Oakton High School | Archive | August, 2009

Field Hockey: Bulldog Invitational Tournament

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington, D.C.

**Click the links within each game summary for individual video and photo galleries**

Chantilly 3, Langley 1
Video from Chantilly-Langley       Photos from Chantilly-Langley

After a scoreless — and uneventful — first half, the Chargers erupted for three goals in the first nine minutes following halftime.

Senior forward Betsy Stipa sparked the run with a second-chance goal in the 33rd minute. Hers was followed promptly by scores from sophomore Brooke Daniels in the 38th minute and junior Maddy Vance on a 39th-minute rebound.

Only a redirected shot in the 59th minute by Saxon sophomore Kelsey Rook prevented the shutout.

“During halftime we had sort of an inspirational speech,” said Stipa of the Chantilly’s decisive start to the second half. “Coach [Ralph Chapman] said we need to get fired up. We could all tell that we were all not into it. We just needed to find something to push us into the mood and start playing better — and work as a team.”

Oakton 4, Washington-Lee 1
Video from Oakton-W-L              Photos from Oakton-W-L

With the scorekeeper sneaking behind the match official to count down the final seconds of the first half, the Cougars led the Generals by a goal and had allowed them a pair of chances for an equalizer.

But it only took an awkward bounce from an acute angle to subside Oakton’s fears at intermission.

Senior forward Rachel Doerr threaded a shot through a sea of defenders and into the Washington-Lee cage to double the margin at halftime.

The Cougars carried the momentum over the break, cruising to a 4-1 opening-game win over the Generals.

“It was off a corner and we did it where we hit it to the outside girl, she’d hit it back in and we all just try to get the tip off to score the goal,” Doerr said. “I was kind of shocked. I was looking around like, ‘Was that a goal?’ But it was in the goal.”

Goals by senior Lauren Mathieu in the 42nd minute and senior Rachelle Marquez in the 46th minute (pictured) rounded out the Oakton scoring. A 60th-minute strike by first-team all-region senior Kelsey Clark provided Washington-Lee its only tally.

South County 2, Thomas Jefferson 1
Video from South County-TJ        Photos from South County-TJ

Apparently 39 minutes of scoreless play was enough for Stallion senior forward Megan Wears.

With already a goal to her credit, Wears broke a 1-1 tie in the 50th minute with a well-played strike in the bottom left corner to lift South County over Jefferson, 2-1, early Friday afternoon.

“Each year, it’s a close game. We’re always one goal ahead, it’s always a close match-up head-to-head,” said Wears, the Stallions highest-scoring returner. “We practice passing sequences every day. We’re just executing what we practice.”

The Colonials were kept afloat by stellar play from senior goalkeeper Katie Martinez and an 11th-minute goal by Amber Kuo.

T.C. Williams 3, Edison 2 (OT)
Video from T.C. Williams-Edison      Photos from T.C. Williams-Edison

With a freshman goalie making her first career start, the Titans trailed by one with over 13 minutes remaining before halftime. The Eagles appeared to have the game in control.

T.C. Williams, though, used a goal by junior forward Kelsey Donley in the waning seconds of the first half, dynamic work in the cage by freshman keeper Megan Boyle and a sudden-victory winner by senior forward Katy Mendez to topple Edison in overtime, 3-2, in the penultimate match at Westfield Friday.

“It’s really uplifting, we just really wanted to win,” said Mendez, coming off a 2-0 loss to Jefferson earlier in the morning. “It was just exhilarating. You’re like, ‘I’m trying my hardest.’ And then you go out there and you just put it to the back. Victory.”

But Mendez would have likely never had the opportunity for heroics had it not been for Boyle standing tall throughout the second half.

Replacing the injured starter, senior Sarah Schwartz, Boyle made four second-half saves to keep the game deadlocked through regulation.

“She was definitely nervous, but she played in the earlier game and she really stepped it up,” said Donley, whose equalizer came :34 seconds before the half. “She’s a phenomenal goaltender. I’m excited to see what she’s going to be like when she’s a senior.”

