Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Eagles spike Bengals in Class CC volleyball final

Hattie Burgher tips the ball over the net for the Loudonville Christian School during Tuesday's Section II Class CC championship match against Tamarac at Hudson Falls High School. (All photos by J.S. Carras - The Record). 

HUDSON FALLS — Hattie Burgher saved her biggest kill for last Tuesday evening in the Section II Class CC girls volleyball championship match against Tamarac.

Burgher, a junior outside hitter at the Loudonville Christian School, put an exclamation point on the Eagles’ 3-1 victory over the Bengals with her 19th kill of the match. Her teammates stormed the court to hop up and down and hoist the Section II trophy together following a topsy-turvy battle against Tamarac at Hudson Falls High School.

Loudonville (16-2), the No. 1 seed and the Central Hudson Valley League’s regular season champion, won the first game 26-24 and posted a 25-15 triumph over the Bengals in game two. Tamarac, however, rallied to win game three, 26-24 and was two points away from sealing a victory in game four. Loudonville won six of the final seven points in the fourth game, clinching the fourth Section II title for the program in the past five years with a 26-24 victory.

Tamarac's Roni Weeks (11) and Loudonville Christian's Sam Parry battle for the ball over the net during Tuesday's Section II Class CC championship match at Hudson Falls.

“We have a great coach and we have great talent,” said Burgher, at right, who added 17 digs. “As small as our school is, we all work hard. Everyone is willing to work hard and push themselves because they want to keep up the winning tradition.”

Chelsea Brown, at left, a senior captain, who like Burgher, is in her fourth year as an outside hitter on the varsity squad, recorded 19 service points and 10 kills, claimed Tuesday’s match was one of the toughest the team had played in all season.

“We’ve had a few matches that were pretty tough, but the girls pulled through every time,” she said.


Julia Brown added 46 assists, 22 digs and 11 service points for the Eagles, while Arlina Anderson chipped in with 14 kills. Sam Parry bolstered Loudonville’s offensive attack with 11 kills.

Tamarac's Alyssa Bonesteel and Loudonville Christian's Arlina Anderson collide at the net during Tuesday's Section II Class CC championship match at Hudson Falls.

Loudonville had defeated Tamarac 3-0 in a non-conference matchup during the regular season.

“Every time we pass the ball and put it to the setter’s hands, we have a kill. So that’s my secret,” said Loudonville head coach Rosemary Burgher. “It’s not a big secret. Everybody wants to be the glory hitter, the killer, the attacker. You can’t get there unless you have good, effective passing.”

Tamarac (14-5), the No. 2 seed, was making its first appearance in a Section II championship match. The Bengals, who won a Wasaren League championship for the first time in school history in 2009, repeated that feat in 2010.

Head coach Judy Burton will miss a number of her seniors next season, including three-time reigning Wasaren League MVP Nancy Vickerson, but she hopes the path blazed by the team in the last two seasons inspires future generations of Tamarac players.

“This is as far as anybody’s ever gotten,” Burton said. “We have nothing to be ashamed of and nothing to cry about. This is as good as we’ve ever done.”

Loudonville advances to the Section II Class CC/C playoff Thursday at 3 p.m. at Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake High School against Class C’s No. 1 seed Voorheesville (19-0), which defeated Galway 3-0.

Loudonville Christian's Arlina Anderson leaps to block a Tamarac shot during Tuesday's Section II Class CC championship match at Hudson Falls.

A season ago, when there was just one Class C bracket, Loudonville defeated Voorheesville in the championship match, 3-0.

The Eagles know it won’t be easy defending their title, but they’re hoping that the strong team chemistry that has served them well so far carries over into the playoff match.

“We haven’t had a leader in terms of one person to get them all into gear,” said coach Burgher. “They play very emphatically. It’s like a wave. If one is down, they all come down. If one is up, honestly, they’re really unstoppable. They really, really are.”




--
In Clifton Park, the Catholic Central girls team was defeated by No. 2 seed Queensbury (17-0), three games to one in a Section II Class A semifinal at Shenendehowa High School. CCHS, the No. 3 seed and Big 10 Conference regular season champion, finished the season with a 16-3 record. Our Ed Weaver was there, so look for his account of the game in Wednesday's edition of The Record.

Catholic Central's Gena Russo (8) and Caitlin Whelan (16) leap to block a shot during Tuesday's Section II Class A semifinal at Shenendehowa.

Catholic Central's Hannah Kutny leaps for a kill shot during Tuesday's Section II Class A semifinal against Queensbury at Shenendehowa.

Catholic Central's Maddie Coneys leaps to block a shot during Tuesday's Section II Class A semifinal at Shenendehowa.

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Friday, October 15, 2010

Mechanicville wins and gets in, tops Tamarac, 28-27 (2 OT)


Mechanicville's Jake Mastrocola celebrates the Red Raiders' dramatic overtime victory over Tamarac Friday night in Clums Corners. For his highlights, view the video below. (Vidcaps by Will Montgomery - The Record).

CLUMS CORNERS -- When David Funaro turned the corner and did not see any Tamarac defenders in his way, one year of frustration for the Mechanicville High School football program was wiped away.

Mechanicville, which finished the 2009 regular season with a 5-2 record but missed the postseason because of a quarterpoint tiebreaker, faced a win-and-get-in situation for the 2010 playoffs Friday night at Tamarac.


The Red Raiders overcame a 12-point fourth quarter deficit – scoring twice in the final 50 seconds of regulation – and Funaro caught a 15-yard touchdown pass that set up his game-winning two-point conversion run in a 28-27 double overtime Class C North Division victory at Tamarac High School.

Mechanicville's J.J. Abele carries the ball in Friday's Class C North Division game at Tamarac. He scored all three Red Raiders touchdowns in regulation. (Action photos by J.S. Carras - The Record).

"It feels really good to win like that too," Funaro said. "We came out really hard, the line stepped up and it was a great ending to that game. It was a great ending, it really was."

Mechanicville (4-2, 4-3) leapfrogged Tamarac (4-2, 5-2) in the North Division standings and will be the No. 3 seed in the playoffs. The Red Raiders, making their first playoff appearance from 2006, will play either Fonda-Fultonville or Watervliet, depending on the result of today’s Voorheesville at Watervliet contest.

Tamarac, the No. 4 seed, will travel to South Division No. 1 Chatham in the first round of the section II Class C playoffs on Friday.


"We knew it was a 50-50 shot and we were both evenly matched and we just did awesome," said Mechanicville senior running back J.J. Abele, pictured above, who gained a game-high 87 rushing yards on 14 attempts and scored all three Mechanicville touchdowns in regulation. "The whole team worked together. I’m really happy right now."

Tamarac grabbed the early lead when quarterback Nick Casale connected with Tyler Larvie on a 53-yard screen pass touchdown just under two minutes into the game.

The teams traded punts the rest of the first quarter and Casale found Larvie again four and one half minutes into the second quarter on a 55-yard touchdown strike down the right sideline.

Mechanicville senior captain J.J. Abele, a running back and linebacker, stiff arms Tamarac's Kevin O'Keefe during Friday's game.

Abele, however, gave the Red Raiders some life by returning the opening kickoff of the second half 83 yards for a touchdown.

Tamarac pinned Mechanicville deep in its own territory early in the fourth quarter, tipped a Red Raiders punt and Casale scored on a 25-yard run that gave the Bengals a 12-point lead with 10:11 to play.

Mechanicville responded with a 17-play, five and one half minute drive that ended with Casale intercepting a pass throw by Red Raiders quarterback Sam Connors on a fourth-and-goal play from the eight-yard line.


A penalty-filled Tamarac drive and a punt shanked out-of-bounds set up Abele for a 25-yard touchdown run with 50 seconds remaining. The Red Raiders recovered the ensuing onside kick and Abele scored on a one-yard run with 1.3 seconds left on the clock to tie the game. The Tamarac defense stopped Abele just short of the goal line on the following two-point conversion play, which sent the game to overtime.

"They got some momentum going," said Tamarac head coach Erick Roadcap. "Mechanicville did a great job. They played hard right until the end. They did a great job. It was a tough game either way and it could have gone either way. They did a great job with special teams and that really made the difference in the game - an onside kick and a kick return and the rest is history."

Tamarac's Nick Arnold is covered in mud in the first quarter of Friday's Class C North Division football game against Mechanicville. The game was played under a steady drizzle through much of the first half.

