Miami Herald

Douglas girls’ soccer team sees state title hopes fade at end

- BY BILL DALEY Special to the Miami Herald

DELAND

Ten minutes.

That’s all that separated the Stoneman Douglas girls’ soccer team from its first appearance in a state championsh­ip game in 15 years.

And then it all went south.

Taking on No. 4 nationally ranked St. Johns Creekside in a Class 7A state semifinal, Douglas played 70 great minutes of terrific soccer and appeared about to pull off a mild upset. Then came those last 10 minutes when Creekside scored not once but twice to pull out a 2-1 victory on Thursday afternoon at Spec Martin Stadium.

The win advances Creekside (15-1-2) to the 7A state title game on

Saturday at 4 p.m., when the Knights will be looking for their second state title in the past three years when they take on Boca Raton.

For the Eagles? They were just left with a case of the “what-could’vebeens” as they trudged off the field with heads drooping for the long bus ride home.

“Just super proud of my girls,” said veteran head coach Laura Rountree. “We were up against a very good team today and our girls did everything that we tried in terms of executing our plan, from their effort and their heart and just fighting to the end and ..... that’s just the way soccer goes sometimes, a real heartbreak­er.”

With a front passing through the DeLand area, wind was a definite factor on this day and the Eagles enjoyed the advantage in the first half. Most of the action took place on the Douglas side of the field and only great saves by Creekside keeper Hailey Smith on a pair of breakaway one-on-one chances by Layla Segelnick and Gianna Rizzo kept the game scoreless.

Douglas finally broke through 17 minutes before halftime when Segelnick took a long wind-aided punt by keeper Ella Stevens that bounced high over Creekside defenders and she was one-on-one with Smith. The two slid at the ball at the same time but Segelnick won the battle, getting her foot underneath Smith to knock it home.

When the teams switched sides in the second half, the Eagles now had the wind in their faces and thus quality offensive chances virtually disappeare­d. Even though Creekside enjoyed the wind, terrific defensive play by the Douglas back line of Lilly Conn, Alessia Frenquellu­cci and Jackie DeStefano kept the Knights from getting many quality chances, and it looked like Segelnick’s lone goal just might hold up.

Then came those fateful last 10 minutes.

It started when Douglas committed a foul at midfield. Normally that’s too far to dump a ball all the way down in front of the net. But with the wind, Payton Dorsett was able to do just that. The ball took one bounce and as Stevens came out to make the save, Lily Paisant got there first and headed the ball over her head into the net with 9:33 left, tying the game.

Just more than four minutes later, after a ball got dumped down low into the corner, Braelyn McMillan was able to hit a perfect centering pass to Alanna Maki who found herself all alone in front against Stevens and buried it into the bottom left corner of the net with 4:59 left.

Rizzo and Segelnick pushed as hard as they could in the last five minutes but, with the headwind not helping, the Eagles (15-2-2) could not get a serious look at the net.

“It was definitely harder to create anything offensivel­y in the second half because the wind would knock the ball down quicker,” Segelnick said. “We tried to get out wide more so we could contain possession . ... it just didn’t go our way.”

 ?? BILL DALEY Special to the Miami Herald ?? Stoneman Douglas’ Layla Segelnick drives against a Creekside defender during Thursday’s state semifinal.
BILL DALEY Special to the Miami Herald Stoneman Douglas’ Layla Segelnick drives against a Creekside defender during Thursday’s state semifinal.

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