Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Findora, Lucier, McMonagle earn medals

Coatesvill­e’s Lucier, Henderson’s McMonagle reflect on their friendship as they bid farewell to incredible careers

- By Nate Heckenberg­er natehecken­berger@gmail.com @nheckenber­ger on Twitter

The right eye of Coatesvill­e’s Nate Lucier was swollen shut and painted purple, while his dumpling of an right ear pushed back on his headgear.

West Chester Henderson’s Sammy McMonagle had both nostrils stuff tight with plugs while blood smeared his front teeth.

These two seniors from the Ches-Mont League have been through a few wars over the years, the latest at the Class 3A PIAA Championsh­ips at the Giant Center in Hershey.

Those battle scars are worn like ribbons telling tales of waging battle and overcoming odds, all while pushing each other along as friends.

“It’s been amazing,” said McMonagle of he and Lucier’s friendship. “He’s one of the best practice partners you could ask for. I call him whenever I need a good workout and it’s been an amazing four years.”

Neither Lucier (132 pounds) nor McMonagle (145) were exactly happy with their state tournament­s. Both had dreams of claiming gold and both settled for fourth, but there was an undercurre­nt of accomplish­ment from a combo that combined for 255 career wins.

“It was definitely rough,” Lucier said. “I got where I was last year and fell short at the same spot. It hurt bad, but not everything in life goes your way. … I’m proud of where I am and I know how far I’ve come.”

In the morning session, Lucier advanced to the semifinals where he couldn’t get out from bottom and dropped a 1-0 decision to eventual champ, Briar Priest of Hempfield. Lucier rallied to pin Bethlehem Catholic’s Matt Mayer in the consolatio­n semifinals, but followed with a loss to Bellefonte’s Jude Swisher.

After losing 13 matches as a freshman, Lucier lost just 14 his final three seasons and topped his sixth-place state medal as a junior.

“Looking back, in ninth grade, honestly I didn’t even think about going to states,” Lucier said. “I didn’t think I could be on that level. When I got there the next year it opened my eyes that I could be one of those guys who gets to a podium.”

McMonagle used a win over Hempfield’s Ty Linsenbigl­er to move on to semifinals, where he nearly came back against Waynesburg Central’s eventual champ, Wyatt Henson. In consis, McMonagle bettered Williamspo­rt’s Riley Bower before losing a rematch to Linsenbigl­er in tiebreaker.

“I had a goal of being state champ and I didn’t achieve that,” said McMonagle, who finished seventh as a junior. “It’s nice I did better than last year, but my goal wasn’t to do better than last year. It was to win a state title, so it’s a little bitterswee­t.”

Downingtow­n West’s Dom Findora had one of the bigger wins of the quarterfin­al round when he upset returning state champ, Ethan Berginc of Hempfield, 5-4. Berginc defeated Findora a year ago at states, and eventually won the rubber match in the consolatio­n final.

“My plan was to win every match and just stay focused on one match at a time,” Findora said. “I spent a lot of time on a game plan (for Berginc) and it worked the first match. I’m kinda mad I lost in the thirdplace match.”

Findora’s fourth-place finish marks five straight years the Whippets have had a medalist. He will be the lone returning state medalist in the Ches-Mont next season.

Kennett’s Trent Kochersper­ger gave Franklin Regional’s eventual champion, Finn Solomon, all he could handle in a 3-0 loss, but the senior responded by taking out Bethlehem Catholic’s Andrew Harmon, 5-3, in consolatio­ns. Kochersper­ger dropped a 3-0 decision to Chartiers Valley’s Dylan Evans, but wound up with a fifthplace medal when DuBois’ Chandler Ho had to injure default midway through their bout.

“I always dreamed about being a state medalist,” Kochersper­ger said. “Obviously I always wanted to be champ, but not everybody gets to be champ. I just kept trying for the next big thing, each match. This medal brings out all my hard work and who I am.”

Downingtow­n East’s Keanu Manuel (120) used a pair of nearfall points in the second tiebreaker period to get past West Scranton’s Austin Fashouer, in the first round of consolatio­ns, for his only win on the day. His three losses were by a combined five points, but after two prior trips to Hershey without a medal, Manuel was thankful to close his career with a sixth-place finish.

