caption, page 6: Woodstock Academy senior Adam Schimmelpfennig clears the last hurdle enroute to a first-place finish against NFA. Marc Allard photos.
Round up
Centaurs pick
up a rare girls’
track win
over NFA
Woodstock Academy girls’ track coach Josh Welch said he tested the memory of a host of other track coaches at the school and no one could remember, in recent history, any win for a Centaurs girls’ outdoor or indoor track team over Norwich Free Academy.
After a decisive indoor track victory, in a meet held outdoors in March, the Centaurs pulled off an outdoor one with a 75-72 victory over the Wildcats last week.
It came down to the final event.
Following the final track competition of the day, the Centaurs trailed the Wildcats by three points.
But the high jump competition was still going on and Woodstock Academy’s Jillian Edwards and Reegan Reynolds were competing.
“Jillian and Reegan had been very busy with other events, and I don’t think they were fully aware until both teams started to pile up to watch the last jumps,” Welch said. “We weren’t totally certain of the score, at that point I was missing data on the long jump, but we knew it was within a few points and they knew it would come down to the high jump. You could see some nervous energy as the pressure of an audience came, but they were really pros out there. Very composed, focused, and consistent. I was impressed.”
Edwards finished with the win and Reynolds tied for second place, giving the Centaurs the necessary seven points to post the Eastern Connecticut Conference non-divisional victory.
Reynolds, a freshman, also finished first in the 400m, triple jump and was a member of the winning 4x400m team.
“Reegan had some nerves leading up to the meet, particularly about high jump, that she had to overcome to compete. She did an amazing job of moving past that nervous energy, and showed real strength, consistency and self-awareness out there. I knew she had talent, and the right attitude from our first conditioning workouts, but she outperformed every expectation,” Welch said.
Other first-place finishers included Leila MacKinnon (javelin, 4x800m relay); Talia Tremblay (300m hurdles, 4x400m relay); Ksenjia Martinovic (100m hurdles) and both Iris Bazinet and Linsey Arends who helped both the 4x400 and 4x800m relay teams to first-place finishes.
Sophomore Bella Sorrentino qualified for the Class MM state championship with a first-place finish in the shotput.
“Bella has really helped change the tone on the team as one of our first multi-event athletes in while. She took on some of NFA’s best and pulled up points and a state qualifying performance in the shot put, as well as locking in a crucial point in the long jump,” Welch said.
Boys’ Track
There were plenty of athletes who were participating in an outdoor track event for a first time when Woodstock Academy played host to Norwich Free Academy in a boys’ meet.
“It’s nice to have an outdoor meet again,” said Woodstock Academy coach Peter Lusa. “Our sophomores, some of our juniors, have never been in a high school track meet before. They are used to the middle school where it’s all the field events first, and when they’re done, now they go and do track events. I heard a kid say to (NFA coach) Tom (Teixeira), ‘Wait, there are events going on at the same time?’ Yes, there are.”
Teixeira said only about a third of his athletes had participated in a high school track meet.
It certainly didn’t slow the Wildcats down all that much as they won the season opener for both teams, 102-43.
“NFA draws from a good-sized crowd and it’s fun to have good competition. It’s good for our kids to see what is out there. I don’t know what we will see the rest of the season especially for our top kids to see. Eric (Phongsa) had two guys in the 200m to chase and it was brilliant to watch,” Lusa said.
Phongsa won the 100m and qualified for the Class MM state championship meet in that event with an 11.2 second time.
He also qualified in the 200m with a 24.1 second time but finished behind NFA juniors Dangelo Aristilde (22.9 seconds) and Max Louis (23.0) who ended in a photo finish.
Adam Schimmelpfennig had quite the day as he won both the 110 and 300m hurdles.
“It’s a surprise,” Schimmelpfennig said of his dual win in a meet against the Wildcats. “They used to have a really fast kid, but he graduated last year. I was really proud of my 110 (16.2 seconds) time and I actually felt pretty good after the 300.”
