La Salle 7 Father Judge 2

La Salle’s success this season has been based on the concept of getting contributions from a variety of sources.

Such was the case Thursday night. Grant LaGreca and Noel Donohue each scored two goals and three other players scored on goal each as the Explorers downed Father Judge 7-2 in a Class AAA Flyers Cup semifinal at Hatfield Ice Arena.

Second-seeded La Salle (17-7) will face Holy Ghost Prep next Wednesday at this same venue in a bid to win its third consecutive Flyers Cup, a feat the Explorers last accomplished in 2014 when they claimed the Cup for a fourth consecutive year. Sixth-seeded Father Judge closed the season at 16-6.

The game was closer than the final score seemingly indicted.  Judge trailed 2-1 after one period was close enough to be a threat, trailing 4-2 early in the third before the Explorers put the game away.

Michael Zarzycki got thing started for La Salle when he beat Crusader goaltender Christian McDonald 3:32 into the first period. But Chris Ferrero responded for Judge with a power-play goal at the 8:49 before Donohue’s effort with 1:14 remaining put La Salle in front for good.

The Explorers extended their lead in the second period on goal from Declan Kelly and Alex Gibson.

Jake Pound made thing more interesting when he scored for Judge just 14 seconds into the final period but LaGreca answered at the 2:21 mark.

Donohue and LaGreca once more added additional goals.

“We started slow,” LaGreca said, “but we stuck to our system, listened to what our coaches had for the game plan, but we played the right way in the end.”

LaGreca said the Explorers stayed patient when it counted.

“We know we can’t look past anyone.” he said. “We’ve got to stay patient and keep shooting pucks on net.”

• The Explorers had a 30-19 edge in shots.

Father Judge 1 0 1—2

La Salle 2 2 3­­—7

La Salle 3 St. Joseph’s Prep 2 OT

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

La Salle 6 Hun School 0

The La Salle Explorers went about their business one step at a time Wednesday afternoon. The results were impressive, a 6-0 win over The Hun School in an APAC matchup at Hatfield Ice Arena.

Grant LaGreca and Michael Zarzycki scored two goals each as La Salle improved to 5-2 on the season and 3-1 at the midway point in its APAC campaign.

LaGreca, a senior, cited the Explorers’ stick-to-basics approach.

“We’re just trying to focus on playing the right way,” he said. “Focusing on the D-zone, not cheating the game. Just kind of letting the hockey gods reward us with goals and playing good.”

It was LaGreca who got things started when he beat Raider netminder Patrick Donoghue just 45 seconds into the opening period. Zarzycki provided the setup before initiating a three-goal blitz with a shorthanded effort 69 seconds into the second frame. LaGreca followed up with a power-play effort at 4:57 before Zarzycki scored his second goal the game with 1:35 left in the middle period.

Hun School coach Eric Szeker the Raiders (0-2-1, 0-1 in the APAC) was hurt by a slow start.

“We were kind of running in quicksand for a bit there,” he said. “It was only 1-0 after the first. We just couldn’t find our game.

“It is what it is. We’re three games onto the season, we’ve got a young team [there were five underclassmen in the Hun School lineup) so, a lot to learn. We get to play again Friday, so we’re going to reset and look forward to that one.”

Because of school policy and NJSIAA regulations the Raiders start their season later than the other four APAC schools. But Szeker refused to cite scheduling issues as contributing to Wednesday’s result.

“We’ve been on the ice a couple weeks,” he said, “so, we should have a pretty good idea of what we want to do.

“I think of lot of credit goes to La Salle and [Coach Wally Muehlbronner] and what they have going on over there. They’ve got several lined that can play, they have a lot of good defensemen and a good goalie. We just ran into a good team today.”

Muehlbronner himself gave his team high marks.

“I thought we played well,” he said. “We came out hard, moved the puck well, all four lines played well, the D played well.”

