Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Field hockey: HWS scoring leaders

(Through Wednesday's games)

Minimum 7 points

Player
School
Goals
Assists
Points
Lauren Masters
North Hunterdon
8
4
20
Samantha Snowden
Delaware Valley
9
1
19
Ryan Anderson
North Hunterdon
4
8
16
Carlie Van Tassel
Vernon
7
1
15
Kristen Bill
Delaware Valley
6
3
15
Madeline Bill
Delaware Valley
4
6
14
Olivia Zmyewski
Belvidere
5
3
13
Simryn Desai
Warren Hills
6
0
12
Samantha Dugan
Warren Hills
5
2
12
Sydney Pavlishin
Newton
6
0
12
Kathrine McLean
Voorhees
4
4
12
Julia Fitt
Newton
4
3
11
Julia Gregory
Vernon
4
3
11
Brooke Hyland
Voorhees
4
2
10
Olivia Reeder
North Hunterdon
5
0
10
Elissar Abou-Jaoude
Newton
4
2
10
Rachel McIntyre
Delaware Valley
3
4
10
Megan Doyle
Hackettstown
3
3
9
Alana Catanzareti
South Hunterdon
4
1
9
Rebecca Phillips
South Hunterdon
4
1
9
Chandler Storcella
South Hunterdon
4
1
9
Natalie Heiser
Delaware Valley
4
1
9
Sarah Korczukowski
Warren Hills
3
2
8
Alexis Wohlers
North Warren
3
2
8
Bridget Kerrick
Newton
3
2
8
Heather Kemper
North Warren
4
0
8
Sammy Freeman
Hunterdon Central
3
1
7
Jenna Wyckoff
Warren Hills
2
3
7
Ryleigh Cameron
Voorhees
2
3
7
Zoe Horan
South Hunterdon
2
3
7
Alicia Mihalko
Vernon
2
3
7
Taylor Berry
High Point
3
1
7
Ashleigh Harrison
Belvidere
3
1
7
Mia Annunziata
Vernon
3
1
7
Kate Fenner
Warren Hills
2
3
7

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

What's in a name: H-W-S(Sussex and/or Somerset)?

Seems we have another county that begins with 'S' interested in joining the Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament.

For 11 years, it's been a tri-county affair in Northwest Jersey, but this past spring, Somerset County, which is comprised of 16 schools competing in their own tournaments, reached out to HWS officials about the possibility of making it a four-county event (with up to 36 schools) across all sports.

"They've expressed interest to join if we ever decided to expand," said North Warren athletic director John Simonetti. "I think 20 teams for a county tournament is fine."

Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex, which is currently comprised of 20 schools, has not expressed, at least publicly, that it would consider an increase in membership for its events. However, there have been rumblings in recent years that Sussex County would like to once again hold its own tournaments -- as it did prior to joining the former Hunterdon-Warren association for the 2009-10 school year.

Several coaches and ADs have mentioned they'd welcome the move to go solo, though no one has gone on the record in support of such a proposal. But with Somerset expressing interest, this may give Sussex the impetus to make a move. High Point athletic director Todd Van Orden could not be reached for comment, but a regular meeting of Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex ADs is slated for today. It is not known whether Somerset wanting to join will be on the agenda as other pressing issues are likely to be discussed, including seeding criteria for the upcoming fall events.

One chief complaint from the Sussex side is the travel. For example, High Point or Vernon making the trek to South Hunterdon or Delaware Valley is quite the trip, especially if a team faces the prospect of a blowout defeat. That certainly goes for the other counties in regards to travel.

Hackettstown won its first HWS field hockey title in 2018.
Another is the latter. Sussex County has been up against it competition-wise in several sports over the years -- in particular field hockey. Newton is the only Sussex program with a field hockey title -- sharing the 2009 prize with Warren Hills when the final was never contested due to scheduling conflicts. High Point is the only other Sussex school to reach a field hockey final (2011-12).

