T C Williams High School | Archive | August, 2009

Football: Patriot District Preview

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

**Teams are listed alphabetically.

ANNANDALE
Last Year: 7-4 (6-1)
Coach: **** Adams, 20th year, 117-61 career record
Returning Starters: 6 offense/7 defense
Key Losses: QB Cason Kynes, DT Shane Doty, TE/DE Pete Herring, RB John Copenhaver, OL/DL Victor Njomo

Although its seven wins last season were the most this decade, Annandale makes a strong case as the best Patriot District program in recent years.

The Atoms have, after all, won three of the last four district titles, including a tie last season.

After winning the district outright in 2005 and splitting it with West Potomac, whom it beat, in 2006, Annandale had to replace starting quarterback Nathan Cartagena and plugged in then-junior Cason Kynes in 2007. After a 4-6 season in his first year under center, Kynes never stepped off the field in leading the team to a tie atop the conference with West Springfield.

The steering wheel of the Atom offense is vacant and 20th-year Coach **** Adams will have two sets of hands steering the ship. Sophomore quarterback Tony Hysjulien is taller than Kynes and has a strong arm. Senior Rick Adams missed last season with shoulder surgery and will play both strong safety and quarterback. He will be used as a change-of-pace runner, but will keep defenses off-balance with play-action passes.

The favorite targets for both quarterbacks will be senior wide receiver Robb Potts — who will double as a cornerback — and first-team all-region junior wide receiver Melvin Robinson.

VirginiaPreps.com lists Robinson as the No. 2 prospect in the state in the Class of 2011. In 2008, he had 44 receptions for 1,130 yards and 12 touchdowns. In seven of the team’s 11 games, he broke the 100-yard plateau.

“He’s put on 10-15 pounds and he can make a lot of plays,” said Coach Adams of his blue-chip receiver. “He can do a
lot, we’ve just got to get the ball down the field to him. People may
overplay Melvin, but the Potts kid is pretty good.

“That helps us a
great deal. It’s just a matter of being able to develop a running game
and get Potts the ball.”

Added another district coach: “He’s the best football player in the district. He’s ****. He’s the entire package. I have a lot of respect for that kid.”

The Atoms also return starting senior running back Stacey Anderson this year.

As potent as the offense could be, the defense returns more starters and will be strong through the middle. Senior end Evan Griffin and junior tackle Bob Stevens will hold down the defensive line, hard-hitting senior strong-side linebacker Marquis Perez and junior middle linebacker Yari Mizouri will be among the team’s leading tacklers and senior free safety Nick Chuong and Rick Adams will lead the secondary.

Junior cornerback J.P. Jenkins and junior outside linebacker Nick Lalande were dominant on the junior varsity level last season and are called upon to make noise this year. This defense is an underrated unit.

Game to Watch: Week 7: Oct. 16 at West Springfield

LAKE BRADDOCK
Last Year: 5-5 (3-4)
Coach: Jim Poythress, 6th year, 47-36 career record
Returning Starters: 9 offense/9 defense
Key Losses: DE Kyle Merrell

At the high-school level, returning starters is a statistic that usually results in hyperbole. A low number causes media outlets everywhere to predict a down year, while a high quantity of returners vaults a team right to the top of preseason power rankings, whatever those mean.

Through two weeks of preseason, though, Lake Braddock is making believers of many. But sixth-year Bruin Coach Jim Poythress is being more cautious than optimistic, at least this early.

“It’s good news and bad news,” he said of his region-best 18 returning starters. “The good news is they’re back. The bad
news is they’re not back off some state championship team; they’re back
off a 5-5 team. The question is can they raise their level of play to
where they’re a championship caliber team. 

“We’re waiting to see. The
jury is still out on that.”

Anonymous jurors around the district have seen the evidence, though, and are convicted.

“Braddock is going to be a handful,” one district coach said.

