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2006 Penguins Cup Semi-Finals Serra Catholic 4 Bishop McCort 0 CASTLE SHANNON - Bishop McCort (19-3-1) and Serra Catholic (20-2-1) have done battle so many times over the past six years that it’s becoming habit to see each of these teams at this venue of the Penguins Cup Semi-Finals. In fact, when Pa Hockey releases its picks for the pre-season, its simple to just try to pick the other two teams, who will battle the the Crimson Crushers and the Eagles for the Class A Penguins Cup. One close follower suggested that maybe McCort and Serra should just play 10 times a year and with the state of Class A with just 12 teams competing and less than a half dozen competitive teams in the dying classification, we may see that sooner than you think. During the Regular Season, McCort defeated Serra early in the season 6-2 at Rostraver and then the teams battled to a 0-0 deadlock in mid-February. At handfor the winner of this evening’s contest is a berth in the Penguins Cup finals on March 25th at the Mellon Arena against the winner of rivals Quaker Valley and Sewickley Academy. A bigger dilemma for the winner of this year’s Penguins Cup is a strong Flyers Cup field of 20 teams, including defending Pennsylvania Class A Champions Penncrest and a competitive field including long time Class A power Springfield, Garnet Valley and Hershey, who expect to be in the hunt for Eastern Pennsylvania supremacy. The fact that Serra was the last Western Pa Class A school to win a State title in 2002 defeating Radnor at Rostraver tells experts that Western Pa will have to come up big whether its any of the four combatants remaining. So before a packed house and atmosphere at Ralph and Alf’s Castle of Castle Shannon, the 2006 Penguins Cup semi-finals was under way. At 10:49 of the opening period, McCort would have the first opportunity of the power play but was unable to score. With 8:00 remaining in the opening period, Serra Catholic appeared to score but somehow Brent Troyan reached back and kept a trickling puck out of the net. Moments later at 7:33, the Eagles went on the power play, but it was BM’s Marc Domonkos, who stripped the Serra defense but Nick Koroly stopped him. Back and forth they went and Aaron Nolte had the next chance for the Eagles, but Brent Troyan was equal to the task. With 3:14 remaining, Serra had another great chance after a big scramble but Troyan found the puck first. With 27 seconds remaining in the opening period, Serra’s Aaron Nolte got behind the McCort defense and slipped the puck past the Crusher goaltender to give the Eagles a 1-0 lead. Shots in the opening period were ten apiece as two evenly matched and well balanced teams. Nick Koroly came up big at 13:51 of the second period stopping David Champe’s backhand attempt. Serra got a little overzealous after the whistle giving the Crushers a chance to tie the game on the power play at 11:43. BM’s Steven Polonkey’s booming slapshot hit the corner of the post and the crossbar at 10:27. Marc Domonkos almost tied the score at 5:42, but Nick Koroly just got his arm on the puck the preserve the 1-0 advantage. Bishop McCort took a rare undisciplined penalty behind the play at 4:30, putting the Eagles on the power play and after a nice give and go passing play Steven Gruhalla shot a puck down on the ice to the stick hand side of Brent Troyan to make it 2-0 at 3:16 of the 2nd period, for a power play goal. After some sloppy play by McCort in its own end, Steven Gruhalla found himself wide open in the left faceoff circle and beat Troyan on the glove side with 1:52 remaining as the Eagles seized control of this contest. Although the shots were 10-9 in favor of McCort and 20-19 for the game, the Serra Catholic Eagles held a 3-0 lead heading to the ice cut. On to the third we went and the Crushers would have to make something happen And with 13:51 remaining, David Champe was the recipient of a turnover, but Koroly stopped him. McCort would get an opportunity on the power play at 13:10 as time began to wind on the Crusher season and an opportunity to defend their Penguins Cup and opp # 2 came and went for McCort. At 9:57, Serra took a bad penalty putting Bishop on the power play again with chance # 3 to no avail. McCort showed its frustration and took a penalty putting the Eagles on the power play looking for a knockout punch at 7:49. Marc Domonkos had shorthanded opportunity at 7:03 forcing another Eagle penalty and a 4 on 4 situation. Serra netminder Nick Koroly made two more great stops on Christian Terchanik during the four on four from