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2006 Meadville Bulldog Invitational ~ Semi-Finals Mt Lebanon 3 Meadville 1 The House of Chills on a Sunday morning for the Bulldog Invitational and it wouldn’t have been complete without the Bulldogs. We were nearly watching a matchup of two Western Pennsylvania Hockey powers, but not Meadville, as Mt Lebanon and Central Catholic appeared headed for a rematch of an earlier season game yesterday afternoon after the Vikings rallied to tie the Bulldogs in the waning moments 4-4. Sylvania Northview took care of all five points and Central Catholic setting the stage for the Bulldogs to defeat Bowling Green and edge out the Vikings on the tiebreakers to gain a spot opposite Mt Lebanon in the semis. For Dawg head coach Jamie Plunkett not the ultimate scenario for the Bulldogs, but I am sure he will take it. An opportunity to face Mt Lebanon, even though this is January, is a good barometer for the 5-2 setback the Blue Devils handed Meadville in early November. The Bulldogs will need to develop a little better consistency come March to make a run and there’s no better place to get started than against the # 1 ranked team in the State of Pennsylvania. There is no question that at this point of the season, Meadville, along with defending State Champions Bethel Park and 2005 Penguins Cup finalist North Allegheny expect to work toward a final 4 berth, but the question is will any of them be able to challenge Mt Lebanon come March. After what Bethel did a year ago knocking off the North Allegheny Tigers [who gave up just one goal in the entire playoffs], anything is possible, but the Blue Devils look pretty strong and the final pieces of the puzzle are falling into place nicely for what needs to happen to erase a 30 year drought. Mt Lebanon and for this weekend and this tournament we’ll call them Mt Lebo 66 as no Murovich, nor Mandic, nor Ferguson, nor Root, nor McDermott in attendance. In fact, coach Paul Taibi tried to summon sound Junior Varsity players for a little depth, but would have to settle for the 13 players who have carried the Blue Devils into the Semis. After watching Mt Lebanon yesterday tie a very good LaSalle team and then throttle Class AA power Thomas Jefferson, a new appreciation for how far the players you don’t read about who will be an important component in the ultimate goal is being developed who we will call Mt Lebo 66 as are preparing themselves for when the other 1/3 of the team returns from AAA tournaments and injury to start the run at the prize that has eluded Mt Lebanon since 1976, and more recently in 2004 when the Blue Devils fell 5 minutes or so shy of a State Championship. The downhill climb for the Blue and Gold will begin as we are only seven weeks shy of the beginning of the march toward April 8th and the 2006 Pennsylvania High School Hockey Championships. At 12:03 of the opening period, Chris Learn’s slapshot found its way through traffic and Matt Vaughn to giving the road team Bulldogs a 1-0 lead. With 1:11 remaining in the opening period, the Blue Devils tied the game as Jon Wilen beat Brian Danczak from right in front. At 7:46 of the second period, Mt Lebanon went on the power play as Mt Lebo 66 a/k/a the 3rd unit in the arsenal continued to hone its skills for the upcoming playoffs, but was unable to score. Meadville went on the power play at 5:55 to take their shot at capturing the lead. Excellent penalty killing by both clubs kept the score at one apiece. Mt Lebanon went on the power play to start the third period and with 13:42 remaining in regulation, the big stick for the Blue Devils Matt Bartkowski unleashed a wicked slapshot past Brian Danczak to give the Blue Devils a 2-1 lead. Just 28 seconds later, at 13:18 Ben Rascoe found a loose puck and deposited into the net for Mt Lebo 66 and more importantly a 3-1 lead. Mt Lebanon clamped down on the Bulldogs defensively and Matt Vaughn shut the door the rest of the way as Mt Lebo 66 moves on to the championship with a 3-1 victory limiting the Bulldogs to 18 shots to the Blue Devils 28 LaSalle 2 Sylvania Northview 1. LaSalle is locked in a four way battle for Flyers Cup supremacy with 5-time defending champions Malvern Prep, 2005 finalist Germantown Academy and upstart Cardinal O’Hara. The Explorers, along with Malvern and GA have gone out and strengthened their schedule year in and year out with strong teams from New York, New Jersey, Ohio and Western Pennsylvania to prepare for the playoffs. LaSalle College under Wally Muehlbronner, now in his 9th year enjoys the annual trip to Meadville, not only for the success his team has had competing for the Bulldog Invitational Championship, which they captured a year ago, but to get a look at a portion of the best of the West. The Explorers played to a 0-0 tie with Mt Lebanon in the preliminary round and that is on the heels of defeating the Blue Devils for the championship a year ago in 2005. Sylvania Northview has been a staple in the Bulldog Invitational for much of the ten-year run of the mid-January event. James Cooper’s team has enjoyed an excellent season in the Northwest Ohio Conference and is many people’s pick to unseat Cleveland St Edwards as the Ohio State Champions in March. The Wildcats feature several super scorers in Alden Hirshfeld and Adam Thangsiu, who have not disappointed in the 2006 Bulldog Invitational as Northview has defeated Meadville, Central Catholic and rival Bowling Green for the only perfect record in the tournament. The Cats had a nice compliment of size, speed and skill, which would be tested by a battled tested LaSalle team for the right to face Mt Lebanon, who bounced host Meadville in the early semi-final. At 14:22 on the power play the Explorers struck as Ross Denczi scored on a quick rebound for a 1-0 lead. The teams battled to a hard fought and end to action, which settled into a goaltending dual between Sylvania’s Craig Trego and LaSalle’s Dan Pyne. The Wildcat’s were finally able to solve LaSalle as Alden Hirshfeld scored his 7th goal of the tournament to knot the game a one apiece as we headed to the ice cut. On to the third period and the game continued to take shape as LaSalle continued to make Northview work at their level. With 3:38 remaining, Tom Minton’s wrist shot from the left circle found its way through the 5 hole of Craig Trego to give the Explorers a 2-1 lead. LaSalle would hold on to move on to the finals to face Mt Lebanon in a rematch of the 2005 Championship. Shots were 29-14 in favor of Sylvania Northview. imageimage
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New Quaker Valley knocks Mars down a peg 5-3!