Mechanicville has never lost to Tamarac in program history. Red Raiders head coach Kevin Collins told his team after the game that he was "more proud of this team right now than any team I’ve ever coached."

"I can’t feel my toes," laughed Abele, covered in mud. "I can’t feel anything on me. But it’s awesome. It really is."

"That was Red Raider football," Funaro, pictured below, said. "That’s what it was. It was heart."

  • NOTES: Larvie, Section II's leading receiver this year by yardage, increased his season totals to 572 receiving yards on 23 catches. He has grabbed seven touchdowns and averages 24.9 yards per reception.
  • Tamarac QB Nick Casale has completed 46-of-99 passes for 985 yards this season. He missed much of the Greenwich game in Week Five and all of Game Six against Corinth.
  • Tamarac's Wade Hansen made six tackles Friday - three were sacks. Joe Hulsebosch made seven tackles and blocked a punt.
  • Tamarac is making its first playoff appearance since 2008 and just the third in program history. The team won the 1983 Section II Division III title over Hoosick Falls.
MECHANICVILLE 28, TAMARAC 27 (2 OT)
Mechanicville (4-2, 4-3) 0 0 8 12 0 7 - 27
Tamarac (4-2, 5-2) 7 6 0 7 0 7 - 28
First Quarter
T - Tyler Larvie 53 pass from Nick Casale (Reed Meehan kick) 9:57
Second Quarter
T - Larvie 55 pass from Casale (kick failed) 7:35
Third Quarter
M - J.J. Abele 83 kick return (Abele run) 11:45
Fourth Quarter
T - Casale 25 run (Meehan kick) 10:11
M - Abele 25 run (pass failed) 0:50
M - Abele 1 run (run failed) 0:01
First Overtime
No scoring
Second Overtime
T - David Newell 7 run (Meehan kick)
M - David Funaro 15 pass from Sam Connors (Funaro run)
Individual Stats
Rushing: Mechanicville (45-130): Abele 14-87, Funaro 20-27, Dunn 3-29, Hatalski 2-5, Connors 6-(-18). Tamarac (35-139): M.Morine 22-78, Casale 9-47, Broderick 4-14.
Passing: Mechanicville: Connors 8-27-106-1-1. Tamarac: Casale 5-16-158-2-2.
Receiving: Mechanicville (8-106): Grayson 6-95, Funaro 1-15, Dunn 1-(-4). Tamarac (5-158): Larvie 3-113, N.Newell 2-45.


Brien Bouyea covered the Bishop Maginn at Lansingburgh game for us. Here is an excerpt from his story. For the full scoop on the Knights, check out Saturday's edition of The Record.

TROY -- Smashmouth football has long been the recipe for success at Lansingburgh High School - and that formula delivered the Knights a coveted division championship and a No. 1 play¬off seed on Friday night.

Seniors Marcus Little and Jacob Luce powered a punishing ground game that controlled the clock and wore down Bishop Maginn as Lansingburgh methodically grinded out a 20-14 victory to clinch the Southeast Division champi¬onship and a No. 1 seed in the upcoming Class A playoffs.

"We just want to pound away at teams and play to our strengths," Luce said. "We believe we can run the ball on any¬body and control the game that way. We made some mistakes tonight, but we made up for that by controlling the ball and stepping up on defense."

Lansingburgh's Chad Laustrup leaps and applauds the Knights' effort Friday night against Bishop Maginn. (Photos by J.S. Carras - The Record).

LANSINGBURGH 20, BISHOP MAGINN 14
Bishop Maginn     7 0 0 7 - 14
Lansingburgh     0 7 6 7 - 20
First Quarter
BM -
Matthias McKinnon 16 run (John Sica kick), 9:56.
Second Quarter
L -
Jake Luce 1 run (Jake Shaw kick), 5:18.
Third Quarter
L -
Marcus Little 8 run (kick failed), 9:51.
Fourth Quarter
L -
Luce 22 run (Shaw kick), 5:27.
BM - McKinnon 35 run (Sica kick), 2:51.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING:
BM - Matthias McKinnon 14-73, Antoine Johnson 6-19, Dion Williams 7-10, John Sica 5-(-6); L - Marcus Little 20-129, Anthony Fogarty 3-7, Jake Luce 11-59.
PASSING: BM - John Sica 4-12-0-64; L - Carlos Grillo 3-6-0-100.
RECEIVING: BM - Isaiah Phillips 1-40, Antoine Johnson 1-(-6), James Lawitz 1-12, Javon Williams 1-18; L - Anthony Fogarty 2-72, Sajae Pryor 1-28.

Lansingburgh's Marcus Little looks for running room Friday night against Bishop Maginn. The Knights won the Southeast Division title in the process, 20-14.

Friday's scoreboard
Class AA
Empire Division
CBA 35, Albany 0
Guilderland 33, Bethlehem 7
Saratoga 14, Shenendehowa 12
Liberty Division
Columbia 26, La Salle 20
Schenectady 23, Colonie 6
Non-division
Niskayuna 42, Ballston Spa 17
Class A
Southeast Division
Lansingburgh 20, Maginn 14
Averill Park 32, Mohonasen 14
Northwest Division
Amsterdam 42, Gloversville 21
Non-division
Burnt Hills 70, S.Glens Falls 13
Scotia-Glenville 34, Cairo 0
Class B
Reinfurt Division
Ravena 21, Albany Academy 6
West Division
Hudson Falls 61, Broadalbin 34
Cobleskill 26, Johnstown 6
Schalmont 13, Schuylerville 0
Class C
South Division
Fonda 21, Taconic Hills 6
North Division
Mechanicville 28, Tamarac 27 (2 OT)
Granville 48, Corinth 20
Non-division
Chatham 48, Greenwich 28
Catholic Central 14, I.Crane 13
Class D
Rensselaer 18, Whitehall 6

Saratoga Springs defeated a reeling Shenendehowa team, 14-12, to leapfrog the Plainsmen in the Empire Division standings. Ballston Spa was awarded the No. 1 seed with the Blue Streaks' victory. (Photo courtsey The Saratogian).

The Record

COLONIE --
Schenectady High finished with 232 yards and did just enough to put its team into the Section II Class AA playoffs.
The Patriots’ (3-3, 3-4) offense was led by Kirieme Pitts, who rushed for 164 yards on 17 carries to defeat Colonie 23-7 on Friday night.
Isaiah Earing, Mister Taylor and Tim Cox rushed for one touchdown each for the Patriots, who earned the Class AA Liberty Division No. 4 seed in the upcoming Liberty Division playoffs. Schenectady will play Empire Division champion Ballston Spa next week in the first round.
Davion Brink saw the bulk of the carries for Colonie, tallying 70 yards on 15 carries and one touchdown.
Niskayuna 42, Ballston Spa 17: Kyle Bayly threw for four touchdowns on 22 of 37 passing for 420 yards to pace the Silver Warriors, who were down 7-0 in the first quarter. Nick Schuler caught two touchdowns for 236 yards on eight catches while Chris Henry and Josh Callahan brought in the other two Bayly tosses.
Troy Gargiulo ran in the Scotties’ lone score from eight yards out. Ballston Spa still locked up the No. 1 seed in the Empire Division because of Shendehowa’s loss.
Saratoga 14, Shenendehowa 12: The Blue Streaks (4-2, 4-3) leapfrogged the Plainsmen (4-2, 5-2) for the No. 2 spot in the Empire Division. Shen, the No. 3 seed, will play at Shaker or Troy next week in the opening round of the Class AA playoffs.
Bronson Greene ran in a fourth quarter touchdown, but the two-point conversion failed. 
Columbia 26, La Salle 20: Connor Ramon hauled in a 25-yard touchdown pass from John Stanley to give the Blue Devils (1-5, 1-6) their first victory of the season.
The Cadets (1-5, 1-6) got two passing touchdowns from Garrett Delory and a rushing touchdown from Josh Landy.  
Guilderland 33, Bethlehem 7: Guilderland (4-3) running back Tony Stanish accounted for 80 of the Dutchmen’s 230 yards on the ground and ran in two touchdowns. Quarterback Ryan Smith threw for 160 yards and one touchdown, an 11 yard pass to Dylan August. Mike Garcelon scored from ten yards out early in the fourth and defensive lineman Matt Callanan took a 21 yard fumble return in for a score late in the contest. The Eagles (2-5) got on the board with 1:54 left when quarterback John Gosstola connected with Zach Garcia for a 34 yard touchdown completion.
CBA 35, Albany 0: Nick Antoinette scored two rushing touchdowns for the Brothers (3-3, 4-3).
Elijah Dukes, Cody Zappone and Bob Macari also scored rushing touchdowns for CBA. 

