Quantcast

South County Secondary School | Archive | October, 2008

Volleyball: South County 3, West Springfield 1

By Sarah Senseney
South County High School Junior, DigitalSports Intern

Last night was quite an exciting game at South County, where the host Stallions claimed the Patriot District volleyball championship with a 25-20, 25-15, 21-15, 25-18 victory over West Springfield.

The first game was a back-and-forth battle early, but the Stallions began to pull away when sophomore Simone Antwi and junior Lindsay Stephens provided a momentum-shift toward the home team. Both had crucial kills to give them the lead, with junior Shelby Robertson getting the **** to win the first game.

The second game was dominated by the hitting of junior Alyson Gregorowicz and the serving of junior Erica Fairbanks and excellent back row digs that gave the Stallions a quick, 8-0 lead. Fairbanks had three aces in Game 2 and continued that terrific serving throughout the match.

The third game proved quite the thriller. It was filled with constant momentum shifts. But this time it was the Spartans who pulled away as the Stallions occasional struggled with its on-court communication and with unforced errors.

However, the Stallions came back in the forth game, gaining momentum with each passing every point. Antwi was on fire this game, recording ****-after-****-after-****. The crowd rallied behind the host Stallions, too. And it was Stephens who provided the exciting, game-winning **** to win the forth game and the Patriot District championship.

Antwi, Fairbanks and Stephens each earned received all-tournament team honors, with Antwi being named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. It was quite an exciting end to the Patriot District season for the Stallions, who now move on to the Northern Regional tournament, where they hope to continue their good fortunes.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Football: No. 9 Annandale 28, No. 5 South County 7

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager, Washington DC

**CLICK HERE for the full video gallery.

**CLICK HERE for over 260 photos.

Something about Atom sophomore Melvin Robinson‘s performance on Friday suggests he was never one to obey the “Please Take One” signs while trick-or-treating.

The stand-out sophomore ripped down two decisive, highlight-reel touchdowns from Stallion defensive backs in the third quarter as No. 9 Annandale beat No. 5 South County, 28-7, to capture a share of its third Patriot District title in the last four years.

“He went from a guy that went straight down the field and catch it to a guy that can make some different moves,” said Atoms’ Coach **** Adams, in his 19th season at the helm. “We challenged him at half time and, I tell you what, he came back and made three or four plays that were incredible.

“He’s only a sophomore, so he’s immature. But when he grows up, he’s going to be big-time.”

Added Robinson
, who finished with three catches for 102 yards and the two scores: “Once I give Cason [Kynes] a look when he gives me my sign, I know it’s there. We go through it every day at three o’clock.”

Annandale’s performance, especially in the second half, looked that rehearsed.

The Atoms held possession for all but 1 minute, 28 seconds of the third quarter, running 18 of the 22 offensive plays in the period and out-gaining the Stallions 100 yards to minus-1. In doing so, Annandale converted a 7-7 tie at half time into a 21-7 lead before the start of the fourth.

Kynes, who threw for four touchdowns offensively, atoned for two first-half interceptions to Stallion senior Karlos Morgan by picking off two passes of his own after half time while lined up at safety.

Adams called Annandale’s defensive effort — which, aside from a 69-yard first-quarter run by South County senior Eric Dorsey, allowed only 43 rushing yards on 19 attempts — the team’s best of the season.

The aforementioned Dorsey run yielded no points when Annandale junior linebacker Marquis Perez stuffed a 3rd-and-goal fullback dive from the 2-yard line.

Then Perez joined Kynes and two-way starting John Copenhaver on a tackle-for-loss on the subsequent pitch play to force a turnover on downs.

And it was Perez who provided the exclamation point — along with several other punctuation marks — with an audible, bone-jarring hit on a Stallion receiver with :44 left in the game that simultaneously had fans cringing and cheering.

“I could see that he slowed down and I had my angle,” he said. “Then, I just know. I know I can get there and I just know that, I feel to myself that I’m better than the next person and I’m going to run through him. That’s just my goal.

“I got goosebumps. When I get a hit like that and I hear the crowd go crazy, that keeps me going. That’s what makes me love this sport and that’s what makes me fight on for this.”

Despite the disappointing loss, the Stallions still qualify for the playoffs, which start next Friday. South County, the No. 8 seed in Division 6, will face top-seeded Oakton, a team Stallion Coach Pete Bendorf knows all too well. He coached the Cougars from 1992 to 2004 and led them to their first-ever Northern Region championship in 2002.

With the win, Annandale (6-4, 6-1 Patriot) shares this year’s Patriot District title with No. 10 West Springfield (7-3, 6-1), last season’s district champion.

The Atoms, who will be seeded sixth, won the district in 2005 and 2006 with Nathan Cartagena at quarterback, but was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by Oakton and Westfield, respectively, both by a score of 28-14. This season, Annandale hopes curb its Concorde playoff curse at third-seeded Chantilly in a rematch of September 12, 31-20 Charger win.