Added another: “[Former West Springfield Coach Bill] Renner is there and that’s going to help Braddock. They’ve run some pretty wacky offenses in the past.”

In the offseason, Poythress invited the recently-retired Renner to help install his offense at Bruin practices. In the last three years, under his tutelage, the Spartans amassed 1,408 points, 40.2 points per game, finishing first, second and first in Division 6 in 2006, 2007 and 2008, respectively.

With personnel that Poythress described as “perfect” for Renner’s system, it appears a match made in heaven. Having outscored its two preseason opponents, Gar-Field and Fairfax, 97-14, Lake Braddock may prove a match-up from the opposite end of the eternal spectrum.

“You’re adding a guy with, what, 20 years as a head coach,” Poythress said. “That’s a
wealth of experience … Looking forward, I think Michael Nebrich could be the best
quarterback in the region, definitely one of the best quarterbacks in
the region, there’s no question about that. If he can perform to his
capabilities and the kids catch the football, it’ll be fun.

“It’s
definitely a stretch for me because I’ve always been a couple-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust type of guy. Knocking them off the ball and maul people
has been my attitude. This is timing, finesse, I pretty much gave Coach
Renner cart blanche offensively and, so far, it’s been very impressive … Before we hired Bill, I knew this was the direction I knew we needed
to go.”

In 2008, the Bruins only returned three total starters, one on offense. Juniors and seniors littered the starting lineup on both sides of the ball and they finished in a three-way tie for fourth in the Patriot District.

At the forefront of those battle-tested in their youth is junior dual-threat quarterback Nebrich. Senior wide receiver, defensive back and back-up quarterback Ryan Curtis stands 6-foot-3, 220 pounds and will see time all over the field. But he broke his leg during basketball season and may not be fully utilized in the first couple games. Senior running back Osman Mansaray is poised for a breakout season, especially with one of the largest offensive lines in the region.

Senior tackle Khamrone Kolb is the highest-profile lineman for the Bruins. At 6-foot-6, 300 pounds, Kolb already holds nine Division I scholarship offers and is considering Connecticut, North Carolina, Penn State, Virginia and Virginia Tech. But Kolb is recovering from an ACL injury and may miss the season-opener against Langley Friday.

Opposite Kolb is fellow 6-6, 300-pound senior Jack Phillips and junior baby brother, Dallas Phillips. Senior guards Martin Quan, also a 300-pounder, and Timmy Baker are anticipated starters. At center, junior Dylan Evans moved from defensive end over the summer to add speed to the offensive line, and has adapted well. Senior Young Won will spell this corps of blockers. Defensively, senior defensive tackle Wasim Abassi leads a very physical unit.

Two new names to watch, with surnames familiar to Lake Braddock fans, are sophomore athletes Tanner and Tyler Quigley, twin younger brothers of B.J. and Casey Quigley, who earned all-region honors in football and girls’ basketball, respectively, in the last decade. The Quigley twins will torch the junior varsity ranks, but Poythress insists they will see some time on varsity, too.

Needless to say, hopes are high for the Bruins.

In 2008, Oakton returned more starters than any team in the Northern Region and took home a regional title. In 2007, Westfield had a region-best 10 offensive starters back and won the state title. This year, Lake Braddock leads the region in overall returning players. Whether or not the statistic will prove overrated is up for debate, but Poythress acknowledges this unit’s potential.

“I’m never satisfied ever really,” he said. “If you make the playoffs you think that’s good until you lose in the playoffs. I’d like to see this team compete for a district title and then compete at the regional level. Everybody always picks the Concorde teams and with good reason, I understand that.

“I think this football team has the talent to compete with those schools and do well. A lot of it depends on the mental status of our kids.”