point blank range as the Serra Goaltender was stealing the show with the 11-1 shot advantage for McCort and only 5 ½ remaining in regulation, bringing back memories for Serra fans of Timmy Johnson, who was the Serra goaltender who lead the Eagles to State titles in 2001 and 2002. The Crushers pulled the goalie for an extra attacker with a little over a minute to go and Steven Gruhalla completed the hat trick with an empty netter with 4 seconds remaining to give Serra a 4-0 victory and their 7th straight trip to the Penguins Cup final and an opportunity to win their 5th Penguins Cup in those 7 years. Nick Koroly stopped al 16 shots in the final period as McCort outshot the Eagles 36-23. image
Quaker Valley 6 Sewickley Academy 3 CASTLE SHANNON – Quaker Valley (22-1-0) and Sewickley Academy (16-8-0) are schools that are less than a mile apart and both schools are also looking for their first trip ever to the Penguins Cup finals. The Quakers have been more of a bridesmaid as this is their 3rd consecutive trip to the Penguins Cup semi-finals losing to Somerset in 2004 and again to Bishop McCort a year ago in 2005 in a tight 2-1 contest. Sewickley would probably like to forget last year’s trip to the semis as they were defeated soundly by Serra Catholic. This season for QV has been a dream defeating both Bishop McCort and Serra late in the season to capture the # 1 seed, but Kevin Quinn knows that this journey is one step at a time and Sewickley is quite capable of knocking off the Quakers. Probably for the first time which must seem like eternity, coach Erik Hoolihan can look down the bench and see more than 10 players as the Panthers will dress 15 skaters for this evenings game, which has to be a relief for the SA fans, who watched their team skate as little as 7 skaters late into the season. Sewickley scored a huge 3-2 win over McCort during the final week of the season. So the Academy and QV would square off before a packed house at Ralph and Alf’s House of Chills for the right to meet Serra in the 2006 Penguins Cup final at Mellon Arena on March 25th. Quaker Valley played opportunist in the games opening moments as at 13:49 George Jackson picked off a clearing attempt and roof a wrist shot over the stick side of Steven Tehovnik for a 1-0 lead for the Quakers. Then at 10:08 Tim Hall found Colin South alone in the slot, who buried a snapshot low to the stick side to give QV an early 2-0 lead. The Panthers would have the first opportunity on the power play at 8:37 and SA capitalized as Jason Limbach buried a beautiful feed by brother Scott at 7:42 to cut the lead to 2-1. QV went on the power play at 6:08, but could not convert, then with 2:41 QV took two penalties to Sewickley’s one for a Panther man advantage, which the Quakers killed. Shots in the opening period were Sewickley Academy 11 Quaker Valley 8. Action continued into the second period as Scott Limbach beat the QV defense to the puck at 13:50, but was stopped by Zac Zinger on the breakaway. The Panthers turned up the pressure in the QV zone and forced a penalty and another power play for SA at 12:42. An ill-advised penalty on QV put the Panthers on a 5 on 3 with 12:01 to go and a 1:20 man two man advantage and a golden opportunity for Sewickley. With 11:04 remaining, Furman South made a terrific play and effort to beat SA to the puck and forced an interference penalty, which was a huge turning point and broke the Sewickley Academy momentum. Then it happened, after a great play to outmaneuver the QV defender in his own zone, Scott Limbach carried the puck into the Quaker zone and waited patiently before shooting the puck sharply on Zac Zinger and Conner Blood picked up the rebound and buried it low to the stick side at 4:15 to tie the game at 2-2. Quaker Valley lost it’s composure and put Sewickley on the power play at 3:53 left in the 2nd. With 1:44 remaining in the 2nd, a errant pass ended up on the stick of Colin South, who rifled a slapshot high over the glove side of Steve Tehovnik to give the Quakers a 3-2 lead, which QV took to the ice cut. Shots on goal in the 2nd period 19-9 in favor of the Panthers. On to the third period and Quaker Valley struck quickly as Furman South found a streaking Tim Hall, who scored on a shot just inside the post with 14:21 remaining in regulation and giving the Quakers a 4-2 lead. QV went on the power play at 13:43. Zac Zinger made a nice leg save on Richard Thornburgh at 12:41 and the Quakers came right back and scored on the power play as Tim Hall fired a slapshot from the left point high over the stick side of Tehovnik to give QV a 5-2 lead. The Panthers came back as Conner Blood’s cross ice pass was deflected by Brad Watts with 9:03 up under the crossbar to cut the lead to 5-3. The Quakers answered as Furman South scored with 8:27 remaining on a pass from Tim Hall to push the lead to 6-3. The Quakers took control of the game as the clock winded down on Sewickley’s season and Quaker Valley finally found redemption after frustration to finally earn a trip to the Mellon Arena with a 6-3 victory over the Panthers. imageimage