Posted by Jeff Mauro at Jan 14, 2008 4:00PM PST ( 0 Comments )
 

CORAOPOLIS –

 

      Mars (13-0-1) has been pretty much on cruise control since their November 27th beating of Quaker Valley at Cranberry. The Planets have outscored opponents 104-11, but a study shows that they have given up twice as many goals in away games than at home. The goal of all of this is for Mars to advance to their first ever Penguins Cup and the looming # 1 seed with a game and a half lead would receive a significant boost with a win over the Quakers. Let’s forget about the Post Gazette # 1 ranking that the Planets have held since the first weeks of the season and lets focus on the mental aspect facing this team that has plagued them in the past. While Quaker Valley was busy with competition over the holidays, coach Tim Coleman’s squad decided to rest and with the lack of competition in Class A, Mars will have to find a way to keep hungry and sharp down the stretch  to try to move on to the Penguins Cup and last week’s 1-1 tie with defending Penguins Cup champ Freeport, is just a reminder that ANY team is just one goaltending performance away from elimination and Quaker Valley will testify to that.

 

     Quaker Valley (13-2-0) lost to Serra Catholic and Mars in November and has reeled off a series of wins to become the hottest team in Class A since those setbacks. Taking into account that the Quakers had a semi-surprised return of Mik Lemieux as a Chirstmas present to QV’s fortunes  brings a whole different element to the offense, which now becomes multi dimensional with Lemieux, Colin South and George Jackson leading the offense and Noah Zamagias move back to defense to solidify a defense with Cody Scott. Head Coach Kevin Quinn’s smile was a little more noticeable as the Quakers got ready to take on # 1 Mars, who now stands in the path of the Quakers redemption of the Penguins Cup loss from a year ago and possibly a 2nd State Title in 3 years. The underlying philosophy of the Lemieux return may be questioned in some parts and certainly I have been outspoken about Eligibility, but in this case it really has nothing to do about who he is, but the principal is that Mik Lemieux is a player who was developed in the Quaker Valley organization, played three years for the team and SHOULD be eligible immediately for those of you naysayers.