Game to Watch: Week 5: Oct. 2 at Robinson

LEE

Last Year: 3-8 (2-5)

Coach: Robert Everett, 4th season, 10-22 career record

Returning Starters: 4 offense/5 defense

Key Losses: DE Anthony Nsekela, LB Kyle Addy, WR Shahram Obed

The highest-profile offseason transfer came when Paul VI standout running back Idreis Augustus elected to play his senior season closer to home at Lee. Augustus’ older brother, Zayd, was an impact fullback and linebacker in Lancer Coach Rob Everett‘s first season in 2006.

With senior running back Jazmier Williams coming off a 1,300-yard season and senior quarterback Greg Lopez entering his third year under center, the only Division 5 school left in the Patriot District features one of its most explosive backfields.

Augustus will line up in the backfield, in the slot and out wide, creating match-up nightmares wherever Lee wills. He rushed for over 2,500 yards and 26 scores in two years at Paul VI.

“The kid can flat out play,” said Everett of Augustus. “It’s a shame he’s only 5-8 or else he’d
have every school in the country offering him. I think with the
competition we’re going to play and what he’s going to be able to do
out on the field — because he’s been doing all that stuff at PVI
without any help — now you throw him in the backfield with Greg and
Jazmier. That’s pretty dangerous.”

At wide receiver, the Lancers have to replace two-year starter Shahram Obed, who led the team with 51 receptions last year. The next closest player had six catches.

Everett expects two newcomers to fill that void, and open eyes in the process. Senior Aaron Jackson missed last season, but brings his 6-foot-2 height back to the starting lineup. In the slot, sophomore C.J. Lewis brings sub-4.5 speed to the slot.

Senior tackle Justin Adams anchors the offensive line since last year.

Defensively, Lee will be led by a trio of Taylors: Senior outside linebacker Danny, senior safety Dante and junior safety Donovan. Joining those returners is senior cornerback Jameel Pitt, completing a secondary that rivals South County as the district’s best.

The defensive line, though, underwent a complete face lift.

Gone is all-region end — and Patriot District Defensive Player of the Year — Anthony Nsekela. This season, the Lancers will start four juniors. First-year defensive line coach Drew Bugden was put in charge of the unit.

Game to Watch: Week 5: Oct. 2 vs. Annandale

SOUTH COUNTY

Last Year: 6-5 (5-2)

Coach: Peter Bendorf, 5th year, 83-75 career record

Returning Starters: 3 offense/5 defense

Key Losses: DB/KR Karlos Morgan, RB/KR/DB Eric Dorsey, RB/LB J.B. Bullock, WR/DB Kyle Michaels, OL/DL Eric Tucker

South County has had three-straight 6-4 seasons, the last two of which result in No. 8 seeds — and first-round exits — in the Division 6 playoffs. While fifth-year Stallion Coach Pete Bendorf feels his team will be markedly improved from a year ago, he knows the Patriot District will be, too.

The key to getting that elusive seventh win — and avoiding the region’s top seed in the quarterfinals — is the play of third-year starting quarterback, senior Aaron Andrews.

“Aaron really has grown into the position from that first game against
West Po his sophomore season, where he got knocked sideways a little
bit,” said Bendorf, who won the Northern Region title at Oakton in 2002. “He’s very steady, very calm; he’s playing like a senior. He’s not
outstanding in any one thing, but he’s pretty solid in a lot of things.

“He runs the ball well, he throws the ball well, he’s a good
decision-maker, he’s very, very under-control and calm. His best
strength is his toughness.”

The strength of this team will be its secondary, headlined by two future Division I players. Senior free safety Andre Simmons is a three-year starter that runs a 4.55 40-yard dash and carries a 3.6 grade point average. Also a kick returner, he has eight current offers from D-I programs: Boston College, Illinois, Maryland, Northwestern, Rutgers, Vanderbilt, Virginia and West Virginia.

Junior whip linebacker and wide receiver Ronnie Van ****, who received three scholarship offers Sept. 1, the first day schools could send offer letters to juniors. Pittsburgh, Rutgers and Boston College all faxed offers to the school and Bendorf said Van **** received verbals from Virginia Tech and West Virginia.

