putnam pg 7 11-3-22



The players change (though not as many as in years past) but the goal does and always will remain the same.
“We play to win championships,” said Putnam Science Academy point guard Darryl Simmons, who could become the only Mustang in history to win three rings. “We want to get better every day, play hard, play with energy, all that. And if we do, we’ve got a chance. Because that’s what we’re trying to do.”
Simmons is one of five Mustangs players who were on last year’s undefeated national championship team, an unusually high number for them. And all five are expected to play major roles in the quest for title number four, as opposed to last year when two, maybe three, of them did.
Simmons, looking to bounce back from a season and summer that was stunted by injury, is nearly back to form and in place to lead, particularly on the defensive end, where the Mustangs are notorious for creating so much of their offense. He is joined by Alabama-bound Mouhamed Dioubate, who now has so much more to his game than just rebounding. Dioubate was a force on the offensive glass in particular last year but has expanded his repertoire and can now affect the game off the dribble and with his shooting.
“I don’t think there are many other players I’d rather have at the prep school level than Mouhamed Dioubate,” coach Tom Espinosa said. “You could throw a lot of names at me, and I don’t know if I’d trade him for anybody. He’s a beast.”
Miles Rose, Duane Thompson, and Jabal Adamu will all see their roles expand. Rose, who has committed to St. Bonaventure, will this year get consistent minutes as opposed to last year when he could get 18 one game but just three the next. Thompson and Adamu both played sparingly, mostly garbage-time minutes long after the outcome had been decided. This year, they will determine when the game is decided. Thompson – who could lead the team in scoring – returned to campus 20 pounds lighter and taking his responsibilities much more seriously, while the 6-foot, 10-inch Adamu is now the team’s leading big man.
“Miles, Duane, Adamu,” Espinosa said. “These guys have waited their turn for this, and now it’s their time and they have shown they’re ready to make the most of the opportunity. They’ve been great in the preseason, not just performance, but as leaders.”
The returnees are joined by a host of talented newcomers that give Espinosa and his staff a roster they think is deeper than last year and that has more consistent shooting.
“Last year, we got probably 75 percent of our offense from our defense,” Espinosa said. “This year, when teams play those junk defenses we’re really going to punish them because of how well we shoot it.”
Two key pieces to that are Rhode Island commit Connor Dubsky and Northwestern-bound Blake Barkley. Will Lovings-Watts and Tarique Foster shot it better in the preseason than the coaches expected. Guards DJ Dormu, who is lightning-quick, and Ramsay Checo give the Mustangs even more shooting depth, in addition to Simmons, Thompson, and Rose as well.
Big men Ben Ahmed, Jimmy Cami, and Pop Wadeng round out the roster. Ahmed is big and strong and will have an impact on this team despite being just 15 years old, and down the road.
“The guys who have been here talk about it, we talk about it as coaches, and the new guys want it too,” Espinosa said. “Last year was a special year for a lot of reasons, but winning a national championship was the biggest one. We want another one. That’s always the goal here.”
By Stephen Nalbandian
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy

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interact pg 8 11-3-22



Interact Club on Hand
Oct. 16 found the Putnam Rotary Club’s Interact Club members helping at the TEEG Fall Festival. Club members helped with the book distribution table, costume distribution and at the Halloween candy giveaway table.  President Emily St. Martin called the festival a success and thanked Caitlin and Eoin Mercer, Jordyn Butler, Eric Levesque, Talia and Kaelyn Tremblay, Maeve and Callum Lusignan and Jacqueline Dearborn. The club is now working on its “Ornament for Shut-ins” project and they look forward to celebrating 25 years of bell ringing for the Salvation Army. The Kickoff celebration for the bell ringing will be at 10:30 a.m. Nov. 17 in front of the Municipal Complex Building in Putnam. The public is welcome. From left: Eric Levesque, Jordyn Butler, Emily St. Martin, Eoin Mercer and Caitlin Mercer. Courtesy photo.

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police pg 8 11-3-22



The following charges were listed in the Putnam Police Department logs.  The people charged are innocent until proven guilty in court. The Town Crier will publish dispositions of cases at the request of the accused. The dispositions must be accompanied by the proper documentation. The Putnam Police Department confidential Tip Line is 860-963-0000.
Oct. 24
James Brisbois, 34, Church Street, Putnam; disorderly conduct and interfering with emergency call.
Laquan Matthews, 30, Green Street, Putnam; operating without a license.
Vicki-Lynn Blanchard, 45, Marshall Street, Putnam; permitting operation of motor vehicle without insurance.
Oct. 27
Devin Oneill, 27, Milton Street, Putnam; third-degree assault, third-degree criminal mischief.
Oct. 28
Benjamin Lachance, 42, Underwood Road, Woodstock; improper use of registration, minimum insurance, unregistered motor vehicle, seat belt.
Oct. 29
Kyle Kamm, 24, Brook Road, Hampton; operating under suspension, seat belt.
Gabriela Maria Diaz Ramos, 26, Providence Street, Putnam; operating under the influence, failure to have lights lit.
Ryan T. Sanchez, 28, Phillips Street, Putnam; second-degree breach of peace.
Oct. 31
Abdull-Alim Williams, 31, Knox Avenue, Danielson; first-degree failure to appear.

