Daily News (Los Angeles)

Harvard-Westlake back in ‘rewarding’ final

- By Haley Sawyer Correspond­ent

Former Harvard-Westlake girls soccer player Alyssa Thompson grabbed a lot of attention her sophomore year when she led the Wolverines to a CIF Southern Section Division 1 title and CIF State SoCal Regional crown in 2021. The precocious soccer star was so focused on internatio­nal play, it kept her from high school competitio­n her junior season.

In the past four months, Thompson’s superstard­om has grown to unpreceden­ted heights — at least locally — as she earned her first United States women’s national team appearance as a 17-year-old high school senior in October. Then in January, she became the No. 1 overall pick in the National Women’s Soccer League draft, being selected by Angel City FC.

Thompson left high school soccer, but what remains is a more than capable Harvard-Westlake team that’s headed to the CIF Southern Section Division 2 championsh­ip to play Hart (15-3-2) today at 5 p.m. at College of the Canyons.

“I have to say, this is one of the most rewarding seasons I’ve ever had,” coach Richard Simms said. “And I’ve been at Harvard-Westlake for a long time.”

Harvard-Westlake will be making its eighth CIF finals appearance and is eyeing the program’s fourth title.

The Wolverines (15-5-3) have leaned on their young talent throughout this season. Seven underclass­men are in the starting lineup, and a few freshmen come off the bench. A freshman scored the game-winning goal for the Wolverines in the CIF-SS quarterfin­als and another freshman scored the game-winner in the semifinals.

Sophomore Victoria Pugh led the Wolverines in scoring throughout the regular season and has been a critical piece of the team during the playoffs. Simms said her quickness and power make her valuable in the penalty area, but her attitude is one of her best characteri­stics.

“Vicky doesn’t care if she scores or not. She just wants to contribute to the team and help the team win,” Simms said. “When your leading goal scorer has that type of attitude and personalit­y, it bleeds into the rest of the team.”

Senior center back Alex Astalos has risen in the playoffs. She scored just two goals in the regular season, then went on to score three goals in four playoff games.

“I think more than anything she’s putting herself in the right positions and she’s just really rising to the occasion,” Simms said. “Its not just goal contributi­ons. She’s playing great defense, she’s leading the team, she’s just doing a lot of amazing things.”

Astalos made the gamewinnin­g penalty kick against Flintridge Prep in the second round, a match Harvard-Westlake had just one day to prepare for. The Wolverines evened the score with minutes remaining in the game to force overtime, then penalty kicks.

That’s just a handful of the challenges that the playoffs presented this season. The championsh­ip game will be the Wolverines’ third road game of the playoffs and their quarterfin­al match against Vista Murrieta featured cold weather and a 10-minute delay due to hail.

“That’s the stuff you should look forward to as an athlete,” Simms said, “because that’s when you find out a lot about yourself. (Overcoming adversity) is definitely a learned skill. It is not random or luck that this group of people is thriving in those situations.”

Harvard-Westlake, the Mission League champions, will have another road game against Hart, which went unbeaten in the Foothill League and has lost only three matches this season. All challenges that are welcomed by the Wolverines.

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