Joining Van **** on the offensive side of the ball is senior slot receiver and kick returner Nico Doublet.

In the backfield, a pair of running backs look to replace Eric Dorsey, the team’s leading rusher and returner in 2008. Speedy senior David Jordan and sophomore Andrew Rector are assigned that duty. Rector played freshman ball last year and scored 24 touchdowns in eight games last year for a team that was 8-0.

Defensively, senior defensive end Antony Carabali added 20 pounds in the offseason and will play an integral role in trying to slow the potent offenses South County will face weekly. Carabali, at 235 pounds, has all the measurables, benching 325, squatting 500 and running 4.8 in the 40-yard dash.

Carabali will asked to spark this unit with his leadership and his play. The offensive and defensive line is somewhat undersized and Bendorf is searching for another impact player or two. He foresees sophomore Cody Smith and junior Mitch Woody playing both ways once their conditioning peaks, which Bendorf hopes is by midseason.

Game to Watch: Week 10: Nov. 6 vs. W.T. Woodson

T.C. WILLIAMS

Last Year: 3-7 (3-4)

Coach: Dennis Randolph, 3rd year, 7-13 career record

Returning Starters: 5 offense/4 defense

Key Losses: QB/P Zach Goehler (Alabama), TE/DE Brandon Burke, RB/DB Dominique Copeland

T.C. Williams only had three wins in 2008, but two were mighty impressive.

It beat Lake Braddock on the road, 20-3, to become the eighth-straight road team to win in that series and it beat West Springfield, minus Bryn Renner, 18-16, at home to keep the Spartans from an outright district title.

As great as their wins were, the Titans looked just as good in several of their losses. T.C. Williams led Oakton, 10-0, at halftime before allowing 26 fourth-quarter points en route to a 39-23 loss. And that was just two weeks after falling to Division 5 regional semifinalist Mount Vernon in overtime, 23-20, in the first game at their new stadium.

“Really, we could have won five of those games,” third-year Titan Coach Dennis Randolph said. “We had a really good
offseason. We played in 80 games over the summer at North Carolina,
Pittsburgh, Richmond, Virginia, we just played all over the place. We
actually finished first or second in every one of those, except UVA,
where we went 5-3 and lost to the two teams that played in the title
game.

“We won the Pittsburgh Tournament out of 32 teams. Hopefully,
that’ll carry over us. Seven-on-seven isn’t the same as regular
football, but 24 or 25 kids had success. We’re hoping that enthusiasm
they had playing the Pittsburgh tournament will carry over. And that’s
what you have to hope for, otherwise you’re doomed to the same fate.”

That was the case for most of this decade. T.C. Williams, once one of the elite programs in the country, has not had a winning record since it went 6-4 under Coach Bill Allan in 1995.

The player with the biggest impact this season will likely be the one with the biggest frame, junior two-way tackle Jay Whitmire, standing at 6-foot-6, 290 pounds. He could get up to six scholarship offers in the next week. Senior guard Luke Dorris missed last year with a broken foot, but is healthy in 2009.

Senior Prince Okigbo transferred in from Yorktown, where he was a tight end and defensive end, and will to move to middle linebacker. Senior DaJuan Douglas returns at the down line position and junior linebacker Kevin Isley returns, the only starting Titan linebacker to do so.

In the secondary, senior cornerback Darnell Roy joins two returning starters, senior safety Robbie Carter and senior cornerback Cortez Taylor. Taylor will be a much larger part of the offense at wide receiver than last season, as T.C. Williams must replace most of its starting skill position players.

A quarterback battle was settled under unfortunate circumstances in a scrimmage against Centreville Aug. 27. Senior quarterback Joe Hargrove had an edge on senior John Bray in an open competition for the starting job, but the big-armed quarterback broke his wrist against the Wildcats and will be sidelined six to eight weeks at least.

