W L Pts OTW OTL
Holy Ghost Prep (12-4-1) 5 2 15 0 0
La Salle (11-6) 5 2 14 1 0
St. Joseph’s Prep (8-7) 3 3 10 0 1
Malvern Prep (3-8) 2 4 6 0 0
Hun School (3-9-2) 0 4 0 0 0
Your Source for High School Hockey
W L Pts OTW OTL
Holy Ghost Prep (12-4-1) 5 2 15 0 0
La Salle (11-6) 5 2 14 1 0
St. Joseph’s Prep (8-7) 3 3 10 0 1
Malvern Prep (3-8) 2 4 6 0 0
Hun School (3-9-2) 0 4 0 0 0
In some aspects, mid-January is the most difficult part of the high-school hockey season. The postseason is still a month away and the players are feeling the grind of the long campaign, particularly if they also play club hockey.
Amidst this atmosphere, Pennridge and Central Bucks South squared off Thursday night at Hatfield Ice in a SHSHL National matchup with potentially long-range implications.
It was the Titans who ground out 4-3 win. Ryan Frey and Jeff Kvecher scored goals 40 seconds apart early in the third period to give South its 11th victory of the season against five setbacks (11-2 in divisional play).
The Rams, who are listed fifth in the newest Class AA Flyers Cup rankings, slipped to 10-4 overall and 9-4 in the division.
It marked the second time the Titans have bested the Rams; the first was a 5-4 overtime win on November 7. In Kvecher’s view, the caliber of the opponent made Thursday’s win particularly satisfying.
“That’s a tough team,” he said of Pennridge. “They put a lot of pressure on us. They have some great guys that can wheel and we did a great job of shutting them down.
“We also sent a message to the league, and the Flyers Cup, that we’re a top team.”
Thursday game came 72 hours after many of the participants completed a full weekend of club tournament play, a circumstance that required an enhanced level of focus.
“Everyone had to dig deep,” Kvecher said. “Everyone was tired, everyone’s legs were tired. We dug deep and we were able to get the win.”
The Titans once more had to come from behind. Pennridge’s Nolan Shaw delivered the only goal of the first period, a power-play effort 3:51 after the opening faceoff that came while South’s Joe Slobodrian was serving a two-minute sentence.
Kvecher and Slobodrian scored power-play goal two-and-a-half minutes apart to give South the lead 5:09 onto the second period before Ryan Burke tied the game for the Ram three-and-a-half minutes later.
Ryan Frey put the Titans in front for good 49 seconds into the final period. Kvecher extended his team’s lead just 40 seconds later and the insurance proved valuable and necessary; Josh Kelly scored for Pennridge with 8:14 remaining. But Jake Matkowski in the South net and his mates in front of him stood tall the rest of the way.
Josh Sklar was in charge behind the Titan bench Thursday night, replacing the absent Shaun McGinty. He said his team had the energy it needed in the third period.
“They definitely had a little more spring in their step, a little more energy,” he said. “They brought the energy all game long but toward the end [two third-period goals] pushes the boys to finish the game out.”
The Titan had a 47-25 edge in shots. Pennridge coach Jeff Montagna says the Titans’ up-tempo style regularly gives his team problems.
“C.B. South is a bad matchup for us,” he said. “They’ve always been a bad matchup for us. They’re deep, they’re good defensively.
“I say this every time we play them; they’re going to get a lot of shots on us by design … We changed defensively how we were going to do things. I thought we did a really good job defensively keeping pucks out of dangerous area. But, they’re a tough team to play.”
Pennridge 1 1 1—3
C.B. South 0 2 2—4
First-period goal: Nolan Shaw (P) from Nick Young and Landon Bishop, 3:51 (pp)
Second-period goals: Jeff Kvecher (CBS) from Ryan Frey and Joe Slobodrian, 2:34 (pp); Slobodrian (CBS) from Frey, 5:09; Ryan Burke (P) from Shane Dachowki and Jared Garber, 8:42.
Third-period goals: Frey (CBS) from Dominic Gibson and Jamison Crouch, :49; Kvecher (CBS) from Peter Herring and Ryan Montagna, 1:29 (); Josh Kelly (P) from James Rush and Dachowski, 8:46
Shots: Pennridge 25, C.B. South 47; Saves: Jacob Winton (P) 43, Jake Matkowski (CBS) 22
Every second counts in a close game. That was borne out Wednesday afternoon when La Salle and St. Joseph’s Prep squared off. Grant LaGreca’s goal with nine tenths of a second remaining in overtime gave the Explorers a 3-2 win at the University of Pennsylvania’s Class of 1923 Rink.
