Gonzaga College High School | Archive | November, 2008

2008-2009 Wrestling Season Preview

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

When Gonzaga wrestling coach Milton Yates took over six years ago, he inherited a team with just eight wrestlers.

Forfeiting 30 points per dual, the Eagles went 1-15 their first year with their only victory coming against Hyde.

“We didn’t have much,” Yates said. “It was a learning experience.”

Now Gonzaga is coming off a season in which it went 11-3 in duals and crowned a pair of WCAC champions in Paul O’Neill at 103 pounds and older brother Joe O’Neill. The Eagles also have more wrestlers than ever in the room, now at 44.

But heading into this year’s wrestling season, even a team on the rise like Gonzaga still faces a cold fact every day; that at this point it’s incredibly difficult to end DeMatha’s 23-year streak atop the WCAC.

“Last year we had a great year,” sophomore Paul O’Neill said. “We beat a lot of teams we haven’t beat in a long time. But DeMatha’s a good team. It’s going to take a lot to beat them – O’Connell too. So it’s definitely going to be tough. It’s doable, but it’s tough.”

While DeMatha is lauded for its success in other sports, such as winning a sixth-straight football championship this past season or for continually fielding one of the best soccer, basketball, baseball and lacrosse teams in the Washington area, it’s most dominant team compared to those around the rest of the conference is wrestling.

The Stags have not only won 23 straight titles but they’ve done it with so much ease that it’s kind of accepted as a fact of life in the WCAC.

“It’s DeMatha; they’re powerhouses in all their sports,” junior Zach Thompson said. Every single year they’re bringing in new kids that are good. It’s discouraging but at the same time it makes beating any of their kids that much better.”

“It’s one of those things that you realize if you’re coming here and you don’t have that experience you understand why they’re where they are,” Yates added. “You understand that not until when we have multiple years of getting five to six experienced kids a year, then we’ll be in a position to compete with them.”

So where do programs outside of Hyattsville even start?

Yates goes with a grassroots approach, meeting kids, parents and coaches in wrestling rooms inside and outside the beltway.

His sell isn’t necessarily wrestling, because if a grapper has his eyes set on team championships and a life focused around athletics, they’re heading to DeMatha. Instead, Yates sells Gonzaga’s academics and hopes that the student is smart enough to get admitted if they choose to even apply.

Yates has steadily improved the numbers in his own room. He will also, for the first time, have a wrestling dual match in the middle of a school day with the entire school’s student population watching, thus hoping to spark some interest amongst those already enrolled.

But while getting kids who have never wrestled before helps to at least put more bodies in the gym, it’s going to take more than that to catch up to the Stags.

“You have to get kids admitted that have wrestling experience,” Yates said before addressing DeMatha. “They’re not dealing with a lot beginners. The only beginners they usually get play football and want to improve and they’re usually heavier.”

Gonzaga’s top returning wrestler is O’Neill, who won the WCAC championship last season by beating DeMatha’s Pat Prada. But O’Neill stumbled at National Preps and didn’t place while Prada took eighth. O’Neil didn’t wrestle this summer so Yates said he’s not sure what to expect from the hard-nosed sophomore.

“Hopefully I keep on winning. That’s about it, keep on winning, keep on working hard,” O’Neill said. “I know I have strength and quickness but my technique wasn’t there last year.”

The Eagles also return senior Stephane Guillou and should get Thompson back near the start of 2009 when his knee heals. Gonzaga feels it has more depth than last year and has a shot at finishing in the top three of the WCAC.

But with DeMatha all but already locking up the title before the season even starts, Gonzaga’s eyes are set on a city championship, which has been won by Sidwell Friends the past few years by a large margin.

“Our chances [of winning a city title] are a lot better,” Guillou said. “It would be great to end my senior year on a city title, especially because I’m a captain. It would mean a whole lot to the whole team.”

SO WHO DOES DEMATHA HAVE?

Yet again, the Stags graduate a talented class of wrestlers, in specific Matt Dugan and Mike Aggugia who went to Drexel and American, respectively. But DeMatha still has a strong cast returning.