Bray, three inches shorter and 30 pounds lighter, will be thrust into a starting role and an early-season schedule that reads: Robinson, Mount Vernon, Oakton, Lake Braddock, West Springfield.

Game to Watch: Week 5: Oct. 2 at West Springfield

WEST POTOMAC

Last Year: 6-4 (3-4)

Coach: Eric Henderson, 6th year, 31-39 career record

Returning Starters: 8 offense/5 defense

Key Losses: QB Cole Walter, RB Daniel Baker, WR Kristian Rodriguez

West Potomac started 5-0 each of the last two seasons before going 2-3 and 1-4 to close out the 2007 and 2008 regular seasons, respectively.

This year, should the Wolverines go unbeaten through the first five weeks, they will have survived an early-season gauntlet that will move them to the top of every area poll.

Four of West Potomac’s first five opponents hosted first-round playoff games: Mount Vernon, Westfield, Chantilly and West Springfield.

“They were kind to us, weren’t they?,” sixth-year Coach Eric Henderson said. “When I first came to West
Potomac, it was just trying to get some W’s, get some momentum and
get kids to buy into the program. Now that we’re where we are at,
it’s a little more competitive.

“We certainly wanted to look at
Westfield or Chantilly — we didn’t really anticipate getting both. But
that’s okay. We’re well-conditioned, our kids are strong, they’ve
worked hard during summer, so we’ll see what happens.”

The entire starting offensive line returns in tact and will rival Lake Braddock’s star-studded unit. All five bench at least 325 pounds.

Henderson called 6-foot-3 senior tackle Matt Cunningham, who recorded nine pancakes against Washington-Lee, the best he has ever coached. And on Henderson’s resume is Connecticut redshirt freshman tackle Jimmy Bennett.

Henderson is also quite impressed with the maturation of 6-3 junior left guard Dan Carriker.

“Physically, he’s the strongest kid on the team pound-for-pound. And he’s 300 pounds,” said Henderson, the former line coach at Lake Braddock. “He’s got everything. He’s the real deal.”

The player they line protects changes this year as senior Colin Mathewson takes the reigns from graduated two-year starter Cole Walter (UVA-Wise). Mathewson has lost only two games in his three-year freshman and junior varsity career.

“Like we’ve done in the last couple years, we seem to find a talent and
we exploit that,” Henderson said. “I think our offensive line is pretty good and we’ve
got a couple running backs that are going to do a good job for us. So
you might see us run the ball a little more than we did with Cole.

“Cole
was a big-time quarterback, so we had to ride that. This quarterback is
a runner.”

Mathewson will be handing the ball off to a pair of senior running backs. Edward Johnson is an explosive back who recorded 500 yards last season as a backup and carried eight times for 130 yards in the Wolverines’ first scrimmage. Derell Lang transfers from Centreville to add some versatility to the backfield.

Henderson says they will be running more of a traditional, single back zone scheme that in recent history. But senior wide receiver Shawn Lee, who had 65 receptions last year, is faster and stronger than he was in 2008 and still projects as a solid fantasy pick.

Junior varsity veterans complete the receiving corps, juniors Jalen Dawson and Daryl Copeland. Henderson said Copeland’s speed was showcased in 7-on-7 tournaments and he should be considered a serious deep threat.

Defensively, two offensive linemen will rotate in at defensive tackle, 6-foot-6, 350-pound senior Akram Mohamed and 6-2, 280-pound senior Francisco Jiminez.

Returning seniors J.P. Marinelli and Eric Miller return at linebacker, Marinelli in the middle and Miller outside.

The secondary will be noticeably younger than the rest of the defense. It features two sophomores, a junior and a senior. Henderson said what the unit lacks in experience, it makes up for in athleticism.

