THOMPSON — A Southbridge man was arrested on Rt. 131 Sept. 13 after members of the Troop D Quality of Life Task Force stopped his vehicle and executed a narcotics-related warrant.
Jory Maldonado, 25, of 117 Cole Ave., Southbridge was charged with possession of heroin and possession of heroin with intent to sell.
The search warrant was obtained after a lengthy investigation revealed that a “JAY –Z” was using the vehicle to sell pre-packaged heroin in and around Thompson
A search of the vehicle by K-9 Ambrie located numerous prepackaged clear plastic baggies of heroin and a cell phone.
Members of the CT State Police are committed to combating drug activity in the “Quiet Corner” and anyone with information regarding the illegal sale of narcotics are encouraged to call the Troop D QLTF anonymous Tips Hotline at 860-779-4950 or message the QLTF Facebook page.
.
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 963-0000.
Sept. 11
Abigail Thompson, 22, Sabin Street, Putnam; failure to obey traffic signal.
Sept. 12
Francis Daniel Wilson, 47, School Street, Putnam; first-degree failure to appear; second-degree failure to appear.
Sept. 15
Steven Woodward, 52, Marshall Street, Putnam; second-degree breach of peace, third-degree assault on an elderly.
Sept. 16
Shaun Fredrick, 24, Bailey woods Road, Brooklyn; traveling unreasonably fast.
William Robinson, 57, no certain address; two counts of second-degree failure to appear.
PUTNAM — The young and scrappy Putnam Science Academy soccer team had a big opportunity over the weekend as they not only competed against the #8 ranked team in the country, Martin Luther King High School, but they also would earn an invite to the Mainline Jamboree held in Philadelphia.
In a physical match, the Mustangs hung in there with Martin Luther King HS and forced a 2-2 tie before the match was called due to misconduct on MLKHS. Putnam’s Felipe Luis scored the Mustangs first goal on a nice assist from Aiden Miller in the first 15 minutes of the match to catch MLKHS off guard. Boadi Augustine would later score a solo goal to put Putnam up 2-0 in the 2nd half.
Head Coach Ivan Damulira said: “Our lads showed absolute class and competence versus a good team. We surely deserved the tie and if the match wasn’t terminated early, we believe we could have won. We are on to the next match and look to improve.”
PSA made the most of that opportunity at the jamboree. A 25-man roster with kids coming from 7 different countries showed fantastic communication as the Mustangs would shake off the tie from the day before and earn a 2-1 victory over Mercersburg Academy. Post Grad Michael Kutsanzira from Zimbabwe scored both goals for PSA in the win, their first official victory of the season. Jenluis Henriquez and Vinny Knupp assisted on the goals.
The day wasn’t done as Putnam Science Academy would take the field a few hours later in game 2 of the Jamboree and dominated West Nottingham with a 7-0 shutout win. Felipe Luis, who scored 1st for PSA Sept. 15, would score twice Sept. 16 for PSA. Boadi Augustine added another goal in the contest followed by Vinny Knupp and 2 goals from sophomore Anco Veiga.
Josh Sanchas
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy
.
captions:
Field Hockey
Top: Sophomore Rachel Canedy (15) and senior Abbe Lecuyer work together against Norwich Free Academy last week. Middle: Rachel Canedy (15) battles for the ball for Woodstock Academy in a 6-0 field hockey victory over NFA. Right: Lily Brin of Woodstock Academy takes on a Norwich Free Academy player. Photos courtesy of Marc Allard.
It was a good start for the Woodstock Academy girls’ field hockey team.
The squad began play last week with a pair of Eastern Connecticut Conference tests and one non-league game.
The Centaurs did what they had to and won both league games, 6-0 over NFA and 5-3 over Killingly. Enfield rallied from an early deficit to hand the Centaurs a 4-1 loss Sept. 15.
“It’s huge because it already puts us a third of the way to qualifying for the state tournament with a 15-game schedule,” said coach Lauren Gagnon.
The Centaurs wasted no time in their opener against Norwich Free Academy.
They scored all six of their goals in the first half, three goals came in the first 3 minutes, 39 seconds.
“It set the tone,” Gagnon said. “We have a word or phrase for every game and (Tuesday) it was ‘Start strong.’ We wanted to start the season strong, start the game strong and get rid of that feeling that maybe we’re not one of the top teams in the ECC because we definitely are. That inferiority complex has been hanging with us for a couple of years now.”
Senior Hannah Chubbuck became the first to score for the Centaurs this season when she scored shortly after the opening whistle.
(Avery Jones) just pushed it across the goal and I tipped it into the corner,” Chubbuck said.
Abby Kruger and Samantha Mowry followed quickly behind with goals of their own.
“That got us going and excited for the game,” Chubbuck said.
Gagnon was happy to see a senior get the first tally of the 2018 season.
“She is just one of those kids who comes to practice every day, puts her head down and works hard. She doesn’t goof around. She’s in every drill doing her thing. She’s a great athlete and a great role model for the younger players,” Gagnon said.
Sophia Rakovan, Emma Durand and Kate Boshka all added first-half goals.
It then became a score management situation for Gagnon.
“We shifted our focus to positioning across the field, something we don’t do particularly well. We put the foot on the gas and just go, go, go. We, sometimes, don’t take the time to transition across the field or back pass. So, we just took it off the throttle a little bit and moved the ball around a little bit more,” Gagnon said.
The foot was off the throttle Sept. 13.
Not because of the score but because of the turf and style of play.
The Redgals play their home games on natural grass.
It’s not something the Centaurs are accustomed to and struggle with.
“I was really tremendously impressed with how our skills showed on grass. It’s really hard to look like a good field hockey player on grass no matter who you are. You look awful on grass,” Gagnon said.
Because of that, Gagnon was impressed when a Meg Preston shot traveled some 50 yards.
Sam Mowry scored the first of her two goals just 4:10 into the game on an assist from Chubbuck. Boshka added the second goal just 2:40 before the half.
Mowry, Rachel Canedy and Sydney Cournoyer added second half goals.
Canedy also had a pair of assists.
“I honestly don’t know how Rachel didn’t score like four or five goals with the way she was hitting the ball. She was hitting it so hard and she was inches away from the post every time,” Gagnon said.
Enfield played its season opener on the South Campus turf at Woodstock Academy Sept. 15 and was successful.
The Centaurs again scored early as Canedy zipped one into the net just 2:52 into the game off a feed from Eliza Dutson.
Unfortunately for the Centaurs, it was their only goal of the game.
Tori Geaglone scored with 3:14 left in the first half and added two more in the second. Laney Vangel also scored for Enfield.
Marc Allard
Sports Information Director
The Woodstock Academy
..