Class A
Averill Park 32, Mohonasen 14:
The Warriors rushed 248 yards on 36 attempts in a Southeast Division tilt. Matt Joe ran for 82 yards and three touchdowns for Averill Park (5-2), the Southeast Division No. 2 seed, while Tyler Dunworth rushed for 85 yards and one score. Noah Friedman had 100 yards on the ground and scored the Mighty Warriors (0-7) lone touchdown.
Burnt Hills 70, South Glens Falls 13: Brandon Beatty scored four rushing touchdowns as the Northwest Division champion Spartans (5-0, 7-0) remained unbeaten.
Amsterdam 42, Gloversville 21: The Rugged Rams (4-1, 6-1) solidified their playoff position as the Northwest Division No. 2 seed with a solid road victory.

Class B
Ravena 21, Albany Academy 6:
The Indians captured the No. 1 seed in the Reinfurt Division with the victory while the Cadets drop to the No. 2 seed in next week’s playoffs. Corey Watts rushed for two touchdowns for 177 yards on 28 carries to lead the Indians’ offense which ran for 305 total yards. Zay Richardson, who rushed for 183 yards on 29 carries scored on a 70 yard run to close out the game.
Schalmont 13, Schuylerville 0: The Sabres scored all of its points in the second quarter to stay unbeaten in Class B action at 7-0. The Sabres earn No. 1 seed in the West Division with the win and a first round bye for next week’s playoffs. Alex Hildebrand returned an interception 43 yards for Schalmont’s first touchdown. Devon Willis scored on a 21 yard run later in the second quarter for a 13-0 advantage.
Cobleskill 26, Johnstown 6: Cullan Hanna threw a 28 yard pass to Chris Phelan in the first quarter and hit Jordyn McIntire for a 27 yard touchdown toss in the second quarter to give the Bulldogs a West Division victory. McIntire added a nine yard run in the final quarter for 85 yards rushing on 15 carries.
Hudson Falls 61, Broadalbin-Perth 34: The Tigers posted a West Division victory.

Class C
Chatham 48, Greenwich 28:
The Panthers (5-0, 7-0) finished off another undefeated regular season on the road against the Witches (5-1, 5-2).
Granville 48, Corinth 20: Codi Scribner finished with more than 200 yards on the night rushing and three touchdowns for the Golden Horde (4-3, 4-3), who were eliminated from postseason contention by Mechanicville’s victory at Tamarac.
Fonda 21, Taconic Hills 6: The Braves (5-1, 5-2) got touchdowns in each of the first three quarters to down the Titans (1-5, 1-6).

Class D
Rensselaer 18, Whitehall 6:
Tom Collins rushed for two touchdowns, one for 23 yards in the first quarter and the second from one yard out in the second quarter to lead the Rams, who earned a No. 2 seed with the win and a first round bye for next week’s playoffs. Whitehall (4-2) answered with a 33 yard run by Josh Hoagland in the second quarter. Tim Foust found Jarrid Wilkinson for an eight yard touchdown toss in the third quarter.

Non-Division
Catholic Central 14, Ichabod Crane 13:
Tyler Gaston and Bradley Adams both had touchdowns for the Crusaders (0-5, 2-5) in a victory over the Riders.
Scotia 34, Cairo-Durham 0: The Tartans (1-3, 2-5) raced out to a 22-0 halftime lead and never looked back.

Saturday's schedule
Class AA
Liberty Division
Shaker at Troy 2:30 p.m.
Class A
Northwest Division
Queensbury at Glens Falls 1:30 p.m.
Class B
Reinfurt Division
Hudson at Cohoes 1:30 p.m.
Class C
South Division
Voorheesville at Watervliet 2 p.m.
Canajoharie at Coxsackie 1 p.m.
Class D
B.Gibbons at Fort Edward 1 p.m.
Warrensburg at Cambridge 1 p.m

A Niskayuna ballcarrier is wrapped up by a Ballston Spa tackler during Friday's game. The Silver Warriors won big, but the Scotties earned the Empire Division's No. 1 seed by virtue of Saratoga's victory over Shen.

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Saturday, October 9, 2010

A Wild(cat) afternoon at Maple Hill's Fall Sports Day

CASTLETON — They hit the crossbar and hit the post. They failed to capitalize on breakaway opportunities and wide-open chances in front of the net.

Given a second life in overtime, Maple Hill High School junior forward Jakob Yager provided the golden goal in a 1-0 boys soccer victory for the Wildcats over Cobleskill-Richmondville.


Maple Hill junior forward Jakob Yager (above) scored the game-winning goal in overtime in Saturday's first round victory over Cobleskill-Richmondville.

 “That’s what some of our games have been like,” Yager said. “1-0 games where we control the game. That’s what this was.”

 Maple Hill and Cobleskill-Richmondville captains shake hands after the coin toss prior to the golden goal overtime session Saturday afternoon. Maple Hill, which had plenty of chances in regulation, did not waste any time in the extra period.

Maple Hill’s defense allowed just two shots on goalkeeper Derek VanAlstyne. The Wildcats had 11 corner kicks in the game and forced Cobleskill’s C.J. Blohm to make 12 tough saves.

Johnstown used a pair of second half goals in defeating Tamarac 2-0 in the other first round game.
Maple Hill (8-0-0, 9-0-0) will play host to Johnstown (4-4-0, 5-4-0) in the championship game at 3 p.m. Monday behind Maple Hill Middle School. Tamarac (2-3-3, 2-4-3) and Cobleskill-Richmondville (2-7-0, 2-8-0) will play in a consolation game at the same time.

MAPLE HILL 1, COBLESKILL-RICHMONDVILLE 0 (OT)
C-R (2-7-0, 2-8-0) 0 0 0 - 0
Maple Hill (8-0-0, 9-0-0) 0 0 1 - 1
Scoring: MH: Yager 1-0, Morgan 0-1.
Goalie saves: MH: VanAlstyne, 2. CR: Blohm, 12.
Corner kicks: MH: 11. CR: 0.

JOHNSTOWN 2, TAMARAC 0
Johnstown (4-4-0, 5-4-0) 0 2 - 2
Tamarac (2-3-3, 2-4-3) 0 0 - 0
Girls Soccer

The Maple Hill girls soccer team saved its offense for its homecoming celebration, as Meeghan Arno, the school's all-time leading scorer, tallied three goals and Alysha Cross added one goal and two assists in a 6-1 victory over Albany High. 

Sierra Legge (left) and Meeghan Arno (right) are the only seniors on this year's Maple Hill girls soccer team, which is still undefeated.

Maple Hill (10-0-0, 11-0-0) will host Cambridge (7-2-1, 8-2-1) in the tournament championship game Monday at 1 p.m. at Maple Hill Middle School. Cambridge defeated Catholic Central 2-0 on a pair of goals from Bridget Cuddihy in the other first round game.

The Cambridge girls soccer team works on calisthenics prior to Saturday's opening round game against Catholic Central.

Big 10 Conference rivals Albany High (0-4-0, 1-7-0) and Catholic Central (2-1-1, 6-3-1) will square off in a consolation game at the same time.

“This is natural for us to have this weekend,” Arno said. “We’re finally back in our own tournament and not just playing league games. We’re playing AA schools and showing our stuff. But all of our friends from other school think it’s weird we don’t have football.”

Monday's game between Cambridge and Maple Hill won't only be an interesting non-conference small-school game at the midway point of the 2010 season, it will be a rematch of a great 2009 Section II playoff game.

A season ago, Cambridge defeated Maple Hill, 4-3, in the Section II Class CC semifinals. Click here to read that story.

"We're looking forward to it," Arno said. "We played them last year and we didn't quite come out on top. We're looking to come out on top this time."

--
It was a bit of a strange day for the girls soccer teams. Albany High and Maple Hill played 10-on-10 in the first half since a number of Albany High players were late to the game because they took SAT exams in the morning. The same thing affected the Catholic Central team, which had to use a player in goal who had never played there before.

MAPLE HILL 6, ALBANY 1
Albany (0-4-0, 1-7-0) 0 1 - 1
Maple Hill (10-0-0, 11-0-0) 2 4 - 6
Scoring: A: Mattei 1-0. MH: Arno 3-1, Cross 1-2, Legge 1-1, Czajkowski 1-0.
Goalie saves: A: Waterson, 8; Honeyghan, 3. MH: Briggs, 2.

