SHSHL Standings and Statistics Through 1-11-19

Suburban High School Hockey League Standings

Class 2A

National Division                        W      L      T      Pts

C.R. South (5-3-2)                       2       3    2       6

Abington (3-4-2)                         2       2      1      5

Neshaminy (3-4-2)                      2       3       1     5

Truman (3-5-2)                            2      3     1       5

Pennsbury (3-5-2)                       2       4     0       4

William Tennent (3-7)                1       4     0      2

 

Continental Division                    W      L      T      Pts

North Penn (6-2-3)                       5       1     2        12

C.B. South (6-3-1)                        5       0     1        11

Pennridge (6-2-1)                         4      1      0        8

C.B. East (7-2-1)                           4       2      0     8

C.B. West (5-5)                             3     3      0        6

Souderton (1-10)                           0       7      0       0

 

 

Class A

American Division                       W      L      T      Pts

Lower Moreland (6-1-3)              4     1      3        11

Wissahickon (6-1-2)                      4      1      2       10

Plymouth Whitemarsh (7-3)         4        2      0       8

Hatboro-Horsham (6-3-1)            3     3      1        7

Upper Dublin (3-7)                       0      7      0     4

Playoff qualifiers will include the top four finishers

 

Scoring

GP       Goals     Assists    Points

Coleman Peppelman LM           10         28            17         45

Sean Gary Wiss                           9         23          17             40

Bryan Gary Wiss                         8         24           14            38

Vincenzo DeMaio LM                 10        22          16           38

Dean Keller PW                           10        15           19           34

Adam Bostock LM                       10        11          22           33

Steven Avellino Tr                      9         24            6             30

Tyler Greenstein NP                  11        15           13            28

Nathan Oh NP                            11       10           16             26

Colin Franzoni PW                     10         15           9             24

Eric Slater Pr                               8          19            4             23

Devin Green   LM                       10           10       13             23

Perry Carpenter Ab                   9          15            8             23

Jake Weikel PW                         10        15           7              22

Ari Nordlinger UD                      9         13           9              22

Reis Bracio CBS                          10         11           10           21

Chris Trefz CBW                         9           5            16            21

Matt Cade  Wiss                        9           10          11            21

Jake Nelson NP                         10         13            8             21

Josh Kaufhold NP                      10         6            14             20

John Gray Soud                          10          12          8             20

Logan Hurwitz CRS                     10         8           12             20

Bobby Matkus WT                    10          13           7              20

 

Goals Against Ave.(Min. 240 minutes played)       GP        Min.      GAA

Luke Stranick  Pr                                                           8         377        2.54

Chris McIntyre   CBE                                                    8          240       2.60

Andrew Zanoni  MP                                                     9          240       2.80

Nick Ebbinghaus NP                                                   10        288       2.83

Joe Gamibino      HH                                                   9            384       2.88

Matt Ogonowski CBE                                                  9            240       3.00

Oscar Levin CBS                                                           9            360      3.20

Steve Glik Nesh                                                            9              384      3.75

Michael Henderson Wiss                                          9             432       3.89

Jacob Snellenberg Ab                                                9             240       4.20

 

Save Percentage (Min 240 minutes played)      GP         Min       Sv Pct.

Chris McIntyre CBE                                                 8           240         .912

Steven Glik Nesh                                                     9            384         .903

Luke Stranik Pr                                                      8            377         .901

Joe Gambino HH                                                   9             384        .901

Jonathan Pritchard                                              10            432        .880

Oscar Levin CBS                                                   9                360       .872

Jeremy Kennard CBW                                        9                 265       .872

Jeremy Wedul  Tr                                              9                384       .869

Jacob Snellenberg Ab                                      9                  240       .863

Matt Ogonowski CBE                                  9                      240     .856

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Lower Moreland 14, Upper Dublin 2

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP—They may be few in numbers, but the Lower Moreland Lions Lower Moreland are making an impact in the Suburban High School Hockey League’s American Division. The Lions have just 12 players on their roster and had just seven skaters in uniform Monday night but their offense was as potent as ever in a 14-2, two- period win over Upper Dublin at Hatfield Ice.