“It’s always tough to replace a good guy and a kid that works hard in the room,” Coach **** Messier said. “Both those individuals had that kind of work ethic. Seeing how they were successful carries over to the next year and the year after that.”

Leading the way is Prada, Ben Hatef (who placed third at national preps in the upper weights) and Kyle Haden, who made a big splash as a freshman last year at 125. Michael Williams, Cory Wilson, Arie Kouandjio, John Daniel Peacock and Chris Miller should also be impact grapplers.

The Stags, as usual, have a pair of highly-touted freshman coming into the fold in junior league champions Sean Patrick Meehan and Jonathan Simmons. Simmons notched a big overtime win in the first match against Curly this past weekend at the Curly Duals.

DeMatha topped perennial state power Curly, 38-36, in an early display of how strong the Stags are again this year. Other than Simmons’ big win, Wilson and Hatef each notched big pins and Prada also had a major decision. The Stags also beat John Carroll, Calvert Hall and St. Mary’s Annapolis to get Messier his 401st career win.

WHO HAS THE BEST CHANCE?

O’Connell’s Nam Dunbar leads an experience-laden Knights squad that may have a senior at every starting position and should have the best chance of knocking off DeMatha.

Dunbar, an aggressive wrestler with a unique style, will surely be looking to get revenge on McNamara’s Andrew Bannister, who came from behind to beat Dunbar at National Preps last season.

The Knights also return seniors Kyle Mason, James Young, Jonathon Carpenter, Chris Curtain, Connor Furey, Mike Pettit, Jeff Carrol, Michael Winkler, Chris Staubs and Jonathan Nieto. O’Connell placed 13th at National Preps last year.

GEMS ELSEWHERE

There’s certainly some top-notch wrestlers sprinkled throughout the rest of the WCAC.

Bishop McNamara senior Andrew Bannister has a chance to become a four-time private schools state champion. Good Counsel offensive lineman and upper weights monster Devin Gordon-Hamm should make a big splash this season as well. St. John’s returns City Champion and National qualifier James Wenzlaff.

Paul VI also returns experience this season and St. Mary’s Ryken is on the rise with Daniel Schuck and Jonathan Boyd leading the way.

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Champions Field House opens to all athletes

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

The slogan “Get Good” floats all over the new Champions Field House training facility in Rockville.

It’s almost a challenge from current Bethesda-Chevy Chase girls lacrosse coach Jenna Ries, the woman behind the construction of the 50,000 square foot indoor facility that opened on Oct. 30.

Now with an all-year round facility where athletes of all sports can train, there are no more excuses.

“It’s actually relevant to skill development, and that’s what we’re all about,” Ries said. “I think this changes the skill part because now there’s going to be a bar for that.”

The slogan originated with the program Champions of Tomorrow, which Ries founded 10 years ago when she felt female athletes didn’t have adequate training facilities to improve their skills. What began with 20 girls practicing field hockey drills in Westbrook Elementary School’s all-purpose room grew into a program training several thousand field hockey, lacrosse and volleyball players.

But as Champions of Tomorrow grew, so did the demand for more fields and training facilities.

“I began to look around and realized that none of the existing facilities offered a clubhouse environment that catered to developing real athletes and teams,” Ries said in her press release. “I knew that if I wanted a facility that really reflected the vision of Champions of Tomorrow, I would have to build it from the ground up.”

Ries found space opposite the Arc Ice Arena, located off Southlawn Court near Gude Drive. And what Ries has constructed is a large recreation arena with impeccable attention to detail.

The Champions Field House has two artificial grass fields with thick rubber cushion that players can wear their cleats on and even slide on without fear of injury.

The fields are of course not regulation size but provide more of an opportunity for skill development with their closer quarters. They do not have walls on the sidelines to also promote maintaining control of the ball instead of forming bad habits, Ries said.

There are two full-size basketball courts, six full-size volleyball courts, two regulation futsal courts, two field hockey courts, batting cages and a artificial grass patch for the 40-yard dash.

All the courts are on a snap sport floor, which is the same surface national field hockey and futsal events are played on. They are nationally sanctioned, meaning national events could be held at the facility.

“We have what those people didn’t have before,” Ries said. “Actual, national pitches.”

