Friday, November 14, 2008

Team Recognition


Team celebratory pile after Hanover's golden-goal in the championship game

The New Hampshire Soccer Coaches Association has selected the 2008 All-State Soccer Teams, which will be announced shortly through the local media.

Four members of the Hanover High School Class I Champions were honored, including an impressive three members of the First Team, seniors Yosef Osheyack, Ben Rimmer and Trevor Barlowe. In addition, senior Kevin Dade was an Honorable Mention selection.

Osheyack, Rimmer and Barlowe have been invited to try out for the Lions Twin State Soccer Cup team this coming Saturday in Concord.

Ben Rimmer led the Marauders in scoring with 10 goals and a team-leading 12 assists. His three-year scoring total of 17 goals and 25 assists places him in a tie for ninth (with Elmer Maxfield 63-63 and Chris Clark 90-92) on the all-time Hanover list. Rimmer's spectacular goal in sudden death overtime gave Hanover a 1-0 win over Monadnock in the first round of the NHIAA Playoffs.

Yosef Osheyack will long be remembered for scoring the wining goals in both the Semifinals and Finals in this year's NHIAA Championship. His deciding goal in a shootout gave Hanover a win over Oyster River, and his dazzling run with two minutes remaining in the second overtime lifted the Marauders to the victory over St. Thomas in the title game. His scoring totals of 2 goals and 8 assists reflected an increased defensive responsibility, and few midfielders worked harder at both ends of the field. His career totals of 18 goals and 17 assists tie him for 17th overall in Hanover history. A member of the U.S. National Deaf Soccer team, Yosef competed in the Deaf World Cup in Greece last summer, and is hoping to rejoin the team this summer for the Deaf Olympics in Taiwan.

Trevor Barlowe was a standout member of the strongest Hanover defensive unit in school history last fall, and was asked to assume new duties this season as a defensive midfielder, filling the shoes of All-New England star Angus Kennedy. He succeeded far beyond those high expectations, dominating every game both in the air and as the best shutdown defender in the state. His ball handling skills allowed him to not only win balls but also initiate the attack in many instances, and facilitate the switching of the point of attack for a Hanover offense that was the most prolific in Class I. Like his co-Captain Ben Rimmer, Barlowe provided superlative leadership on and off the field.

Kevin Dade evolved from defender to little-used reserve in his sophomore and junior years to the team's leading scorer with 12 goals, part of a deadly tandem with fellow senior Henry Caldwell. Scoring six goals on headers from crosses and free kicks taken by classmate Lou Gemunden, Dade saved his best performances for big games, scoring the winning goal in a 1-0 victory over Lebanon, the winning goal in the 1-0 quarterfinal victory over Merrimack Valley, and tallying two spectacular goals and the game winning assist in the State Championship game (after the all-state voting deadline).

"All of these honors are richly deserved," commented Coach Rob Grabill. "These seniors and their classmates have worked hard to improve every aspect of their game, and it is appropriate for them to receive this recognition from the Class I coaches. At the same time it is important to recognize that what we stressed all season was not individual accomplishment, but cohesive team play. We were a championship team because every player contributed, even those who had limited playing time or none at all. It was our unselfishness and good chemistry that characterized our success, and it is in that spirit that we celebrate these individual honors."

It was also announced at the NHSCA meeting that Coach Rob Grabill was the recipient of the National Soccer Coaches Association of America Large School Coach of the Year award for New Hampshire. He is now eligible for the NSCAA Region 1 Coach of the Year award, an honor he received in 2007.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

All Together Now


2008 Soccer team after Hanover’s fourth consecutive championship

Game Write-ups

A couple of more write-ups on the championship game from Foster’s Daily Democrat here and the Seacoastonline here.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Class I Champs


Hanover soccer hoists the trophy after Saturday’s championship win

Coach Grabill

Coach Rob Grabill receives the team trophy
Thanks Coach, well done!

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Hanover Wins State Title

HANOVER WINS CLASS I TITLE 3-2 WITH A GOLDEN GOAL

The Hanover High boys soccer team earned its fourth consecutive Class I title with a 3-2 victory in sudden death overtime against undefeated St. Thomas Aquinas High School. Yosef Osheyack’s spectacular goal with less than two minutes remaining before a looming shootout gave the Marauders the win in dramatic fashion, completing their second consecutive undefeated season with a record of 19-0-1. Hanover has now gone undefeated in 47 games.