Coleman Peppelman and Vincenzo DeMaio scored four goals each to lead the way for Lower Moreland, which moved into first place in the division with a 4-1-3 divisional mark (6-1-3 overall). The Lions, despite their lack of numbers, are unbeaten in their last eight games and are averaging nine goals a game.

The result was determined within moments of the opening puck drop. Much of the opening period was played in the Flying Cardinals’ defensive zone.

Lower Moreland scored 12 goals in the opening frame. Upper Dublin (3-7, 0-7 in league play) was outgunned but Flying Cardinal netminder Liam Nixon did some good work between the pipes, making 25 saves in the opening period. He added five more in the second frame.

The Flying Cardinals got on the scoreboard when Ari Nordlinger found the back of the net 71 seconds into the second session and the teams traded goals until the contest was halted at the period’s conclusion via the 10-goal mercy rule.

The Lions backed off the throttle in the second frame but Peppleman noted that having a sizable lead allowed he and his teammates to work on some of the game’s finer points. “We try to build up our defense,” he said, “from giving up a lot of goals and offensively I think we’re pretty solid.”

Peppelman, one of just two seniors in the lineup on Wednesday, stressed the importance of staying focused in a one-sided game to avoid developing bad habits.

“That’s when you try to get the kids who don’t get the puck as much, get it to them,” he said, “and have them build up from there, just set them up and get them ready for the next game.”

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Coleman Peppelman scored four goals for Lower Moreland in Thursday’s won over Upper Dublin (Photo by Keith Clemens)

Lower Moreland coach Gus Salfitti was focused on puck possession. “We have about four or five guys that can protect the puck,” he said. “They keep possession. Their passes are nice and crisp and they’re to a target …They use a big chunk of the ice.”

In addition to Peppelmans’s and DeMaio’s four-goal efforts, Adam Bostock scored twice while collecting an incredible seven assists for a nine-point night. Peppelman added three assists to finish with seven points while DeMaio’s two assists gave him six points on the evening.

By Rick Woelfel

Lower Moreland 12 2—14
Upper Dublin 0 2—2
First-period goals: Vincenzo DeMaio (LM) from Adam Bostock, 1:37; Coleman Peppelman (LM) unassisted, 2:01; Bostock (LM) from DeMaio, 5:04; Devin Green (LM) from Peppelman, 5:44; Peppelman (LM) from DeMaio, 7:07; DeMaio (LM) from Bostock, 7:23; Peppelman (LM) from Bostock, 9:33 (pp); DeMaio (LM) from Bostock, 11:35; Green (LM) from Bostock, 13:03; Arthur Rubinstein (LM) from Peppelman, 13:33; Peppelman (LM) unassisted, 14:02; DeMaio (LM) from Bostock and Peppelman, 15:51 (pp).
Second-period goals: Ari Nordlinger (UD) from Chris Barbera and Andrew Kearney, 1;11; Bostock (LM) unassisted, 2:35; Noah Gazzara (LM) from Bostock and Green, 7:35; Oren Serafin (UD) unassisted, 10:08.
Shots: Lower Moreland 44, Upper Dublin 17; Saves: Jacob Lungrin (LM) 15, Liam Nixon (UD) 30.
Records: Lower Moreland (6-1-3, 4-1-3 SHSHL American Division); Upper Dublin (3-7, 1-7)

Plymouth Whitemarsh 7, Wissahickon 4

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP—On some nights, a single occurrence can turn a hockey game on its axis and send it in an entirely new direction. So it was at Hatfield Ice Wednesday night.

Leading by a goal in the waning moments of the second period but facing a two-man disadvantage, Plymouth Whitemarsh not only successfully killed both penalties but scored a shorthanded goal to boot and went on to a 7-4 win over previously unbeaten Wissahickon in a Suburban High School Hockey League American Division encounter.

Colin Franzoni and Dean Keller scored two goals each and Ben Yuter made 33 saves in goal but the win was made possible in large part by what happened late in the middle period and early in the third.