Overall, Hunterdon-Warren teams are 111-86 in the field hockey tournaments, while Sussex is 53-73. High Point (14-9) and Newton (10-9) are the only Sussex schools with winning records, while Warren Hills (32-4 and a tournament-best six titles) and Voorhees (21-8 and two titles) have dominated this event.

Across the 23 tournaments involving all sports, Hunterdon Central leads in titles won in 13 events, including a record nine in boys swimming. The Red Devils have won a combined 89 championships overall. Other than Central's nine in boys swimming and eight in girls swimming, boys lacrosse and boys tennis, and seven in girls golf, no other HWS school has won more than six titles in any sport.

For the sake of our Open Mike coverage, wrestling would be another issue. The 18-school (soon to be 19 in a few years with the revival of South Hunterdon's program) HWS Tournament is regarded as the state's toughest and losing Sussex -- which includes former team champions High Point, Kittatinny and Pope John -- would be a major hit.

In addition, the Somerset schools are members of the Skyland Conference and therefore already play or wrestle against the Hunterdon-Warren schools in division or crossover contests. Adding them to the county tournaments would just be overkill in a lot of sports. Plus, several sports hold Skyland Conference championship events. That isn't the case with the current setup as all of Sussex (as well as Hackettstown and North Warren) compete in the Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference.

The 16 Somerset County Tournament schools are: Bernards, Bridgewater-Raritan, Bound Brook, Franklin, Gill-St. Bernard's, Hillsborough, Immaculata, Manville, Montgomery, Mount St. Mary, North Plainfield, Pingry, Ridge, Rutgers Prep, Somerville, Watchung Hills.

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Field hockey: Streaks, Voorhees atop HWS ranks

It's almost that time for the 11th annual Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament to commence.

Seeds and pairings won't be released until early next week, but here's hoping the athletic directors figure out a way to get the seeding process done right. In previous seasons, seeding has been based solely on power points, but with teams playing an uneven number of games and some facing much stiffer competition, things have not made sense. Another Warren Hills-Voorhees matchup in the quarterfinals -- no joke, this happened in 2017 -- is not what we're looking to see.
Hackettstown won the 2018 HWS field hockey title.

The ADs from the HWS area will hash all of this out -- as well as what to do with seeding in other sports besides wrestling -- at their next scheduled meeting on Tuesday.

Speaking of Warren Hills, which surely rates as the favorite to win this season's HWS title, is off to a 6-0 start for the third time in six years. What should be scary to all teams in the area and statewide is that the Blue Streaks return all 11 starters from last season's Group 3 runner-up team and are still very young -- only four starting seniors.

"We're doing OK," said third-year coach Josie Potter, following her team's 4-0 win over Watchung Hills last Monday.

That may be the understatement of the season, but Potter likes keep everything close to the vest. There's no denying the depth of talent on her squad, particularly on defense, which was bolstered by the returns of backs Ashley Moskal and Jess DeSanto. Moskal, a junior, was arguably Warren Hills' top player as a freshman and missed all of 2018 with an ACL injury. She has been brought along slowly since opening day, and showed some versatility by playing on the forward line in a 2-0 win over Voorhees on Sept. 3. DeSanto was a starter on the 2017 Group 3 runner-up team and did not come out as a junior.

It's caused some nice problems to have for Potter, who has been mixing and matching lineups early on, like she did a year ago. Senior Kate Fenner, a rock-solid sweeper and Fairfield University commit, moved to center midfield against Watchung Hills and the offense, which was a little sluggish to start that one, responded immediately, as she scored her first goal of the season. That may be a winning move with so many strong options in the backfield, including sophomore Emily Dvorsky and juniors Liz Schlaffer and Kylie Compton, in the sweeper role.

You can bet Warren Hills will be hungry for redemption this Saturday when the Streaks travel to Hackettstown for a noon independent meeting at Morrison Field. The Tigers snapped a 14-game skid in the series with a 1-0 win in overtime in last year's HWS championship game -- the program's first win over Warren Hills since a 2-1 victory at home in 2006 and spoiling the Blue Streaks' bid for a seventh title in the tournament's 10-year history. The Streaks own a 42-5-3 edge in the all-time series.