Hanover led 1-0 at halftime on a goal by senior Kevin Dade and took a 2-1 lead on Dade’s second of the day and 12th of the year at the 50-minute mark after St. Thomas tied the match five minutes into the second half. The hard-working Saints drew level with 20 minutes remaining, and from that point the two sides battled back and forth in spectacular fashion through almost 60 minutes of pulsating soccer before Osheyack electrified the crowd at Stellos Stadium with a dazzling run through the St. Thomas defense that culminated in his point-blank golden goal.

The win puts this edition of the Marauders in rare company among the many storied teams in Hanover history. The Class I championship is the school’s 15th since 1968, adding to their lead (15-13 over Gilford) in total titles. This mark also ties the Maruaders with three other schools for fifth all-time in state titles nationally. It is the first time that any school in Class I or Class L has won four consecutive championships.

The Marauders also distinguished themselves as one of the best teams both offensively and defensively in Hanover history. They allowed only seven goals in 20 games, tying them for the fifth-fewest ever. Their total of 14 shutouts is the third best of all time. On the offensive end, their total of 65 goals ties them for eighth all time.

The championship match with St. Thomas promised to be something special, pitting two unbeaten teams with identical 18-0-1 records. It was understandable that the first few minutes would be tentative, but as the time elapsed approached ten and then fifteen minutes, the quality of soccer on both sides was dreadful. Neither team could connect on more than two passes, and the ball was in the air constantly. This was hardly a showcase for NH high school soccer at its best. It looked more like a rec league game, and it wouldn’t have been surprising for a soccer mom to come rushing out at halftime with a tray full of orange slices.

It wasn’t even until twenty minutes had elapsed before either team launched a shot towards the goal, but Hanover made the first move to establish some possession and then some coherence. Shortly after they had linked five or six passes and the smarter soccer fans in the stands stopped wincing, Kevin Dade struck with the speed and accuracy of a king cobra, receiving a ball at the top of the penalty box, spinning to his left and lashing a shot past sprawling St. Thomas goalie Ken Grade. The 1-0 lead gave the Marauders even more confidence, and they began to assert their customary control as the first half came to a close, although neither team had a serious scoring threat.

Any illusions that Hanover harbored about managing the match and winning by the customary score of 1-0 were rudely dismissed at the five minute mark of the second half when shifty Saint midfielder Doug Crow broke loose on the left and served a ball into the box that was headed home expertly by Taylor MacDonald to tie the match. If Hanover was momentarily shocked they were hardly undone, and having already committed to going after their second goal they now pressed forward with purpose. No more than five minutes had gone by before the Marauders re-took the lead when Lou Gemunden, playing the game of his life, served a long free kick into the box and Dade redirected it with his head into the corner of the net. The goal was Dade’s 12th of the season, giving him the team scoring title and culminating a truly remarkable career rise.

The Marauders didn’t relax at this point, but St. Thomas showed incredible heart, and refused to go away. Although they never managed to successfully penetrate the Hanover defense, they didn’t need to do so 10 minutes after Dade’s goal when a long free kick from the right side by Crow found ginger-headed stopper Zac Joostens free on the doorstep of Rhys Cyrus in the Hanover goal. In the ensuing scramble the ball found the back of the net, and the match was again a draw at 2-2.

St. Thomas had a right to be brimming with confidence, and Hanover had every reason to be back on their heels. Nevertheless, it was the Marauders who responded over the remaining ten minutes of regulation and throughout the two 20 minute golden goal overtimes. The pace of the game continued to accelerate, but despite the urgency, the rain, and the fatigue, both teams produced nothing less than great soccer. Gemunden had the best bid in regulation, hitting a free kick that was barely tipped over the bar by Grade.

The overtimes could not have been more exciting. Play surged back and forth, and produced a large number of agonizingly close chances. Hanover had two glittering chances in the first overtime, once when Ben Rimmer headed a Gemunden corner kick back across the face of the goal, and once when Dade raced underneath a sky-high shot by Osheyack and got there just after Grade handled the dive-bombing ball cleanly on his goal line. St. Thomas had only one real chance, but it should have ended the match. Byron Greenwood broke into the box on the end of some nice combination play and had only Cyrus to beat to win the match. Somehow, the agile Hanover keeper got a foot on Greenwood’s bid for glory, the Marauders dodged a bullet.