Keller had just scored a goal to put the Colonials up 4-3 when, with 2:08 left in the middle period, Franzoni was sent to the box for high sticking. With 51 seconds left in the period Desmond Brock was corralled for a hooking infraction, leaving Plymouth Whitemarsh two men short for 46 seconds.

As the clock wound down inside the final half minute of the period the Colonials iced the puck. Two Trojans headed back to retrieve it but the Colonials’ Jake Weikel got to the puck first behind the Wissahickon net and spotted Franzoni waiting in front. The junior proceeded to put the puck past Trojan netminder Michael Henderson with nine seconds left in the period.

“I just busted all the way (down the ice) Franzoni said. “(Weikel) got the open pass, I shot it and it went in.”

Franzoni’s second goal of the game didn’t mean the Colonials (7-3, 4-3 SHSHL American) could rest easy. Dan Glazer scored for Wissahickon (6-1-2, 4-1-2) 56 seconds into the third period to bring the Trojans within a goal at 5-4. But Gavin Mulligan and Keller scored goals at 6:14 and 12:26, respectively, to give the Colonials some insurance.

The winners were outshot 37-24 but Yuter, a junior, was on top of his game. He said the key was maintaining his concentration. “Just staying intense the whole time and just watching every shot in,” he said,”and just seeing where everyone is, and just playing every shift like it’s my last.”

After losing a 13-8 shootout to Lower Moreland last Thursday, Yuter said it was important for he and his mates to step up Wednesday night.

“It was very important,” he said, “because we’ve always had a big rivalry against Wissahickon. They’re undefeated (prior to Wednesday) and we just need to show them what’s up and who is boss in this league.”

That issue won’t be settled until season’s end but Wissahickon coach Ken Harrington acknowledged Plymouth Whitemarsh was the superior team on this occasion.

“They were outworking us over and over,” he said. “We weren’t adjusting; they were collapsing on us and we weren’t adjusting.”

Harrington acknowledged his team still has some work to do.  “We looked real sluggish,” he said. “A couple guys were under the weather, they were game time decisions, but no excuses. They’re were outworking us and the one-on-one battles, they won a lot of them.”

Plymouth Whitemarsh 2 3 2—7
Wissahickon 2 1 1—4
First-period goals: Colin Franzoni (PW) from Ben Lucas, 9:10; Bryan Gary (W) from Sean Gary, 9:31; Peter Troy (PW) from Dean Keller, 15:06; Sean Gary (W) from Bryan Gary and Nick Hussa, 15:36 (pp).
Second-period goals: Aidan Keith (PW) from Troy, 5:43; Bryan Gary (W) from Sean Gary, 11:55; Keller (PW) unassisted, 12:29; Franzoni (PW) from Jake Weikel, 15:49 (sh).
Third-period goals: Dan Glazer (W) from Ty Schaffer, :56; Gavin Mulligan (W) from Desmond Brock, 6:14; Keller (PW) from Franzoni, 12:26.
Shots: Plymouth Whitemarsh 24, Wissahickon 37; Saves: Ben Yuter (PW) 33, Michael Henderson (W) 17

By Rick Woelfel

 

SHSHL By the Numbers

Suburban High School Hockey League statistics as of 1-6-19

 

 

Scoring                                GP       Goals     Assists    Points

Sean Gary Wiss                           8         22          15            37

Bryan Gary Wiss                          8         22           12          34

Dean Keller PW                           9         13           18           31

Vincent DeMaio LM                   9         16           14            30

Coleman Peppelman LM           9         18            11           29

Tyler Greenstein NP                  10        15           12            27

Nathan Oh NP                            10        10           14            24

Perry Carpenter Ab                   8          15            8             23

Steven Avellino Tr                      8         17            5             22

Reis Bracio CBS                           9         11           10            21

Eric Slater Pr                               7          17            4             21

Matt Cade Wiss                         8          10           11            21

Ari Nordlinger UD                     8          12            9              21

Colin Franzoni PW                     9          13            8             21

Jake Weikel PW                          9           15            6              21

Josh Kaufhold NP                      10         6            14             20

John Gray Soud                          9          12          8               20