CAMBRIDGE 2, CATHOLIC CENTRAL 0
Cambridge (7-2-1, 8-2-1) 2 0 - 2
CCHS (2-1-1, 6-3-1) 0 0 - 0
Scoring: Cambridge: Cuddihy 2-0, Roverby 0-1. 
Goalie saves: Cambridge, Andrew, 7. CCHS: O'Brien, 3; Regan, 4.

Girls Volleyball

A pair of teams with undefeated records in their respective leagues squared off in the championship match of the girls volleyball tournament and the Wasaren League leaders from Tamarac bumped off the homestanding Patroon leaders in Maple Hill.

Tamarac put together an inspirational rally in the second and final game of the championship match to win the tournament title by scores of 25-21 and 25-23.


“I think it was really great that we came together and we really built our energy as we were going,” said Tamarac senior setter Sarah Malsch, pictured, above, who was named tournament MVP. “We started off down and we were down by a lot. Once we started getting point after pint, we started building our energy and confidence.”

The Bengals (7-0, 9-2) won their first-ever regular season league title in 2009 and are hoping to build on that in 2010.

“The program is really starting to grow and get a lot better,” Malsch said. “Last year was our first league championship and we’re headed in that direction this year, so I think it’s getting better and better.”

Maple Hill (10-0, 10-1) is also on the way up under fourth-year varsity head coach Len Bacon.

"It makes us better when we play against a high-level team like that," Bacon said. "Obviously, we would have liked to won, but we played a pretty nice game."

Kiwanis Glover Cross Country Invitational

Ravena senior Mike Morrow covered the course in 16:42 to claim the individual title in the boys race. Berlin, which placed five runners in the top 19, took home the team title in the varsity cross country race. Senior captain Llew Palmer, who placed seventh in 18:03, paced the Mountaineers.

Lansingburgh senior C.J. Sousis placed third overall in a time of 17:07.

Columbia's Anna Boughtwood crosses the finish line one second in front of teammate Kaylee Scott at Saturday's Kiwanis Glover Cross Country Invitational at Maple Hill High School. (Mike McMahon photo - The Record).

In the girls race, the Columbia High girls team passed up the Manhattan Invitational to stay close to home for homecoming weekend and cleaned up at Maple Hill. Senior Anna Boughtwood (19:30), eighth-grader Kaylee Scott (19:31) and freshman Cali Palumbo (20:17) finished 1-2-3 to lead the Blue Devils to the team title.


"I was just trying to stay with her and she just started kicking, so I was like, 'I have to go with her," Boughtwood said of chasing Scott. "We were pushing each other."

"I know what we have as a team. We're up there," said Columbia head coach Doug Hadley. "I'm glad for her, being her senior year. I know Kaylee has a couple of more years. I'm happy with the way they ran today."

Scott, an eighth-grader, finished 10th overall in a time of 19:22.00 in the Great American Cross Country race in Cary, N.C. over the 3.1-mile course. She was the third eighth-grader overall and led Columbia to a sixth place finish in the seeded race.



Anna Boughtwood (25th), Cali Palumbo (32nd), Kailyn Balzano (52nd) and Amanda Jones (53rd) also placed for the Blue Devils. Jones, a seventh-grader, was the top runner at the meet in her grade level.

Scott said that the warm welcome from veterans like Boughtwood has made the transition to the varsity level easy for the youth movement on the Columbia girls team.

 "It's nervewracking, because the first day I was scared that no one would like me, but Anna was so sweet," said Scott. "The state meet is so nervewracking because everyone is taller than you and it's so scary because you're the youngest one there. Oh yeah, it's scary. But it's a fun sport, so I guess you just have to deal with that."

Columbia High School senior Anna Boughtwood (left) passes teammate Kaylee Scott at the finish line during Saturday's Kiwanis Glover Cross Country Invitational at Maple Hill High School. (Mike McMahon photo - The Record).

Hoosic Valley’s Maggie Sanderson was fifth overall in 20:36 and Maple Hill’s Kelsey Oglesby (21:01) and Hannah Riordan (21:07) placed eighth and ninth, respectively, leading the Wildcats to a third place team finish.

For full results, click on the Scribd window below:

Glover2010                                                            

The Columbia High School girls pose with the team championship trophy at the 2010 Kiwanis Glover Cross Country Invitational at Maple Hill High School. (Video capture - Will Montgomery - The Record).

Girls Tennis
Ichabod Crane, paced by Emily Qua, won the team title, winning all nine of its matches. Maple Hill finished second and was followed, in order, by Cobleskill and Greenwich.

Round One
Cobleskill 3, Greenwich 0
Feldman (C) def. Collet (G), 10-7
Brust/Shaw (C) def Boyce/Pellington, 10-8
Krisowaty/Moore (C) def Smith/Curley, 10-5

Ichabod Crane 3, Maple Hill 0
Qua (IC) def Duffy, 10-4
Patzwahl/Geiger (IC) def Bhaskar/Wood, 10-0
Downing/Curry (IC) def Dugan/Quint, 10-3

Round Two
Maple Hill 3, Cobleskill 0
Duffy (MH) def Feldman, 10-6
Bhaskar/Wood (MH) def Brust/Mrisowaty, 10-3
Kirsch/Osmanzai (MH) def Kohler/Moore, 10-0

Ichabod Crane 3, Greenwich 0
Qua (IC) def Collet, 10-0
Geiger/Patwahl (IC) def Pellington/Smith, 10-0
Downing/Geiger (IC) def Boyce/Curley, 10-5

Round Three
Ichabod Crane 3, Cobleskill 0
Qua (IC) def Feldman, 10-1
Patzwahl/Geiger (IC) def Brust/Shaw, 10-1
Geiger/Curry (IC) def Krisowaty/Moore, 10-0

Maple Hill 3, Greenwich 0
Duffy (MH) dfe Collet, 10-5
Bhaskar/Quint (MH) def Boyce/Smith, 10-4
Wood/Dugan (MH) def Pellington/Curley, 10-2


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Thursday, September 30, 2010

State police release Tamarac vs. 'Vliet robbery suspect photos

CLUMS CORNERS -- State Police have released surveillance photographs of three men they believe stole belongings from visiting Watervliet High School football players during a weekend game at Tamarac High School.






Several iPods, a wallet, cash and other personal items were taken from the visiting locker room during the game, which was played early Saturday afternoon on the fields of the school on Route 2.

The photos released Thursday, taken from surveillance cameras outside the school, depict three white males police believe are in their early 20s exiting the building. State Police urged residents to note the clothing they are wearing: one appears to be wearing a red t-shirt, another a white one and the third a grey short-sleeved shirt.

"They don’t appear to be students," Trooper Maureen Tuffey said. "Not recent ones, at least."
The visiting locker room was not locked during the game, which the Tamarac Bengals won 13-12 in a come-from-behind victory.

"It was insult to injury, I guess," Watervliet coach Erick Bernard said of the thefts. "You lose a game and then you get robbed."

Bernard said six or seven athletes discovered some of their belongings had been stolen, including at least five iPods.

To make matters worse, he noted the team’s running back, Ryan Manning, broke his clavicle during Saturday’s game and is out injured.

"It was kind of a tough day, overall," Bernard said.

He doesn’t imagine the athletes will get their items back, but he said catching the culprits will bring some resolution to the issue.

Anyone who recognizes the men pictured or has other knowledge of the larcenies is asked to contact the State Police Loudonville barracks at 783-3211.

- Story by Dave Canfield, The Record
 
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Saturday, September 25, 2010

High school football: Week Four in review

CLUMS CORNERS — Reed Meehan wears two hats during the fall sports season at Tamarac High School, which is to say sometimes he wears a helmet and sometimes he does not.

A senior captain on the Bengals’ soccer team, Meehan also serves as the place kicker for Tamarac’s football team, which is off to a 4-0 start for the first time since 1983. Meehan booted the game-winning extra point with 1:58 remaining in Saturday’s 13-12 non-division Class C triumph over Watervliet.

Tamarac High School senior Reed Meehan (above) is the place kicker on the Bengals' football team and the captain of the soccer team. (Will Montgomery vidcaps - The Record).