Westfield 4, Hayfield 0
Video from Westfield-Hayfield       Photos from Westfield-Hayfield

The Bulldogs wasted no time securing a chance to defend their tournament title Saturday with their second match Friday.

Westfield senior midfielder Lauren Stuchlak and junior forward Annie Martello each scored in the first four minutes against Hayfield — and each later scored again — in a 4-0 win to cap play on the baseball field Friday.

“It’s always good because it gets our intensity up,” said Martello of the early goals. “[It] gets us motivated to play the game because we had that early lead.”

Stuchlak scored her second goal in the 12th minute to put the Bulldogs ahead, 3-0. Martello closed the scorebook in the 37th minute.

Westfield plays South County in the first semifinal Saturday at 11:30 a.m. West Springfield faces Oakton in the second at 1:30 p.m.

The losers of each of those games meet in the third-place game at 5 p.m. The winners play in the championship at 6:30 p.m.

Other consolation matches begin at Westfield at 10 a.m.

Other Results:
Jefferson 2, T.C. Williams 0
West Springfield 2, Hayfield 1
Westfield 2, Langley 0
West Springfield 2, Chantilly 0
South County 2, Washington-Lee 1
Oakton 1, Edison 0

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Volleyball: Concorde District Preview

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, DigitalSports.com

**Click here for previews from the other three districts in the Northern Region!!**

With its recent record of success, Chantilly has a resume any team would envy.

And with all three of its all-region players returning, the Chargers — who dropped only four games in their first 22 matches last year — are odds-on favorites to repeat as Northern Region champions, and make a strong case as the best team in Virginia.

Coaches around the region agree.

“They didn’t lose much,” one said. “The pressure is on them. They should repeat.”

Added another: “Question is: Can someone stop Chantilly from running the table? It’s going to take a special night.”

The most notable graduation is Jessy Cooper, who played right side. But the Chargers (22-1) return five starters.

Headlining that list is senior outside hitter Samantha Reeves (320 kills), who made first-team all-region and All-Met, first-team all-region senior middle hitter Allison Williams, second-team all-region senior libero Laura Misiewicz, and honorable-mention all-district junior Emily Wright.

Northern Region Coach of the Year Charles Ezigbo could not help but agree that the spotlight is firmly affixed to his team.

“There will be pressure, but the key will be to relieve ourselves of that pressure,” he said. “The most pressure that we face is the pressure that we put on ourselves. We just have to do a good job of managing our own expectations.”

Among the teams with the best opportunity to prevent a Chantilly repeat is a squad that was 0-4 in matches against the defending champions last year, Westfield.

Entering his seventh season, coach Jim Bour led the Bulldogs to the Concorde District, Northern Region and Virginia AAA State finals last season, their first-ever, but Westfield failed to win any titles.

It fell to Chantilly in both the district and regional championships and fell to state champion Albermarle, 3-1, in the AAA title game.

The Bulldogs (22-8) were senior-laden last year, graduating second-team all-district middle back Kelly Murray, second-team all-district setter Kat Lanigan and Northern Region Player of the Year, outside hitter Sammy Spees (Loyola-Marymount).

But Bour, winner of two regional titles, foresaw the high turnover over a year ago and made his roster deeper than ever last year.

“I took my biggest squad ever last year, I took 16 players,” he said. “So the cupboard is not bare. I have seven people that were on that team last year returning to play for me. That’s huge.

“Six of them are seniors and one junior and a good corps of them were starters on that team last year or had a lot to do with playing on that team.”

The projected impact Bulldogs are senior middle hitter Emma Stewart, a dominant, third-year player that moved from outside hitter; junior outside hitter Emily Koehler, an absolute powerhouse; and senior setter Gabie DiVincenzo, a third-year varsity player.

Bour also anticipates significant contribution from senior setter Clare Lanigan, Kat Lanigan’s younger sister.

Much like last season, Westfield will test itself in out-of-district games. On its schedule is 14-time Maryland state champion Centennial, 2006 and ‘07 Virginia state champion Deep Run, Flint Hill, South County, Langley, Yorktown and Stone Bridge.

Another possible source of Chantilly upheaval also resides in the Concorde District, Herndon.