Devin Green LM                       9            8         12               20

 

Goals against Ave.(Min. 192 minutes played)       GP        Min.      GAA

Chris McIntyre   CBE                                                   8          240       2.60

Luke Stranik Pr                                                            7          329       2.62

Andrew Zanoni  NP                                                     8          240      2.80

Nick Ebbinghus NP                                                     8           240      2.80

Joe Gambino  HH                                                       8           336       3.14

Ben Yuter PW                                                              8          312       3.22

Oscar Levin CBS                                                         8            312      3.23

Jimmy Sweeney CRS                                                 6            208      3.46

Michael Henderson Wiss                                        8             384      3.50

Steven Glik, Nesh                                                     8             336      3.86

 

Save Percentage (Min 192 minutes played)      GP         Min       Sv Pct.

Chris McIntyre CBE                                                 8           240         .912

Steveb Glik Nesh                                                    8            336         .902

Luke Stranik Pr                                                        7           329         .901

Joe Gambino HH                                                    8            336         .900

Oscar Levin CBS                                                     8             312        .881

Jonathan Pritchard Soud                                     10           432        .880

Jeremy Wedul Tr                                                  9              384        .866

Jacob Snellenburg  Ab                                         8             240         .863

Michael Henderson Wiss                                    8             384         .859

Ben Yuter PW                                                       8              312         .858

SHSHL Standings Through Games of 1-4-19

Here is  how the standings shape up in the Suburban High School Hockey League going into the week.

Class 2A

National Division                        W      L      T      Pts

C.R. South (5-2-2)                       2        1    2        5

Abington (3-3-2)                         2       1      1      4

Neshaminy (3-4-1)                      2       3       0     4

Pennsbury (3-4-2)                       2       3     0       4

Truman (2-5-2)                            1      3     1        3

William Tennent (3-6)                1       4     0       2

 

Continental Division                    W      L      T      Pts

C.B. South (6-2-1)                         5       0     1        11

North Penn (6-2-2)                       5       1     1        11

Pennridge (5-1-1)                         4      1      0        8

C.B. East (5-2-1)                           2       2      0        4

C.B. West (3-5)                             1     3      0          2

Souderton (1-9)                           0       6      0       0

 

 

Class A

American Division                       W      L      T      Pts

Wissahickon (6-0-2)                      4      0      2       10

Hatboro-Horsham (5-3-1)            3     3      1        7

Lower Moreland (5-1-3)              3      1      1       7

Plymouth Whitemarsh (6-3)       3      3      0       6

Upper Dublin (3-6)                       0       6      0      0

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C.B. South 2, North Penn 2

By Rick Woelfel

HATFIELD TOWNSHIP‑The much-anticipated matchup delivered on most expectations. But it did not produce a winner.

Central Bucks South and North Penn put on an impressive display of hockey at Hatfield Ice Thursday night before their Suburban High School Hockey League matchup ended in a 2-2 deadlock.

It was the second meeting of the season between the Titans and the Knights but this one counted in the SHSHL Class 2A division standings.

The Titans improved to 6-2-1 overall and 5-0-1 in the SHSHL. The Knights now stand at 6-2-2 and 5-1-1.

North Penn’s Jake Nelson scored what turned out to be the last goal of the evening 4:25 into the third period off a superb individual effort by his teammate, defenseman Ryan Cunningham, who carried the puck out of his own zone up the left wing before cutting to his right as he crossed the South blue line and moving in on Titan goaltender Oscar Levin. Levin made the save but Nelson put in the rebound.

“I knew (Cunningham) was going to shoot it,” Nelson said, “so I just went to the net, filled my lane, and looked for the rebound.”

Levin was superb in the Titans’ net, making 25 saves. His best work came just past the midway point of the second period when he denied first Nick Rowland and Josh Kaufhold in a 30-second span. “I usually use those to make sure our team gets the confidence to make sure we get back into our business,” Levin said, “where we can get good, quality shots on net and make sure that we can get as many shots as possible.”

North Penn was able to slow their foes down to some extent, outshooting the Titans 27-21.