It should be an interesting few weeks coming up. Here are the first set of Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex rankings, and keep an eye on the surprising North Hunterdon Lions. More on them below.

1. Warren Hills (6-0) -- Blue Streaks capped a 3-0 week with a 2-1 win over Bridgewater-Raritan on Saturday to set themselves up as the frontrunner for the Skyland Conference Raritan Division title. Coach Josie Potter's team has outscored opponents, 18-3 through the first six games. Junior Simryn Desai, who led the Streaks in scoring last season, has four goals, while senior Samantha Dugan leads in scoring with five goals and two assists.

Up next: Ridge at home on Tuesday; Pingry at home on Friday; at Hackettstown on Saturday.

2. Voorhees (4-2) -- Vikings have rebounded with four straight wins after opening the season with losses to state powerhouses Warren Hills (2-0 on Sept. 3) and West Essex (5-1 on Sept. 5). Senior midfielder Ryleigh Cameron scored a pair of goals and had an assist in Saturday's 3-0 win over a much improved Watchung Hills team, while junior forward Kathrine McLean (three goals and three assists) and senior forward Brooke Hyland (three goals and two assists), a University of Lynchburg commit, lead the Vikes, who scored their first win on the new turf against Hillsborough (4-0 on Tuesday) in scoring.

Up next: Phillipsburg at home on Tuesday; Bridgewater-Raritan at home on Thursday; at Delaware Valley on Saturday.

3. North Hunterdon (4-2) -- How about the Lions? In just her third season at the helm, coach Maria Bachert has this program, which had gone 47-171-5 over the previous seven years and hadn't won more than three games since 2010 until its four victories in 2018, back on the map as evidenced by a shocking 4-1 win over Bridgewater-Raritan last Tuesday. A speedy forward line, led by sophomore Ryan Anderson (four goals, three assists), freshman Lauren Masters (eight goals, three assists) and sophomore Olivia Reeder (four goals), has this team eyeing its first winning season since going 12-9 in 2009.

Up next: Montgomery at home on Tuesday; at Franklin on Saturday.

4. Hunterdon Central (3-2-1) -- Red Devils have a lot of new faces this season, but coach Jenn Sponzo's team is off to a strong start -- playing to a 0-0 tie against nemesis Bridgewater-Raritan on Sept. 7 and giving Group 3 champion Moorestown all it could handle in a 2-1 overtime loss two days later. Central got back on track with a 3-0 win over Phillipsburg on Saturday as senior midfielder Sammy Freeman scored her team-leading third goal of the season. The offense will go as she does.

Up next: at Hillsborough on Tuesday; Hunterdon Central Tournament on Friday and Saturday.

5. Delaware Valley (5-0) -- Terriers, who started 5-0 for the second time in three seasons -- going 7-0 in 2017 -- opened their campaign in style with a 2-1 win over reigning Skyland Conference Valley Division champion Bernards on Sept. 4, and coach Stephanie Rifflard's team capped a 3-0 week with a 2-1 victory at Lawrence on Friday. Junior forward Kristen Bill (five goals, three assists), senior midfielder Madeline Bill (three goals, four assists) and newcomer Samantha Snowden (six goals) are powering the offense, which produced 22 goals in the first five games.

Up next: South Hunterdon at home on Tuesday; at Somerville on Thursday; Voorhees at home on Saturday.

6. South Hunterdon (5-0) -- Eagles are primed for another run at the Skyland Conference Mountain Division title following a 2-1 win over Bernards last Tuesday followed up by a 3-2 overtime victory at Belvidere on Thursday. Senior forward Alana Catanzareti scored goals in both of those wins, while junior forward Chandler Storcella had a hat trick in Saturday's 7-0 win over Steinert.

Up next: at Delaware Valley on Tuesday; North Plainfield at home on Thursday; Notre Dame at home on Saturday.

