field pg 1 9-15-22



Roundup
Field hockey
team wins 1st
for new coaches
A confidence builder? As Woodstock Academy field hockey co-head coach Gerry LaMontagne pointed out, that goes without saying.
The Centaurs were sky high after a 4-3 win over Somers/Rockville cooperative in their season-opening game Sept. 8.
“We were really afraid that we weren’t going to have a season. Winning our first game especially with the expectations we had coming in from last year, sets the bar a little higher. We’re really glad that we got it and even if we didn’t, we had really great spirit,” said senior goalie Ava Basak.
The Centaurs overcame adversity before the season, waiting to see who would step up and coach the team.
They breathed a sigh of relief when LaMontagne and Donte Adams both stepped up to take the reins.
There was more adversity to overcome in the opener. The Centaurs went up, 1-0, on a Sophie Petrella goal with 4 minutes, 19 seconds left in the first quarter.
But the Spartans rallied behind the stick of Alyssa Reynolds who scored two second quarter goals to give the visitors a 2-1 halftime lead.
Then Centaurs sophomore Grace Pokorny stepped up, taking a pass from Abby Converse to tie the game with 8:19 left in the third quarter.
She put the Centaurs ahead off a rebound with 11:38 to play.
Pokorny is used to stick work. She also plays ice hockey for the Centaurs and that helps especially when it comes to vision and anticipation of what will happen on the field.
Then Audrey Molin tied it with 9:38 left for Somers/Rockville.
But with 2:33 to play, senior Chloe Nason broke in from the right side and sent it across the mouth of the goal where it found the left corner for the game winner.
“That was so amazing. I’m so proud of her. She got it right in that corner - an amazing shot,” Pokorny said.
Nason wasn’t the only senior who delivered.
“We had a lot of great senior leadership (Thursday). Ella (Musumeci) was great just keeping people on point and being a field general; Ava was a great leader in goal making sure what the girls knew what to do and I complimented Ainsley (Morse) for her work on defense,” LaMontagne said.
Volleyball
Coach Adam Bottone admitted to having flashbacks to the 2018 Class L state championship match. The memories were not good ones as his Centaurs bolted to a 2-0 lead only to see Joel Barlow come back to post a 3-2 win four years ago.
While the occasion was not as momentous, just the second match of the season against South Windsor, the scenario played out in a similar fashion Sept. 10.
The Centaurs (2-0) won the first two sets, 25-18 and 25-22. Then the Bobcats bounced back. Fortunately for Woodstock, it pulled out the 3-2 win this time.
The Bobcats tied things up with wins of 25-22 and 25-16. That led to a doozy of a fifth set. The two teams battled to a 15-all tie with senior Morgan Bonin getting a crucial kill to pull the Centaurs back from a point down.
Bonin then put Woodstock ahead to stay with the last of her 15 kills in the match off a pass from setter Sophie Gronski.
Gronski finished with 31 assists in the match.
Cassie Ladd provided the game-winning point with an ace for the 17-15 victory in the fifth and deciding set.
Lily Bottone added 13 kills in the win which could help down the road.
“I really think this was a great way to start the season and it sets us up for success in the future,” Bonin said.
The season opened on a sweet note Sept. 8 when Woodstock took a 3-0 win over Ledyard, sweeping through the three sets, 25-15, 25-18, 25-23.
Lily Bottone had 12 kills for the Centaurs while Ladd was excellent from behind the service line where she recorded seven aces. Bonin was also dominant at the net with nine kills.
There is still some work to do despite the unblemished record. “We had double-digit service errors in both matches so that and our receive. If we serve well and receive well, which everyone wants to do, we’re a dominant enough team where we have enough hitters to terminate. When we’re out-of-system, we struggle a little,” Adam Bottone said.
Boys’ Soccer
In neither of their first two matches did the Centaurs start well. Take the season opener in Ledyard which ended in a 2-2 deadlock Sept. 8.
“To be totally honest, they started stronger and we got our first goal probably against better play. We hung in there. They came out really quick out of the box,” said coach Paul Rearden.
But high school matches aren’t always decided by who is playing better.
It was the Centaurs who tallied the first two goals.
“Both of our goals came because our boys chased down a lost cause, (the first one we) ended up winning the ball and got a corner,” Rearden said.
The ball that came in to senior Grace Viau from sophomore John Bennett was dead solid perfect.
“The ball never touched the ground from coming in from the corner to going into the back of the net. It was the best goal I’ve ever seen in high school,” Rearden said.
The Centaurs went ahead by two halfway through the first half when sophomore Austin Byer chased down a ball that a Ledyard defender thought was headed to the sideline. Byer took it, raced toward the net, and put it home.
But that’s where the real good vibes ended. Nate Vidal sent a long ball through the Centaurs defense with 12 seconds left in the first half to slice the deficit in half.
Vidal tied the game for the Colonels (0-0-1) with 17 minutes to play.
A slow start also cost the Centaurs Sept. 10. Neither team scored in the first 37 ½ minutes of the first half although the NFA Wildcats took eight shots to the Centaurs one.
NFA finally hit pay dirt when Rood Apolon scored not one but two goals in the final 4 ½ minutes to put the Wildcats (1-0-1, 1-0-0 ECC Div. I) up 2-nil.
One of the highlights of the first half for Woodstock was the play of goalie Brian Jameson who even foiled a penalty kick attempt by NFA.
Apolon struck again just 6 minutes, 21 seconds into the second half to make it 3-0.
But the Centaurs (0-1-1, 0-1-0) were more on the attack in the second half than they were in the first.
With 30 minutes to play, Max Ferreira scored off an assist from Bennett for the Centaurs.
Unfortunately, that foothold never got much better as neither team would score the remainder of the way.
So far, Rearden is happy with what he has seen.
It’s just going to take some tweaking especially on the pitch.
Girls’ Soccer
It wasn’t the first week that the girls’ soccer team was hoping for. The Centaurs got off to a bit of a difficult start with losses to Stonington and Ledyard.
The Bears scored three goals in the first 12 minutes of the match, the season opener for both teams Sept. 8.
Woodstock did reduce the deficit to a more manageable two goals when senior Grace Gelhaus tallied from 35 yards out on a direct kick. But Stonington scored two more goals before the half ended and finished with a 7-1 victory.
The Centaurs were much happier with their effort Sept. 10 on the road at Ledyard.
Gelhaus put the Centaurs up, 1-0, with an unassisted first half goal.
That’s where the score remained at halftime but the host Colonels (2-0) tied the match early in the second half.
Maddie McLeod then delivered the game winner with 24 minutes to play as Ledyard prevailed, 2-1.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy

 Working the Ball
Sophomore Juliet Allard tries to work the ball up the field against Stonington.  

Bringing the Ball Up
Garrett Bushey brings the ball up the field.  
 

projects pg 1 9-15-22



captions, page 4:

Sidewalk Woes
Grove Street sidewalks are cracked, run through with grass, worn down to nothing or heaved up. Replacement of the sidewalks is coming up. Linda Lemmon photos.

Projects
coming
to fruition
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — The projects are lining up and it’ll be a busy November — or spring, depending.
A surveyor was working last week around Eversource’s former transformer area adjacent to the town’s commuter lot on Kennedy Drive.
That is related to the town’s intended purchase of that small lot to expand the town’s soon-to-be revamped commuter lot. Elaine Sistare, town administrator, said Eversource is proceeding with its due diligence for the possible sale. They have to put together all their appropriate easements, for example, an air easement for wires that might go over the little lot after the town buys it.
Meanwhile, the town is proceeding with finalizing the redesign of the commuter lot. One of the key elements is that the entrance that is very near the intersection of Rt. 44 and Kennedy Drive will move away from the intersection, keeping down congestion and bottlenecks.
Back in January, the conceptual plan drawn up by J&D Civil Engineers LLC of N. Grosvenordale, called for 195 parking spaces. The whole lot would be reworked, including the exits/entrances. The conceptual plan showed 20 electric vehicle (EV) charging stations, relocated handicapped parking spaces and possibly another set of stairs next to the Centreville Bank stairs to get to the Main Street/Union Square area. In addition some landscaped strips dot the plans. There will also be stormwater improvements. It will likely be spring before construction can begin on that lot, she said.
Meanwhile Sistare said the state Department of Transportation approved the award for the redo of the sidewalks on Grove Street. The state must OK it because Grove Street is a state road, Rt. 12.
The project includes removal of existing sidewalks and curbing and construction of new Portland cement concrete sidewalks with monolithic curb and sidewalk ramps along portions of South Main Street and Grove Street between the intersections of Front Street and Killingly Avenue.
Sistare said they need to get everything signed. “I suspect that this will wait until spring.”
Meanwhile, outside the new Putnam Public Library, the creation of a playscape is on the “we hope for November” list. After the play equipment is in, a pour-in-place rubber material “ground” will be poured around the equipment, locking it in. That material will last decades and is ADA compliant, she said.
The play scape will measure 20 feet by 40 feet. The cost for the equipment and the rubber “ground” is $175,000. The rubber material is tinged in “Putnam Blue.”  “If the material is delayed, it may be spring before that project is done,” she said.
Also in November, and also at the Municipal Complex, Sistare said the bathroom doors that were ordered have come in, after a 10-week wait. The original plans for the new Putnam Municipal Complex had doors for the four bathrooms (one men’s and one women’s on each of the two floors). But COVID rolled around and they instead dispensed with the doors and the entrances to the restrooms were open, like at an airport. The town decided to go back to doors. The town hopes to install them in November.

