2019 Flyers Cup Schedule

Here is the complete Flyers Cup 2019 game schedule

Game times and sites are subject to change

Class AAA

Quarterfinals

# 1  1 LaSalle has a bye

Wednesday, March 6

#2  4 Holy Ghost Prep vs. 5 Father Judge   8:40 at Grundy

#3  3  Cardinal O’Hara vs 6 St. Joseph’s Prep  6:15 at Skatium

Thursday, March 7

#4  2 Malvern Prep vs 7 Roman Catholic  8:00 at Ice Line

 

Semifinals

Thursday, March 14

LaSalle vs Winner of Game 2  7:00 at Hatfield

Winners of Games 3 and 4   6:30 at Ice Line

Championship Game

Sunday, March 17 7:00 at Wells Fargo Center. 7:00

 

Class AA

First Round: All Games Wednesday, March 6

# 1  1 Downingtown East vs Council Rock South 5:30 at Ice Line

# 2  8 Neshaminy vs. 9 Parkland 7:00 at Grundy

# 3  4 Pennridge vs. 13 Garnet Valley 8:40 at Hatfied

# 4  5 North Penn vs. 12 Pennsbury 7:00 at Hatfield

# 5  3  Conestoga vs. 14 Perkiomen Valley 8:50 at Ice Line

#6   6 Haverford vs. Central Bucks East 8:00 at Skatium

# 7   7 Boyertown vs. 10 Central Bucks West 7:10 at Ice Line

# 8   2 Central Bucks South vs. 15 Downingtown West 7:15 at Rev. Ice Gardens

 

Quarterfinals: All Games March 11

Winners of Games 1 and 2 6:15 at Ice Line

Winners of Games 3 and 4 7:00 at Hatfield

Winners of Games 5 and 6  8:00 at Ice Line

Winners of Games 7 and 8  7:15 at Rev. Ice Gardens

 

Semifinals

Thursday, March 14

Upper Bracket  6:15 at Ice Line

 

Wednesday, March 13

Lower Bracket 7:00 at Hatfield

 

Championship Game

Sunday, March 17 at Wells Fargo Center 4:30 P.M.

 

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If you would like to promote your product or service on Hockey Happenings during the Flyers Cup tournament e-mail us HERE

 

Class A

First Round

# 1  1 Bayard Rustin vs. 16 Sun Valley 3-5 at Ice Line, 6:30

#2   8  Lower Merion vs.  9 O.J. Roberts 3-4 at Skatium, 8:00

#3   4  West Chester East vs. 13 Wissahckon 3-4 at Ice Line, 5:30

#4   5 Palmyra vs. 12 Springfield Delco 3-5 at Ice Line, 8:15

#5   3 WC Henderson vs 14 Kennett 3-4 at Ice Line, 7:10

#6   6 Hershey vs. 11 Plymouth Whitemarsh 3-4 at Ice Line, 8:50

#7   7 Lower Moreland vs 10 Unionville 3-4 7:45 at Rev. Ice Gardens

#8   2 Strath Haven vs. Hatboro-Horsham 3-5 at Aston, 7:30

 

Quarterfinals: All Games March 7

Winners of Games 1  and 2  5:30 at Ice Line

Winners of Games 3 and 4   6:45 at Ice Line

Winners of Games 5 and 6   7:10 at Ice Line

Winners of Games 7 and 8   7:30  at Aston

 

Semifinals

Tuesday, March 12

Upper Bracket 7:00 at Ice Line

Wednesday, March 13

Lower Bracket 6:30 at Ice Line

 

Championship Game

Sunday, March 17 at Wells Fargo Center 2:00

 

Girls

Semifinals

1 Unionville has a bye

2 West Chester East vs West Chester Rustin 8:45 at Ice Line

Championship Game

Sunday, March 17 at Wells Fargo Center 9:45 A.M.

Unionville vs.  Semifinal winner

 

 

 

Flyers Cup Seedings

The seedings and pairings for the 40th Flyers Cup will be announced on Sunday.

The announcements will originate from the Brick House in Horsham.

Hockey Happenings will be part of the live webcast at http://portal.stretchinternet.com/SFBN

You can promote your product or service on Hockey Happenings starting today and all the way through the Flyers Cup playoffs. E-mail us for details.

