Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Field hockey: Streaks, Lions eye sectional history

Warren Hills' field hockey team knows eight in a row would certainly be great.

But the top-seeded Blue Streaks insist they aren't getting caught up in the sectional title streak as they will take on No. 3 West Morris for a fourth straight year in the North 1, Group 3 final at 4 p.m. on Friday.

Warren Hills looks to collect another championship trophy.
The good news for third-year coach Josie Potter's team, which seeks the program's eighth consecutive championship and the program's 17th overall, is that it won't be on the road this time after rallying in overtime for a 3-2 victory over West Morris in last year's title clash. The Streaks, 4-0 all-time against the Wolfpack in the postseason, also scored one-goal victories in the 2016 (2-1) and '17 (1-0) title games, and a 6-4 win in the 2012 Group 3 state semifinals.

"We played [West Morris] in the preseason [a 2-0 win]. It's going to be a tough game," said junior forward Jenna Wyckoff, who scored the go-ahead goal and assisted on another in Warren Hills' 3-0 victory -- all second-half goals -- against No. 5 Mendham in Tuesday's semifinals. "We need to show up and play like we did in the second half [against Mendham]."

Two other teams from the Hunterdon-Sussex-Warren area will be playing for sectional titles.

North Hunterdon will host Hunterdon Central in North 2, Group 4 final at 4:30 p.m. on Friday, while Vernon has the daunting task of facing state powerhouse West Essex in the North 1, Group 2 championship game at 3:30 p.m. on Friday.

Warren Hills (21-1), which has been pegged for a return trip to the Group 3 state final since a tough 7-0 loss to Moorestown in the 2018 championship game, is playing in its ninth consecutive sectional final since a 3-2 loss to Freehold Boro and former star Emily Wold in the 2011 North 2, Group 3 title game. But star center midfielder Kate Fenner insists the Streaks aren't focusing on the program's incredible postseason run.

"Our team is kind of young, we haven't really thought about it being eight in a row," Fenner said. "We know we have the stuff to get it done."

Playing at home for the final time in their careers is especially nice for Fenner and three other starting seniors -- forward Samantha Dugan, midfielder Paulina Georgoutsos and goalie Julia Webber -- where the group is 35-5 over the last three seasons.

"Last year, we didn't expect to get as far being a young team," Wyckoff said. "We have more confidence and feel more comfortable being at home."

Warren Hills will look to get off to better start than it did in the semifinals against Mendham. After a scoreless first half, the Streaks rallied behind an inspired halftime talk from Potter to extend their season.

"The one great thing about our team is we have leaders on the field," said Potter, who offered that Mendham was much better than its 6-11-1 record. "Sometimes it just takes a little push.

"If we start like we did in the second half [against Mendham], I will feel very confident."

The status of Dugan, who sustained a right ankle injury and had to be assisted off the field with 13:11 to go in the second half against Mendham, was unknown following the game. Dugan ranks seventh on the program's career goals list and shares the team lead this season with junior forward Simryn Desai, who scored her 19th on Tuesday.

"We're hoping it's a speedy recovery, and hopefully, we have [Dugan] for Friday. If not, we'll fill the hole," Potter said. "Sam is an integral part of our offense and a great player, but we have a lot of talented players. I feel confident [playing] anyone sitting on our bench."

Of course, when your defense isn't allowing goals, it makes it awfully tough for opposing teams to win. Warren Hills has outscored its two postseason opponents, 16-0, and has produced 14 shutouts behind backs Liz Schlaffer, a junior, and sophomore Emily Dvorsky, and junior sweeper Kylie Compton. The Streaks yielded five goals in the first eight games of the season and just four in the last 14, including a pair in a 2-1 loss to Ridge on Oct. 15.

West Morris (20-1-1) enters the final riding a 12-game win streak, including a 4-3 win over Northern Highlands in the North 1, Group 3 semifinals, since their own 2-1 setback at Ridge on Sept. 21. The Wolfpack also played to a 0-0 tie against Bernards on Sept. 14.

Senior midfielder Caroline Compoli, who had an assist in last year's final, is among West Morris' offensive leaders with 11 assists this season, while senior forward Sarah Bietka has logged a team-best 32 goals and 26 assists. Also keep an eye on senior forward Sophia Prata (28 goals, 17 assists) and senior forward Jenna Leonhardt (17 goals). Prata scored a goal against the Streaks in 2018.

On defense, senior goalie Victoria Bodnar, who started in last year's championship game, has logged 15 shutouts, including a 2-0 win against Mendham, one of two victories over the Minutemen this season, on Sept. 12 and a 4-0 victory over Hackettstown on Oct. 1.

North making its mark


A year ago, the mantra for North Hunterdon's young field hockey team was "Trust the process."

Well, the Lions did just that, and now here they are playing for the program's first sectional championship in 26 years.

North won its only sectional titles in 1986 and '93.
"This year [our slogan] is, 'All out, all game, all season,'" said third-year North coach Maria Bachert following her team's 6-2 victory against Skyland Conference Raritan Division rival and No. 4 seed Montgomery in Monday's North 2, Group 4 semifinal at Singley Field.

North (15-7), seeking the program's third sectional title and first since 1993, will face another familiar opponent in Hunterdon Central, which last won a championship in 2013. The winner will face the North 1 champion -- either Ridge or Montclair -- in Tuesday's Group 4 state semifinals at a neutral site.

The Lions, who lost twice to Ridge (4-2 on Sept. 7 and 4-1 on Oct. 7), scored a 3-1 victory over Central on Sept. 23 for their first win over the Red Devils since 2010.

The incredible rise for North Hunterdon, which had gone 47-171-5 over the previous 11 seasons and is enjoying its first winning campaign since 2009, has been years in the making. Bachert, the former head coach at Watchung Hills who went 6-31 over her first two seasons with the Lions, and volunteer assistant coach Amy Masters are next-door neighbors and have daughters in the program who have been playing together on the youth (Junior Lions) and club levels.

"I've known these girls since they were 8 years old," said Bachert, who sports a roster with eight sophomores and three freshmen, along with only three seniors. "I came up with them. We played hockey every day."

Sophomore Ryan Anderson and freshman Lauren Masters lead a speedy forward line -- combing for 45 goals and 41 assists. Anderson's area-best 26 assists are believed to be a school record, while Masters is poised to shatter all of North's scoring records with a team-high 29 goals. The turnaround starts with offense, as the Lions have scored 87 goals -- up 73 from its 2018 total of 14.

"It feels amazing," Masters said after scoring three goals in the semifinal win -- her eighth multi-goal game of the season and sixth with at least three.

Sophomore forward/midfielder Olivia Reeder, who led the team with five goals last season, has 10 to go with seven assists, while senior Emma Landis has scored six of her nine goals over the team's last five contests, including a 6-0 win over Sayreville in the quarterfinals.

Central (11-9-2) seems to be getting hot at the right time. Coach Jenn Sponzo's team has won four in a row and six of its last seven, including 2-1 wins over Bridgewater-Raritan and Hillsborough in the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds.

The overtime victory over Bridgewater-Raritan was particularly huge, considering the Panthers had beaten the Red Devils in the previous five sectional finals and had won 14 straight championships -- en route to losses to state powerhouse Eastern in the Group 4 finals.

Senior midfielder Sammy Freeman is a player to watch for Central -- leading the team in scoring with 10 goals and three assists. She has been red-hot down the stretch with seven goals in the team's last seven games.

Vernon still dancing


For the first time since 2010, the Vernon Vikings will play for a sectional title after scoring a 3-2 win over Hackettstown in the North 1, Group 2 semifinals.

Coach Kieran Killeen's team started the season 12-0 before back-to-back losses to Hunterdon Central (3-0 in the HWS Tournament quarterfinals) and Newton (2-1 on Oct. 10). The latter cost the Vikes a shot at winning the outright NJAC Freedom Division title, which they shared with the Braves. It was Vernon's first conference title since winning the old Sussex County Interscholastic League crown in 1996.

Senior forward Carlie Van Tassel, who has been on fire down the stretch with seven goals in the past four games, leads the Vikes in scoring with 23 goals and 10 assists, while sophomore Jenna Gregory has produced 18 goals and six assists.

The reward for the program's first finals appearance in nine years is championship date against West Essex (20-1-1), which has won a New Jersey-best 36 sectional titles, including four in a row and 15 overall since 2000.

Longtime Knights coach Jill Cosse is considered one of the best of all-time with a career mark of 479-40-11 in 23 seasons, including a 17-3 overall record in sectional finals. She has also won 10 Group 2 state championships.

West Essex is a remarkable 936-95-55 overall in 53 seasons.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Field hockey: Streaks ride 2nd-half surge to final

WASHINGTON TWP. -- Warren Hills' field hockey team got a dose of reality during a motivational halftime talk coming off a sluggish first half.

The message in short was either pick up the pace in the next 30 minutes or forget any thoughts of an eighth straight sectional title.

Junior Jenna Wyckoff scored the go-ahead goal and assisted on another by junior Simryn Desai as the top-seeded Blue Streaks responded with a 3-0 win over No. 5 Mendham in a North 1, Group 3 semifinal on Tuesday afternoon at Warren Hills School District Stadium.

Warren Hills celebrates the program's 708th win.
Warren Hills (20-1), which is seeking the program's 17th sectional title and advanced to its ninth straight sectional final, will host No. 2 West Morris (20-1-1) in the title game at 4 p.m. on Friday.

