Radnor High School | Archive | October, 2019

Forbes, Strath Haven bond in grief, beat Nazareth to get to states

NETHER PROVIDENCE — The moment of silence held for a full 20 seconds. There was no muffled conversation, no ring of a cell phone, just a sniffle fought by one of the players sporting a new purple ribbon in her hair and the distant hum of traffic on the Blue Route.

The air of solemnity at George L. King Field Tuesday night soon gave way to focus, to catharsis, and eventually to celebration.

Two first-half goals by Maggie Forbes and a stellar performance by goalie Claire Wolgast earned second-seeded Strath Haven a 2-0 victory over Nazareth Academy in the District 1 Class 3A girls soccer semifinals. With it comes a states berth and a date in Wednesday’s district final against nine-time champ Villa Joseph Marie (Phoenixville H.S., 5 p.m.).

More importantly, for a group of students playing with heavy hearts, a group that would’ve found each other for comfort Tuesday whether a soccer ball had been involved or not, it’s a guarantee of at least two more games together.

Tuesday’s game was postponed from Monday when the Strath Haven community got news of the death of junior Hallie Jackson. A state medalist in track, Jackson counted many close friends on the Strath Haven squad, so much so that the group decided Monday that it was too distraught to play.

“We met yesterday right after we all heard the news and it was solemn, but we knew we were together and we knew when we were going to play Nazareth, we were going to be together,” Wolgast said. “And no matter what, if we lost, if we won, we were going to support each other, and we were all there for each other.”

The tight community that is Strath Haven – particularly its small but passionate athletics programs – rallied around the soccer team. They filled a full section in the stands, many clad in purple. Both Nazareth and Springfield, the team Strath Haven beat in the quarterfinals, offered bouquets of flowers to extend condolences. The chant in the huddle to start the second half was of “1-2-3 Hallie,” not that anyone packing the stands needed a reminder that something bigger than soccer was at play.

“Coming here at 6 p.m., it was of course still in our mind, but soccer was first,” Wolgast said. “And it was nice to have a break from all the, just terrible feelings we were all having. Seeing all the fans coming out, it was just for everyone, I think, just a good break.”

“Being on the field, it’s a safe place because you’re not really thinking about it,” said defender Danielle McNeely, a classmate and close friend of Jackson. “It really helped us winning for her.”

That devotion crept into the Panthers’ play from the outset. They were relentless, winning three corners kicks in the first seven minutes. The third yielded a goal from Forbes, heading home the curling delivery of Dahlia Kuzemka for the opener.

“I always tell her how important she is because no one can defend her on corner kicks,” McNeely said of Forbes. “She’s always at the right spot at the right time, and she finishes it.”

Forbes did it again in the 27th, this one diagrammed on the training ground. With the Panthers packing all their players toward the left touchline and Kuzemka lining up a free kick from 30 yards on the right side, Forbes got the jump on a defender and cut in on a ball played on the ground toward the top of the area. The track athlete beat her defender to the ball and hit a low shot against the grain that Nazareth goalie Katie McGinn got a piece of but couldn’t keep out to make it 2-0.

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Strath Haven’s girls soccer team poses for a photo after beating Nazareth Academy, 2-0, Tuesday to earn a spot in the PIAA Class 3A tournament and the District 1 final. (DFM photo)

Strath Haven’s girls soccer team poses for a photo after beating Nazareth Academy, 2-0, Tuesday to earn a spot in the PIAA Class 3A tournament and the District 1 final. (DFM photo)

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Garnet Valley field hockey qualfies for state tournament for first time

CONCORD – The corner did not go as planned, yet no one at Garnet Valley is complaining this morning. It worked, that’s all that matters and the Jaguars are headed to the PIAA Class 4A field hockey tournament because of it.

Senior Claire Wolfe converted a pass from junior Tina Rawa off a corner 1:39 into overtime to lift the top-seeded Jaguars to a 1-0 victory over fifth-seeded Central Bucks East in a fifth-place playback thriller at Moe Defrank Stadium Tuesday night.