“Obviously it wasn’t the happiest ending, but I’m still very grateful for my high school career,” said Manuel, who finished with a career record of 121-20. “I’m happy that I was able to get this medal and get to the state podium.”

Manuel’s teammate, Matt Romanelli (172), couldn’t find a win in Hershey, but finishes his career as an eighth-place state medalist, with a career record of 94-25. He dropped decisions to Mifflin County’s Trey Kibe, La Salle’s Regan Loughney and injury defaulted against Nazareth’s Sonny Sasso.

PHILADELPH­IA >> It might be easy to say, as Alain Vigneault has recently done day by day, that alleged No. 1 goaltender Carter Hart is simply trying to practice through a slump.

Or work through some other synonym.

“He’s going through a rough patch,” Vigneault termed it early Saturday, “and he’s got to work himself through it.”

Lately Hart had been mostly punching his timecard for the mid-day shift and was scheduled to do so behind Brian Elliott again Saturday night. But just two nights after he’d been riddled for five goals in a Flyers loss to the Capitals, Elliott started this rematch looking like a weary backup, bringing Hart back to the spot for which he’s paid to play when Elliott was pulled in the second period.

Despite a too-late push in the third by the Flyers, there would be no poetic conclusion for Hart’s savior act on this night, as he could only work his way through a 5-4 rematch loss to the Capitals at Wells Fargo Center.

Washington now has won all four times it’s played Philadelph­ia. Meanwhile, the Flyers are 5-6-1 since a four-game COVID break and have lost five of their last seven starts. They’re looking as out of synch as they have for a long time. Or are appearance­s deceiving? “I thought we played a good game from start to finish,” Vigneault said. “Guys competed. We’re not going to be perfect. We competed hard, made some plays at the right time and got some good looks. Unfortunat­ely, the game, results-wise, it didn’t go our way.

“Nobody’s going to feel sorry for us right now because we’re going through tough times . ... I do like parts of our game at this moment I do think we’re trending the right way.”

Again, that’s five losses in seven games. The Flyers are fifth in the East, three points out of a playoff spot. What’s that trending toward? “I do believe our game is trending the right way,” Claude Giroux echoed, “but it’s hard to evaluate that when you’re losing games. I do think we have a lot of confidence in our locker room and this (four-game) road trip coming up, guys are excited about it.” But then again... “We’ve dug ourselves a hole to make the playoffs,” Giroux said, “but we’re going one game at a time here and we’re going to battle to get back in that race.”

To do so, the Flyers can’t count on Elliott to carry the goaltendin­g load. That will have to fall heavily on Hart, and whether due to his club’s poor defensive play, numerous turnovers, or his own sloppiness in the crease, he hasn’t seemed up to the challenge.

Hart last started Tuesday, when he allowed three first-period goals to the Buffalo Sabres then sat

the last two periods while Elliott helped the Flyers gain a shootout win. Hart’s only other two starts in March were losses to the Capitals and Penguins. Other than that, it’s been Elliott leading the way, until he made it quite clear early on Saturday that he didn’t have it.

His rebound control was rather non-existent, but then, he could have done without the Flyers’ defensive zone turnovers that gave the Caps their chances to begin with.

“Without a doubt we’re going through a challengin­g time,” Vigneault said. “We’re falling behind in games and trying to work and battle back. Yes, we are making mistakes. We’re going to try to improve and get the mistakes to a minimum.”

It took almost no effort for the Flyers to fall behind early yet again. Elliott couldn’t control a puck shot in by Nick Jensen, and the rebound trickled into the slot. There, a shovel shot by Washington’s Daniel Sprong got legs and climbed over Elliott’s body and slipped behind him for an odd goal and a 1-0 Capitals lead only 4:40 in.

Then a Giroux backpass was off the mark to Shayne Gostisbehe­re, and in a flash Elliott was forced to make a save ... but again he couldn’t get the rebound. This time Carl Hagelin outmaneuve­red Gostisbehe­re to it, jamming the puck

through Elliott’s pads at 13:21.

An intermissi­on seemed to matter when a blind clearing attempt in the Washington zone was snagged by James van Riemsdyk, who turned around a wristed a shot past Capitals goalie Ilya Samsonov 2:36 into the second. But all of 29 seconds later Elliott didn’t seem to have a proper angle on a Jensen shot, and it was 3-1 and guess which rusty goaltender was asked to come on down?

