centaurs pg 1 4-13-23



 Roundup
Centaurs
baseball team
enjoys nice
opening week
Woodstock Academy baseball coach Brian Murphy was smiling. His Centaurs are off to a 3-0 start against some quality early-season competition.
Woodstock finished off its opening week of the season with a 7-1 victory over Lyman Memorial.
Prior to that, the Centaurs played their first game last Monday and posted a 6-3 win over an always difficult Waterford team on the road and added a 6-2 win over Norwich Free Academy in its Wednesday home opener.
“I like where the guys are at,” Murphy said. “They realize that we have an opportunity to do some really special things this year. They also realize they just can’t throw their gloves on the field and win. The (ECC) is very competitive and if you don’t show up, you’re going to get beat, but the potential is there in all facets of the game for us to be very successful.”
Sophomore Brady Ericson was a key contributor against the Bulldogs to finish up the week.
Ericson, who had thrown three innings of scoreless relief against Waterford earlier in the week, held Lyman Memorial (1-1) to just two hits in five innings and struck out six to pick up his first win of the season.
Ericson also helped give himself an early lead as he doubled home Eric Mathewson, who had walked, in the bottom of the first inning and then scored himself on a Marcus McGregor double.
Woodstock added three more runs in the third inning when Maxx Corradi walked, stole second and came home on a Mathewson double to right.
Ericson, who is now 6-for-10 (.600) at the plate for the season, followed with a single and McGregor knocked in the second run of the inning with a sacrifice fly. Keon Lamarche, who had two hits, drove in another with a single.
The Centaurs added two more in the fifth when McGregor walked and later scored on a wild pitch and Corradi added a sacrifice fly.
While Woodstock struck first on Saturday, it was NFA that did the honors in the Centaurs’ home opener.
The Centaurs fell behind the Wildcats (1-1) when Connor Doyle reached starting pitcher Riley O’Brien for a two-run single in the first inning.
But O’Brien recovered, went five innings and gave up just four hits.
“He battled. It was a rough first inning getting out of the box, but he settled down, kept us in the game and Eric (Mathewson) did a great job of coming in and closing the door,” Murphy said.
Mathewson pitched the last two innings and recorded the save.
The Centaurs had to wait a bit but found some offense in the fifth inning.
Mathewson got things started when he drew a walk and came home on an Ericson triple. Carter Morissette scored Ericson with a single. Morissette moved up on a stolen base and passed ball and scored on a Lamarche sacrifice fly.
O’Brien singled and Mike Hernandez came in to pinch-run for him. Caleb Simoneau reached on a bunt single and an error on the play allowed Hernandez to come around. Corradi followed suit and also bunted his way aboard and an error allowed Simoneau to score. Morissette finished off the second 3-run rally with a run-scoring double.
Ericson, Morissette and Simoneau each had two hits in the win for the Centaurs.
Earlier in the week, Ericson and O’Brien led the offense with two hits and two runs batted in each in the win over the Lancers.
Ericson hit a solo homer and had an RBI single and also pitched three innings of scoreless relief while O’Brien added an RBI single and a sacrifice fly.
Winning pitcher Kaden Murphy had a sacrifice fly and a pair of singles for the Centaurs. Morissette (2-for-4) and Corradi both had doubles in the win.

Girls’ Golf
Woodstock coach Earl Semmelrock was a little concerned that he was missing his top player this year, Maya Orbegozo, for the match against Waterford on Thursday.
He didn’t have to be. The Lancers could not field a full team and the Centaurs posted the forfeit win with a 251 total to raise their record to 2-0 overall and in the ECC.
Ella Musumeci paced the team with a 56 against the Lancers while Lily Bottone carded a 63 and Isabella Siwiko posted a 65.
Orbegozo did play in the season opener against East Lyme.
The senior returned after a year off from the game to take medalist honors with a 46 in the season opener for the Centaurs who downed the Vikings, 230-257, at the Old Lyme Country Club.
Musumeci shot a 57 for Woodstock in the opening win.

