Girls soccer: Woodbridge edges Sailors
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Tony Altobelli
NEWPORT BEACH - Apparently the washer does eliminate the power of
superstition.
For highly-superstitious Newport Harbor High girls soccer coach Jason
Sorrell, Thursday’s 1-0 Sea View League loss to Woodbridge was the
occurrence of more than just solid play by the Warriors.
“I knew I shouldn’t have washed them,” Sorrell jokingly said of his
socks, the same ones he wore in Tuesday’s 2-0 win over Laguna Hills.
On a more serious note, it was the Warriors, ranked No. 4 in CIF Southern
Section Division II, who negated any supernatural powers, outshooting the
Sailors 17-6 for the game.
“You gotta hand it to them,” Sorrell said. “They have a very strong team
over there. We just couldn’t get anything going.”
Off a header from Siera Cristiano, Woodbridge’s Sandra Martinez directed
a shot past Newport goalie Amy Niles into the net 10 minutes into the
second half for the game’s lone goal.
From there, the Warriors went on the defensive, allowing the Sailors
(2-7-2, 1-2-0 in league) some opportunities to score, but to no avail.
“We had some opportunities in the second half, but we couldn’t make that
last pass for us to get a good shot off,” Sorrell said. “I told the
forwards to get a little more greedy and that gave us some
opportunities.”
Early in the first half, freshman Amy Burlingham broke free after
stealing the ball, but her shot to the right goal post missed and shot
away.
Minutes later off another steal, Katie Yeager tried a lob shot over the
Warriors’ goalie, but her attempt went just above the crossbar and out of
play.
From there, it was all Woodbridge, keeping the ball on Newport’s side of
the field for most of the first half.
Solid saves by Niles kept the game scoreless.
“Amy played real strong for us back there,” Sorrell said. “She came up
big for us when she had to.”
Near the end of the first half, Tory Manchester managed to rip a shot,
but was denied by Woodbridge goalie Megan Druding.
Despite a scoreless first half, the Sailors knew that adjustments had to
be made to keep the game close.
“We pretty much just sat back and defended in the first half,” Sorrell
said. “We needed to start attacking more and take some more chances out
there.”
But it was Woodbridge (9-2-1, 1-0-1) which applied the early pressure.
After Niles shot out of the goal to negate a breakaway chance by
Cristiano, the ball popped loose, but Manchester did a solid job of
backing up the play and kicking the ball out of harm’s way.
But it was Cristiano, who would have the last laugh, setting up Martinez
for the goal moments later.
“We had played such great defense for the whole game,” Sorrell said. “We
just had a little defensive lapse and they took advantage of it.”
On the next trip down the field, Newport nearly tied the score, but a
header tip by Satya Tweena just sailed over the crossbar.
Tweena and Burlingham had to pull off some fancy footwork just to get by
the stingy Woodbridge defense.
“Once they scored that goal, they all just fell back and stopped
attacking. It was real tough to get anything going in their zone.”
Senior Lauren Birchfield and junior Laura Kauth managed to break free on
separate scoring opportunities, but both shots failed to find the back of
the net.
With time running out, Tweena kept the pressure on the Warriors, but
Woodbridge hung tough.
Finally, with a Tweena corner kick corralled by backup goalie Emmie
Dokolil, time ran out.
Niles finished the game with 13 saves, while Woodbridge’s goalies
combined for seven stops.
Sorrell was also pleased with the defensive effort of junior Meredith
Miller, but pointed out a total team effort by his players.
“I couldn’t ask for much more from my players,” Sorrell said.
“Defensively, we had one lapse that hurt us, but the effort is definitely
there. I think this is a game we can definitely build from. We just have
to keep working hard and we’ll get it done.”
Next up for the Sailors is a trip to Aliso Niguel High to take on the
Wolverines Thursday at 3:15 p.m.
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