May 19, 2008

SLUH 7 - Chaminade 3

You can read about the game and see a picture of Kevin Arnold yodeling here: http://prepsports.stltoday.com/ssi/prep/stories2008.nsf/waterpolo/story/76E2F79ACB1C6DFF8625744D001F4532?OpenDocument

About an hour before the State championship against SLUH, I could tell that the boys were acting a little funny. The conversation was light-hearted and everyone was very excited, but there wasn't any anxiety about the upcoming game. Which I thought was a good sign. But, there were a lot of sentences that began with "It would be great if we won, but..."so I decided to call a team meeting at halftime of the 3rd place game. I told the guys that they had an hour to mentally prepare to win the state title. The attitude of "we're just happy to be here" wasn't acceptable because in order to win a game, you first have to believe you can win it. Well, ladies and gentlemen, the attitudes shifted at that moment and you could see in the eyes of the Red Devils that they wanted to win and they believed they could. The conversation shifted from "it would be great if" to "it will be great when" which is a big difference.

Our boys we came out in the 1st quarter likes bats out of hell. Our goal going into the game was to have no regrets. We wanted to do everything we could to do the impossible and for a while, it seemed like the impossible was possible. Usually the ones on the delivering end of quick goals and counter-attack breakaways, SLUH found themselves playing from behind early on two counter-attack goals by Jack Benage and Danny Faust.

The CCP defense was amazing in the first half. We forced many bad passes by pressing on the perimeter without fouling. The bad passes resulted in a lot of steals and quick counter attacks. After the first two goals, SLUH had their best defender, Michael O'Neill, stay on their defensive side of half the rest of the game to thwart the CCP counter. And it worked as the Red Devils couldn't get anything going out of the half-court...but neither could SLUH.

SLUH opened up their scoring on a 5M from Tim Dale. It would be the first of three 5M's called on the Red Devils in this game (Tim scored on two of them), and I could never get a satisfactory explanation from either referee on any of them. The first was apparently on Blake who had both of his hands up, the second was on Arnold who was even with his man when the foul was committed (if he was fouling from behind I would have agreed) and the third was called on Kubik with the ball two or three strokes away from the SLUH player (how can it be a probable goal if he doesn't even have the ball?)

SLUH's second goal was again scored by Tim Dale who took Kevin Arnold into the hole and still rifled off a shot Kevin hanging all over him. Their third goal was the aforementioned Kubik 5M in the third quarter, again scored by Tim who had SLUH's first three goals. I have been coaching Tim since he was a freshman, and it was a dominant performance by him. It was one of the best games he has probably ever played and he received my vote for Player of the Year.


Despite the fluke 5M's, CCP's defense was great and we went into the second half tied 2-2. Another rendition of "Living on a Prayer" contributed to our good moods and I thought we were ready to take it to them again. Unfortunately, that 5M on Kubik was called early in the 3rd quarter and then the wheels started coming off. I'm not sure if we were tired and drained from the emotional roller-coaster the night before, or if SLUH was that much better than us, or the fact that we prepared so much for DeSmet that we ignored preparing for SLUH...whatever it was, after our first 2 goals, we gave up 6 unanswered goals until Chris Watkins stopped the bleeding in the 4th.

Although the result was not ideal, we still played a great game. It was the toughest anyone had played SLUH all year (it was the only game all season where SLUH didn’t at least double the opponents goal total) and we should be very proud of our accomplishments this season. At the beginning of the year, our goal was to make it to the state final and I think I speak for the whole team when I say that we have no regrets. We defied expectations and our season was a success.

Coaches Awards:
Most Valuable Player – Michael Kubik
Offensive Player of the Year – Michael Kubik
Defensive Player of the Year – Jake Entwistle
Most Improved – Chris Duncan
Rookie of the Year (1st Year on Varsity) – Chris Watkins
Most POTGs – Blake Stabler and Jake Entwistle

On behalf of the team, I would like to thank all of the parents for all of their support throughout the year. You have no idea how much you have carried us this season. From the cowbells, to the cheering, to the blinking Devils, to the dyslexic signs, to the Gatorade, water bottles and after-game snacks, it was a phenomenal performance by the parents this year. And at no point in the season could we say “nobody believes in us” because our parents always did (even my parents!). There was also a fantastic showing by alumni and even the parents of alumni. We truly have a great water polo community at Chaminade.