Boys’ Tennis
The Woodstock boys’ tennis team got off to a nice start in its first week of competition.
The Centaurs hosted both New London and Killingly indoors at the Pomfret School and posted wins over both squads.
“This is a very positive feeling,” said coach Siana Green. “Having to forfeit our No. 3 doubles and being down, 1-0, right from the start of a match is very scary.”
Woodstock has only eight players out for the team currently, leaving them two players shy of a full roster to compete in all seven matches that comprise a high school match.
What made it even more difficult is that the Centaurs are normally pretty evenly matched with Killingly.
“I knew it was going to be difficult because we were pretty even last year and they didn’t graduate many people. I was very happy and proud to come out with the win,” Green said.
The encounter with Killingly went down to the wire.
Woodstock sophomore Owen Rigney, playing at second singles, pulled out the decisive victory that lifted Woodstock to the 4-3 win Tuesday.
The two teams were tied at three with Rigney and his opponent, Phillip Purcell, still going at it.
Purcell had won the first set, 6-4, and Rigney came back to tie with a 6-4 victory in the second.
But the daylight waned by the decisive third set and it was decided to move indoors to complete it.
Rigney then gave the Centaurs the win with a 6-3 victory in the third set.
James Le also prevailed at fourth singles for Woodstock, posting a straight-set, 6-3, 6-3 win over Killingly’s Ross Hill.
The first doubles team of Diego Rodriguez and Ethan Staples won their match, 6-2, 6-2, and the duo of Quentin Patterson and Ryan Chabot were 6-1, 7-5 winners.
The Centaurs had a much easier time with the Whalers.
Cormac Nielsen, Rigney, Tyler Chamberlin and Rodriguez all won their singles matches.
Le and Staples took first doubles while Paterson and Chabot were also winners at second doubles.
Green has decided to alternate Rodriguez and Le at fourth singles.
The numbers will be even a bigger problem over spring break as both Le and Rodriguez are not available for matches against NFA and Montville.
“We will be forfeiting, at least, two positions. Hopefully, no one gets sick. I’m hoping we can manage a win still against NFA,” Green said.

Boys’ Lacrosse
The schedule makers did no favors for the Woodstock boys’ lacrosse team.
The Centaurs had to battle against East Lyme in their opener and followed that up with a game against Waterford, the top two teams in the ECC last season.
“When you see that schedule, you know those are two of the toughest opponents that you will see all year,” said coach Jason Tata.
Fortunately, the Centaurs did get their first win of the season after those two tough openers.
Woodstock downed Norwich Tech/Windham Tech, 13-3.
Zach Gessner may have only scored one goal in the match against the Warriors but he was extremely valuable when it came to distributing the ball.
The Centaurs senior attack assisted on nine of the other Woodstock tallies.
Junior attack Jared Nielsen benefitted the most from Gessner’s aid as four of his team-leading five goals came with the help of his teammate.
Three of Nielsen’s goals came in the first quarter when the Centaurs bounced out to a 4-0 lead and never trailed in the match.
Freshman Dylan Phillips added a hat trick of his own while Henry Wotton had a pair of goals and Ryan Wallace contributed a goal and an assist.
Woodstock needed the win after East Lyme had handled the Centaurs with ease, allowing just a Nielsen goal, in a 20-1 win on the first Saturday of the season.
But things were much better against the Lancers as the Centaurs kept it close before falling, 7-4.
The Lancers led 2-1 at the end of the first quarter and 4-1 at the half. But the Centaurs rallied in the third quarter to cut the deficit to one, 4-3, before Waterford scored three of the last four goals to scrape together the victory.
Gessner scored twice for Woodstock while Cashel Noel and Quintavanh Sangasy added the other tallies. Seamus McDermott had an assist.

