baseball playoffs, there was always room for improvement for a playoff system which, up until the early 2000’s, had even seen many years as a single- elimination tournament. So when I heard about the new format that Suffolk County was using, I was cautiously optimistic. And it has its merits and one alarming flaw. The new format grants byes up to the quarterfinals for the five champions of each AA league, which this year were Ward Melville, Connetquot, Hauppauge, Smithtown East and Half Hollow Hills West. The remaining teams that qualify for the playoffs, n o w h a v e t o finish at .500 instead of above .500, including Smithtown West, Commack and Northport from the local area. They play in a “Qualifying Round,” which will whittle 13 teams down to the final three quarterfinal spots. This all works well, as the league champions get rewarded for winning their league, while allowing more teams like Northport the opportunity of playing playoff baseball. My favorite new feature of the playoffs is the best-of- three series for the semifinal and championship rounds. In theory, this should allow the best teams to win, not the team that can be carried by one dominant pitcher or player. It also can protect teams from having their season ruined by a single uncharacteristic performance. But it is the way the quarterfinal round was set up that makes the least sense. The best-of-eight “Championship” round will be decided by a single game. So seeking to protect the better teams while rewarding the teams with worse records goes completely out the window, because anything can happen in one game—a bad start by the ace, a bad performance by the cleanup hitter, some unlikely error— all could do in a team playing really well or dominantly at the end of the year. Hence, the teams most at a disadvantage by the new format become five league champions, who have to wait fromthelastdayoftheregular season, Wednesday, May 13, until the quarterfinal round, Thursday, May 21, to play their next game. A lot of rust can develop in eight days, so it’s unfair for league champs to face teams that have played through the weekend, let alone teams that had to play red-hot to get there. I’m not the only one who feels this way. Seven of the county’s coaches who took a vote on the change in the playoffs voted against it. Said one coach: “The five league champions get rewarded with a bye, but in the case of Hills West and Smithtown East, they are both league champions and fantastic teams, but their reward is playing each other in the round of eight, with one of them ending their season.” “The way it is now, you can go undefeated the whole year, win your league and run into a No. 1 pitcher from any school; if you lose one game, your season is over,” another coachsaid.“Singleelimination is tough because once you get that far in large school playoffs, everyone is good and any No. 1 pitcher can beat any team no matter what the record and seeding is.” Both coaches noted that if the quarterfinal was a three- game series like the semifinals and finals, they would have voted yes, and I feel the same way. If it were a three-game tilt, the system would have been perfect. Instead, it is the sole crack in what could have been perfect. By ANTHONY LIFRIERI By ANTHONY LIFRIERI Midfielder overcomes his hamstring injury to re-enter game late, score game-winner Wilkomback,Jerrod! It took the No. 6 seed Smithtown West boys’ lacrosse team 46:35 to take its first lead over No. 11 seed Bay Shore. For much of that 46:35, midfielder Jerrod Wilkom was not in the game, as he was battling a balky hamstring after getting kneed in it midway through the first quarter. That injury didn’t stop Wilkom from playing at the most important time as he scored the winning goal with 1:25 left in regulation, putting the Bulls ahead for the first time in their 6-5 home victory in the first round of the Suffolk Class A playof fs Friday, May 15. “It’s the playoffs; if we lost, we’re done for the season,” Wilkom said. “This is my senior year, so I didn’t want to lose like that.” The game-winning score came as no surprise to coach Bobby Moltisanti. “In a nutshell, that sums up the kind of young man Jerrod Wilkom is,” Moltisanti said. “He’s a relentless, fearless competitor who’s tough to keep out of a game. It’s going to take a hell of a lot more than a hamstring. It’s fitting he’s the guy that ends up with the ball in his stick to win a playoff game. You can’t write it better than that.” The win