The second overtime produced more of the same frantic football. Cyrus made a great save when a long free kick by Crow threatened to tuck under the bar before he flicked it over the top, earning the Saints their only corner kick of the match, which was well-defended by the hard-working Dan Remillard and Mike Tecca. Hanover came excruciatingly close three times, including once when a long cross by Nate Hanna kept sailing and turned into a shot that clanged off the crossbar long after Grade had given up it. Dade just missed on a close-in shot, and Gemunden nearly won the match with a powerful run into the box and a hard shot that deflected off of a defender and out of bounds.

With the two-minute mark approaching, it seemed almost certain that the match would be decided by a shootout. While Hanover had every reason to be optimistic about this prospect, given their semifinal success, there is also no question that ending a championship match with any sort of tiebreaker is unappealing, and this would have been particularly true after such an epic battle. Many athletic teams have been known to watch the movie “300” to prepare for a hard-fought match. From now on, they should show the Hanover-St. Thomas game film. Into this cauldron of ultimate athletic pressure strode Yosef Osheyack, fresh off his game-winning shootout performance on Wednesday. Truth be told, the senior midfielder had played better games this year. Hampered by a bad bruise behind his knee, Yo-Yo had been out of sorts for much of the evening. Yet like he had done all season and all of his career, he kept plugging. Determined to make a difference, he took the ball on the left flank and cut inside first one and then a second flagging St. Thomas midfielder. He laid the ball to Dade, the day’s other scoring hero and raced ahead for a return pass from Dade that put him into the box at top speed. Osheyack needed to slow to dodge a final defender, but he kept him composure and calmly buried the ball to give Hanover a richly-deserved championship. Hanover’s bravest player was now the team’s hero for all time.

Further match analysis, perspective and kudos will need to wait. Hanover has had a great deal of hard work invested into this season by players, parents and coaches, and the list of credits is not only long but important to enumerate sometime soon. It’s hard to imagine a better championship scenario, given the earlier success of the Hanover girls’ team, the gallantry of the opposition, and the courage and composure shown by the Marauders. Thirteen wonderful seniors can clutch their championship medals and walk into the rainy night, knowing that they more than fulfilled their responsibility to lead this team on and off the field. Speculation about the future has no place here. This is and ought to be all about the here and now, and a team which embodied so much of what is good in high school sports. Their school and larger community will be proud of them as players, teammates and human beings. They have humbled the fortunate coaches who have done their best to shape them, and their investment of themselves gives them full ownership of their achievement.

Writeups in the Valley News here and the Manchester Union leader here.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Double Wins!

Both HHS Boys and Girls Soccer teams won their championship matches in the final moments.

Hanover Boys 3 - St. Thomas 2 (2OT)
Hanover Girls 1 - Hollis-Brokline 0 (79')

More details in the morning....

Friday, November 7, 2008

Double Header Saturday


Senior goal-keeper Rhys Cyrus wraps a shot up against Lebanon

HHS Boys and Girls Soccer teams head to Stellos Stadium on Saturday November 8, for final matches of the season.

Girls game vs Hollis-Brookline scheduled to start at 1:00 pm

Boys game vs St. Thomas scheduled to start at 3:00 pm

Thursday, November 6, 2008

OR Semifinal Summary

HANOVER NIPS OYSTER RIVER IN SHOOTOUT; ON TO FINALS

The Hanover High boys’ soccer team beat Oyster River in a shootout after 120 minutes of scoreless soccer to advance to the NHIAA Class I finals on Saturday. The Marauders, seeking their fourth straight title, will face off against St. Thomas Aquinas at 3:00 at Stellos Stadium in Nashua, immediately after the girls’ Class I Final featuring Hanover and Hollis-Brookline.

After recording his third straight playoff shutout, Rhys Cyrus dominated the shootout for Hanover, stopping all three shots he faced. Hanover took an early lead on goals by Ben Rimmer and Henry Caldwell, and after Eric Jayne’s shot was saved and Cyrus made his third straight save, Yosef Osheyack lined up for an attempt that could ice the game and coolly connected on his shot before being buried by a wave of celebrating teammates.
Now 18-0-1 on the season, the Marauders have established a new school record by stretching their unbeaten streak to 46 games, the third-longest in New Hampshire history, and longer than any other Class I or Class L school.