Schimmelpfennig’s 16.6 in the 110 hurdles qualified him for the state competition.
Other Woodstock Academy athletes who qualified and finished first included Jackson Dias in the high jump (5-10) and Keenan LaMontagne in the discus (127-9 ½). Hans Rhynhart also won the 1,600m (5:22) for the Centaurs. Junior Ian Hoffman finished second in the pole vault but improved by a foot over his previous best.
Baseball
The instructions from Woodstock Academy coach Brian Murphy to Woodstock Academy junior third baseman Zach Roethlein in the bottom of the seventh before he came to the plate with the winning run in scoring position were pretty simple.
“I said, ‘Zach, this is what you are meant for, big guy. Go out, swing the bat, win the game. Plus, I have to go and take my heart medication so get me out of here,” Murphy said. Roethlein did just that.
His walk-off, RBI single in the bottom of the seventh gave the Centaurs a 3-2 win over Tourtellotte.
Woodstock Academy trailed 2-1 going into the bottom of the seventh as Tourtellotte starter Mason Barber handcuffed the Centaurs on four hits.
“Mason is a great competitor who has been with me for seven years on my travel teams and (American) Legion ball and I knew this was going to be a battle. It was good to see him go,” Murphy said.
Barber simply ran out of pitches.
The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference allows pitchers to only throw 110 pitches in a game. Barber exceeded that in the bottom of the sixth.
Tourtellotte brought on reliever Brayden Akana.
The junior got the first out on a fly ball but walked the next two, Keon Lamarche and Trey Ayotte.
Ninth batter Max Racicot then delivered a clutch single to right to load the bases.
Senior Jacob Hernandez tied the game when he lofted a ball to deep enough center to allow pinch runner Jackson Gallagher to score.
Roethlein stepped up and got what he was looking for. “It was a fast ball, down the middle and I took it over the shortstop’s head,” Roethlein said.
Ayotte steamed home from second and everyone on the team went looking for Roethlein.
“There is nothing like it. It’s truly one of the best feelings in the world, being out there and being swarmed by the team,” he said.
“It was good for Zach,” Brian Murphy added. “He’s a hard worker. A grinder. A kid who has been with me for a long time in baseball and I’m just happy for him. He deserves it.”
Kaden Murphy was the other hero of the day for the Centaurs.
The sophomore righthander went the distance, throwing 100 pitches, but holding Tourtellotte to just seven hits.
“Kaden battled,” Brian Murphy said. “I’ve seen him sharper, but for his first varsity start, to go seven innings and hold them after the first inning. He shut them down.”
Softball
Mackenzie Leveille had quite the week. The senior pitched a perfect game in a 20-0 five-inning mercy rule win over Tourtellotte early last week.
She followed that up April 17 with a three-run homer and a triple in a 15-0 five inning win over Putnam.
Woodstock Academy coach Jason Gerum said he thought the effort against Tourtellotte was the best pitching effort he had seen by the senior as she only needed 53 pitches for the win.
She finished with 11 strikeouts and only had to throw 16 pitches in the first two innings when she fanned five Tigers on three pitches each.
That followed a less than masterful performance by Leveille in the circle in the season opener against NFA.
“She’s a great player. She has a great bat,” Gerum said. “Her (pitching) stuff wasn’t really on against NFA last week (a 15-7 Centaurs loss in the first game of the season). NFA is a great hitting team. Her movement on balls we usually go to wasn’t working. It’s early season. She refocused and worked hard a couple of days. These kids play a lot of softball. They know what to do and, sometimes, you just have to get the rust out.”
Leveille also drove in four runs in the win over Tourtellotte as did sophomore Lexi Thompson who put a ball over the fence for a home run to go along with her two doubles. Amanda Bond added three hits and five RBIs.
The Centaurs wasted little time.
Sarah McArthur reached on a passed ball and Megan Preston walked.