advanced Smithtown West to the Suffolk Class A quarterfinals for a road- showdown with No. 3 seed Connetquot, Tuesday, May 19, where the Bulls won, 12-9. West will travel to No. 2 seed Smithtown East in the semifinals Friday, May 22 at 4 p.m. East defeated No. 7 West Islip (see story, page 30), 17-5, Tuesday, May 19. Smithtown West tied Bay Shore at 6 with 3:01 left in regulation, when attackman Jimmy Caddigan rebounded a shot by midfielder Garrett Brunsvold and quickly flicked the ball into the cage. “I saw the ball go and I was waiting for it; I’m always waiting for the rebound,” Caddigan said. “A goal is a goal. I’ll take it because I definitely felt the momentum swing with the goal. We never had the lead, but the seniors and everyone else were getting pumped up.” After midfielder Dan Varello won the ensuing face-off, the Bulls worked the ball to Wilkom, who put the game away with his score. “We were working the ball around,” Wilkom said. “[Midfielder Dan] Caroussos got the ball and the defenseman slid up. That left the back door open for me and I finished [with a shot on the goaltender’s] off-stick [side].” West had to dig itself out of a steep hole, falling behind 2-0 through the first quarter off scores from Bay Shore attackman Robbie Sarraga, the second of which came after he intercepted a pass and went coast-to-coast for the score. Caroussos fed attackman Kyle Zawadzki for BOYS’ LAX: SUFFOLK CLASS A FIRST ROUND 1 2 3 4 final No. 7 Bay Shore 2 2 1 0 5 No. 6 SMITHTOWN WEST 2 1 1 2 6 (Continued on page 23) TOUGH IT OUT: Smithtown West midfielder Jerrod Wilkom (above, #29) ducks under the check of a pair of Bay Shore defenders during the Bulls’ 6-5, first-round home playoff victory, Friday, May 15. -Tony Zawadzki photo
  4. 4. Page 28 ~ The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 Awet&wildwin Sports Awet&wildwin Tulley’s single, steady pitching down stretch helps S’town West overcome two-hour delay, three-run deficit against defending champion By ANTHONY LIFRIERI Everything seemed to be going against the Smithtown West baseball team in its Class AA first-round playoff game with West Islip. The No. 9 seed Bulls had made an uncharacteristic error and fell into a three-run deficit to the defending Suffolk County champion Lions in a (Continued on page 25) game that had already been delayed by two hours due to water runoff from one side of the infield to the other. But through it all, the West bats woke up at the right time while senior pitchers Rob Tammaro and Brandon LaManna held the Lions hitless over the final four innings as West rallied for a 5-4 home win Saturday, May 16. “These one-run games always come down to a walk, a base-hit, a passed ball or a stolen base,” Smithtown West coach Al Nucci said. “I’m always on eggshells, but the kids are so much better at it than me. They’re the ones with ice-water in their veins, and they showed it today.” TheBulls’resolvewasapparent in the bottom of the fifth. With two out and runners on second and third, senior designated hitter Vin Tulley hit a line drive just over the glove of the leaping West Islip third baseman, allowing both junior shortstop Nick Grande and Tammaro to score and turning a 4-3 hole into a 5-4 lead that stood up as the Bulls’ pitching bore down. “I knew I had two strikes on me, so I focused on staying calm,” Tulley said. “He threw a curveball that hung, and I pulled it to the left-field line. In a spot like that, you can’t be nervous—just play it like any other at-bat.” Tammaro, with Grande on first and senior centerfielder Nick Attardi on second, belted a single to left field that scored Attardi to cut the deficit to 4-3. He then BASEBALL: SUFFOLK CLASS AA FIRST ROUND R H E No. 14 West Islip 130 000 0 4 5 1 No. 9 SMITHTOWN WEST 101 030 X 5 5 1 UP THE MIDDLE: Smithtown West junior second baseman Joe Ianuzzi (above, #15) tags a runner and junior shortstop Nick Grande (#2) makes a catch (right) and swings at a pitch (left) during the Bulls’ 5-4 home playoff victory over West Islip, Saturday, May 16. -Richard Valeo photos
