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Quaker Valley 5 Mars 1 CORAOPOLIS – Mars is ranked # 2 with a 4-0-1 record and off to its best start in recent memory under Eric Glover. The last time the Planets had a good start was 2003 and they advanced to the Penguins Cup Semi-Finals before being knocked off by Westmont Hilltop. This year’s rendition is a club with speed, balance and size, who can score goals, which has been a missing ingredient over the past couple of seasons. Goaltender Greg Lewis has been solid throughout the early season and looks to be able to lead the Planets on a playoff run. History tells us that Mars will have to overcome Serra and Bishop McCort, who are perennial Class A powers and now Quaker Valley can be counted on as the Quakers have been sniffing the Pennsylvania Cup for a few years and captured their first in 2006. Quaker Valley is ranked # 1 and at 5-0-1 as won five straight after an opening tie against Serra Catholic. Head coach Kevin Quinn is looking forward to defending the title they earned a year ago and now understands the process of winning it all, which is something that his team is poised to do in 2007. The Quakers have all of the ingredients including two game breakers in Colin South and Mikail Lemieux, that no other team in Class A can match up with. The opening period was pretty uneventful except for some solid goaltending from QV’s Zac Zinger and Mars Greg Lewis. The scoreless period featured an equal number of chances at both ends. Mars went on the power play at 12:32 and failed to get many opportunities thanks to some good penalty killing by the Quakers. The Planets went back on the man advantage at 8:16 and at 6:54 of the period Greg Dyer picked off a pass in the neutral zone and fed Mikail Lemieux who buried a wrist shot high over the glove side of Greg Lewis to give QV a 1-0 lead. Mars lost their composure a little and took two bad penalties putting Quaker on the power play in cluding a 5 on 3 for over a minute, which could be a key point in the hockey game. Another penalty at 5:03 put the Planets further in the hole and with just 14 seconds left in the first penalty, Breton McNamara picked up a loose rebound and deposited it into an empty net to make it 2-0. With a 5 on 3 for over 40 seconds, QV went to work again, but Mars defense stiffened and the score remained 2-0. With 1:52 remaining, The Planets would have an opportunity on the man advantage top cut the lead with 1:52 to go and although they picked the physical play, maybe got a little overzealous and took another bad penalty with 42 seconds left negating the power play and a chance to gain some momentum heading to the third period. On to the third period and QV would go on the power play eight seconds in and Mars killed it off. Moments later at 13:27, Colin South found a loose puck and banked it off a Mars defenseman in front and past Lewis to make it three zip. The Planets turned up their game a notch and they finally got a bounce as Sam Mashuda’s shot bounded in the air and behind Zac Zinger to make it 3-1 with 8:40 to go in regulation. Mars started to press and was trying to beat Zinger and the mometum got sidetracked with a penalty with 6:10 to go and the Quakers capitalized as Mikail Lemieux fed a streaking Colin South in the slot who made no mistake with 4:38 to go and QV had some breathing room at 4-1. Moments later at 3:59 Rob Balotsky added a breakaway backhand goal to increase the lead to 5-1. So Quaker Valley maintains their stranglehold on the top spot in Class A,with a rematch awaiting on Janusry 30th at Cranberry BladeRunners, with an impressive 5-1 victory over upstart Mars. imageimage
Quaker Valley 5 Mars 1 CORAOPOLIS – Mars is ranked # 2 with a 4-0-1 record and off to its best start in recent memory under Eric Glover. The last time the Planets had a good start was 2003 and they advanced to the Penguins Cup Semi-Finals before being knocked off by Westmont Hilltop. This year’s rendition is a club with speed, balance and size, who can score goals, which has been a missing ingredient over the past couple of seasons. Goaltender Greg Lewis has been solid throughout the early season and looks to be able to lead the Planets on a playoff run. History tells us that Mars will have to overcome Serra and Bishop McCort, who are perennial Class A powers and now Quaker Valley can be counted on as the Quakers have been sniffing the Pennsylvania Cup for a few years and captured their first in 2006. Quaker Valley is ranked # 1 and at 5-0-1 as won five straight after an opening tie against Serra Catholic. Head coach Kevin Quinn is looking forward to defending the title they earned a year ago and now understands the process of winning it all, which is something that his team is poised to do in 2007. The Quakers have all of the ingredients including two game breakers in Colin South and Mikail Lemieux, that no other team in Class A can match up with. The opening period was pretty uneventful except for some solid goaltending