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because pg 2 9-15-22


The passing of a 96-year-old woman is not something that I would declare shocking in any way. However, when I heard the news of the passing of Queen Elizabeth II I was unexpectedly deeply moved.  I never met The Queen, and I cannot say that I feel I even knew her. Yet, her death represents an end to a human example of the embodiment of a purely dutiful mindset and for that, I am sad.
In considering the definition of dutiful, phrases like obedient fulfillment and motivated by duty rather than desire are abundant. In a world where people too often and too easily cast duty aside for the pursuit of personal wants, The Queen, seemingly, did not. For me, and I suspect for millions of others, The Queen, with her steadfast dutiful manner, was an individual who transcended the monarchy, quietly shaking off the negative and restrictive aspects of a hierarchal stigma. Whether she was a warm and loving mother to her own children is not for me to judge, but I do feel that her behavior as a monarch was entirely like that of a mother (or parent) in that she willingly cast aside her own personal desires for the care and guidance of preserving a deeply rooted structure and identity of a culture. And she didn’t do it for just a little while or for 18 years or 21 years or until she reached retirement age… She did it, and without publicly complaining, whining or blaming, until she died. And for that, I have deep respect.
I welcomed and relished the opportunity to be a mother, but I also remember that I complained quite a bit. Raising a child requires a certain level of accepted selflessness. At least for a little while … Sleep becomes elusive, and the tiredness extends to the furthest part of your body. Perpetual patience is required and flexibility necessitated as what you think you have planned in a day, can change rapidly when children are involved. Can you imagine feeling this way for 70 years?  Further, can you imagine feeling this way while those around you are free to not only pursue their own passions but can publicly complain about the restrictive nature of being obligated to an institution? I cannot imagine that it is easy. Of course I recognize that the institution of the monarch comes with a great deal of privilege, but, for The Queen, she did not choose to use that privilege to remove herself from her duty…Even when it became personally difficult.
Perhaps The Queen’s resolute and loyal nature resulted from her experiences during World War II. Or, perhaps, it was her love of the unspoiled beauty and quiet of nature which shaped her dedication. I could watch 100 documentaries about Her, but I will never really know. As a developmental psychologist, I suspect it was a combination of many things which created a public leader who viewed challenges as  opportunities to overcome… that is, as long as you relied on pragmatic structure and problem-solving. And she did just that… her “whole life”. LONG! LONG!
Kathy Naumann, possessor of NATURALLY curly hair and the understanding that you can’t control everything!

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legals pg 2 9-15-22



Legal Notice
Town of Pomfret
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
PLANNING AND
ZONING COMMISSION
The Pomfret Planning & Zoning Commission will hold the following Public Hearing at their meeting on September 21, 2022, starting at 7:00 PM.
1. Isaac Ignacio, 73 Fox Hill Road, special permit application for a 44’ by 52’ garage with porch.
A copy of the application is on file in the office of the Planning and Zoning Commission, 5 Haven Road, Pomfret Center, Connecticut.

Town of Pomfret
Dated this 4th day
of September 2022
Lynn L. Krajewski,
Clerk
Planning &
Zoning Commission

Sept. 7, 2022
Sept. 14, 2022

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