“I’ve been playing soccer my whole life. I know when I come out on the field I have to calm down,” Meehan said of his approach to the all-or-nothing aspect of kicking an extra point. “I calmed down and I made that kick.”

Meehan, a forward on the soccer team, scored three goals in the Bengals’ season-opening victory over Granville. Hoosic Valley, however, defeated Tamarac 2-0 on Oct. 14 to snap the Bengals’ 30-game winning streak in Wasaren League action.

On the football field, he has connected on 11 extra points.

“It’s great. I’ve always been a part of the soccer team and we were always good,” said Meehan. “Now it’s great to see the football team doing good. I’m glad it’s my senior year and I’m glad I’m part of this football team.”

Healing from a broken right wrist, Meehan had his right hand wrapped in a protective foam sheath for Saturday’s game, a necessity since the cast had just been removed.

It’s his right leg, however, that has the Tamarac football players glad that he is part of the team.


“He holds his own in practice and he’ll go and make a play when he needs to,” said junior quarterback Nick Casale (pictured, above). “He’s got a golden leg and we’re just going to keep that going.”

“He comes out and gives us his all,” said senior wide receiver Nick Newell, pictured below. “He gave us touchbacks today. It’s just amazing. He has a golden leg. It’s incredible.”


Major matchups in Week Five: In a season that has been defined by blowouts, Week Five should provide Section II football fans with plenty of exciting and important games.

In Class AA, Christian Brothers Academy (2-1, 3-1) plays host to Shenendehowa (3-0, 4-0) in an Empire Division showdown Friday at 7 p.m. Troy (4-0, 4-0) heads to the Spa City for a non-division game Friday against Saratoga Springs (2-2, 2-2). The Flying Horses have outscored opponents 188-0 through four games.

Averill Park (2-0, 3-1) will host Lansingburgh (1-0, 3-1) Friday in a Class A Southeast Division game with the winner likely to wind up division champion.

Tamarac (3-0, 4-0) heads to traditional Wasaren League rival Greenwich (3-1, 3-1) in a Class C North Division matchup Friday night. Both teams are chasing Hoosick Falls (4-0, 4-0), which Saturday heads to Hoosic Valley (0-3, 0-4), the only team in Section II yet to score a single point. Stillwater (1-2, 2-2) will take the short trip to Mechanicville (1-2, 1-3) for the annual battle for the Indian Bowl, this time under the lights Friday night.

Last but not least, in what looks like a Section II Class D Super Bowl preview, Rensselaer (3-0, 3-0) plays host to Cambridge (3-0, 3-0) Friday at 7 p.m.

The Record's power polls
Class AA
Team, League, Overall, Last Week
1, Troy High, 4-0, 4-0, 1
The Flying Horses have outscored opponents 188-0 through four games. Troy posted five straight shutouts during the 2009 season. This week, Troy travels to Saratoga Springs, which scored just two points in a 27-2 loss against CBA.
2, Shaker, 3-0, 4-0, 2
The Blue Bison haven’t blown out their opponents like Troy, but Shaker keeps finding a way to win under first-year head coach Greg Sheeler. Shaker hosts La Salle in a must-win game for the Cadets Friday night at 7 p.m.
3, Shenendehowa, 3-0, 4-0, 3
The Plainsmen are cruising toward an Empire Division title, but Friday’s game at CBA will go a long way in the division’s playoff seeding. Bronson Greene and Tony Fusco have proven to be a potent two-headed attack out of the backfield.
4, Ballston Spa, 3-1, 3-1, 4
The Scotties thumped up Bethlehem on Friday night, 35-6. Ballston Spa plays Empire Division games the next two weeks before playing Nisky of the Liberty Division in a crossover game in Week Seven.
5, Christian Brothers Academy, 2-1, 3-1, NR
The Brothers made a pretty big statement on Friday night, holding defending Section II Class AA champion Saratoga Springs to two points in a 27-2 victory. CBA isn’t afraid to spread the wealth on offense, as at least five players receive regular carries out of the backfield.

Class A
Team, League, Overall, Last Week
1, Burnt Hills, 2-0, 4-0, 1
The Spartans traveled to head coach Matt Shell’s alma mater, Gloversville, Friday night and posted a 41-0 decision over the Huskies. Brandon Beatty and Evan Nusbaum ran for at least 100 yards apiece.
2, Lansingburgh, 1-0, 3-1, 2
The Knights didn’t exactly light up the scoreboard last week against Scotia-Glenville, but a 21-0 final score was good enough for a Southeast Division triumph. The division title will likely be on the line Friday night in Averill Park.
3, Amsterdam, 2-0, 4-0, 3
The Rugged Rams have been perfect so far in 2010 following a down year in 2009. Amsterdam gets a test when it hosts Queensbury on Friday.
4, Averill Park, 2-0, 3-1, 5
The Warriors have bounced back well from a 42-0 defeat at Burnt Hills in Week Two and are 2-0 in a pair of Southeast Division games. Can Tyler Dunworth run wild Friday night on the Lansingburgh defense?
5, Queensbury, 1-1, 3-1, NR
Like Averill Park, Queensbury also responded well after being shut out by Burnt Hills, beating South Glens Falls 26-14 in Week Two.

Class B
Team, League, Overall, Last Week
1, Albany Academy, 2-0, 4-0, 1
The Cadets fared well in their first full game without quarterback Hunter McCarthy, defeating Cairo-Durham 47-8, Zay Richardson added 240 rushing yards to become the first Section II back to break the 1,000-yard mark in 2010.
2, Schalmont, 2-0, 4-0, 2
The Sabres have outscored opponents 199-26 through four games. That’s an average final score of 50-7. Joe Paskevich has added a passing attack to the offense that Schalmont did not have in 2009.
3, Schuylerville, 2-0, 4-0, 3
The Black Horses have proved their worth in their first season in Class B, vaulting into a first-place tie with Schalmont in the West Division. Those teams appear set for a title-game showdown in Schuylerville in Week Seven.
4, Ravena, 2-0, 4-0, 4
The Indians are still undefeated after four weeks, but they’ll face a tough Reinfurt Division challenge at home from Hudson High Friday night.
5, Hudson, 0-1, 2-2, NR
The Bluehawks lit up the scoreboard in a 47-31 victory over Class A’s Mohonasen on Friday night. That type of win could propel Hudson to a hot streak at the end of the regular season in the Reinfurt Division.

Class C
Team, League, Overall, Last Week
1, Hoosick Falls, 4-0, 4-0, 1
Tanner Williams caught seven passes for 77 yards and ran the ball six times for 66 yards in Hoosick Falls’ 34-6 victory over Granville in Week Four. Senior QB Mike Brewster added 115 passing yards for the defending Section II champs.
2, Chatham, 4-0, 4-0, 2
The Panthers received 309 rushing yards and five touchdowns from Josh Keyes in a 42-13 victory over Voorheesville one of the preseason favorites in Class C, Friday night.
3, Fonda-Fultonville, 3-1, 3-1, 4
The Braves blanked Canajoharie 19-0 in Week Four, looking to keep pace with Chatham in the South Division. Fonda makes the trek to the Collar City Friday night for a South Division game against Catholic Central.
4, Tamarac, 3-0, 4-0, 5
The Bengals are 4-0 for the first time since 1983, thanks in large part to junior quarterback Nick Casale, who has completed 38-of-73 passes for 779 yards and five touchdowns. Tamarac travels to Greenwich Friday night in a Wasaren League…make that North Division…clash.
5, Greenwich, 3-1, 3-1, NR
The Witches’ only loss this season came at the hands of North Division leader Hoosick Falls. Greenwich blanked Mechanicvile in Week Four, using 183 rushing yards from Tyler Pruiksma in the win.

Class D
Team, League, Overall, Last Week
1, Rensselaer, 3-0, 3-0, 1
Timmy Foust passed for four touchdowns and Tyler Bishop ran for a score in Rensselaer’s 33-0 victory over winless Salem on Saturday. Senior running back Phil Sayers added 145 rushing yards in the triumph.
2, Cambridge, 3-0, 3-0, 2
The Indians will get their first real test on the Class D level since dropping down from Class C this Friday at Rensselaer in what could be a Section II Super Bowl preview. Matt Best ran for 262 yards in Saturday’s romp over Fort Edward.
3, Whitehall, 2-1, 2-1, NR
The Railroaders move into the Class D polls after Fort Edward lost at Cambridge in Week Four, 49-8.

