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Enterprise 11 3-13

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Enterprise 11 3-13

  1. 1. SPORTS ENTERPRISENEWS.COM EXTRA POINTS WEB EXTRA .................... I Keep track of te Bruins with Mike Loftus’ “Blog of Ice.’’ Enterprisenews.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 15 P AT R I O T S By Glen Farley McCourty F turns the corner ENTERPRISE STAFF WRITER Defensive back makes nice transition from CB to safety HISTORY LESSON On this date in 1941... I Joe DiMaggio wins the American League Most Valuable Player award for the second time in his career. The Yankee Clipper, who compiled a 56-game hitting streak in 1941, edges the Red Sox’ Ted Williams, who hit .406 that season. OXBORO – With the sudden impact he made on the NFL – seven interceptions, second most in franchise history by a Patriots rookie to Pro Football Hall of Famer Mike Haynes’ eight in 1976 – Devin McCourty earned a Pro Bowl berth at cornerback. Three years later, McCourty may be in the process of enjoying a “re-berth” at the safety position. “He’s a very good player,” safeties coach Brian Flores said. “(He’s) versatile, smart, can make adjustments on the fly, in-game adjustments, and prepares well, practices hard and does all the right things. “He’s a great player. I’m very MCCOURTY/PAGE 18 HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER ‘HEARTBREAKING’ POP QUIZ I In 1949, Ted Williams, above, reached base in 84 consecutive games, a major league record. Who holds the Red Sox record for consecutive games with a hit? Answer on Page 16 TAKE OUR POLL I Did the Miami Dolphins do the right thing in suspending Richie Incognito over the Jonathan Martin controversy? To cast your vote, go to Enterprisenews.com and click on sports. Absolutely No way EMILY J. REYNOLDS PHOTOS/THE ENTERPRISE I Ursuline players, left, celebrate as East Bridgewater High players console one another after the top-seeded Vikings lost on penalty kicks to the seventh-seeded Bears in the Div. 4 South final Sunday at Taunton High School. No. 1 seed E. Bridgewater dominates but falls short By Ken Lechtanski ENTERPRISE CORRESPONDENT TAKE OUR POLL I We asked readers on our website, Enterprisenews.com: Despite the rash of injuries, do you think the Patriots can make it to the Super Bowl? Sure, they can do it .... 45% No, too many injuries . 55% TAUNTON – As her players solemnly packed their travel bags for their final bus ride back home on Sunday, East Bridgewater High girls soccer coach Pam Ross paused to reflect on having been down the same dead-end road before. “I sort of feel like something’s torn out of me right now – mostly for these girls,” Ross said. “I thought this would be it. I thought this is the team.” Instead, Ross and the Vikings fell short of their South Sectional expectations for the third time in four years as the top seed. After outshooting seventh-seeded Ursuline, 23-5, through 100 minutes of scoreless regulation play and two overtimes at Taunton High’s Aleixo Stadium, East Bridgewater watched the Bears steal SOCCER/PAGE 17 I East Bridgewater High goalie Brooke Troup dives for the ball Sunday.
  2. 2. S PORTS Find more at www.enterprisenews.com The Enterprise, MONDAY, Nov. 11, 2013 17 COLLEGE SOCCER Twice as nice Bridgewater State soccer teams win MASCAC tourney championships Sunday was a special day for the Bridgewater State University men’s and women’s soccer teams. Just an hour apart during the afternoon, the two teams won Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference tournament championships. They are headed to the NCAA Div. 3 tourney this week. The third-seeded women earned their first MASCAC tourney title since 2003 with a 3-1 victory over fourth-seeded Worcester State University at Swenson Field. The Bears will be making their third appearance in the NCAAs, qualifying in 2002 and 2003. An hour after the women became champions, the third-seeded men scored a late goal to slip past top-seeded Worcester State, 1-0, for their first MASCAC tourney crown and NCAA tourney bid since 2007. The Bears also reached the NCAA tourney in 1990 and 2004. This marks the first time ever that the men’s and women’s teams will be in the NCAAs in the same year. The tourney pairings will be announced today, and the two BSU teams are expected to be on the road. WOMEN’S SOCCER I Bridgewater State 3, Worcester State 1: Sophomore Mackenzie Hatfield of Whitman was selected the tournament most valuable player after helping the Bears win the title. BSU took a 1-0 lead late in the first half on a goal by Caley McClendon, assisted by Hatfield. Less than four minutes into the second half, Erica Jonasson notched her 16th goal for a 2-0 lead, Olivia Planty assisting. Hatfield, who had two goals and two assists in the tourney, extended the advantage to 3-0, scoring her ninth goal on an assist by Katie Nasuti. The Lancers (11-7-2) spoiled the shutout bid of BSU goalkeeper Kerry Condon of Whitman (two saves) with less than seven minutes to play. The Bears had been to the MASCAC finals four times since winning their last title in ’03. MEN’S SOCCER I Bridgewater State 1, Worcester State 0: Conor Murtagh broke a scoreless tie at 84:30 with Steve McAvoy assisting to give the Bears the championship. Murtagh, a sophomore, also scored the only goal in Friday’s semifinalround win at Framingham State. He was selected the tournament most valuable player. Goalkeeper Matt Bagley made two saves for the Bears’ fourth shutout in the past five games. BSU has given up just one goal in that span and did not allow a goal in the tournament. Worcester State (11-4-4), which had played the Bears to a tie during the regular season, was 6-0-1 in the MASCAC. COLLEGES HIGH SCHOOLS Dramatic rally puts Silver Lake in state semifinal Stonehill harriers earn titles The Stonehill College women’s and men’s cross country teams swept NCAA Div. 2 East Regional championships on Sunday afternoon in Boston. The women, ranked 22nd in the nation, won their fifth consecutive regional title and 12th overall. The Skyhawks will take part in the national championship meet for a 14th year in a row. The men, also ranked 22nd in the country, won their first regional championship since 2007 and third overall. They are headed to the nationals for the 11th consecutive year. The two teams will travel to Spokane, Wash., for the NCAAs next week. The Stonehill women topped a 26team field at Franklin Park with 57 points, ahead of second-place Bentley University with 105 points. The Northeast-10 Conference champions were led by senior captain Chelsea Bishop, who was fourth in 22:23.2. Classmate and fellow captain Emily Regan of Hanson had her third top 10 finish of the season, winding up sixth in 22:45.8. Freshman Nicole Borofski of Plymouth was 11th, senior Elizabeth LaRegina took 14th place and junior Brittany Venturo of Taunton was 22nd. Those five runners earned all-region honors. In the men’s race, Stonehill sophomore Robert Massey was eighth with senior Stephen Leonard finishing ninth. Junior captain Bryan Wilcox was 11th while Daniel Zawalich became the fourth Skyhawk runner to earn all-region honors, placing 23rd. Stonehill, which won the NE-10 title earlier this month, had 78 points to finish ahead of Franklin Pierce with 97. EMILY J. REYNOLDS/THE ENTERPRISE I East Bridgewater High’s Brittany Richardson and Ursuline’s Courtney Sepe battle for the ball during the Div. 4 South final Sunday at Taunton High School. E. Bridgewater girls lose on penalty kicks SOCCER/FROM PAGE 15 FIELD HOCKEY I LIU Post 2, Stonehill 1: The Skyhawks (18-3) were edged in the Northeast-10 Conference championship game in Brookville, N.Y. Erika Kelly scored her 37th goal for Stonehill at 63:39 after third-ranked LIU Post (20-0) had opened a 2-0 lead on goals at 4:32 and 54:06. Elizabeth Genovese made seven saves for the fifth-ranked Skyhawks. Stonehill’s Chelsea Emery and Emily Sideris were chosen to the all-tournament team The Skyhawks are likely to receive a bid to the NCAA Div. 2 tourney when the pairings are announced this afternoon. MEN’S BASKETBALL I Stonehill 78, Queens 65: The Skyhawks are 2-0 after winning both games at the Stonehill Tip-Off Classic. Josh Heyliger led the way with 20 points while Ryan Logan added 18 points and five rebounds and Carter Smith chipped in with 17 points and six assists. WOMEN’S BASKETBALL I Nova Southeastern 96, Stonehill 77: In a matchup of teams ranked in the top 10 nationally, the Skyhawks (1-1) lost to the host Sharks in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Amy Pelletier (20) and Mary Louise Dixon (15) led seventh-ranked Stonehill against fourth-ranked Nova Southeastern, which hosted a two-day tournament. I Bentley 75, Caldwell 58: All-America forward Lauren Battista of Easton had 23 points, including 11 straight late in the second half for the top-ranked Falcons. away with the Div. 4 South crown in a 1-0 win decided by penalty kicks, 4-3. “It’s heartbreaking,” Ross said. “PK is never a way to go out. We dominated the game, but we just couldn’t get our shot off. I guess that’s a credit to their defense, but we won all the first-balls, we won all the second-balls and dominated play. At the end though, you ultimately have to have a goal on the scoreboard.” Unfortunately for the Vikings (17-3-2), they were shut out by Ursuline goalkeeper Niamh Hynes to force the contest into penalty kicks, where the Bears (13-5-4) came away with their third straight tourney win via PKs to reach the Div. 4 EMass. final, where they will face North champ Austin Prep on Tuesday in Quincy. “East Bridgewater is very tough, but we’re excited to be moving on,” Ursuline head coach John Forte said. “The chemistry of this team is unbelievable. We have a lot of skilled players and they just really play well together as a team.” But it all came down to Hynes on Sunday. The junior was sensational, repeatedly denying the Vikings, who put 11 shots on