 

 

APAC Update 2-20-18

Final Regular Season Standings

W          L         OTW    OTL         Pts

LaSalle  (18-6)                  8            0           1            0           26

Malvern Prep (12-4)       5            3           1            0           17

Holy Ghost Prep (7-12)   1           5            0            3           6

St. Joseph’s Prep (6-16)  1          7            1            0            5

The Founders Cup playoff semifinals are scheduled for Monday, February 25 with top-seeded LaSalle hosting St. Joseph’s Prep ( 4 p.m. at Hatfield Ice) and second-seeded Malvern Prep hosting Holy Ghost Prep  at 4:40 at Ice Line.

The Founders Cup championship game will be played on Wednesday, February 27 and will be hosted by the highest seeded finalist.

 

Scoring Leaders                   Goals      Assists      Points

Sam Lipkin La                          11           19              30

Daniel Sambuco La                  14           15              29

Michael Casey   La                    9            16              25

Byron Hartley    HGP               14           16              20

Nick Martino  MP                       9              8               17

Alex D’Angelo     HGP               4             11              15

Andrew Serafin HGP                7                7              14

Jan Olenginski Ls                      4                10            14

Colin Costello HGP                    8                  4           12

Vincent Borgessi SJP              5                 5             10

Daniel Behr HGP                      2                  7             9

Evan Mudrick HGP                 6                 3             9

Kyle Washkalavitch MP         4                 5             9

Fabrizio Mazzarelli              4                  5              9

Malvern Prep Wins APAC Finale

Malvern Prep defeated St. Joseph’s Prep 3-2 on Tuesday in an Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference game at Ice Line.

The Friars closed the regular season at 12-4 and 5-3-1-0 in conference play. The Hawks concluded the season at 6-16 overall and 1-7-1-0 in the APAC.

 

Here are the final regular season standings

 

 

Won      Lost      OTW      OTL      Pts

LaSalle  (18-6)                  8            0           1            0           26

Malvern Prep (12-4)       5            3           1            0           17

Holy Ghost Prep (7-12)   1           5            0            3           6

St. Joseph’s Prep (6-16)  1          7            1            0            5

The APAC semifinals are scheduled for Monday with top-seeded LaSalle hosting St. Joseph’s Prep and second-seeded Malvern Prep hosting Holy Ghost Prep.

The championship game is scheduled for next Wednesday, February 27.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Holy Ghost Prep Remains Committed to its Original Mission

The following is advertorial content

The underlying philosophy at Holy Ghost Preparatory School has always been about the importance of service, to fellow students and the school community, and to the world at large.

Founded in 1897 by Fr. John Tuohill Murphy C.S.Sp, the institution was originally a combination prep school and junior-college seminary. In 1959, the school opened its doors to non-seminarians. The seminary was discontinued eight years later and Holy Ghost Prep was created in 1968.

While the structure of the institution has evolved over time, Ryan Abramson, the admissions director and a Holy Ghost Prep graduate himself, emphasizes that its underlying philosophy remains unchanged.

“The school was founded by the Spiritans,” he said, “which is essentially a missionary order. So, most of the people that join the religious order that runs Holy Ghost Prep end up leaving the U.S. and working in missions all over the planet that are in some of the poorest communities that you can go to.

“What we try to do here is try to put students in a situation where  they have they have the ability to be successful but then to understand that their success is measured by the ability to help others, as opposed to whatever individual success they might have. So, whether it’s community service or the way they reach out and help their classmates, whether it’s how they participate in the community, the idea is that your greatness or your successes are always measured by your ability to lift other people up to that same level.”

The student body at Holy Ghost Prep numbers approximately 450 boys in grades 9-12. About 60 percent of the students come from Catholic grade schools, the other 40 percent from public schools throughout the area.

“We’re looking for students that are engaged,” Abramson said, “students that are focused. But primarily, students that are going to be interested in participating in an environment where the school becomes their life, where you challenge yourself more than you thought you would. Students that willing to work really hard in school, more than maybe they ever have before, with the idea that the focus at the end of the day is to prepare them to have the skills to be successful in college and the skills to be successful after college.”

The school day is structured with those goals in mind.

“We have an enormous amount of free time,” Abramson said. “Our students are given tons and tons of opportunities to be in a situation where they have to make good decisions.