Game to Watch: Week 6: Oct. 9 at W.T. Woodson

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Last Year: 8-4 (7-1)

Coach: J.T. Biddison, 1st year, 33-39 career record (Marshall)

Returning Starters: 4 offense/4 defense

Key Losses: QB Bryn Renner (North Carolina), WR Andy Stallings (Campbell), DL John Lockwood (Monmouth), LB Scott Van Buren (Campbell), RB Brandon Bailey, DB Auggie Tsibi-Gyan, WR Fabrice Kambinga,
DB Malick Diaw, C Will Mallon,
WR Tucker Tobin, OL/DL Andrew Leonzo

If one coach has an edge on Woodson’s addition to the Patriot District, it is the newest kid on the block: West Springfield Coach J.T. Biddison.

Biddison coached at Marshall for six seasons, in the Liberty District, and is entering his first season leading the Spartans.

“Trey, playing him over the years, he involves the talent he has,” said Biddison, 33-39 in his Statesmen tenure. “Three
years ago, they were double-wing, slot, high-fill, mid-line,
smash-it-in-your-face football. Last year, they were wide-open, spread
option, throw deep to Weizenheimer — whoever that guy was.

“They change
a little bit every year … I kind of know what’s he’s going to do, but
he knows what I’m going to do — at least, defensively. So it goes both
ways.”

Not only did the sidelines undergo an offseason makeover, but so will the highlight films.

Three-time all-region nominee — the 2008 Northern Region Offensive Player of the Year — Bryn Renner graduated and received a scholarship to play at North Carolina. He was one of four Spartans to earn Division I scholarships, joining wide receiver Andy Stallings (Campbell), linebacker Scott Van Buren (Campbell) and defensive end John Lockwood (Monmouth).

Vying to replace Renner under center, are senior Eric Schauder and junior Matt Prokop. Should Prokop win the job, Schauder will move out wide, where he was the third wide receiver last year. Schauder would join returning starter, senior T.J. O’Connell as favored targets. Biddison said West Springfield will be more balanced offensively than in previous seasons, but will revert to its high-octane approach in select situations.

In the backfield, senior Dan Collins returns after starting the final five games last season. In 2008, Collins rushed for 1,169 yards and 12 touchdowns, with 938 yards and nine touchdowns coming in those five starts.

Installing an updated defense will be assistant coaches Will Gardner and Brendan Campbell, who Biddison brought with him from Marshall.

Senior defensive back Ben Lockwood and senior linebacker Joey DeSantis are two of the four returners on the Spartan defense.

DeSantis is a third-year starter and returning first-team all-district linebacker. He recorded over 100 tackles in each of the last two seasons, including a team-high 133 last year.

He and West Springfield’s 30 seniors will be called on early, as Biddison’s first games in blue and orange will be a baptism by fire.

Its first three opponents are all regional finalists from a year ago, two are defending Northern Region champions: Edison, Oakton and Stone Bridge.

“They all have [a few] things in common: They have a lot of talent and they’re all coached really well,” said Biddison of his schedule, second only to Centreville in statistical difficulty. “They’re definitely going to test us, to find out where we’re at.

“Win or lose, we’re going to learn from every game and hopefully set us up for a great district run.”

Game to Watch: Week 8: Oct. 23 at W.T. Woodson

W.T. WOODSON

Last Year: 7-4 (6-1)

Coach: Trey Taylor, 4th year, 17-14 career record

Returning Starters: 7 offense/5 defense

Key Losses:
WR Max Waizenegger, FS Sam Burt

When in Rome…

In its first year in the Patriot District, W.T. Woodson will switch to a no-huddle offense, giving more control to second-year starting quarterback, senior Connor Reilly.

“We moved to the Patriot and it seems like that’s what everyone in the Patriot does,” fourth-year Cavalier Coach Trey Taylor joked. “I figured we’d just follow suit.”

Reilly committed to Temple over the summer and Taylor will give him much more freedom at the line of scrimmage. In fact, Taylor said he will rely on Reilly to check out of plays and call audibles if he doesn’t like what the defense is showing.