The lighting is bright and state-of-the-art and the ceiling also helps with the facility’s illumination, which gives it a more outdoor kind of feel rather than artificial.

There’s a gym with top-quality equipment for athletes or parents of athletes to use while they are watching the games or practices. A study and break room is also on site for parents or students to spend their down time.

Dr. Stephen Horwitz, a Sports Injury Prevention Specialist and Sports Performance Coach, also has an office in the building, which can provide immediate medical assistance to any athlete and also provide teams or individual athletes with injury prevention training and more.

That is the part of the facility, among other things, that Good Counsel boys soccer coach Julio Zarate most appreciated.

“The place is state of the art; it’s very good and has many opportunities to play many sports,” Zarate said before saying whether his teams will be coming to Champions Field House. “They will be part of this, definitely.”

A major emphasis for Ries was to make sure she had a top-notch staff that could develop well-rounded athletes in an array of different sports. And she accomplished that.

The staff consists of a wide variety of top-notch coaches and current athletes from around the area, including Denise Infante (field hockey), Jason Gasaway (baseball), Devin Payton (futsal), Michael Haight (girls lacrosse), Jennifer Greenberg (girls lacrosse), Corey Samperton (girls lacrosse), Alan Pohoryles (boys lacrosse), Kip Turner (boys lacrosse), Jim Bruno (soccer), Matt Pasquinelli (soccer) and Karen Jones (volleyball).

“If nothing else, this building is spot on for niche marketing for what’s happening,” Ries said. “The staff, the actual surfaces, everything. That’s our biggest forte.”

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All-WCAC Football Team

2008 All-WCAC Football Team

Coach of the Year
Steve Trimble, O’Connell

First Team

Quarterback
Tommy Chroniger, DeMatha

Running Backs
Idreis Augustus, Paul VI
Jelani Jenkins, Good Counsel
Caleb Porzel, Good Counsel

Wide Receivers
Jerome Couplin III, McNamara
Dominic Sanders, Paul VI


Tight End

Dan McGroarty, Paul VI

Offensive Linemen
Harry Britton, Paul VI
Pete DeSouza, DeMatha
Devin Gordan-Hamm, Good Counsel
Calvin McDowney, DeMatha
Pete White, St. John’s

Defensive Linemen
Tim Anderson, Good Counsel
A.J. Bowman, Good Counsel
Jerimiah Mathis, DeMatha
Andre Monroe, St. John’s

Linebackers
Wayne Burden, St. John’s
Derrick Lakins, DeMatha
Chris Pitsenberger, Good Counsel
Chris Townsend, McNamara

Defensive Backs
Emmanuel McPhearson, DeMatha
Ed Thomas, St. John’s
Mike Wallace, Good Counsel
Louis Young, Good Counsel

Punter
Mark Hamilton, Good Counsel

Kicker
Matt Elsasser, St. John’s

Specialist
Stefon Diggs, Good Counsel

Second Team

Quarterback
Tyler Campbell, Good Counsel

Running backs
Alan Elder, Gonzaga
Marcus Coker, DeMatha
Greg Gadell, O’Connell

Wide Receivers
Brandon Coleman, McNamara
EJ Scott, Good Counsel


Tight End

Jake Ruffing, Gonzaga

Offensive Linemen
Alfonso Beale, Carroll
Jack Higgins, Good Counsel
Carl Katz, O’Connell
Nate Luongo, St. John’s
Mark Rehbein, Gonzaga

Defensive Linemen
Troy Gloster, Good Counsel
Patrick Goulden, DeMatha
Ike Nnawuba, DeMatha
Sam Oyekoya, Gonzaga

Linebackers
Alex Berdahl, O’Connell
Raheem Cardwell, DeMatha
Blair Rutledge, Carroll
Eric Wright, Paul VI

Defensive Backs
Michael Coley, DeMatha
Donald Quarles, St. John’s
Al Thompson, Good Counsel
Joshua Trimble, O’Connell

