North Penn 4 Pennsbury 2

By Rick Woelfel

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP—Prior to taking the ice Monday night in their Suburban High School Hockey League quarterfinal, Pennsbury and North Penn were fully aware they are scheduled to face each other next Wednesday in the opening round of the Flyers Cup tournament. With that fact in mind, the Falcons and the Knights would have been forgiven for playing things close to the vest, since the results of the SHSHL playoffs have no bearing on the Flyers Cup seedings.

Instead, they chose to go another way. Both teams stepped up their games Monday night, the Falcons, who were seeded sixth in the SHSHL tournament, especially so.

It took a third-period goals from Josh Kaufhold and Nathan Oh to give the Knights a 4-2 win in an entertaining affair at Hatfield Ice. North Penn (11-3-3) will face second-seeded Pennridge on Wednesday at 7:00 in the semifinals while Pennsbury (7-8-3) will wait for next Wednesday’s rematch in the Flyers Cup.

Oh, who assisted on Kaufhold’s winning goal, was quick to point out that winning a SHSHL title would mean a lot to the Knights.

“Winning the league would mean so much for us,” he said. “Obviously, (Central Bucks South) has been on top forever and for us to get some hardware, that would be awesome. It would be great for me and the rest of the seniors.”

Jake Nelson gave the Knights an early lead when he scored just 2:02 into the first period but Ben Dous scored twice for the sixth-seeded Falcons (7-7-3) to give them a 2-1 lead after one frame.

Tyler Greenstein tied the game for North Penn with 5:51 left in the second period on the most picturesque play of the night; he skated up the middle of the ice and split the two Pennsbury defensemen before beating Falcon netminder Topher Seiler with a forehander.

At the start of the third period it was anyone’s hockey game.

The teams hadn’t played each other since November 29 and North Penn coach Kevin Vaitis noted that both had evolved since then. “Obviously both teams have changed a lot over the last three months,” he said. “Hats off to them. They came out really ready to play and they kind of went toe-to-toe with us for two periods.”
Kaufhold scored the winning goal on a power play with 9:09 left in the third period. The goal came while the Falcons Beau Yedman was in the box serving a hooking penalty.

Oh added an empty net goal with four seconds remaining.

Despite the loss, and his team’s elimination from the SHSHL playoffs, Pennsbury coach Ryan Daley feels his team has taken some big steps forward of late. The Falcons were 4-1-1 in their last six games prior to Monday night.

“The kids have been on fire,” he said. “I was telling the guys before the game that we’re a dangerous team. We’re an underdog playing extremely good hockey and I knew we had good shot. A couple bounces didn’t go our way, but it’s hockey.”

Notes: Both goaltenders came up with some big saves. Seiler and North Penn’s Nick Ebbinghaus combined to stop 52 shots.

Pennsbury 2 0 0—2

North Penn 1 1 2—4

First-period goals: Jake Nelson (NP) from Tyler Greenstein, 2:02; Ben Dous (P) from Jake Sieger, 11:34; Dous (P) from Sieger and Erik Eisler, 12:51.

Second-period goal: Greenstein (NP) from Jared Albano and Luke Van Why, 10:09.

Third-period goals: Josh Kaufhold (NP) from Nathan Oh, 6:51 (pp); Oh (NP) from Albano, 15:56 (en).

Shots; Pennsbury 25, North Penn 33; Saves: Topher Seiler (P) 29, Nick Ebbinghaus (NP) 23

 

 

Pennridge 6 Central Bucks East 0

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP—  Pennridge served notice Monday night that its ready for the postseason. The Rams were in firm form Monday night during a 6-0 win over Central Bucks East in the opening round of the Suburban High School Hockey League Class AA playoffs at Hatfield Ice.

Six different players scored goals for second-seeded Pennridge (12-2-3), which will face North Penn in Wednesday’s semifinals (7:00 at Hatfield Ice. The seventh-seeded Patriots (11-6-2) will be idle until the Flyers Cup tournament begins next week; they’ll face Haverford High in the opening round next Wednesday.

Michael Eissler gave Pennridge a 1-0 lead with 4:12 left in the opening period when he tipped in a rebound of Jeff Manto’s original shot, beating East netminder Chris Mcintyre.