from QV’s Zac Zinger and Mars Greg Lewis. The scoreless period featured an equal number of chances at both ends. Mars went on the power play at 12:32 and failed to get many opportunities thanks to some good penalty killing by the Quakers. The Planets went back on the man advantage at 8:16 and at 6:54 of the period Greg Dyer picked off a pass in the neutral zone and fed Mikail Lemieux who buried a wrist shot high over the glove side of Greg Lewis to give QV a 1-0 lead. Mars lost their composure a little and took two bad penalties putting Quaker on the power play in cluding a 5 on 3 for over a minute, which could be a key point in the hockey game. Another penalty at 5:03 put the Planets further in the hole and with just 14 seconds left in the first penalty, Breton McNamara picked up a loose rebound and deposited it into an empty net to make it 2-0. With a 5 on 3 for over 40 seconds, QV went to work again, but Mars defense stiffened and the score remained 2-0. With 1:52 remaining, The Planets would have an opportunity on the man advantage top cut the lead with 1:52 to go and although they picked the physical play, maybe got a little overzealous and took another bad penalty with 42 seconds left negating the power play and a chance to gain some momentum heading to the third period. On to the third period and QV would go on the power play eight seconds in and Mars killed it off. Moments later at 13:27, Colin South found a loose puck and banked it off a Mars defenseman in front and past Lewis to make it three zip. The Planets turned up their game a notch and they finally got a bounce as Sam Mashuda’s shot bounded in the air and behind Zac Zinger to make it 3-1 with 8:40 to go in regulation. Mars started to press and was trying to beat Zinger and the mometum got sidetracked with a penalty with 6:10 to go and the Quakers capitalized as Mikail Lemieux fed a streaking Colin South in the slot who made no mistake with 4:38 to go and QV had some breathing room at 4-1. Moments later at 3:59 Rob Balotsky added a breakaway backhand goal to increase the lead to 5-1. So Quaker Valley maintains their stranglehold on the top spot in Class A,with a rematch awaiting on Janusry 30th at Cranberry BladeRunners, with an impressive 5-1 victory over upstart Mars. imageimage
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Erie Times News Editorial

Posted by Jeff Mauro at Dec 11, 2006 4:00PM PST ( 0 Comments )
December 10, 2006 -- PLUNKETT COACHES GAME 1000, MONDAY DECEMBER 11TH VS NORWIN IN MEADVILLE ...GAME TIME 7:15PM Reprinted feature and excerpts by Matt Martin, Erie Times News. Jamie Plunkett has left his indelible stamp on the Meadville hockey program. After 20 seasons of shaping the Bulldogs into one of the state’s elite programs, Plunkett has proved he owns a blueprint for coaching success.The most significant figure on Jamie Plunkett’s coaching resume isn’t the most obvious. It’s not the eight state championships his Meadville Bulldog hockey program has won, or the record five straight from 1992 to 1996. It’s not the 730 career victories, thought to be the second-most coaching wins in U.S. high school hockey history. No, 20 is the number that should stand out. Twenty years as coach of a program that unfailingly is among the state’s elite. Plunkett hired on in May 1986, surely one of the most serendipitous coaching moves in northwestern Pennsylvania sports history. He’d been coaching a Midget house league team at DeArment Arena after a short stint with the club team at Allegheny College, where he was and remains head athletic trainer. The Bulldogs went 19-3-2 and won a state title that first season. They’ve lost exactly 11 playoff games since. With few exceptions, coaches don’t coach with any one high school for 20 years. Especially not a coach whose team wins state titles in seven of his first 10 seasons, who never has had a losing record, and who appears to be the winningest high school coach, in any sport, in state history. Monday night, Plunkett will make history again as he coaches his 1000th game for the Bulldogs vs Norwin at the "House of Chills". What others see in his two decades in Meadville: · Plunkett locked down ice time at DeArment Arena, making practice a priority. The team’s players, parents and supporters raised money for several years for construction of a pro-style dressing room in whose stalls the youngest players now dream of one day hanging their sweaters. Most of Meadville’s opponents had no such ice-time or home-ice advantage, and many remain nomadic today. The sense of ownership that’s developed in players and fans has made the House of Chills one of the toughest road venues in the state, in any sport. · He brought pro, junior and college sensibilities to a high school club program that feasted on the dedication those sensibilities instilled and required. The Bulldogs traveled to face the best competition; they played 50, even 60 games some seasons; they made dry-land training in August as important as skating drills in