“Of all the teams in the district, we are the least-talented,” said Adams, who won state championships with the Atoms in 1993 and 1994. “But our quarterback has played great, the big kid No. 18 has developed into a heck of an athlete and we’ve played good defense.

“We just don’t have the people here anymore. We’ve gotta play 11 kids, but the kids we’ve got are great kids. The best group of kids with: Work ethic, they give you everything they’ve got; talent level, we just overcome it. They’re willing to do whatever it takes. We bounced back from the West Springfield loss and ran the table.

“I think we’ve got as good a shot as anybody.”

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

South County     0   7   0   0  —   7
Annandale          0   7  14  7  —  28

2Q – AN – Herring 21 from Kynes (McQueen kick) — 11:16
2Q – SC – Bullock 29 from Andrews (Fawsett kick) — 2:46
3Q – AN – Robinson 29 from Kynes (kick failed) — 8:50
3Q – AN – Robinson 15 from Kynes (Kynes pass to Potts) — 0:29
4Q – AN – Potts 30 from Kynes (McQueen kick) — 5:40

Passing
SC – Andrews – 9-for-20, 83 yards, TD, INT;  Beal – 1-for-6, 10 yards, INT. AN – Kynes – 9-for-18, 260 yards, 4 TD, 2 INT.
Rushing
SC – Dorsey – 11 car, 98 yards;  Bullock – 4 car, 30 yards. AN – Kynes – 24 car, 48 yards;  Kargbo – 8 car, 36 yards;  Anderson – 7 car, 13 yards.
Receiving
SC – Doublet – 3 rec, 31 yards; Bullock – 1 rec, 29 yards, TD;  McDaniels – 2 rec, 13 yards. AN – Robinson – 3 rec, 102 yards, 2 TD;  Potts – 3 rec, 90 yards, TD;  Kargbo – 2 rec, 47 yards;  Herring – 1 rec, 21 yards, TD.
Defense
SC – Morgan – 2 INT, 3 PD;  Tucker – 3 sacks. AN –  Kynes – 2 INT, TFL, Sack; Perez – 2 TFL.
Time of Possession
SC – 18:14. AN – 29:46

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Field Hockey: Northern Region Quarterfinals

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Editor, Washington DC


**Photos and videos from all games available by clicking the tabs on the top-left, or view individual game highlights by clicking the corresponding links beneath each final score.

Westfield 2, Madison 1

Click here for Westfield-Madison highlights!

Despite unquestionably controlling the tempo for the entire first half, Westfield only caged one-goal against Madison (10-9) through 20 minutes.

But it was not until after the Warhawks game-tying goal eight minutes after halftime that the Bulldogs regained the momentum and pulled away for a 2-1 win and a berth in the Northern Region semifinal.

“We should have capitalized on some of our chances in the first half,” said Westfield coach Terri Towle, a four-year starter at Michigan State. “It should have more of like a 2-0 game in the first half. But we didn’t capitalize in the first half. At the start second half,  Madison came out very strong and maybe we were a little too comfortable.

“In a regional tournament, anything can happen.”

And anything almost did. Warhawk junior forward Hallie Dominick slapped home a cross to tie the game before the Bulldogs (18-3) took their fingers of the snooze button and awakened.

After a series of short corners and waves of pressure on the Madison cage, Westfield senior defender Maddy Curry scored the game-winner on a set play from a penalty corner with 6 minutes, 44 seconds left in the game.

“I just took a hard shot and it went off that girl’s stick and up into the air and the goalie couldn’t stop it,” she said. “My sophomore year we won the region, so we’re hoping we can be just as successful as then.”

But Curry’s game-deciding goal came after a series of viable Bulldog scoring chances that barely missed. Although Westfield was more than satisfied with its victory, it recognizes the goals it may have left on the field.

“We didn’t play a full 60 minutes here, which is why we ended up losing that goal,” said Towle, whose Bulldogs are 62-20-1 in the last four seasons. “Every team that is in this tournament is capable of scoring in one trip down the field. So we have to be ready on defense and we have to be able to capitalize on our corners, we had a few go wide and miss by just a few inches.

“We’ll be working on that tomorrow.”


South County 4, McLean 2

Click here for South County-McLean highlights!

Holding a one-goal lead at halftime over McLean (12-6-2), South County coach Leah Conte ordered a quick return to basics to put away the win.

Her adjustments worked as the Stallions scored twice in the first four minutes of the second half in what proved a 4-2 win over the ever-improving Highlanders.

“We just focused on three key points that we need to use: Spread the field, attack down the sidelines and get second and third shots,” Conte said. “They focused on that and they did it.”

Two of the four Stallion goals were scored by junior forward Megan Wears, including the latter of quick pair to open the second half.

“It was more the other two goals that came after [mine],” said Wears, whose Stallions are 18-3. “We have great attackmen and it’s really exciting when more people on the team score than just one.”

Conte, though, realizes a late lapse like the one that led to the final McLean goal could prove costly on Monday against Concorde District champion Westfield.

The Bulldogs have beaten the Stallions twice this season: 3-0, on August 23, and 2-1, on September 3.