A very special thanks is owed to Bill Stabler and Kin Watkins for all of their hard work on the stats this year. The boys were very happy to have accurate stats and having the stats creates a good historical record of the season. If this were a banquet, I would ask for a round of applause. Thanks Bill and Kin!

Personally, I need to thank my parents and my girlfriend Mandy for all for their support this year. Thanks also to Coach Larry Stream who did a fantastic job with the JV and whose assistance was invaluable this season. Thank you to Patrick St. Cin for being our third coach when he was in town and helped us prepare for DeSmet. Thanks to Tom Fiala and Kevin Brennan for taking care of all of the details.

Lastly, I need to thank the senior class. Going in, I wanted to form a partnership with the seniors and try to do the best I could to achieve their goals. After all, it was their team and the season was going to be what they made of it. Well, they made it a season that none of us will ever forget. As the saying goes, you never forget your first time, and I’m glad I had such a great group of guys to lead me through my first time. I’ll miss you guys next year. Good luck in college, and make sure you come back to see us next year, Grassi’s will be on me!

Chaminade 5 - DeSmet 4

In the most exciting game I have ever been a part of, the Chaminade Red Devils upset the DeSmet Spartans 5-4.

CCP's Senior Michael Kubik started the scoring and really put the heat on DeSmet from the beginning. DeSmet's sophomore Andrew Schonhoff responded for the Spartans with 24 second remaining in the first to tie the game at 1-1. The second quarter was all CCP as Jake Entwistle, Jack Benage (on a 5M!) and Jack Meara all knotted goals. In typical Jake fashion, he got pissed off and decided to go into set and make something happen. Danny Faust set the ball and Jake tried a couple moves but wasn't awarded a foul. He looked around to see if anyone was driving, but they were all telling him to shoot, so Jake shrugged off his defender and barred in a lob to the far corner. We were celebrating the goal and rolling on the ground laughing at the same time. Another DeSmet sophomore, Matt Stiponovich, ended the Red Devil scoring streak with a unstoppable bullet to the near corner (un-savable in my mind) and we went into the second half up 4-2.

Halftime was not all smiles as the Red Devils were clearly still intense and focused and were disappointed by the DeSmet goals and some missed opportunities of our own. There was also a certain junior I told to cheer up who then told me he was "scared to death". I think sophomore Kevin Glauber felt the tension and started one of the most memorable moments of the night. The back story is that we created a team CD, where everyone chose a song and everyone on the team had a copy of the CD, including me. Senior Blake Stabler chose Bon Jovi's "Living on a Prayer" for his song. I found it odd that Blake chose a song that is older than he is and is the anthem for every girl I ever met in college, but it was perfect. During a treading drill in practice, at the halfway point, the boys would sing the chorus..."whoa, we're halfway there, whoa-oh living on a prayer"...and I thought it was hilarious. Well as we were huddling up to get ready for the second half, Kevin sang the first couple notes..."whoa, we're halfway there"...and the rest of us, whether out of habit or sheer spontaneity or as a stress release finished off the chorus..."Whoa-oh! Living on a prayer! Take my hand, we'll make it I swear! Whoa-oh! Living on a prayer!" It was the ultimate team moment and I will never forget it.

Well, the second half wasn't as productive offensively as the first, with only one goal coming from Jack Benage two minutes into the third, but it didn't need to be as our defense was stifling and Blake's goaltending was amazing. The game plan was to play a drop-zone to prevent weak side passes and keep the ball out of the middle of the goal so the Spartans would be forced to take outside shots and beat Blake from the perimeter. Every time we played DeSmet up to this point, they would get the ball down on the left wing and drive someone hard to the right (usually Junior Danny Holtgrewe) and make cross-goal passes and score back-door. The plan hinged on Blake playing a great game, and he rose to the challenge making 14 saves. A couple of coaches who came to watch put it, "He stopped everything."