“We want to try to get at least 10 shots every period,” said North Penn coach Kevin Vaitis. “We want to look to hold the other team to seven or less. (South) loves shooting the puck from all different angles and getting shots on net. We did a good job tonight of keeping their shots to the outside, keeping them to a minimum.”

South coach Shaun McGinty said his team was fortunate to come away with a point. “I think we were lucky to get out of there with a tie,” he said. “(North Penn) definitely deserved to win, they won all three periods. We definitely didn’t have the offense we’ve had.”

Ryan Gingras gave the Titans a 1-0 lead 8:45 into the first period with a long shot that caromed off the glove of North Penn goaltender Nick Ebbinghaus and into the net.

Nathan Oh drew the Knights even just seven seconds into the second frame but it took just another 1:23 for South to take a 2-1 lead thanks to Matt Milanesi’s power-play goal. Gingras set up the goal with a burst through the neutral zone

Notes—The Titans won the teams’ first meeting 5-2 on November 21. South is unbeaten in its last seven games

 

 

C.B. South 1 1 0—2

North Penn 0 1 1­—2

First-period goal: Ryan Gingras (CBS) from Reis Braccio and Brian Keilman, 8:45.

Second-period goals: Nathan Oh (NP) from Jared Albano, :07; Matt Milanesi (CBS) from Gingras, 1:30 (pp).

Third-period goal:  Jake Nelson (NP) from Ryan Cunningham and Tyler Greenstein, 4:25.
Shots: C.B. South 21, North Penn 27; saves: Oscar Levin (CBS) 25, Nick Ebbinghaus (NP) 19.

Council Rock South 5, Neshaminy 1

WARWICK—The calendar has turned to January. And, as predictably as an appearance of the full moon, Council Rock South is rounding into form.

Four unanswered third-period goals enabled the Golden Hawks to pull away from Neshaminy 5-1 Wednesday night in a Suburban High School Hockey League Class 2A matchup at Revolution Ice Gardens. Five different players scored goals as South improved to 2-1-1 in league play and 5-2-2 overall. The Hawks have three wins and a tie in their last five starts dating back to Thanksgiving Eve. Neshaminy dropped to 3-4-1 and 2-3.

“It’s good when you get contributions from everybody,” said South coach Joe Houk. “That’s the key to everything. That’s all different lines too. The third line was we had was basically a line of (junior varsity) guys.”

Andrew Stoychev led the way for South with a goal and two assists. His goal 30 seconds into the third period provided to be the game winner.  Logan Hurwitz also had a three-point night; three assists.

Despite the fact that there were several junior varsity players in the South lineup, Stoychev said all the pieces fit.

“Both our teams work together,” the senior said. “We saw what was happening with  all of our lines, we know how to play with each other and we just make stuff work out.”
The game was  scoreless for virtually all of the first two periods. Neshaminy’s Zach MacNamee broke the scoreless deadlock when he beat South netminder Jimmy Sweeney from close range with just 52 seconds left in the second session.

It took only 22 seconds for John Hearn to deliver the equalizer, a one-timer from the left faceoff circle.

Stoychev put South in front for good 30 seconds into the final period. Billy Harrelson, Cameron Schwartz, and Kenny Duffield followed with goals of their own over the next 7:42.

“We came out flat,” said Neshaminy coach Matt DeMatteo. “The biggest thing for us I think is that we turned too many pucks over in transition and we did a poor job getting the puck out of the zone. And when you let that team keep the puck in, and sustain pressure, sooner or later the puck is going to go in your net.”

 

Notes—South had a 21-16 wedge in shots. The game featured just three minor penalties.

 

Neshaminy 0 1 0—1

C.R. South 0 1 4—5

Second-period goals: Zach MacNamee (N) from Brett Nelson, 15:08; John Hearn (CRS) from Logan Hurwitz and Andrew Stoychev, 15:30.

Third-period goals: Stoychev (CRS) from Hurwitz and David Mueller, :30; Billy Harrelson (CRS) from Jimmy Purcell, 3:45; Cameron Schwartz (CRS) from Sam Cherkassky and Julian Wagenmann, 5:01; Kenny Duffield (CRS) from Hurwitz and Stoychev, 8:12.