“Being up 4-1, you kind of get back on your heels,” she said. “You’re thinking, ‘Oh, I’m going to win this game.’ But, in reality, you have to stay up on your toes the whole time.”


Annandale 4, Jefferson 2


Click here for Annandale-Jefferson highlights!

Sometimes postseason success is all about peaking at the ideal time. No team has epitomized that ethos more than — or remotely as close as — Annandale.

Already with an upset, two-goal win over Lake Braddock on its resume, Annandale captured its seventh victory in the last eight games with a 4-2 win over Jefferson on Friday.

With the win, the Atoms advance to the Northern Region semifinals, one game from a state tournament berth.

“The beginning part of our season didn’t go as well as we wanted as far as the outcomes go,” said Annandale coach Cindy Hook, whose team started 3-10 before catching fire two weeks ago. “But they never gave up, they never stopped. They kept working together and they continued to believe. They made that decision as we were getting ready for the playoffs that they were going to really work together and step it up.

“It’s all them and they’ve certainly earned it.”

The Atoms were paced by senior Melisa Tordella, who scored the team’s first and third goals. The go-ahead goal, which she caged with 15 minutes, 24 seconds remaining in the game, came off a penalty corner, a point of emphasis in Tordella’s training.

“I’ve been working all season on my corner shots,” she said. “And I’ve been getting really close, and it feels really good to finally get one in.”

Annandale (10-11) faces Lake Braddock in the Field No. 2 regional semifinal on Monday. The Atoms handed the Bruins their only loss, 2-0, on October 21.


Lake Braddock 1, W.T. Woodson 0

Click here for Lake Braddock-Woodson highlights!

For the last two years Lake Braddock has fallen victim to curious hex that found it unable to advance beyond the Northern Region quarterfinal round. Few would have expected that all along, the ailment’s cure sat next to a Slurpee machine.

Thanks to a new pre-game ritual by two impact Bruins — and other nonsense like unequaled conditioning, great set-piece strategy and sound defense — Lake Braddock reversed the curse with a 1-0 win over defending regional champion W.T. Woodson on Thursday.

“Me and, actually, Mackensy Medlin, we have this little thing we do right before the game,” said Bruin senior forward Ann Marie Gambescia, who scored the game-winning goal with just over 13 minutes left. “Before Tuesday, we went to 7-11 and got a PowerBar and a Gatorade and we said if we won, we’d go do that again. I’m a really superstitious person.

“We told the cashier at 7-11 that we’d be back getting the same exact order on Sunday.”

And Lake Braddock needed every calorie and carbohydrate to withstand the Woodson onslaught that followed Gambescia’s goal.

Cavalier junior and Liberty District Player of the Year Shelly Montgomery, senior Mary Beth Barham and senior forward Jaime Pritchard all had shots in the waning moments.

Woodson entered Thursday’s quarterfinal with a Northern Region-best, 12-game winning streak against VHSL competition.

“That was the longest 10 minutes of my life,” Bruin coach Diane Miller said. “You look at the clock and it’s not moving… I had been nervous about this game for a long time, but I’m just so proud of them. They never gave up even when Woodson pressed a lot.”

With the season-defining win on Thursday, Lake Braddock’s second over Woodson (16-3) this season, it advances to play Annandale with a berth in the Northern Region championship and the state tournament on the line.

The Atoms handed the Bruins (20-1) their only loss in the Patriot District semifinal last week, 2-0. The defeat was both devastating and, apparently, necessary.

“Everyone is psyched for this game,” said Gambescia, one of 12 seniors on Lake Braddock’s roster. “I think that loss — as bad as it might sound — we kind of needed it, because we were 18-0 and that kind of got to our heads a little bit… Come Monday we’re going to be back for revenge to prove that that shouldn’t have been a loss.”

Added Miller: “They were so determined to come out here and play better than what they’ve been playing lately and live up to what their record is. Losing in the district tournament was a big blow to them.

“But beating Woodson, whew, that’s a big win.”

E-mail: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Cross Country: Northern Region Championsihp

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager, Northern Region

*Check the tabs above the video player for a photo gallery and video highlights from both races*

**All 15 runners will advance to the state meet 11/08 at Great Meadows**

Northern Region Boys Results

1. Leoule Degfae(ED) 15:12.27; 2. Christopher Foley(CH) 15:20.66; 3. Andrew McCullen(OK) 15:31.06; 4. Jared Berman(RB) 15:31.48; 5. Tihut Degfae(ED) 15:33.67; 6. Neal Hendricks(OK) 15:34.95; 7. Brett Mandeville(SC) 15:35.42; 8. Daniel Tobin(WS) 15:35.66; 9. Todd Van Luling(HN) 15:37.65; 10. Scott Plunkett(AN) 15:39.31; 11. John Cruz(LB) 15:40.41; 12. Jack Jasper(HN) 15:41.78; 13. Stuart Steen(RB) 15:43.90; 14. Dan Grimm(CV) 15:44.57; 15. Yazid Zouaimia(CV) 15:46.18.