Section II high school football standings, 2010

Class AA, League, Overall
Empire Division, W-L, W-L, PF, PA, QP
Shenendehowa, 3-0, 4-0, 117, 31, 21
Ballston Spa, 3-1, 3-1, 106, 40, 17.5
Christian Bros. Acad., 2-1, 3-1, 110, 55, 15.5
Saratoga Springs, 2-2, 2-2, 70, 60, 17
Bethlehem, 1-2, 1-3, 48, 121, 5.5
Guilderland, 1-2, 2-2, 95, 100, 7.5
Albany, 0-4, 0-4, 33, 141, 0
Liberty Division
Troy, 4-0, 4-0, 188, 0, 28
Shaker, 3-0, 4-0, 118, 49, 18
Niskayuna, 2-2, 2-2, 102, 102, 14.5
Colonie, 2-2, 2-2, 41, 95, 11.5
La Salle, 1-2, 1-3, 35, 125, 5
Columbia, 0-3, 0-4, 56, 145, 4
Schenectady, 0-3, 0-4, 70, 135, 3

Class A
Northwest Division
Amsterdam, 2-0, 4-0, 144, 53, 12
Burnt Hills, 2-0, 4-0, 156, 15, 14
Gloversville, 1-1, 1-3, 95, 147, 5.5
Queensbury, 1-1, 3-1, 97, 81, 7
Glens Falls, 0-2, 2-2, 135, 110, 2.5
South Glens Falls, 0-2, 1-3, 73, 89, 1
Southeast Division
Averill Park, 2-0, 3-1, 121, 101, 13.5
Lansingburgh, 1-0, 3-1, 129, 59, 7
Bishop Maginn, 1-1, 2-2, 111, 122, 6.5
Mohonasen, 0-1, 0-4, 69, 149, 1
Scotia-Glenville, 0-2, 0-4, 6, 105, 0

Class B
Reinfurt Division
Albany Academy, 2-0, 4-0, 204, 59, 14
Ravena, 2-0, 4-0, 152, 59, 14
Cohoes, 0-1, 0-4, 26, 183, 0
Hudson, 0-1, 2-2, 96, 102, 0
Cairo-Durham, 0-2, 0-4, 34, 179, 0
West Division
Schalmont, 2-0, 4-0, 199, 26, 14
Schuylerville, 2-0, 4-0, 169, 32, 14
Cobleskill, 1-1, 2-2, 101, 81, 5
Hudson Falls, 1-1, 1-3, 108, 122, 9
Broadalbin-Perth, 0-2, 0-4, 37, 229, 0
Johnstown, 0-2, 0-4, 20, 179, 0
Independent
Ichabod Crane, 0-0, 1-3, 72, 119, 0

Class C
North Division
Hoosick Falls, 4-0, 4-0, 144, 26, 27.5
Tamarac, 3-0, 4-0, 111, 52, 17.5
Greenwich, 3-1, 3-1, 123, 35, 21.5
Lake George, 3-1, 3-1, 115, 48, 18
Mechanicville, 1-2, 1-3, 35, 101, 7
Stillwater, 1-2, 2-2, 82, 121, 7
Granville, 1-3, 1-3, 86, 114, 10
Hoosic Valley, 0-3, 0-4, 0, 156, 0.5
Corinth, 0-4, 0-4, 63, 132, 3
South Division
Chatham, 4-0, 4-0, 147, 61, 27
Watervliet, 3-0, 3-1, 125, 32, 20.5
Fonda-Fultonville, 3-1, 3-1, 119, 71, 21.5
Coxsackie-Athens, 1-2, 2-2, 120, 86, 2
Taconic Hills, 1-2, 1-3, 62, 130, 7
Voorheesville, 1-2, 2-2, 75, 99, 5
Canajoharie, 0-3, 1-3, 48, 93, 0.5
Catholic Central, 0-3, 1-3, 55, 106, 0.5

Class D
Cambridge, 3-0, 3-0, 110, 23, 18
Rensselaer, 3-0, 3-0, 94, 29, 19
Whitehall, 2-1, 2-1, 73, 61, 14.5
Fort Edward, 2-2, 2-2, 128, 111, 13.5
Bishop Gibbons, 1-2, 1-2, 35, 62, 8
Warrensburg, 1-3, 1-3, 52, 111, 9
Salem, 0-4, 0-4, 35, 130, 1.5

Week Five Schedule
Fri., Oct. 1
Class AA
Empire Division
Ballston Spa at Guilderland, 7 p.m.
Bethlehem at Albany. 7 p.m.
Shenendehowa at Christian Brothers Academy, 7 p.m.
Liberty Division
Columbia at Schenectady, 7 p.m.
La Salle at Shaker, 7 p.m.
Niskayuna at Colonie, 7 p.m.
Non-division
Troy at Saratoga Springs, 7 p.m.
Class A
Southeast Division
Mohonasen at Scotia-Glenville, 7 p.m.
Lansingburgh at Averill Park, 7 p.m.
Northwest Division
South Glens Falls at Gloversville, 7 p.m.
Queensbury at Amsterdam, 7 p.m.
Glens Falls at Burnt Hills, 7 p.m.
Class B
Reinfurt Division
Hudson at Ravena, 7 p.m.
West Division
Johnstown at Broadalbin-Perth, 7 p.m.
Schalmont at Cobleskill-Richmondville, 7 p.m.
Class C
South Division
Fonda-Fultonville at Catholic Central, 7 p.m.
Watervliet at Chatham, 7 p.m.
Taconic Hills at Canajoharie, 7 p.m.
North Division
Stillwater at Mechanicville, 7 p.m.
Tamarac at Greenwich, 7 p.m.
Granville at Lake George, 7 p.m.
Non-division
Coxsackie-Athens at Corinth, 7 p.m.
Class D
Cambridge at Rensselaer, 7 p.m.

Sat., Oct. 2
Class A
Non-division
Bishop Maginn at Albany Academy, 1:30 p.m.
Class B
West Division
Schuylerville at Hudson Falls, 1 p.m.
Reinfurt Division
Cohoes at Cairo-Durham, 1:30 p.m.
Non-division
Ichabod Crane at Voorheesville, 1:30 p.m.
Class C
North Division
Hoosick Falls at Hoosic Valley, 1 p.m.
Non-division
Ichabod Crane at Voorheesville, 1 p.m.
Class D
Salem at Bishop Gibbons, 1 p.m.
Whitehall at Fort Edward, 1 p.m.

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Cardiac Cats strike again; Tamarac tops 'Vliet, 13-12

Tamarac junior quarterback Nick Casale looks for running room during Saturday's 13-12 victory over Watervliet. Casale passed for 274 yards and ran for 58 more as the Bengals started a season 4-0 for the first time since 1983. (Photos by Mike McMahon - The Record).

CLUMS CORNERS — Pick a hero, any hero, because plenty of players stepped up and embodied the Tamarac High School football team’s motto – find a way - Saturday afternoon for the Bengals in an historic and thrilling 13-12 Section II Class C non-division victory over the Watervliet Cannoneers.

Tamarac junior quarterback Nick Casale completed 16-of-29 passes for 274 yards, passed and ran for a touchdown and led the team in rushing with 58 yards on 13 attempts. Nick Newell caught eight of those passes for 126 yards.

Junior lineman Joe Hulsebosch blocked a Watervliet punt early in the fourth quarter that helped the Bengals win the field position battle at the end of the game.

Sophomore linebacker Sam Burden made 13 tackles and broke up a Watervliet pass attempt on the Cannoneers’ last-minute drive.

Freshman David Newell made a shoestring tackle of Watervliet’s Antonio Lind with just over one minute to play, saving what would have been the go-ahead touchdown for the Cannoneers.

Reed Meehan, who also serves as the captain of the Tamarac soccer team and whose right hand was cradled in a wrap of foam padding – he recently broke his wrist – kicked the game-winning extra point after Casale ran for the tying touchdown with 1:58 to play.

Tamarac senior Reed Meehan kicked the game-winning extra point in the fourth quarter. He also serves as a team captain on the Bengals' soccer team. (Will Montgomery vidcap - The Record).

All of that added up to lift Tamarac (3-0, 4-0) to an undefeated start through four games for the first time sine 1983, which was the last time the Bengals won a Section II title.

“Our whole mindset was play through everything, no matter what,” said Casale. “Fumbles, turnovers, penalties, anything. You have to keep your head up. We just had to play through it and that’s what we did. No matter if they scored touchdowns, we came right back and showed them who’s boss.”