Punter
Robbie Colas, Gonzaga

Kicker
Michael Branthover, DeMatha

Specialist
Kyrrel Latimer, DeMatha

Third Team

Quarterback
Kevin Clark, McNamara

Running Backs
Charles Brown, St. John’s
Josef Epps, McNamara
Patrick Simms, O’Connell

Wide Receivers
Mike Milburn, DeMatha
Brian Williams, O’Connell

Tight End
Taylor Hayes-Leak, O’Connell

Offensive Linemen
Nick Appel, O’Connell
Kortlan Jackson, St. John’s
Shane Johnson, DeMatha
Jonathan Nieto, O’Connell
Gary Suarez, McNamara

Defensive Linemen
Michael Katz, O’Connell
Lawrence Lucas, Gonzaga
Steven Muskett, Paul VI
Cedric Watson, St. John’s

Linebackers
Dionte Holland, Carroll
Durrell Miller, Good Counsel
John Pfister, Gonzaga
DeAngelo Williams, St. John’s

Defensive Backs
Darrian Carmichael, McNamara
Matthew Goldsmith, McNamara
Taylor Hanley, Gonzaga
Jared Williams, McNamara

Punter
Owen Scarbrough, Paul VI

Kicker
Matthew Michael, McNamara

Specialist
Devin Bassett, McNamara

Honorable Mention

Archbishop Carroll
Jeremiah Attaochu, DL
Cyrus Britt, RB
Nate Clarke, OL
Rian Gaskins, DB
Jonathan Matthews, QB

Bishop McNamara
Demetrius Baxter, TE
Tre Bracken, DL
Brandon Jackson, RB
Samuel Kydd, OL
Chrishon Rose, OL

Bishop O’Connell
Devin Amole, DB
Ernie Barber, OL
Beau Fitzpatrick, LB
Chris Jeffries, LB
Patrick Thompson, QB

DeMatha
Austin Bailey, RB
Bobby Caffes, DL
Aaron Conaway, RB
Jake Geiser, OL
Lorenzo Water, DB

Gonzaga
Alex Beauboeuf, WR
Kevin Hogan, QB
Max Johnston, WR
Dylan Jones, OL
Ricky Neville, WR

Good Counsel
Joe Keesling, LB
Tommy Kokolas, OL
Kelly Flaherty, DB
Mike Nittoli, DB
Garrett Schmidt, DB

Paul VI
Sam Bennett, OL
Chuck Carton, DE
Mike Lyons, LB
Scott Simmons, WR
Josh Wright, DB

St. John’s
Dominico McIntosh, OL
Daniel Wright, DB
Kyle Kirsch, TE
Cameron Webb, LB
Walter Contreras, LB

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Monday Morning Quarterback: Week 10

Weekly Awards

Offensive Player of the Week: Charles Brown, St. John’s
Brown ran 26 times for 218 yards and three touchdowns of 15, 27 and 3 yards, respectively, as St. John’s won the 80-year rivalry between the two WCAC schools.

Defensive Player(s) of the Week: O’Connell
The Knights posted their third shutout of the season in a big rivalry game against Paul VI. O’Connell didn’t make the playoffs this season but won more games than the past two seasons combined.

Special teams Player of the Year: Matt Elsasser, St. John’s
A skilled kicker is so valuable in high school football and Elsasser is quite good. He booted field goals of 33 and 26 yards to seal the Cadets’ victory as St. John’s led by just one touchdown.

Offensive Play of the Week: Tommy Chroniger to Emmanuel McPhearson touchdown, DeMatha
A 41-yard bomb that put DeMatha up 28-0 over McNamara.

Defensive Play of the Week: Gary Mziray, St. John’s
Mziray made a beautiful interception over his shoulder late in the Cadets’ win over Gonzaga.

Hit of the Week: Ed Thomas, St. John’s
Charles Brown did much of the offensive work for the Cadets but Thomas takes the award for running over a Gonzaga defender on a 13-yard carry. You’ve got to watch the video to understand.

Quote of the Week: Andre Monroe, St. John’s
“When you come out with fire in your ****, man, there’s no telling what you can do.”

Round Up

Game of the Week
St. John’s 27, Gonzaga 14

In a historic 80-year rivalry, the Cadets pulled out an impressive win over a Gonzaga team that finished the season much better than it started. The Cadets scored 13 straight points after the two teams were tied at 14.