Shots: Neshaminy 16, Council Rock South 21; Saves: Steven Glik (N) 16, Jimmy Sweeney (CRS) 15

 

School Days: Tom Feeley Recalls His Days as a High School Hockey Player

At the other end of the telephone, Tom Feeley recalled his days playing high-school hockey.

“It was simpler times,” he said. “We were on the ice with referees and the goaltenders had equipment.”

Feeley graduated from Archbishop Wood in the spring of 1975. He skated for the Vikings in the 74-75 season, the first year the school had a team. The year before, as a junior, he played for Hatboro-Horsham in the Suburban High School Hockey League’s inaugural season.

A lot of high school kids wanted to play hockey around that time. The reason was the Philadelphia Flyers, who won their first Stanley Cup the same year the SHSHL got started.

“The Flyers were doing great,” Feeley said. “It was just so cool to be on the ice. Playing hockey and occasionally scoring goals and lifting your stick up it just felt like you were a Flyer; you felt like you were not a professional, but you kind of better understood the game and watching it by playing it.”

Feeley grew up in Southampton. He and his friends got their start like many others did in that time and place, playing street hockey.

“That’s where most of us learned how to play,” he said. “We would play very day after school in the backyard of one of the neighbors who had an asphalt court about one third the size of a regular basketball court.

“We usually ended up with one net, one goalie, and that goalie would play full-time goalie for both teams. That’s where we were all the time.
“Then, when the local pond or creek froze, we got a chance to put skates on, but most of the time it was street hockey in sneakers.”

By 1973-74, Feeley’s junior year of high school, the Flyers were starting their seventh season and attracting a fair amount of attention A lot of teenage boys wanted to be hockey players. That combination of circumstances led to the launch of the SHSHL that year.

While Archbishop Wood didn’t field a team that year, Hatboro-Horsham did. The issue of ‘purity’, of players actually attending the high school they played for, wasn’t as big a factor then as it would later become, which explains why Feeley spent his junior season in the Hatters’ red and black instead of the Vikings’ black and gold.

“I think we may have wanted to get a team going at Wood my junior year,” he said, “and there just wasn’t enough interest.

“There were a couple of us from Wood that wound up playing for Hatboro-Horsham; I don’t know how that happened; someone must have known someone there.”
The Hatboro-Horsham program had its origins in the 1972-73 season.  While it was founded by three Hatboro-Horsham students, Bob Sands, Gary Rossler, and John Wszalek, it was less a high-school hockey team than a community hockey club, one that was open to men as well as boys. The group would get together at the Wintersport rink on York Road in Willow Grove.

The following year, the group became the Hatboro-Horsham Ice Hockey Club. The founders became the first coaches and the team joined the high-school league that had been created at Wintersport midway through the previous season.

The 1973-74 is considered the Suburban High School Hockey League’s first official season. All league games were played at Wintersport, usually late on Friday nights or Saturday mornings and occasionally on Sundays.

They were not necessarily prime time games,” Feeley said. “Maybe during the playoffs they would mostly have evening games, but we had a couple games that would start at like 10:00 on Saturday morning.”

Wintersport was a no-frills facility. In those days, there was no glass above the boards.

“There was a black chain link fence that went around behind the goalies,” Feeley said. “It kind of stretched up to maybe the blue line and then it was kind of open in between.”

Feeley recalls that Hatboro-Horsham’s first head coach was Ray Reynolds. “His son, Ray Junior played on the team,” he said. “He was probably, if not our best, one of our best two players. He was fast, he could skate, and he had come from a background of hockey He was one of the few kids on our team that actually played some hockey before they started playing high school.”

Feeley notes that primary job of the coaching staff was to make sure the players came off the ice when they were supposed to. “They tried to control the line shifts,” he said, “but there was many a time when I player didn’t come off and his teammates were yelling at him, ‘Come on, come on,’ because it would mess up the lines. For most the part, we would short shift everyone would come on as a group and go off as a group.”