The Rams broke the game open in the second period, scoring five times in a span of 6 minutes, 58 seconds. Bryson Egan, Michael Walker, Manto, Blake Stewart, and Evan Kehoe all scored goals, the last two of which came just 14 seconds apart.

The Rams are unbeaten in their last nine games (7-0-2) Walker, a junior, says he and his teammates are focused on their postseason goals. “We’re kind of looking at every game as just like the next step forward to get to where we want to be,” he said. “We want to win the SHSHL and then obviously go as far as we possibly can in the Flyers Cup. So, this is just a step on the way.”

Walker noted the Rams have found more scoring balance in recent weeks

“In the beginning of the season we were a little one sided,” he said. “The first line was getting a lot of points, but as the season went on, the chemistry got better. Everyone was scoring on every line.”

The Rams are seeking their first SHSHL title since 2008. Walker noted the team is benefitting from the abundance of experience on the roster, as well as the experience of playing together. “With the regular season, working as hard as we did, coming into the postseason and working with each other isn’t as difficult as it seems,” he said. “We just connect.”

The Patriots had trouble coping with Pennridge’s speed for most of the evening and managed just 10 shots on goal in the 48-minute game.

“For the last three or four games we haven’t been on our game,” said East coach Ken Latchum. “Hopefully the Flyers Cup is another new season and we’ll get it going there.”

 

C.B. East 0 0

Pennridge 1 5

First-period goal: Michael Eissler (P) from Jeff Manto, 11:48

Second-period goals: Bryson Egan (P) from Michael Walker, 1:43; Walker (P) from Eric Slater, 2:06; Jeff Manto (P) from Nick Eissler, 5:20; Blake Stewart (P) from Slater and Matt Guinette, 8:27 (pp); Evan Kehoe (P) from Tommy Prichard, 8:41

Shots: C.B. East 10, Pennridge 40; Saves; Chris McIntyre (CBE) 34, Luke Stranik (Pr) 10.

LaSalle 3, St. Joseph’s Prep 1

By Rick Woelfel

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP— The postseason is a different animal. That point become apparent when La Salle and St. Joseph’s Prep took to the ice Monday afternoon in the Atlantic Prep Athletic Athletic Conference Founders Cup semifinals at Hatfield Ice.

The top-seeded Explorers had to work hard to secure the 3-1 victory over the Hawks to earn a place in Wednesday’s inaugural Founder’s Cup final. LaSalle’s opponent in the final will be longtime rival and third seed Holy Ghost, a 4-1 win over second seed Malvern Prep in Wednesday’s other semifinal.

Game time will be 4:00 at Hatfield Ice.

LaSalle (19-6) had beaten the fourth-seeded Hawks three times during the regular season, but the the two teams skated on fairly even terms on Monday.

“I think (the Hawks) played a really good game,” said LaSalle head coach Wally Muehlbronner. They clogged up the middle and did a great job of doing that. That took away our team speed a little bit, more than I would have liked, but we stuck with it and scored some dirty goals, which was good to see.”

Sam Lipkin gave LaSalle a 1-0 lead when he scored off at the 6:04 mark of the opening period.

The key sequence in the game however, commenced 2:24 in to the second frame when LaSalle’s Daniel Sambuco drew a five-minute major penalty for cross checking in the midst of a pileup at the Hawks’ net that resulted in an injury to St. Joseph’s Prep’s Matt Moresco (who later returned to the game). A few minutes later, LaSalle’s Byron Evans drew a minor penalty for cross checking, forcing the Explorers to play two men short for 1:29. But they escaped both penalties unscathed.

“I think we maybe gave up two or three shots in the five-on-three,” Muehlbronner said, “and had some tremendous offensive opportunities during it as well. I was really happy with the way we killed penalties.”

St. Joseph’s Prep coach David Giacomin looked back on the missed opportunity. “It’s a shame,” he said, “because we worked on the five-on-threes in practice quite a bit, just in case we got a chance. The sad part is, we didn’t get enough puck movement today to even get scoring opportunities. I think that would have maybe changed the tide of the game.”

Lipkin extended LaSalle’s lead when he scored a power-play goal off a deflection with 3:57 left in the second period.