Leveille followed with a shot to left-center that kept rolling and Leveille kept running for a three-run homer.
Thompson followed with a solo shot to make it 4-0.
Bond and Emily Goodell walked, Jenna Bankowski had a bunt single and Marissa Mayhew was hit by a pitch to score a run. Mia Pannone delivered an RBI single and McArthur followed with a three-run triple which meant the first nine batters to the plate all scored for the Centaurs.
“We took care of business. No messing around. No nonsense,” Gerum said. “When you are playing at a high level, which I think this team is, and you know that you can do some damage, you want to do it right away and get the game over. I asked them to jump right on it and get control of the game early and they did.”
Mayhew added a run-scoring double and finished with four RBIs for the Centaurs (3-1, 2-0 ECC Division 2). Thompson struck out 13 and allowed only one hit. Chloe Kerr had an infield single for the Clippers (1-2, 1-2).
Boys’ Lacrosse
The Centaurs had a 50-50 week heading into spring break.
Despite a cold rain falling, they easily prevailed over the Ledyard-Griswold cooperative program, 11-3, April 15.
Jonah Libby had a nice day with four goals and two assists while Guerin Favreau contributed three goals and three assists.
The win raised the Centaurs record to 2-1 as they had fallen earlier in the week at E. Lyme, 12-5. Jacob Jurnovoy and Favreau had two goals each in the loss.
Girls’ Lacrosse
The Centaurs rallied from a two-goal deficit early in the second half against NFA April 15, but the Wildcats still prevailed 9-7.
Shannon Gagnon and Eliza Dutson, both of whom had two goals in the game, scored for Woodstock to tie the contest at five with 15 minutes, 29 seconds to play. Rachel Canedy then put the Centaurs ahead just 2 ½ minutes later.
But the Wildcats responded, tying the game just 17 seconds after Canedy’s goal and then scoring the next three to drop Woodstock to 0-2 on the season and 0-2 in Division 1 of the ECC.
The Centaurs opened their season earlier in the week and lost on the road to Stonington, 17-2. Peyton Saracina and Gagnon scored in that contest for Woodstock.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy
..
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.
April 6
Susan Stevens, 53, Coatney Hill Road, Woodstock; speeding.
April 7
Dylan Varner, 22, Mill Street, Putnam; second-degree sexual assault, risk of injury to a minor, delivery of liquor to a minor.
April 11
Heather Poplasky, 32, Black Hill Road, Plainfield; breach of peace.
Alicia Dawn Marando, 39, School Street, Putnam; disorderly conduct, third-degree criminal mischief, third-degree assault.
David R. Hetu, 29, School Street, Putnam; disorderly conduct.
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Girls' lacrosse preview
Team excited
about season
Jones finally makes her debut as head coach of Centaurs
Mikayla Jones was supposed to takes over the reins of the Woodstock Academy girls’ lacrosse team a year ago.
Kathleen Johnson had stepped down after taking the Centaurs to a 15-4 season in which Woodstock Academy won the ECC tournament title with an 11-9 win over Stonington in 2019. Gone from that team were eight seniors. But Jones was happy with the team that was coming back in 2020. That season never happened.
Jones’ enthusiasm has not waned, however, as the calendar has turned to 2021.
“I’m so excited. We still have an awesome group of girls even though we lost a bunch of them. We’re still coming back pretty strong,” Jones said.
The first regular season game for the Centaurs took place at E. Lyme April 13 (it ended too late for this edition).
“It’s so great. I was a little worried that we weren’t going to have a season but it’s so great to be out here with the girls and having a fun time,” senior Rachel Canedy said.
With Jones now at the helm.
“I love coach,” Canedy said. “She definitely makes us work hard but we need it this season because we’re running out of time and need to be in shape. It’s nice to have a younger coach because she is relatable to us and gets all of our girl problems.”
Jones admits there are plenty of question marks coming into the season.
But the Centaurs have some players back who will make an impact this season.