  5. 5. The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 ~ Page 27 Sports By ANTHONY LIFRIERI Fourthatgotaway Unearned runs eliminate Kings Park It was a game the sixth-seeded Kings Park softball team should have won. No. 11 Longwood scored its first four runs on errors, negating a late rally in the seventh as the host Lady Kingsmen fell, 6-3, in the first round of the Suffolk County Class AA playoffs, Monday, May 18. Longwood hosted No. 14 seed Walt Whitman, Wednesday, May 20, but results were not available at press time. “There’s not much to say but four errors—those are big mistakes,” Kings Park coach Kim McGinley said. “We tried to rally back like we’ve done all season, but you can’t make four errors in a major playoff game.” An error by sophomore pitcher Cassandra Cancemi in the first inning led to a run scored by Longwood shortstop Leah Mele and a pair of errors by junior third baseman Taryn McGinley led to runs scored by Longwood rightfielder Alex Reggiani and third baseman Alex Toro in the second and sixth innings, respectively. Reggiani added another run in the sixth when she scored on a passed ball before leftfielder Gabby Vickemoni and Mele scored on a two-out bloop single to right by centerfielder Jenna Beekman to bust open the game and give the Lions a 6-1 lead later in the inning. Longwood nearly scored more when a throwingerrorbyKingsParkjuniorfirst baseman Gianna Cancemi off a bunt by Reggiani put runners on second and third with no out, but Cassandra Cancemi struck out three of the next four batters, including a bases-loaded, full-count strikeout to end the inning and escape without further damage. But while the Kingsmen overall had problems with the leather, they still had theirmoments. One came in the top of the fifth with a runner on first. Longwood catcher Madison Rappold hit a scorcher toward Kings Park senior second baseman Cheyenne Giarraputo, but Giarraputo dropped to her knees, caught the ball cleanly and quick-flicked to first to turn a double-play. Although Cassandra Cancemi allowed the team’s first four runs, they were all unearned, as the errors and a passed ball in the sixth gave the Lions their fourth run. The unearned SOFTBALL: SUFFOLK ‘AA’ FIRST ROUND R H E No. 11 Longwood 110 004 0 6 6 2 No. 6 KINGS PARK 010 000 2 3 7 4 runs marred a solid performance by Cancemi, who allowed five hits and three walks with nine strikeouts over 5 1/3 innings. Despite the errors and unearned runs, the Kingsmen still showed a fight, especially in the bottom of the seventh. Down to their last out, the Kingsmen rallied for a pair of runs off a double from junior centerfielder Kristen Plant that scored senior shortstop Carly Califano and a single by Taryn McGinley that brought home Plant. Kings Park’s other run was scored in the bottom of the second, when a single down the first- base line by Gianna Cancemi scored senior catcher Arianna Ambrosio. Although Kings Park’s season ended far earlier than its coach had hoped, McGinley was still happy with its 12-6 record. “It was a good season,” she said. “We had to battle for everything. Nothing came easy in a very competitive League (III]. We always played hard to the end and never gave up. We may be losing a lot of good people, but we have a good nucleus returning.” SPIN IT: Kings Park sophomore pitcher Cassandra Cancemi (#4) delivers a pitch and junior third baseman Taryn McGinley (above, #12) reaches for a throw during the Lady Kingsmen’s 6-3 home playoff loss to Longwood, Monday, May 18. -Richard Valeo photos
  6. 6. Page 26 ~ The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 (Continued on page 25) Sports Takegoodwithbadminton Smithtown East girls win first-ever county crown; boys place second By ANTHONY LIFRIERI What a year it’s been for Smithtown East badminton. The girls’ team won its first county championship, edging Commack 5-4, while the boys’ team advanced to the county final before losing to champion Half Hollow Hills East, 8-1, at Suffolk Community College in Selden, Thursday, May 14. For the girls’ team (13-3), it was all about fulfilling a vow this year’s graduating seniors made three years ago. “We had no league or county championships, so the girls made a goal of becoming champions by the end of their senior year,” Smithtown East coach John Hart said. “They’ve been focused on that goal ever since. Every practice was about how to become a champion. We didn’t become champions on Thursday night—we became champions practicing in the gymnasium every day as hard as we could. They just fulfilled it with that 5-4 victory over Commack.” Right in the middle of the girls’ run to the title was senior Brooke Mraz, who won the clinching matches in the Bulls’ 5-4 semifinal win over No. 2 seed Walt Whitman and No. 3 seed Commack. “It’s unbelievable to be county champions because this is the first time Smithtown East varsity badminton has ever done it,” Mraz