 

        Quaker Valley jumped all over Mars in the opening period as Noah Zamagias gave the Quakers a 1-0 lead. Mik Lemieux made his presence known as he set up Colin South on a nice passing play to extend the lead to 2-0 before the ‘Concerned Citizens’ of Mars and Quaker Valley could get settle in their sets, which was a nice crowd for the premier matchup in Class A for a scheduled 9:00 PM start courtesy of the promotionally challenged PIHL (who sent the Riddler to watch this games instead of someone who might know a little about hockey), who is more interested in promoting themselves than their teams. At 3:18 of the period, the Quakers nearly made it 3-0, but Mars Brady Sipe broke up a play between South and Lemieux with a tremendous backchecking effort to keep the two goal deficit for the Planets.

 

        The second period turned into a goaltending dual between Mars Greg Lewis and QV’s Zach Taylor as the teams battled for the all important third goal of the contest in the first five minutes of the second. Quaker Valley would get the prize as Lemieux took a Colin South feed from the top of the circle and whipped it past Lewis and the Quakers now had a 3-0 lead at 9:12. Mars answered on the power play as Brady Sipe took a shot from the left point and Jake Robasch pounced on the rebound and jammed it past Zach Taylor and the Planets were on the board at 3-1 at 6:08. That momentum didn’t last long as Colin South drew a penalty and put the Quakers on the power play at 4:44. South took a cross ice feed from George Jaskon and fired a bullet off the cross bar that appeared to go in, but just in case Mik Lemieux made sure and tapped it in for a 4-1 QV lead heading to the ice cut. Shots were 33-20 in favor of QV.

 

        Mars did not quit and they could have laid down in this game after Mike Heltman was stopped on the breakaway with 12:25 remaining in regulation. Mars had a golden opportunity with 11 ½ minutes left on a 5 on 3, but Zach Taylor made a great save on Mike Mazzota at 10:38 and Quaker killed it off. On a QV power play, Mars goaltender Greg Lewis made an unreal stop on Mik Lemieux, but left the game under his own power. Mars kept on grinding and finally broke QV as Ian Finney redirected a Michael Tracy shot from the left point through the 5-hole with 3:39 to go and give a glimmer of hope to the Planets. Any fire the Planets had was extinguished just ten seconds later as Colin South found an empty net after Marty Lamneck made a save on Mik Lemieux and it was now 5-2. Time ran out as Mars continued to pressed for goals as Mike Mazzota scored on a beautiful shot inside the post to make the final count 5-3 in favor of Quaker Valley, who pinned the first loss of the season on Mars, which could prove to be a preview of a third meeting and that would be in the Penguins Cup final in March.        

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Canevin 2 West Allegheny 1

 

CORAOPOLIS –

 

     West Allegheny coach Norm Cook learned one thing about his team after their 4-0 loss to Franklin Regional last Friday night. The Indians will need both leading scorers Ryan Kumpfmiller and Jeff Cupelli in the lineup and the rest of the lineup to contribute key goals for West A to contend for the Class AA Penguins Cup in March. There is no question that the Indians are contenders and along with Latrobe, Franklin Regional and tonight’s opponent Canevin are the odds on favorites to win it all. West A made it to the Semi-Finals a year ago and is looking to go one step further this season and with the goaltending of Kyle Mortimer and Anthony Sweet, will be a tough team to beat when the bell rings.

 

      Bishop Canevin has never won anything in hockey, it’s because Canevin is the hockey power that everyone remembers that won State Championships in 1983. 1984 and 1989. And when it comes down to it, that history and tradition is pretty important, but in the scheme of the 2008 Penguins Cup AA, I liken this race to 1998, when out of nowhere came Thomas Jefferson to win three straight Pennsylvania State Class AA crowns. For Kevin Zeilmanski, that was the year when he took the helm at Central Catholic and won the Class AAA Penguins Cup, only to fall to LaSalle in the Pennsylvania High School Hockey Championships. A new start at Canevin, coach Zeilmanski has had a profound effect on the Crusaders in his first year and with a combination of youth and veterans and some pretty good goaltending in Zach Bogden, is in the thick of things in Class AA and has to be one of the teams to watch come March.