The North 1 winner will face the North 2 champion -- either Middletown South (17-3-1) or Chatham (13-4-2) -- in Tuesday's Group 3 semifinals.

"At halftime, [third-year coach Josie Potter] opened our eyes that this could be our last game," Wyckoff said  "We were thinking about our [2-1] loss to Ridge [on Oct. 15], and we knew we'd feel worse if we lost our last game of the season."

Mendham (6-11-1), which scored a 1-0 win in a sectional quarterfinal game decided by penalty strokes against No. 4 seed Wayne Valley, didn't seem the least bit intimidated by a Warren Hills team that's been pegged to make a run at the program's third Group 3 state title since 2014.

Desai, who gave Warren Hills some breathing room with her 19th goal of the season, logged one of the Blue Streaks' four shots-on-goal in the first half that bounced off the pads of Minutemen goalie Hanna Cortes. But the offense couldn't muster any other serious threats, leading to a blunt halftime talk by Potter.

"I told them that [Mendham] wanted it more in the first half," said Potter, now 10-2 overall in postseason games. "I reminded them how they felt after the Ridge loss -- in a game that technically didn't matter -- and if they wanted to keep playing -- figure it out. And they did."

Wyckoff snapped the scoreless tie with her seventh goal of the season -- redirecting a nice drive toward the cage by Desai, who picked up her fourth assist. Wyckoff returned the favor just 54 second later when she assisted on Desai's 19th goal of the season, tying her with senior forward Samantha Dugan for the team lead.

"Desai sent a pass flat and I hit it off the backside of my stick, and luckily it went in," Wyckoff said. "Then, she put one in to secure the lead. From there, as coach Potter likes to say, we played Warren Hills hockey."

Senior back Jess DeSanto, who came back this year after sitting out her junior season, capped the scoring with her second goal of the year. Dugan, who had her left thigh taped to start the game, was forced to leave with 13:11 left in the second half after sustaining an apparent right ankle injury.

Though her scoring numbers don't rival the big totals produced by other Blue Streaks forwards, seven goals and six assists overall this season, Wyckoff has come up big last two postseasons. She scored the go-ahead goal that preceded Desai's overtime winner in a 3-2 victory against West Morris in the 2018 final that gave the Streaks their seventh title in a row.

"When she is on, she commands the field," Potter said. "She hides in the shadows a little bit surrounded by our big scorers. But she distributes the ball well and has a tremendous sense for the game. She's our workhorse. She's not the flashiest player, but when she's on the field, you notice."

Defensively, Warren Hills did not allow a shot-on-goal and rock-solid backs Emily Dvorsky and Liz Schlaffer, along with sweeper Kylie Compton, secured the unit's 14th shutout and third in a row.

Center midfielder Kate Fenner, one of four starting seniors and a Fairfield University recruit, said the Streaks just needed a fresh start after a disappointing first half against Mendham, now 0-6 all-time against Warren Hills in postseason meetings dating to 1982.

"What coach said at halftime was perfect and spot on," Fenner said. "The second half, everyone showed  they wanted [to win]. If we did that, we knew we could come out on top."

Mendham (6-11-1)                           0                   0            --    0
Warren Hills (21-1)                          0                   3            --    3

Scoring

Second half -- WH, Jenna Wyckoff, 7th, (Simryn Desai), 23:37; WH, Desai, 19th, (Wyckoff), 22:43; WH, Jess DeSanto, 2nd, 7:25.

Shots -- Mendham 0; Warren Hills 12.

Saves -- Hanna Cortes 9 (M); Julia Webber 0 (WH).

Penalty corners -- Mendham 1; Warren Hills 9.

Monday, October 28, 2019

Field hockey: North, Central to clash in sectional final

CLINTON TWP. -- North Hunterdon's rapid ascent to becoming one of the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex area's top teams is only matched by its abundance of speed on the field.

North Hunterdon eyes its first sectional title since 1993.
The lightning-quick duo of sophomore Ryan Anderson and freshman Lauren Masters on the forward line has the Lions playing for the program's first sectional title in 26 years, as they combined for three goals and two assists in top-seeded North's 6-2 victory over No. 4 Montgomery in a North 2, Group 4 semifinal clash on Monday afternoon at Singley Field.

North Hunterdon (15-7), which won its only sectional championships in 1986 and '93, will next face No. 3 Hunterdon Central -- a 2-1 winner over No. 7 Hillsborough in the other semifinal on Monday -- in the title game on Thursday. The Lions scored a 3-1 victory over Hunterdon Central -- their first against the Red Devils since 2010 -- during a regular-season meeting on Sept. 23.

"It's crazy," Anderson said of North moving on to the championship round. "There was a little bit of pressure [facing Montgomery for a third time after regular-season wins of 7-0 and 4-0 over the Cougars] because we needed to win this game."

Masters, who is well on her way to breaking every program scoring record, got North on the board just 5:48 into the contest when Anderson got loose on a breakaway -- starting one of several scoring drives in the game -- and tipped in a perfect crossing pass at the right post. Masters added two more to raise her HWS-area leading total to 29 -- her eighth multi-goal game and sixth with three or more -- while Anderson's two assists gave her an area-high 26 for the season.

"They're all fast," third-year coach Maria Bachert said of the wealth of team speed. "My defense is fast. You're not going to beat my defense too often, it's very rare."

Montgomery (8-12-1), which had opened the postseason with a 2-1 victory over Westfield, did not back down after North's quick goal. Sophomore Mora Costa stepped to the line and converted a penalty stroke to knot the score at 1 with 8:55 left before halftime.

But Masters gave North Hunterdon the lead for good when she redirected a shot from the top of the circle by sophomore Katie Roberts with 5:29 to go in the first half.

Back Mira Carver, one of only three seniors on the Lions' roster, gave North some breathing room with the first of her back-to-back goals with 16:45 to play in the second half. The second -- off a nice give-and-go from Anderson -- was Carver's third of the season. Senior Emma Landis followed with her ninth goal of the season.

North's rise to prominence in field hockey has been in the works for several years. This current group of 10 sophomores and four freshmen have been close friends and teammates throughout their days on the youth level.

It's amazing to think North is playing in a sectional final so quickly, considering the program went 47-171-5 over the previous 11 seasons, including a four-win campaign in 2018 -- the first time in eight years that the Lions won more than three games. This is also the program's first winning season since 2009.

"This feels amazing," Masters said. "We're just looking to have a good mindset and give 100 percent."

Bachert, who took over at North in 2017, following a long stint as the head coach at Watchung Hills, said her team is ready for the next challenge.

"They all really want to win this [sectional] title," Bachert said. "I told them to take [the postseason] like any other game. Otherwise, I feel it just creates too many nerves. It will be great to pull off a win [in the final]."

Montgomery (8-12-1)                         1                   1           --    2
North Hunterdon (15-7)                     2                   4           --    6

Scoring

First half -- NH, Lauren Masters, 27th, (Ryan Anderson), 24:12; M, Mora Costa, 4th, (penalty stroke), 8:55; NH, Masters, 28th, (Katie Roberts), 5:29.

Second half -- NH, Mira Carver, 2nd, (Olivia Reeder), 16:45; NH, Carver, 3rd, (Anderson), 8:54; NH, Emma Landis, 9th, 5:40; M, Costa, 5th, (Lindsay Devine), 4:48; NH, Masters, 29th, 4:35.

Shots -- Montgomery 4; North Hunterdon 22.

Saves -- Lillian Lowenhar 16 (M); McKenna Laman 2 (NH).

Penalty corners -- Montgomery 8; North Hunterdon 12.

Central in championship form


Hunterdon Central (11-9-2) is bidding for the program's 14th sectional title overall and first since 2013, after knocking off Hillsborough for the program's 600th win in the other All-Skyland Conference semifinal. Central overcame a huge hurdle in the quarters with a 2-1 win in overtime vs. No. 6 Bridgewater-Raritan, which had won 14 consecutive sectional titles and defeated Central in the previous five finals.

Senior midfielder Sammy Freeman, who scored one of the Red Devils' goals and assisted on another by Lexi Finklestein in the win over Hillsborough, has recorded six of her 10 goals on the season in the past six games for Central, which scored a pair of 3-2 wins over Hillsborough in Delaware Division tilts during the regular season.

Hillsborough (11-12)                            1                   0           --    1
Hunterdon Central (11-9-2)                 2                   0           --    2

Scoring

Goals -- H, Payton Altman, 31st; HC, Sammy Freeman, 10th; Lexi Finklestein, 5th.

Shots -- Hillsborough 2; Hunterdon Central 15.

Saves -- Kerri O'Donnell 11 (H); Alexa Karpinski 1 (HC).

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Field hockey: HWS 8 set for sectional semifinals

We're down to the Elite 8.

Warren Hills eyes its 17th sectional title.
North Hunterdon (North 2, Group 4), Warren Hills (North 1, Group 3) and Voorhees (North 2, Group 2) -- all No. 1 seeds -- are among the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex area teams still chugging along in the postseason as the sectional semifinals commence on Monday and Tuesday. The championship games for Group 1 and 4 will be held on Thursday, with Group 2 and 3 set for Friday.