Watervliet (3-0, 3-1) limited Section II’s leading receiver, Tamarac junior Tyler Larvie, to one reception for one yard. Larvie fumbled and lost the ball to Watervliet’s Sean Daley on the play. With the Cannoneers blanketing Larvie in double coverage, up stepped Nick Newell, Mark Morine and Joe Motzer in his place.


Morine grabbed four passes for 81 yards and Motzer, who was hung out to dry on one high pass from Casale - Watervliet's Pat Ebenhoch delivered a crushing blow - caught four balls for 76 yards.

"Tyler had been carrying the load, but they had a safety over the top and you had (Ryan) Manning on him early in the game," said Tamarac head coach Erick Roadcap. "Manning is one of the best athletes in Section II among the small schools. It wasn't happening. They took that away and that’s where we needed the other guys to step up. And I’ll tell you, they did.

"Newell, I harp on him and I’m always riding him," Roadcap continued. "I tell him, I’m ridning you because I like you. I’ll take 25 of you any day of the week"

Tamarac gained at least 100 yards rushing on the ground for the fourth straight game, doing it for the second straight game without senior captain Nick Feldmaier, who is out with what head coach Erick Roadcap called a fractured fibula. Casale ran for 58 yards and Mark Morine added 42 yards on 12 carries.

Casale took a massive hit from Watervliet's Josh Veshia late in the third quarter. Casale tried to walk off the field, but crumbled to the turf and yelled, "oh, my leg," before hobbling off to the sidelines. He missed just one play before returning to lead the Bengals to the come-from-behind victory.

"I’ve felt that ever since Feldmaier went down, I’ve had to carry this team," Casale said. "I could only come out for a play, though, I knew I had to go back in no matter how bad my leg hurt. I had to stay tough mentally and I went back in and we finished this game out strong, the whole team."

Tamarac, which closed the 2009 season on a three-game run, has won seven straight.

Tamarac's Nick Newell is tackled by Watervliet's Ryan Manning during the first quarter of Saturday's game. Newell finished with eight receptions for 126 yards in the victory.

“Tyler is leading Section II and they took him as a threat and left me open,” Newell said. “I just took advantage of it and saw beautiful passes all day. The line gave him time in the pocket and it all came together.”

Newell, in fact, was sporting a spiffy Mohawk haircut, which he got in Watervliet. His conversation with the barber led to a bet between them for Saturday's game.

"I made a bet with Jose the barber at Who’s Next in Watervliet. That’s where I got my Mohawk," he said. "I’ll be going down there to get my free Mohawk"

The team also gained inspiration from Phil Arnold prior to the game. Arnold was a feisty senior running back and linebacker on Tamarac's 2008 team, which also started the season 3-0 and finished with a 5-4 record.

"We had leaders step up," Newell said. "We had a talk with Phil Arnold right before the game and he said every inch counts. When I caught the ball for the first touchdown, that’s all I was thinking. Every inch counts. I just pounded it in there and barely got it in. Every inch counts and that’s what you have to do."

Newell scored on an 18-yard touchdown reception in the second quarter to give Tamarac the first lead. Meehan’s extra point attempt was blocked.

“He could have had a cup of tea back there and then threw the ball,” laughed Tamarac head coach Erick Roadcap. “The line did an unbelievable job.”

Watervliet responded in the third quarter as Brandon Legault, who passed for 212 yards on a 12-of-29 performance, tossed touchdown strikes to Pat Ebenhoch and Kyle Touzin as the Cannoneers claimed the lead with just over 17 minutes remaining in the game.

The Cannoneers threatened on their final possession, advancing to Tamarac’s 35-yard line with 8.8 seconds remaining. Legault dropped back and connected with Antonio Lind, who was tackled on the five-yard line as time expired.

“The big word for us is gut check and heart. Well, that’s two words,” Burden laughed. “It’s been so long and we just had to get it done today. Everybody knew what was going on.”

The Bengals were on the fence of whether to pull Burden up to the varsity squad this season, but he certainly proved his worth Saturday afternoon.

"We were on the bubble with him all year," Roadcap said. "Is it too early to bring him up? He just shut me up. He’s no longer a junior varsity player."

"We had some injures throughout the year and it kind of hurt us but we stuck together as a team and I just got my call, so I went up and played my heart out," Burden said. "That’s all I can do."

Watervliet senior running back and defensive back Ryan Manning returned to the sidelines in the second quarter of Saturday's game but he did not take the field again after injuring his shoulder on the final play of the first quarter.

Ryan Manning, Watervliet’s senior running back, injured his left shoulder on the final play of the first quarter, was carted off the field and did not return. Head coach Erick Bernard said Manning was getting an X-ray after the game and his status for the rest of the season is uncertain.

“Tamarac is back on top,” Casale said. “We’re feeling good about ourselves and we’re going to carry this through the rest of the year.”

"It feels good," Newell said. "I’d like to see this be the first of many with a winning season and just set the precedent for the younger kids and have them keep playing. The two soccer players, they don’t even want to play soccer. They want to play football."

Friday night, Tamarac will face North Division rival Greenwich (3-1, 3-1), which will be yet another test for the Bengals.

“It’s a big rivalry, the same with Hoosick Falls,” Burden said. “It’s going to be tough though. We’re going to have to play twice as hard as this game. You never know.”

Tamarac sophomore Sam Burden made 13 tackles in Saturday's game, including this one on Watervliet's Andre Williams.

TAMARAC 13, WATERVLIET 12
Watervliet (3-0, 3-1) 0 0 12 0 — 12
Tamarac (3-0, 4-0) 0 6 0 7 — 13
First Quarter
No scoring
Second Quarter
T — Nick Newell 18 pass from Nick Casale (Reed Meehan kick blocked) 5:02
Third Quarter
W — Pat Ebenhoch 15 pass from Brandon Legault (Legault kick blocked) 8:37
W — Kyle Touzin 42 pass from Legault (pass failed) 5:12
Fourth Quarter
T — Casale 2 run (Meehan kick) 1:58
Individual Statistics
Rushing: Watervliet (33-102): Williams 15-57, Manning 8-30, Brown 9-29, Ebenhoch 1-(-14). Tamarac (28-102): Casale 13-58, M.Morine 12-42, Broderick 3-2.
Passing: Watervliet: Legault 12-29-212-2-1. Tamarac: Casale 16-29-274-1-1; Larvie 1-1-10-0-0.
Receiving: Watervliet (12-212): Lind 6-83, Touzin 3-71, Ebenhoch 2-25, Williams 1-33. Tamarac (17-284): N.Newell 8-126, M.Morine 4-81, Motzer 4-76, Larvie 1-1.


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Saturday's schedule
Class A
Northwest Division
Amsterdam 39, Glens Falls 29
Class B
West Division
Cobleskill 34, Hudson Falls 26
Reinfurt Division
Ravena 38, Cohoes 7
Albany Academy 47, Cairo 8
Non-division
Coxsackie-Athens 38, Ichabod Crane 0
Class C
South Division
Fonda-Fultonville 19, Canajoharie 0
Non-division
Tamarac 13, Watervliet 12
Class D
B.Gibbons 16, Warrensburg 12
Cambridge 49, Fort Edward 8
Rensselaer 33, Salem 0

Friday's scores
Class AA
Empire Division
Ballston Spa 35, Bethlehem 6
CBA 27, Saratoga Springs 2
Guilderland 34, Albany 26
Liberty Division
Shaker 21, Niskayuna 14
Colonie 20, La Salle7
Troy 53, Columbia 0
Non-division
Shen 35, Schenectady 21
Class A
Southeast Division
Averill Park 49, Bishop Maginn 20
Lansingburgh 21, Scotia-Glenville 0
Northwest Division
Burnt Hills 41, Gloversville 0
Queensbury 26, South Glens Falls 14
Non-division
Hudson 47, Mohonasen 31
Class B
West Division
Schalmont 56, Johnstown 0
Schuylerville 52, Broadalbin 12
Class C
South Division
Taconic Hills 23, CCHS 13
Chatham 42, Voorheesville 13
North Division
Stillwater 35, Corinth 18
Lake George 41, Hoosic Valley 0
Hoosick Falls 34, Granville 6
Greenwich 32, Mechanicville 0

