Lambrakis’ shot rallies Newport
Chris Yemma
In order for frequent matchups to become rivalries, the win/loss
ratio must be fairly equal.
Newport Harbor High girls soccer junior Stephanie Lambrakis got
her team rolling in that direction last Thursday, with just one swipe
of the foot.
The shot, from about 18 yards out in the middle of the field, with
two minutes remaining in the game, gave visiting Aliso Niguel, then
ranked No. 2 in CIF Southern Section Division I, its first Sea View
League loss of the season.
Now, the Wolverines are ranked No. 1, oddly enough, but their
record is still tainted from one swing of Lambrakis’ foot, a shot
that gave Newport Harbor a 2-1 victory and its first win over Aliso
in more than four years.
And, so, a league rivalry was reborn.
“It’s definitely becoming a big rivalry,” Lambrakis said. “Last
year we tied them, but that’s the closest we’ve come in at least four
years.”
Lambrakis’ goal in the 78th minute provided the biggest win for
the Sailors all season, while also carving a notch near the top of
the outside midfielder’s list of best career shots.
Lambrakis, one of three captains among the Sailors’ squad, said
she felt like everything was moving in slow motion just before her
shot and directly after it lofted into the upper-right corner.
The junior saw the whole scene unfold as if she was in “The
Matrix.”
“It just went in really slow,” she said. “I looked up, and I saw
Krystal [Wright] running at me. Everyone came running at me and we
all just hugged in a big circle.”
One clean swipe of the foot swiped a perfectly clean league record
off Aliso Niguel’s books. And sometimes, it’s just about taking down
the Goliath.
“Everyone was ecstatic; the stands were pretty full for girls
soccer,” Newport Coach Phil D’Agostino said. “Everyone went nuts. It
was huge -- the biggest game of the season, no two ways about it.”
It was also a personal accomplishment for first-year coach
D’Agostino, who had previously never beaten the Wolverines. In the
first meeting between the two schools on Jan. 11, the Sailors scored
the first goal, but Aliso came back and won, 3-1.
On his second shot at Aliso, though, D’Agostino was not
intimidated by the highly ranked Wolverines.
“I knew we had a chance,” he said. “Our team’s play may be
erratic, but when we’re firing on all cylinders we’re tough to stop.
I always thought we had a shot at winning.”
For Lambrakis, the Sailors second-leading goal scorer behind
junior Amy Klippert, and the rest of the Newport team, the win
provided a boost of confidence while also raising the expectations
for the rest of this year and next season.
Before the win, Lambrakis said the team’s goal this season was to
make it to the first round of the CIF Division I playoffs. Now, she
said, it’s to advance past the first round.
“This definitely sets some higher goals,” Lambrakis said. “Now we
want to get past the first round and finish first or second in
league.”
And if the Sailors achieve their new goals, Lambrakis will be
right there in the mix of things.
“She’s one of the most serious players on the team,” D’Agostino
said. “She’s a leader on the team and she’s one of the fastest
outside midfielders in the league.
“She’s able to cut back really well, she’s quick on her feet --
she’s multi-tool player.”
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