said. “It was also my senior year, so it’s a great way to go out with a bang and make history.” In the semifinal against Whitman, Mraz dropped the first game, 11-13, but rallied to win the next two 11-9 and 11-7 to send the Bulls to the final. “It was crazy and stressful,” Mraz said of the semifinal win. “To lose the first, win the second, and finally win the third was highly emotional for me. I ended up crying when I was coming off the court because I knew we were going to counties.” In the championship match, Mraz rolled to victory, winning in two games, 11-2 and 11-7, to also clinch the team title. “I was a little more confident going into Commack because we all matched up with them better and had success in the past,” Mraz said. “I was actually surprised I was the one who ended up clinching it, but it was still an incredible feeling to know I was the one to do it.” But Mraz was not alone in leading the Bulls to a county championship. Junior Tara Korkus went 13-3 during the regular season at first singles, then picked up victories over Whitman and Commack’s top singles players in the team tournament. “We went into the tournament with one of our strongest teams and our strongest goal,” Korkus said. “We’d never made it this far before and we were so close. I was a little nervous but I was still able to do well and we ended up finishing well.” Korkus also had success in the individual tournament a week prior, where she emerged as the county champion. “That wasn’t even in the picture for me,” Korkus said. “Last year I took fourth, so I just wanted to do a little better. Going into it I was confident I could win, but I didn’t expect it. I was really surprised.” Part of what propelled Korkus to the title was the support she received in the individual tournament. “Everyone from both teams came to watch and that gave me confidence” Korkus said. “Other teams may have had three or four people, so I didn’t think everyone would come. So when all the girls, and even the boys, were there and cheering the whole time, it really helped.” That show of unity was nothing new to the girls’ and boys’ teams. In fact, Hart cited the support the boys’ and girls’ teams gave each other as a source of their successes this season. “Team unity was absolutely pertinent,” Hart said. “Both teams were very united and supportive of each other. In badminton, you go out as individuals but you win as a team. If the team is not behind you, the court becomes very lonely. We were united in every single match. When kids come off the court and support each other in close matches, that’s a definite team effort that can make a very big difference.” Also helping the girls’ team to victory was second singles player Julianna Thompson, whom Hart called a good leader, and the second doubles duo of Brianna Saladino and Geraldine Hughes, which Hart called the team’s engine. “They don’t have the strongest record but they’re two of the strongest players in terms of rallying the team,” said Hart of Saladino and Hughes. “They’re at the center of everything in terms of unity and supporting everyone. They’re the heartbeat of the team and two of our captains. Our captains may not always be the best players but they are always the best leaders.” A 7-2 victory over perennial power Half Hollow Hills East to open its season helped boost the Bulls’ confidence right away. “After we beat them, we were on the busride home and said, ‘Wow, this could be it,’” Hart said. “They hadn’t lost in 74 matches over three or four years, so it was telling. We thought they had a good program, but we showed a chink in their armor.” The Smithtown East boys’ team was almost as dominant. It went 14-2 in the regular season before reaching the county final, where it lost to a strong Half Hollow Hills team. “They were very consistent this season,” Hart said of the boys. “We had a rough start because the first team we played was [eventual champion] Half Hollow Hills and we lost [8-1],” Hart said. “But… we all knew we could do better and we went through the rest of the competition playing well. We didn’t blow a lot of people out because the competition was fierce, TOP OF THE HEAP: The Smithtown East girls’ badminton team celebrates its first county title after defeating Commack, 5-4, in the Suffolk championship match at Suffolk Community College in Selden, Thursday, May 14. The team was led by junior first singles player Tara Korkus (right), who also won the individual county championship.