Northern Region Girls Results

1. Liana Epstein(LB) 17:46.04; 2. Stephanie Paradis(SB) 17:58.75; 3. Stephanie Marzen(TJ) 18:00.21; 4. Lauren Shaw(LG) 18:00.44; 5. Erica Howes(WT) 18:05.75; 6. Becca Kassabian(OK) 18:06.52; 7. Myah Hicks(ED) 18:06.91; 8. Sarah Stites(TJ) 18:08.06; 9. Lanie Smith(OK) 18:10.20; 10. Carolyn Hennessey(HN) 18:13.81; 11. Katherine Sheridan(TJ) 18:15.65; 12. Julianne Bigler(WP) 18:17.54; 13. Paige Kvartunas(WS) 18:19.63; 14. Madeleine Willner(SC) 18:26.24; 15. Stephanie Bray(RB) 18:30.14.


**Top four teams in each race will advance to the state meet 11/08 at Great Meadows**

Northern Region Boys Team Results

1. Oakton 1:18:54.49; 2. Robinson 1:19:31.11; 3. Thomas Jefferson 1:20:17.53; 4. Lake Braddock 1:20:30.80; 5. South County 1:20:34.85; 6. Herndon 1:20:59.53; 7. Edison 1:21:09.54; 8. Centreville 1:21:38.23; 9. Woodson 1:21:43.63; 10. West Springfield 1:22.00.12; 11. West Potomac 1:22:42.66; 12. Washington-Lee 1:23:52.94; 13. South Lakes 1:24:29.50; 14. Stone Bridge 1:26:00.05 15. Falls Church 1:28:17.76; 16. Stuart 1:28:36.22.

Northern Region Girls Team Results

1. Thomas Jefferson 1:31:57.44; 2. Oakton 1:33:02.95; 3. Robinson 1:33:38.09; 4. Lake Braddock 1:33:42.19; 5. West Potomac 1:34:12.74; 6. West Springfield 1:34:56.46; 7. Herndon 1:35:11.17; 8. Edison 1:36:03.03; 9. T.C. Williams 1:36:46.12; 10. Woodson 1:37:11.93; 11. Langley 1:37:51.89; 12. Yorktown 1:39:13.16; 13. Westfield 1:39:29.17; 14. Stone Bridge 1:41:24.69; 15. Mount Vernon 1:47:19.80; 16. Stuart 1:45:54.16.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Football: A Weekend Preview — Week 10 — ALL FINAL SCORES

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


**Check back with DigitalSports throughout the week for video recaps of nearly every game in the Northern Region!!


CLICK HERE FOR ALL THE FINAL SCORES IN THE NORTHERN REGION.


NORTHERN REGION WEEK 10:  BY THE NUMBERS

168-12 – In the 2000s, Robinson has outscored Fairfax, 168-12, in four games.
70.3 – Since Jefferson joined the Liberty District in 2005, there is an average of 70.3 combined points per game in three meeting with South Lakes..
10-0 – No. 2 Oakton is seeking its first 10-0 regular season in history of the school, which spans five decades.
51.4 – No. 1 Stone Bridge is scoring 51.4 points per game this season, tops in the VHSL.
0.1. – The Division 6 No. 6 through No. 8 seeds, Herndon, Annandale and South County are separated by 1/10th of a point with one game left.

Non-District Games                                                        
No. 3 Edison (9-0, 6-0) at No. 4 Chantilly (7-2, 5-2) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m. **Game will be covered by Angela Watts.
There’s a reason why non-district games are not listed at the bottom this week.

Whether the team will admit it or not, Edison has had this game circled
on the schedule since a Week 3 over South County. Having escaped a
somewhat tumultuous three-week out-of-conference stretch to open the
season, the Eagles were likely to reach this game with a goose egg in
the loss column.

Only No. 1 Stone Bridge has scored points or allowed fewer than No. 3 Edison.

Chantilly’s only losses are to No. 2 Oakton and No. 6 Westfield. Six of
its seven wins have come against teams with a 4-5 record or better, so
the sixth-ranked Chargers have been tested, and excelled. Last week,
they snapped a 12-year losing streak to Centreville with a 20-point
road over the toothpaste-blue Wildcats.

And what is not to love against Eagle linebacker Stephon Robertson
against Charger running back Torrian Pace… or Edison quarterback Levi
Barber
against the talented pass rush… or the Eagle special teams
against the disciplined Charger kick coverage unit… or the Edison
running game
, which has totaled 24 rushing touchdowns through nine
weeks, against the Chantilly rush defense, which allowed just 73
rushing yards last week… or…

Concorde District                                                                                                             
Centreville (1-8, 0-5) at No. 6 Westfield (7-2, 3-2)  — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
This series has not lived up to its anticipated competitiveness — Westfield has won the last six games in a row, the last two by a combined 60-7. But the bragging rights have not diminished despite the rivalry’s recent one-sidedness.

The Wildcats are mired in their worst season in recent memory and the Bulldogs are coming off consecutive losses for the first time since 2001.