December. Plunkett’s best teams haven’t been just good, but feared. From 1986 to 1995, the Bulldogs never lost more than eight games, and averaged just six losses per season. · Every move speaks to Plunkett’s lead role in a cultural shift in western Pennsylvania hockey. Pittsburgh-area teams, whose officials dominated the sport’s governing body, all but refused to acknowledge the arrival of Meadville’s program despite evidence it was in place to stay as early as the late 1980s. By thetime Meadville was grudgingly accepted as an equal, the Bulldogs were anything but; the southwestern quarter of the state spent the mid-90s playing catch-up -largely following Plunkett’s blueprint - as the Bulldogs hoisted the Pennsylvania Cup five straight years. If Plunkett were just concerned with wins, he’d be a success. But his success isn’t found only in wins, titles and records. His players have grown up under his watch, the sons of his friends and neighbors. He’s worked their skate blades dull, and they have the gold medals and golden memories to show for it.Some have gone on to play in college, or tried their luck in the minors. Others have returned to Plunkett in new guises - as assistant coaches, as assistant trainer at Allegheny,with families of their own. And Meadville’s sports fans, whose winters have been given to basketball and wrestling for so long, have gladly learned how to make DeArment Arena warm for the home team, icy for the visitors. None of that happens in just a few whirlwind seasons. For the very fortunate communities, it’ll take at least 20. MATT MARTIN, managing editor/sports, can be reached at (814) 870-1704 or by e-mail at matt.martin@timesnews.com. Congratulations Coach on your 1000th game behind the bench. imageimage
Pine Richland 7 Latrobe 3 VALENCIA – Pine Richland is off to a pretty strong start at 6-0 and ranked # 1 in the Pa Hockey Elite 8 statewide poll. Head coach Bob Kennedy’s club has been virtually unchallenged through the early part of the season with the veteran leadership of top line Senior Phil Trombetta and sophomores George Saad and Dylan Trombetta, who have combined with a nucleus of up and coming younger players to lead the Rams to a perfect start. The question is when talking Class AA hockey, who will challenge Pine Richland and furthermore is there anyone who can knock them off. A decent victims list of perennial AA powers Peters Twp, Thomas Jefferson, West Allegheny and Canevin have been the whipping boys for the Rams as no one has come within three goals of them during the regular season. The rebirth of Latrobe hockey is still a work in progress under Ron Makoski as this team has started off 7-1 with strong performances over West Allegheny, Greensburg Salem, two narrow wins over Franklin Regional and a road victory at the Belmont over Kittanning, with the only blemish coming in a rematch with Salem. The Wildcats have speed, discipline and goaltending, which is a pre-requisite of competing with the Rams that would be put to the test as the current # 2 team in Class AA traveled to the Infection Ice Connection. The key to Wildcat success would be their ability to expose the Ram defense and goaltending, which is easier said than done and contain Saad, Trombetta and Trombetta, which has not been done by anyone. The Rams dominated the territorial play in the early going as the top line of Phil and Dylan Trombetta and George Saad led the assault. PR opened the scoring with 8:00 left in the opening period. Latrobe came on in the middle of the period but was forced to kill off a penalty and capitalized as Isaac Pritchard got behind the Ram defense and beat Stoney Hildreth low to the glove side to tie the score at one apiece with 5:01 remaining. The Wildcats seized the lead in the hockey game as Ryan LaDuke found Michael McCrady on a cross ice pass, who beat Hildreth cleanly on the ice to give Latrobe a 2-1 lead with 2:20 left. On to the second, which has been Richland’s best period all season and this game would be no different as Phil Trombetta got things started just 30 seconds in beating Nick Loyacona with a wicked snapshot high under the crossbar to tie the score at two apiece. The game went back and forth with both teams skating hard and having chances at both ends, but Pine Richland show their lethal hand in the middle period in the final three minutes as Phil Trombetta found George Saad on a noe-timer with 3:01 to go to give the Rams the lead 3-2. The real backbreaker came with just :13 left as Dylan Trombetta skated over the blue line and used the defenseman as a screen and buried a wrist whot over the glove hand of Loyacona to give PR a 4-2 lead. Shots were 26 – 15 thru two periods in favor of Richland. The Wildcats started the third with the power play and then had a 5 on 3 just ten seconds into the period and Latrobe failed to mount an attack not to mention a quality scoring chance and the Rams killed it. Juat as the penalties ended the Wildcats had a costly turnover as freshman Brian Watt raced 120 feet and beat Loyacona on a nice move to extend the Pine Richland lead to 5-2. Just 41 seconds later the freshman Brian Watt scored at 12:01 on another breakaway as Latrobe fell apart and the Rams seized a 6-2 lead. A little over a minute later, Phil Trombetta turned this one in to a rout at 10:49 7-2. Latrobe scored at 8:49 as JeffJoe Regula made it a 7-3 count. Pine Richland cemented their claim to the number one spot in Class AA and is looking for that next challenger to see if anyone will challenge them come March. imageimage