No. 3 seed Newton (North 1, Group 1) and No. 2 Vernon (North 1, Group 2) are carrying the flag for Sussex County, while No. 6 Hackettstown (North 1, Group 2), No. 3 Hunterdon Central (North 2, Group 4) and No. 5 South Hunterdon (North 2, Group 1) are also still in the title hunt.

Group 4


North Hunterdon (14-7) has been the feelgood story of the season as the Lions are enjoying their first winning season since 2009. Coach Maria Bachert's team, which will next host No. 4 Montgomery in the semifinals on Monday, has a tremendous opportunity to capture the Hunterdon County school's third sectional title and first in 26 years, as North won its only two championships in 1986 and '93 under former longtime coach Bonnie Carter.

It's the first semifinal appearance for the Lions since falling, 2-1, at Randolph in '09. The 6-0 quarterfinal round win over Sayreville was North's first in the postseason since a 2-1 first-round victory over Columbia in 2013.

North shut out Montgomery twice during the regular season -- 7-0 at home on Sept. 17 and 4-0 on Oct. 15 -- as sophomore forward Ryan Anderson logged five of her HWS area-best 24 assists in that first meeting. In fact, the Lions are 4-0 against the remaining three teams in the section, with wins over Hunterdon Central (3-1 on Sept. 23) and Hillsborough (5-4 on Oct. 3).

Hunterdon Central (10-9-2), which is bidding for the program's 14th sectional title overall and first since 2013, will host No. 7 Hillsborough in Monday's All-Skyland Conference semifinals. Central overcame a huge hurdle in the quarters with a 2-1 win in overtime vs. No. 6 Bridgewater-Raritan, which had won 14 consecutive sectional titles and defeated Central in the previous five finals.

Senior midfielder Sammy Freeman recorded five of her nine goals on the season in the last five game for Central, which scored a pair of 3-2 wins over Hillsborough in Delaware Division tilts during the regular season -- the last on Oct. 15.

Group 3


Warren Hills celebrates its HWS Tournament title win.
Warren Hills (20-1), which has won seven straight sectional titles, seeks the program's 17th overall. The Blue Streaks, who are 85-43 all-time in the postseason, will face No. 5 seed Mendham for the fourth time in the last six postseasons on Tuesday. Coach Josie Potter's team cruised to a 13-0 win over No. 8 Wayne Hills in the quarterfinals on Saturday.

In all, nine players scored goals, including senior forward Samantha Dugan, who logged three to move into seventh place on the program's career goals list. With 56, Dugan (19 goals and 9 assists this season) ranks behind Dani Profita (94 from 2013-16), Sydney Muntone (77 from 2011-14), Lindsey Schott (72 from 2008-11), Rebecca Sigman (72 from 2014-17), Nikki Profita (64 from 2011-14) and Niki Miller (61 from 2009-12). Dugan also is one goal shy of becoming just the 12th player in program history to score 20 goals in a season.

Junior forward Simryn Desai (18 goals), who ranks 17th on the program's career goals list with 37, senior midfielder Paulina Georgoutsos (team-high 11 assists) and junior midfielder Sarah Korczukowski (9 goals, 6 assists) have carried the offense most of the season, while senior Kate Fenner makes it all flow from the center midfield spot.

Defensively, Warren Hills, the Skyland Conference Raritan Division and Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament champion, has yielded just nine goals in 21 games, as senior goalie Julia Webber is among the area's best.

Group 2


Voorhees eyes its first sectional title since 2016.
Voorhees has played without one of its best players for most of this season and may not have another in the lineup for Tuesday's semifinal clash against No. 4 Madison. Senior center midfielder Lauren Kokoskie sustained a right knee injury during a recent practice and watched from the bench as the Vikes routed Holmdel, 8-1, in the quarterfinals on Friday. It's another tough blow for second-year coach Shannon Hughes' team, which lost senior forward Cassie Boyce (ACL injury) in the second game of the season.

The Vikes (18-4) are hoping to have Kokoskie (8 goals, 10 assists), who is the team's best threat on corners, back for the semifinals and beyond, but there still is plenty of talent on the roster, including senior forward Brooke Hyland, who scored her team-leading 15th and 16th goals in the win over Holmdel. Seniors Ryleigh Cameron (10 goals, 7 assists) and Madison Ogorzalek (10 goals, 7 assists) are solid midfielders, while backs Sadie Eichlin and Grace Schiavo form a nice barrier in front of talented junior goalie Noelle Gabrish (9 shutouts).

The North 2 bracket is loaded with No. 2 seed Rumson-Fair Haven and No. 3 Bernards matching up in the other semifinal. Rumson-Fair Haven, which handed Voorhees semifinal losses the previous two years, is seeking its fourth consecutive title.

"Rumson is very strong, but we feel like our team this year is just as strong," Hyland said.

First, though, Voorhees will have to get past Madison, which is 2-1 all-time against the Vikes in postseason meetings, including wins in the 2001 and 2015 sectional finals. Voorhees prevailed, 3-2, in the 2002 North 2, Group 2 championship clash in former coach Ann Bonavita's final season.

In North 1, Hackettstown and Vernon are set to square off in the only all-local semifinal matchup on Tuesday. The winner will likely face powerhouse West Essex, the No. 1 seed and Group 2 state title favorite, in the title game.

Hackettstown (9-8-1), which has won four its last five games, advanced with a 1-0 win in overtime against No. 3 seed Lakeland. The Tigers, who have never won a sectional title, saw their 2018 run end with a 4-0 loss to West Essex in the title game. Junior forward Megan Doyle has been on fire with 11 goals in the last six games.

Vernon (15-2), which earned a share of the NJAC Freedom Division title for its first conference championship since 1996, reached the sectional semifinals for the first time since 2010, with a 4-1 win over High Point. Vikings senior forward Carlie Van Tassel logged six goals in the team's last three games and 22 overall for the season.

Group 1


Newton (15-3) is back in familiar territory -- reaching the North 1, Group 1 semifinal round for the seventh straight season with a 2-1 win over Mountain Lakes in the quarters. The Braves are seeking back-to-back titles and the program's fifth since 2014, but top seed Ramsey (19-0) is the favorite. Coach Lisa Bechtel's team will be on the road against No. 2 Pequannock in Monday's semis.

Newton captured its 12th sectional title in 2018.
Sophomore forwards Sidney Pavlishin (9 goals) and Julia Fitt (11 goals, 7 assists) lead the offense, while junior forward Elissar Abou-Jaoude logged four of her 10 goals in the last three games. Senior goalie Abby Berkowitz has produced nine shutouts this season and 34 for her career.

South Hunterdon (17-2) is enjoying a nice bounce-back season after going 8-5-1, including a first-round playoff exit a year ago. The Eagles avenged a 5-2 loss to Delaware Valley during the regular season on Sept. 17, with a 3-0 victory in Thursday's North 2, Group 1 quarters. Senior midfielder Rebecca Phillips recorded an assist for the fifth straight game in the rematch and leads the team in that category with 13.

Coach Stephanie Davis-Hart's team faces a tall order in seeking the program's 15th sectional title as South will take on Group 1 power Shore Regional (20-1) in the semifinals. Shore has captured 25 sectional championships overall -- second only to West Essex (36), Moorestown (28) and Eastern (26) -- including the 2018 title.

Semifinal schedule


Monday, Oct. 28


(All games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA semifinals

North 1, Group 1

Newton at Pequannock

North 2, Group 4

Montgomery at North Hunterdon, 2 p.m.
Hillsborough at Hunterdon Central, 2:30 p.m.

North 2, Group 1

South Hunterdon at Shore


Tuesday, Oct. 29


(All games 3 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA semifinals

North 1, Group 3

Mendham at Warren Hills, 4 p.m.

North 1, Group 2

Hackettstown at Vernon, 5 p.m.

North 2, Group 2

Madison at Voorhees

Saturday, October 26, 2019

Field hockey: HWS schedule for Oct. 28-Nov. 2

Monday, Oct. 28


(All games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA semifinals

North 1, Group 1

Newton at Pequannock

North 2, Group 4

Montgomery at North Hunterdon, 2 p.m.
Hillsborough at Hunterdon Central, 2:30 p.m.

North 2, Group 1

South Hunterdon at Shore


Tuesday, Oct. 29


(All games 3 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA semifinals

North 1, Group 3

Mendham at Warren Hills, 4 p.m.

North 1, Group 2

Hackettstown at Vernon, 5 p.m.

North 2, Group 2

Madison at Voorhees


Friday, Nov. 1


(All games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA finals

North 2, Group 4

Hunterdon Central at North Hunterdon, 4:30 p.m.

North 1, Group 2

Vernon at West Essex, 3:30 p.m.

North 1, Group 3

West Morris at Warren Hills

Friday, October 25, 2019

Field hockey: Hyland, Voorhees cruise in playoff win

LEBANON TWP. -- Voorhees' field hockey team has been forced to adopt the "next player up" mantra this season. Another crushing injury, however, didn't slow the Vikes in their postseason opener.

Senior forward Brooke Hyland scored a pair of goals and assisted on another as top-seeded Voorhees cruised to an 8-1 win -- No. 668 for the program -- over No. 8 Holmdel in a North 2, Group 2 sectional quarterfinal clash on Friday afternoon at Richard Degnan Field.