  7. 7. The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 ~ Page 25 Sports but we stayed consistent and played fantastically.” Leading the way on the court for the boys’ team was Alex Gugliata at first singles, and Will Haff, who knocked Gugliata out of the individual tournament in the second round. “That shows the depth of our entire lineup,” Hart said. “Will is also the only person to beat a Half Hollow Hills player in the finals.” Leading the team off the court was the second doubles pairing of Matt Lyons and Robert Schepis. Hart cited Lyons’ cool demeanor as the rock that steadied the team in times of crisis. “Miller Place nicknamed him ‘Cool Blonde Guy,’” Hart said. “He’s a very charismatic team leader who always gets the team to work its best. He does it with great sportsmanship and etiquette, and, whether he’s winning or losing, he does it with style. That’s what Miller Place must have seen in him.” Another key to East’s success was the versatility of Andrew Edsell, who served as the team’s utility man. Whenever there was an absence, sickness or illness by a singles or doubles player, (Continued from page 26) Eastbadmintonteams enjoyexcellentseason Edsell was the first person Hart called upon. “He was always ready to play when whenever we needed him,” Hart said. “You need to have that kind of depth because you’re always going to have absences. If you don’t have a strong kid like that to fill in, you may drop a match. He always stepped up when we needed him and worked hard in practice. He was just an awesome kid.” Coming off perhaps the most successful season in the history of Smithtown East badminton, Hart has high hopes for the future. “Things always change but if the bulk of the kids come back, we’re going to have a strong year,” Hart said of 2016. “The boys’ program is always there. We’ve made the finals four times since 2009, which is fantastic for any program. “The girls have been fantastic and we hope to keep in the top four. We’re graduating a lot of girls but we have a lot of girls that have not seen the court that are good practice and exhibition players. I think they should transition into solid starting players next year, and will work hard every single day in practice.” Westdiamondmenrally stole second base to put the second runner in scoring position for Tulley’s two-run single. “I was looking for a fastball middle-in that I could drive because I knew he wasn’tgoingtothrowacurve,”Tammaro said. “That’s what he threw me, and I was able to put a good swing on it.” Prior to the game, the field was water- logged and unplayable. Although most of the field was dry by game-time at 2 p.m., prior to that there was a pool of water down the third-base line, while the whole left side of the infield was wet. Eventually, dirt and quick-dry was dumped on the spots and the field became dry enough to play two hours later. “The infield was so saturated this morning; we were able to work on the dirt, but there was nothing we could do about the grass,” Nucci said. “All the water ran to the baseline, and I guess as it was drying underground, it pooled up in that spot. Still, it was good to be able to play and I appreciate West Islip being so patient.” The rally in the fifth helped erase a hole dug by the Bulls in the top of the second, when the Lions scored three runs on a fielding error by LaManna while fielding a bunt, which preceded a two-run double by West Islip junior infielder Louis Antos and a sacrifice fly by senior outfielder Alex Barbera. From there, Tammaro completely shut down the Lions’ offense, allowing just two more hits in the top of the third before retiring the final eight batters he faced. Tammaro was cruising, but had to swap places with LaManna after injuring his thumb. Tammaro allowed five hits and three earned runs in 5 2/3 innings with two strikeouts and two walks. LaManna finished the job with a four-out save, allowing just one walk against four batters. “I knew we got off to a bad start, but with the guys behind me, I knew there was no way this game would end 4-1,” Tammaro said. “I knew if I could locate my pitches, we’d battle back.” The choice of starting Tammaro on the mound over LaManna, his top starter, was a hunch by Nucci, who wanted to save LaManna for the Bulls’ second-round match-up at No. 8 seed Patchogue-Medford. “We figured if we went with Rob today, we could use Brandon for an inning or two, then use him for the Patchogue game,” Nucci said. “We rolled the dice not throwing Brandon, but that’s because we felt so confident with Rob. We also thought Brandon matched up better with a bigger, stronger hitting team like Pat- Med.” The move paid off, as the Bulls beat Patchogue-Medford, 7-2, Monday, May 18. The Bulls/Raiders advance to a one-game elimination quarterfinal (see column, page 29) to play at second- seeded Ward Melville, Thursday, May 21 at 4 p.m. The winner of that game will play in the county semifinals against either No. 6 seed East Islip or No. 3 seed Hauppauge in a three-game series beginning Saturday, May 23 at 4 p.m. on the road. (Continued from page 28) D E U C E : S m i t h t o w n West senior pitchers Rob Tammaro (left) and Brandon LaManna helped pitch the Bulls’ to a 6-5 playoff win over West Islip, Saturday, May 16. Tammaro and LaManna no-hit the defending county champion Lions over the final four innings, giving the Bulls’ bats a chance to get back into the game. -Richard Valeo photo