 

       Overcoming West Allegheny is one of those obstacles that has held Canevin back the past few years and this is a big week that the teams will meet twice and could very well decide the top two or three seeds in the Penguins Cup playoffs. The Crusaders and Indians have waged many battles over the last few years and these two over the next week will be pretty important in the seeding of the Class AA playoffs. Canevin and West Allegheny both skated hard in the opening minutes with the Crusaders having an edge in the territorial play in the opening minutes. Vince Nicolella had a great chance at 11:41 only to be turned aside by Kyle Mortimer. Canevin continued to press and went on the power play at 4:32, but West A stiffened. The Crusaders kept on coming and it finally paid off when with 53 seconds to go in the period Cam Zappi converted a Josh Daley pass beating Mortimer for a 1-0 Canevin lead.

 

       On to the second period and West Allegheny picked up their pace and would get the equalizer at 6:38 as Ryan Kumpfmiller beat the Crusader defense and Zack Bogden to knot the score at one apiece. Canevin almost pulled ahead at 5:29 as Mike Mannsmann had a golden opportunity on a 2nd rebound with a wide open cage, but Kyle Mortimer robbed him with a phenomenal glove save. At 3:28 Jeffrey Cupelli beat the Canevin defense but Bogden stoned him and West A was given a power play, but could not score as the game headed to the ice cut tied at 1-1.

          Canevin came up with the big goal to take the lead at 10:20 as Vincent Nicolella scored on another nice feed from Josh Daley and the Crusaders were now on top again 2-1. West Allegheny apparently tied the game with 7:22 to go as Ryan Kumpfmiller buried a wrist shot upstairs past Bogden. The play was blown dead as referee Jeff Sheran ruled that a Canevin player was in the crease and called a goaltender interference penalty, much to the dismay of the ‘Concerned Citizens’ of West Allegheny and to the delight of the Blue Raspberry Canevin faithful. It was a very good call from my angle as not one Crusader was within a stick length of the offender from West A, who was clearly in the goal crease and got caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Needless to say, this was a very big break for Canevin, who could not convert the power play. The Indians got another chance with the man advantage, but Canevin stood tall and with the goalie pulled furiously tried to tie the game, but the Crusaders withstood a final minute barrage for a 2-1 victory. Canevin cannot rest on it’s laurels too much as these same teams will meet again on Monday.   imageimage

Canevin 2 West Allegheny 1

 

CORAOPOLIS –

 

     West Allegheny coach Norm Cook learned one thing about his team after their 4-0 loss to Franklin Regional last Friday night. The Indians will need both leading scorers Ryan Kumpfmiller and Jeff Cupelli in the lineup and the rest of the lineup to contribute key goals for West A to contend for the Class AA Penguins Cup in March. There is no question that the Indians are contenders and along with Latrobe, Franklin Regional and tonight’s opponent Canevin are the odds on favorites to win it all. West A made it to the Semi-Finals a year ago and is looking to go one step further this season and with the goaltending of Kyle Mortimer and Anthony Sweet, will be a tough team to beat when the bell rings.

 

      Bishop Canevin has never won anything in hockey, it’s because Canevin is the hockey power that everyone remembers that won State Championships in 1983. 1984 and 1989. And when it comes down to it, that history and tradition is pretty important, but in the scheme of the 2008 Penguins Cup AA, I liken this race to 1998, when out of nowhere came Thomas Jefferson to win three straight Pennsylvania State Class AA crowns. For Kevin Zeilmanski, that was the year when he took the helm at Central Catholic and won the Class AAA Penguins Cup, only to fall to LaSalle in the Pennsylvania High School Hockey Championships. A new start at Canevin, coach Zeilmanski has had a profound effect on the Crusaders in his first year and with a combination of youth and veterans and some pretty good goaltending in Zach Bogden, is in the thick of things in Class AA and has to be one of the teams to watch come March.