Senior running back Jordon Anderson has not been held under 100 yards this season and has only been outrushed twice in nine games — Week 1 at South County (Aaron Andrews) and Week 7 at Fairfax (Chris Regensberg).

Robinson (4-5, 2-3) at Fairfax (4-5, 1-4) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
Entering the season, no one figured this Week 10 meeting would be determining a .500 record for either team. Both teams are coming off dominant wins last week.

Robinson senior running back Alex Murray carried for 275 yards and 3 touchdowns last week in a 41-23 win over then-No. 4 Herndon. Fairfax overcame 121 penalty yards with a 10-carry, 200-yard, two-touchdown performance by Iogi Lewis in a 34-7 win over Falls Church.

This decade, in four Ram wins, Robinson has outscored Fairfax, 168-12, an average score of 43-3.
 
No. 8 Herndon (6-3, 3-2) at No. 2 Oakton (9-0, 5-0) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m. **Game will be covered by Jimmy Thomas.
Speaking of back story.

Last year, Herndon beat Oakton, 35-34, with a last-minute two-conversion that the teams still disagree on. The controversial result eliminated the Cougars from playoff contention and completed their end-of-season free fall.

This year, No. 2 Oakton enters with its second 9-0 start in the program’s 41-year history. The Cougars have never been 10-0.

So, with storied history and a dash of personal vengeance on the line, albeit the definite Division 6 No. 1 seed and Concorde District champion, don’t expect Oakton to rest its starters and go lightly on No. 8 Herndon.

Liberty District                                                                                                
No. 7 W.T. Woodson (7-2, 6-0) at No. 1 Stone Bridge (9-0, 6-0) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m. **Game will be covered by Dan Sousa.
Welcome to the Liberty District championship.

Last week, after its 28-14 home win over Langley, Cavalier coach Trey Taylor said candidly that if his boys didn’t come prepared for the Bulldogs, that Halloween could turn into Fright Night. It’d be more like Friday the 13th if No. 7 Woodson leaves its A-game in Fairfax.

No. 1 Stone Bridge equaled the school scoring record in Week 3 — 63-0 over Marshall — then broke it in Week 4 — 64-13 against Loudoun Valley — and broke it again last week — 70-7 over Jefferson. The Bulldogs, in terms of points per game, have the top-rated offense and defense in the Northern Region. Their offense is the highest-scoring in the state at any classification and the defense is ranked fifth.

Only Phoebus’ average margin of victory is broader than Stone Bridge’s, but Beach teams aren’t exactly known for rushing to pull starters from lopsided games.

The Bulldogs need to win and hope for a loss by No. 3 Edison — along with myriad factors — to have the top seed entering the Division 5 playoffs.
 
McLean (0-9, 0-6) at Langley (4-5, 3-3) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
Saxon offensive lineman Garrett Moore tabbed the Rotary Cup as the game he most anticipated for this year when we spoke in the preseason. It’s an understandable sentiment considering the Saxon winning streak over the Highlanders stretches over a decade.

But with its loss to Woodson last week, Langley eliminated itself from playoff contention. So, the teams are playing for pride, bragging rights, ability to cut in line at Madison Deli, whatever.
 
Jefferson (2-7, 1-5) at South Lakes (2-7, 1-5) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
Astonishing as it may seem, this game between squads with a combined 4-14 record has deeper playoff implications than any between two Division 5 opponents this week, assuming Wakefield doesn’t upset Mount Vernon and cause the Power Point apocalypse.

A 780 math SAT is providing minimal help in figuring out the opaque cloudiness surrounding this game’s consequences, but the Loudoun Prep Sports (LPS) Ratings Guru breaks it all down here. Control+F “Jefferson” like three times.

Trust me.

South Lakes coach John Ellenberger will be getting bombarded with text messages for his final score at, or around, 11 p.m. tonight.

At it’s surface, this game lacks the appeal it deserves. Since Jefferson joined the Liberty Distirict in 2005, these teams have put up a combined 70.3 points per game in their three meetings.

Madison (5-4, 4-2) at Marshall (4-5, 2-4)  — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
Last year, the Statesmen ended a losing streak dating back to the last millenia with a 27-20 road win over the Warhawks, as the Baby Blues officially fitted themselves with a glass slipper. But that win cost them Chris Hurlbert for the postseason with a shoulder injury.

Both teams enter off wins that greatly assisted in their playoff aspirations. Madison is in.

So is Marshall, unless it loses and Jefferson wins. That is, unless Wakefield beats Mount Vernon. Then up to seven games’ results could have an impact on the final three seeds in Division 5.

National District                                                                                         
Yorktown (6-3, 4-1) at Washington-Lee (5-4, 3-2) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
This game between the No. 5 and No. 6 seeds in Division 5 is one of the few Week 10 games in a vacuum, considering it has minimal playoff effect outside of the two participants. A Yorktown win would help West Potomac, should it lose to T.C. Williams, but that’s for another preview.

The Patriots have owned the Generals this decade, winning all eight meetings by a combined 267-87. Last year’s six-point Yorktown win was one of only three games within 26 points in the series. But look out for the Washington-Lee wildcat formation.