Voorhees seeks the program's eight sectional title.
Voorhees (18-4), which is seeking the program's eighth sectional title and first since 2016, will next host No. 4 Madison -- a 3-0 winner over No. 5 Summit -- in the semifinals on Tuesday at 3 p.m. But the Vikes, now 3-1 all-time in postseason meetings with Holmdel, may be without senior center midfielder Lauren Kokoskie, who watched from the bench after sustaining a right knee injury during practice earlier this week. Her status for next week is unknown.

"We lost two very valuable players, but we we've been able to work well together," said Hyland, who logged her team-leading 15th and 16th goals in the victory over Holmdel. "It was nice for us to get [a season-high] five goals in the first half. It gave us the momentum to go on and win."

Second-year coach Shannon Hughes, who had already lost senior star forward Cassie Boyce for the season with an ACL injury in the team's second game, once again was forced to shuffle the starting lineup -- moving talented sophomore Sadie Eichlin to center midfield and inserting junior Mackenzie Vreeland into Eichlin's regular spot at left back. Eichlin fit right in on offense as she scored her first varsity goal to make it 7-0 with 17:47 left to play.

"Gracie [Schiavo], Sadie and [midfielder] Ryleigh Cameron really stepped up for us," said Hughes, whose team finished with a 20-2 edge in shots-on-goal and saw some of the backup players get heavily involved in the second half. "The girls have worked hard and have had to adjust to another change, losing our center midfielder."

Voorhees, now 61-42 overall in the postseason since 1975, struck first just 4:30 into the game on a penalty corner when Hyland tapped in a feed from senior midfielder Stefanie Fabbroni, who recorded her third assist of the season. Senior Grace Anderson made it 2-0 with her third goal of the season before Cameron gave the Vikes, whose previous best was six goals in a win over Ridge on Oct. 10, a three-goal advantage off a corner with 16:51 to go before halftime. Senior midfielder Madison Ogorzalek, who assisted on both of those goals, made it 4-0 with her 10th goal of the season.

Junior Audrey Maxwell capped the first-half scoring with her first varsity goal. Junior goalie Noelle Gabrish, who has had another fine season in the cage, was lifted with 18:30 left in the second half. In her place, freshman Jen Bekos, who is new to the sport, faced the only two shots by Holmdel and recorded her first varsity save. Bekos nearly pulled off what would have been an incredible save on Holmdel's lone goal off a corner with 14:25 to go.

With No. 3 seed Bernards and No. 2 Rumson-Fair Haven, which has won the last two North 2, Group 2 championships and handed Voorhees a 3-0 loss in the 2018 semifinals, in the other half of the draw, the Vikes are the favorites to reach the sectional final in the upper half. However, Madison, which has won 16 titles, should prove to be a stiff test in the semifinals.

"Rumson is very strong, but we feel like our team this year is just as strong," Hyland said. "But we're taking it one game at a time."

Hughes knows this could be the program's best shot at a sectional title during her short tenure with seven starting seniors. Kokoskie is a tough player, and she very well could return next week if she gets medical clearance.

"We don't know if we'll have Koko so we'll see," said Hughes, whose team came up short to Warren Hills in the Skyland Conference Raritan Division and Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament title chases. "We're trying to take it game by game. They really want to get another shot at winning a championship."

Holmdel (11-9)                          0                   1           --    1
Voorhees (18-4)                        5                   3           --    8

Scoring

First half -- V, Brooke Hyland, 15th, (Stefanie Fabbroni), 25:30; V, Grace Anderson, 3rd, (Madison Ogorzalek), 18:57; V, Ryleigh Cameron, 10th, (Ogorzalek), 16:51; V, Ogorzalek, 10th, (Hyland), 11:03; V, Audrey Maxwell, 1st, (Leigha Schultze), 3:45.

Second half -- V, Hyland, 16th, 22:19; V, Sadie Eichlin, 1st, 17:47; H, Sara Safari, 5th, (Lane Fontana), 14:25; V, Grace Schiavo, 3rd, 8:50.

Shots -- Holmdel 2; Voorhees 20.

Saves -- Jenin Engimal 12 (H); Noelle Gabrish 0, Jen Bekos 1 (V).

Penalty corners -- Holmdel 2; Voorhees 14.

Officials -- Siobhan Devlin and Len Ciufo.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Field hockey: North, Central reach section semis

It's been a long time coming for North Hunterdon's field hockey team.

The Lions have endured their share of hard times this decade, but the program's turnaround season continued with a 6-0 win over Sayreville on Wednesday afternoon in a North 2, Group 4 sectional quarterfinal on the turf at Singley Field.

North Hunterdon (14-7), the No. 1 seed, which is enjoying first winning campaign since going 12-9 in 2009,  will next host No. 4 Montgomery on Monday afternoon. It's the first semifinal appearance for the Lions since falling, 2-1, at Randolph in '09, under former head coach Stacy Ditze, who now serves as the program's freshmen coach. The win over Sayreville was North's first in the postseason since a 2-1 first-round victory over Columbia in 2013.

Freshman forward Lauren Masters and sophomore forward Olivia Reeder combined for six goals and three assists in the win over Sayreville. Reeder scored a career-best four goals, while Masters logged a pair of goals to raise her team-leading total to 26. Sophomore Ryan Anderson added two assists -- giving her at least one goal or an assist in all but two games this season.

North won its only two sectional titles in 1986 and '93 under former longtime coach Bonnie Carter.

Red Devils oust nemesis


In the other all-Skyland Conference semifinal, No. 3 Hunterdon Central (10-9-2) is set to host No. 7 Hillsborough, a 2-0 winner over No. 2 South Brunswick in Monday's quarters. Central advanced with a 2-1 win in overtime vs. No. 6 seed Bridgewater-Raritan, which had won 14 consecutive sectional titles -- defeating Central in the previous five finals -- and reached the Group 4 state final in each of those seasons since merging its East and West schools for the 2005-06 school year. The teams played to a 0-0 tie on Sept. 7.

Senior midfielder Sammy Freeman and senior forward Lexi Finkelstein scored for Central, which seeks the program's 14th sectional title, which would match South Hunterdon for most in the county.

Coach Jenn Sponzo's teams are now 10-29-4 against Bridgewater-Raritan in her 21 seasons at the helm. Central, which went 0-1-1 against the Panthers in 2018, snapped a 12-game losing skid in the series with a 2-1 victory in 2017. The rivals have now met 15 times in the postseason, including the past nine seasons. Central last sectional title came in 2013 when Bridgewater-Raritan was housed in North 1. The Panthers beat the Red Devils, 4-2, in the Group 4 semis in '13.

Hunterdon Central scored a pair of 3-2 wins over Hillsborough in Delaware Division matchups during the regular season -- the last on Oct. 15.

Field hockey: Stateliners fall, look to build for 2020

MONTCLAIR -- Phillipsburg's field hockey team made tremendous strides the second half of this season, but the Stateliners couldn't find a way to finish as strong as they started games.

Junior forward Allison Devlin gave No. 10 seed P'burg a lead shortly before halftime with her goal off a penalty corner, but No. 2 Montclair scored three unanswered second-half goals en route to a 3-1 victory on Wednesday afternoon in the North 1, Group 4 sectional quarterfinals at Watchung School Field.

P'burg ended its season 4-15-2 after a tough start.
Phillipsburg, which was coming off a 3-1 victory over No. 7 seed Livingston on Monday, ends its season at 4-15-2, following a tough 0-9-1 start. Third-year coach Toni Popinko said her team just couldn't find a way to overcome those sluggish second halves this season.

"It's been an ongoing theme all season," said Popinko, whose team was looking to get back to the sectional semifinals for the second time in her three seasons at the helm after a first-round playoff exit in 2018. "We come out very strong, and then we lose it. It's a learning process. We are a very young team and we'll keep working for next year."

Devlin, whose aunt, Katie, was a star player for Phillipsburg in the mid-1980s, gave the 'Liners a 1-0 lead when she redirected a nice shot by senior Erin Fisher on a penalty corner with just 19 seconds on the clock before halftime. Fisher, who received the ball in the upper left corner of the circle, fired it toward the cage and Devlin tipped it in past Montclair goalie Amanda Murnick, who later left the game with an apparent left shoulder injury, for her third goal of the season and 10th of her career.

"Everything fell into place. It was a beautiful shot by Erin Fisher," Devlin said. "I couldn't have asked for a better shot."

P'burg scored all four of its postseason goals off penalty corners, including two by sweeper Morgan Barna, one of four starting seniors, in the win over Livingston. Barna said after Monday's game that corners have given the  'Liners trouble all season, but working on them in recent practices certainly paid off.

"Something was clicking the past two games," Devlin said. "We've worked hard on them, even on defense."

Montclair (14-5-1), which was on its heels for most of the first half, caught an early break nearly four minutes after halftime as a Phillipsburg defender was called for deliberately hitting the ball out of the circle. A penalty stroke was awarded, and sophomore Phoebe Campbell beat P'burg goalie Tatum McVey to the left corner of the cage to tie the score at 1.

Popinko disagreed with the stroke call, which swung the momentum toward the hosts.

"It should have been a corner," Popinko said. "When a sure goal is blocked that way, it's a stroke. When we have faced a little adversity this season, we haven't responded. That probably comes with maturity, but we need to keep playing there."

Montclair grabbed its first lead just 2:26 later, when sophomore Sydney Kovel got loose on a breakaway at midfield and scored 21 seconds after Popinko had called a timeout with 23:50 to play.

