The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pennridge wins state final in double overtime

Rams overcome Thomas Jefferson to capture the trophy

- By Kev Hunter khunter@thereporte­ronline.com

After 80 minutes of hockey, against its toughest opponent of the season, Pennridge found a way.

“Their resolve is incredible,” Rams coach Jeff Montagna said of his newly-crowned state champions.

With 4 minutes and 59 seconds left in the second overtime, Kevin Pico scored off a rebound, lifting the Rams to a 4-3 win over Thomas Jefferson in the State Final Saturday afternoon in front of a standing-room-only crowd at Ice Line.

“Biggest goal I’ve ever scored,” said a teary-eyed Pico afterwards. “That’s probably gonna be the biggest goal I’ll ever score in my hockey career.”

Undefeated Pennridge, champions of the Suburban High School Hockey League Continenta­l Division and the 2A Flyers Cup Champs, finished the season 220-1. The Rams led the Penguins Cup Champion Jaguars 2-0, battled back to tie it 3-3, then prevailed in OT in a marathon of a contest.

“I feel amazing…State Champions,” Pico said. “Everyone was gassed. Both teams were gassed. It’s whoever wanted it more.”

Kevin’s brother, Ryan, was instrument­al at the other end, stopping 62 shots in all.

“He was unbelievab­le. I’ve never seen him play that well in my whole life,” Kevin said. “Even the goals that went in, he was right there for them. He was there for every shot.”

“Ryan Pico was absolutely incredible,” echoed Montagna. “He kept us in there.”

The Rams kept working deep into OT.

“We were still trying to roll three lines and they still had nothing (left),” said Montagna. “You hope that when teams get tired, they make a mistake defensivel­y. And we made one at the beginning of overtime and it didn’t cost us.”

Said Montagna of the focus on the offensive end: “Try and get

traffic and try and get rebounds.”

The Rams took a 1-0 lead just 1:13 into the contest, on a goal by Andrew Savona.

Midway through the first, Jack Lowery scored on a power play to double the Ram advantage to 2-0.

Thomas Jefferson worked its way back into the contest, cutting the margin in half on a second-period goal by Colby Bilski. Bilski scored again early in the third and then Lance Smith put the Jaguars up for the first time, 3-2, with 9:29 left in regulation.

There was much more hockey to come.

The Rams got the equalizer from Tyler Manto with 4:59 left, as he was able to beat keeper Billy Siemon (45 saves).

The two teams would skate into overtime, and another.

“When they tied it and then went up, there was not an ounce of panic on our bench,” said Lowery. “We were calm. We knew we had come back in multiple games before. Every championsh­ip game that we've been in, we've been down. There wasn't a doubt in our minds that we were gonna come out on top. I love these guys. They go to battle every day.

These guys are my family. I wouldn't rather play on any other team.”

The Rams captured the program's first Flyers Cup title and now have a firstever state title trophy to go with it.

“It feels good. The job is finally finished for us,” Lowery said. “That's a heck of a hockey team we played today. It really could have gone either way. But we came out on top. We played our game and that's all we can do.”

Said Montagna: “That was by far the best team we played all year. And we did not have a lot left in overtime. It's incredible, just absolutely incredible. I'm just so proud of these guys.”*

 ?? KEV HUNTER — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Jack Lowery (left) celebrates his first-period goal with teammate Andrew David on Saturday.
KEV HUNTER — MEDIANEWS GROUP Jack Lowery (left) celebrates his first-period goal with teammate Andrew David on Saturday.

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