Section II high school football standings, post Week Four

Class AA, League, Overall
Empire Division, W-L, W-L, PF, PA, QP
Shenendehowa, 3-0, 4-0, 117, 31, 21
Ballston Spa, 3-1, 3-1, 106, 40, 17.5
Christian Bros. Acad., 2-1, 3-1, 110, 55, 15.5
Saratoga Springs, 2-2, 2-2, 70, 60, 17
Bethlehem, 1-2, 1-3, 48, 121, 5.5
Guilderland, 1-2, 2-2, 95, 100, 7.5
Albany, 0-4, 0-4, 33, 141, 0
Liberty Division
Troy, 4-0, 4-0, 188, 0, 28
Shaker, 3-0, 4-0, 118, 49, 18
Niskayuna, 2-2, 2-2, 102, 102, 14.5
Colonie, 2-2, 2-2, 41, 95, 11.5
La Salle, 1-2, 1-3, 35, 125, 5
Columbia, 0-3, 0-4, 56, 145, 4
Schenectady, 0-3, 0-4, 70, 135, 3

Class A
Northwest Division
Amsterdam, 2-0, 4-0, 144, 53, 12
Burnt Hills, 2-0, 4-0, 156, 15, 14
Gloversville, 1-1, 1-3, 95, 147, 5.5
Queensbury, 1-1, 3-1, 97, 81, 7
Glens Falls, 0-2, 2-2, 135, 110, 2.5
South Glens Falls, 0-2, 1-3, 73, 89, 1
Southeast Division
Averill Park, 2-0, 3-1, 121, 101, 13.5
Lansingburgh, 1-0, 3-1, 129, 59, 7
Bishop Maginn, 1-1, 2-2, 111, 122, 6.5
Mohonasen, 0-1, 0-4, 69, 149, 1
Scotia-Glenville, 0-2, 0-4, 6, 105, 0

Class B
Reinfurt Division
Albany Academy, 2-0, 4-0, 204, 59, 14
Ravena, 2-0, 4-0, 152, 59, 14
Cohoes, 0-1, 0-4, 26, 183, 0
Hudson, 0-1, 2-2, 96, 102, 0
Cairo-Durham, 0-2, 0-4, 34, 179, 0
West Division
Schalmont, 2-0, 4-0, 199, 26, 14
Schuylerville, 2-0, 4-0, 169, 32, 14
Cobleskill, 1-1, 2-2, 101, 81, 5
Hudson Falls, 1-1, 1-3, 108, 122, 9
Broadalbin-Perth, 0-2, 0-4, 37, 229, 0
Johnstown, 0-2, 0-4, 20, 179, 0
Independent
Ichabod Crane, 0-0, 1-3, 72, 119, 0

Class C
North Division
Hoosick Falls, 4-0, 4-0, 144, 26, 27.5
Tamarac, 3-0, 4-0, 111, 52, 17.5
Greenwich, 3-1, 3-1, 123, 35, 21.5
Lake George, 3-1, 3-1, 115, 48, 18
Mechanicville, 1-2, 1-3, 35, 101, 7
Stillwater, 1-2, 2-2, 82, 121, 7
Granville, 1-3, 1-3, 86, 114, 10
Hoosic Valley, 0-3, 0-4, 0, 156, 0.5
Corinth, 0-4, 0-4, 63, 132, 3
South Division
Chatham, 4-0, 4-0, 147, 61, 27
Watervliet, 3-0, 3-1, 125, 32, 20.5
Fonda-Fultonville, 3-1, 3-1, 119, 71, 21.5
Coxsackie-Athens, 1-2, 2-2, 120, 86, 2
Taconic Hills, 1-2, 1-3, 62, 130, 7
Voorheesville, 1-2, 2-2, 75, 99, 5
Canajoharie, 0-3, 1-3, 48, 93, 0.5
Catholic Central, 0-3, 1-3, 55, 106, 0.5

Class D
Cambridge, 3-0, 3-0, 110, 23, 18
Rensselaer, 3-0, 3-0, 94, 29, 19
Whitehall, 2-1, 2-1, 73, 61, 14.5
Fort Edward, 2-2, 2-2, 128, 111, 13.5
Bishop Gibbons, 1-2, 1-2, 35, 62, 8
Warrensburg, 1-3, 1-3, 52, 111, 9
Salem, 0-4, 0-4, 35, 130, 1.5

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Saturday's local roundup:

WATERFORD -- Badreddine Talbi headed the ball from a Wayne Russell corner kick past Waterford-Halfmoon goalkeeper Joe Hilton to lift Troy High School to a 1-0 boys soccer non-league victory Saturday afternoon.
The Flying Horses (5-0, 6-0) spoiled the Fordians’ (4-0, 5-2) homecoming and stayed unbeaten in a non league tilt.
Bobby Strang made two saves to record the shutout for Troy High.
Hilton finished with three saves for the Fordians (4-0, 5-2).
Colonie 3, Shaker 0: Tommy Osipitan tallied two goals to halt Colonie’s two game losing streak at Shaker. Edin Hadjimuratovic added a goal and an assist for the Red Raiders in a Suburban Council match.
Bethlehem 3, Burnt Hills 2: The Eagles rallied from two goals down for a comeback win in a Suburban game. Zack Rockmore provided all the offense for the Eagles, netting three goals. Thomas Nocito and Sean Kenny scored a goal each for the Spartans.
Voorheesville 3, Mechanicville 1: Chris Dimmitt and Evan Campana tallied a goal each for the Blackbirds in a Colonial Council match. Chris McNall scored the Red Raiders lone goal and Caleb Foard finished with 14 saves.
Girls Soccer
Bethlehem 2, Burnt Hills 0: Kristina Maksuti registered a goal and an assist for the Eagles in a Suburban victory. Marjana Maksuti added Bethlehem’s second goal. Florie Comley recorded 15 saves in net for Burnt Hills.
Saratoga Springs 2, Averill Park 0: The Blue Streaks blanked the Warriors in Suburban Council action.
Lake George 3, Waterford-Halfmoon 0: Emma Underwood scored a pair of goals for the Warriors (5-1-1) in a non-league victory over the Lady Fordians (1-4-0, 1-5-0).
Shannon Hastings made 11 saves for Waterford.
Schuylerville 5, Troy 0: The Black Horses (6-0) received two goals apiece from Nicole Senecal and Courtney Pierce in a non-league victory over the Flying Horses (5-4).
Football
Class A
Amsterdam 39, Glens Falls 29: The Rugged Rams improved to 2-0 in the Northwest division and remained undefeated overall (4-0) with a victory over the Indians (0-2, 2-2).
Class B
Ravena 38, Cohoes 7: The Indians (2-0, 4-0) remained undefeated, topping the Tigers (0-1, 0-4) in a Reinfurt Division game on Alumni Field.
Albany Academy 47, Cairo-Durham 8: The Cadets (2-0, 4-0) kept pace in the Reinfurt Division with a big win over the Mustangs (0-2, 0-4).
Senior running back Zay Richardson had his worst game of the season so far, but he still piled up 240 rushing yards and scored four touchdowns. He has run for 1,106 yards and 19 touchdowns through four games.
Cobleskill-Richmondville 34, Hudson Falls 26: The Bulldogs (1-1, 2-2) posted their first West Division victory of the season over the Tigers (1-1, 1-3).
Coxsackie-Athens 38, Ichabod Crane 0: The Indians (1-2, 2-2) posted a non-division victory over the Riders (0-0, 1-3).
Class C
Fonda-Fultonville 19, Canajoharie 0: The Braves (3-1, 3-1) bounced back from last week’s loss at Chatham with a South Division victory over the Cougars (0-3, 1-3).
Class D
Rensselaer 33, Salem 0: The Rams (3-0, 3-0) will be rolling into next week’s game against Cambridge, having blanked the Generals (0-4, 0-4) on the road Saturday afternoon.
Cambridge 49, Fort Edward 8: The Indians (3-0, 3-0) posted a big victory over the Flying Forts (2-2, 2-2).
Bishop Gibbons 16, Warrensburg 12: The Golden Knights (1-2, 1-2) picked up their first victory of the season over the Burghers (1-3, 1-3).
From Friday
Girls Volleyball
CCHS 3, Albany 0: The Crusaders (4-1, 5-2) recorded a Big 10 win by scores of 25-14, 25-16 and 25-16. Ashley Creigton registered two aces, nine digs, five assists and two kills to pace CCHS. Hannah Kutny added five aces, seven digs, two assists and nine kills. The Falcons were led by Emily Thorton’s 17 digs.

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