“And so, during a typical school day, a student might not have class for an hour, an hour and 20 minutes where he has to make decisions about how he’s going to use the time, whether it’s preparing for a test, whether its meeting with a teacher for extra help, whether it’s getting ahead because he plays a sport or is involved an after-school activity and he’s going to miss time at home and so he get those things done during the school day. But the idea is to learn those time management schools and the responsibility of being able to manage your time on your own, rather than have somebody that always tells you what to do.”

Abramson says that new students develop those skills in part from emulating the upperclassmen. He points out that the size of the student body encourages relationships between students of all grade levels.

“Those relationships that those freshmen have with seniors are not on the surface,” he said. “Those freshmen know those seniors and those seniors know those freshmen. They know their names, they know something about them. They know where they went to grade school, they know where they went to middle school, what sport they play, what activity they’ve been a part of so that behavior is not being seen in a generic sense, but that behavior is being seen through a personal relationship. And so, that that freshman acts a certain way because he sees a senior who he knows doing that. So, he wants to be like that individual as opposed just some kind of thing that you read on a piece of paper, or see in a really generic sense.”

In keeping with the school’s founding mission, students must fulfill a service requirement each year, 10 hours per academic year for underclassmen, 20 hours for upperclassmen.

“Again, it’s the idea of lifting others up,” Abramson said. “And so, we have students that do projects. We have students that go to the Dominican Republic, that will spend three weeks in Tanzania and East Africa. We have students that will do local things. We had a whole group of students that traveled Martin Luther King Day weekend for service projects at the Romero Center in Camden and in Philadelphia at St. John’s Hospice. So we have students that do lots of different kinds of service with that idea; that service needs to be hands on for people in need.

“There are lots of ways to do service where you’re making things at home and they’re certainly wonderful activities, but what we want is to see our students do hand-on (service) with people that are in need. So, that, again, you can lift people up.”

Students are encouraged to share their accounts of their community service experiences with their peers. “The experience of service for a student is not simply about what he learns,” Abramson said, “but what he is able to be taught by people that can be very different from him.

“We have a lot of students that have done really remarkable things with their community service. And more importantly, they come back and they share those experiences with their classmates, so that they can also benefit from the things that they learned.”

Like the other schools in the Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference, Holy Ghost Prep is committed to maintaining an athletic program that embraces the philosophy of the institution.

Abramson says it’s important to retain coaches that embrace that philosophy as well. “I think what’s amazing to me about the hiring of coaches is these coaches find you,” he said. “Just as much as you want to find those personalities, there are great, great individuals out there that want that as well. Just like a student that wants to come to Holy Ghost there are coaches that want to be in an environment that embraces all of those values as well.”

 

Click Here For more information about Holy Ghost Preparatory School

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LaSalle 6, Holy Ghost Prep 3

By Rick Woelfel

BRISTOL— On the surface, there wasn’t a lot at stake when LaSalle and Holy Ghost Prep took the ice at Grundy Arena Monday afternoon. The Explorers had already clinched the Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference’s regular-season title.

But no meeting on the ice between the two longtime rivals can ever be classified as routine. The intensity level was as high as ever over the course of LaSalle’s 6-3 win.

“It’s a great rivalry game,” said LaSalle coach Wally Meuhlbronner. “It has been for years.”

Special teams played a significant role in this occasion, particularly in the early going. Referee Laura White tolerated no nonsense and called six penalties in the first period. Three of them led to power-play goals.

Colin Costello got things started when he scored for the Firebirds (7-12, 1-8 in the APAC with three losses in overtime or a shootout) off a left-wing faceoff. Michael Casey tied the game for LaSalle (18-6, 9-0 with one win in overtime) at 10:05 but Richard Spore put Holy Ghost Prep back in front at 11:46 when he beat Explorer netminder Aidan McCabe off a nifty feed from Alex D’Angelo.

Fabrizzio Mazzarelli tied the game for a second time when he scored for LaSalle on yet another power-play situation 3:01 into the second period.

Some three minutes later McCabe denied the Firebirds’ Byron Hartley on a two-on-none breakaway and momentum began to shift in LaSalle’s direction, David Brunner scored on a breakaway of his own off a turnover at 11:54 to give his team the lead.

The Firebirds battled through a stretch that found then playing two men short for 89 seconds and it was still a one-goal game after 32 minutes.

But Casey (on a power play) and Bryan Evans scored to make it a 5-2 game 3:57 into the third period to put the Explorers firmly in command. The Firebirds’ Evan Mudrick and LaSalle’s Daniel Sambuco traded goals to complete the scoring.