  8. 8. Page 24 ~ The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 Sports (Continued from page 31) WildWestwininpostseasonBattleoftheBulls stay with anybody.” Witteck’s first goal in the run put West ahead for the first time. She worked around a defender then put the ball into the cage to give her team a 10-9 lead with 5:33 left in regulation. “We’ve been practicing that play all year,” Witteck said. “We have a lot of different options, but I knew I had to go one-on-one if we were going to get ahead. I had to have faith in myself to get it done.” West’s win seemed unlikely late in the firsthalf,whenEastbuilta6-3leadwith about four minutes left until halftime. East’s early success stemmed from threegoalsfromseniormidfielderAnnie Collins, and scores from sophomore midfielder Katie Schmal (19:36), junior midfielder Jackie Cuccurullo (10:19) and sophomore midfielder Shannon Kavanagh. However, West answered back with a free-position goal from Witteck (3:04 left), a goal on an overhand-shot by junior midfielder Natalia Lynch (2:15) and a goal by junior midfielder Mackenzie Heldberg (1:21) to tie the score at 6 before intermission. “It was all about the draws,” Witteck said. “Winning the draws got us back into the game. It allowed us to tie it at the half and give us momentum over the rest of the game.” Spearheading Smithtown West’s effort on draw control was Heldberg, who slowly took control of the game as it wore on by working with her teammates. This gave West a 15-7 advantage in possession against another of the county’s best draw controllers in Kavanagh. “I knew she was strong so I let her win a little bit so I could get it to the defenders,” Heldberg said. “I had faith they were going to get it. It was tough, but we did it together.” The first 20 minutes of the second half was a dogfight, with ties at 7-7, 8-8 and 9-9 before Witteck took control of the game. Kavanagh and Cuccurullo logged a goal and an assist in the run, and sophomore attacker Julia Smith’s goal with 9:34 remaining gave East its last lead at 9-8. Lynch (15:16 left), freshman attacker Grace Langella (11:54) and senior attacker Kaitlin Unser (8:51) helped keep West in the game despite the stellar play of Smithtown East senior goaltender Ashley Stoessel, who logged 10 saves in her final game as a high-schooler. “It was a good, tough game, but this was disappointing,” Smithtown East coach Ann Naughton said. “We had opportunities, but we lost momentum on the draw and they answered back. I’m proud of where we got [12-5 record], but we wanted to go further this year. Still, we made it further than we did last year, and we hope we can keep the trend going and make it a little further again next year.” ON THE RUN: Smithtown West senior defender Katie Aldrich (above, #6) clears the ball in transition with Smithtown East sophomore midfielder Kate Schmal (above, #23) in pursuit in West’s 12-9 playoff win over East. -Anthony Lifrieri photo
  9. 9. The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 ~ Page 23 Sports the Bulls’ first goal :08 into the second quarter, but Bay Shore answered back with a goal on a high-velocity shot from midfielder Phil Glynn, giving the Marauders a 3-1 lead with 7:02 remaining in the second quarter. Two goals from midfielder Dan Riley (with 6:32 and 1:14 left) helped the Bulls pull to within 4-3 heading into halftime. The only scores in the third quarter came from Caddigan off an assist from attackman Matt Miller with 9:09 left in the period, and a Bay Shore quick- stick from midfielder Ted Nagengast to Nicole Brieva, a Biology/ Sociology major from Kings Park, was a member of the 2015 SUNY Oneonta softball team. The team finished with a 25-14 record overall. The Red Dragons were 12-6 in the SUNYAC and qualified for the conference tournament. Brieva made 19 appearances this season. She recorded two hits, both doubles, for two RBIs. She crossed the plate six times. In the field, she recorded three putouts. * * * Kaitlyn Norton, an Early Childhood Education major from Kings Park, was a member of the 2015 SUNY Oneonta women’s lacrosse team. The team finished 7-11 overall this season. The Red Dragons finished 4-4 in the SUNYAC and qualified for the conference tournament. Norton played in nine games this season, starting four. She collected eight ground balls and caused one turnover. * * * V e r o n i c a P e c k , o f Hauppauge, was