The Hornets were 19-5 last year, going 0-3 against the Chargers. But they were one of just four Northern Region teams to even take a game from the defending champions. Herndon beat South County and Langley on the road in the Northern Region Tournament last season before getting bounced by Chantilly in the semifinals.

The Hornets need to replace second-team all-district libero Emily Jones and honorable-mention setter Mandy Roth. They will switch from a 6-2 offensive set to a 5-1 to compensate for Roth’s graduation.

Herndon has seven returning varsity players, most notably second-team all-district middle back Steph Drahozal, senior outside hitter Kelly Madden and 6-foot-1 senior middle back Hannah Vick.

Coach Pat Smith also anticipates strong contribution junior outside hitter Mia Chernick, a junior varsity player last year.

Centreville has seven seniors on its roster, including outside hitters Celine Alasomuka and Jenny Smith. The Wildcats have reached the district championship match in eight of the last 10 seasons.

Robinson will be led by 6-foot second-team all-region junior outside hitter Susie Murach, who has a 23-inch vertical.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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Field Hockey: Concorde District Preview

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, DigitalSports.com

**Click here to visit previews for the other three districts!!

Westfield reached the Virginia AAA semifinals last season and was runner-up in the Northern Region. The last time the Bulldogs barked that loudly in the playoffs, they struggled to make a wimper the following season. After winning the regional title in 2006, they failed to reach the regional tournament in 2007.

“A couple years ago, that’s something we didn’t do after coming off a successful year,” 10th-year Westfield coach Terri Towle said. “I want to put a couple back-to-back seasons in a row. Once you get in that regional tournament anything can happen. The only time we won that regional tournament, we were a No. 4 seed. Getting in there, good things can happen.

“But a loss in that district tournament and you’re out. You have one bad day and — after a whole season of work — it can keep you out.”

The Bulldogs (20-5) graduated eight seniors, including first-team all-region midfielder Maddy Curry, second-team all-region midfielder Kat Kendrick and two-year starting goalkeeper Nicole Ficarra.

Towle will look to returning senior starters Molly Gift, Kelsey Grainer and Stephanie Poppe to build on the momentum gained from last season’s run to Virginia Beach.

“Those three girls had a lot of playing time last year,” Towle said. “Now they need to step up into more of a leadership role, be more vocal, take charge and be as consistent as they were last year.

“Those three kids got better and better as the season went on. We’re hoping they pick up there.”

Westfield’s out-of-conference schedule includes Langley, Madison, Jefferson, Yorktown, Annandale and Fairfax.

Chantilly (13-8-1) finished runner-up last year in the district tournament, but graduated 11 seniors, including second-team all-region defender Kellie McDonald.

Oakton (10-7-1) fell to South County on strokes in the first round of the regional tournament. But despite graduating 10 seniors, have 11 on its roster this year. The Cougars graduate all-district midfielder Danielle Filliponi (Georgetown), first-team all-region midfielder Pilar Lopez-Gomez and goalkeeper Megan McHie.

First-year Oakton coach Kate Ruch expects significant contribution from two of her most-experienced returners, senior center midfielder Erin Kurle, in her fourth varsity season, and third-year varsity member, senior right wing Lauren Mathieu.

Also, sophomore Jackie Rupp will move from defender to forward and is projected among the Cougars’ leading scorers. 

“She just has a knack for goal,” Ruch said. “She causes trouble for defenses and they have trouble shutting her down.”

Centreville senior midfielder Haili Hartman headlines other returning stars in the Concorde.

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2008 Football: Top 10 Games — No. 4

No. 4 Game of 2008
In this highly-anticipated Division 6 regional semifinal, Oakton (11-0) jumped all over West Springfield (8-3) early, taking a 28-10 lead into the locker room. Cougar senior quarterback Chris Coyer rushed for scores of 65 and 50 yards and connected with senior running back Trey Watts for 46- and 67-yard touchdowns, all before half time.

Oakton stretched that margin to 42-17 with 8 minutes, 31 seconds left in the third quarter thanks to two more TD tosses, those from Coyer to senior receiver Jay Young.