The zone worked all day except for a one minute span where Danny Holtgrewe got free for two goals. In principle, Danny scored the type of goals our defense was designed to prevent, but DeSmet took a play our of our playbook and ran flat-wing picks to get Danny open weak-side and he capitalized on two goals in the third to bring the score to 5-4. But we adjusted, and for the first time all season, we learned from a mistake and shut that play down. The defense was perfect from that point forward and despite some scares, including a 5M shot, 4 man-advantages, and some point-blank opportunities, the defense held and we pulled out a last second victory.

Overall, it was the one of the best games we had played all season and it was by far the most gratifying. We beat a team that we had played close all season and we executed the game plan when it counted. Our offense was aggressive early and our defense was near-perfect. I am very proud of the way we played and we accomplished our goal of making it to the state finals.

Goals: Benage - 2, Entwistle - 1, Kubik - 1, Meara - 1
Assists: Benage - 2, Faust - 1, Kubik - 1
Steals: Faust - 3, Kubik - 3, Benage - 2, Watkins - 2, Arnold - 1, Entwistle -1, Fernandez -1, Stabler - 1
Kickouts: Entwistle - 3 (first time all season anyone has gotten red-flagged), Kubik -1, and one unrecorded for the 5M

Player of the Game: Stabler - 14 saves on 18 shots, 1 steal and "stopping everything".

May 17, 2008

Prepcasts Live Broadcast of Districts

Hey everyone, it's Jack Benage here. I wanted to pop in to double check to see if everyone was aware of the live broadcasts being done by Prepcasts. Prepcasts has been doing audio broadcasts of the district tournament games. I wanted to make sure you all had the link for tonight's game so that if you are unable to make it to the finals tonight but you are around a computer and wanted to, you could listen to the game.


Tonight's broadcast of the Chaminade vs. SLUH finals game is accessible here:

Also, if you want to relive last night's game, or didn't have a chance to see it and would like to listen to it. Prepcasts keeps an archive of old broadcasts. The Chaminade vs. Desmet semi-final game can be found here:


On a side note: Thank you to all who have been attending our games and cheering us on. Your support certainly does not go unnoticed and the team really appreciates it. It's great to look up into the stands and see a sea of red. 

We'll see you tonight!
Go Devils!
~Jack

May 16, 2008

Tonight v. DeSmet

Tonight the Chaminade Red Devils play in the district (state) semi-final against the rival DeSmet Spartans. The game starts at 8:00 PM out at St. Peter's Rec-Plex.

There isn't really anything to say about this game that hasn't been said many times already. We have seen them three times and all three times they played hard the whole game and we did not. The 4th quarter has been our downfall...we were down 5-4 after three in the first game only to lose 9-6...we were up 4-2 after three in the second game, only to give up two 4th quarter goals and end up losing in overtime...we were tied 3-3 after three in the third game, only to give up five 4th quarter goals for our third loss.

If you have a dangerous enemy down, you can't let up, you can't relax or they can come back on you.

I'm fired up for tonight. It's going to be exciting and a lot of fun. I hope we can fill the stands with a sea of red.

Starters:
#1 Blake Stabler
#2 Jack Benage (c)
#3 Michael Kubik
#4 Jack Meara
#5 Kevin Arnold (c)
#6 Jake Entwistle
#8 Danny Faust

May 14, 2008

Chaminade 9 - Ladue 4

Final Four here we come!

The Red Devils came to play on Wednesday night and completed the sweep of the Ladue Rams, who have been an increasingly tough opponent all year. The comments from our boys regarding the Rams have been nothing but positive and they were great competitors all season. I'm glad this was the last time we had to face them, because they might beat us if we had to meet again.

Right from the get-go, you could tell the CCP boys were fired up and played very aggressively on the offensive end. We countered hard, we made good passes and we attacked the goal. The goal output was a very consistent 3 goals per quarter until we pulled back the reigns in the 4th quarter.