Bullis 36, St. Mary’s Ryken 0
Let’s just channel that Week 1 win over Annapolis Area Christian and remember that St. Mary’s Ryken is still learning.

DeMatha 42, McNamara 7
The Stags have been dominant down the stretch of the season and Tommy Chroniger keeps impressing. Chroniger passed for three touchdowns on 9-of-11 passing for 184 yards. He also rushed five times for 76 yards.

Good Counsel 44, Carroll 0
The offense always gets the credit, but let’s take time to point out that the Falcons defense has allowed nine points in the past four games.

O’Connell 16, Paul VI 0
The Knights lost their playoff spot to McNamara but went out with a win over their rival for  the seventh straight season. Greg Gadell ran 18 times for 144 yards and a 6-yard touchdown.

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Football: St. John’s 27, Gonzaga 14

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington D.C.

**CLICK HERE for full video gallery.

**CLICK HERE for over 150 photos.

**Check below for an interactive box score.

The result, the statistics and even the post-game hugs and photo-ops may get lost deep in the history books — or, rather, encyclopedia — of the oldest Catholic high school football rivalry in the country, dating back to 1910.

But the players who took part and those who donned St. John’s scarlet and Gonzaga purple over the past decades — many of whom wore their now-ragged jerseys to the game on Saturday afternoon — will likely have the moments and images of the 91st edition of this historic match-up forever seared into their memories.

St. John’s countered a two-touchdown, first-half comeback by Gonzaga with a touchdown just before half time, capturing pivotal momentum at the break en route to a 27-14 win at Blair High School in Silver Spring, Md., marking the Cadets fifth victory in a row over the Purple Eagles.

With the win, St. John’s cut Gonzaga’s all-time lead in the series to 40-37-3. 

“As everyone knows, this is a tradition,” Cadet junior defensive tackle Andre Monroe said. “People that we don’t even know from years and years ago come out just to watch this game. It feels good just to do it for them, because it means so much to them, especially the alumni.”

After the first quarter, it appeared as if those alumni could make it an early evening.

St. John’s junior running back Chuck Brown carried the ball nine times for 97 yards and both Cadet touchdowns in the opening period as the scarlet-and-gray opened a 14-0 lead without much Eagle protest.

“My coaches, in practice, kept telling me I needed to step up,” said Brown, who ultimately rushed for 218 yards and three scores on 26 attempts. “I stepped up in this game, right before the playoffs.”

But right before half time, the Purple Eagles used a six-play scoring drive cut the Cadet lead in half, and sophomore safety and quarterback Kevin Hogan translated an interception into an eventual one-yard touchdown run to tie the game.

St. John’s then turned to its three-minute offense and Brown for the go-ahead, three-yard score with :22 seconds remaining in the second quarter.

The Cadets carried the impetus over seamlessly into the second half. St. John’s held Gonzaga to 73 total yards after half time, forced two interceptions and, most critically, kept the Purple Eagles off the scoreboard.

“I think the first thing we did was settle down,” Cadet Coach Joe Patterson said. “They’ve got a good passing game and they got us for a couple big plays.

“This was everything we expected it would be. We expected it to be an intense game and we expected it to be a game we would need to play well to win.” 

Added Monroe, whose Cadets held Eagle senior Alan Elder to minus-2 rushing yards in the second half after he had gained 100 yards in the first half: “The first thing we did was calm down. We came together and calmed down. Everybody did their job and when everybody does their job, things like that happen.”

While Gonzaga’s season ends, St. John’s qualifies for the WCAC playoffs, which begin next weekend. They open, though, with perennial power DeMatha at the Prince George’s Sports and Learning Center in Landover, Md., on Friday.

The Stags have won 13 league titles in Coach Bill McGregor‘s 27-year tenure, including the last five in a row. They are 63-6 in that span.

“It’s going to take the same thing that we had today in the second half [to win],” said Monroe, whose Cadets fell to the Stags last weekend, 34-6. “Good communication, everybody doing their job and we need to come out with some fire, just like this.