 

       Overcoming West Allegheny is one of those obstacles that has held Canevin back the past few years and this is a big week that the teams will meet twice and could very well decide the top two or three seeds in the Penguins Cup playoffs. The Crusaders and Indians have waged many battles over the last few years and these two over the next week will be pretty important in the seeding of the Class AA playoffs. Canevin and West Allegheny both skated hard in the opening minutes with the Crusaders having an edge in the territorial play in the opening minutes. Vince Nicolella had a great chance at 11:41 only to be turned aside by Kyle Mortimer. Canevin continued to press and went on the power play at 4:32, but West A stiffened. The Crusaders kept on coming and it finally paid off when with 53 seconds to go in the period Cam Zappi converted a Josh Daley pass beating Mortimer for a 1-0 Canevin lead.

 

       On to the second period and West Allegheny picked up their pace and would get the equalizer at 6:38 as Ryan Kumpfmiller beat the Crusader defense and Zack Bogden to knot the score at one apiece. Canevin almost pulled ahead at 5:29 as Mike Mannsmann had a golden opportunity on a 2nd rebound with a wide open cage, but Kyle Mortimer robbed him with a phenomenal glove save. At 3:28 Jeffrey Cupelli beat the Canevin defense but Bogden stoned him and West A was given a power play, but could not score as the game headed to the ice cut tied at 1-1.

          Canevin came up with the big goal to take the lead at 10:20 as Vincent Nicolella scored on another nice feed from Josh Daley and the Crusaders were now on top again 2-1. West Allegheny apparently tied the game with 7:22 to go as Ryan Kumpfmiller buried a wrist shot upstairs past Bogden. The play was blown dead as referee Jeff Sheran ruled that a Canevin player was in the crease and called a goaltender interference penalty, much to the dismay of the ‘Concerned Citizens’ of West Allegheny and to the delight of the Blue Raspberry Canevin faithful. It was a very good call from my angle as not one Crusader was within a stick length of the offender from West A, who was clearly in the goal crease and got caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Needless to say, this was a very big break for Canevin, who could not convert the power play. The Indians got another chance with the man advantage, but Canevin stood tall and with the goalie pulled furiously tried to tie the game, but the Crusaders withstood a final minute barrage for a 2-1 victory. Canevin cannot rest on it’s laurels too much as these same teams will meet again on Monday.   imageimage

Woodland Hills fights off Kiski and penalties to score big win

 

DELMONT –

 

       When I glanced at the schedule for Monday Night for Interscholastic Hockey, I usually will try to find a couple games in Class AAA, AA and A to watch a couple of Penguins Cup contenders on one trip killing two birds with one stone. You’d figure in early January you could find some intruiging match-ups and on this night I could not. So plan B sent me to Delmont for a game between my former team Woodland Hills and Kiski. Both schools play in the Open Division and have avoided the Class AAA for several years now because the PIHL will not allow them to play in Class AAA nor Class AA nor Class A because they do not have developmental programs, which is their stance, but the reality is that they have pigeon holed all of these so-called Developmental teams in the Open Division.

 

        The Open Division is made up of schools who no one else including the schools in Class AAA wants to play period. The are a unique way for the PIHL to bill for their poor service and an additional fine base for people who choose not to attend their boring but recently entertaining meetings, because some people are raising questions about their SECRET finances. Word on the street is that one of their former Treasurer’s companies is under Federal investigation, which does not surprise me and should not surprise any of you either.

 

        So you have 4 West Virginia schools (excluding Wheeling Park who opted for Class AAA), 9 Co-Op schools ranging from Carrick or Ringgold, who has several schools represented on its roster to Derry, who has just one or two players from another school, which tells me that they could not find ONE OR A COUPLE more kid in their district to put in uniform to become a pure High School Team from Derry Area (or maybe that one kid is pretty good ?). I am not here to pick on any one of those schools, but there is NO MOTIVATION for any other schools to build hockey programs if their players are plucked by surrounding schools, which has led to the demise of South Allegheny, West Mifflin, Steel Valley, Belle Vernon’s, Penn Hills, Blackhawk, and other schools who will never resurface as a hockey program EVER. How is this Developmental Hockey? It’s not, it’s a billing machine with bad processes.