Wolfe’s goal, the first overtime score of her career, deflected off of the stick of a CB East defender to clinch what is believed to be the first state playoff berth in program history. Garnet Valley (20-1) will be back at home Friday afternoon (3:45) to take on sixth-seeded Souderton in the fifth-place game. The Indians knocked off No. 10 Council Rock South, 2-1, to earn a trip to the Moe.

“I wasn’t expecting to take the shot and all throughout warmups my shots were off so I was nervous,” Wolfe said. “But I knew that as soon as I got the ball that this was our one opportunity to score and I had to do it.”

There was a reason for that confusion. Four players are taken off the field in overtime and one, for Garnet Valley, was Sophie Easter, who is usually the insert on corners. With Easter on the sideline, that job fell to junior Mary Rose Berry.

Berry was supposed to insert the ball to Wolfe, who would then feed it to Rawa for a shot on goal, but the play went the other way. Berry passed to Rawa, who found Wolfe at the top of the circle. Wolfe let go a one-timer and the celebration was on.

“I was supposed to be practicing the inserts, but I’m also a post player (on corners) so I’ve been practicing the post because that’s one of the more important jobs,” Berry said. “That’s where Tina and Claire hit the ball so I never got the chance to practice my inserts so when they said it was a 23 I just hit it right in between them and Tina ended up getting it to Claire, thank goodness.”

No one on the team cared that the play did not go as planned. The result is what mattered.

“It worked out for us really well,” Rawa said. “I was so happy that I started crying. It was so exciting. It was unreal.”

Click HERE to read the full article.

Senior Claire Wolfe, left, and junior Tina Rawa teamed up for the winning goal in overtime to give Garnet Valley a 1-0 victory over Central Bucks East Tuesday. (DFM photo)

Senior Claire Wolfe, left, and junior Tina Rawa teamed up for the winning goal in overtime to give Garnet Valley a 1-0 victory over Central Bucks East Tuesday. (DFM photo)

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All Teams Schedule: Week of October 28 – November 03


Here is a preview of this week's events for Radnor High School, October 28 - November 03
 

MONDAY
October 28, 2019

No events happening

TUESDAY
October 29, 2019

4:00 PM Field Hockey: Girls Varsity Vs. Gwynedd Mercy Academy High School @ Encke Field

WEDNESDAY
October 30, 2019

4:00 PM Football: Boys Freshman @ Conestoga High School @ Teamer Field
(Rescheduled from 10-31-19)

THURSDAY
October 31, 2019

No events happening

FRIDAY
November 1, 2019

10:00 AM Tennis: Girls Varsity PIAA Doubles Tournament @ Hershey Racquet Club
5:45 PM Ice Hockey: Boys Junior varsity @ Roman Catholic High School @ FSZ Phantoms
7:00 PM Football: Boys Varsity @ Penn Wood High School @ Kerr Field - Varsity Football

SATURDAY
November 2, 2019

TBA Football: Boys Junior varsity SAT/ACT @ TBD
8:00 AM Tennis: Girls Varsity PIAA Doubles Tournament @ Hershey Racquet Club
10:00 AM Cross Country: Boys Varsity PIAA State Championship @ Hershey
(Rescheduled from 11-02-19)
10:00 AM Cross Country: Girls Varsity PIAA State Championship @ Hershey
(Rescheduled from 11-02-19)

SUNDAY
November 3, 2019

No events happening
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Mehra’s two goals keep Radnor’s season going

RADNOR — Radnor senior field hockey players Olivia DeCain, Brigid Lowry and Genevieve Mehra have been teammates for a long time.

“We started playing together when we were in third grade,” Lowry said.

The trio didn’t plan to be high school hockey teammates for the final time Tuesday. They helped the No. 1 seed Raiders (16-2) to a 3-0 victory over No. 16 Strath Haven (7-10) in the opening round of the District 1 Class 2A tournament at Encke Field under a heavy rain.

Radnor will host No. 9 Villa Maria (11-8), the defending district champion, in a second-round match Thursday afternoon. The Hurricanes defeated No. 8 Phoenixville, 2-0, in their playoff opener.

Haley Kemp opened the scoring for the Raiders in the sixth minute of play. Mehra added a goal seven minutes later to set the halftime score at 2-0, then came back with another tally in the third minute of the second half.

