NETHER PROVIDENCE — Maggie Forbes knows that track runs in her family. That’s hardly a secret.
The CliffsNotes version: Maddie Forbes was a track All-Delco. So was Grace Forbes, times three, plus a two-time Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year. In her only season of cross country, Grace was the Girls Runner of the Year. Both now run at Rice University.
But Maggie also knows that soccer is pretty popular around the Forbes household. Maddie, a speedy winger, was a starter for Strath Haven in her day. It was a difficult decision for Grace to drop soccer after three years and focus on cross country last fall.
Maggie has followed her older sisters in their soccer/track time-sharing. But the junior is the only one to prioritize soccer in that arrangement. While her older sisters certainly had an affinity for the sport, the demands of the track eventually won out.
Maggie, however, is bucking that trend.
“I definitely like soccer,” she said. “It’s hard for me to rank them. I like them both for different reasons. I think I really like the team aspect of soccer and it’s not just the individual. Track can be a team sport, too, but it’s not the same. You play countless games with your teammates and you just get really close with soccer. I value that a lot.”
It doesn’t take long watching Forbes in the middle of the pitch to feel like it’s where she belongs. With her long, loping strides that focus into quick, adroit movements on the ball and her long red hair trailing her movements across the field, Forbes has a blend of size, speed and technical ability perfectly adapted for the demands of the midfield engine room. Whether she’s tracking down an opponent with the ball or turning to connect combination passes, it’s not hard to see why soccer has won out in the contention for her considerable athletic gifts.
The Strath Haven program is certainly better off for it.
With Forbes in the middle of everything, Strath Haven won 14 games this season, making its first PIAA tournament since 2012. For that level of achievement, Forbes is the 2019 Daily Times Player of the Year.Forbes qualified as a veteran leader for the Panthers this season. On a team where only two seniors started regularly, the power was undoubtedly housed in the junior class. Forbes’ level of play even from a young age dictated that she would ascend to a leadership role sooner rather than later.
For someone naturally soft-spoken, Forbes’ developing talent and experience helped her assume that full leadership task.
“I’ve always wanted to be able to be a great teammate but also being able to tell others what to do or support them, and helping them make the right decision was also a good thing to be able to do,” she said. “Having a voice as an upperclassman, when you’re an underclassman, you feel a little less. You can’t sort of tell the upperclassmen what to do. But now it was nice to be able to say like, ‘hey come slide in this way’ or something like that.”
It helps that Forbes seemed to have chemistry that looked natural with most of her mates. She’s been at Nether Providence Soccer Club for years (now at 1776 United FC), but only senior goalie Claire Wolgast is a teammate there. The connections she’s formed in midfield were more organic but looked like those dating back years.
She and junior midfielder Ellie Malek form a daunting pair in central midfield, one so strong that it compelled coach Gino Miraglia to drag Malek back from a run at forward. That connection extended to classmate Gianna Zweier, whose absence in the postseason due to injury was evident.
Then there’s the money connection between Forbes and Kuzemka, which yielded many of Forbes’ 13 goals. It’s how Forbes deposited both of the tallies in the District 1 Class 3A semifinal against Nazareth, the win that sent Haven to its first state tournament since 2012.
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