Defense was a little shaky in the early going as a lack of communication gave the Rams a lot of opportunities in the first half. Senior goalie Blake Stabler bailed his teammates out often as we got caught watching and left the most dangerous shooter open (the idea is to let the guys hanging out at half be open and guard everyone who is 7M or closer to the goal...it's also not a good idea to make your teammate swim from 2M to 2M). Blake's 21 saves were a season high and is playing his best water polo at the end of the season, which is awesome. There were some passes in the second half that had me scratching my head, but he still played a great game.

Things that went right:

  • Goaltending
  • Defensive recovery - we made mistakes, but we recovered well and usually didn't repeat the mistake
  • Offensive aggressiveness - we attacked, attacked and then attacked some more. A great offensive effort
Things that went not so right:
  • Communication - how many times has this appeared in this section? Too many. It got better in the second half, but we still need to talk to each other in the water more
  • 6-on-5 - I made the mistake of calling a timeout when the goalie got kicked out, but we still should have scored on the time out. Also we took a lob on 6-on-5...a big no-no.
  • 5M shot - I think Jack was too tired, I should have had Kubik take it.
Goals: Benage - 3, Kubik - 2, Arnold - 1, Entwistle -1, Meara - 1, Watkins - 1
Assists: Kubik - 3, Stabler - 2, Benage - 1, Duncan - 1, Hoette - 1, Meara - 1
Steals: Kubik - 4, Meara - 4, Entwistle - 1, Duncan - 1, Hoette - 1, Schwartz - 1, Stabler - 1
Kickouts: NONE!
Saves: Stabler - 21

Player of the Game: Stabler - 21 Saves on 24 shots, 2 assists and 1 steal

Up Next: 8:00PM on Friday May 16th v. DeSmet at St. Peters Rec-Plex.

Tonight v. Ladue

Tonight, the 3rd ranked Boys in Red will begin their post-season quest against the 6th ranked Ladue Rams. The game will start at 6:15PM at the St. Peter's Rec-Plex and I would like the boys to try and arrive at 5:00PM.

This will be the 4th meeting of these two teams with the last meeting ending 5-3 just 10 days ago. Ladue is a very good team with two excellent 2M's Zach Varwig and Hayden Yancey. Their goalie is unheralded, but has played very well against us this year. We need to do a good job of getting cross-goal shots and using fakes to keep him off-balance.

It's "make or break" time as this could be our last game of the season. I have been saying all along, we are a great team, maybe the best team, if we are all focused and we execute. We cannot win this game on athleticism alone, we need to be ready and focused. I'm pumped. See you there.

Starters:
#1 Blake Stabler
#2 Jack Benage (c)
#3 Michael Kubik
#5 Kevin Arnold (c)
#6 Jake Entwistle
#8 Danny Faust
#9 Peter Hoette

May 12, 2008

Summer Water Polo

I highly encourage everyone who wants to play water polo next year for Chaminade to play for a club this summer. There are a handful of clubs in the area and all have different advantages and disadvantages, but all are doing a good job at developing their players. The clubs that participate in the Strike Zone summer league are the ones I would recommend, and they are Daisy, Jungle Cats, Mad Dog and SLAP. Flyers is a good club as well, but I believe they don't have a club this summer because Lindbergh pool is under repair.

As for me, this summer will be my 5th summer coaching for Jungle Cat Water Polo. Jungle Cats was started when I was in high school by SLUH's varsity coach Paul Baudendistel and we just celebrated our tenth season. The last few years have been very successful as we have won the Strike Zone league three times straight and have gone out to California twice to participate in Junior Olympics. This summer, we will again be travelling to play in the Junior Olympics in Irvine, CA.

I would very much like everyone to play for a club, any club, as playing for a team and being coached year round exponentially increases a high school player's experience and ability. As I've said many times before, water polo in this city is not like soccer where everyone has been playing since they were 6 years old and by the time you reach high school you only get incrementally better each year. Since most kids START playing in high school, water polo is a sport in which you can increase your experience EXPONENTIALLY by playing during the offseason.

So again, PLAY this summer, for any club. There are different clubs with different practice times at different locations, so pick the one that is right for you. I will not play favorites to those who play for me at Jungle Cats.