Softball
Surprise, surprise, it was quite breezy at the Bentley Athletic Complex last Monday.
That breeze, hardly gentle, combined with temperatures in the high 40s made for a rather chilly afternoon.
Not one that would seem conducive to balls carrying deep into the outfield. The Centaurs proved that wrong.
Seniors Lexi Thompson and Avery Collin both hit long home runs in an eight-run fifth inning that led Woodstock to a 13-3 season-opening win over St. Bernard.
“We have a senior and junior group so if they’re focused, we have a lot of strong hitters. You don’t see it go out on a day like this too much but we have some pretty good players and if they get a hold of it, it doesn’t matter much what the weather is,” said coach Jason Gerum.
The Centaurs fell behind, 2-0, as the Saints put two up on the board in the top of the first inning, but Woodstock erased that deficit in the second inning with four runs.
Collin knocked in two with a double while Sarah McArthur tripled home one and Emily Goodell singled home another.
Two innings later, the floodgates opened. Goodell had a one-out triple and McArthur reached on a bunt single. Maddie Martinez knocked in both with a triple and didn’t have to run fast to score from third. Thompson followed with a bomb to left field, one of the longest Gerum has seen hit at the softball field.
“That was a monster. it was one of the hardest hits I’ve seen here,” Gerum said. The only hits he remembered that rivaled the Thompson blast, which cleared not only the fence but the stone wall behind it, were one by Adelys Concepcion which went over the right field fence and onto the turf football field beyond and one by Riley Hehir that also hit the stone wall in left.
The rally wasn’t over yet.
Elizabeth Morgis singled, Ainsley Morse doubled her home and, after a walk to Mia Pannone, Collin hit one over the left field fence for her first career varsity home run.
“I didn’t hit it that hard, didn’t take a full swing, so I was actually shocked that it went that far,” Collin said with a laugh.
Collin finished with five RBIs from the eighth spot in the order.
Thompson pitched the first five innings and allowed just two hits and struck out nine.
She did allow two runs in the first on a triple, a groundout, a walk, stolen base and an error and a wild pitch.
Plus, it’s always nice to get that first win in the first game of the season.
Unfortunately, things did not go as well over the remainder of the week in a pair of road games.
The Centaurs lost at Norwich Free Academy, 14-6, and followed that up with a 6-2 loss to undefeated Coventry.
Coventry chipped away at the Centaurs on their home field. Remington Casida drove in winning pitcher Elizabeth Mitchell with a double in the first inning. The Patriots added another in the fourth on an RBI single by Maya Waterhouse and put it away with two runs each in the fifth and sixth innings.
Mitchell and Brooke Rand had RBI singles in the fifth while Caroline Wesoloskie homered and Charlotte Wesoloskie had an RBI double in the sixth.
The Centaurs mustered just four hits against Mitchell.
Collin and Delaney Anderson knocked in the runs for the Centaurs who slipped to 1-2.
The Wildcats didn’t let Woodstock hang around for long.
They scored 12 runs in the first two innings to put the game out of reach.
The Centaurs started out well. Martinez doubled and Thompson hit her second home run of the season to put Woodstock Academy up, 2-0, in the first inning.
Unfortunately, the Wildcats answered with five runs in the bottom of the first inning and added seven more in the second for the insurmountable lead.



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lamontagne pg 1 4-13-23



LaMontagne
takes over
boys’ track
program
It’s the hat that gives away Gerry LaMontagne.
And it’s becoming a familiar feature on the Woodstock Academy school grounds.
LaMontagne coached the girls’ field hockey program this past fall and is now the head coach of the Centaurs boys’ track program after Peter Lusa retired from the post recently.
“It’s getting to be a habit,” LaMontagne said with a laugh of his second head coach responsibility. “When Pete retired, he mentioned to me that I should give it some thought and both coach (Josh) Welch and Joe Banas (girls’ track coaches) thought I would be a good fit for it. I’ve been here the last three years (as an assistant), so I figured I would step in and give it a little continuity. Honestly, from a practice standpoint, it doesn’t change a lot for the kids.”
LaMontagne will continue to coach the field events, especially the throwers, while Welch and Banas focus on the track events.
“(LaMontagne) is really willing to learn all of the events and tries his best to give corrections even though he specializes in throws. He has paid extra attention to me in the pole vault which really means a lot to me as an athlete,” senior Liam Wilcox said.
LaMontagne’s boys’ team will be one of the biggest groups he has seen in his tenure with the Centaurs as the number stood at 45 recently.
“I’m shocked at the number of throwers I have to work with this year. We have a nice crop of freshmen coming in,” LaMontagne said.
The Centaurs did lose 10 athletes from a year ago including a couple of school record holders in LaMontagne’s son, Keenan, and Ian Hoffman.
But LaMontagne feels more records could fall this season.
“Jared (Eaton) has a good chance of setting the school record in the shotput. Christian (Menounos) may have a chance at two records, the 3200-meter, and I think he has his eye on the 800-meter record as well. Colton Sallum has a shot at breaking the 1600-meter mark and keep your eye on Braedon Emerson in the 200,” LaMontagne said.
Eaton was happy to see all the throwers come out for the team.
In addition to himself, junior Austin Adams and sophomores Aidan Brailsford and Mike Susi will throw for varsity.
There are 10 others who will compete on the JV level to start.
“It’s great to have people. In indoor track, there was only five people who were committed. We have, like 15, it’s just amazing,” Eaton said.
Eaton made Nationals in the shotput in indoor track this past winter.
“I had been working all summer for it and even before the season. It felt amazing,” Eaton said.
Now his intention is to leave Woodstock Academy with his name next to a school record.
“That’s my main goal,” Eaton said. “I need six more inches and I will feel incomplete if I don’t hit it.”
Eaton has thrown the shot 52-feet, he desperately wants 52-6. “I’m ready,” he said with a smile.
Wilcox, meanwhile, takes over for Hoffman as the leader in the pole vault.
“Liam was having a pretty darn good indoor season but, unfortunately, he broke his pole at a tough time for him and had to adjust to a new pole on short notice and wasn’t able to pull it off like he wanted. Now, he has the time, especially with a later start, it’s an advantage,” LaMontagne said.
Menounos will have plenty of friends running in the middle and long distance.
Seniors Vincente Bastura and Owen Tracy return for their final season, junior Joel Koleszar, and sophomore Sallum will all compete in the middle and distance events.
Seniors Ethan Brierley, Rocco Corrado, Emerson, Jayden Meier and Carter Saracina will handle the sprint duties.
Wilcox will be joined in the pole vault by Corrado while Wilcox will also compete in hurdles and high jump. Other jumps competitors include senior Mateusz Chojnicki and sophomore Aidan Kane.
“The strengths of the team will be throws led by Jared and then the middle and distance runners. That’s where will get most of our points,” LaMontagne said.
The Centaurs do compete in Division I of the Eastern Connecticut Conference against much larger programs such as Norwich Free Academy, Fitch and East Lyme.
“Track is a numbers game,” LaMontagne said,” so it’s a tough one. I think if we can kind of hold serve with what we have achieved in the past. It’s tough to compete with East Lyme and Fitch because of their numbers. On a good day, we have guys who can win events, score points, and if some of the freshmen come along and steal some points, maybe we win a meet against a team like NFA.”
The Centaurs still have plenty of practice before their first meet.
While some ECC teams had a meet this past week, the season opener for Woodstock is not until April 19 at East Lyme.
That meant the team had about a month’s worth of practice before a meet.
For some, that’s OK.
“We hit the gym about twice a week because it’s harder in outdoor. We have been just working as hard as we can so we can be ready going into that first meet,” Eaton said.
Wilcox was not as hyped about it.
“It’s difficult,” Wilcox admitted. “Having the mindset that you have to do track for a whole month before your first competition. It’s definitely good for preparation so that by the time we do compete, we will be at our best.”
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy

captions inside:

Ready for Track
Woodstock Academy senior Jared Eaton, left, will be a standout thrower while fellow senior Liam Wilcox should garner points in both the pole vault and hurdle events.

The Woodstock Academy boys’ outdoor track team will be coached by Gerry LaMontagne, who takes over for Peter Lusa, this season. Photos by Marc Allard.


 

navy pg 1 4-13-23


captions:

Top: On deck on the USS Carl Vinson. Photo by Guillermo Carmona. Above: Fighter jets 30 feet away. Photo by Tom Borner. Left: Tom Borner (left) and Barney Seney experienced a day at sea on an aircraft carrier.



A day in the Navy
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — Standing 30 feet from F-35s rocketing off the deck of a carrier is certainly jaw dropping — even for a businessman and a mayor.
Attorney Thomas Borner and Putnam Mayor Barney Seney said it was an “impressive” experience.
They had joined the crew of the USS Carl Vinson Nimitz class nuclear aircraft carrier for a full day in March. The two were part of a group of 14 from the U.S. who had been nominated to take part in the Navy Embark distinguished visitor program. It’s designed to acquaint civilians with the Navy, to “experience the Navy for a day,” said Borner. “The program is intended to showcase the Navy and to spread the good word about the Navy’s contribution to our national security.”
Educators, business people and politicians are nominated to take part and perhaps share with their towns what the modern U.S. Navy is like.
Borner said they were nominated four years ago and then the pandemic put the program on hold. The first week in March they were notified that there would be a carrier in the San Diego vicinity, possibly between March 24 and March 29. The pair got short notice that March 29 was the day. They met their group at the naval base gate — 10 teachers, three business people and … one mayor. After three hours of training, they took an exciting ride on an Osprey to the Vinson. Borner said much of the time the door of the Osprey was open. Borner said “You could drive a car in through that door.” They were “super strapped in.”
When they got to the carrier, the wind was incredible when they disembarked. “I thought somebody is gonna get blown off,” said Borner.
After landing on the Vinson and more training, they were outfitted with vests, double ear plugs and a helmet so “snug” that most got headaches.
Then it was off to the flight deck where they stood 30 feet from the F-35s’ takeoffs and landings. “It was earth shattering” they said.
On a tour they noted the carrier is home to 5,500 and morale is high. Borner said the only way that they knew they were below deck was that the doors were water tight. Otherwise all the halls and doors looked the same.
This “little city” had everything it needed. There’s 18,000 square feet of freezer space; they serve 17,000 meals a day in five mess halls and do 43,000 pounds of laundry. The carrier is resupplied about once a month. When the resupply is at sea, Borner said they use “modified M-16s” that shoot “suction cups” so that a cable relay system between the supply boat and the carrier can be established to transfer goods.
There’s all types of gym equipment. Seney spotted a Zumba class going on and joined in. “Barney was a hit,” Borner said.
They marveled at how a carrier four football fields long could almost turn on a dime. It was nearly zero clearance. The carrier makes frequent turns so that the aircraft are always taking off into the wind, the changeable wind. They said they could look behind them and see they were crossing their own wake.
Another tour topside at night — there are takeoffs and landings until 2 a.m. There’s even a midnight buffet. The next day they returned to San Diego.
Borner said the outreach program is “a great segue from high school to being grown up.” Students can at least consider the military and all the benefits it offers and the service to your country. Seney said the military offers much: discipline, learning a trade that transfers to the civilian world or using the GI bill to continue on to college. “It opens up the whole world.”
Borner said what impressed him most was seeing what 20 year olds were doing. “It was encouraging to see what this generation is doing; it’s inspiring.”
The Navy Embark program was right up there with “ringing the bell at NASDAQ, twice,” he added (for Putnam Bank).
Seney said, “I’m still high. I’ve seen a lot of things in my life and this was impressive. Maybe I should have joined the Navy.”
A highlight for Seney was giving a chief a Putnam anniversary medallion. “The chief walked with me to a seaman and handed the medallion to the sailor saying that someday ‘you, too, can achieve much. You can be a mayor’.”