Joining Reilly in the backfield is one of the select few Woodson players who will play both ways, senior running back and linebacker James Johnson, a second-year starter.

Another notable two-way player is senior tight end and defensive end Josh Hogan, but Taylor said he would be featured more on offense.

The Cavaliers’ most substantial loss to graduation was easily second-team all-region receiver Max Waizenegger. The two-time all-district wide out also returned kicks and started at cornerback.

“I don’t think we’re going to find one kid that can do everything that
he did,” said Taylor, a West Springfield alumnus. “I think we’re going to have to spread it around amongst some
other kids. That being said, I think we have a better array of weapons
on the field this year that we can spread the ball around and get
things accomplished.

“I don’t think it will be a one-man show like it
was last year.”

Replacing Waizenegger, as promised by Taylor, is a pair of senior wide receivers: Mike Le and Brendan Breslin, a standout baseball player.

Senior running back Betrand Ngampa will step to spell Johnson and sophomore Jonathan Stokes will get spot carries in his first varsity season. The latter, a 5-foot-7, 185-pound bull, squats 450 pounds.

In the defensive backfield, Ngampa will start at free safety alongside senior strong safety Colin Dempsey.

Game to Watch: Week 10: Nov. 6 at South County

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

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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

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Volleyball: Patriot District Preview

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

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

On the very short list of best non-Concorde teams is defending Patriot District champion South County.

The Stallions were 17-4 last season with all four defeats coming at the hands of Concorde competition. And they only graduated two players from that team.

They feature arguably the best underclassmen in the Northern Region, junior middle hitter Simone Antwi. Antwi can touch 10-3 and holds scholarship offers from Stanford, USC and Duke.

Along with senior outside hitter Lindsay Stephens — the Patriot District Player of the Year — and honorable-mention all-district libero Erica Fairbanks, South County is favored to run its district table again.

“To me, the expectations of the other teams in the region — what they expect of us — are to finish well and not just **** out,” fifth-year coach Dave Prahl said. “That’s the expectation other teams have of us, which I think we’ll do. We’d like to get some people on the all-region team; Lindsay was second-team last year and Simone made honorable-mention.

“I wouldn’t see why both of those girls wouldn’t be first-team all region this year, along with like four Chantilly girls.”

One area coach said the Stallions are “on the brink of breaking out.”

Another added: “South County is there. I think everyone the Patriot is going to start hating them, across the board. I think they’re going to be winning a lot.”

With out-of-conference games against Westfield, Centreville, Chantilly, Herndon and Langley, in that order all before October, the conventional wisdom of a breakout year for South County will be put to a crucible quickly.

Standing in the way of a district repeat is West Springfield, led by second-year coach Stephanie Noriega. But the Spartans (16-6) graduated seven seniors, many of whom key contributors from last season — four second-team all-district players — including setter Lauren Sipple and both outside hitters.

Replacing Sipple is senior setter Sammy Hague and the only all-district player to return, senior libero Alyssa Hager, who Noriega will rely on as an on-the-court leader.

“She really ran our defense last year,” said Noriega, whose team has appeared in five-straight district finals, winning two. “She just took control of it and took charge out there on the court. And with last year’s experience, now being a senior, she’s a definite leader for our time and does a lot.

“As far as controlling our team and our defense on the floor, I just put her in charge and don’t have to worry a lot. I know she’ll get the job done.”

The Spartans also expect two newcomers to make headlines this year. Senior outside hitter Brittany McCollum transferred from Blacksburg and junior outside hitter Lauren Scolese starred on junior varsity last season before moving up for the playoffs.

Woodson joined the Patriot District over the summer and brings one of the top returning liberos in the region, senior Tiffany Vu.

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Field Hockey: Patriot District Preview

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

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

Lake Braddock was one of the most dominant Northern Region teams in recent memory last year, rolling to a 23-2 record, outscoring its opponents 57-18. The Bruins won the regional title and reached the state semifinal, ultimately falling to Princess Anne, 1-0.