Senior Kileigh Gagnon, one of the heroes of the ECC tournament championship in goal for the Centaurs, returns to that position in 2021.
Sofia Murray will share time with Gagnon in the cage.
“They are both awesome and both deserve as much time as they can get. We’re happy that we have two strong goalies this year,” Jones said.
Offensively, the Centaurs have senior Peyton Saracina who contributed 26 goals and six assists in 2019 along with Canedy (6 goals, 5 assists), Sydney Haskins, and Caroline Harris.
The group between the girls up front and the goalies is the one that Jones is working on most.
“Our defense is the weak point this season, only because we lost so many from the last senior class and losing a season last year. That’s where we have to rebuild,” Jones said.
Another concern is getting used to one another again.
And that spans team wide.
“We have so many new girls. We’re having all the returners talk to the new girls so that we can get the hang of things way quicker,” Canedy said.
The team usually dresses 21 players for varsity games. They have only 27 out for the whole program.
It has made practices a bit difficult as the team can’t separate the skill levels to start the season as much as it has in the past.
It also makes Jones concerned if the team should have a pandemic protocol issue.
Like field hockey in the fall, the girls’ lacrosse team will essentially play a normal schedule, playing in Division I of the Eastern Connecticut Conference along with Norwich Free Academy, Stonington, East Lyme, Fitch and Waterford.
“It’s as normal as possible which is great because we get to play as often as we usually do,” Jones said.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy
..
Soccer has always been Luca Almeida’s escape. When things weren’t easy at home in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, he would go play soccer and get away from it.
“Playing soccer has always made me feel happy and free,” Almeida said. “I love to play it, I love to watch it.”
Almeida’s relationship with the beautiful game will continue on at least a little bit longer. The PSA senior recently signed his Letter of Intent to play next year with NAIA school Graceland University in Lamoni, Iowa.
“The first reason I chose there is because it is a good school. I’m going to study criminal justice and they have a really good program,” Almeida said. “The other big reason was the coach. He seemed really interested and was always calling me and sending messages to see how it was going. He said from the beginning that his plan was for me to come and start playing as a freshman. I figured that would be the best thing for me to come in and start playing.”
Almeida, 19, has yet to play in PSA’s first two games of this season as he recovers from an injury. Last season, in 2019, he was the second-leading scorer on the Second Team, finishing with nine goals in 11 games.
“I’ve played soccer my whole life, since the beginning,” he said. “When I was 13, I was the top scorer in my state and playing against the best teams. I was signed to a Division I club in Brazil. Everybody has really big expectations for me so I was always conscious that something good like playing in college would happen.”
Almeida, a center attacking midfielder, did say that he feels like his game leveled off quite a bit the last three years or so, mostly because he has faced players who are physically stronger. So he is looking forward to diving into a workout plan in college so that he can grow on the field again too. And then he can do what he loves the most on the pitch, which is dribbling.
“I like to – not humiliate the other players – but I like to make them angry when I have the ball,” he said with a laugh.
Said PSA coach Ryan Dunnigan: “Luca is a two-footed player. He has the ability to play multiple positions very well, making him very versatile as a player. And he has a very good soccer IQ as well. He’s worked hard and gotten fitter since he’s been on campus.”
Graceland went 6-6-1 while playing in the Fall of 2020. The Yellowjackets are continuing their season now in the Spring as well.
“They are a good team,” Almeida said. “But I think they are missing a midfielder. All the other attack midfielders graduated, so they needed a Number 10 and that’s the role I’m looking to fill.”
Once he graduates from PSA in May, he will return to Brazil for the summer, then make his way to Iowa. While he is home, he will celebrate the good fortune with friends and family.
“There were a lot of different feelings,” he said. “I’m proud that I was able to get a good scholarship and the coach is interested in me coming to play for him. I’m excited to go and keep playing. And I’m thankful for all the people who have helped me.”
Stephen Nalbandian
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy
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