C.R. South 9 C.B. East 2

Jeremy Rayher scored four goals and Jake Weiner added two more as Council Rock South downed Central Bucks East 7-2 Friday night at the Bucks County Ice Sports Center.

The win moved the Golden Hawks to the top of the National Division standings as the SHSHL schedule hots the halfway mark heading into the Christmas break. South stands at 9-1 overall and 8-0 in divisional play for 30 points, one point clear of North Penn and Pennridge. The Golden Hawks also have a game in hand on the Knights and the Rams.

Jake Maurer, Brendan Rooney, and Jagger Smith also scored for the Golden Hawks.

Joseph Walter and David Brown scored goals for the Patriots, who slipped to 3-6 overall and 3-5 in divisional play.

C.R. South 2 3 4—7

C.B. East 0 2 0—2

Pennridge 10 C.B. East 0

Pennridge overwhelmed shorthanded Central Bucks East Wednesday night and rolled to the win in a SHSHL National Division semifinal at Hatfield Ice that was halted with 5:48 remaining in the third period.

Kevin Pico had a five-point night for the top-seeded Rams (18-1-2) with three goals and two assists. Andrew Savona contributed two goals and two assists.

Shane Dachowski, Ian Brouse, Josh Kelly, James Rush, and James Embert also scored goals.

The fourth-seeded Patriots (12-6-2) were without several players and coach Jeff Mitchell because of suspensions and injuries.

“We knew they were going to be down,” said Pennridge coach Jeff Montagna, “but we knew we could not look past them. We played very well and got scoring from all four lines.

Pennridge will face Council Rock South for the National Division title Thursday night at Hatfield Ice. Game time is 7:45.

C.B. East 0 0 0—0

Pennridge 4 4 2—10

First-period goals: Andrew Savona (P) unassisted, 5:22; Savona from Kevin Pico, 8:46 (pp); Pico from Savona and Shane Dachowski, 12:24; James Rush (P) from Jared Garber and Pico, 14:28

Second-period goals: Dachowski (P) from John Mikulich and Savona, 1:04; Ian Brouse (P) from Dhilan Howard and Ryan Mikhulich, 4:08; Josh Kelly (P) gtom Dachowski and John Mikulich, 5:50; Pico from Dachowski and Tyler Manto, 10:14

Third-period goals: James Embert (P) from Nathan McKean and Kelly, 8:16; Pico (P) unassisted, 11:12

Game terminated with 5:48 remaining in the third period

Shots: C.B. Est 11, Pennridge 67 Saves: Cole Breen (CBE) 57, Jacob Winton (P) 11

C.B. East 4 C.B. West 2

WARWICK TOWNSHIP—With the demise of Thanksgiving Day high-school football, scholastic hockey, now more than ever, has become an entrenched holiday tradition, one which brings together traditional rivals.

Central Bucks East and Central Bucks West have been rivals in all sports for over half a century, since before either school fielded a hockey team. And their traditional Thanksgiving Eve shootout on ice brought with it a full measure of emotional energy.

“It’s good to get a lot of support from the fans from the respective schools,” said East coach Jeff Mitchell. “The homecoming [football] game and rivalry games aren’t too much of a thing anymore, especially since Covid, so it’s good that the league still lets us have these games and tries to make a little bit more special than the rest of them.”

West Coach Dave Baun spoke of the familiarity the players on both side have with one another.

“Many of the kids know the opponent,” he said, “because they went to Tohickon [Middle School] together. It’s a great rivalry, there are great kids on both teams, and we have a lot of fun.”

On this occasion, it was the Patriots who had the upper hand. Corey Kosick scored three goals in a span of 4 minutes, 57 seconds in the first period to pace his team to a 4-2 win in front of a full house at Revolution Ice Gardens.

It was the second win for the Patriots (3-1) over the Bucks (1-3-1) in 13 days; East won the first meeting 7-3 on November 9.

Kosick’s first goal of the night, his eighth of the season, came off a turnover when he when in on West netminder Liam Rogers essentially unchallenged. His second tally came at the 7:57 mark, he completed his hat trick just 19 seconds later.

Kosick was playing in his third East-West holiday matchup.

“I think we probably had the most people here for this year,” he said. “There was a lot of energy. It was fun to play in front of all these people because we don’t usually get that many.”

Evan Asimakopoulos made it a 4-0 game 29 seconds into the middle period but the Bucks were still hanging around, largely due to the work of Liam Rogers in goal. The senior made 26 saves over the course of the first two periods.