But over the next 12 minutes, the West Springfield offense caught fire, scoring four touchdowns to trim the lead to 49-43 with 8:30 still remaining in regulation.

Spartan senior quarterback Bryn Renner completed 23 of his 47 passes for 419 yards and four touchdowns, putting him over 3,000 yards passing for the season, a feat accomplished for just the 10th time in VHSL history.

The historically-potent West Springfield offense had two possessions to take the lead in the final 6:22, but suddenly struggled to move the chains against the Oakton defense — which returned all 11 starters from the previous year.

With the Spartans threatening on 4th-and-6 with 1:01 left, still trailing by six points, Cougar senior captain Joey McCallum made the game-clinching tackle of Renner a half-yard shy of the first down. Oakton survived, 49-43, to advance to the Northern Region championship.

**CLICK HERE FOR THE COMPLETE TOP 10 COUNTDOWN**

By Angela Watts
Assistant General Manager, Washigton D.C.

**
Click the links to the left, above the video, to access a photo
gallery, dozens of video highlights and video interviews with Oakton
captains Chris Coyer, Jack Tyler and Trey Watts.

The
fog hovered so low and so thick by game’s end Friday night that it was
impossible for fans to see their counterparts across the field during
the Northern Region Division 6 semifinal between No. 6 West Springfield
and No. 2 Oakton.

But the heavy haze did nothing to muffle
the sounds of the Cougar and Spartan faithful, who packed the stands
and took turns throughout an action-packed second half upping one
another with wild cheers.
 
In the end, though, it was the home team — and their fans — who savored the sweetest of their 12 victories this season.

No.
2 Oakton (12-0) held off a furious rally from No. 6 West Springfield
(8-4) for a 49-43 victory to advance to next week’s Northern Region
Division 6 championship game.

And one thing is certain with that
game: There will be a new region champion crowned. That’s because No. 5
Chantilly also knocked off No. 4 Westfield, the defending region and
Virginia AAA state champions, 35-28, in the other semifinal game. The
Cougars will host the Chargers at 1 p.m. on Saturday in the regional
finale.

“We haven’t really been that kind of team all year that’s been overly excited,” said Oakton senior quarterback Chris Coyer,
whose teammates did little more than exchange a few hugs after the
final whistle had sounded. “But yeah, we expected to be here at the
beginning of the season. Our team motto, we decided early in the
off-season, was to finish 15 as one.

“And we have yet to make it to the 15th game … so we’re not satisfied yet.”

But
to even continue toward that goal, the Cougars first had to stave off a
feisty Spartan team that scored 33 second-half points to turn what once
looked to be a walk-over into a nail-biter.

Oakton led 28-10 at half time on the strength of Coyer’s big plays.

The
senior signal-caller rushed for scores of 65 and 50 yards and threw a
pair of touchdown passes of 46 and 67 yards, respectively, to senior
running back Trey Watts. The Cougars extended that
lead to 42-17 with 8 minutes, 31 seconds remaining in the third
quarter with a another pair of touchdown passes of 55 and 10 yards from
Coyer to senior wide receiver Jay Young.

“They
were hyped up all week as the match-up being their offense against our
defense and could our defense shut them down,” said Coyer, who finished
with 215 yards passing and four touchdowns, and also rushed for 197
yards and two scores.

“But we are an explosive offense and
we really wanted to show everyone, really, that we are an explosive
offense and we can put points on the board from anywhere on the field.”

But that’s when things got interesting.

West
Springfield scored four of the game’s final five touchdowns — over a
span of almost exactly 12 minutes of game clock — to close within
49-43 with 8:30 to play. To do so the Spartans not only benefited from
an onside kick that was recovered by junior linebacker Peyton Davey, but also a pair of fumble recoveries by senior defensive back Malek Diaw and senior defensive end John Lockwood.

And, of course, the Spartans had standout senior quarterback Bryn Renner,
who will play next year at North Carolina, with his hand firmly on the
throttle. Renner, who was covered head-to-toe in mud, limping at times
and surely exhausted, put the West Springfield offense on his shoulders
and, as he has done for two seasons, fought to the end.