DeCain, Lowry and Mehra have played together with the Mayhem club team. Tuesday afternoon, they were among the Radnor players creating mayhem at both ends of the field.

“Since we played (Strath Haven) earlier in the season (a 3-1 Central League win) they knew a lot of what we like to do,” said Mehra, who is headed to Johns Hopkins University to be a pre-med major and play field hockey.

Kemp’s goal came on a scramble in front of the Haven cage, while Mehra was in the right place at the right time to knock home her two goals.

Strath Haven goalie Marlaena Ciabattoni turned away a penalty stroke in both halves, the first off the stick of Hope Delaney and the second by DeCain.

“Guess we’ll be doing a lot of work on penalty strokes (Wednesday) at practice,” DeCain said.

Rory Caulfield had the most dangerous scoring chance in the second half for Strath Haven, which forced Raiders goalie Rory Harper to make only two saves.

Click HERE to read the full article. fh- rad mehra

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Dixon makes history, Radnor rolls

TREDYFFRIN >> On Senior Night at Conestoga’s Teamer Field Friday, Radnor’s defense and a record-setting evening by junior wide receiver Jahmir Dixon highlighted a 28-7  win.

It marked the third year in a row that Radnor (5-4, 4-4 Central) has beaten Conestoga. The Raiders held the Pioneers (3-6, 3-5) scoreless until the final six minutes.

Radnor got some big plays from the 5-foot-9, 140-pound Dixon, who grabbed five Sam DiLella’s passes for 210 yards — a Radnor program record — and three touchdowns.

“We played great today, we had a great week of practice,” said a smiling Dixon. ‘Coach (Tom Ryan) told us to come out and be athletes and play Radnor football, and that’s what we did to come out with the win. Sam had a perfect night at quarterback. Our defense came out hard, and at halftime, the coaches told us to step it up, and that’s what we did “

Radnor opened the scoring when DiLella hit Dixon for a 20-yard touchdown in the right corner of the end zone for a 7-0 lead.

“The coaches told me that I should be able to beat their corners up top,” Dixon said. “We’re going to throw it up and you make a play.”

Late in the second quarter, Radnor began another long drive, moving to the 2-yard line. The key plays were a 27-yard pass from DiLella to Dixon and a 19-yard run down the sideline by Taylor Margolis. But a Radnor fumble in the end zone gave the ball back to Conestoga, and the first half ended at 7-0.

Radnor took the second-half kickoff and marched 80 yards in 10 plays. DiLella found Dixon for 35 yards and Brendan Surbeck for 19, then hit Gavin McCall for an 8-yard touchdown pass to make it 14-0.

Conestoga picked up a couple of first downs on the following series, but the drive stalled at the Radnor 38, where the visitors took over on downs. Two plays later, DiLella hit an open Dixon across the middle, and Dixon turned on the jets for a 66-yard touchdown.

“Sammy and me worked on that play all summer,” Dixon said. “He told me where he was going to throw it; I looked up and it was there.”

Early in the fourth quarter, the DiLella-to-Dixon combination hooked up once again for one last big play, a 62-yard TD strike down the left sideline.

Click HERE to read the full article. fb- rad dixon

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All Teams Schedule: Week of October 21 – October 27

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Radnor’s Dixon, DiLella join the lore of Lower Merion game

RADNOR — The Radnor-Lower Merion football rivalry began in 1897.

With the host Raiders’ 49-6 victory at Prevost Field Saturday afternoon, both teams have 56 wins in the series, and 11 games have ended in ties.

Radnor junior Jahmir Dixon, seniors Sam DiLella, Taylor Margolis and Pat Boujoukos, and sophomore Damian Falcone as well as Lower Merion junior Abdoulie Sahor have plenty to remember about the latest renewal of this football tradition Saturday.

Dixon caught five of the eight passes DiLella completed, including scoring plays of 42 and 46 yards on his way to amassing 162 receiving yards. He added a 53-yard catch that left the ball three yards short of the goal line, setting up a TD run by Margolis.

DiLella (8-for-11 for 214 yards and three touchdowns through the air – all in the first half) also got off a pair of scoring runs in the second quarter.