When Anthony Dowd and Adam Ricci scored goals 20 second apart West found itself trailing just 4-2 with a period-and-a-half of hockey remaining. But Cole Breen kept the Bucks at bay the rest of the way.

“I feel like we kind of took our foot off the gas at the start of the second period,” Mitchell said, “which kind of gave them room to kind of start getting back into the game and we took a couple of bad penalties.

“But all in all, the boys were pretty much giving 110 [percent] throughout the entire game.”

West was unable to take advantage of five power-play chances (one of them abbreviated).

“You would never guess that we worked on our power play breakout at practice on Monday,” said West coach Dave Baun. “but sometimes they have short memories.  Some of this stuff should be second nature and it’s not.”

C.B. West 0 2 0—2

C.B. East 3 1 0—4

First-period goals: Corey Kosick (CBE) unassisted, 3:19; Kosick (CBE) from Evan Asimakopoulos and Drew Trask, 7:57; Kosick (CBE) from Asimakopoulos and Trask, 8:16

Second-period goals: Asimakopoulos (CBE) from Kosick, :29; Anthony Dowd (CBW) unassisted, 12:35; Adam Ricci (CBW) from Dowd, 12:55

Shots: C.B. West 25, C.B. East 40; Saves: Liam Rogers (CBW) 36, Cole Breen (CBE) 23

C.B. East 7 C.B. West 1

WARWICK TOWNSHIP—There is a lot of history within the walls of the Bucks County Ice Sports Center. The rink, originally called Face Off Circle, opened its doors in 1975 when the Philadelphia Flyers were the reigning Stanley Cup champions.

It’s the place where Central Bucks East Coach Jeff Mitchell learned to skate. And it’s where Mitchell brought his Patriots Friday night to renew one of the area’s traditional rivalries.

His players met expectations, scoring a 7-1 decision over Central Bucks West, a win that gave the Patriots two vital points in the SHSHL National Division standings. With the playoff field being reduced to six teams this season from the customary eight, the result was especially significant in terms of the standings. 

Perhaps more importantly however the win was the Patriots’ second straight following a four-game losing streak, a losing streak that was especially difficult to endure after East (6-4, 2-1 in divisional play) began the season with four straight wins.

The Patriots displayed an abundance of scoring balance. Stephen DiRugeris scored two goals, while Owen Brackbill, Ethan Cenci, Anthony Dowd, Corey Kosick, and Drew Trask provided one goal each.

 “The last two games have been a little bit of a sigh of relief,” Mitchell said, “that we’re getting back to the right motions that we’re running through when we’re playing our games.

“Were kind of getting back to our core values. Probably the past four or five games have been very subpar, slow, a lack of effort. It’s almost like we had an easy start to the season.”

With a full lineup in uniform, Mitchell was enthused about the balanced scoring.

“Having everybody back in the lineup really helped,” he said. “We spread the puck around, we were able to get four full lines out there. Rotate four lines throughout the game.

“It definitely helps a lot with getting a little pressure off the top two lines.”

After a scoreless first frame, the Patriots took control with goal from Brackbill, DiRugeris, and Cenci to go up 3-0 with 6:46 left in the middle period. Anthony Dowd scored for West (3-7, 1-2) 43 seconds later but by the midpoint of the third period, the Bucks were running on empty. Kosick, DiRugeris, and Gerken scored goals in a span of 2:20.

“On the spectrum of how we play, I think we played pretty well the first half of the game,” said West coach Dave Baun. “In fact, I don’t think we played that badly the entire game for where we are right now.

“East is a little better and they beat us.”

Mitchell noted the importance of every point in the standings in light of the new playoff format.

“I think every team that makes the playoffs is going to be a top-tier team,” he said. “I think seeds one through six are all going to be challenging. So, we’re going to have to do our best to play the games we have left in the season and kind of get a feel for the competition.”

C.B. West  0 1 0—1

C.B. East 0 4 3—7

Second-period goals: Owen Brackbill (CBE) from Kyle McIntyre, :50; Stephen DiRugeris (CBE) from Corey Kosick, 5:06; Ethan Cenci (CBE) from Gavin Widmer, 10:14; Anthony Dowd (CBW) from Zane Sanders, Ryan Gerken (CBE) unassisted, 15:24

Third-period goals: Kosick (CBE) from Jason Young, 9:10; DiRugeris (CBE) from Cenci, 9:52 Drew Trask (CBE) from Brackbill, 11:30.
Shots: C.B. West 27, C.B. East 38; Saves: Kyle Fasolak (CBW) 31, Matt Magiacapre (CBE) 18 and Cole Breen (CBE) 8