With time winding down in the three-on-three overtime LaGreca, stationed just inside the St. Josephs Prep blue line, turned his body sideways and flipped the puck toward the net and past Hawk goalkeeper Declan Geary. His post-goal celebration brought him a minor penalty but the goal and the victory stood.
“It was coming down to the wire,” LaGreca said, and {one of his teammates} was saying ‘Shoot it.’ I just threw it at the net and it found its way through.”
The result kept the Explorers (11-6, 5-2 in the APAC) in the running for the conference regular-season title although their ray of hope is growing dim. La Salle trails Holy Ghost Prep by one point in the APAC standings with one conference game remaining. The Firebirds have the tiebreaker if the teams finish deadlocked.
Michael Zaezycki gave La Salle a 1-0 lead off a setup from Noel Donohue with 1:20 left in the first period. Donohue made it a 2-0 game with 9:13 left in the second stanza.
At that point the Hawks (8-7, 3-3) who had just 14 skaters and a goaltender on hand, seemed to be at a disadvantage. But they took the ice in the third period with what seemed to be a renewed sense of energy.
It took just 73 seconds for Patrick Sweeney to make it a one-goal game. Noah Stuhl followed up with 11:42 remaining in regulation.
La Salle coach Wally Muehlbronner felt the second period was his team’ best. But momentum shifted after the intermission and ice cut.
“When they got that first one it gave them the momentum that they needed,” Muehlbronner said. “I think we were kind of on our heels a little bit but we managed to come out on top which is what matters the most.”
Ironically in this matchup of rivals, there were no penalties called until La Salle’s Will Gregorio was sent off for slashing with 7:20 left in regulation. The next came 1:08 into overtime when the Hawks’ Frankie Ely was flagged for tripping, giving the Explorers a four-skaters-to-three advantage.
Just s Ely’s penalty expired, Donohue seemingly gave La Salle the win when he launched a rocket from the right wing that beat Geary. But goal was immediately disallowed on the grounds the net had become dislodged.
The countdown to the dramatic finish ensued from there.
Although the Hawks came up short on the scoreboard, St. Joseph’s Prep coach David Giacomin was impressed with the effort his team have him.
“I was very proud of the effort our boys put out,” he said. They really paid attention to detail and fought back. It was a tough way to lose but being so shorthanded it was nice to see us compete.”
Jake Rossi got the win in goal, making 27 saves along the way.
“I think {Rossi} was very calm in goal,” Muehlbronner said. “I think that helped keep the guys focused on just trying to get our game back. I do think the seniors did a good job.”
La Salle 1 1 0 1—3
St. Joseph’s Prep 0 0 2 0—2
First-period goal: Michael Zarycki (L) from Nole Donohue, 15:40
Second-period goal: Donohue (L) Julian Tarsi and Michael Esmond, 7:47
Third-period goals: Patrick Sweeney (SJP) unassisted, 1:13; Noah Stuhl (SJP) from Adam Charrafi, 5:18
Overtime goal: Grant LaGreca (L) from Julian Tarsi, 4:59
Shots: La Salle 38, St. Joseph’s Prep 29; Saves: Jake Rossi (L) 27, Declan Geary (SJP) 35
For more information about La Salle College High School CLICK HERE
For more information about St. Joseph’s Prep CLICK HERE
Four different player scored goal as Malvern Prep shut out Hun School 4-0 Wednesday afternoon in an APAC game at Ice Line.
The win broke the Friars’ seven-game losing streak and lifted them to 3-8 overall and 2-4 in conference play. The Raiders fell to 3-9-2 and 0-4 in the APAC.
Gabe Bdwell gave his team the lead with a shorthanded goal 8:19 into the first period.
The hosts broke the game open in the third period when Jake Weingartner, Teague Murray, and Finn Gatta scored goals in a span of 7 minutes, 26 seconds.
Matt Crawford earned the shutout in goal with 28 saves.