He
finished with 419 yards passing, four touchdowns and an interception
and also rushed for 96 yards and two more scores. Renner scored on runs
of two and four yards and passed for four touchdowns, two to senior Andy Stallings (30 and 44 yards), and one each to junior running back Dan Collins (8) and senior receiver Fabrice Kambinga (47). 

Renner
completed 24-of-47 passes for 419 yards and four touchdowns, making him
the 10th quarterback in Virginia High School League history to throw
for more than 3,000 yards in a season — despite sitting out one game
with injury. He stands alone in sixth place in the single-season
records books for completions (221) and yards (3,123) and eighth in
touchdowns (35).

“Our kids had seen him in a scrimmage and had
gotten a flavor for what he could do, but you’re just amazed at his
accuracy,” Oakton Coach Joe Thompson said of Renner.
“The kid is a complete warrior. He throws on the run, doesn’t break
down … if you blitz he picks it up, sight adjusts, understands
coverage. He’s the real deal. There’s no question about it.

“You
can see that they’re not afraid of giving up points. So it’s a
different world trying to play them. You can think we’ve got it easy,
but they get one stop on you and all the sudden they flip the field and
they’re scoring again. They’re not afraid to give up points because
they know they’re going to come back and score. So it’s unconventional.
You have to take everything you know about football and put it in a box
for a week and think about playing a basketball game against them.”

Oakton’s
defense was on the field for most of the end of the third quarter and
nearly the entire fourth — the Cougars’ lone score during that
stretch came on a 65-yard kickoff return by senior running back Derek Gleich — but as drained and dirty as they were, they stood tall when it mattered most. 

“Obviously
they would have liked to have made it a little easier on themselves,”
Thompson said of his defense. “But seeing as they didn’t, their job was
to get a stop and get off the field with the win, and they did that.”

Renner
and the Spartans — trailing by only six points — had two possession
in the game’s final six-and-a-half minutes, but failed to convert.

Oakton junior defensive lineman Daniel Aevermann
put a damper on West Springfield’s first drive, sacking Renner for an
eight-yard loss, and on 4th-and-6 with 1:01 to play senior linebacker Joey McCallum stopped Renner about a yard shy of the first down on a quarterback keeper to seal the win.

“We
couldn’t have played any worse in the first half, but obviously we did
exactly what we wanted to do in the second half,” said West Springfield
Coach Bill Renner, Bryn’s father. “We just didn’t finish. We had
two chances for our offense to finish it and couldn’t. … But I still
couldn’t be more proud of the effort we gave out there.”

Added Oakton senior linebacker Jack Tyler,
who became only the fourth player this season to intercept a Renner
pass: “Bryn’s an excellent player and you have to throw everything at
him to even remotely stop their offense. And we knew it was going to be
tough. … Most of our defense is seniors and we were just, the whole
time, telling them, ‘This is not going to be our last game. This is not
going to be our last game.’ And we really just stayed alive and we made
some big plays.”

Now the Cougars must turn their attention away
from the top quarterback in Division 6 of the Northern Region and to
Chantilly senior Torrian Pace, who is widely regarded as the
region’s top running back in Division 6. Pace rushed for 2,468 yards
and 36 touchdowns this season, including 724 yards and 10 scores in the
last two weeks alone.

“They’re a great team,” said Thompson,
whose team defeated Chantilly, 17-15, during the regular-season on
October 3. “I’ve thought all along they were one of the best in the
region, if not the best in the region. So it doesn’t surprise me that
they’re there. I’ve got great respect for their team and their coaching
staff.

“I think it’s a heck of a squad coming in here next weekend.”

* South County junior and DigitalSports intern, Jeff McDaniels, contributed to this report.