But the Hawks kept battling and they finally got on the scoreboard with 4:21 left in the third period when Evan Cassidy beat LaSalle netminder Aidan McCabe on a shot from the high slot off an Explorer turnover. The Hawks kept the pressure on the rest of the way but couldn’t score the tying goal.

Andrew Budzynski accounted for the final margin when he scored into an empty net with a long shot from the neutral zone just before time expired.

Notes: LaSalle had a 35-15 edge in shots. The Explorers are seeded first for the Class AAA Flyers Cup while the Hawks will be seeded sixth.

St. Joseph’s Prep 0 0 1—1
LaSalle 1 1 1—3
First-period goal: Sam Lipkin (L) from Michael Casey and Fabrizzio Mazzzarelli, 6:04
Second-period goals: LIpkin (L) from, Casey and Jan Olenginski, 12:03 (pp)
Third-period goals: Evan Cassidy (SJP) unassisted, 11:21; Andrew Budzynski (L) unassisted, 16:00 (en)
Shots; St. Joseph’s Prep 15, LaSalle 35; Saves: Troy Stefano (SJP) 32, Aidan McCabe (L) 14

 

Holy Ghost Prep 4, Malvern Prep 2—Colin Costello scored two goals as third seeded Holy Ghost Prep bested second seed Malvern  Prep 4-2 on Wednesday in the other Founders Cup semifinal at Ice Line.

Jack Kelly’s goal gave the Firebirds a 1-0 first-period lead. Costello scored with 2:36 left in the middle period to extend his team’s lead and added his second goal 2:56 into the third.

Kenny Conners scored for the Friars with 2:28 left in the game before Evan Mudrick finished the scoring with 1:36 left.

Sean Joyce got the win in goal, making 25 saves.

 

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 2019

A total of 42 high school hockey teams have been selected and seeded for the 40th annual Flyers Cup tournament.

Sixteen teams each will comprise the boys’ Class A and Class AA brackets while seven more will compete in Class AAA and three others will meet in a girls’ competition.

First-round games will be played March 4-6 and the tournament will continue from there before the champions are crowned at the Wells Fargo Center on Sunday, March 17

Two-time defending Flyers Cup and state champion Downingtown East has drawn the top seed in Class 2A. Central Bucks South, which lost to the Cougars in overtime in last year’s championship game, is seeded second, followed by Conestoga, Pennridge, and North Penn.

Haverford is seeded sixth, followed by Boyertown, Neshaminy, Parkland, and Central Bucks West. Central Bucks East is seeded 11th, followed by Pennsbury, Garnet Valley, Perkiomen Valley, Downingtown West, and Council Rock South.

The field includes eight teams from the Suburban High School Hockey League, seven from the Intercounty Scholastic Hockey League and one from the Lehigh Valley Scholastic Hockey League.

Five-time defending Flyers Cup and State Class A champion Bayard Rustin is once again the top seed in its bracket, followed by Strath Haven, West Chester Henderson, West Chester East, Palmyra, Hershey, Lower Moreland, and Lower Merion.

Owen J. Roberts is seeded ninth, followed by Unionville, Plymouth Whitemarsh, Springfield-Delco, Wissahickon, Kennett, Hatboro-Horsham, and Sun Valley.

LaSalle, which captured the Atlantic Prep Athletic Conference regular-season title, is the top seed in Class AAA. The Explorers will be trying to win the Flyers Cup for the 11th time and will be the only boys’ team in any division with an opening-round bye.

Malvern Prep is seeded second followed by Cardinal O’Hara, Holy Ghost Prep, Father Judge, St. Joseph’s Prep, and Roman Catholic.

Unionville will have the bye in the girls’ bracket. West Chester East and West Chester Rustin will meet on March 13 for a place in the championship game.

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.

 

 

SHSHL Playoff Game Times Set

The brackets have been finalized for the 2019 Suburban High School Hockey League playoffs. Action gets underway Monday, February 25 with four Class AA quarterfinal games and continues on Wednesday the 27th with semifinal games in Class AA and Class A. The championship games in each class will be played at Hatfield Ice on Thursday, February 28.

Central Bucks South is the four-time defending champion in Class AA; if they successfully defend this year it will extra blush a new league record. Hatboro-Horsham meanwhile will be trying to defend the Class A crown.