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wnba pg 1 4-13-23


caption, page 3:

Bria Holmes. Photo by Middletown Press



WNBA
player is
new coach
Bria Holmes is ready for a change.
Putnam Science Academy was more than happy to provide her an opportunity for one.
PSA hired Holmes last week as the school’s new girls’ basketball coach, a break of sorts for Holmes from the rigors of a professional career that included a year-round schedule of the WNBA and overseas repeated for essentially the last seven years.
“I just think it was the right time for me, as far as my career, as far as being able to be home with my daughter and still be around the game that I fell in love with,” said Holmes, a former McDonald’s high school all-American who played at West Virginia University before being a first-round draft pick of the Atlanta Dream in 2016.
“I just think it’s a great opportunity for me, and who knows what doors it can open for all of us? Being able to help and share my journey and my experiences with these girls, and help mold them into the student-athletes they should be on and off the court in order to be successful is my mission and has always been my vision.”
The 28-year-old Holmes, who is currently finishing her contract overseas in the Czech Republic, will take time off as a professional to “be a mom (she has a 4-year-old daughter) and help young girls follow their dream.” She inherits a PSA team that has finished fourth in the last two national tournaments and is expected to return three of its top four scorers from last year.
“This is an incredible opportunity for us to bring someone with Bria’s experience into Putnam Science Academy,” Dean of Athletics Tom Espinosa said. “Bria has big expectations of herself and her players and we are looking forward to her getting started.”
Following her Hall of Fame career at WVU, Holmes was the 11th overall pick by Atlanta in the 2016 WNBA Draft and spent two seasons with the Dream before being traded to the Connecticut Sun, with whom she went to the Finals in 2019. She signed as a free agent with the Los Angeles Sparks prior to the 2021 season.
“I’m a girl from New Haven, Connecticut who dreamed,” she said. “I had a great high school career, I had an incredible college experience at West Virginia, I’ve played in the WNBA and overseas.
“I’m living proof that even without certain outlets, you can still have a dream and you can still make it out. You have to dream big and believe in yourself. Anything is possible. It’s possible. I made it out. And now I want to be able to share my experiences and my journey with these girls and let them know that whatever you’re going through, if you have a dream just stick to it and work at it and anything can happen.”
Aside from her own AAU program that she used to have, this will be Holmes’ first coaching job. She knows there will be some learning on the fly but is confident that her experiences give her a head start.
“I’ve been playing basketball since I was 5 years old, so I’ve had a lot of coaches over the years,” she said. “There are things you learn from each of them, things you pick up if you’re paying attention, things you like and don’t like. I never had a thing for coaching, honestly. I just knew I had the experience and tools to coach if I ever decided to.
“Being away from my daughter so much made me open my eyes to other things. It’s
bigger than basketball for me, it always has been. And it’s bigger than me too. Being able to be that outlet and a go-to person for these female athletes, it’s an honor. I’m grateful for the opportunity to do this.”
Stephen Nalbandian
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy

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