Not that it was part of the plan...

“I just felt that Carter needs a couple of more days here,” Vigneault had said before the game. “He’s been working hard. Stepping on the ice, stopping the next puck and working with (goalie coach) Kim (Dillabaugh) are all things that are going to build him and bring him back in the right direction.”

An Alex Ovechkin left-circle power play shot might have awakened him, too. That happened shortly after a Nolan Patrick goal had cut the Caps lead to 3-2.

The Flyers had a chance to tie after that, gifted with a power play. But Travis Sanheim threw that away with an infraction, and after the Caps went up an extra skater with Sanheim in the box, a brutal clearing attempt by Patrick would be flagged and sent on

to Ovechkin, who drove it home over Hart’s waving glove for 4-2 after two periods.

In the third, Caps winger Garnet Hathaway threw a bit of a wrist shot that teammate Nic Dowd may have breathed on as it went by. Didn’t matter because Hart had it between his pads ... until it exited through the other side for a 5-2 Caps lead.

But then the Flyers suddenly decided to make their coach’s trendy words ring true. They kicked up their energy level for a power play, and Gostisbehe­re floated a long-distance shot through a screen and past Samsonov to bring it to 5-3 with 6:53 showing on the clock.

Then with an empty net and extra skater, the Flyers controlled the puck until Giroux one-timed a shot home to cut the deficit to a goal with 2:57 left.

Try as they may, and with an extra skater the whole time, the Flyers couldn’t get the equalizer. You wonder if and when their equalizer in net — whichever goalie that might be — can return to consistent competence.

“He was fighting it a little bit,” Vigneault said of Elliott. “We saw that, so Carter came in. Our guys worked. When you’re giving up the number of goals we’re giving up at this time, it’s not easy for anyone.”

 ??  ??
 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? West Chester Henderson’s Sammy McMonagle — with both nostrils stuffed to stop blood from flowing — wrestles during the state championsh­ip meet Saturday.
NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP West Chester Henderson’s Sammy McMonagle — with both nostrils stuffed to stop blood from flowing — wrestles during the state championsh­ip meet Saturday.
 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Coatesvill­e’s Nate Lucier works for positionin­g against Waynesburg Central’s Colton Stoneking on his way to a win in the 132-pound quarterfin­als.
NATE HECKENBERG­ER FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Coatesvill­e’s Nate Lucier works for positionin­g against Waynesburg Central’s Colton Stoneking on his way to a win in the 132-pound quarterfin­als.
 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Downingtow­n West’s Dom Findora gets in on a shot against Northampto­n’s Patrick Snoke en route to a win in the 126-pound consolatio­n semifinal.
NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Downingtow­n West’s Dom Findora gets in on a shot against Northampto­n’s Patrick Snoke en route to a win in the 126-pound consolatio­n semifinal.
 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Coatesvill­e’s Nate Lucier sports a swollen right eye and plenty of battle scars after Saturday’s PIAA Championsh­ips.
NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Coatesvill­e’s Nate Lucier sports a swollen right eye and plenty of battle scars after Saturday’s PIAA Championsh­ips.
 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Downingtow­n East’s Keanu Manuel scores the winning near-fall points against West Scranton’s Austin Fashouer in a win in the 120-pound consolatio­ns.
NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Downingtow­n East’s Keanu Manuel scores the winning near-fall points against West Scranton’s Austin Fashouer in a win in the 120-pound consolatio­ns.
 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Kennett’s Trent Kochersper­ger looks for a shot against Franklin Regional’s Solomon Finn. (Nate Heckenberg­er - For MediaNews Group)
NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Kennett’s Trent Kochersper­ger looks for a shot against Franklin Regional’s Solomon Finn. (Nate Heckenberg­er - For MediaNews Group)
 ?? DERIK HAMILTON - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Capitals goalie Ilya Samsonov, left, watches the Flyers’ James van Riemsdyk play the puck during the third period Saturday. A third-period comeback was too little, too late in a 5-4Flyers loss.
DERIK HAMILTON - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Capitals goalie Ilya Samsonov, left, watches the Flyers’ James van Riemsdyk play the puck during the third period Saturday. A third-period comeback was too little, too late in a 5-4Flyers loss.

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