But it is not what Lake Braddock gained last year that will dominate the early-season headlines, but what it lost in the offseason. The Bruins graduated 12 seniors — nine of whom started — and for the first time in coach Diane Miller’s 29-year career, will feature no seniors on the roster.

“I think that’s the problem. The expectations every year for Lake Braddock are very high,” said Miller, one of 37 known members of the 400-win club. “And, of course, my standards are very high. Just the reputation alone — and they want to try and live up to that and they want to work towards that — we have so many new people on the field.

“It’s going to take time to develop into a solid team.”

Notable departures include: co-Northern Region Player of the Year Annie Stephens (Michigan State), first-team all-region forward Laura Brodner, first-team all-region forward Katie Klatt, second-team all-region midfielder Ann Marie Gambescia (Central Florida) and Sarah Morehouse (William & Mary), who missed last season with an ACL tear.

But the Bruins’ leading scorer from 2008, junior forward Brittany Hopkins (19 goals) is one of its two returning starters, joining third-year starting junior forward Ali Froede. Joining Hopkins and Froede in captaincy is junior defender Melanie Brodner, anchoring a defense with all new faces in its starting lineup.

Lake Braddock also features one of the area’s top freshman, forward Maria Pastor, who moved to Burke from Argentina. Miller praised Pastor’s stick work, fluidity and shooting accuracy and predicts — once Pastor is accustomed to American officiating — she will be a fixture in the Bruin lineup for the next four seasons.

“She said to me last night, ‘They blow the whistle for everything,'” Miller said. “You know how when somebody has the ball and somebody cuts across and then takes it? In field hockey, that’s obstruction.

“That’s what she was doing, getting her body to knock people off, and she didn’t understand why it was being called. She just has to learn things like that.”

The likely favorite in the Patriot District is defending champion South County. The Stallions only graduated three seniors, but just one that started, first-team all-region midfielder Megan Rea.

South County was 18-4 last season, with three losses to Westfield and one to Lake Braddock. Coach Leah Conte is focusing on defense and — with just five seniors on the current roster — may be at the forefront of a Stallion dynasty.

Feature players include junior midfielder Patty Raferty, sophomore defender Rachel Binzer, junior forward Maddy Tettelbach, senior keeper Kirsten Olson and senior forward Megan Wears — the leading scorer last season.

“I think we all have very high expectations, but we’re very realistic,” said Conte, the program’s only coach in its five-year history. “We only lost three seniors, but we also had a few girls that decided not to come out for the team this year. So we are pretty young; we have a ton of sophomores on this team.”

Annandale was the only Northern Region team to beat Lake Braddock last year, eliminating the Bruins from the Patriot District Tournament in the semifinals, 2-0.

And under coach Cindy Hook, the Atoms reached the regional semifinals and were the youngest team aside from the Stallions in the final four. They graduate second-team all-region defender Amy Steinbuechler, but return most of their starters.

“I don’t think [Hook] lost very many [players] at all,” Miller said. “I remember looking at the district tournament and going, ‘Uh oh!'”

In the offseason, Woodson joined the Patriot District and will line up the favorite to repeat as Northern Region Player of the Year, senior midfielder Shelly Montgomery. The Cavaliers won the regional title in 2007 and are the two-time defending Liberty District champions.

Woodson graduated 12 seniors, including first-team all-region midfielder Mary Beth Barham (Yale) and second-team all-region midfielder Becca Geist, but have eight seniors on the current roster and are saturated with experienced juniors.

“Both of those teams are very well-coached,” said Conte of Lake Braddock and Woodson, the two times most likely to threaten a South County repeat. “I have a lot of respect for both Diane and Becky [Preston]. I know they’ll put great teams on the field.

“We’re not going to take any team lightly this year.”

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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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