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BEAVER ~ Deer Lakes and Blackhawk met twice this season and both affairs were high scoring as the Lancers won the 1st meeting 6-5 in December and the Cougars came back to win an 11-8 scoring festival in February. So what came so close a year ago to be a first round tiebreaker game [as Blackhawk and Deer Lakes were a point apart in 2001-2002 in the final standings], has renewed into a rivalry of sorts as the teams would open the playoffs as an 8th and 9th seeds. Blackhawk [11-7-3] has been Class A’s hottest team in February with wins over Quaker Valley and Mars under their belt and a near win against Westmont Hilltop in Johnstown. Head Coach Dave Stepanian’s group is a sleeper in this year’s Penguin Cup Playoffs, but would need to get by Deer Lakes to make some real noise in the playoffs. The return of goaltender John Fitzgerald has sparked the Cougars on their late season run as they are making their first playoff appearance since 1998. Deer Lakes [13-9-0] on the other hand has played well late in the season with a big win over Somerset and a tight game against rival Mars losing 5-3. Coach Al Palowski has been preaching defense and it seems the team is starting to listen. Goaltender Roman Drienovsky has improved to a point where the Lancers may be a upstart team should it get by Blackhawk. As we settled into our assigned and numbered seat in the beautifully remodeled Beaver Arena at Brady’s Run Park we were greeted by a vocal student section of Blackhawk fans as a big crowd was on hand for this playoff game. Palowski and Stepanian opened the game in a chess match of line matching in the first period. Fitzgerald made a nice stop on DiSanti at 14:04 and McIntyre at 5:00 on a shorthanded situation to keep Deer Lakes off the board. At 3:53 of the 1st, Sam Kristian spotted freshman Jake Polas alone, who beat Drienovsky to give the Cougars a 1-0 lead in a very uncharacteristic defensive first period. In the second period, the Cougars tried to extend the lead, but Travis Stoll was stopped point blank and the score remained 1-0. Then the Lancers got their offense rolling as Andrea Backstrom buried a wrist shot upstairs past Fitzgerald high to the glove side to tie the game at 12:02. Matt DiSanti and Sean McIntyre got into the act as they just missed on a 2 on 1 at 11:19. The same two combined on the next shift as DiSanti found McIntyre behind the Blackhawk defense and McIntyre beat Fitzgerald on the backhand at 8:58 to give the Lancers a 2-1 lead. The game opened up at this point as Deer Lakes scored again as Jonas Eliasson went high to the glove side at 4:30 and all the sudden the Lancers had a 3-1 lead. Deer Lakes went on a 5 on 3 power play late in the second and McIntyre scored with just 47 seconds left to give DL a 4-1 into the locker room. Blackhawk came out flying in the third period and Jake Polas scored a very important goal at 14:10 as he found the five hole. Drienovsky made great save on Matt Stepanian from right in front at 13:41 as Blackhawk continued to apply the pressure. When you pressure, sometimes you create odd man breaks at the other end and Backstrom and Eliasson combined on a great passing play to give Deer Lakes a huge insurance goal at 9:06. Blackhawk was not done yet as Mike Wylie scored on a sneaky wrister at 7:08 and Polas completed the hat trick on a power play goal at 4:51 to pull the Cougars back within one at 4:51. Deer Lakes played a little too conservative late and Polas almost beat three Lancer defenders at 1:48, but his attempt just went wide. Blackhwk went on the power play with under a minute to play creating a 6 on 4 with the goalie pulled and McIntyre found that empty net with 41 ticks left from 165 feet and the score now read 6-4. Travis Stoll came right back just 8 seconds after the faceoff with a PPG upstairs past Drienovsky and the Cougars were back within one 6-5. This would be Deer Lakes night as Andreas Backstrom score an empty netter and the Lancer would move on 7-5 to round two in a wild finish. imageimage