LaGreca said efforts like Wednesday’s allow the veterans on the roster to set a standard for their teammates to emulate.

“All the returning seniors just want to show the younger guys and the new guy how to play the game and how to play the right way,” he said. “Because we’ve been there before.

• Jake Rossi earned the shutout in goal with 20 saves.

Hun School 0 0 0—0

La Salle 1 4 1—6

First-period goals: Grant LaGreca (L) from Michael Zarzycki, :45

Second-period goals:   Zarzycki (L) unassisted, 1:09 (sh); LaGreca (L) from Zarzycki, 4:57 (pp); Zarzycki (L) from Tristan Mitchell and Declan Kelly, 15:25; Alastair St. Hilaire (L) from Noel Donohue and Luca Staffieri 16:58

Third-period goal: Julian Tarsi (L) from Staffieri and Donohue 10:50

Shots: Hun School 20, La Salle 54; Saves: Patrick Donoghue (HS) 48, Jake Rossi (L) 20

La Salle 6 Perkiomen Valley 1

La Salle left little doubt Monday night why it is favored to win the Class AAA Flyers Cup championship. The top-seeded and defending champion Explorers scored three goals in each of the first two periods and rolled to a 6-1 win over Perkiomen Valley at Hatfield Ice.

La Salle will face Holy Ghost Prep or Father Judge net Thursday in a semifinal

Dean Carvalho and Grant Lagreca each scored twice for the Explorers (21-3). Patrick Brace, and Ben Falicki also scored goals.

But while La Salle was clearly the dominant team on the ice, the title of Most Outstanding Player for the evening belonged to Perkiomen Valley goaltender Peter Neveil. The sophomore registered 50 saves in the course of an evening that saw the Explorers outshoot the Vikings 66-10.

“The kid was unbelievable,” said La Salle coach Wally Muehlbronner. “we were all wondering, ‘Who is this guy?’

“He made some great saves and did a nice job controlling rebounds.

Lagreca got a look at Neveil from close range.

“He played really good,” the junior said. “We got frustrated at some points because we just wanted to score but he played a heck of a game and kept it close.”

Thanks in large part to Neveil’s efforts it was a 1-0 game in the closing minutes of the first period. Dean Carvalho’s goal at the 3:58 mark gave La Salle the lead but Neveil was impregnable after that until Carvalo and Patrick Brace scored goals 18 seconds apart to put the Explorers up 3-0 with 1:24 left in the opening session. By period’s end, La Salle outshot the eighth-seeded Vikings (11-8-1) 22-5.
Mason McCabe scored Perkiomen Valley’s only goal 3:01 into the second session but La Salle continued to dominate play; by period’s end the shot differential was 40-6.

Lagreca spoke of the importance of he and his teammates maintaining their focus.

“You don’t want to get into bad habits,” he said. “We just want to keep working hard and playing as a team and that will continue to get us success.”

Muehlbronner gave the evening mixed reviews.
“In the end, we got the job done,” he said. “I wasn’t thoroughly pleased with our performance. There are a lot of things we’ve been working on that we kind of got away from a little bit. We’ve got to get back to just playing a hard, simple game.”

• La Salle is seeking it 13th Flyers Cup championship, the most of any school in tournament history.

Perkiomen Valley 0 1 0—1

La Salle 3 3 0—6

First:  Dean Carvalho (L) from Julian Tarsi and Alistair St. Hilaire, 3:58; Carvalho (L) from Logan Dicus, 15:36; Patrick Brace (L) from Charlie Kennedy and Ryan Wiley, 15:54

Second Mason McCabe (PV) from Travis Moscariello, 3:01; Grant Lagreca (L) from James Carpenter, 3:32; Ben Falicki (L) from Lagreca, 12:00; Lagreca (L) unassisted, 16:25

Shots: Perkiomen Valley 10, La Salle 56; Saves: Peter Neveil (PV) 50 Jake Rossi (L) 9