It should be noted that the results of the SHSHL playoffs will have no impact on the Flyers Cup seedings which are scheduled to be announced on Sunday.

 

Monday, February 25

Class AA Quarterfinals

1 C.B. South vs. 8 Council Rock South  7:00 at Rev. Ice Gardens

4 C.B. West vs 5 Neshaminy  8:40 at Rev Ice Gardens

3 North Penn vs 6 Pennsbury  8:40 at Hatfield Ice

2 Pennridge vs 7 Central Bucks East 7:00 at Hatfield Ice

 

Wednesday, February 27

Class AA Semifinals

Upper Bracket winners   7:00 at Revolution Ice Gardens

Lower Bracket winners   7:00 at Hatfield Ice

 

Class A Semifinals

1 Lower Moreland vs 4 Hatboro-Horsham 8:45 at Rev. Ice Gardens

2 Wissahickon vs 3 Plymouth Whitemarsh   8:45 at Hatfield Ice

 

Thursday, February 28

Class AA Final 7:00 at Hatfield Ice

Class A Final 8:45 at Hatfield Ice

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Has it Really Been 39 Years?

The United States’ 4-3 win over the Soviet Union in the 1980 Olympic Games in Lake Placid is considered by many to be the single most significant event in the history of American sports, certainly American sports in the 20th century. The game was played on February 22, 1980, exactly 39 years ago as this is written.

Here are a few notes and reflections while I’m wondering where 39 years went.

 

The Stakes—The game was not an Olympic final, nor was it semifinal in the purest sense of the word. The Olympic tournament format was different then. Two groups of six teams each played a round robin with the top two teams in each division advancing to the medal round to play the two teams from the other group. But they took with them the result of their game with the other qualifier from their own group.

 

Sweden and the United States each finished 4-0-1 in the Blue Division and advanced to the medal round, taking with them the 2-2 tie they played against each other. The Soviet Union (5-0) and Finland (3-2) advanced from the Red Division, taking with them the USSR’s 4-2 win over Finland in group play.

At the start of the medal round the standings looked like this

W      L      T      Pts

Soviet Union      1       0      0        2

United States      0       0      1       1

Sweden               0       0      1       1

Finland               0        1       0      0

 

On Friday the 22nd, the U.S. faced the Soviet Union followed by Sweden against Finland. The Sunday schedule would feature the U.S. against Finland and Sweden against the USSR regardless of Friday’s results.

 

How good were the Soviets?—At that point in hockey history, the Soviet national team was the best hockey team in the world. Eleven of the 20 players on the Olympic roster played for the Red Army team in the Soviet Union’s domestic league (officially CSKA Moscow. They were in the army but their military duty consisted of playing hockey. While the Olympics were restricted to amateurs at that time, the Soviet players were amateurs in name only.

The lineup featured Vladislav Tretiak, considered the finest goaltender in the world at the time, along with center Vladimir Petrov, left wing Valeri Kharlamov, and defenseman Viacheslav Fetisov among others.

The Soviets arrived in Lake Placid having won the last four Olympic titles.

 

What about the Americans? —The American team consisted primarily of college players. Apart from captain Mike Eruzione and Buzz Schneider (both 25) no one on the roster was older than 22. The youngest player on the roster, Mike Ramsey, was 19. The goaltender, Jim Craig, was 22.

The coach was Herb Brooks, who took a leave of absence  from the University of Minnesota to coach the Olympic team. He eliminated the rivalry between the New England and Midwestern fractions on his roster by giving his players a common enemy; himself.

 

The Game—Vladimir Krutov scored on a deflection to give the Soviets a 1-0 lead 9:12 into the first period Schneider tied the game with a log-range slapshot at 14:03. Sergei Makarov put the USSR back in front at 17:34. The Americans tied the game with one second remaining in the period after Tretiak gave up a long rebound of a long slapshot from Dave Christian. Mark Johnson put the rebound past Tretiak just before time expired. Indeed, the clock showed 0:00 but the officials ruled the goal counted and the Soviets, who had gone to their dressing room, had to put players back on the ice for the last second of the period.

Replay clearly showed the goal should have counted but video review by the officials was not permitted.

 

At the start of the second period, Soviet coach Viktor Tikhonov replaced Tretiak was in goal with Vladimir Myshkin, which even today is regarded as one of the historic coaching blunders in the history of international hockey.