2006 Penguins Cup Semi-Finals Kittanning 6 Canevin 4 CASTLE SHANNON – Canevin (16-4-2) and Kittanning (14-5-4) meet for the right to go where neither program has been for a while and when you discuss Penguins Cup with the ‘Concerned Citizens of Kittanning or Canevin, the word of passion comes up frequently is all of the discussions. Whether it’s the normal 3:30 PM call from the head Crusader Kenny Vance or a rare 3:30 AM call from Joe Avi, Jamie King and Armstrong legend Pat McCue, Canevin and Kittanning have tradition not seen in many programs, but only the Crusaders have State Championships in 1983, 1984 and 1989 and it’s certainly been a long time between and for Kitanning /Armstrong it’s etched in the walls of the Belmont, every time one enters. So two teams who no one could have expected to be here at the start of this season are playing for the Cinderella role opposite the winner of the Pine Richland – Peters Twp nightcap, looking for a trip to the finals, which is the opportunity that either would embrace with open arms. Who will have the passion to carry their team to the promised land? I can tell you that both teams traditions will make for a very hard fought game before an absolutely circus atmosphere at the Ice Castle, with so many Who’s whos in the house, my fingers can’t begin to type them all. At 11:54 Canevin struck first as Josh Daley buried a wrist shot from the bottom of the circle past Joey Mecurio for a 1-0 lead. Joey Ziemanski looked sharp early stopping Zack Avi at 10:43 from just in front. Kittanning continued the pressure on the Crusaders and it paid off at 4:07 as Evan Blodgett unloaded a slapshot high over the stick side of Ziemanski to tie the score at one apiece. At 3:20, the Wildcats went on the power play with an opportunity to take their first lead. Joey Ford hit the post with 1:39 remaining and the score remained tied at 1-1. The shots on goal in the opening period were 17 – 11 in favor of Kittanning. The crowd continued to grow into the second period 3-4 people deep around the glass, like sardines in the stands and people almost hanging from the rafters of Ralph and Alf’s Castle. Joey Mecurio made a real nice stop on Zach Haluszczak at 11:36, who beat the Wildcat defense with good speed. Kitanning scored a beautiful goal at the ten minute mark as Nick Troup took a feed from Joey Ford and deposited through the 5-hole to give the Cats a 2-1 lead. Kittanning looked to be tiring a little but came up with enough effort to capitalize on some Crusader turnovers and Joey Ford gathered a loose puck and beat Ziemanski on the backhand with 55 seconds remaining in the 2nd period to increase the Wildcat lead to 3-1. Kittanning held an 11-9 shot advantage in the middle frame. Joey Mecurio made a sharp stick save on Haluszczak at 14:40 to keep the Cats up by two. Canevin would not be denied as they pinned Kittanning in their zone and at 14:21, Josh Daley continued to crack away at the puck and it found the net to cut the lead to 3-2. Just 38 seconds later, the Crusaders would tie the game as red hot Michael Darnley struck again almost in the same fashion as he did against Canon McMillan to get the Crusaders to this game less than a week ago and the game was now tied early in the third period 3-3. A ghost from seasons past helped Kittanning regain the lead at 11:31 as Ethan ‘Zip’ Zimmerman as he chipped home a Nick Troup rebound and all the sudden the score was 4-3 in favor of the Wildcats. The Crusader’s didn’t waste any time countering as 40 seconds later Jason Rogerio beat Mecurio on the backhand to the glove side on the ice inside the post at 10:31 to knot the score at 4-4. Lee Heilmann intercepted the puck from the Canevin defense at 5:41 putting the Wildcats on the power play with an opportunity to go ahead. With 4:20 remaining in regulation, Lee Heilmann’s shot from the center point caroomed off teammate Justin Kovatch and bounded in the air and behind Joey Ziemanski and Kittanning had a power play goal and a 5-4 lead. At the three minute mark, Zack Haluszczak made a great steal from behind the net and fed Cam Zappi, who was stopped by Joey Mecurio from on the doorstep. Canevin pulled the goalie for the extra attacker and Kittanning was not going to let them tie it as Montour did last week and appropriately it would be Justin Kovatch, whose passion cost him a penalty and almost the game would collect himself and buried a wrist shot into the empty net with 49 seconds to go for a 6-4 victory and a return opportunity to the Penguins Cup for the first time since 2003. Canevin out shot Kittanning 19-9 in the 3rd period. imageimage
