Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

OJR holds on to beat Whippets

- By Jeff Stover jstover@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MercuryXSt­over on Twitter

BUCKTOWN >> It’s a situation with which the Wildcats have been dealing all season long.

Relaxing after getting out to a solid lead has been a bugaboo for Owen J. Roberts. It occurred again Tuesday evening, though not enough to prevent Owen J. from outlasting Downingtow­n West, 2-1, in an opening-round District 1-4A playoff game at Wildcat Stadium.

Scoring twice in a fourminute span of the final 15, Roberts appeared to be in good position to take its first post-season outing. But the Whippets made the lead more tenuous by getting a goal inside the three-minute mark, then watching one final shot at the Roberts cage go wide as time expired.

“I don’t think we finished the way we could,” OJR head coach Eric Wentzel said. “The last 5-6 minutes, we unravelled mentally. We didn’t make good decisions.”

The tenacity of both teams kept it a 0-0 game through the first half and 25 minutes of the second. Though it was dominant in first-half shots on goal (10-5) and corner shots (51), OJR couldn’t get the ball in the net against a stout West defensive backfield and goalkeeper Ryan Miller.

That ended at the 14:43 mark when Owen J’s Sam Coroniti, assisted by Kyle Storti, converted a straighton shot. Then at 10:32, Addison Waldman connected on a shot from 30 yards out to put 12th-seeded Roberts (13-6) up 2-0.

“I think they (OJR) deserve credit, the way they dictated the tempo,” Downingtow­n head coach John Hatt said after seeing his 21st-seeded Whippets finish the year 108-1. “Once the game got to that level, we had success. But it was too late.”

West’s increased sense of urgency did its part to make Owen J’s lead less insurmount­able. With 2:57 left, Dylan Englehart got the visitors on the board; they then dueled with Roberts before getting the ball down in front of the home goal, where a shot went to the right of the cage by a margin OJR keeper Ryan Walker estimated at between one and two feet.

“That last one was scary,” Walker, who finished the night with seven saves, noted.

“We were totally in control at the end,” Wentzel added. “We should never have had to scramble.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States