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Centaurs pg 1 11-10-22



caption, page 2:

Honors
Five members of the Woodstock girls’ soccer team were honored prior to the ECC Div. 1 tournament championship match. From left: Kayla Leite was named the team’s Sportsmanship Award recipient; Freya Robbie, Grace Gelhaus and Leah Costa were named ECC Division I first team All-Stars and Lennon Favreau was the team’s Scholar-Athlete and an ECC honorable mention. Photo by Brad Favreau/ Woodstock Academ


caption, page 5:

Celebration
The Woodstock Academy girls’ soccer team celebrates after its 3-2 overtime victory over Stonington in the ECC Div. 1 tournament championship match at East Lyme on Thursday. Photo by Sean Saucier/Woodstock Academy



Centaurs take
2nd ECC
Tournament
title in 5 years
On the bus ride down to E. Lyme High School Nov. 3, Woodstock Academy coach Dennis Snelling made sure his team knew that this was not unchartered territory.
“I was talking to the girls about the history of Woodstock girls’ soccer during my tenure and just made it clear to them that we had been in the (ECC) final or semifinal so many times as a program that there was no need to be nervous about it,” Snelling said.
When his team scored just 2 minutes, 14 seconds into the championship match against Stonington, it was clear that message was received.
The second-seeded Centaurs outlasted the top-seeded Bears, 3-2, in overtime in the ECC Div. 1 championship.
It was the second championship in five years for the Centaurs who last claimed it in 2018.
Sophomore and Stonington transfer Leah Costa sent the ball in from the left of the Bears’ goal and it hit a Stonington defender right in front of the net, trickling over the line for the Centaurs victory just 2 ½ minutes into the first 10-minute sudden death overtime period.
“It was fitting that it came from Leah’s foot,” Snelling said. “We just sent the ball in, sending it toward the goal as much as possible. We’ve had strange things happen in overtime when everyone is tired and that was the message – get it at the goal. It was still surprising.”
Woodstock (12-4-2) opened the scoring quickly when Grace Gelhaus, off a rebound, put the ball into the Stonington net just moments after the opening whistle.
“Grace just started the game on another level and kind of played that way the whole game. It kind of kept Stonington back because it had to stay on Grace,” Snelling said.
But just 1:24 later, the Bears countered when Maya Terwilliger fired a long shot just over the outstretched hand of Woodstock keeper Rebecca Nazer (7 saves).
Despite the Centaurs holding a 13-7 advantage in shots in the first half, it was the Bears who led at the half as Terwillger scored again on a follow off a shot by Lily Loughlean with 1:43 to play.
Freshman Gabbie Brown came up big halfway through the second half when she controlled a bouncing ball and fired before Anderson could come out of the Stonington net to tie the match with 21:01 left in regulation.
The goal sent the match into the sudden death overtime as neither team could forge ahead.
“We knew she was going to be doing that,” Snelling said of the freshman’s first career varsity goal. “We just didn’t know it would be in the championship game. She played all 80 minutes of every JV game, got in great shape and had a great level of confidence to go out there and play hard right away.”
It was the confidence that convinced Snelling to play her in the championship match and she delivered.
The win was the eighth in a row for the Centaurs who are 9-0-1 over their last 10 matches.
“We’ve been really great at keeping it to one game at a time but as win like this, going into the state tournament, I’m sure is great confidence builder. We haven’t lost in a while,” Snelling said.
Prior to the contest, five members of the team were honored.
Gelhaus, Freya Robbie and Costa all were named ECC 1st team All-Stars. Lennon Favreau was the team’s Scholar-Athlete and an ECC honorable mention choice and Kayla Leite received the team’s Sportsmanship Award.
ECC Semifinals
It was a long, hard, physical battle. But the result made it all worth it.
Woodstock advanced to the championship match of the ECC Div. 1 tournament with a 1-0 (5-4 PK’s) victory over Bacon Academy earlier in the week.
The final score of the semifinal may have to be reported as 1-0.
In reality, neither the Centaurs nor the Bobcats put the ball in the back of the net.
It was decided by penalty kicks with the Centaurs taking that battle, 5-4.
“It was a really hard game,” said Woodstock Academy senior back Magdalena Myslenski.
In the postseason, there is no such thing as a tie until you get to the state championship game. There must be a winner and that is determined by penalty kicks.
After 80 minutes of regulation play and 20 minutes of sudden death overtime, five Centaur players lined up against Bacon Academy keeper Elizabeth Glover.
All five, including one who had to go twice, hit their PKs.
Gelhaus went to the right side of Glover and scored; Robbie put one under her left arm and Macy Rawson went to the upper right.
Lennon Favreau stepped up and put it into the left side.
But official Frank May had not blown his whistle starting the play yet so Favreau had a do-over.
The Bobcats (10-4-3) had Audrey Palmer, Mia Haggeman, Alyssa Blanchette and Kayla Hall all hitting their PKs but they did miss one.
That meant the final kick for the Centaurs either would send them to the championship match or into a second round of kicks.
The person who had the responsibility of making that last kick count was senior Maya Orbegozo. She shot at the right corner and it found the back of the net.
Postseason next
The season is not done for the Centaurs.
The 11th-seeded Centaurs played host to No. 22 Windsor in a Class L first-round state tournament match on Tuesday (the match ended too late for this edition).
“I’ve seen who they have played. They have had some Central Connecticut Conference matchups. It looks like a competitive game. I think being on the home field will give us a big advantage and a lot of confidence,” Snelling said.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy

 

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