2006 Penguins Cup Semi-Finals Pine Richland 4 Peters Twp 3 CASTLE SHANNON – Pine Richland (19-1-2) and Peters Twp (15-8-0) met in the 2005 Penguins Cup final at Mellon Arenain a game, which the Indians controlled from start to finish beating the Rams 6-2. The victory was the 4th consecutive Penguins Cup for Peters Twp and they captured their 3rd State Championship in 4 years by defeating Haverford High 4-0 at Hersheypark Arena. Pine Richland has been the Penguins Cup three times including 1997 losing to Bishop McCort 2-1 in Class A and in 2001 losing to Beaver 4-1 in Class AA at the War Memorial in Johnstown. What intrigues the observer about the path is the resiliency of Peters Twp defeating Thomas Jefferson and then # 2 seed West Allegheny 5-3, which is a very similar path that the Champions took to go all the way a year ago. The momentum is an important component for a team that refuses to lose. And they will need it against a Pine Richland that has dominated Class AA all year and opened up with a 9-0 thrashing of Greensburg CC in their playoff opener. The Rams and Indians winner will face the upstart Kittanning Wildcats, who have come out of nowhere to capture a spot at Mellon Arena on March 25th. Peters grabbed the lead at 8:11 of the opening period as Gerry Raymond’s intial shot was saved by Stoney Hildreth, but Dave Rigatti pounced on the rebound to give the Indians a 1-0 lead. Pine Richland went on the power play at 6:07. With 53 seconds remaining in the opening period, Dustin Roux handled the puck with precision and found a wide open Brandon Tingle in the slot, who buried the puck past Hildreth to give the Indians a 2-0 lead. Shots on goal in the opening period were 11-6 in favor of Peters Twp. The Rams went on the power play early in the second period and Josh Fodor had a very good chance at 13:07, but Mike Mastracci was equal to the task. Peters would get the next chance at 11:39, but it would be Phil Trombetta with a shorthanded breakaway, that glanced off the post at 10:23. Pine Richland looked like a confused team as Peters continued to frustrate their attack limiting the chances to low quality scoring opportunities. Then the dagger came as Dustin Roux beat the Pine Richland defenseman and slipped a backhander high over the stick side with 22 ticks remaining on the clock…a huge goal for the defending champions and disaster for Pine Richland after a great play in his own end by Jake Della Valle. Pine Richland showed life as Josh Fodor scored a power play with an overpowering wrist shot which beat Mastracci high to glove side with just 1.6 second left to cut the lead to 3-1 in favor of Peters. Shots were nine apiece. Just 29 seconds into the third, Pine Richland had a golden opportunity on the power play, that they failed to score on. But the Rams pulled closer with 8:11 to go as freshman Dylan Trombetta converted a George Saad pass to cut the lead to 3-2. Josh Fodor went on a length of the ice rush and backhanded a cross ice pass to Jordan Yoklic who beat Mike Mastracci with 5:42 remaining to tie the score and erase a 3 goal lead and tie the game 3-3 and a huge momentum swing for the Rams. Then on a wild play with just under a minute to play, Pine Richland would not be denied as first it was Jordan Yoklic and then Josh Fodor who finally gathered the puck and beat the Peters defense and then lofted a wrist shot past Mastracci to the puck with 55 seconds to go in regulation to give the Rams an amazing 4-3 victory over Peter Twp and a date with Kittanning in the Penguins Cup on March 25th. For the Indians the end of a great run with 4 Penguins Cup and 3 State Championships and maybe a passing on the torch in the Rams can go on a capture the State Championship they have long coveted, but have been unable to win. Now Pine Richland has an opportunity to do it and although it didn’t look good with under a minute left in the 2nd, it does now. Shots in the final period was 15-0 in favor of the Rams. imageimage