Hun School 0 0 0—0
Malvern Prep 1 0 3—4
First-period goal: Gabe Bedwell (MP) unassisted, 8:19 (sh) Teague Murray (MP) from Matt Barbacanem 7:41 (pp); Finn Gatta (MP) from James Young, 11:29
Third-period goals: Jake Weingartner (MP) unassisted, 4:03;
Shots: Hun School 28, Malvern Prep 40; Saves: Elliot Wong (HS) 36, Matt Crawford (MP) 28
The Firebirds and the Blues skated to a draw Wednesday afternoon at the Eccleston Rink on the Hill School campus in Pottstown.
W L Pts OTW OTL
Holy Ghost Prep (12-4) 5 2 15 0 0
La Salle (10-6) 4 2 12 0 0
St. Joseph’s Prep (8-6) 3 2 9 0 0
Malvern Prep (2-7) 1 4 3 0 0
Hun School (3-8-2) 0 3 0 0 0
Scoring (Conference Games) GP G A Pts PPG
Brady Logue HGP 7 8 10 18 2.57
Grant LaGreca La 6 8 1 9 1.50
Cole Gagron SJP 5 6 1 7 1.40
Frank Ely La 5 1 5 6 1.20
Michael Zarzycki La 6 4 3 7 1.17
Chase Logue HGP 7 3 4 7 1.00
Anthony Valeriote HGP 7 4 3 7 1.00
Save Percentage GP Shots GA Save %
Jake Rossi La 6 170 12 .929
John Botthof HGP 2 64 5 .922
Patrick Donoghue HS 2 109 10 .908
Declan Geary SJP 4 93 9 .903
Matt Crawford MP 4 120 12 .900
Goals Against MP GA GAA
Jake Rossi La 304 12 2.01
Declan Geary SJP 204 9 2.25
John Botthof HGP 102 5 2.50
Matt Salita HGP 102 5 2.50
Jack Unger HGP 153 8 2.67
Matt Crawford MP 204 12 3.00
National Division W L T PTS OTW OTL
C.R. South (14-1) 12 0 0 45 3 0
North Penn (12-2) 11 2 0 45 0 1
Pennridge (10-3) 9 3 0 38 0 2
C.B. South (9-4) 9 2 0 33 3 0
Pennsbury (5-8) 5 7 0 22 0 2
C.B. East (4-8) 4 7 0 16 0 0
Neshaminy (4-7) 3 8 0 13 0 1
Souderton (3-9) 3 8 0 12 0 0
C.R. North (3-10) 3 10 0 12 0 0
C.B. West (0-12) 0 12 0 0 0 0
American Division W L T PTS OTW OTL
Plymouth Whitemarsh (11-0) 10 0 0 40 0 0
Hatboro-Horsham (6-5) 6 4 0 24 1 1
Wissahickon (6-4) 6 3 0 23 1 0
Springfield (2-8) 2 8 0 9 0 1
Abington (0-10) 0 9 0 0 0 0
National Division Scoring G A Pts
Shane Dachwski Pr 28 20 48
Jeremy Rayher 23 22 45
Cole Pluck NP 17 25 42
James Rush Pr 19 20 39
Jackson Accardi CRN 23 15 38
Samuel Norton NP 16 22 38
Jake Weiner CRS 25 11 36
Jordan Sarne CRS 11 19 30
Nolan Shingle NP 17 12 29
Ivan Bondra CRN 16 10 26
Matthew Cross Soud 17 8 25
Landon Bishop Pr 9 16 25
Chris Sarver Pb 10 14 24
American Division Scoring G A Pts
Vincent Graziani HH 14 17 31
Dan Guller PW 10 20 30
Nathan Nemchinov HH 15 12 27
Darius Graziani HH 9 13 22
Ben Raebiger Wiss 16 4 20
Victor Wilkins HH 15 5 20
Cooper Kanze PW 10 9 19
Luke Smith PW 6 12 18
Blake Ambler PW 9 7 16
Braydon Russo scored three goals in a span of 5:08 in the first period as the Tide bested Malvern Prep 3-1 on Wednesday at Ice Line.
Teague Murray scored for the Friars in the third period.
C.B. East-North Penn
Cole Pluck scored two goals, including the game winner with 7:27 left in the third period, as North Penn bested Central Bucks East 3-1 Wednesday night in a SHSHL National Division skirmish at Hatfield Ice.
The win lifted the Knights (12-2, 11-2 in the division) into a tie for first place in the National Division standings with Council Rock South; the Golden Hawks have a game in hand. North Penn was listed third in the latest set of Class AA Flyers Cup rankings that were released on Monday.