named to the Empire 8 Conference all-star team for women’s basketball. Peck started all 25 games at point guard this season and contributed 9.4 points and a conference-best 3.5 assists per game. She also led the Golden Flyers with 50 three- point baskets and was among the conference leaders in three-point accuracy at 38.5% (50-for-130). Sports briefs Also leading the charge against Bay Shore was midfielder Dan Varello, who dominated the face- off ‘X,’ winning 13 of 15. “I knew they had a lot of athletes, and three different Fo/Gos [face-off/get-off players],” Varello said. “I tried to stay away from them, because big, athletic kids can strip and take the ball away. I pushed the ball to my wings the whole time, which is all I really needed to do. I also was prepared really well for this game by Brandon Meir, who gave me great reps all week in practice.” Thomas Glynn with 7:56 left. Although the Bulls were trailing into the fourth, they didn’t panic. Some of them even found it enjoyable. “It was fun because we’re kind of used to it,” said Caddigan, who finished with two goals and an assist. “Last year, we didn’t have many close games, so this year we needed guys to step up that didn’t have a lot of experience. That showed today when you have guys like Wilkom, Caroussos and myself playinghard.Everyonestepped up today when we needed it.” Westlaxmenpullitout FIRM GRIP: Smithtown West midfielder Dan Riley (above, #2) cradles left to avoid a defender during the Bulls’ 6-5 home win against Bay Shore , Friday, May 15. -Tony Zawadzki photo (Continued from page 29)
  10. 10. Page 22 ~ The Smithtown News ~ May 21, 2015 Sports (Continued from page 30) EastbouncesWestI.forthirdpostseason East has been so dominant against West Islip that some might say it can hardly be considered a rivalry anymore. In their past six head-to- head meetings including last year’s county final—all East victories—the Bulls have outscored West Islip, 84-33. “I think we learned a lot from the seniors on the first [Smithtown East] team that beat [West Islip] in 2013,” said senior John Daniggelis, a member of the team for all six victories. “They showed us to play the game rather than the shirt [of the other team]. The hardest part is going out there and playing with a clear mind—not[beworriedabout]thebig,bad West Islip. Just play the game and the right things will happen.” East’s latest win against West Islip sets up a Suffolk semifinal showdown against crosstown rival Smithtown West—which -A. LIFRIERI In the same game Smithtown East boys lacrosse coach Jason Lambert picked up his 100th career victory (see story below), senior attackman Brian Willetts tallied his 300th career point, becoming only one of two players in school history (2007 graduate Matt Hull was the other) to reach the milestone. Willetts logged nine points (five goals, four assists) during the Bulls’ 22-4 win over visiting Commack in the first round of the Suffolk County Class A playoffs, Friday, May 16. “It’s an honor to reach such a milestone, but I owe a lot of it to my teammates,” Willetts said. “There’s a lot of guys that set me up, so this is their accomplishment as much as it is mine. I advanced with wins over Bay Shore and Connetquot (see story, page 29)—at 4 p.m. Friday, May 22 at Smithtown East. “This is going to be great for the Smithtown community,” Lambert said. “This is a great opportunity for both teams on Friday. Anytime we play, it’s a great event between two very, very good teams.” Against West Islip, Smithtown East actually found itself in a 2-0 hole after a pair of scores from junior Michael Lombardi, the second of which forced Lambert to call a time-out with 6:34 remaining in the opening period. “We came out slow off the ground balls and their face-off kid did a good job,” Lambert said. “They were being more aggressive than us, so we called the time-out to take a deep breath.” In the huddle, Lambert stressed getting to ground balls, which the Lions were winning the majority of to that point, and the team responded, winning most of the loose balls the rest of the way. Combined with junior midfielder Gerard Arceri winning 16 of 22 face-offs, the Bulls dominated the pace from there. Smithtown East junior attackman Dan Rooney scored the next two goals to tie the score, then Daniggelis netted the first of his three goals, beating a defender and ripping a sidearm-shot to the top-right corner of the cage to give his team a 3-2 lead with seven seconds left in the opening period. Early in the second period, East took control of the game, scoring four goals in a 53-second span. The run started after senior goaltender Sean Turner made one of his seven saves and made a long clearing pass to senior defenseman James Sarrocco, who sprinted past West Islip defenders and used an underhand shot to score in traffic with 10:44 left in the first half. Rooney scored six seconds later on a fast break before