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Erie Times News Editorial

Posted by Jeff Mauro at Dec 11, 2006 4:00PM PST ( 0 Comments )
December 10, 2006 -- PLUNKETT COACHES GAME 1000, MONDAY DECEMBER 11TH VS NORWIN IN MEADVILLE ...GAME TIME 7:15PM Reprinted feature and excerpts by Matt Martin, Erie Times News. Jamie Plunkett has left his indelible stamp on the Meadville hockey program. After 20 seasons of shaping the Bulldogs into one of the state’s elite programs, Plunkett has proved he owns a blueprint for coaching success.The most significant figure on Jamie Plunkett’s coaching resume isn’t the most obvious. It’s not the eight state championships his Meadville Bulldog hockey program has won, or the record five straight from 1992 to 1996. It’s not the 730 career victories, thought to be the second-most coaching wins in U.S. high school hockey history. No, 20 is the number that should stand out. Twenty years as coach of a program that unfailingly is among the state’s elite. Plunkett hired on in May 1986, surely one of the most serendipitous coaching moves in northwestern Pennsylvania sports history. He’d been coaching a Midget house league team at DeArment Arena after a short stint with the club team at Allegheny College, where he was and remains head athletic trainer. The Bulldogs went 19-3-2 and won a state title that first season. They’ve lost exactly 11 playoff games since. With few exceptions, coaches don’t coach with any one high school for 20 years. Especially not a coach whose team wins state titles in seven of his first 10 seasons, who never has had a losing record, and who appears to be the winningest high school coach, in any sport, in state history. Monday night, Plunkett will make history again as he coaches his 1000th game for the Bulldogs vs Norwin at the "House of Chills". What others see in his two decades in Meadville: · Plunkett locked down ice time at DeArment Arena, making practice a priority. The team’s players, parents and supporters raised money for several years for construction of a pro-style dressing room in whose stalls the youngest players now dream of one day hanging their sweaters. Most of Meadville’s opponents had no such ice-time or home-ice advantage, and many remain nomadic today. The sense of ownership that’s developed in players and fans has made the House of Chills one of the toughest road venues in the state, in any sport. · He brought pro, junior and college sensibilities to a high school club program that feasted on the dedication those sensibilities instilled and required. The Bulldogs traveled to face the best competition; they played 50, even 60 games some seasons; they made dry-land training in August as important as skating drills in December. Plunkett’s best teams haven’t been just good, but feared. From 1986 to 1995, the Bulldogs never lost more than eight games, and averaged just six losses per season. · Every move speaks to Plunkett’s lead role in a cultural shift in western Pennsylvania hockey. Pittsburgh-area teams, whose officials dominated the sport’s governing body, all but refused to acknowledge the arrival of Meadville’s program despite evidence it was in place to stay as early as the late 1980s. By thetime Meadville was grudgingly accepted as an equal, the Bulldogs were anything but; the southwestern quarter of the state spent the mid-90s playing catch-up -largely following Plunkett’s blueprint - as the Bulldogs hoisted the Pennsylvania Cup five straight years. If Plunkett were just concerned with wins, he’d be a success. But his success isn’t found only in wins, titles and records. His players have grown up under his watch, the sons of his friends and neighbors. He’s worked their skate blades dull, and they have the gold medals and golden memories to show for it.Some have gone on to play in college, or tried their luck in the minors. Others have returned to Plunkett in new guises - as assistant coaches, as assistant trainer at Allegheny,with families of their own. And Meadville’s sports fans, whose winters have been given to basketball and wrestling for so long, have gladly learned how to make DeArment Arena warm for the home team, icy for the visitors. None of that happens in just a few whirlwind seasons. For the very fortunate communities, it’ll take at least 20. MATT MARTIN, managing editor/sports, can be reached at (814) 870-1704 or by e-mail at matt.martin@timesnews.com. Congratulations Coach on your 1000th game behind the bench. imageimage