Pluck scored the first goal of the night during a power play when he beat Cole Breen in the East net with 1:20 left in the second period.
The Patriots (4-8, 4-7 in the division) got the equalizer from Jaden Young 37 seconds into the final period.
Pluck’s winning goal came just seconds after the Patriots’ Charlie Keiser was accessed a double-minor penalty for slashing and unsportsmanlike conduct.
Nolan Shingle added the last goal of the night for North Penn with 49 seconds remaining.
“We did a lot of good things offensively and played much better defensively than we did last Friday (in an 8-7 win over Souderton) said North Penn coach Kevin Vaitis. “Central Bucks East is very good defensive team and Breen in goal might be one of the best in the league. I was glad to see the boys continue to work hard offensively and cycle the puck and eventually led to some goals. We spent some time cleaning up our power play at practice and I think it showed with two goals tonight.
“Aidan Quigley stood strong in net for us when needed as well.”
North Penn 0 1 2—3
C.B. East 0 0 1—1
Second-period goal: Cole Pluck (NP) from Declan Leahy, 15:40
Third-period goal: Jaden Young (CBE) unassisted, :37; Pluck (NP) from Chase Kelly Del Ricci and Danial Cabrales; Nolan Shingle (NP) from Samuel Norton, 16:11
Shots: North Penn 36, C.B. East 13 Saves: Cole Breen (CBE) 33. Aidan Quigley (NP) 12
The journey wasn’t easy at times. But, in the end, Holy Ghost Prep got the result it wanted Wednesday afternoon, a 4-1 decision over The Hun School in an APAC encounter at Ice Land.
With the win, the Firebirds, who have won eight of their last nine starts improved to 12-4 overall and 5-2 in the APAC. They’ll conclude conference play with a rematch against the Raiders next Friday.
The visitors jumped in front early on. Joe Spadaccino scored a power-play goal 3:30 into the opening period.
But the remainder of the first frame was challenging for both sides, a study in old-time hockey. There were 12 penalties called in the opening session.
“It didn’t seem like there was much flow to the game early on,” said Hun School coach Eric Szeker.
The visitors had the better of the play over the first two periods but were stymied repeatedly by Patrick Donoghue in the Hun School net. The senior finished with 51 saves. The Raiders are just 2-8-2 on the season (0-3 in the APAC) but Donoghue and Elliot Wong have been sold in goal all season.
“I think the one really nice thing is we have two really good goalies,” Szeker said. “I never worry about who is going between the pipes for us. They work hard, they’re best friends in the locker room, and they push each other every day.”
Anthony Valeriote extended Holy Ghost Prep’s lead 35 second into the third period but the Raiders responded a minute-and-a-half later when the Firebirds coughed up the puck directly in front of their own net, making it a one-goal game once more.
Brian Kinniry extended his team’s lead when he scored with 11:39 left in the third frame and then delivered an insurance goal with 2:01 remaining.
Spadaccino didn’t play in the last two periods but was proud of the way his teammates were able to get past the challenging first frame.
“It shows that no matter what gets in our path, we just keep on fighting,” he said. “We try to get to the end goal of winning.”
Firebird goaltender Matt Salita stopped 14 of the 15 shots he saw, earning praise from his coach John Ritchie.
“I thought Salita did a great job in net for a sophomore,” Ritchie said. “Those are tough games for goalies, only facing 15 shots dispersed throughout the game with power plays for them and stretches where he wasn’t seeing pucks.”
The Firebirds are listed first in the Class AAA Flyers Cup rankings that were released on Monday, but Ritchie says his team will need contributions from the entire lineup to reach its potential.
“We have a couple guys on our roster that carry the weight of this team on their backs game in and game out,” he said. “I know what to expect from them, so it’s just about getting all 20 guys, or all 18 skaters, to pull the rope in the same direction.”
Holy Ghost Prep 1 0 3—4
Hun School 0 0 1—1
First-period goals: Joe Spadaccino (HGP) from Brady Logue, 3:30 (pp)
Third-period goals: Anthony Valeriote (HGP) from Chase Logue and Brady Logue, :35; Luke Rassler (HS) unassisted, 2:03; Brian Kinniry (HGP) from Logan Barnes and Colin Bara, 5:21; Kinniry (HGP) from Barnes and Santino Tiberio, 14:59
Shots: Holy Ghost Prep 55, Hun School 15; Saves: Matt Salita (HGP) 14, Patrick Donoghue (HS) 51