“When you come out with fire in your ****, man, there’s no telling what you can do.”

Added Patterson, with nervous grin: “We definitely have to bring our A-game.”

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

Gonzaga         0  14  0   0  —  14
St. John’s      14  7   3   3  —  27

1Q – SJ  – Brown 15 run (Elsasser kick) – 8:14
1Q – SJ  – Brown 28 run (Elsasser kick) – 0:20
2Q – GZ – Neville 35 from Hogan (Colas kick) – 9:36
2Q – GZ – Hogan 1 run (Colas kick) – 4:53
2Q – SJ  – Brown 3 run (Elsasser kick) – 0:22
3Q – SJ  – Elsasser 32 FG – 7:01
4Q – SJ  – Elsasser 27 FG – 3:29

Individual Leaders
Passing
GZ – Hogan – 8-for-27, 124 yards, TD, 2 INT. SJ – Thomas – 1-for-2, 26 yards, INT;  Konieczka – 2-for-5, 9 yards.
Rushing
GZ – Elder – 18 car, 98 yards, TD;  Hogan – 4 car, 7 yards, TD. SJ – Brown – 26 car, 218 yards, TD;  Thomas – 15 car, 98 yards;  Mziray – 1 car, 12 yards.
Receiving
GZ – Neville – 2 rec, 49 yards, TD; Beauboeuf – 2 rec, 28 yards;  Johnston – 2 rec, 27 yards. SJ – Wright – 1 rec, 26 yards;  Thomas – 2 rec, 9 yards.

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All-WCAC Boys Soccer Team

2008 All-WCAC Boys Soccer Teams

Player of the Year
Chris Hegni, Sr DeMatha

Coach of the Year

Julio Zarate, Good Counsel

First Team

(F) Marcus Douglas, Sr.,., Gonzaga
(F) Hugh Roberts, Jr., Good Counsel
(F) John Ciampa, Jr., Bishop O’Connell
(MF) Jeremy Raley, Jr., St Mary Ryken
(MF) Chris Perez, Sr., Gonzaga
(MF) Alan Flott, Jr., Bishop O’Connell
(MF) Stefone Coburn, Sr., Archbishop Carroll
(D) Mayowa Alli, Jr., Bishop McNamara
(D) Brendan Duffy, Sr., Gonzaga
(D) Cody Pearson, Sr., DeMatha
(D) Mike Chelena, Sr., Paul VI
(GK) Stefan Berkley Sr., DeMatha

Second Team

(F) Earl Hamilton, Jr., Gonzaga
(F) Adrian Tombini, Sr., Good Counsel
(F) Christian Arce, Sr., Paul VI
(F) Josue Lopez, Sr., St John’s
(MF) Denzel Pascoe, Jr., Archbishop Carroll
(MF) Brian Alvarez, Jr., DeMatha
(MF) Malcolm Harris, Fr Good Counsel
(MF) JJ Pezor, Sr., Good Counsel
(D) Michael Nsoesie, Jr., Archbishop Carroll
(D) Connor White, Sr., Bishop Ireton
(D) Wole Lolawole, Sr., DeMatha
(D) William Gegelee, Jr., DeMatha
(GK) John Leimbach, Sr., Bishop McNamara

Third Team

(F) David Weinstein, Sr., DeMatha
(F) Jean-Christophe Souagnon, Sr., Archbishop Carroll
(F) Cody Allbrecht, Soph., DeMatha
(F) John McMurray, Sr., Gonzaga
(MF) Toby Iguade, Jr., DeMatha
(MF) Daniel Rice, Sr., Gonzaga
(MF) Joey Goririssi, Sr., Bishop McNamara
(MF) Chris Moehler, Sr., Paul VI
(D) Matthew Michael, Jr., Bishop McNamara
(D) Tommy Todd, Sr., Good Counsel
(D) Gabe Cunningham, Sr., Gonzaga
(D) Matthew Madigan, Soph., Paul VI
(GK) Alex Harrington, Jr., Bishop O’Connell