Aleksandr Maltsev scored the only goal of the second period at 2:18 to give the Soviets a 3-2 lead. They would not score again.

What is often overlooked is that the Soviets to that point were dominating the game. Jim Craig in the U.S. goal

 

Third period[edit]

The Americans got a power-play chance at 6:47 of the third period when Vladimir Krutov drew a high-sticking penalty. Johnson scored at 8:39 to tie the game at 3-3.

Eruzione scored what proved to be the winning goal with exactly 10 minutes left in the game on a shot from the high slot on a play on which Myshkin appeared to be screened.

The Soviets continued to generate scoring changes the rest of the way but never pulled their goaltender, something that just wasn’t done in the Soviet system. Of course, the USSR was so dominant in international play at the time that it seldom found itself behind late in a game.

On this occasion, the USSR outshot the U.S. 39-16.

 

The Aftermath—Two days after beating the Soviets, the U.S. defeated Finland and won the gold medal while the Soviets won silver by defeating Finland. Thirteen of the 20 players on the American roster went on to play in the NHL. Defenseman Ken Morrow joined the New York Islanders following the Olympics and helped them win the Stanley Cup—over the Philadelphia Flyers.

Five of the Soviet players later played in the NHL.

 

Fast facts—The game was not televised live in the U.S. ABC Sports, which had the American Olympic television rights at the time, asked that time game time be moved from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern Time to facilitate a live telecast but the Soviets refused to go along.

 

Al Michaels, who called the game on TV with analyst Ken Dryden, got the hockey assignment in Lake Placid because he had experience calling hockey; exactly one game, the 1972 Olympic final in Sapporo, Japan which he did for NBC.

His Olympic performance certainly enhanced Michaels’s status in the broadcast industry, but he had already made a name for himself broadcasting baseball for the Cincinnati Reds and San Francisco Giants and had called some NFL games for CBS before joining ABC.

 

Final thoughts: For the young hockey players who are still reading this and are wondering if the occasion was as special as they’ve been told. Trust us when we say it most certainly was!

 

 

 

 

 

SHSHL Regular Season Standings 2-22-19

Class AA                                                  W      L        T        Pts

Central Bucks South (11-3-2)              9        0       2        20

Penneidge (11-2-3)                                8        1       2        18

North Penn (10-3-3)                              7         2      2       16

Central Bucks West (9-7)                      7        4       0       14

Neshaminy (7-4-4)                                 5       3        3       13

Pennsbury (7-7-3)                                  5       5        1       11

Central Bucks East (9-5-2)                    5       5         1      11

# Council Rock South (6-7-3)                3       5         3      9

Abington (5-7-4)                                     3       5         3      9

Truman (3-11-3)                                      2      7         2     6

William Tennent (3-11-2)                      1      8         2     4

Souderton (2-13-1)                               0     10       1      1

 

# Council Rock South has tiebreaker over Abington. The tiebreaker was goals-against average during the 11 league games.

 

Tentative  quarterfinal playoff matchups

  1. Central Bucks South vs. 8. Council Rock South
  2. Central Bucks West vs. 5. Neshaminy
  3. Pennridge vs. 7. Central Bucks East
  4. North Penn vs. 6. Pennsbury

Quarterfinal games February 25. Sites, times TBA

Class A                                              W         L       T   Pts

Lower Moreland (10-2-3)              7          2       3    17

Wissahickon (11-3-2)                     7          3       2   16

Plymouth Whitemarsh (10-5-1)   6          5       1   13

Hatboro-Horsham (9-5-2)             5          5       2  12

Upper Dublin (4-12)                       1         11      0   2

 

Tentative semifinal matchups

1.Lower Moreland vs. 4 Hatboro-Horsham

2. Wissahickon vs. 3 Plymouth Whitemarsh

Semifinal games February 27. Times and sites TBA

Playoff seedings and pairings are tentative until officially verified by the SHSHL

 

 

C.B. West 8, North Penn 7

By Rick Woelfel

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP—If you’re the type of hockey fan who favors an abundance of offense, you would have felt right at home at Hatfield Ice Thursday night. Central Bucks West and North Penn took turns finding the back of the net before Chris Trefz’s power-play goal with 1:30 left in the third period gave the Bucks an 8-7 win to bring the curtain down on the Suburban High School Hockey League’s regular season.

