Sailors lose a nail-biter
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Bryce Alderton
The first week of November brings with it shorter days, election
fever and, for the past three years, Newport Harbor High battling
Harvard-Westlake in the Los Angeles Field Hockey Association
Tournament of Champions title game.
The past two title tilts produced 1-0 and 2-0 decisions by
Harvard-Westlake and Newport, respectively, and Thursday’s latest
edition at Fountain Valley High didn’t deviate from the low-scoring,
hard-fought outputs of the past.
Goals were hard to come by once again, except when
Harvard-Westlake sophomore Brenna Moeljadi scored 12 minutes into the
second half, giving the Wolverines the only lead they would need in
an eventual 1-0 victory to seal their second title in three seasons.
The top-seeded Sailors (18-4-5) mounted a rush with less than a
minute remaining -- forcing one of their four corners -- but were
denied a second straight title by a team that didn’t allow a goal in
three tournament contests. Harvard-Westlake (12-2-4) outscored its
three TOC opponents, 12-0.
The Sailors, who won the Sunset League championship for the fourth
time in five seasons and competed in their fifth straight tournament
title game, outscored their prior two opponents (Chaminade and
Glendora), 3-0.
“[The Wolverines] were ready to play, but we were, too,” Newport
senior midfielder, captain and four-year varsity member Jenny Taylor
said. “[Losing] is tough, though.”
Taylor, along with junior Sasha Grumman and senior Lyndsi Foster,
who each earned all-tournament honors, were kept extremely busy at
midfield for most of the contest as both teams had difficulty
breaking deep into the other squad’s zone.
“It was like a fight for who could get the ball out,” Newport
Coach Kristy Cross said. “Both teams were so strong that no one could
hit it out.”
Moeljadi’s goal came on one of the Wolverines’ seven penalty
corners. Taylor blocked a shot by Moeljadi, but the rebound rolled to
the Wolverine’s leading goal-scorer and she rifled it into the cage
from 10 yards out.
In the first half, the Wolverines earned three corners in
succession, but came away empty-handed when Newport goalkeeper Ciara
Lawrence dove to her left to deflect a shot by Moeljadi. Lawrence
finished with four saves.
Newport tallied six of its seven shots in the second half with an
increased rush up field.
Three of the Sailors’ strongest scoring chances came in the final
30 minutes. Senior Amanda Fallon sent a pass to senior captain Reese
Simmons for a one-timer that rolled left of the goal.
About 15 minutes later, Foster’s corner hit found Grumman, who
cleanly struck the ball. But Wolverine goalkeeper Madeline Jacobs
moved over to tally her only save.
Minutes later Grumman took control at the top of the penalty box
and found Taylor, whose shot rolled a few feet left.
Taylor, senior Julia Bernay, Fallon and Lara Schilling also fired
shots for the Sailors.
Newport, though, couldn’t get a shot off on its final corner
attempt with the Wolverines stacking their entire defense within the
penalty box.
The Sailors’ defense turned in an equally strong effort. Defenders
Ashton Rief, Darci Pennington and junior Jackie Taylor each stopped
Wolverine advances and sent passes to forwards Danica Kalmbach and
Sienna Palmer.
“The midfield stepped up and the defense played awesome,” Jenny
Taylor said.
There was little denying Newport’s unity, even in defeat.
Players posed for pictures and then embraced an adjacent teammate
in the postgame aftermath.
“The loss is frustrating, but [Newport] is the best hockey team
I’ve seen,” said Cross, who played forward at Del Mar High in San
Jose. “We have a lot of people who put their heart into it to move
the ball around and click on the field. These are tough girls.”
Foster shared Cross’ sentiments.
“We did the best we could do all season,” Foster said. “This is
the greatest feeling in the world. We worked the whole year to make
it [to the title game] again.”
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