Campbell basically iced it with her second goal of the game off a corner with 12:24 to go. P'burg managed its only shot-on-goal in the second half with 26 seconds to play, while Montclair scored on its only three shots in the final 30 minutes.

"The second half, we didn't do what we needed to do. We played reactive," Popinko said. "One thing about this team is they do fight every game. One thing I love is that P'burg has that grit."

Montclair, which won the last of its 12 sectional titles in 2015, has given P'burg fits over the last two decades in the postseason, including a 6-0 loss in the 2016 sectional quarterfinals. The 'Liners haven't reached a final since 2010 and will look to end its sectional title drought -- winning their fourth and last championship in 1999 -- next season.

Perhaps most disappointing is that P'burg recently played top-seeded Ridge to a 1-1 tie last Thursday, showing marked improvement after a 4-0 loss in the first Skyland Conference Raritan Division meeting with the Red Devils on Sept. 24.

"We fought until the end," Devlin said. "This is something we'll definitely keep in the back of our minds for next year. We're a young team and we got better and better."

Phillipsburg (4-15-2)                   1                   0            --    1
Montclair (14-5-1)                        0                   3            --    3

Scoring

First half -- P, Allison Devlin, 3rd, (Erin Fisher), 0:19.

Second half -- M, Phoebe Campbell, 13th, (penalty stroke), 26:05; M, Sydney Kovel, 3rd, 23:39; M, Campbell, 14th, 12:24.

Shots -- Phillipsburg 4; Montclair 4.

Saves -- Tatum McVey 1 (P); Amanda Murnick 2, Sadie Reynolds 1 (M).

Penalty corners -- Phillipsburg 6; Montclair 6.

Monday, October 21, 2019

Field hockey: Barna powers 'Liners to sectional win

LIVINGSTON -- Phillipsburg's field hockey team is all about throwing out the records and seeds in the postseason.

The Stateliners, who have played some of New Jersey's top teams while competing in the rugged Skyland Conference, haven't had much to show for it in terms of wins, but it surely played a role in a convincing 3-1 victory over No. 7  seed Livingston on Monday afternoon in the opening round of the North 1, Group 4 sectional playoffs at Jacobson Memorial Field.

P'burg celebrates its first playoff win since 2017.
Phillipsburg (4-14-2), the No. 10 seed, scored all three goals off corners, including a pair by senior back Morgan Barna, her first of the season. Barna, whose father, Mike, won a New Jersey state wrestling title in 1984, and was a three-time district champion and a two-time state finalist for the 'Liners, also made a nice play on defense to clear out a corner attempt by Livingston (6-12-1) in the final minutes.

"We don't have the best record, on paper, but we do work hard," said Barna, who started the season as a midfielder before shifting to defense. "We play tough teams. Coming into this game, we wanted to do our best [and advance further] than we did last year."

P'burg, which will next face No. 2 seed Montclair (13-5-1) in the quarterfinal round at 2 p.m. on Wednesday on the turf at the Watchung School, was one-and-done with a 3-0 loss to Ridge in the 2018 playoffs. None of the current players were born when the Stateliners won their fifth and last sectional title in 1999.

"We are very young still with a majority of sophomores and freshmen," said third-year coach Toni Popinko, the former Warren Hills star who is now 2-2 in postseason games. "We just need to get that consistency. Then, we'll be moving in the right direction."

Corners have been an issue for Phillipsburg, but the Stateliners were able to capitalize on those opportunities, which are critical this time of year, to extend their season. Barna's first goal came on the team's third attempt with 15:43 left in the first half, as she sent the ball past Livingston goalie Meghan Kelly and into the left corner of the cage.

"Morgan stepped up for us and took quick shots, that's been an issue for us," Popinko said.

Livingston evened the score at 1 by tipping in a rebound off a corner just under two minutes later, but Barna gave P'burg the lead for good when she took the ball at the left post and sent it into the right corner of the cage with 6:26 to go before halftime.

"Morgan has really stepped up for us this year," Popinko said. "She has single-handily won us about four games this year. She's super solid and very consistent."

Phillipsburg nursed that one-goal lead until senior back Erin Fisher gave the 'Liners some breathing room by converting her first goal of the season off the team's 10th corner with 10:55 left to play in the game. Senior goalie Tatum McVey made the lead stand as she logged five saves overall.

The next test will come against a Montclair team that handed Livingston a 4-0 loss on Oct. 11. The Mounties, who have won 12 sectional titles but none since 2015, have been a postseason nemesis for P'burg over the last two decades -- beating the 'Liners, 6-0, in the last matchup between the schools in the North 1, Group 4 quarterfinals in 2016.

But Phillipsburg seems to be playing its best hockey at the right time, battling No. 1 seed Ridge to a 1-1 tie in the final Raritan Division contest last Thursday. The 'Liners also played well in tight losses to Voorhees (3-2 last Tuesday and 2-1 on Sept. 17), the top seed in North 2, Group 2 and North Hunterdon (2-1 on Oct. 5), the top seed in North 2, Group 4.

"We've been able to hang, and every game, we've gotten better," Popinko said. "At one point, we were 0-9-1. It doesn't matter where you start, it's how you finish. Four years ago, these teams were blowing us out. We like being the underdog. There's no pressure."

P'burg relishes the chance for another opportunity to make some program history and get back to a sectional final for the first time since 2010. That season, the 'Liners were ineligible to play for the championship against Montclair after exceeding the maximum number of games allowed for the regular season.

"It's exciting," Barna said. "We want to go further in states and prove we're better than our record."

Phillipsburg (4-14-2)                    2                   1            --    3
Livingston (6-12-1)                       1                   0            --    1

Scoring

First half -- P, Morgan Barna, 1st, 15:43; L, Isabella Freschi, 8th, 14:04; P, Barna, 2nd, 6:26.

Second half -- P, Erin Fisher, 1st, 10:55.

Shots -- Phillipsburg 14; Livingston 6.

Saves -- Tatum McVey 5 (P); Meghan Kelly 10, Mia Bucich 1 (defensive) (L).

Penalty corners -- Phillipsburg 15; Livingston 11.

Sunday, October 20, 2019

Field hockey: It's playoff party time (HWS rankings)

Now the fun really begins. It's playoff time, and the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex area sets up to do very well this postseason.

North Hunterdon (North 2, Group 4), Voorhees (North 2, Group 2) and Warren Hills (North 1, Group 3) are the No. 1 seeds from our area.

Warren Hills celebrates its 7th HWS title.
Warren Hills (19-1) will get some well deserved rest this week before opening the playoffs in search of the program's eighth straight sectional title and 17th overall -- only six schools have won more in state history. The Blue Streaks, who scored a 2-0 victory over Voorhees -- their third win against the Vikes this season -- to claim their seventh HWS championship on Saturday, are taking to time to heal a bit, as several players are banged up with the usual bumps and bruises from a grinding season.

"This was our 20th game of the season, and we've played a lot of great competition," third-year coach Josie Potter said on Saturday. "We do have space [on the schedule] for one game, but last year at this point in the season, they were tired and were getting outran."

Senior midfielder Kate Fenner, who was sporting an ice pack after taking a ball off her left ankle in the win over Voorhees, has dealt with several injuries this season. But she's ready to go as the Streaks ultimately seek the program's third Group 3 state title and first since going back-to-back in 2014-15.

"We needed something to light a fire under us and get us going," said Fenner, when asked if the 2-1 loss to Ridge last Tuesday was a good thing for the team.

The nice thing for Fenner and three other starting seniors -- forward Samantha Dugan, midfielder Paulina Georgoutsos and goalie Julia Webber -- is that they'll get three more games at home -- where they've gone 33-5 over the last three seasons -- should the Streaks advance to the sectional final as expected. Last year, Warren Hills had to play at Northern Highlands and West Morris in the semifinals and final.

Keep an eye on Streaks junior midfielder Sarah Korczukowski, who had an excellent all-around performance against Voorhees on Saturday, and really looked like she had the game's Most Valuable Player Award locked up even before converting that critical penalty stroke in the second half to snap a scoreless tie.

"The last handful of games, she's really stepped up her play," Potter said. "She's a vocal leader and distributes the ball well. She's a wall on defense. We have a lot of talented players, and she's starting to stand out."

Voorhees (16-4) will have plenty of motivation as the Vikes seek their eighth sectional title and first since 2016. The North 2, Group 2 bracket is loaded, but second-year coach Shannon Hughes likes how things set up as the top seed. That puts No. 2 and favorite Rumson-Fair Haven, which has won three straight titles in this section, and No. 3 Bernards in the bottom bracket.

"I think we have a good chance to play in the sectional final," Hughes said after Saturday's setback. "Despite losing [in the HWS final], we're going to keep moving forward."

North Hunterdon (13-7) has enjoyed an amazing turnaround this season with the program's first winning campaign since going 12-9 in 2009. The Lions reached the sectional semis that year -- falling 2-1 at Randolph. North hasn't won a postseason game since a 2-1 first-round victory over Columbia in 2013.

But coach Maria Bachert's team is playing well at the right time, taking Voorhees to overtime in a 3-2 loss on Thursday, after giving Warren Hills all it could handle in a 1-0 setback on Oct. 10. The Lions have beaten No. 3 seed Hunterdon Central, No. 4 seed Montgomery and No. 6 Bridgewater-Raritan this season.