The winning goal came on a shot from the top of the right circle that beat North Penn goaltender Andrew Zanoni. The Knights’ Jared Albano was serving a slashing penalty at the time.

“I saw an open look,” Trefz said. “Our game plan was to put pucks on net the whole game. I just put it on and it went in,”

Trefz’s third goal of the game capped a comeback by the Bucks (9-7, 7-4 in SHSHL Class AA), who trailed 4-1 late in the first period before rallying to pick up their seventh win in their last nine games.

“Guys decided to come together,” Trefz said. “Our seniors did a great job of leading us; our goalie, Jeremy Kennard, our captain, Matt McCarthy, and a few other juniors did a great job of getting everybody motivated.

‘We’re doing a great job of buying into (Coach Dave Baun’s) system and we’re looking forward to the playoffs.”

The Knights (10-3-3, 7-2-2) built their early lead on goals from Nathan Oh, Tyler Greenstein, Tony Tuozzo, and Albano.

Joey DeYoung cut into the deficit when he scored for West with 2:40 left in the opening session and Owen Shields followed up with a goal just 12 seconds into the second frame.

Trefz’s first goal of the game 6:32 into the middle period not only tied the game but sent Nick Ebbinghaus, North Penn’s starting goaltender, to the bench.

The teams traded goals the rest of the way.

All told, 10 Bucks and 11 Knights got onto the scoresheet. Trefz had two assists to go with his hat trick. Lang provided three assists along with his goal. Nelson scored twice for North Penn and added an assist, while Oh contributed two assists along with his goal.

The Knights enjoyed a 46-29 shot advantage but Kennard withstood the barrage and finished with 39 saves.

North Penn coach Kevin Vaitis was pleased with much of what he saw. “We’re doing a lot of good things,” he said. “We’ve got to keep building on that. There are things we’ve got to clean up a little bit. We’ll talk about them Monday and be ready to go.

Notes: The SHSHL quarterfinals are set for Monday. North Penn will be seeded third in the field of eight, the Bucks will be seeded fourth.

 

North Penn 4 2 1—7

C.B. West 2 3 3—8

First-period goals: Nathan Oh (MP) unassisted, 2:54; Jake Lang (CBW) from Pavel Serhiayenka and Chris Trefz, 7:15; Tyler Greenstein (NP) from Josh Kaufhold and Jake Nelson, 8:58; Tony Tuozzo (NP) from Jared Albano and Ryan Cunningham, 11:13 (pp); Albano (NP) from Oh and Eric Sarbacker, 12:51; Joey DeYoung (CBW) from Ben Morris, 13:20.

Second-period goals: Owen Shields (CBW) from DeYoung, :12; Trefz (CBW) from Lang and Serhiayenka, 6:32; Trefz (CBW) from Kyle Burton and Lang, 7:04; Jake Nelson (NP) from Albano and Oh, 10:01; Thomas Boyle (MP) from Albano, 12:42.

Third-period goals: Kyle Burton (CBW) from Evan Hee and Trefz, 4:02; Nelson (NP) from Greenstein and Chase Mueller, 9:33; Dan Poliak (CBW) from Keith Orlando, 10:21; Trefz (CBW) from Lang, 14:30 (pp).

Shots: North Penn 46, C.B. West 29; Saves: Nick Ebbinghaus (NP) 8 and Andrew Zanoni (NP) 13; Jeremy Kennard (CBW) 39.

 

If you, a family member, or a  friend are looking for a dentist, Hockey Happenings is proud to recommend All Smiles Family Dentistry. They’re located at 1620 South Broad Street in Lansdale.

Dr. Caroline Hsu, Dr. Azure Pelberg and their staff provide high-quality dental care in a caring, nurturing environment.  They’ve been taking care of my teeth for 25 years and I would recommend them to anyone. Going to the dentist can be an unsettling experience, take my word for it, but everyone at All Smiles Family Dentistry will work to put you at ease.

Call for an appointment at 215-616-0609 or e-mail them HERE. You can also find them on line at www.allsmileslansdale.com.

That’s All Smiles Family Dentistry of Lansdale.