Canevin 4 Canon McMillan 3 MT LEBANON – Canevin (15-4-2) and Canon McMillan (12-6-3) meet in this evening’s match-up with a little more at stake than the December 1st meeting here at the Mt Lebanon Rec Center that ended in a 6-6 tie in a game in which Canevin scored twice in the final minute to tie the game. Both teams have had great seasons as the Big Macs won their 2nd consecutive division title and advanced through the opening round of the playoffs defeating Latrobe convincingly 6-2 for the right to meet Canevin. Coach Dave Fryer’s Big Macs are looking to return to the Penguins Cup Semi-Finals, where a year ago they were ousted by Peters Twp in a game that CM held a 4-1 advantage and succumbed to a furious rally that propelled the Indians to their 4th consecutive Penguins Cup and the State Championship win over Haverford 4-0. If you are a ‘Concerned Citizen of Canevin’, you are a lot less concerned this season than last and for Crusader’s coach Brian Henderson this has to be quite a switch from the past few years when Canevin has been off the playoff radar. The Crusaders won several key games down the stretch to capture the # 3 seed, a bye and one step away from a place their program has not been in over five years, which is the Penguins Cup Semi-Finals. Anyone who doesn’t believe that either of these teams can’t upset the applecart and go on a run to RMU Island Sports Center has not been following the momentum built by both of these teams in the second half of the season. In a quick moving opening period, both teams worked at both ends of the ice to created chances and limit scoring opportunities against one another before a festive packed house at the Rec. The Big Macs had the first opportunity on the power play at 10:18, which was unsuccessful, but Justin Cormack found a streaking Jesse Patnesky down the slot and Joey Ziemanski made the games first big save at 7:02. Canevin had a great opportunity as # 10 was in alone on a breakaway at 4:27, but Mike O’Neill came up big. The Crusaders outshot CM 9-6 in the opening 15 minutes. On to the second period and the Big Macs struck as Nick Cusilito found a loose puck on the doorstep and fired a bullet which snuck past Joey Ziemanski to give the Big Macs a 1-0 lead at 14:31. CM applied the pressure and Ziemanski kept the deficit at 1-0 stopping Justin Cormack. The Crusaders went on the power play at 11:07 and tied the game as Kevin Pawlos slapshot from the right point was tipped by Josh Daley and trickled past Mike O’Neill to knot the game at 1-1 with 9:47 to play in the 2nd. O’Neill had to be sharp as Josh Daley took a drop pass from Zach Haluzchak and fired a wrist shot low to the stick side at 4:27. Ziemanski made a very good series of save on Jesse Patnesky and Nick Cusilito at 3:44 as the game remained tied at one apiece. At 2:32 of the second period, Zach Haluzchak made a terrific forecheck to force a turnover and the result was moments later Michael Darnely shooting the puck and got his own rebound tapping in past O’Neill to give the Crusaders a 2-1 lead. With 37 seconds remaining in the period, Nate Bohn found Patenesky in the slot and Jesse rifled a shot off the crossbar and Canevin would hold off a late Big Mac surge to take a slim 2-1 lead to the ice cut. Canon McMillan outshot Canevin 13-11 in the period. Canon Mac came out flying in the opening minute of the third and hard work paid off as Corey Griffith banged home a short pass from Kyle Harnan to tie the score at 2-2 with 13:33 remaining in regulation. With 11:32 to play, Canevin would receive a golden chance on the power play., but it would be the Big Macs who played opportunist as Nate Bohn intercept an errant pass and drove the defense and dropped it off to Justin Cormack, who made it count beating Ziemanski on the stick side at 10:40 to give CM a 3-2 lead. Canevin made the best of the rest of the power play as Zach Haluzchak beat O’Neill on a long wrist shot to the blocker side at 9:57 to tie the game again. Canevin’s Michael Darnelly stole the puck from the Big Mac defense just 10 seconds later at 9:47 to give the Crusaders a 4-3 lead beating O’Neill low to the stick side. At 6:29, Canon Mac’s Justin Cormack split the Canevin defense and Ziemanski made the save, but the Big Macs would get a power play out of it and could not convert. With 4:52 remaining, Canon Mac was whistled on a questionable play late in the game and time was now the ally of Canevin. Ziemanski made a game saving save on Kyle Harnen on the back door with 32 seconds remaining and another after a big scramble with 8 ticks left and the Canevin Crusader’s would keep their magical season alive with a trip to Ice Castle next Tuesday in the final 4. imageimage