Here is the final regular-season set of area rankings:

1. Warren Hills (19-1) -- Blue Streaks rebounded from their first loss of the season with a 5-1 win over Montgomery on Senior Night on Thursday to secure the Skyland Conference Raritan Division title -- the program's seventh in the last nine seasons and 12th overall since 1996. Dugan enters the postseason one goal shy of matching former great Megan Springmeyer (54 from 2004-07) for sixth place on the school's all-time list.

Up next: Morris Knolls or Wayne Hills at home on Saturday in North 1, Group 3 quarterfinals.

2. Voorhees (16-4) -- Vikes came up short for the third time this season against Warren Hills with a tough 2-0 loss in the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament final on Saturday. It was the second time this season that the offense was kept off the board after posting three-goal games in wins over Phillipsburg (Tuesday) and North Hunterdon (Thursday). Senior midfielder Lauren Kokoskie had a pair of goals to help Voorhees extend its winning streak against North to 41 straight.

Up next: at Sparta on Wednesday; Hopewell Valley or Holmdel at home on Friday in North 2, Group 2 quarterfinals.

3. North Hunterdon (13-7) -- Lions wrapped up their Skyland Conference Raritan Division slate with a tough 3-2 loss in overtime to Voorhees on Thursday -- the first OT game played between the rival schools since a 1-1 tie in 1991. North, which hasn't won in this series since back-to-back 2-1 victories in 1990, closed the gap in three losses to Voorhees this season, which bodes well for the postseason and the future.

Up next: Old Bridge or Sayreville at home on Wednesday in North 2, Group 4 playoffs.

4. Hunterdon Central (9-9-2) -- Red Devils, who drew the No. 3 seed in North 2, Group 4, bounced back from a 3-0 loss to Warren Hills in the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex semifinals with wins over Hillsborough (3-2 on Tuesday) and Pingry (2-0 on Thursday). Senior midfielder Sammy Freeman has logged five goals in the team's last five games.

Up next: Franklin or Bridgewater-Raritan at home in North 2, Group 4 quarterfinals.

5. Delaware Valley (14-4) -- Terriers have won six of their last seven heading into the postseason, including a 1-0 victory over Somerville on Tuesday that secured the Skyland Conference Valley Division title. Coach Stephanie Rifflard's team is the No. 4 seed in North 2, Group 1 and could be heading for a quarterfinal matchup with No. 5 South Hunterdon.

Up next: Burlington City at home on Monday in North 2, Group 1 playoffs.

6. South Hunterdon (15-2) -- Eagles, who earned the Skyland Conference Mountain Division title, have won a Hunterdon County-best 14 sectional titles, but none since 2002 as coach Stephanie Davis-Hart's team drew the No. 5 seed in North 2, Group 1. South has won 10 of 11 since a 5-2 loss to Delaware Valley on Sept. 17, and could get a rematch with the Terriers in the sectional quarters.

Up next: Bordentown at home on Monday in North 2, Group 1 playoffs.

7. Belvidere (9-8-1) -- County Seaters capped the regular season with wins over North Warren (3-0 on Monday) and Mount St. Mary (2-1 on Tuesday) and a 1-0 loss to Delaware Valley on Thursday. Coach Beth Franceschino's team, which owns a 1-0 win over No. 3 seed and defending champion Newton, is the No. 7 seed in North 1, Group 1 and is seeking the program's eighth sectional title overall and first since 1996.

Up next: Butler at home on Monday in North 1, Group 1 playoffs.

8. Newton (14-3) -- Braves enter the postseason riding a five-game winning streak and earned a share of the NJAC Freedom Division title with a 3-0 victory over High Point on Thursday. Junior forward Sidney Pavlishin scored a goal and added an assist in that win, while scoring two goals in the team's 5-0 win over Sparta on Saturday.

Up next: Wallkill Valley or Mountain Lakes at home on Thursday in North 1, Group 1 quarterfinals.

9. Vernon (14-2) -- Vikings closed out the regular season on Saturday with a 4-3 win in overtime against Hackettstown to gain a share of the NJAC Freedom Division title -- the program's first conference championship since winning the old Sussex County Interscholastic League title in 1996 -- the same season in which Vernon won its eighth and last sectional title. Sophomore forward Julia Gregory scored three goals -- giving her 15 on the season.

Up next: High Point or Jefferson at home on Friday in North 1, Group 2 quarterfinals.

10. Hackettstown (7-8-1) -- Tigers rolled to a 6-0 win over Lenape Valley on Monday before closing the regular season with a 4-3 loss in overtime to Vernon, almost spoiling the Vikings' bid to share the NJAC Freedom Division title. Junior forward Megan Doyle has scored nine goals (14 overall this season) to go with two assists in the team's last four games.

Up next: Parsippany at home on Tuesday in North 1, Group 2 playoffs.

Field hockey: HWS schedule for Oct. 21-26

Monday, Oct. 21


(All first-round games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA playoffs

North 1, Group 4

Phillipsburg at Livingston, 2 p.m.

North 1, Group 1

Kittatinny at Westwood, 6:30 p.m.
North Warren at Boonton
Wallkill Valley at Mountain Lakes
Butler at Belvidere
Pompton Lakes at Lenape Valley

North 2, Group 1

Burlington City at Delaware Valley, 2 p.m.
Bordentown at South Hunterdon, 2 p.m.


Tuesday, Oct. 22


(All games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA playoffs

North 1, Group 2

Parsippany at Hackettstown
High Point at Jefferson, 2 p.m.


Wednesday, Oct. 23


(All games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA quarterfinals

North 1, Group 4

Phillipsburg at Montclair, 2 p.m.

North 2, Group 4

Sayreville at North Hunterdon
Bridgewater-Raritan at Hunterdon Central

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Kittatinny at Lenape Valley, 6 p.m.

Independent

Voorhees at Sparta, 4:30 p.m.


Thursday, Oct. 24


(All games 4 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA quarterfinals

North 1, Group 1

Mountain Lakes at Newton
Belvidere at Pequannock

North 2, Group 1

South Hunterdon at Delaware Valley, 2 p.m.

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

St. Elizabeth at Kittatinny


Friday, Oct. 25


(All games 2 p.m., unless noted)

NJSIAA quarterfinals

North 1, Group 2

West Milford at Sparta
Hackettstown at Lakeland
High Point at Vernon

North 2, Group 2

Holmdel at Voorhees, 3 p.m.

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Pope John at Mount Olive, 4 p.m.


Saturday, Oct. 26


NJSIAA quarterfinals

North 1, Group 3

Wayne Hills at Warren Hills, 10 a.m.

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Field hockey: Stroke sends Streaks to 7th HWS title

HACKETTSTOWN -- Two championships down, two to go for Warren Hills' field hockey team.

Junior midfielder Sarah Korczukowski converted a penalty stroke to open the scoring in the second half and senior forward Samantha Dugan tapped in a goal near the buzzer to ice a 2-0 victory over Voorhees -- giving the Blue Streaks a record seventh Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament championship on Saturday afternoon at Morrison Field.

Warren Hills celebrates its seventh HWS title.
It was sweet redemption for Warren Hills (19-1), which lost 1-0 in overtime to Hackettstown in the 2018 championship game at Newton High School's Palmer Field. The Streaks, now 35-4 all-time in the 11-year history of HWS tournament play, also suffered their first loss of this season on Tuesday -- 2-1 at Ridge -- before bouncing back with a 5-1 victory over Montgomery on Thursday to clinch the Skyland Conference Raritan Division title.

"At the beginning of the season, our goal was to not be a second-place team," said third-year coach Josie Potter, now 8-1 overall against Voorhees. "We lost the [Raritan Division] to Voorhees, the HWS to Hackettstown and [the Group 3 state final] to Moorestown last year. My team really showed up today. It makes me very proud."

Beating Voorhees is no easy task, let alone three times in one season. Warren Hills, which has prevailed in eight of the last nine meetings, won both regular-season matchups -- 2-0 at home on Sept. 3 and 2-1 on the road on Oct. 1 -- to join the 2017 squad as the only ones to beat the Vikes, who still own a 34-28-6 edge in the all-time series, three times in a season. Voorhees had won seven in a row since that second loss to Warren Hills.

"It's tough [to beat them three times]. We know it's going to be close," said Korczukowski, who earned the championship game's Most Valuable Player Award, the third non-senior to win it for the Streaks -- joining Dani Profita (2014) and Ashley Moskal (2017). "It's always a hard game. My freshman year, we beat them three times so we know it's possible."
Voorhees (16-4), whose only other loss this season was 5-1 to Group 2 powerhouse West Essex on Sept. 5, had a golden chance to gain some early momentum in the third meeting with Warren Hills. But senior Madison Ogorzalek's apparent goal at 22:55 in the first half was waved off when the officials deemed the ball went through the netting on the side of the cage and in.

From that point on, the Vikes generated little on the offensive end, managing just two shots-on-goal. On defense, backs Sadie Eichlin and Grace Schiavo did a tremendous job in front of goalie Noelle Gabrish of keeping a potent Warren Hills offense at bay.

"Our defense played really well," said second-year coach Shannon Hughes, whose team is the No. 1 seed for the North 2, Group 2 sectional playoffs that begin on Monday. "Noelle made some great saves, big saves, that kept us in the game. My team said that was a goal, and from our angle it looked like it went in. We were able to score early the last couple of games, but we couldn't find [our offense] today."