Honorable Mention

Archbishop Carroll: Brandon Brown, Vitalis Atem, Anthony Ugorgi
Bishop Ireton: Peter Giambone, Sebastian Spinetto, DJ Philips, Garrett Littler
Bishop McNamara: Max Allegro, Greg Carbott, Ryan Leslie
Bishop O’Connell: Riordan Nolan, Andrew Piemonte, Joe Delmontagne
DeMatha: Toby Iguade, David Weinstein, Kevin Rama, Eric Hamel
Good Counsel: Henry Kahwaty, Connor Farrell, Drew Schaeffer, Julio Zarate, Jeff Byrnes
Gonzaga: Dan Valcicak, Kevin Go, Sean Cantarella
St John’s: Jonathan Leiva, Brian Powers, Guy Cross
Paul VI: Lorenzo D’Agostino, JJ Chahine, Benen O’Brien, Tyler Meintel
St. Mary’s Ryken: Steven Beck, Addison Goodley, JT Gregg

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Top 20 Videos: Oct. 30-Nov. 6

WCAC Top 20 Most Watched Videos
Oct. 30-Nov. 6

1. Kevin Clark to Jerome Couplin III 5-yard touchdown pass
This touchdown pass put McNamara ahead of O’Connell and possibly into the WCAC playoffs.

2. Gonzaga’s Dan Rice goal

3. Ball saved off goal line by Daniel Valcicak

4. Final seconds tick off Gonzaga’s boys soccer championship game

5. Darrian Carmichael 94-yard kick return for a touchdown

6. Jerome Couplin III interview

7. Remi Gibba goal from 28-yards out

8. Sara Kneeland game-winning goal on header

9. Slater from Fletcher goal ties field hockey game

10. Marcus Douglass volley off corner kick is barely wide

11. Dan Rice huge collision with Alex Harrington

12. Alex Harrington kick save in WCAC championship

13. Hayley Katzenberger interview

14. Dan Rice interview

14t. Remi Gibba interview

16. Daniel Valcicak interview

17t. 28-yard touchdown pass from Clark to Couplin III

17t. Devin Douglas interview

19. Clark to Couplin III for a 52-yard touchdown

19t. Caitlin Walls scores to open WCAC field hockey championship

20t. Dan Rice bicycle shot attempt

20t. Gonzaga fans halftime interview

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Monday Morning Quarterback: Week 9

Weekly Awards

Offensive Player(s) of the Week: Jerome Couplin III and Kevin Clark, McNamara
There’s no way to pick between these two guys. Clark threw for a mind-boggling 436 yards and five touchdowns while Couplin III caught 11 of those passes for 199 yards and four touchdowns, including the snag on a jump-ball to win the game.

Defensive Player of the Week: Devin Douglas, McNamara
With O’Connell in position to run out the fourth quarter and pull out a win, Douglas stepped in front of a pass over the middle and intercepted it for a game-changing play. The Knights still had one last chance to win on their next drive but Douglas was instrumental in stopping three straight running plays.

Special Teams Player of the Week: Darrian Carmichael, Bishop McNamara
After the kickoff went over his head, Carmichael looked like his proverbial goose was cooked. But Carmichael caught the bouncing ball, reversed course and took a kickoff 95 yards to keep Bishop McNamara close with O’Connell in the first half.

Offensive Play of the Week: Jerome Couplin III, McNamara
Couplin’s leaping grab in the endzone sealed the win for McNamara. He was telling Clark to toss it up and McNamara several times just went up and got it.

Defensive Play of the Week: Jerome Couplin III, McNamara
Couplin III made a very nice play on the ball to intercept O’Connell’s final pass, putting the game away for the Mustangs.

Hit of the Week: Chris Townsend, McNamara
OK, so he didn’t have any of those huge hits on special teams, but Townsend was in the O’Connell backfield all day.

Quote of the Week: Jerome Couplin III
“Throw it. You put it up there, I’m going to get it.”

Round-Up

CHECK BACK EVERY WEDNESDAY FOR VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS OF ADDITIONAL GAMES FROM THE PREVIOUS WEEKEND!

Game of the Week
Bishop McNamara 36, O’Connell 35

With major playoff implications on the line, McNamara came from 17 points behind in the fourth quarter to beat the Knights, putting McNamara in the lead for the fourth and final playoff spot. This was a high-octane shootout that  you all need to check out.