The shootout win was well-deserved for Hanover, which outshot Oyster River in regulation and 40 minutes of overtime, but couldn’t connect on a number of scoring bids. The Marauder defense, which recorded its 14th shutout of the season and 29th in two years, limited Oyster River to six shots on goal.

The Bobcats created their best scoring chances of the match in the opening moments, as Jake Gross blasted a long shot from the left that was tipped over the bar by Cyrus. After the ensuing corner kick, Owen Gehling got a great look from the top of the box that sailed over the bar, and Oyster River spent the rest of the half playing defense. Eric Jayne retaliated almost immediately with a good-looking shot that just missed the far post, and Kevin Dade and Henry Caldwell both came close twice. Dade just missed connecting on a header that would have beaten Benuck after he ghosted past the Oyster River defense. Ben Rimmer came up just short after his anticipatory run left him just short of beating Benuck to the ball after another Dade header.

Hanover continued to have an edge in play in the second half, with several more near misses. Ben Rimmer had two hard shots on goal that were saved by Oyster River goalkeeper Zack Benuck, who also made a great stop on Henry Caldwell after a pirouetting move on the left baseline that saw him elude two defenders before Benuck snuck out the goal and made a daring dive at Caldwell’s feet to corral the ball. Although Oyster River was never able to penetrate the Marauder defense, they regularly mustered the skill and tactical ability to possess the ball and probe the outer fringes. Hanover defenders Mike Tecca, Dan Remillard, Nate Hanna and Lou Gemunden continued their spectacular postseason run of spotless postseason soccer, aided by the ferocious midfield defense of Trevor Barlowe. Bobcat scoring threat Ben Rollins had one hard shot on goal late in the half, but it was right at Cyrus, who never flinched.

The Marauders ramped up the attack in the first overtime, coming perilously close to scoring on several occasions. Lou Gemunden lofted a ball into the Oyster River penalty area that Dade headed across the face of the goal to Osheyack at the far post, where he narrowly missed tucking in the wining goal. Hanover was getting good bench minutes from several sources, and both Gunnar Shaw and Oscar Eriksson came close to scoring. Shaw just missed a header at the goal line, and Eriksson was open at the far post for Henry Caldwell’s cross, but his header was a few feet wide of the upright on the other side.

Both teams sagged in the second overtime, although it was clear that neither savored the idea of the looming 35-yard shootout. Neither side had the legs to accomplish much as the clock ran down, and they gathered at midfield to watch five shooters from each side take their allotted seven seconds to dribble in alone for a scoring attempt. Oyster River had advanced to the semifinals by beating Bow in the contrived tiebreaker, but Hanover hadn’t needed to endure a shootout since beating Lebanon in the quarterfinals of their 2005 championship run.

Rimmer confidently stepped up as the first shooter and capped a great game with a well-executed dribble and deke. Cyrus then initiated his heroics by snuffing Nate Drogseth, and already a ripple went through the Hanover hearts. Even that early, a cocky Coach Grabill circulated through his troops and predicted victory. Caldwell showed senior smarts with a short run and a blast that went through Benuck for a 2-0 lead. Cyrus calmly corralled defender David Wilson, and already the lead was almost unassailable. After Eric Jayne’s offering was saved by Benuck, Cyrus made a remarkable third save in a row on Jesse Brown, and it was sudden death. Osheyack, had been the most demonstrative on the team in declaring his desire to be a shooter, and he backed it up with a twisting run and a rip into the back of the net to give Hanover sudden victory and a ticket to the finals.

The Marauders will face their toughest challenge of the year Saturday in 18-0-1 St. Thomas, a senior-laden team of destiny that has been fixated on the finals since the season’s start. St. Thomas is the only team to score more than a goal on Hanover in the last two seasons, taking a 2-1 lead on them in last year’s game in Dover before the Marauders rallied late in the game to take a 3-2 victory. Having seen them expertly dispatch Con-Val 1-0 in the first semifinal game at Stellos, the Marauders have a good idea of what to expect. They have also seen the quote in Foster’s Daily Democrat from St. Thomas Coach Steve Suleski, who opined that his club would rather face Hanover than Oyster River in the finals.

“We still have a great game left in us,” commented Grabill. “I hope that this opportunity brings it out of us. We have worked very hard to get to this stage of the season, and we’ll do our best to leave everything on the field.”