Willetts bounced through an attempted check and ripped a shot just under the crossbar with 10:02 left in the half to make it 6-2. Although the Lions took a time-out in an attempt to quell East’s momentum, it didn’t work. Arceri won the ensuing face-off, then started a fast break that concluded with sophomore attackman Sean Barry scoring a point-blank goal off a Rooney assist with 9:51 left in the half. Barry’s goal finished the four-goal flurry and gave East a 7-2 lead. “We always say our chemistry is insane,” Rooney said of the run. “We all know where each other are and what we’ll do next, so it’s easy to get bang- bang-bang goals like that.” There was little West Islip could do from there, as East outscored the Lions 10-3 over the remaining two-plus quarters. Rooney continued to feast on the Lions en route to a game-high seven points (five goals, two assists) while Willetts had two goals and two assists, sophomore midfielder Connor DeSimone two goals and an assist, freshman midfielder Matt Russo a pair of assists, and Arceri and Barry a goal and an assist apiece. Willettssurpasses300points,eyesschoolrecord think it speaks a lot to the talent around me and the faith everyone has in me to keeptheballinmystickanddomything. I love and embrace that role because I love to get after it and compete.” After tallying two goals and two assists in a 17-5 drubbing of West Islip (see story, page 30) Tuesday, May 19, Willetts sits just four points behind Hull’s school record of 310. Willetts could break the record in his next game, a Suffolk Class A semifinal showdown against crosstown rival Smithtown West at 4 p.m. Friday, May 22. If Willetts breaks the record, he would surpass a player he has considered his hero. In fact, if not for Hull’s inspiration, Hull’s record might not be threatened. “It would be a real honor to break the record considering it’s Matt Hull,” he said. “He’s the reason I wear No. 40. I remember coming to the field at 6 years old and watching him tear it up. He was a role model I looked up to, and he’s part of the reason I ended up picking lacrosse over baseball.” This season, Willetts arguably is the best player on Long Island. He currently leads Suffolk with 100 points on 65 goals and 35 assists, edging out his teammate, junior attackman Dan Rooney, who has 97 points (65 goals, 32 assists). Willetts and Rooney also are tied for most goals on Long Island and sit behind only Herricks’ Sal Cipriano (128 points on 43 goals and 85 assists) for points.Brian Willetts 100thgrandforLambert Everything seems to be going Jason Lambert’s way. Lambert’s Smithtown East boys’ lacrosse team is in the midst of its best season under his watch. The Bulls eliminated West Islip from the playoffs for the third consecutive year on May 20 (see story, page 30), and five days earlier Lambert recorded his 100th career victory in East’s 22-4, first- round playoff victory over Commack. But while many would boast of a major coaching accomplishment, Lambert instead credited his team. “It’s a testament to the great players we have,” he said. “This is my eighth season here, and I’m very fortunate enough to have had some exceptional talent. It speaks to the program we’ve built here. I remember when we started here in [the spring of] 2006, when the schools split, and we had no seniors— we were in Class B that year. As the program has grown, our players and youth program got better, and now we have depth we’ve never had in the past.” Lambert got his start in Smithtown as an assistant to longtime coach Kevin Huff in 2002, and the then-Smithtown Central squad found near-instant success, winning the school district’s first-ever county championship in boys lacrosse in 2003. That same team was inducted into the Smithtown Booster Club’s Athletic Hall of Fame last weekend. Lambert continued as an assistant under Huff when the schools split in the fall of 2005, and he grabbed the head coaching reins of the team in 2008. Since then it’s been an uphill climb to the top, culminating with East’s first- ever Suffolk title last spring. Smithtown East senior co-captain John Daniggelis, a team member for 57 of Lambert’s 101 head coaching wins, was happy for Lambert. “It’s a great honor to be a part of this,” Daniggelis said. “Ever since he pulled me up [to the varsity level] the summer heading into high school and my first varsity season, we’ve had a great relationship. There is no coach like him. He’s well respected and is a player’s coach. We’re very lucky to have him here, and we never want to lose him. The way he sets up players on and off the field, no one compares to him.” COACH ‘EM UP: Smithtown East coach Jason Lambert (above, right) discusses strategy with his players, including senior captain John Daniggelis (above, left) during the Bulls’ 17-5 victory over West Islip, Tuesday, May 19. -Anthony Lifrieri photo

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