 

         A quick glance at the Flyers Cup, which is a part of the Pennsylvania High School Hockey Championships shows that Eastern Pa has a Class AAA division with only a dozen schools and the rest of the 100 plus schools is either Class AA or Class A. To delve even further, Massachusetts has it’s Super 8 Division and the 3 A, 2 A and 1 A Classifications. Illinois has the Red Varsity and then a combined State Championship for rural Co-Op teams. The point is that every school has an opportunity to play for a State Championship and there is not this mess of teams that no one wants to play [that is according to PIHL logic and NOT MINE] in any other State in the Country, but right here in Western Pa, with the exception of New York, which has the battle between Federation Sanctioned School Teams and USA Hockey Club teams, which is a whole other story.

 

           During the National Invitational Scholastic Showcase, two local Co-Op teams tried to schedule games right in the middle of our event, which goes to show you that this is not an exclusive problem to Western Pennsylvania. Co-Op Teams are NOT HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY, they are SELECTED PLAYERS WHO FORM A TEAM AND PLAY UNDER A PARTICULAR HIGH SCHOOL BANNER, which I still can’t understand how a principal can sign off on to validate a roster.

               

         To round out the Open Division lineup are nine schools including Holidaysburg, Altoona, Connellsville, Ferndale, Allderdice, Ambridge, Trinity, and tonight’s combatants Woodland Hills and Kiski. These schools and teams are the BEST at reporting scores and results to PA Hockey as they religiously send in their highlights and Pa Hockey is the place you can find out what is happening with the Open Division as we rank them weekly.  So why is Altoona, Holidaysburg, Woodland Hills, Connellsville, Allderdice, and Ambridge who all have pretty good teams not in Class AA where they could be competing for a State Title?

 

           And people wonder why the Kool-Aid serving Junior B,C,D and probably next E & F and Midget AAA [glorified AA teams] programs are flourishing, well that is the next editorial. So Woodland Hills and Kiski, with nothing more to look forward to than playing the other 5 Co-Op teams in their divisions and maybe Carrick [who wasn’t allowed to participate in the Open Division playoffs last year], continued their rivalry with one another in pursuit of Ford City [a/k/a Armstrong Central – Kittanning] for first place.

 

           After watching the first period, I came to the quick realization that both Woodland Hills and Kiski, would be pretty good Class AA teams and the Woodland Hills team I was watching had way more talent in their lineup than I had 11 years ago (when we competed pretty well [didn’t win a lot of games but competed] in Class AAA] and what a shame they are not playing for anything except their schools, which is more than we can say for some others, who choose to take the lazy Co-Op route. Woodland Hills took a 3-1 lead in a very close opening period courtesy of goals from Billy Sullivan, Nate Simon and Zach Brown and Kiski’s Phil Cappo scored the lone Cavalier goal.

 

          The second period was a barrage of penalties as Kiski had numerous power plays and outshot the Wolverines 21-5, but Woody High had the only goal courtesy of defenseman Matt Frank, who found enough energy to score while helping kill off several 5 on 3’s and other penalties. Ryan Hast was superb stopping all 21 shots in the second period.

 

          The third period continued to be a penalty fest as Woodland Hills continued to kill them off and Darren Pellegrino scores a shorthanded goal at 13:43 to make it 5-2 Wolverines. Kiski mounted a comeback with two power play goals by Colin Mahoney, but the Wolverines Zach Brown scored his second to close it out for a 6-3 WH win. Ryan Hast continued his strong play in the third period stopping 17 of 19 Kiski shots and 47 of 50 shots on the evening as the shot clock was more like a slot machine, courtesy of 12 Kiski power plays to only 3 for Woodland Hills, which was a little lopsided. 

 

       Maybe next time these teams meet, it will be in Class AA next year and for a Penguin Cup playoff spot.

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