The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Hill School faces off against Lawrencevi­lle

Hill School blanks Lawrencevi­lle, completes the season sweep

- By Rob Senior For Digital First Media

POTTSTOWN » Hill School coach Chris Bala is no stranger to the Hill-Lawrencevi­lle School rivalry.

As a former Hill hockey player himself, Bala knew his team couldn’t rely on strategy alone in what was sure to be an emotional contest.

“These games,” said Bala, “aren’t won by Xs and Os. It’s a matter of little plays turning into big plays.”

Of course, when you can keep the puck out of your own net, strategy becomes a luxury.

Dalton Jerzak made 22 saves leading a complete team defensive effort as the Blues subdued Lawrencevi­lle, 3-0, improving to 8-5-2 on the season and completing a season sweep of their arch rivals on Saturday afternoon. The Blues also took down Lawrencevi­lle 2-1 last month.

Jerzak, a senior originally from Rochester, NY, is in his first year at the Hill School. While he may be new to the Hill-Lawrencevi­lle rivalry, the significan­ce of the victory wasn’t lost on him.

“We’ve got a group of guys who put up a strong performanc­e on the road against them last month,” he said, “and now we can say we owned the

season rivalry this year.”

Offensivel­y, Hill chipped away with 30 shots, solving Lawrencevi­lle’s Karl Szabo once in each period.

Scoring chances were at a premium in the early going, until Hill capitalize­d on a power play chance late in the first period. Junior CJ Duvall took a short feed from captain David Hill, beating Szabo glove side to open the scoring at 14:23. Just over a minute later, Lawrencevi­lle’s best opportunit­y of the period struck the goalpost on a point blast from David Parker.

The ice seemed tilted in the Blues’ favor early in the second period, but Szabo was equal to the task each time. Lawrencevi­lle, however, remained unable to solve Jerzak, who made his first tough save of the game diving cross-crease to rob Trey Croddick.

Hill would get an insurance tally with two minutes left in the period, with the Blues killing a penalty. Junior Alex Kiviniemi turned and fired from center ice in hopes of getting his team a line change. But the blistering shot took a strange bounce and handcuffed Szabo, doubling the Blues’ lead.

Early in the third period, junior Ryan Long carried the puck into the Lawrencevi­lle zone on a 3-on-1. Long took advantage of the defenseman’s hesitation, firing a wrister by Szabo to close out the scoring.

The only mystery remaining was whether Jerzak and the Blues could complete the shutout. A last-ditch Lawrencevi­lle rally — half of their 22 shots came in the third period — was thwarted when Jerzak turned in the play of the game, robbing Croddick a second time on a glove save during a late power play.

“It was an odd-man rush,” Jerzak recalled, “and my responsibi­lity is the shooter. So when they slide the puck across like that, it was just a natural reaction to turn my body. I think I was in pretty good position, and fortunatel­y the puck hit me.”

For the two squads, Saturday’s game was a continuati­on of the year-long celebratio­n of the Hill-Lawrencevi­lle rivalry. The schools first competed in interschol­astic athletics in 1887 — one of America’s oldest athletic rivalries at any level.

This past November, the entire Hill student body traveled to New Jersey to commemorat­e the 130th anniversar­y of the rivalry. On that day, Lawrencevi­lle got the better of Hill, besting the Blues in seven of the day’s nine contests across various athletic activities.

Therefore, Saturday’s victory was extra sweet for Hill, as they not only completed a season sweep of their arch rivals, but exacted a measure of revenge for their classmates.

Over their four years at Hill, the Class of 2018 now sports a 9-2 record against Lawrencevi­lle in ice hockey.

“Anytime a student or a team at Hill competes against Lawrencevi­lle, they become part of something bigger than themselves,” said Bala. “The rivalry goes back well over a hundred years, so each player only gets the chance to write a few chapters.”

For Coach Bala and his squad, the focus now turns to capturing a third consecutiv­e Mid-Atlantic Hockey League title. The eightteam league will send four teams to a single-eliminatio­n postseason tournament to determine its champion.

“Winning these games in the area is critical,” Bala confirmed. “Kids are looking for strong academics and a high level of hockey. Results against local teams, plus some top programs in New England, give our athletes a chance to measure themselves against some of the best.

“But for the present, the focus is on the Mid-Atlantic Hockey League.”

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 ?? THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Hill School’s Ryan Long, right, celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the third period of Saturday’s game against Lawrencevi­lle. The Blues won 3-0.
THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Hill School’s Ryan Long, right, celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the third period of Saturday’s game against Lawrencevi­lle. The Blues won 3-0.
 ?? THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Hill School’s Ethan Hempel (3) takes the puck into the zone while Lawrencevi­lle’s David Zhu (8) defends during Saturday’s game.
THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Hill School’s Ethan Hempel (3) takes the puck into the zone while Lawrencevi­lle’s David Zhu (8) defends during Saturday’s game.
 ?? THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Hill School’s Ryan Long (11) celebrates after scoring a goal during the third period of Saturday’s game against Lawrencevi­lle.
THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Hill School’s Ryan Long (11) celebrates after scoring a goal during the third period of Saturday’s game against Lawrencevi­lle.
 ?? THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Hill School’s Travis DeBruyn (14) vies for a call after a mixup with a Lawrencevi­lle defender during Saturday’s game.
THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Hill School’s Travis DeBruyn (14) vies for a call after a mixup with a Lawrencevi­lle defender during Saturday’s game.
 ?? THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Hill School’s Vincent Petrone (17) brings the puck up ice while Lawrencevi­lle’s Jacob Schiller (16) defends during the second period.
THOMAS NASH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Hill School’s Vincent Petrone (17) brings the puck up ice while Lawrencevi­lle’s Jacob Schiller (16) defends during the second period.

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