Hills' 7th HWS trophy.
Korczukowski stepped up at a critical point in a scoreless game to turn the tide. Her stroke attempt -- awarded due to the ball off a shot from Warren Hills sophomore Maddie Summitt hitting a Voorhees defender, who was positioned right alongside Gabrish in the circle, hit hard off the left post, but the ball trickled behind Gabrish and crossed the line to give the Streaks a 1-0 lead with 11:35 to play.

"We practiced strokes yesterday. I stepped to the line and took a deep breath, and I always try to pick a corner," Korczukowski said. "When I went to shoot, I overturned a little bit and it went off the back of the post. Luckily, it got behind her. She's an amazing goalie. She's the best we've played against this season. We have some hard-hitters on our team."

The stout Warren Hills defense took it from there as the unit -- starting backs Liz Schlaffer, Emily Dvorsky and sweeper Kylie Compton -- did not allow a shot in the second half. Senior goalie Julia Webber made two saves to earn her 10th shutout of the season.

"We came in with a goal and knew what we wanted," said senior Kate Fenner, who played another solid game and helped control the action from her center-midfield spot. "I knew warming up that we had this. We stayed composed. Voorhees is an amazing team."

Warren Hills, which drew the top seed for the North 1, Group 3 playoffs, will get the week off before its quarterfinal game against either Morris Knolls or Wayne Hills next Saturday. The Streaks look to claim the program's eighth straight sectional title and 17th overall.

Voorhees (16-4)                              0                   0            --    0
Warren Hills (19-1)                          0                   2            --    2

Scoring

Second half -- WH, Sarah Korczukowski, 9th, (penalty stroke), 11:35; WH, Samantha Dugan, 16th, (Paulina Georgoutsos), 0:01.

Shots -- Voorhees 2; Warren Hills 7.

Saves -- Noelle Gabrish 4, Ryleigh Cameron 1 (defensive) (V); Julia Webber 2 (WH).

Penalty corners -- Voorhees 3; Warren Hills 6.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Field hockey: HWS title game preview (lineups, facts)

Who: Warren Hills Blue Streaks vs. Voorhees Vikings.

What: 11th annual Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament championship.

When: Saturday, 3 p.m.

Where: Morrison Field, Hackettstown High School.

Records: Warren Hills 18-1; Voorhees 16-3.

Coaches: Josie Potter (3rd season, 61-10-1, 7-1 vs. Voor); Shannon Hughes (2nd season, 31-10, 1-4 vs. WH).

Series history: Voorhees, which owns a 34-27-6 edge dating to 1975, has dropped seven of the past eight meetings since 2017, including a pair of losses this season -- 2-0 on Sept. 3 and 2-1 at home on Oct. 1. This is the sixth meeting in a county final and third in the HWS Tournament -- with Voorhees winning 1-0 in 2010 and Warren Hills rolling to a 5-0 victory in the 2014 title game, the last finals appearance for Voorhees, which saw its HWS run end with losses to Warren Hills in three of the previous four years. Interestingly, the Vikes own a 4-1 edge in games played at neutral sites in this series.

Previous champions: Newton/Warren Hills co-champs in 2009 (final was never played); Voorhees in 2010 and '12; Warren Hills in 2011, '13, '14, '15 and '17; Hunterdon Central in '16; Hackettstown in '18.

Note: Here's a closer look at both teams with probable starting lineups:

Warren Hills Blue Streaks

How they got here: Beat Belvidere, 6-0, in quarterfinals; Hunterdon Central, 3-0, in semifinals.

Previous tournament history: Beat Delaware Valley, 8-2, in 2009 first round, Beat High Point, 4-0, in 2009 quarterfinals, Beat Pope John, 3-0 in 2009 semifinals; Beat Sparta, 6-0, in 2010 first round, Beat Wallkill Valley, 4-1, in 2010 quarterfinals, Beat Newton, 2-1 in overtime, in 2010 semifinals, Lost to Voorhees, 1-0, in 2010 championship game; Beat North Warren, 9-0, in 2011 first round, Beat Newton, 5-0, in 2011 quarterfinals, Beat Wallkill Valley, 8-1, in 2011 semifinals, Beat High Point, 3-1, in 2011 championship game; Beat Lenape Valley, 5-1, in 2012 first round, Beat Pope John, 8-0, in 2012 quarterfinals, Lost to Voorhees, 2-0, in 2012 semifinals; Beat Kittatinny, 6-0, in 2013 first round, Beat High Point, 3-0, in 2013 quarterfinals, Beat Voorhees, 2-1, in 2013 semifinals, Beat Hackettstown, 1-0, in 2013 final; Beat Wallkill Valley, 6-0, in 2014 first round; Beat Hackettstown, 3-0, in 2014 quarterfinals; Beat High Point, 8-0, in 2014 semifinals; Beat Voorhees, 5-0, in 2014 final; Beat Phillipsburg, 4-0, in 2015 quarterfinals; Beat Voorhees, 2-1, on strokes in 2015 semifinals; Beat Hunterdon Central, 2-1, in 2015 final; Beat Newton, 1-0, in 2016 quarterfinals; Beat High Point, 3-2, in 2016 semifinals; Lost to Hunterdon Central, 2-1, in 2016 final; Beat Lenape Valley, 11-0, in 2017 first round; Beat Voorhees, 2-1, in 2017 quarterfinals; Beat Delaware Valley, 4-0, in 2017 semifinals; Beat Hunterdon Central, 1-0, in 2017 championship game; Beat Wallkill Valley, 2-0, in 2018 second round; Beat Vernon, 3-1, in 2018 quarterfinals; Beat Voorhees, 1-0 in overtime, in 2018 semifinals; Lost to Hackettstown, 1-0 in overtime, in 2018 championship game. Overall HWS record: 34-4.

Probable starting lineup: Jr. F Simryn Desai (17 goals-4 assists-38 points); Jr. Julianna Valli (7-3-17)/Jr. F Jenna Wyckoff (5-4-14); Sr. F Samantha Dugan (15-8-38); Jr. MF Sarah Korczukowski (8-5-21);  Sr. MF Kate Fenner (3-5-11); Jr. MF Olivia Chomut (0-0-0); Sr. MF Paulina Georgoutsos (4-9-17); So. D Emily Dvorsky (0-0-0); Jr. MF Kylie Compton (0-1-1); Jr. D Liz Schlaffer (0-0-0); Sr. GK Julia Webber (107 saves, 10 shutouts, .939 save percentage, 0.37 goals against).

Voorhees Vikings

How they got here: Beat South Hunterdon, 4-1, in quarterfinals; North Hunterdon, 3-1, in semifinals.

Previous tournament history: Beat Kittatinny, 3-0, in 2009 first round, Beat Hackettstown, 3-0, in 2009 quarterfinals; Lost to Newton, 2-1 in double overtime, in 2009 semifinals; Beat Delaware Valley, 3-0, in 2010 first round, Beat North Hunterdon, 1-0, in 2010 quarterfinals, Beat High Point, 1-0, in 2010 semifinals, Beat Warren Hills, 1-0, in 2010 final; Beat Kittatinny, 2-0, in 2011 first round, Lost to Wallkill Valley, 1-0, in 2011 quarterfinals; Beat Kittatinny, 2-0, in 2012 first round, Beat Wallkill Valley, 3-0, in 2012 quarterfinals, Beat Warren Hills, 2-0, in 2012 semifinals, Beat High Point, 1-0, in 2012 final; Beat Wallkill Valley, 3-0, in 2013 first round, Beat Lenape Valley, 3-2 in overtime, in 2013 quarterfinals, Lost to Warren Hills, 2-1, in 2013 semifinals; Beat North Hunterdon, 5-0, in 2014 first round; Newton, 4-0, in 2014 quarterfinals; Hunterdon Central, 1-0, in 2014 semifinals; Lost to Warren Hills, 5-0, in 2014 championship game; Beat Sparta, 5-1, in 2015 quarterfinals; Lost to Warren Hills, 4-2 on penalty strokes, in 2015 semifinals; Beat Hackettstown, 2-1, in 2016 quarterfinals; Lost to Hunterdon Central, 3-2 on penalty strokes, in 2016 semifinals; Beat High Point, 7-1, in 2017 second round; Lost to Warren Hills, 2-1, in 2017 quarterfinals; Beat South Hunterdon, 4-1, in 2018 second round; Beat Delaware Valley, 1-0, in 2018 quarterfinals; Lost to Warren Hills, 1-0 in overtime, in 2018 semifinals. Overall HWS record: 23-8.

Probable starting lineup: Sr. F Grace Anderson (1 goals-1 assist-3 points); Sr. F Brooke Hyland (12-7-31); Sr. F Stef Fabbroni (4-2-10); Sr. MF Lauren Kokoskie (8-10-26); Jr. MF Mackenzie Vreeland (0-0-0); Sr. MF Madison Ogorzalek (9-5-23); Sr. MF Ryleigh Cameron (9-6-24); So. D Sadie Eichlin (0-0-0); Jr. D Grace Schiavo (2-1-5); Sr. Sara Anderson (0-0-0); Jr. Noelle Gabrish (122 saves, 8 shutouts, .865 save percentage, 1.00 goals against).