There were no organized practices because of the cost of the ice so the players sharpened their skills by continuing to play street hockey.

“I remember taking a piece of plywood and putting car wax on it,” Feeley said, “It was a piece of paneling actually. and using that in my driveway and shooting a regular, vulcanized puck with a hockey stick off of that to try to develop a wrist shot and shooting that against the garage door.

“We would come up with ideas and ways to get some practice, even though it wasn’t on the ice.”

Feeley was a defenseman throughout his high-school career. “ I was a pretty good  skater,” he recalls. “We had a few guys who were definitely better skaters I but could skate. And with defense, you’re just on the ice longer because we typically went with two pairs of defensemen. We had a third pair but we’d get more ice time, an extra shift a period, if you played defense.

“So I played defense and I tried to be more of an offensive defenseman. My partner at Wood, Ron Fetch, was more stay-at-home.”

That 1973-74 season saw the Hatters win one of nine games. The following year, Archbishop Wood had a team organized by Ray Reinhl, an influential figure in the early years of the SHSHL.

Feeley scored the team’s first official SHSHL goal in a 4-2 season-opening win over North Penn. That team reached the league championship series before losing to Abington two games to one.

Feeley recalls that he and his teammates were enthralled by the opportunity to play hockey. The players had a do-it-yourself attitude.

“There would be a core group of spectators at every game,” he said, “Sometimes kids from school, sometimes some parents, but back then, you didn’t have parents involved in every single thing your kids did.. We took ourselves to the games, and practices. Our parents would come but they weren’t in the face of the coach, they weren’t trying to influence who gets to play. It was pretty pure back then.

“It was right around the (oil embargo) in the early 70s; sometimes you didn’t know if you were going to get enough gas in your car to get to the rink and back but the playing was just pure fun.”

After high school Feeley headed to California University of Pennsylvania. His efforts to start a club team there were unsuccessful, although he did play in some pickup games

He played in a men’s league for a time after college but today he’s a successful businessman in the Pittsburgh area and an ardent fan of the Penguins.

He looks back fondly on his days playing high-school hockey. “It was just fun, joyful, low stress,” he said. “No one was playing for a scholarship, no one was playing for any other reason than because we enjoyed it.”

 

Another Look at Hockey History—The SHSHL

The 2019 Suburban High School Hockey League season is set to resume the day after New Year’s.

It was 46 years ago that high-school hockey was introduced to Eastern Montgomery County.

Sometime around the midway point of the 1972-73 season, hockey impresario Walter Jewell withdrew a team that he ran from a league that played  at the original Grundy rink in Bristol and moved it to the Wintersport rink on York Road in Willow Grove, which had recently opened, and where a league for high-school age players had been organized.

Jewell’s team, which featured primarily, though not exclusively, Abington players, was actually called the Wintersports. The team won the league championship that first season, defeating a team called the Northeast Sabres 3-2 in the varsity championship game.

The following season, 1973-74, saw the league take a major step forward when most teams began playing under the names of various high schools. Research indicates there were eight teams in the league that year; Abington, Hatboro-Horsham, North Penn, Plymouth Whitemarsh, Lower Moreland, Upper Moreland/Willow Grove, Philmont, and Northeast (the section of Philadelphia, not necessarily the school).

High-school hockey has been a fixture in the area ever since.

 

Our thanks to Steve Schorr and the Abington hockey alumni for their help and providing much of the information contained in this post.

Combing the Annals of History

Hockey Happenings and the Suburban High School Hockey League are engaged in an ongoing effort to document the history of the league.

We are reaching out to coaches, club officers, and anyone who have have historical material such as newspaper clippings, photographs, game programs, or even receipts for such things as purchasing ice time.

We’re concentrating on the following areas

What year each club was organized/  joined the SHSHL and, if it left the league at any point, when did it return?

What teams were part of the SHSHL each season

What teams won the SHSHL championship each season

We welcome input from all those who share our interest in and passion for high-school hockey.

Thank you all.

 

Rick Woelfel

Editor.Publisher

Hockey Happenings