The temperature of the game cooled off a bit after the frenzied start; there were six penalties called over the last two periods.

“We were a little frustrated in the beginning,” said LaSalle captain Zach Baker, a senior defenseman. “Coach had to calm us down. Everyone was contained in the locker room in between (after the second period). In the first we were a little rattled, off our game, but ever since the end of the first we kind of stuck to our normal game plan and got things going.”

If you’re counting, five of the nine goals in the game came on power plays, including three of LaSalle’s six.

“I thought we did some good things early on,” said Holy Ghost Prep coach Gump Whiteside, “but you’ve just got to be disciplined and stay out of the box. We told them what was going to happen but unfortunately, we just couldn’t get it done today.”

 

 

LaSalle (18-8, 9-0, 1 in OT)

HGP 7-12, 1-8, 3 losses in OT)

 

 

LaSalle 1 2 3—6

Holy Ghost Prep 2 0 1—3

First-period goals: Colin Costello (HGP) from Alex D’Angelo and Andrew Serafin, 7:38 (pp); Michael Casey (L) from Daniel Sambuco and Sam Lipkin, 10:05 (pp); Richard Spohr (HGP) from D’Angelo, 11:46 (pp).

Second-period goals: Fabrizzio Mazzarelli (L) from Lipkin and Jan Olenginski, 11:54; David Brunner (L) unassisted, 11:54.

Third-period goals: Casey (L) from Lipkin, 2:10 (pp); Bryan Evans (L) from Sean Keaveny, 3:57; Evan Mudrick (HGP) unassisted, 6:47; Daniel Sambuco (L) from Lipkin, 11:49.

Shots: LaSalle 28, Holy Ghost Prep 27; Saves: Aidan McCabe (L) 24, Sean Joyce (HGP) 22

 

 

 

Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference Update 2-10-19

Standings through 2-11-19

 

 

Won      Lost      OTW      OTL      Pts

LaSalle  (18-6)                  8            0           1            0           26

Malvern Prep (11-4)       4            3           1            0           14

Holy Ghost Prep (7-12)   1           5            0            3           6

St. Joseph’s Prep (6-15)  1          6            1            0            5

Teams receive 3 points for a regulation win

2 points for a win in OT or SO

1 point for a loss in OT or SO

0   points for a loss in regulation

Remaining League Game

Tuesday  2-12  St. Joseph’s Prep at Malvern Prep, 3:55 at Ice Line

 

Playoff Semifinals

Monday, 2-25  Seed 4 at LaSalle  4:00 at Hatfield Ice

Seed 3 at Malvern Prep TBA at Ice Line

 

Championship Game

Wednesday 2-27 hosted by highest seeded finalist

 

Scoring Leaders (conference games only through 2-7 )

Scoring                                    Games          Goals         Assists     Points

Sam Lipkin     La                        8                 9               13              22

Daniel Sambuco La                   8                   8               12            20

Michael Casey La                     8                   5               12            17

Nick Martino MP                      6                   6                 7            13

Byron Hartley   HGP               7                    7                2               9

Kyle Washkalavitch La           7                  4                 5               9

Jan Olenginski LaSalle            7                 3                  5               8

Alex D’Angelo HGP                  6                2                  3                5

Eric Pohl  HGP                          8                2                 3                5

Andrew Serafin                       8                2               3                 5

Kenny Connors                         5               2               3                  5

Brandon Leer La                          8           4               1                   5

Holy Ghost Prep 5, St. Joseph’s Prep 3

PHILADELPHIA—Byron Hartley scored the winning goal 1:13 into the third period and Holy Ghost Prep went on to defeat St. Joseph’s Prep 5-3 Monday night in an Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference game at the University of Pennsylvania’s Class of 1923 Rink.

The win was the first for the Firebirds in eight conference starts and moved them into third place in the standings; they improved to 7-11 overall and 1-7 in the APAC with three of those conference losses coming in overtime or a shootout.

The Hawks dropped to 6-16 overall and 2-6 in league play with one of those wins coming in a shootout (over Holy Ghost Prep). They sit in fourth place in the standings with five points.

Michael Urbani and Mark Stahl gave St. Joseph’s Prep a 2-0 lead 6:46 into the first period when they scored goals 99 seconds apart. Urbani’s goal came on a power play.

