The Day

Will Falcons learn from Masuk all over again?

- MIKE DIMAURO m.dimauro@theday.com

Groton The kids who would play their last football game of the season Tuesday night weren't yet alive during the 1998 state championsh­ip game. And yet the shapes and forms of that fateful night ran like a current, all the way to Dorr Field, all the way to the playoffs of 2017.

How ironic, indeed, that it was Masuk that provided Fitch its most haunting defeat and most limitless inspiratio­n 19 years ago. And it is Masuk that, again, as if commanded by the universe, gives the Falcons another offseason blueprint.

In 1998, Fitch was unbeaten and heavily favored to win the state championsh­ip, the first of the Mike Emery era. The Falcons discovered, quite painfully, that manly Masuk was just a little tougher and stronger. On the interminab­le bus ride home, the players, stricken with defeat, managed to find resolve, too: Never again. Never again would they walk on a football field physically inferior. To anybody. Never again turned into two straight state titles, 34 straight wins and the state's No. 1 ranking in 2000. Nobody knew that night in 1998, through all the distress, was the greatest blessing in Fitch football history.

And then it was Tuesday night, one of those once-in-alifetime chances for the Fitch seniors.

And guess who came to dinner? Masuk, again. The result: Masuk, again. Too strong, too physical. Maybe to the naked eye the Panthers didn't seem so imposing. Until Fitch tried to run a play. It was 43-7 by the end.

Now comes the true measure of the junior class — the promising junior class — that returns enough talent next year to get Fitch right back to the postseason.

Yo, fellas: You gonna learn from this, like your brethren from 1998?

Or will the residual effect of Tuesday night's postgame tears fade into offseason irrelevanc­e?

Remember this: Notre Dame of West Haven did the same thing to New London in last season's quarterfin­als. New London's juniors who became seniors didn't spend enough time in the weight room this offseason.

The Whalers got pushed around far too much this year. They didn't learn. Soon, we'll discover if the returning Sons of Fitch can turn the loss of a game into a win in the weight room. Heck, they have coach on their staff, Calvin McCoy, who does strength and conditioni­ng for a living.

Coach Calvin can open doors that will open holes next fall. If they want to listen.

"This hurts," junior quarterbac­k Tyler Nelli was saying inside the Fitch fieldhouse after the game. "The other juniors and me are going to have a talk later. We know we have to get in there, pump iron and keep working."

Not to mention become

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