The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Lopez buries first career goal in Garnet Valley’s win over Spring-Ford

- By Matthew DeGeorge mdegeorge@21st-centurymed­ia.com @sportsdoct­ormd on Twitter

RADNOR >> Rei Lopez has gone through the routine hundreds of times in his high school career.

The Garnet Valley senior contests a faceoff, winning more often than not. Then it’s 50-50 whether he’s turned back by the defense or is allowed to build a head of steam going forward.

Ninety-nine out of 100 occurrence­s of the latter case, Lopez follows the script of drawing a defender, dumping to a more specialize­d attacking threat and retreating to battle another day.

Saturday was that one time, and Lopez didn’t look like a player unaccustom­ed to shooting.

Lopez buried his first career varsity goal and accumulate­d a 19-for-22 day at the X to power Garnet Valley’s 12-8 nonleague win over Spring-Ford at the 17th annual Katie Samson Lacrosse Festival at Radnor High School.

If Lopez played the last three quarters and change with a bit of extra wind in his sails, it stemmed from the sortie at 8:16 of the first. Just nine seconds after a clean draw win set off a tic-tac-toe goal for Jake Morin from Jacob Buttermore, Lopez was at it again. This time, he called his own number and rifled a deft shot high on Spring-Ford goalie Kyle Pettine.

“FOGOs, you see a lot of guys run down there as fast as they can and shoot it like, ‘oh I’m going to shoot this as hard as I can,’ and don’t really aim for it,” Lopez said. “But I felt that shot that I took, I was calm and I knew I was going to put it in the top corner.”

Lopez’s deferentia­l first instinct has merit. His offensive toolkit isn’t the most expansive for a faceoff specialist. But the Jaguars don’t require him to contribute regularly, focusing his energies on the X.

With a passel of stars like the Syracuse-bound Buttermore or three-time AllDelco Matt Moore (University of Virginia) waiting in the attacking half, Lopez is rarely the best option to go to goal. But that only heightened the special nature of Saturday’s marker.

“It’s a milestone,” Lopez said. “The role of the FOGO is to get possession, but there’s more than just the FOGO. If you get it on the fast break, there’s a potential to score. And I guess with all the players that we have, I know they can score. But to have the confidence to shoot it and nail one in the top right, it feels pretty good.”

Lopez’s wins translated to team success in a spasticall­y paced game. The first quarter featured seven goals in 4 minutes, 6 seconds, leaving the teams even at 4-4. GV’s tallies blossomed in pairs — Morin and Lopez within nine seconds, then Jake D’Annunzio for the first two of his fivespot eight seconds apart.

Sloppiness marred the second quarter, grinding the breakneck pace to a standstill. But Evan Trizonis and Buttermore scored 17 seconds part in the final 100 ticks, staking the Jags (10-3) to a 7-4 lead at the break. And just when Spring-Ford (12-2) threatened to pilfer the momentum at 8-7 in the final minute of the third thanks to a natural hat trick from Tate Pijanowski, D’Annunzio answered back with one tick left on the clock by deflecting home a Buttermore feed … off a clean Lopez win.

“You’ve got to be grateful for Rei,” Trizonis said. “Today was huge for him, and it’s great when he can win them.”

Trizonis scored three times — including the backbreake­r at 4:48 of the fourth to stretch the lead to 11-8 — and added an assist. Buttermore provided a goal and three helpers. Pijanowski sparked SpringFord with his spurt. Daniel Cassidy tallied twice to go with setting up Peyton Gensler’s tally at 1:23 of the first quarter. But from there, the Rams endured a 22-minute barren stretch until Pijanowski’s threeminut­e hat trick. It was preceded by the Rams killing a two-man disadvanta­ge.

Kyle Pettine kept SpringFord in the game with 12 saves, though a pair of denials turned into rebound goals on the doorstep. Gensler notched his second goal at 9:31 of the fourth, inching the Rams back to within one.

But with a steady diet of Lopez winning draws any which way, the Rams were denied enough possession to claw any closer, only fitting given Lopez’s memorable day.

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