7. Belvidere (2-2) -- County Seaters are still in the mix despite heavy losses on the offensive end from last season's North 1, Group 1 sectional runner-up squad. After lopsided wins over North Plainfield and Somerville to open the season, the latter giving coach Beth Franceschino her 100th victory over two stints at the Warren County school, the Seaters dropped a 3-2 decision in overtime against South Hunterdon in a key Skyland Conference Mountain Division clash. Junior forward Olivia Zmyewski leads the team in scoring with five goals and three assists.

Up next: at Bernards on Monday; Phillipsburg at home on Saturday.

8. Vernon (4-0) -- Vikings, who seem to be making a comeback, scored a big 2-1 win over Newton on Friday after dropping a pair of tough 1-0 losses to the Braves last season. Coach Kieran Killeen's Vikes improved to 2-0 in the NJAC Freedom Division with that victory and enter the week alone in first place. Senior forward Carlie Van Tassel, who scored a team-leading five goals through the first three games, was kept off the board against Newton.

Up next: at Wallkill Valley on Monday; at Hackettstown on Tuesday; Wallkill Valley at home on Thursday.

9. Newton (4-1) -- Braves saw their four-game winning streak -- all shutouts -- to open the season snapped with a 2-1 loss at Vernon on Friday. Coach Lisa Bechtel's team had outscored its opponents 17-0, through the first four games, including a 3-0 win over reigning NJAC Freedom Division champion Hackettstown on Sept. 4. Sophomore forward Sidney Pavlishin scored a team-leading six goals through the first four games, while sophomore forward Julia Fitt and junior forward Elissar Abou-Jaoude are next on the scoring list with four goals apiece.

Up next: at High Point on Monday; at Hackettstown on Thursday; at Lenape Valley on Saturday.

10. Hackettstown (3-1) -- Tigers, coming off that magical season in 2018, which included the program's first Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex Tournament title, bounced back from a 3-0 season-opening loss at Newton, with three straight wins, including a 1-0 win over Mendham on Saturday. Junior forward Megan Doyle, one of the few returning starters from last season, is off to a good start with three goals and two assists.

Up next: Vernon at home on Tuesday; Newton at home on Thursday; Warren Hills at home on Saturday.

Field hockey: HWS schedule for Sept. 16-21

Monday, Sept. 16


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Newton at High Point
Lenape Valley at Kittatinny, 7 p.m.
North Warren at Jefferson
Morris Hills at Pope John
Vernon at Wallkill Valley

Skyland Conference

Belvidere at Bernards, 4:15 p.m.

Tuesday, Sept. 17


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Vernon at Hackettstown
North Warren at Wallkill Valley

Skyland Conference

South Hunterdon at Delaware Valley
Hunterdon Central at Hillsborough, 3:45 p.m.
Phillipsburg at Voorhees, 3:45 p.m.
Ridge at Warren Hills
Montgomery at North Hunterdon, 3:45 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 18


(Both games 4 p.m.)

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Pope John at Jefferson
Chatham at Sparta

Thursday, Sept. 19


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Newton at Hackettstown
High Point at Kittatinny, 3:45 p.m.
North Warren at Sparta, 7 p.m.
Wallkill Valley at Vernon
Jefferson at Lenape Valley

Skyland Conference

Delaware Valley at Somerville
North Plainfield at South Hunterdon, 4:15 p.m.
Bridgewater-Raritan at Voorhees, 6 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 20


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Roxbury at Pope John

Skyland Conference

Pingry at Warren Hills
Mount St. Mary at Belvidere

Independent

Hunterdon Central at Conshohocken (Pa.) Tournament, 7 p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 21


(All games 10 a.m., unless noted)

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Kittatinny at Wallkill Valley
Newton at Lenape Valley

Skyland Conference

Voorhees at Delaware Valley, 9:30 a.m.
Phillipsburg at Belvidere
North Hunterdon at Franklin, noon

Independent

Warren Hills at Hackettstown, noon
Notre Dame at South Hunterdon
Hunterdon Central at Conshohocken (Pa.) Tournament, 3 p.m.