goal in each half. “A lot of our shots were from the outside, but she made some really, really good saves,” Ross said. After neither team could produce a shot in the second scoreless overtime, the Vikings began the penaltykicks session with freshman and team-leading scorer Mackenzie Vlachos putting the first shot of the day past Hynes along the ground. When Ursuline’s Courtney Sepe followed by banging her shot off the right post, the Vikings took the early lead. East Bridgewater freshman Sarah Lofstrom made it 2-0, but after Ursuline’s Jill Kamphaus beat Vikings goalkeeper Brooke Troup, Rianna Fasanello got too much under her kick and sent it over the net to keep it at 2-1. Katherine Lynch took advantage for Ursuline with a shot into the top right corner to pull the Bears even after three rounds. East Bridgewater’s Katherine Cavanaugh and Ursuline’s Carly Whalen traded goals, with Whalen’s shot deflecting off the gloves of a diving Troup and into the net, to keep things deadlocked. In the final round, Allie Cranshaw’s grounder rolled just inches wide of the left post for the Vikings to put the game on the foot of Ursuline’s Katherine Lynch. The junior midfielder calmly ripped her shot along the ground past Troup, sending the Bears into a raucous celebration as the teary-eyed Vikings stood and watched in stunned disbelief. “I wasn’t thinking penalty kicks,” Ross said. “I think we even picked it up in the overtimes. I had a feeling that something was going to go in, but their goalie and defense stepped it up. Even in PKs, I liked us because, in the last shootout, we did win and our goalkeeper, as crazy as she is, loves PKs.” After not allowing a goal in their first three tourney games, the Vikings’ game plan against Ursuline was to make sure that speedy junior forward Amy Piccolo was marked tightly. Piccolo, the state indoor track champ in both the 300 meters and 600 meters last winter, had one-onone opportunities in each half, but was stopped both times by Troup while being otherwise kept in check by the East Bridgewater defense. “She’s fast and we knew that coming in, but our defense is fast,” Ross said. “They just played their zones like we have played and every time she got the ball, it’s gonna be three-on-one.” The Vikings’ best scoring opportunity in regulation came at 25:18 of the second half when Sarahkate Norton took a crossing ball in the middle from Danielle Griffin and sent a Beckham-esque bending shot from 20 yards out towards the upper left corner that Hynes leaped to turn aside. “It’s heartbreaking to go out, but I’m still very proud of everything we’ve accomplished,” said Ross, adding that she has one more assignment for her team. “We’re definitely going to celebrate the good year that we had. We deserve to celebrate that.” TAUNTON – The Silver Lake boys soccer team was in a world of hurt in Sunday’s Division 1 South Sectional final against Needham, trailing 1-0 with less than two minutes to play. The Lakers had been frustrated all night by missed opportunities at the offensive end, and by a handful of calls that didn’t go their way. To make matters worse, a would-be tying goal had been disallowed by an offside flag with 5:48 left. Silver Lake needed to be rescued, and just as he’s done all season, Paul Beatty answered the call. Beatty netted the tying goal with just over a minute to play and then added the winner in double-overtime to give Silver Lake a dramatic 2-1 win. The Lakers (21-0-1) advance to Tuesday’s Div. 1 state semifinal against North champion Somerville (20-1-1). That battle of No. 1 seeds will be played at 7:15 p.m. at Taunton High. BOYS SOCCER I Cohasset 3, Sacred Heart 1: The Cohasset High boys soccer team won its first Division 4 South Sectional championship since 1989 Sunday afternoon, with two second-half goals from sophomore Matt Legge (pronounced “leg”) providing the winning margin in a 3-1 victory over Sacred Heart at Taunton High School. The Skippers earned themselves a berth in Tuesday’s state semifinal. Sunday’s first half saw Cohasset dominate the offensive play, forcing Saints goalkeeper Ryan Bigley, an eighth-grader, to make three saves within the first 10 minutes. No. 2 Sacred Heart (16-3-1) was also crafting its own threats, which tended to be equally dangerous, if not as frequent, but the steady Cohasset pressure began to wear down the Saints For Sacred Heart, the school’s second-ever appearance in a sectional final ended the way its first one did, back in 1990 when the Saints lost to Medfield. Adding to the disappointment is the knowledge that the 10 seniors backboned this excellent campaign, and next year will have to be a youth movement. “Cohasset ended up finishing their scoring chances, and we didn’t,” said Saints coach Matt Bruninghaus. “But, with an eighth-grade goalie and a freshman left fullback, I thought our defense played tremendous. For what they had to face, they really held the fort for us.”

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