FYI: Jungle Cats will be practicing at Chaminade this summer. Sign-ups have begun and more information can be found at http://junglecatpolo.com/

Senior Bio: Dan Fernandez

Name: Dan Fernandez
Age: 18
Height: 6'2''
Weight: 220
Grade Started at Chaminade: 6th
Going to College: SMU
Best Water Polo Skill: Passing and breaking for offense
Favorite Water Polo Moment: Last year, after I subbed in the middle of a game at the Rec-Plex vs DeSmet, I got the ball on our 7m from blake, and drove it all the way down to DeSmet's right post and skipped it past the goalie.
Quote: "ATTACK!" -Jack Benage


May 8, 2008

CCPWP Development Program continues today

The turnout so far to the Development Program has been encouraging, but I think we can do better. Remember, ANY Chaminade student that is a sophomore or younger can attend. No prior experience is required. It's a fun time and we play and shoot a lot. The more students that attend, the brighter Chaminade's water polo future will be!

Senior Bio: Blake Stabler

Name: Blake William Stabler
Age: 18
Height: 6-2
Weight: 177
Grade Started At Chaminade: 6
Going to College: Mercyhurst
Best Water Polo Skill: Shot-blocking
Favorite Water Polo Moment: I'll let you know after the state finals
Quote: "I wish my girlfriend would call me coach" -Jake Entwistle

May 7, 2008

Senior Bio: Jack Benage

My girlfriend came up with the idea of putting player bios on the site so casual fans could get to know the players better. It's also nice filler as we wait agonizingly long for our next game. Here is the first stab at it. I'm starting with Jack Benage because he is the first one to send me his bio with a picture. Enjoy!


Name: Jack Benage
Age: 18
Height: 6'1"
Weight: 145
Grade Started at Chaminade: Attended 6th - 12th
Going to College: SMU (Southern Methodist University)
Best Water Polo Skill: Irritating Coach.........Just Awareness in General
Favorite Water Polo Moment: A couple years back, during club season, the opposing team shot the ball hard enough to rebound off the crossbar all the way back to his own goalie who wasn't paying attention. The ball hit his goalie in the head and went in. He shot on the right goal, but scored on his own team!
Quote: Some favorites right now:
  • "We're so busy watching out for what's just ahead of us that we don't take time to enjoy where we are." - Calvin & Hobbes

  • "Learn to embrace the chaos." - Dr. Greg Mantych

  • "I'm a threat!!" - Danny Faust

May 6, 2008

All-Conference Teams Named

The All-Conference selections were announced today. Out of respect for the players on other teams (they should hear it from their coach), I will only mention our boys:

First Team: Michael Kubik, Blake Stabler
Second Team: Jack Benage

Congratulations guys! All three of you are very deserving of the honor and I believe that is about the right number of players from a team in third place in such a talented conference. Also, I think these three will be eligible to make the All-District team that gets voted on later and I expect all of them to be in the running.

May 5, 2008

District Rankings Set

The Chaminade Red Devils were voted #3 by area coaches, which is exactly where I think we belong based on our season so far. Can we end up #1? I think so. We just have to be firing on all cylinders come tournament time.

Our first game will be Wednesday May 14th out at the Rec-Plex. We have a first round bye so do not know our opponent yet. We will play the winner of #6 Ladue and #11 Parkway South, two teams that we have played at least twice this year. A victory in our first game, which is the quarter-finals, would put us in the semi-finals, likely against DeSmet (again, a team we have seen three times). A loss in the first game would end our season. Ladue and South play this Saturday at Rec-Plex, so I strongly suggest we go out an watch that game in order to mentally prepare for next Wednesday. These are two good teams that have the ability to upset us and send us home early. We need to be ready.

Since we don't have a game for 9 days, I likely won't post for about a week until there is some news to report. I hope your imaginations can keep you busy until then.

Chaminade 5 - Ladue 3

Jake Entwistle is my hero. Jake is probably our most gifted player physically and when he puts his mind to something (like setting up in the hole and ripping a halo backhand for a game-winning goal) he can do almost anything in the water. Now if I can only learn to get him to put his mind to doing that ALL THE TIME, then the Red Devils might be looking at the school's first water polo title.