Monday, September 9, 2019

Field hockey: Fenner, Streaks shift into winning gear

WASHINGTON TWP. -- Warren Hills' field hockey team knows exactly where it wants to be at season's end, just don't expect players and coaches to readily discuss it.

"Our coach [Josie Potter] always tells us, 'One game at a time,'" said senior midfielder/back Kate Fenner, who scored her first goal of the season in Monday afternoon's 4-0 win over Watchung Hills in a Skyland Conference crossover contest at Warren Hills School District Stadium.

Coach speak aside, Warren Hills (4-0 overall, 4-0 division) knows it's the favorite to win a ninth straight sectional title and make a return trip to the Group 3 final in early November.

Warren Hills started 4-0 for the third time in five seasons.
Fenner, a captain and integral part of last season's run to the program's eighth consecutive sectional championship and its seventh straight state final appearance, provided an offensive spark against Watchung Hills (0-3, 0-3). Fenner, a Fairfield University commit, who opened the game as the sweeper, shifted to the center-midfield spot midway through the first half. The move paid quick dividends as she knocked in a rebound to the right-corner of the cage with 6:08 left to give the Streaks a 2-0 lead.


"I felt like we played a much more offensive game with that change," said Potter, who moved junior Kylie Compton from the midfield to the sweeper spot to get Fenner more involved up front, where senior Samantha Dugan also got things going when she bumped up from the midfield to the forward line.

"We came out a little flat and we needed an offensive push. Sam Dugan played awesome. She's goal hungry and Kylie, who played sweeper last year, she's a wall [in the backfield] for us."

Fenner, who prefers to play in the midfield, noticed something lacking on the offensive end and was glad to make the switch as the Streaks collected win No. 691 as a program.

"We weren't communicating and our forwards were getting all jumbled," Fenner said. "[The offense] really wasn't going up the field. I really wanted to give us that offensive push."

Junior left inner Simryn Desai opened the scoring with the first of her two goals off a feed from junior Sarah Korczukowski with 11:48 to go in first half. After Fenner's goal provided some breathing room, Warren Hills, which closed out the half strong, recording 10 shots-on-goal. Defensively, Compton, sophomore Emily Dvorsky (one beautiful defensive save) and junior Liz Schlaffer helped keep things in check -- allowing just one shot by Watchung in the first half.

Desai made it 3-0 early in the second half -- with an assist from Dugan -- on a penalty corner for her team-leading third goal of the season. Sophomore Maddie Summitt, who also provided a spark off the bench, capped the scoring with her first goal of the season at the 3:25 mark. The Streaks also had two goals called back earlier in the game, finishing with a 17-1 edge in shots and a 10-1 advantage on corners.

After opening the season with a big 2-0 win over nemesis Voorhees at home on Sept. 3, followed by road victories over Hillsborough (3-1 on Thursday) and Phillipsburg (3-0 on Saturday), Warren Hills will host North Hunterdon at 5:15 p.m. on Thursday before another big test at Bridgewater-Raritan, the Group 4 runner-up the previous 14 seasons, on Saturday at 2 p.m.

"[The game against Voorhees] was back-and-forth, they're always a strong team," Fenner said. "We know we have to take it one at a time. I know some of the North Hunterdon players and they said their No. 1 goal this season is to beat Warren Hills. Obviously, our overall goal is to be in the state finals."

Watchung Hills (0-3, 0-3)                  0                   0            --    0
Warren Hills (4-0, 4-0)                       2                   2            --    4

Scoring

First half -- War, Simryn Desai, 2nd, (Sarah Korczukowski), 11:48; War, Kate Fenner, 1st, 6:08.

Second half -- War, Desai, 3rd, (Samantha Dugan), 24:53; War, Maddie Summitt, 1st, 3:25.

Shots -- Watchung Hills 1; Warren Hills 17.

