Newport victory striking
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Barry Faulkner
The only collective bargaining at issue with these hockey players
might have been which compact disc to pop into the sideline boom box.
Indeed, while the greatest ice hockey players in the world remain
figuratively on ice due to NHL labor-management negotiations, the
Newport Harbor High field hockey team showed just how much fun
peppering a goal could be Thursday afternoon at the Harper Community
Center.
The Sailors thoroughly dominated visiting Westminster to earn a
5-0 nonleague victory, improving to 3-0-1 in complete matches this
season. The Tars played four 25-minute tournament contests Saturday
that won’t count on their record.
The 3-0-1 start ups the defending Tournament of Champions and
Sunset League title holders’ record to 41-1-1 since falling in the
TOC final in 2001.
“I thought it was a great game,” said Newport Harbor first-year
coach Kristy Cross. “I thought we had some nice sequences.”
The initial sequences for the Sailors ended in frustration, as the
Lions (0-3) weathered a barrage of early shots to keep things
scoreless the first 20 minutes.
But senior Julia Bernay scored with 9:27 left in the 30-minute
first half and the Sailors added three more goals before intermission
let the visitors catch their breath.
Some deft passing by senior Katie Kelly, Bernay and sophomore
Rachel Foster led to a goal by senior Laura Vassar with just more
than three minutes to play in the half and junior Sienna Palmer
converted a well-placed cross from Bernay into a 3-0 halftime lead
about a minute later.
The Sailors, who outshot the Lions, 19-0, in the first half,
continued their dominance throughout, despite substituting liberally
with all 22 available players.
Senior Jenny Taylor set up another goal early in the shortened
20-minute second half, driving a ball through the middle of the
Westminster defense that junior Lara Schilling appeared only to
redirect past Westminster goalie Alexis McConnell to add to the lead.
Kelly finalized the scoring with a rapid shot from about 10 yards
out, as junior Sasha Grumman collected the assist.
The Sailors finished with a 28-0 advantage in shots and have now
outscored opponents, 11-1 this season.
Newport goalie Ciera Lawrence collected the shutout, despite not
having to provide much more than encouragement for a Sailor lineup
that rarely saw Westminster advance the ball past midfield.
Taylor, one of five returners from last year’s squad and a
four-year varsity performer who is one of the Sailors’ captains, was
in the center of things all game for the winners.
Senior Lyndsi Foster, and senior Reese Simmons, another four-year
varsity veteran, were also obvious Sailor standouts.
Junior Danica Kalmbach was another catalyst for the winners, whose
starting back line of senior Kirstie Lane, junior Jackie Taylor and
Ashton Rief also performed well when called upon.
“It’s a nice problem to have,” Cross said of the lack of offensive
pressure put on by Westminster. “From what I’ve heard [the Lions are]
much-improved from what they have been. We are trying to work on
staying spread out on offense, but that was a little hard to do when
the ball was right in front of their goal. It sometimes looked like a
clump of people around the ball.”
Cross was particularly pleased with her team’s consistently
unselfish play, which seemed to flow regardless of personnel
combinations.
“A lot of our girls have been playing together since they were
freshmen,” Cross said. “They work hard and they all encourage team
unity.”
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