The game was very nerve-wrecking (or is it nerve-racking? Not sure which it is). As expected, our team defense was excellent, allowing one first half goal on a perfect shot into the corner that most Olympians couldn't have saved. Ladue's second goal came in the 4th off a counter attack. The Rams leading scorer, Zach Varwig, left Jake as he was walking towards the goal with the ball. Our lack of communication again came back to bite us as Blake, Jake and everyone else on the bench (including me) should have made sure someone was going back to cover Zach. Jack Meara got the message too late and Zach had a one-on-one with Blake (impossible for the goalie to stop). As a lesson to all, you cannot let someone "cherry pick". If a defender leaves for offense, you need to go with him (or make sure someone is going back for you). Ladue's third goal was a weak backhand that caught Blake by surprise and he still nearly saved it.

Q: So if the defense was so good, why was the game nerve-wrecking/racking?
A: Because our offense was so flat that we didn't score until 3 minutes into the second half.

The opportunities were there for us, especially in the first half with at least 4 breakaways. I can point to many things that we could have done better, but the offensive woes boil down to three things:

  1. Having beaten Ladue twice already, the boys were not focused before the game. As a team that beats teams by being smarter and executing better than the other team, being unfocused before a game is suicide. We aren't a bunch of 200 lb. bruisers who can have an off night and get by on our athleticism. We need to have sharp mental focus if we are to succeed.
  2. Even though we practice passing ad nauseum during practice, our passing (especially wet passing to a guarded or moving target) is atrocious. We do a good job getting open on offense, but the window to get the ball to an open driver is small and we need to execute better.
  3. Senior captain Kevin Arnold was out with a concussion that he suffered during the DeSmet game. Largely considered the emotional leader and one of the better passers, Kevin's absence magnified that two biggest problem areas in this game.
But, we survived and finsihed third in the Suburban Central Conference. We persisted and we did not give up. I'm proud of the way we played in such a close and emotional game. We will likely see this team again, so we need to make sure we get up for it next time.

Side note: if the shot clock is off (less than 35 second remaining) and you are in the lead, you NEVER should shoot. Shooting gives the other team an opportunity to make a play and come back on you. Even if you are all alone in front of the cage, I would prefer you hold the ball rather than try and score. History is littered with examples of people having a "sure thing" like a goal on an open cage and the sure thing ends up going awry. The best thing to do is play keep-away until the clock runs out.

Goals: Kubik - 2, Benage - 1, Entwistle - 1, Watkins - 1
Assists: Meara - 2, Benage - 1, Kubik - 1
Steals: Entwistle - 6, Kubik - 3, Benage - 2, Duncan - 2, Meara - 2, Faust - 1, Hoette -1, Stabler -1
Kickouts: NONE
Saves: Stabler - 15

Player of the Game: Entwistle - 1 goal (game winner) on 1 shot, 6 steals and displayed his ability to be an unstoppable beast if he wants to be.

Up next: Districts!

May 2, 2008

Senior Blake Stabler Honored

Blake was honored as one of the seven Athletes of the Week for April 30th by the Post-Dispatch. It's a big week for Blake as he also signed his letter of intent to Mercyhurst College. Congratulations Blake!

May 1, 2008

DeSmet 8 - Chaminade 5

The Red Devils again could not put together a 28 minute game as DeSmet tallied 5 goals in the 4th quarter (the most goals scored against in a single quarter) for 3 consecutive victories this season against Chaminade. Tied 3-3 going into the 4th after three great quarters, I was confident in the team’s ability to prevent the Spartans from scoring without the aid of the bottom of the pool, and it worked for the first 3 minutes of the quarter. With 4:36 remaining, CCP’s Junior 2M guard Chris Duncan got an ejection on the perimeter and the wheels started to come off. I made the mistake of telling Peter Hoette to leave a man in the middle, which resulted in a Spartan goal and a 4-3 lead.

On the very next position, the Spartan’s Danny Holtgrewe notched his third goal of the game on a cross-goal pass with CCP’s Jake Entwistle holding his arm. The pass had to be perfect (and it was) and Danny had to be strong enough to shoot with Jake on him (and he was). It’s tough to stop something like that.

