The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pennridge already eyeing title defense

Pennridge already thinking about returning to Hershey next season

- By Andrew Robinson arobinson@21st-centurymed­ia.com

HERSHEY » Pennridge has proven itself capable of long postseason runs and many observers this fall aren’t expecting that to change.

With the Rams projected to return eight of their 11 starters from Saturday’s 1-0 double overtime win against North Allegheny in the PIAA 4A title match, it’s not hard to see why. Unlike previous runs into states, Pennridge won’t have to heavily reload next fall, but that also doesn’t guarantee anything.

On paper, it’s promising but the team’s upperclass­men know the reality is going to be very different.

“We know next year, it’s just going to be that much harder,” junior co-captain Leah Malone said. “We already have a target on our backs coming into a season so this next year, it’s just going to be that much bigger. Now that everybody here knows this feeling, I think it’ll be extra motivation to want to get back here and I think that will push everybody.”

A major factor in the team’s success this fall was the composure of its young players. Freshmen stepped up in huge moments all year including the postseason and the moment rarely seemed too big for them.

Pennridge, which should also get high-scoring winger Em

ily Kriney back from injury next season, has a ton of firepower due to return. Even in the wake of Kriney’s injury, the Rams showed adaptabili­ty and it opened a path for more underclass­men to fill in.

Replacing the three senior starters — Lindsey DeHaven in the midfield along with Kera Dam and Cady McKean on defense — is still a tall order. Co-captain DeHaven, a four-year varsity starter, said she’s eager to see what the program does over the next few years .

“I want them to learn that they have what it takes, no matter what,” DeHaven said. “Whatever faces them or whatever adversit y comes their way, they have what it takes and they’re all amazing players, individual­ly and together but I also want them to realize how hard it is to really work toward this.”

Every year, the two games against the Rams get circled on the calendar of each other SOL Colonial team and nonconfere­nce opponents see a match with Pennridge as a measuring stick. Now carrying a state title on top of their backto-back district titles and five straight SOL titles, the Rams truly won’t have any room for slacking next fall.

In preseason, coach Audrey Anderson asked her team if its expectatio­ns were too much with such a young team. Her players resounding­ly said it wouldn’t be then proved it, something they will have to do again next season.

“I think that’s what they expect of themselves,” Anderson said. “I’m a tough coach, I have high expectatio­ns of my players. The fact the team trusted those young players and those girls responded, it speaks volumes about the character of these girls.” DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES

Anderson described seeing the ending of Saturday’s game in a dream back in 2018.

While that positive memory turned into reality on Saturday, a couple ghosts of the team’s last trip to Hershey made the trip as well. Pennridge’s frantic group defense of a North Allegheny corner kick came in front of the same goal Souderton had scored on to win the 2018 state title, a thought that did not elude the Rams’ coach as she watched her players mount a valiant stand.

“I was thinking about 2018 and it was that same goal where we got scored on and I couldn’t be happier that we had that much hunger to clear that ball out,” Anderson said.

Overtime wasn’t kind to the Rams in 2018 either, so when Saturday’s contest went into extra time, Malone’s resolve only grew. She and DeHaven were the only players currently on the roster who had been on the field two years ago and the junior forward didn’t want a repeat of that ending.

Malone would go on to bag the winning goal in the second overtime, but she also admitted to a negative flashback as regula

tion ended.

“Going into overtime, I was thinking ‘here we go again,’” Malone said. “Pulling up here today, it was an overwhelmi­ng feeling, almost negative, like I still had that pit in my stomach from losing two years ago. We wanted a different outcome. As soon as I stepped on the field, I thought back to where I was standing when that goal went in and said I couldn’t let it happen again.”

REVERSE THINKING » For a defender, 99 out of 100 times getting the player they’re responsibl­e for to pass or dribble the ball backwards is a winning move.

Anna Croyle got a firsthand look at the exception to that rule on Saturday. North Allegheny senior catalyst Sarah Schupansky, a Pitt recruit, thrived on the negative plays.