JOHNSTOWN – For people who have been to Johnstown …there is always something about stepping inside the War Memorial that brings a chill up your spine and when it’s a Bishop McCort – Westmont Hilltop hockey game and they only play once a year….well that’s worth the trip over the mountain to J-Town. An estimated crowd of around 1400 turned out on a Friday night, the final night of the regular season for all teams to prepare themselves for the upcoming playoffs. This game had added significance for both teams as the # 3 seed and avoiding Serra Catholic until the Penguins Cup was at stake. For Bishop McCort, they have been here before and head coach John Bradley’s club is looking to get back to their 10th Penguin Cup in 11 years. The Crimson Crushers have had a decent season, which is a little less than the expectations of the five-time State Champion, but three empty-handed trips to the Penguin Cup against Serra with no prize may be weighing on McCort. A recent loss to Serra for the second time this season may have been another reminder. The Mighty Hilltoppers have new life under Art McQuillan and have been the hottest team in Western Pa, the only blemish a 6-4 lost to Mars. King Arthur says their fightin to get on the bus at another shot at that trip, which many a Hilltopper before them has not completed…..to West Chester to Pennsylvania Cup Class A. The task at hand thing evening was the villan arch rival Crimson Crushers, who continue to make Westy’s life miserable in recent memory. Last years meeting saw Westmont hold a 3-1 lead in the Scholastic Showcase and watch it evaporate in the games final four minutes and then the season finale of 2002, where Westmont held a 4-0 lead after two periods, only to have a furious McCort rally extinguish the Hilltoppers 5-4. Sludgin…. Trudgin….the Mighty Hilltoppers with Bob the Bus Driver, Brace, the ‘first lady’ Queen Arthur and even little Cullen McQuillan, with battle scars from a recent scrap, likely with a Crimson Crusher, all in attendance with a cast of thousands to see if maybe this group of Hilltoppers could exorcise the Crushers. In and evenly played first period, Westmont and McCort battled to a 8-7 shot total, but the game took on a familiar tone as Anthony DeMarco scored at 7:22 to give Westmont a 1-0 lead. Bishop McCort fought hard in the second period to tie the game and outshot the Hilltoppers 12-5, but Pat Krumenacher stood tall for Westy stopping all twelve including two sliding saves on McCort’s scoring machine Joe Delic. At 5:42, DeMarco found a loose puck on a rebound and deposited it past Ron Stenger and Westmont took a 2-0 lead to the locker room. Could the Crimson Crushers come back…..well Bishop McCort dominated the play as Delic hit the post at 9:09. Justin McCloskey had a chance to put Westy up 3-0, but was stopped by Stenger at 8:28….then Scott Kenner missed for the Hilltoppers on the breakaway with 7:09 left and the score still read 2-0 Westmont. Then a break for McCort as Westmont was whistled at 6:07…a turning point ? The Crushers now where throwing everything and the kitchen sink, but Krumenacher wouldn’t let them on the board and the mighty Hilltoppers held on for a 2-0 victory, the # 3 seed and a big confidence booster going into the playoffs. image
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Penguins Cup Playoffs History

Posted by Jeff Mauro at Mar 1, 2003 4:00PM PST ( 0 Comments )
Did you wanna know ? ............'you better call somebody' or just follow all of the action of the Penguins Cup and Flyers Cup all the way to West Chester !! Visit Pa Hockey History by clicking on the logos !imageimageimage
BETHEL PARK – Shaler and Penn Trafford met on December 9, 2002 in a regular season contest in Harmarville, with the Titans skating to an easy 7-1 victory over the Warriors. Coach Rich Michalowski’s club finished with a 9-14-1 record and didn’t exactly light the world on fire the last month of the season, so he had to be a little concerned about facing a team his team had handled so easily. Penn Trafford on the other hand made the playoffs for the first time in their history last season at Class AA and did it again at Class AAA. Coach Gary Artz has a very young club with six freshman, but can relay the voice of experience to his freshman and sophomores from his playing days at Churchill, where he played in three consecutive