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Kennedy Boys Soccer

Kennedy - Boys Soccer

Marion puts 9 on all-Wamac soccer

Nine soccer players from Marion High School have been named to the Wamac Conference all-star squads this season in the West Division.

Ryan Hagen was a first-team pick on the boys all-conference squad. Enoch Duval was named to the second team, while Spencer Henessee and Matthew Minks received honorable mention.

Lexie Rael was a first-team choice on the girls all-conference squad. Ashley Iehl and Lauren Rausch were second-team choices. Liz Deeney and Ciera Rodriguez received honorable mention.

Boys West Division Standings

1. Waterloo Columbus 7-0, 2. (tied) Benton Community 5-2, Center Point-Urbana 5-2, Clear Creek Amana 5-2, 5. Williamsburg 3-4, 6. Marion 2-5, 7. Vinton-Shellsburg 1-6, 8. Independence 0-7.

Girls West Division Standings

1. Waterloo Columbus 7-0, 2. Center Point-Urbana 6-1, 3. Independence 5-2,4. Clear Creek Amana 4-3, 5. Marion 3-4, 6. Benton Community 2-5, 7. Vinton-Shellsburg 1-6, 8. Williamsburg 0-7.

 

 

 

Last Updated on Friday, 01 June 2012 19:19
 

Kennedy - Boys Soccer

Feltes, Patience are top MVC goalkeepers

Ben Feltes of Kennedy and Andrew Patience of Jefferson have been named the top goalkeepers in the Mississippi Valley Conference this season in boys soccer.

Patience was named the top keeper in the Valley Division and Feltes was selected as the top keeper in the Mississippi Division.

Patience edged Feltes on the all-Metro soccer team, with Patience honored on the first team and Feltes placed on the second team.

Austin Bergstrom of Washington, Matt Shannon of Kennedy, Connor Johnson of Linn-Mar, Jacob Bjornsen of Washington and Killian Magee of Kennedy were named first team all-conference in the Mississippi Division.

Austin Reutzel of Prairie, Colyn Snyder of Prairie, Ali Al-Yasseri of Jefferson, Chad Gilmer of Xavier and Tom Bales of Xavier were named first team all-conference in the Valley Division.

Bergstrom and Al-Yasseri were named the Metro co-Players of the Year. John O'Connor of Jefferson was named the Metro Coach of the Year.

Last Updated on Thursday, 31 May 2012 20:10

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Kennedy - Boys Soccer

No. 16 Cougars stopped by No. 1 Trojans

CORALVILLE - For 40 minutes Saturday afternoon, you couldn't tell who had the No. 1 boys soccer team in the state and who was ranked 16th.

Unfortunately for Kennedy, a penalty kick turned the match in Iowa City West's favor and helped send the top-ranked Trojans to the Class 3A state meet.

Iowa City West clipped the 16th-ranked Cougars, 2-0, in the substate finals on a warm, breezy day at Northwest Junior High School in Coralville.

Ben Troester scored on a point-blank penalty kick from 12 yards with 10:55 left in the first half to give Iowa City West a 1-0 lead. Kennedy keeper Ben Feltes made a leaping attempt to block the shot, but the ball found the upper right-hand corner of the goal.

Kennedy Coach Mike Robertson called it a "questionable" penalty that produced a decisive goal.

"And that's being nice. That's being real nice," said Robertson. "Unfortunately that changes the nature of the game. Now we have to chase the game and they're able to just launch counters and stuff.

"That whole first half, we had them back on their heels. Our guys were really pushing it."

The penalty was called on defender Killian Magee. "I really have no idea why," said Robertson. "I know of nowhere where that's a foul.

"Now don't get me wrong," he added. "I'm not trying to take away from West. They're a great team. And it was a great match."

Kennedy (9-9) caught a bad break with 25 minutes left in the second half when a shot by Eric Bertroche hit the crossbar and bounced away, preventing the Cougars from tying the game.

Iowa City West (18-1) clinched the victory when Steve Kim used his body to nudge the ball past Feltes for a 2-0 lead with 15:03 left to play. Feltes made several brilliant saves for the Cougars, but the two balls that got away ended Kennedy's campaign.

"I'm just really proud of my teammates," said Feltes, who will play at
Eastern Illinois next year. "They came to play and they fought to the last
minute.

"They're a great team, but so are we," he said. "We knocked the ball around."

Ryan Walker, a pint-sized freshman, helped lead Kennedy's attack with his excellent footwork and quickness. He was the smallest guy on the pitch, but one of the biggest players.

"I'm 5-1 and like 100 on a good day," he said.

Walker wore No. 7 Saturday instead of his regular No. 11, because the No. 11 jersey he was given for the substate finals was too large and drooped all over him. Riley Galbraith, who normally wears No. 7 for Kennedy, did not play because he was busy finishing second in the state tennis tournament in Cedar Rapids.

"It was a big deal to wear his jersey," said Walker.

Iowa City West defeated Kennedy twice this year, both times by counts of 2-0.

Iowa City West will face Sioux City West in the quarterfinals of the Class 3A state tournament Thursday in Des Moines. Ames will play Ankeny, Iowa City High will meet West Des Moines Valley, and Johnston will play Bettendorf in the other first-round matches.

   

Kennedy - Boys Soccer

Cougars breeze past Wash; Trojans up next

The Kennedy boys soccer team won the right to a rematch with 3A top-ranked Iowa City West in Saturday’s substate final by toppling Washington, 4-1, Wednesday evening at Kingston Stadium.