DeMatha 34, St. John’s 6
This was actually a 13-6 game heading into the fourth quarter before DeMatha rattled off 21 unanswered points. A Delonte Morton 2-yard touchdown run, Marcus Coker 4-yard run and Emmanuel McPhearson 23-yard interception return for a touchdown capped DeMatha’s fifth-straight win.

Good Counsel 45, Gonzaga 0
The Falcons went about business as usual, blowing out another WCAC opponent. Two rushing touchdowns each from Jelani Jenkins and Caleb Porzel provided the bulk of the offense and the defense picked off Gonzaga five times.

Paul VI 34, Carroll 7
The Panthers could finally breathe easy in the fourth quarter as Idreis Augustas rushed for four touchdowns and 84 yards on just 20 carries. Daniel McGroarty also returned an interception 20 yards for a touchdown.

Bishop Ireton 34, Sidwell Friends 0
The Cardinals are now 4-6 after junior quarterback Oliver Noon threw for 153 yards including a 54-yard touchdown pass to Mark Holmes. John Attiliis ran for two touchdowns and 84 yards.

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Boys Soccer Championship: Gonzaga 1, O’Connell 0

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

It was late October, 2006 when sophomore Chris Perez told Gonzaga Coach Scott Waller on the eve of the WCAC playoffs that he thought the Eagles could win three straight conference championships.

“I think he kind of laughed and was like, ‘Who is this kid?’” Perez said Sunday.

Two years and three championships later, Perez can finally say he was right. Gonzaga beat O’Connell, 1-0, in Sunday’s WCAC boys soccer finals at Catholic University, only further cementing the Eagles as the most successful boys soccer program in the Washington region over the past decade.

The Eagles (21-2-1) will likely finish the season ranked in the Top-10 of the National Soccer Coaches Association of America poll. They were undefeated in the conference this season with two ties against DeMatha, who fell to O’Connell in penalty kicks in the semifinals, and just one loss to Regis Jesuit of Colorado.

Gonzaga has reached the conference finals the past nine years and won championships six of those nine years.

“My goal from the beginning was to three-peat,” Perez said. “We had the teams to do it, the players and the talent and it all came together every year.”

Gonzaga’s talent was on full display Sunday as the Eagles battered O’Connell with 20 shots. The only reason why the game was so close was that junior O’Connell goalkeeper Alex Harrington made 12 saves, several of which on what looked like surefire Gonzaga goals.

But all it took was one to get past Harrington and senior Dan Rice delivered. With 51 seconds remaining until halftime, Rice accelerated past a defender and weaved a shot around the charging Harrington into the top right corner of the goal.

“It felt so good to score,” said Rice, who was the chief thorn in O’Connell’s side all afternoon. “Right before halftime too, it was a good time to score and go into the second half with the upper hand.”

O’Connell’s best scoring chance came in just the fifth minute when a shot by Chris O’Donnell nicked off Gonzaga goalie Daniel Valcicak’s fingertips and slowly rolled towards the goal line.

“I looked over and saw it slowly rolling in,” Valcicak said. “I had to get up as quick as I could and I managed to get it about six inches off the line. It was definitely a key point in the game. If they score the momentum definitely would have shifted.”

Instead Gonzaga seemed emboldened by the close call. The Eagles, even after taking a lead, never pulled back to focus on defending. Gonzaga had numerous chances to add to their lead that went wide or were saved by Harrington or a defender on the goal line.

“They were relentless the entire game from every direction,” Harrington said. “They were in our offensive third probably the majority of the game, so I was on my toes the entire time just trying to keep it 0-0 as long as I could. … They can beat you in any number of ways possible.”

Rice didn’t hesitate in saying this was the best team of the past three years. Waller has said that this team has a combination of depth and star-power and said it was of course one of the best he has coached in his four years at Gonzaga.

When Waller first came to Gonzaga in 2005, he entered with the current senior class. Early on, he said he knew it was special and this season was a culmination of four years spent growing together.

“It’s our legacy,” Perez said. “We’re known as a program now. That was our whole goal.”

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