Margolis gained 70 yards on eight carries. He also was all over the place from his inside linebacker post as Radnor did not allow a first down on the ground or through the air in the first three quarters.

Boujoukos and his line mates helped the Raiders earn 203 yards rushing and 280 passing for 483 yards of total offense.

Falcone was another of the inside linebackers whose strong play helped hold Lower Merion to 95 yards of total offense.

Lower Merion’s Sahor keep the visitors from being shut out with a 14-yard run 49 seconds before the game ended.

Dixon’s first scoring catch opened the scoring in the third minute of the game. His other six points came 29 seconds before halftime.

“This is a big game, and we came out ready to play today,” he said. “(DiLella) and I have been working together since the summer so that we can make our connections better. Whatever I did today was because there were people blocking for me, so our plays would succeed. They are the ones who should get the credit.”

Dixon pointed to Nick Hart, Duncan McDermott, Lincoln Twedt, Boujoukos, Peter Dustin, CJ Murphy, and Cameron Williams as unsung heroes who did their jobs as blockers so the quarterback and receivers had the time to make their plays go.

“It’s a team effort,” Boujoukos said. “I used to be one of the ones up in the stands watching this game, and now I’m playing in it. It’s been great having all the spirit as we got ready for the game all week.”

Margolis made several tackles for losses.

“I really couldn’t wait to get out there on the field,” he said.

Falcone will end up being a four-year starter before his Radnor career comes to a close.

Click HERE to read the full article.

Radnor quarterback Sam Dilella celebrates as he waltzs in for a touchdown in the second quarter against Lower Merion Saturday. Radnor won the rivalry game, 49-6. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

Radnor quarterback Sam Dilella celebrates as he waltzs in for a touchdown in the second quarter against Lower Merion Saturday. Radnor won the rivalry game, 49-6. (Pete Bannan/MediaNews Group)

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Radnor’s Ciarrochi and Hederick win Central League doubles title

Kanon Ciarrocchi and Lucy Hederick didn’t have the easiest path to a Central League doubles title Saturday, but they got the job done anyway.

The Radnor duo dropped the first set to Conestoga’s Leena Kwak and Olivia Dodge Saturday, but rallied to claim the title, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5.

Ciarrocchi and Hederick had advanced from an all-Radnor semifinal, topping teammates Annie Burton and Bridget Dougherty, 6-2, 6-4. That duo fell to Harriton’s Shaina Ginsberg and Allison Lao in the third-place match, 6-3, 6-4.

Fifth place went to Conestoga’s Coco Kambayashi and Belle Chen, topping Harriton’s Josephine Kwok and Kelly Tong, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3.

tennis ball

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All Teams Schedule: Week of October 14 – October 20

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Lower Merion freshman Sydney Yermish wins district title

Limerick >> Lower Merion freshman Sydney Yermish pratically ran away from the field at the PIAA District 1 Golf Championship Tuesday at Turtle Creek Golf Club, winning the girls’ Class AAA individual championship by five strokes, shooting 65-71 for a two-day total of 7-under par 136.
Yermish fired a brilliant six-under par 65 at Raven’s Claw Monday, a round that inclided four birdies and an eagle; then shot a 71 Tuesday at Turtle Creek that included five birdies.“I really hit the ball straight [Monday],” said Yermish, who tied for first place earlier this fall at the Central League Girls Championship with Haverford High junior Riley Quartermain and Strath Haven sophomore Grace Smith. “Today, I couldn’t hit a drive straight, but I felt very comfortable with my irons and putter.”

Yermish, who plays on the American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) tour, is ranked No. 1 in Pennsylvania among Class of 2023 high school girls by the AJGA. Last April, she finished fifth in the Girls 12-13 division at the Drive, Chip & Putt National Finals at Augusta National Golf Club.

Lower Merion golf coach Dennis Keenan said, “Sydney has a good all-around game – she doesn’t really have a weakness. She can drive the ball 250 yards or more – at the seventh hole at Philadelphia Country Club’s Centennial Course, a 310-yard hole, she’s driven it to a greenside bunker.”