Saves -- Sarah Bruno 11, Madeline Gully 1 (defensive) (Wat); Julia Webber 0, Emily Dvorsky 1 (defensive) (War).

Penalty corners -- Watchung Hills 1, Warren Hills 10.

Sunday, September 8, 2019

Field hockey: HWS schedule for Sept. 9-14

Monday, Sept. 9


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Newton at North Warren
Lenape Valley at Vernon

Skyland Conference

Watchung Hills at Warren Hills

Independent

Moorestown at Hunterdon Central, 5:30 p.m.

Tuesday, Sept. 10


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Hackettstown at High Point
Jefferson at Kittatinny
Wallkill Valley at Newton
Lenape Valley at Sparta

Skyland Conference

Delaware Valley at Mount St. Mary
Hunterdon Central at Montgomery
Pingry at Phillipsburg, 3:45 p.m.
Bernards at South Hunterdon, 4:15 p.m.
Hillsborough at Voorhees, 3:45 p.m.
Somerville at Belvidere
Bridgewater-Raritan at North Hunterdon, 3:45 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 11


Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

High Point at Sparta, 4 p.m.

Thursday, Sept. 12


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

North Warren at Morris Hills
Mount Olive at Pope John
Vernon at Jefferson

Skyland Conference

Franklin at Delaware Valley
Phillipsburg at Montgomery, 4:30 p.m.
South Hunterdon at Belvidere
Ridge at Voorhees, 3:45 p.m.
North Hunterdon at Warren Hills, 5:15 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 13


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

High Point at Wallkill Valley
Sparta at Kittatinny
Newton at Vernon
Lenape Valley at North Warren, 3:45 p.m.

Independent

Delaware Valley at Lawrence
Belvidere at Boonton

Saturday, Sept. 14


(All games 10 a.m., unless noted)

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Pope John at Wallkill Valley

Skyland Conference

Phillipsburg at Hunterdon Central
Voorhees at Watchung Hills, 11 a.m.
Warren Hills at Bridgewater-Raritan, 2 p.m.
North Hunterdon at Pingry, 2:30 p.m.

Independent

High Point at Delaware Valley (Pa.)
Steinert at South Hunterdon

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Field hockey: HWS schedule for Sept. 3-7


Tuesday, Sept. 3


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

North Warren at Boonton
West Morris at Lenape Valley, 4:30 p.m.

Skyland Conference

Hunterdon Central at Watchung Hills
North Hunterdon at Phillipsburg, 3:45 p.m.
Voorhees at Warren Hills, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 4


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Hackettstown at Newton
Morris Hills at Kittatinny, 4:30 p.m.
Sparta at North Warren, 3:45 p.m.
Vernon at Wallkill Valley, ppd. to 9/16
Lenape Valley at Jefferson

Skyland Conference

Delaware Valley at Bernards, 4:30 p.m.
Mount St. Mary at South Hunterdon

Thursday, Sept. 5


(All games 3:45 p.m., unless noted)

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Pope John at Roxbury, 4 p.m.

Skyland Conference

Ridge at Hunterdon Central, 5:30 p.m.
Phillipsburg at Bridgewater-Raritan, 3:45 p.m.
Warren Hills at Hillsborough

Belvidere at North Plainfield
North Hunterdon at Watchung Hills

Independent

Voorhees at West Essex, 4 p.m.

Friday, Sept. 6


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

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Vernon at High Point
Kittatinny at North Warren, 3:45 p.m.
Sparta at Jefferson

Independent

Henry Hudson at Delaware Valley, 3:45 p.m.
South Hunterdon at Stuart Country Day

Saturday, Sept. 7


(All games 10 a.m., unless noted)

Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference

Wallkill Valley at Hackettstown
Jefferson at Newton, noon
Pope John at Morris Knolls

Skyland Conference

Bridgewater-Raritan at Hunterdon Central, 11 a.m.
Warren Hills at Phillipsburg
Montgomery at Voorhees, 11 a.m.
Ridge at North Hunterdon, 11:30 a.m.