Class AAA State Championship finals as a freshman, sophomore and junior, including the first Pennsylvania High School Hockey Championships in 1975. So the Warriors were looking for a little advantage to reverse their fortunes against Shaler. The Warriors got into the post-season on a technicality involving a playoff rule invoked in 1999, which states that the 16th and 17th teams in the final standings will have a playoff if they are within 1 % and since Shaler and Penn Trafford were both 9-14-1, its brought us together for the geometric ‘neutral site’ game at Bethel Park of all places and the prize is a return trip to face the Blackhawks less than 24 hours later. Shaler broke out on top in the first period as Eric Taormina banged home a rebound of a Chris Szczpinski shot at 11:43 for a 1-0 lead. Shaler must have thought this was gonna be a repeat of December, but the young Warriors started to take the play to the Titans with an 11-5 shot advantage. PT’s Bobby Lane walked downthe slot and beat Eddie Stotts on the backhand to tie the game with 1:27 left. The Warriors came right back as Devon McCusker scored on a rebound of a Kyle Sidle shot with just 57 seconds remaining during a delayed penalty call for a 2-1 lead. Penn Trafford extended its lead in the second period as Bobby Lane scored at 10:57 for a 3-1 advantage. Lane scored again at 8:17 of the third and the Warriors now had a comfortable 4-1 lead. Freshman goaltender Joel Sterniak shut the door the rest of the way stopping 18 of 19 Shaler shots on the evening as Penn Trafford captured its first ever playoff victory 4-1 earning a return trip to Bethel Park Monday night. imageimage
HARMARVILLE – A standing room only crowd at Harmarville turned out Thursday night as one of Western Pa’s best rivalries commenced for the second time this season as a rematch of a 4-2 Fox Chapel victory in November. A lot has changed since November as both teams have matured into playoff contenders, so this would be a big test for both teams. A moment of silence for Mr. Rogers, a Pittsburgh icon, who did his best work next door to the Central campus at WQED for many years, was held with class as the well mannered Fox Chapel and Central Catholic student sections respectfully waited for the national anthem on the state of the art BladeRunners sound system. Head coaches Kevin Zielmanski [CC] and Keith Kearney [FC] were looking forward to this meeting as both teams are preparing for the upcoming playoffs. A playoff atmosphere led to a quiet first period as both teams played very defensive. With 2:31 remaining, Conner Hickton chipped a puck behind the Foxes, like a downhill chip on Oakmont CC’s fast greens, which speedy linemate Joe Coulter was able to corral and backhand past Todd Hendry to the far side and give the Vikings a 1-0 lead. Central held an 8-6 shot advantage in a evenly played first period. In the second period the game opened up as both teams failed to capitalize on power play opportunities. At 9:31, Chris Niznik stopped a Fox Chapel scoring chance with a great backcheck and caught the Foxes in a line change and in one motion spotted Eddie Martin in alone and Martin buried a shot past Hendry to give Central a 2-0 lead. Hendry kept the game close as he stopped Matt Urso at 5:57 from in close. Fox Chapel got on the board as Matt King won the faceoff to Jake Werner who’s hot to the net created a rebound, which was buried by Jason Lorenz to cut the CC lead to 2-1 at 4:21. The Foxes began to pressure, which resulted in a 5 on 3 power play late in the second and early in the third. Impatience by the FC PP unit and excellent penalty killing by CC, led by Chris Niznik and Eddie Martin killed off a huge opportunity for Fox Chapel. This set the tone for the third period as the Foxes had several opportunities, but did not get great scoring chances and the chances they had were easy pickins for Bryan Adamczak, who returned to the lineup after a layoff of almost a month. Central Catholic Held on for a 2-1 victory setting up a rematch in the first round against Upper St Clair, who beat the Vikings last Monday. Fox Chapel will move on to travel to either Mt Lebanon or McDowell next week to open the playoffs. imageimage