Yermish’s final round 71 included birdies at hole Nos. 1, 8, 12, 14 and 17. On each of her five birdies, she planted a wedge approach shot close to the hole. On the par-4 12th hole, she cut the dogleg on the left with her drive, then lofted a wedge to six feet; and on the par 4 No. 17, she hit a drive and pitching wedge to three feet from the hole.
Five strokes back of Yermish was Pennsbury junior Jade Gu (68-73-141).

The top nine AAA girls golfers qualified for the PIAA Class AAA East Regional Championship, including Quartermain (fifth place, 76-74-150); West Chester East sophomore Victoria Kim (sixth, 76-75-151); Grace Smith (seventh, 78-74-152); Unionville freshman Mary Dunigan (eighth, 76-77-153); and Downingtown East sophomore Ava O’Sullivan (ninth, 74-80-154).

Quartermain, who birdied hole Nos. 1 and 2 to start her round Tuesday, said, “I hit the ball a lot better today than on Monday, even though I three-putted on Nos. 8 and 9, and on 18 – the ball did a 360 around the cup.”

Kim, who was even par through 15 holes Tuesday, said, “I hit the ball better today than Monday. My drives and irons were giving me trouble yesterday. … I really like this course, it’s wide-open, and there are great views everywhere.”

West Chester East coach Todd Lorback, who watched Kim win the Ches-Mont girls’ individual championship last week despite being in a car accident earlier in the morning, paid tribute to Kim’s steadiness.

“Victoria had a good round today – she’s steady, and keeps herself focused,” said Lorback.

Smith’s round Tuesday included 14 pars, three bogies and one birdie.

“It was a consistent round – I was driving well today,” said Smith.
Dunigan, who contributed to Unionville’s second-place finish in the girls AAA team competition Monday, was one-under par through 15 holes Tuesday.

In the Girls AAA team competition Monday at Raven Claw, Mount St. Joseph finished first (230), Unionville was second (240) and Downingtown East was third (260). The Indians trio consisted of Mary Dunigan (first round 76), Charlotte Scully (77) and Morgan Santaguida. The Downingtown East trio included Ava O’Sullivan (74), Ava Lichok and Anisha Sonti (94).

In the District 1 AAA boys individual competition, Norristown junior Josh Ryan finished first with a one-under-par two-day total of 71-72-143. Holy Ghost Prep sophomore Calen Sanderson and Plymouth Whitemarsh junior Dylan Gooneratne tied for second at 146, and Harriton senior co-captain Andrew Wallace tied for fourth place (75-72-147).

Wallace, who has committed to play golf for Drexel University next fall, said, “I hit the ball fairly solid all day, but in the last week I’ve been struggling with the putter. Today it was really nice to see the ball rolling and dropping. I missed a lot of birdie opportunities [Monday], so it was cool to get it back today. The course played difficult with the wind gusting today, but that’s what makes it so much fun.”

Harriton head coach Brian Dobak said, “Monday, the course was dry and fast with some wind; today was more windy and because it had rained [Monday] night, the course was softer and wet. Consequently, the golfers faced, on some level, two different golf courses, I think it kept them on their toes.”

Unionville senior Jack Cooley shot 73-77-150 to finish in sixth place, which is six spots higher than his finish at last year’s District 1 tournament. Cooley displayed some resilient play Tuesday, bouncing back after a front nine 42 in which he missed several short putts for par, and took an eight on No. 8 after hitting the water next to the green.

Click HERE to read the full article. golf- lm yermish

On the back nine Tuesday, Cooley shot one-under-par, including a birdie on No. 16, where he made a curling right-to-left 5 foot putt. On the 18th hole, he knocked in an 8-foot-putt for par that travelled on the same right-to-left path.

West Chester Rustin sophomore Ryan Dariano (76-75-151) finished seventh and Conestoga junior Morgan Lofland tied for 10th place with a 78-75-153. Lofland qualified for Regionals for the third consecutive year.

“Morgan really battled today after a bad start, getting birdies on Nos. 13 and 14,” said Conestoga golf coach John Jones.

Harriton senior co-captain David Fitzgerald also tied for 10th place (73-80-153).

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