Breakdown: Voorhees, which is making its fourth finals appearance and first since winning it all in 2014, has struggled on the offensive end this season with 53 goals in 19 games. Kokoskie, one of seven starting seniors, makes things flow through the middle of the field, along with Ogorzalek, as both are having career-best campaigns. The Vikes have received at least one goal or an assist from either player in 12 straight games. But there's no doubt the loss of senior forward Cassie Boyce (ACL injury), the team's leading scorer in 2018 with 20 goals and 15 assists, in the second game of this season has hurt. The defense is strong, led by talented backs Eichlin and Schiavo, while Gabrish is a two-year starter in the cage. Warren Hills, which is the No. 1 seed, is making a tournament-record 10th finals appearance and its seventh in a row since losing 2-0 to Voorhees in the 2012 semifinals. The Blue Streaks, who are a tournament-best 34-4 overall in tri-county contests and secured the Skyland Conference Raritan Division title with a 5-1 win over Montgomery on Thursday, have outscored opponents, 64-9, while posting 11 shutouts and allowing just nine goals all season. Desai and Dugan lead a very balanced offensive attack, which has produced 24 goals in the last seven games, as they've combined for 11 goals and seven assists during that stretch. Dugan (52 career goals), who is seventh on the school's career points list with 127, is just two shy of matching former great Megan Springmeyer (54 from 2004-07) for seventh on the program's all-time goals list. Defensively, backs Dvorsky and Schlaffer, along with Compton at sweeper, are a talented group in front of the cage, where Webber, an aggressive keeper and a two-year starter, has been awfully stingy. Warren Hills scored two goals in each of the first two meetings this season and smart money says it will take three goals for Voorhees to pull off the upset. That will be a tough task against a phenomenal Streaks defense. Hills, which I think will benefit in the long run from a 2-1 loss to Ridge on Tuesday, has the more potent offense and that's the difference here.

Pick: Warren Hills, 3-2.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Field hockey: HWS sectional playoff pairings, seeds

Pairings and seeds for the upcoming NJSIAA sectional tournaments -- which won't be official until noon on Thursday -- involving 17 teams from the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex area.

The tournaments begin with preliminary round games on Monday.

Warren Hills is seeking its eighth straight sectional title.
Warren Hills (17-1), seeking the program's eighth straight sectional title and 17th overall, will have the home-field advantage as the No. 1 seed in North 1, Group 3, after having to go on the road for the semifinal and final in 2018.

The Blue Streaks suffered their first loss on Tuesday -- 2-1 at Ridge -- in their bid to clinch the Skyland Conference Raritan Division title outright. Coach Josie Potter's team, which fell two shy of matching the school record for consecutive wins, will look to clinch the division title at home against Montgomery on Thursday.

North Hunterdon and Voorhees are the only other No. 1 seeds among area teams.

Voorhees (15-3), which has won seven sectional titles, the last in 2016, was ousted by No. 2 seed Rumson-Fair Haven in the North 2, Group 2 semis in 2018.

In North 1, Group 2, Vernon (13-2) is the No. 2 seed, Sparta (9-6-1) is the No. 4 seed, Hackettstown (6-7-1), last year's runner-up, is the No. 6 seed and High Point (5-10) is the No. 10 seed. The top seed is perennial power West Essex, which has won a state record 36 sectional titles.

North Hunterdon (12-6), which is enjoying its first winning season since 2009, eyes the program's third sectional title and first since 1993 in North 2, Group 4. The Lions' last postseason win was a 2-1 first-round victory over Columbia on Oct. 30, 2013. North has beaten five teams in the field this season, including No. 3 Hunterdon Central, No. 4 Montgomery and No. 6 Bridgewater-Raritan, which has won 14 straight sectional titles competing in either North 1 or North 2, Group 4.

Hunterdon Central (8-9-2), which won its 13th and last sectional title in 2013, played to a 0-0 tie with Bridgewater-Raritan, which dropped decisions to Eastern in the Group 4 final in each of the previous seasons since 2005 after merging the district's East and West schools. Central and Bridgewater-Raritan have met in the postseason the previous eight years, with the Panthers winning all of those meetings, including a 4-1 victory in the 2018 sectional final.

Newton (12-3) is the No. 3 seed and Belvidere (8-7-1), which seeks the program's first sectional title since 1996, is the No. 7 seed in North 1, Group 1. There are six Open Mike area teams in that bracket overall, including the Braves, who won have four of the past five titles, including a 1-0 road win in overtime against the County Seaters in the 2018 title game.

Pairings were determined using power points. Records are through Saturday's games.

North 1

Group 4

(Games played on Oct. 21, Oct. 23, Oct. 28 and Oct. 31)

9-Randolph (4-9-2) at 8-Union (6-9), winner to meet 1-Ridge (11-5)
12-Watchung Hills (1-13-1) at 5-Columbia (7-6-1), winner to meet 4-Morristown (7-9)
11-Hackensack (4-11) at 6-Mount Olive (6-6-1), winner to meet 3-Scotch Plains-Fanwood (11-5)
10-Phillipsburg (2-13-1) at 7-Livingston (6-10-1), winner to meet 2-Montclair (12-4-1)

Group 3

(Games played on Oct. 22, Oct. 26, Oct. 29 and Nov. 1)

9-Morris Knolls (6-7-1) at 8-Wayne Hills (3-9), winner to meet 1-Warren Hills (17-0)
5-Mendham (5-7-1) at 4-Wayne Valley (13-3)
6-Roxbury (8-6) at 3-West Morris (15-1-1)
10-Passaic Valley (5-10) at 7-Montville (5-6-2), winner to meet 2-Northern Highlands (15-2)

Group 2

(Games played on Oct. 22, Oct. 25, Oct. 29 and Nov. 1)

9-Parsippany Hills (8-7) at 8-River Dell (5-9-2), winner to meet 1-West Essex (13-1-1)
5-West Milford (7-4-2) at 4-Sparta (9-6-1)
11-Parsippany (1-14) at 6-Hackettstown (6-7-1), winner to meet 3-Lakeland (11-3)
10-High Point (5-10) at 7-Jefferson (6-7-1), winner to meet 2-Vernon (12-2)

Group 1

(Games played on Oct. 21, Oct. 24, Oct. 28 and Oct. 31)

9-Pompton Lakes (7-9-1) at 8-Lenape Valley (5-9-1), winner to meet 1-Ramsey (14-0)
12-Kittatinny (3-10-1) at 5-Westwood (12-4-1)
13-North Warren (4-9-2) at 4-Boonton (10-6-1)
11-Wallkill Valley (5-7-3) at 6-Mountain Lakes (5-7-2), winner to meet 3-Newton (11-3)
10-Butler (8-9) at 7-Belvidere (7-7-1), winner to meet 2-Pequannock (11-3)

North 2

Group 4

(Games played on Oct. 21, Oct. 23, Oct. 28 and Oct. 31)

9-Old Bridge (4-10-2) at 8-Sayreville (4-10-2), winner to meet 1-North Hunterdon (11-6)
12-Piscataway (1-14) at 5-Westfield (7-9), winner to meet 4-Montgomery (6-8-2)
11-Franklin (4-11) at 6-Bridgewater-Raritan (8-8-1), winner to meet 3-Hunterdon Central (7-9-2)
10-East Brunswick (3-9-3) at 7-Hillsborough (7-10), winner to meet 2-South Brunswick (9-5-2)

Group 2

(Games played on Oct. 22, Oct. 25, Oct. 29 and Nov. 1)

9-Hopewell Valley (5-9-2) at 8-Holmdel (7-8), winner to meet 1-Voorhees (14-3)
5-Summit (12-5) at 4-Madison (9-3)
11-Governor Livingston (2-12) at 6-South Plainfield (10-4-2), winner to meet 3-Bernards (12-3-1)
10-Matawan (1-11-2) at 7-Raritan (8-7-1), winner to meet 2-Rumson-Fair Haven (10-4)

Group 1

(Games played on Oct. 21, Oct. 24, Oct. 28 and Oct. 31)

9-Whippany Park (9-4-1) at 8-Johnson (13-4), winner to meet 1-Shore (16-1)
12-Bordentown (2-14) at 5-South Hunterdon (14-2)
13-Burlington City (3-11) at 4-Delaware Valley (12-4)
11-New Egypt (8-5) at 6-Florence (12-3), winner to meet 3-Metuchen (13-1-1)
10-Henry Hudson (8-4-1) at 7-Glen Ridge (9-6), winner to meet 2-Point Pleasant Boro (16-0)

Complete tournament schedule:

Monday, Oct. 21 – NJSIAA Groups 1 and 4 first round
Tuesday, Oct. 22 – NJSIAA Groups 2 and 3 first round
Wednesday, Oct. 23 – NJSIAA Group 4 second round
Thursday, Oct. 24 – NJSIAA Group 1 second round
Saturday, Oct. 26 – NJSIAA Groups 2 and 3 second round

Monday, Oct. 28 – NJSIAA Groups 1 and 4 semifinals
Tuesday, Oct. 29 – NJSIAA Groups 2 and 3 semifinals
Thursday, Oct. 31 – NJSIAA Groups 1 and 4 finals
Friday, Nov. 1 – NJSIAA Groups 2 and 3 finals

Tuesday, Nov. 5 – NJSIAA state semifinals
Saturday, Nov. 9 – NJSIAA state championships at Bordentown

Monday, Nov. 11 – Tournament of Champions play-in
Wednesday, Nov. 13 – Tournament of Champions semifinals
Friday, Nov. 15 – Tournament of Champions final at Kean University