The winner will likely be the No. 5 seed and play at Madison next weekend, while the loser will be the No. 6 seed and likely travel down Route 1 to face Mount Vernon in a National District sequel.

Again, all of that changes if Wakefield can upset Mount Vernon or if Lee goes 300 on West Springfield.

Falls Church (0-9, 0-5) at Stuart (1-8, 0-5) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
The Bell Game is annually the most significant game for these schools, which are less than five miles apart on Route 50. This year, the winner will find silver lining on what has been a tougher-than-expected season for both teams.

Although Stuart has the one combined win between the programs, Falls Church has had both the more productive offense and stingier defense.

Keys for the Raiders:  Protect Chris Goslin and slow the Jaguar passing game with a turnover or two. Keys for the Jags:  Spread the aerial wealth to keep the secondary guessing and protect the football.

The Jaguars have taken seven of the eight meetings this decade.

Wakefield (3-6, 2-3) at No. 10 Mount Vernon (7-2, 4-1) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
Now, if the Warriors behave and fall to the Majors like the numbers say they should, all will be peaceful in the Division 5 playoff front. But anyone that has seen Wakefield on film for the last six weeks knows that the page with “behave” was ripped out of Keith Powell‘s dictionary and used to feed the two-headed backfield beast that Romeo Goffney and Isiah Cruz have become.

The Warriors are 3-3 over that span, but two loses to Yorktown and Washington-Lee were by a combined eight points. That minus-eight margin in those two games is only seven points worse than the Majors’ against the same teams.

But Wakefield has not seen an offensive line as big as Mount Vernon’s, which averages 6-feet, 4-inches and over 265 pounds per man.

If the Warriors can strike first — as they have in five of the last six games, including those last-minute losses to the Patriots and Generals — and jeopardize the Major running game, this could get interesting. But if Brendan O’Clisham and Kyle Ricks can get the ball rolling on the ground, Mount Vernon will wear down Wakefield.

Patriot District                                                                      
No. 5 South County (6-3, 5-1) at No. 9 Annandale (6-3, 5-1) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.**Game will be covered by Phil Murphy.
No matter what the result this game breeds chaos among both Division 5 and Division 6 playoff fronts from top to bottom.

Speaking of evenly-matched:  Both teams enter with the same overall and district records, with wins in five of their last six games and one popular score prediction tool has each team with a .500 chance of victory, chalking up a mock win for both the Stallions and Atoms. This match-up features two of the best, most-experienced coaches around in **** Adams and Pete Bendorf and both teams have proved a knack for showing up in big games in the last three seasons.

And that’s aside from the winner being assured at least a share of the Patriot District championship. If Annandale wins, it will be its third district banner in the last four seasons.

The last time these teams met on this field, the lone touchdown was a 42-yard South County fumble return in a 7-0 Stallion win.

Lee (3-6, 2-4) at
No. 10 West Springfield (6-3, 5-1) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
The last time the Lancers played the Spartans on this field, Lee running back Brandon Cameron had a career day in 40-34 Lee win. But that was against a West Springfield defense that allowed 40.4 points per game that year. This year, they allow a much better 25.1 points per.

And last week, West Springfield proved its offense is back to form with a 41-20 road win over Lake Braddock, as senior quarterback Bryn Renner went 19-for-28 passing for 327 yards and four touchdowns, three of which went Andy Stallings‘ way. But this Lee secondary is the real deal. And now with Donald Keldo added to its pass rush — yes, Donald Keldo — Renner won’t have as much time to sit in the pocket and pick pass defenses apart. Although, secretly, I think he enjoys that.

With a win, Lee would vault up to the sixth spot in Division 5 and avoid four-time running regional finalists Edison and Stone Bridge in the first round of the postseason. West Springfield currently holds the No. 4 spot in Division 6 and is unlikely to move unless they should fall.

Lake Braddock (4-5, 2-4) at Hayfield (1-8, 0-6) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
Last season, Bruin quarterback Shane Halley carried five times for 209 yards and three touchdowns to clinch a first-round playoff home game for Lake Braddock in a 63-14 rout of Hayfield. But with no playoffs in sight and no Halley, one might wonder if the Bruins will have the same ****** instinct against the Hawks.

And the defense can’t sleep on Anton McCallum or the junior quarterback will hurt it. Also, Ray Rigans is seeing an expanded role and performing well. So, for the first time in a while, offensive depth is not an issue for the Hawks, who only fell by seven points on the road to South County last week.

On paper, Lake Braddock should prevail handily, but teams like Lee, Wakefield, Marshall and West Potomac are in Billy Pugh‘s corner big time tonight.

T.C. Williams (3-6, 3-3) at West Potomac (5-4, 3-3) — Friday, October 31, 7:30 p.m.
The Wolverines have lost four games in a row and, in the last month, have gone from a lock for a first-round home game to paying to watch a game if the postseason started today. Fortunately for West Potomac, they can win and hope, possibly sneaking into a No. 8 seed with a number of things having to fall into place.