“My goal was to not let her turn,” Croyle said. “I stayed behind her when she received it, but then she would start to dribble backwards and in the first half, I kept following her and it left a gap in the back.”

“Their attacking midfielder and forwards were making runs off of her so that was really hard to defend,” DeHaven said. “She kept dribbling backward and we had to adjust to it in the midfield.”

It was already a lot asking a freshman center back to handle a Division Ibound playmaker but with Schupansky turning negative into positive for her team, the Rams knew they had to change things up.

Croyle would stay on Schupansky, but she wouldn’t trail the Tigers senior after the initial challenge. Instead, Pennridge put the ball-winning skills of DeHaven to work to keep their shape intact.

“At halftime, we talked about it and we decided I would try to keep her from winning it out of the air and Lindsey did a great job coming back so I could then drop and fill the gap,” Croyle said.

DeHaven and goalkeeper Sierra Shaeffer also noticed the disruption North Allegheny’s unorthodox approach had on the Rams’ defensive form in the opening 40 minutes. The halftime adjustment­s, plus plenty of communicat­ion between Shaeffer, McKean and Croyle, helped stitch things back together.

“There was always a player open in the middle and in the first half, we had

a problem with that,” Shaeffer said. “In the, I can’t even say second half, this whole second part of the game, we covered that a lot better.” SIZING UP » Joey Tomlinson and Sophie Craig are two of the smallest players on the Rams’ roster.

Saturday, they played like two of the biggest. Tomlinson, a sophomore, was a critical sparkplug along the Rams’ frontline and not only gave the starting trio of Malone, Riley Hepler and Tori Angelo some rest but gave North Allegheny things to think about.

Matched up with bigger players who weren’t afraid to be physical, Tomlinson didn’t shy away from going at them.

“I needed to use my speed, that’s my big thing,” Tomlinson said. “It was so tiring but I think we all left it on the field. It’s hard to match up with bigger players, especially me being short, but we know we can always bring the energy.”

Craig, a freshman, gave the Rams a lift as a central midfielder for the second straight game. Primarily a forward during the regular season, Craig added a bit of everything Pennridge needed to solidify its midfield against Parkland and North Allegheny.

Like Tomlinson, Craig didn’t hesitate to tangle with the Tigers’ physicalit­y and won some critical balls and connected passes to keep possession. The duo, who also helped spark Pennridge’s second-half takeover against Abington in the district tournament, brought the bench’s energy onto the expansive field at HersheyPar­k Stadium with them.

“I look at our team and think we’re so deep, we have a lot of players who can do great things,” Anderson said. “We have a lot of speed and it was really key that our forwards pressured them and forced any kind of mistakes. Any time we could eat away at them, put pressure on and tire them out, it may have allowed us to finally get in behind them.”

Malone said the energy from the reserves was infectious, whether it was the lift from the players coming on the field or the constant shouting and support coming from the bench.

“We knew we had to keep working no matter what, we weren’t going to give up,” Tomlinson said. “We knew we had to finish and just get one ball in the back of the net.”

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 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? The Pennridge girls soccer team celebrates with the PIAA championsh­ip trophy after winning the title over North Allegheny on Saturday.
AUSTIN HERTZOG — MEDIANEWS GROUP The Pennridge girls soccer team celebrates with the PIAA championsh­ip trophy after winning the title over North Allegheny on Saturday.
 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Game-winning goal scorer Leah Malone raises the trophy after Pennridge won the PIAA 4A championsh­ip on Saturday.
AUSTIN HERTZOG — MEDIANEWS GROUP Game-winning goal scorer Leah Malone raises the trophy after Pennridge won the PIAA 4A championsh­ip on Saturday.
 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Pennridge’s Leah Malone, left, controls the ball as North Allegheny’s Kena Shannon defends during the PIAA 4A championsh­ip game in Hershey on Saturday.
AUSTIN HERTZOG — MEDIANEWS GROUP Pennridge’s Leah Malone, left, controls the ball as North Allegheny’s Kena Shannon defends during the PIAA 4A championsh­ip game in Hershey on Saturday.

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