Next up for the No. 16 Cougars (9-8) is once-beaten West, who won the first go-around in the regular season 2-0.  No. 14 Washington gave the Trojans their only blemish of the year, a 3-2 defeat in overtime.

“We know we’re capable of beating them,” Kennedy keeper Ben Feltes said. “We just need to focus on our game. And play with passion like we did tonight.”

It was breezy Wednesday as well as balmy, and in a tournament game between two evenly matched, well-acquainted foes, the windy conditions may have played as much of a factor as anything. Though the Warriors won the opening coin flip, Coach J.P. Graham chose to have his guys go into the wind the first half and have it at their backs in the second.

“I thought if we could hold them the first half, we could score a few more goals with the wind, “Graham said. “It didn’t work out that way.”

For one thing, it wasn’t near as gusty in the second half. And, with a 2-1 halftime lead, Kennedy had momentum on its side.

“I think the wind limited Washington’s play somewhat,” said Kennedy co-coach Mike Robertson. “They’re a team that likes to take big swings switching the ball to the weak side. The wind prevented them from doing it as much.”

In any case, the Cougars were clearly the more aggressive team from the start. They dominated ball possession in the first half with the Warriors backpedaling on their heels much of the time.

“We wanted to drive at the goal all night,” Robertson said. “And we used a lot of combination plays, with multiple players passing the ball.”

Kennedy’s first goal with nine minutes gone was more of a chip shot by Riley Galbraith. With the ball plopped at his feet right in front of the net, he faked one way and dribbled it in the other.

Playing with a gimpy foot hurt in practice last week, Galbraith seemed unaffected as he was on the field most of the time until the waning minutes of the match.  It’s unlikely he’ll play in Saturday’s noon title face-off in Iowa City, however, as he hopes to be competing for a state tennis championship in Cedar Rapids at the same time.

“We knew that might happen,” Robertson said. “His teammates will have to step up.”

Washington’s only score came at the 27:35 mark in the opening stanza when Kimu Kasha drilled a penalty kick past Kennedy’s Feltes.  It was the only goal Feltes allowed all night, despite a number of hard shots delivered his way.

“He had some key saves for us,” Robertson said. “Especially in the second half when they could have made a game of it if they’d scored.”

With an ice pack on his sore right shoulder after the match, Feltes shrugged off any accolades.

“As a team, we played a great game,” he said. “We defended as a team, attacked as a team, scored as a team and won as a team.”

What turned out to be the winning goal was made by the Cougars’ Tyler Pape halfway through the first half. Given a free kick from the far right side, he put a reverse spin on a line drive that hooked untouched into the net.

“I’ve worked on it in practice,” Pape said. “I kicked it with the outside of my right foot and and it got past the keeper."

“It was a perfect shot,” said Washington Coach Graham. “We had our chances after that to tie it up 2-2. But we didn’t take the momentum.

“Some of it was self-inflicted. We had possessions in the second half, but we just didn’t take advantage of our opportunities.”

Kennedy did, on the other hand, as Pape scored again on an open breakaway with an assist from Eric Bertroche and Mark Schulz closed out the night with a ricochet shot off the goal post.

KENNEDY 4, WASHINGTON 1

Goals: CRK -- Riley Galbraith, Tyler Pape 2, Mark Schulz; CRW -- Kimu Kasha. Assists: CRK -- Eric Bertroche.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 23 May 2012 23:10
 

Kennedy - Boys Soccer

'Max goal' sends Warriors past Kennedy boys, 1-0

Sometimes practice does make perfect.

Thanks to a wonderfully executed play and stifling defense, the Washington boys soccer team defeated Kennedy 1-0 Thursday night at Kingston Stadium.

After a physical opening to the first half, the teams were locked in a defensive stalemate.

But at the 15-minute mark, Warrior forward Jacob Jensen secured the ball and started heading up the left flank towards Kennedy’s goal. Three Warrior players appeared in picturesque position, lined up for a Jensen cross.

The cross kick came from Jensen into the middle of the field, and the ball squeaked through the Kennedy defense. At the last second, Washington player Max Versteegh poked his knee at the ball, and caused it to nonchalantly roll past the helpless goalkeeper.

“I know this sounds cliché, but we actually worked on that exact thing yesterday in practice,” said Washington Coach J.P Graham. “And that is what we call a Max goal. He doesn’t score too many goals with his feet, he scores with his thighs, his chest, his head and he almost had another one in the second half. Well deserved on his part.”

A 1-0 lead was all the Warrior defense needed. After the well-executed score, the stalemate between the two teams continued, and Washington’s defense was air-tight. Kennedy mustered a few shots on goal, including a pretty rip by forward Eric Bertroche near the end of the game.

Bertroche nailed it from nearly 20 yards out, and just when it looked like a tie game, Washington keeper Hunter Loushin stepped in front.

“Our defense did a great job,” said Graham. “Hunter did not have to make too many saves. A couple balls that were up in the air, but no real shots. So we did a good job at eliminating the shots.”

Washington closed out the regular season at 10-7 overall and 9-4 in the MVC. Kennedy is 8-8, 6-7.

WASHINGTON 1, KENNEDY 0

Goals: CRW -- Max Versteegh. Assists: CRW -- Jacob Jensen

   
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