Colin Costello got the Firebirds on the scoreboard just six seconds after Stahl’s goal before goals from Alex D’Angelo and Aidan Mulholland put them up 3-2 with 3:49 left in the opening session.

Stahl tied the game for the Hawks with his second goal of the game 5:40 into the second stanza and the game remained deadlocked until Hartley put Holy Ghost Prep in front 1:15 into the third period. The power-play goal cane while the Hawks were two men short. Harley scored into an empty net with 26 seconds left in regulation.

 

Holy Ghost Prep 3 0 2—5

St. Joseph’s Prep 2 1 0

First-period goals: Michael Urbani (SJP) from Evan Cassidy and Vincent Borgesi, 5:07 (pp); Mark Stahl (SJP) from Urbani and Nick Corrado, 6:46; Colin Costello (HGP) from Byron Hartley and Andrew Serafin, 6:52; Alex D’Angelo (HGP) unassisted, 8:13; Aidan Mulholland (HGP) unassisted, 12:11.

Second-period goal: Stahl (SJP) from Matt Moresco and Brody Piourde, 5:40.

Third-period goals: Hartley (HGP) from Jake Marek, 1:15 (pp); Hartley (HGP) from Evan Mudrick

Shots: Holy Ghost Prep 29, St. Joseph’s Prep 25

LaSalle 5, Malvern Prep 1

By Rick Woelfel

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP—The LaSalle Explorers made it official Wednesday afternoon. Daniel Sambuco scored two goals and assisted on a third to give his team a 5-1 win over Malvern Prep in an Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference game at Hatfield Ice.

The win officially gives LaSalle (16-6 overall) the APAC regular-season title. The Explorers are a perfect 8-0 in conference play (with one win coming in overtime) and one league game left, on Monday against Holy Ghost Prep.

The Explorers and the Friars (11-4, 5-3 in conference with one win in overtime) will be seeded one-two in the APAC playoffs and will host semifinal games on February 25th. Both will move on to the Flyers Cup tournament from there.

Sambuco got the day off to a good start for the Explorers by scoring on a shot from the left circle with 2:56 left in the first frame. LaSalle extended its lead with 10 seconds left in the period when Nathan Benner scored a deflected goal on a play that originated behind the Malvern Prep net and appeared to catch goaltender Dan Dougherty unawares.

Sambuco and Andrew Budzynski scored goals 73 seconds apart to put LaSalle up 4-0 les than two minutes into the second period but the Friars, who were without their sniper, Nick Martino, due to a lower body injury, but they didn’t back off or back down.

“In the second period they had some really good pressure on us I thought” said LaSalle coach Wally Meuhlbronner. “I don’t know that our puck movement was so strong, but Malvern played a really good game. We’ve got to be prepared for every game from here on out.”

The Explorers didn’t buckle however until the 8:04 mark of the period when Jack Constabile scored a power-play goal for the Friars off a scramble in front of LaSalle goaltender Aidan McCabe. It was just the eighth goal surrendered by the Explorers in eight conference games.

“We’ve got a solid defense in the back,” said LaSalle senior defenseman Bryan Evans. “We love to play a hard, physical game and I think teams A. can’t keep up with our physicality and B. can’t keep up with our speed.”

Malvern Prep coach Dave Dorman presided his team’s tenacity. “There was no quit in the game,” he said, “which was the most important thing for us. I thought the bench stuck together, the kids kept competing, and I was happy for that.”

Brandon Leer completed the scoring for LaSalle with 3:04 left in the third period. The Explorers enjoyed a 40-22 edge in shots.

Notes: The four LaSalle seniors, Evans, Leer, Zach Baker, and Sean Keaveney were recognized before the game.
Malvern Prep 0 1 0—1
LaSalle 2 2 1—5
First-period goals: Daniel Sambuco (L) from Sam Lipkin, 13:04; Nathan Brennan (L) from Ryan Ferry, 15:50.
Second-period goals: Sambuco (L) from Lipkin, :25; Andrew Budzynski (L) from Benner, 1:38; Jack Constabile (MP) from Kyle Washalavitch, 8:04 (pp).
Third-period goal: Brandon Leer (L) from Sambuco and David Kimmel, 12:56.
Shots: Malvern Prep 22, LaSalle 40; Saves: Dan Dougherty (MP) 35, Aidan McCabe (L) 19.