But standing in its way is a Titan team that scored a 15-14 upset last season that forced the Wolverines to take to the road to face Lake Braddock in the first round. With less assurance than last season and a more distant drop off, there is a question whether West Potomac can muster up enough poise to put themselves in position for back-door playoff entry against T.C. Williams, who is 2-1 on the road this year.

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Volleyball: Patriot District Semifinals

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager, Northern Region

** Click the links to the left, above the video player, to access a photo gallery and video highlights from both of Wednesday’s semifinal games.

West Springfield (15-5 overall) and South County (16-3) advanced to the Patriot District tournament championship and will meet Thursday night at South County for the league crown.

After ripping off 18 consecutive points to easily win its first semifinal game on Tuesday night, second-seeded West Springfield dropped Game 2 to Hayfield before finally cruising to a 25-9, 22-25, 25-22, 25-12 victory.

Tournament host and top-seed South County went to its strength in the second half of the semifinal doubleheader, feeding sophomore Simone Antwi and junior Lindsay Stephens over-and-over again in a 25-15, 25-17, 25-20 sweep of T.C. Williams.

“Our team revolves around Lindsay and Simone,” South County Coach Dave Prahl said. “If they are having an off night its going to be a long night, but when their on it’s game over.”

The Stallions remain undefeated against district opponents and Thursday will meet a Spartan team that it defeated for the first time in school history, 3-1, earlier this month for the league title. South County enters that championship round on Thursday having won 10 of its past 11 matches, including four in a row.


Patriot All-District Honors

Coach of the Year:
Dave Prahl, South County

Player of the Year: Lindsay Stephens, South County

First-Team: MB Simone Antwi,Sr., South County; MB Leigh Blair, Sr., West Potomac; OH Miranda Branch, Jr., T.C. Williams; OH Jessie Kolden, Soph., Hayfield; DS Sonya Inderbitzin, Jr., Annandale; S Danielle Thorne, Sr., T.C. Williams.

Second-Team: MB Erica Anderson, Sr., Annandale; MB Erin Battle, Sr., West Springfield; S Melissa Guy, Sr., South County; DS Alyssa Hager, Jr., West Springfield; OH Megan Murphy, Sr., Lake Braddock; S Lauren Sipple, Sr., West Springfield; OH Sarah Smith, Sr., West Springfield.

Honorable Mention: Nikki Anderson, West Springfield; Analia Ayala, T.C. Williams; Ava Blennerhassett, Annandale; Erica Fairbanks, South County; Alex Lambert, Hayfield; Sammi Lasley, Lee; Rachel Nebrich, Lake Braddock; Crystal Ronan, Lee; Logan Russell, Lake Braddock; Autumn Williams, Hayfield.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Northern Region Football Top 10 — Week 9

Northern

Region Football Top 10 — Week 9

1. Stone Bridge (9-0, 6-0 Liberty)
    Previous ranking:
1
    Last week: defeated Thomas Jefferson, 70-7
    Up next: vs No. 7 W.T. Woodson, 7:30 p.m. Friday
2. Oakton (9-0, 5-0 Concorde)
    Previous

ranking: 2
    Last week: defeated No. 6 Westfield, 30-18
   

Up next: vs No. 8 Herndon, 7:30 p.m. Friday
3. Edison (9-0, 6-0 National)
    Previous ranking: 3
    Last week: defeated Washington-Lee, 51-0
    Up next: at No. 4 Chantilly, 7:30 p.m. Friday
4. Chantilly (7-2, 4-2 Concorde)
   

Previous ranking: 6
    Last week: defeated Centreville, 34-14
    Up next: vs No. 3 Edison, 7:30 p.m. Friday
5. South County (6-3, 5-1 Patriot)
    Previous ranking: 7
    Last week: defeated Hayfield, 28-21
    Up next: at No. 9 Annandale, 7:30 p.m. Friday
6. Westfield (7-2, 3-2 Concorde)
    Previous ranking: 5
    Last week: lost to No. 2 Oakton, 30-18
    Up next: vs Centreville, 7:30 p.m. Friday
7. W.T. Woodson (7-2, 6-0 Liberty)
    Previous ranking: 8
    Last week: defeated Langley, 28-14
    Up next: at No. 1 Stone Bridge, 7:30 p.m. Friday
8. Herndon (6-3, 3-2 Concorde)
    Previous ranking: 4
    Last week: lost to Robinson, 41-23
    Up next: at No. 2 Oakton, 7:30 p.m. Friday
9. Annandale (6-3, 5-1 Patriot)

    Previous ranking: 9

    Last week: defeated West Potomac, 32-27

    Up next: vs No. 5 South County, 7:30 p.m. Friday
T10. Mount Vernon (7-2, 4-1 National)
   
Previous ranking:
10
    Last week: defeated Yorktown, 22-20
    Up next: at Wakefield, 7:30 p.m. Friday
T10. West Springfield (7-2, 4-1 National)
   
Previous ranking:
NR
    Last week: defeated Lake Braddock, 41-20
    Up next: vs Robert E. Lee, 7:30 p.m. Friday

   
Others receiving votes: Madison, Yorktown.