Email: awatts@digitalsports.com 

No. 6 West Springfield        0   10  19  14 — 43
No. 2 Oakton                      7   21  21    0 — 49

Scoring Summary
1Q — OK — Coyer 65 run (Goins kick)
2Q — WS — McConnell 27 field goal
2Q — OK — Coyer 50 run (Goins kick)
2Q — OK — Watts 46 pass from Coyer (Goins kick) Pt 1  Pt 2
2Q — WS — Stallings 30 pass from Renner (McConnell kick)
2Q — OK — Watts 67 pass from Coyer (Goins kick)
3Q — WS — Stallings 44 pass from Renner (kick failed)
3Q — OK — Young 55 pass from Coyer (Goins kick)
3Q — OK — Young 10 pass from Coyer (Goins kick)
3Q — WS — Renner 2 run (kick failed)
3Q — OK — Gleich 65 kickoff return (Goins kick)
3Q — WS — Collins 8 pass from Renner (McConnell kick)
4Q — WS — Renner 4 run (McConnell kick)
4Q — WS — Kambinga 47 pass from Renner (McConnell kick)

Individual Leaders
Passing
WS — Renner 24-of-47 passing, 419 yards, 4 TDs, 1 INT; OK — Coyer 6-of-14 passing, 215 yards, 4 TDs, 1 INT.
Rushing
WS — Renner 17 carries, 101 yards, 2 TDs; Collins 19 carries, 62 yards; OK — Coyer 11 carries, 197 yards, 2 TDs; Meadows 10 carries, 28 yards; Watts 7 carries, 32 yards.
Receiving
WS —
Stallings 10 receptions, 154 yards, 2 TDs; O’Connell 5 receptions, 75
yards; Kambinga 4 receptions, 122 yards, TD; Collins 4 receptions, 56
yards, TD; OK — Watts 3 receptions, 138 yards, 2 TDs; Young 2 receptions, 65 yards, 2 TDs.

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2008 Football: Top 10 Games — Honorable Mentions

By Phil Murphy
DigitalSports.com


While counting down the top games of 2008, we stumbled across several great games that barely missed the cut. Here are the lot of games — listed chronologically — that kept me agonizing over cups of coffee and 5-hour energy shots, night-after-night, as I prepared this countdown.

No, really.

Mount Vernon 23, T.C. Williams 20 (OT)  — Aug. 29 — Majors ruin ribbon-cutting in Alexandria
Jefferson 28, Falls Church 27 (OT)  — Aug. 29 — NRR — Dittmer deflects game-winning two-point attempt, Colonials take opener
Stuart 30, McLean 14  — Sept. 5 — Raiders snap 25-game losing streak
Lake Braddock 23, W.T. Woodson 22NRR — Sept. 5 — Bruins beat soon-to-be district for fifth-straight time
Madison 18, Langley 14  — Oct. 3 — NRR — Warhawks score final 15 points in district rivalry
Oakton 17, Chantilly 15  — Oct. 3 — NRR — Cougars eek out region final preview
Mount Vernon 69, Falls Church 40  — Oct. 10 — NRR — Majors, Jaguars combine for 109 points in National shoot-out
Mount Vernon 36, Centreville 26  — Oct. 17 — NRR — Five first-quarter touchdowns of 40 yards or more; Majors win fourth-straight
Westfield 58, Centreville 40  — Oct. 31 — NRR — Concorde rivals combine for 15 touchdowns in surprise Halloween outburst

*NRR — Northern Region Recap available

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Football: Top 10 Games of 2008

By Phil Murphy
DigitalSports.com

With the 2009 season fast approaching, DigitalSports will take a look back at the 10 best football games from last season. We will count down those games in reverse order starting Thursday, August 13 and continue — according to the schedule below — until the best game of last season is unveiled!

No. 10West Springfield 72, W.T. Woodson 47 (Nov. 7)
No.  9  — Mount Vernon 17, Washington-Lee 10 (Nov. 7)
No.  8 South County 27, Lee 23 (Sept. 26)
No.  7 West Potomac 28, Lee 21 (2 OT) (Sept. 19)
No.  6 Washington-Lee 21, Wakefield 20 (Oct. 10)
No.  5  — Edison 35, West Springfield 34 (Sept. 4)
No.  4 Oakton 49, West Springfield 43 (Nov. 14)
No.  3 Herndon 29, Westfield 28 (2 OT) (Oct. 18)
No.  2  — Edison 20, Chantilly 17 (Oct. 31)
No.  1  — Chantilly 35, Westfield 28 (Nov. 14)

Click here for the HONORABLE MENTIONS!!

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