The Red Devils were looking really down at this point, and I was losing my cool (sorry about that, I guess I just wanted to win pretty badly), but we didn’t give up (yet). Two possessions after Holtgrewe’s third goal, Junior Chris Watkins broke out of his shell and notched his second goal off a foul outside 5M. Clearly, this game was Chris’ coming out party as he played his best game of the year finally finding the offensive aggressiveness I knew he had. As Jack Benage said to me: “Chris is better than he thinks he is”.

We were back within one with three minutes remaining, but we were either too physically overmatched or mentally beaten down to overcome the deficit. DeSmet kept after the Red Devils with relentless countering and back door drives and notched two more goals on consecutive possession to put away the Red Devils. Down three, Junior Jack Meara didn’t give up and was a one-man wrecking crew getting possession of the ball deep in front of the cage, got a hard shot off, went after the rebound and forced DeSmet’s goalie to take the ball under, resulting in a Chaminade 5M attempt, which Jack Benage buried. Jack and Jack’s efforts were too late as the Spartans still led by 2 with less than two minutes remaining. A late Benage kickout and a DeSmet 6-on-5 goal capped the scoring.

The story, as I see it, is an old cliché: they wanted to win more than we did. We played a solid 24 minutes; the Spartans played a full 28. The biggest compliment I can pay DeSmet is they never faltered, never quit. They kept coming at us with a relentless and invincible attitude that we usually bring to every game. Luckily, this wasn’t districts and we will get a chance at redemption. Now we need to focus on Ladue on Saturday.

Things that went right (during the first 24 minutes):

  • Offensive aggressiveness – we countered hard and took a lot of high quality shots off of ball side drives. Kubik and Benage had a lot of fast-break opportunities. Arnold and Meara had good chances in the hole. The opportunities were there, and you don’t get opportunities like that without doing a lot of things right.
  • Anticipation – our best game of the year from an anticipation standpoint. I don’t recall any DeSmet player getting a fast break in the first 24 minutes. I don’t even recall a 2-on-1 or 3-on-2. We hustled back to defense. We also left early for offense when the clock ran down (see: offensive aggressiveness). Kubik, Benage, Arnold, Meara and Watkins were all anticipating and were hungry for goals. I loved the killer instinct.
  • 6-on-5 – 1 for 2. Kubik’s pass to Meara was perfect.
  • 5M shots – I guess “5M Survivor” is working

Things that went not so right;

  • COMMUNICATION – maybe it’s a product of my talking the whole game, but I stopped counting the number of times our guys would switch on defense and didn’t call it out. I also stopped counting the number of times we didn’t call for help when we got beat on defense. I only have 10 fingers and 10 toes.
  • Shooting – sometimes you shoot well and sometimes you don’t and sometimes you score 5 goals on 27 shots for the lowest shooting percentage of the year (18%). For those parents wondering, you aren’t supposed to throw the ball at the goalie’s hands. Looking back, with the number and quality of our shots in the first and third quarter, we were two or three near-side-lows from blowing them out (i.e. a 3-3 game after three could have easily been 6-3 or 7-3).
  • Defensive break downs and learning from mistakes – goes hand-in-hand with communication. If you know a team is going to try to go back door on you, it might be a good idea to not let the weak side wing get open.
  • Too many kickouts – dropping your hips and over-committing against good players will result in a season high in kickouts (we also got 4 kickouts in our loss to Marquette…don’t think there isn’t a correlation between kickouts and losing).

Goals: Watkins – 2, Benage – 1, Kubik – 1, Meara – 1
Assists: Stable r – 2, Kubik – 1
Steals: Stabler – 4, Arnold – 3, Entwistle – 3, Benage – 2, Duncan – 2, Meara – 2, Faust – 1, Kubik – 1
Kickouts: Benage – 2, Duncan – 1, Meara – 1
Saves: Stabler – 7

Player of the Game: Watkins – 2 goals on 2 shots in a “coming out party”. Add him to the list of guys on our team who makes things happen.

Up Next: 7:00 PM Saturday May 3rd v. Ladue at Ladue.