**

DigitalSports’ Top 10 is chosen by staff members Angela Watts, Jimmy
Thomas and Phil Murphy.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Cox On DEMAND High School Performer of the Week

By Jimmy Thomas
Content Manager/ Northern Region

**Please click the video tab above the video player for highlights**

Senior Alex Murray earned the Cox On DEMAND High School performer of the Week award carring the ball 26 times for 275 yards and three touchdowns Friday night to lead Robinson to a 41-23 victory over Herndon.

His performance put him over the 1,000-yard mark for the season, averaging a whopping 7.2 yards per carry with 13 touchdowns.

“It feels great to recieve this award,” Murray said before practice on Wednesday. “Our line did the job for us. All I did was run the ball.”

In the Rams’ backfield since his sophomore year, Murray has racked up almost 2,400 yards on the ground and has scored 24 touchdowns in his high school career.

Robinson will attempt to end the season at .500 when they travel to face Fairfax in the regular-season finale on Friday. 

Click Here for a complete list of winners

Cox Communications is proud to serve the residents of Fairfax County, and is honored to present the Cox ON DEMAND High School Performer of the Week trophy award to the standout player from a Fairfax County team weekly.

Please send nominations to awatts@digitalsports.com

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Football: Northern Region Power Point Ratings — Updated!

The Virginia High School League rates its teams based on their win-loss
record and bonus points that are awarded based on the teams’ strength
of schedule.

Seven
games into the season, this is how the
Northern Region football teams would stand if the post-season
started today. Eight teams in each division advance to the playoffs,
with the No. 1 seed hosting the No. 8 seed, the No. 2 seed hosting the
No.7 seed, the No. 3 seed hosting the No. 6 seed and the No. 4 team
hosting the No. 5 team.

In the event of a tie, here’s how the VHSL handbook says it would be broken:

1.
The winner of any games between the two tied teams if only two teams
are involved. If more than two teams tied, and one of the tied teams
beat all other tied teams, that team shall advance.
2. The team with the better record against all common opponents.
3. The team with the highest winning percentage against rating-scale-recognized opponents.
4. The team with the higher average rating of all of each team’s opponents.
5. The regional chairman or his/her alternate if his/her school is
involved, shall draw by lot to determine the playoff representative.

Division 5                                                      

No. 1. Edison (32.0)
No. 2. Stone Bridge (30.4)
No. 3. Mount Vernon (26.9)
No. 4. Madison (24.7) 
No. 5. Yorktown (24.1)
No. 6. Washington-Lee (22.3)
TNo. 7. Marshall (21.2)
TNo. 7. Robert E. Lee (21.2)

Knocking on the door:
No. 9. Thomas Jefferson (20.8)
No. 10. Wakefield (20.1)
No. 11. South Lakes (18.7)

Division 6                                                      

No. 1. Oakton (33.1)
No. 1. Westfield (30.1)
No. 3. Chantilly (29.8)
No. 4. West Springfield (28.1)
No. 5. W.T. Woodson (27.4)
No. 6. Herndon (26.1)
TNo. 7. Annandale (26.0)
TNo. 7. South County (26.0)

Knocking on the door:
No. 9.  West Potomac (24.9)
No. 10. Langley (24.8)
No. 11. Robinson (23.8)
No. 12.  Lake Braddock (23.7)

NOTE: The number in parentheses is the current power-point rating issued by the Virginia High School League. DigitalSports will update these potential parings each week once the new ratings are released by the VHSL.

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Football: Week 9 Highlights

Week 9 Highlights — Northern Region


Check
the schedule below to see when your favorite game’s highlights will be
available on DigitalSports. Completed game packages are listed as
active links and are posted on the individual school and team pages.

**MORE GAMES COMING!! FULL SCHEDULE POSTED.**

Saturday                                                               

No. 1 Stone Bridge 70, Jefferson 7HIGHLIGHTS HERE!!RECAP

No. 2 Oakton 30, No. 5 Westfield 18RECAP

No. 8 W.T. Woodson 28, Langley 14

No. 10 Mount Vernon 22, Yorktown 20


Sunday                                                                  

West Springfield 41, Lake Braddock 20RECAP

No. 7 South County 28, Hayfield 21RECAP

Robert E. Lee 24, T.C. Williams 13

Monday                                                                 

No. 6 Chantilly 34, Centreville 13RECAP

Robinson 41, No. 4 Herndon 23RECAP

No. 3 Edison 51, Washington-Lee 0RECAP

Tuesday                                                                 

Wakefield 42, Stuart 18

Fairfax 34, Falls Church 7

Marshall 14, South Lakes 12

Previous Weeks’ Highlights                                   

Week 8

Week 7

Week 6

Week 5

Week 4

Processing your request, Please wait....

Posted in Uncategorized0 Comments

Alerts

     

    Please log in to vote

    You need to log in to vote. If you already had an account, you may log in here

    Alternatively, if you do not have an account yet you can create one here.