Also game writeups in the Valley News here and the Seacoastonline here

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Semifinal vs Oyster River


Senior back Lou Gemunden serves one into the box against Merrimack Valley

Semifinal game vs Oyster River on Wednesday, November 5, at 6 pm.
Carpooling to Stellos encouraged, meet at the HHS flagpole at 4 pm.

DIRECTIONS TO STELLOS STADIUM (5 Riverside St. Nashua, NH): I-89 South to I-93 South. Take Everett Turnpike/I-293 towards Manchester and Nashua. Everett Turnpike becomes US-3 South. Take Exit 5W (first ramp for exit 5); go right off the exit for about 0.25 miles. Turn right at the lights and Police Station. Stadium is first driveway on the left. Approx. drive time 1.75 hours. Mapquest directions to Stellos here.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Merrimack Playoff Summary

HANOVER BEATS MERRIMACK VALLEY 1-0 TO REACH SEMIS

The Hanover High boys soccer team used timely scoring and spectacular goalkeeping to beat Merrimack Valley 1-0 in an NHIAA quarterfinal match Saturday at Merriman-Branch Field. The Marauders now move to Stellos Stadium in Nashua on Wednesday to play Oyster River in the Class I semifinals at 6:00 p.m.. The win gave top-seeded Hanover a 17-0-1 record and extended their unbeaten streak to 45 games, tying the all-time Hanover record, which is also the third-longest in New Hampshire history.

Kevin Dade’s textbook header on a Lou Gemunden cross early in the second half was the only goal the Marauders needed, but it took several standout saves by senior goalkeeper Rhys Cyrus, including a world-class stop at the death of the match, to ensure the victory. Hanover has now won three straight matches by a 1-0 score, and recorded 13 shutouts on the season, establishing them as the top defensive squad in the state in any class.

Playing a confident Merrimack Valley team that had beaten Lebanon 4-2 on the same site three days earlier, the Marauders nevertheless took control of the tempo early, outshooting the Pride 8-2 and hitting the woodwork twice. Early in the match a cross from the corner by Nate Hanna kissed the crossbar on its way through the box, and later in the half Lou Gemunden hit a rocket from outside the penalty area that deflected hard off the Kwik Goal decal (ooh, product placement!) and into the ravine. Each one of Hanover’s top strikers (Dade, Caldwell Rimmer, Jayne, Osheyack and Eriksson) had a good look before the half ended, but none found paydirt.

Merrimack Valley was not able to muster much offense in the first half, recording two shots in the directions of the Hanover net. Each of these, however, was a challenging long-range free kick by Pride leading scorer Aaron Smith, whose on-target attempts coming straight out of the blazing sun were handled with aplomb by Rhys Cyrus. Smith, who is also the placekicker for the Merrimack Valley football team, found himself continuing a funk that carried over from the night before, when he missed an extra point and had a field goal attempt blocked in Hanover’s 28-27 overtime win over the Pride.

Halftime was enlivened by a brief ceremony honoring 10 members of the 1968 Hanover High team that beat New London 3-0 for the first of 14 state titles for the Marauders. The team presented Athletic Director Mike Jackson with a new version of their missing NHIAA title plaque, which will be installed on the Wall of Champions. Highlights of the season included fond memories of Coach David Ford, the team trip to Europe prior to the season, and the team’s semifinal victory over Oyster River. (Hmmmm….)

Discarding their recent tendency to delay the scoring of the deciding goal until fan discomfort levels were too high (though never worrisome for their cold-blooded coach), the Marauders got right to work in the second half and tallied the game-winner at 49:04 when Dade redirected Gemunden’s centering pass for his 10th goal of the season. The assist was Lou’s second game winner in two games and eighth in the past ten. It may not be his last of the season. Hanover kept up the pressure, with the Ben Rimmer Passion Play orchestrating several melodramatic near misses, and Ben Harris, subbing ably for a dinged-up Yosef Osheyack, getting a nice shot on target. Miles Peterson had a great run at the end and hit a centering pass that was ably collected by MVHS keeper Codi Labreque.

The Pride had one last shot at evening the match, and it produced a moment of high drama. The clock had stopped at 2:00 for a good while when the snakebit Smith sought to set straight his several shanks, launching a laser from well outside the penalty box that was headed for the upper right corner. Cyrus was equal to the task, launching leftward horizontally and lunging to flick the ball wide of the upright as time expired. It was a fitting end to a playoff match that lived up to the advance billing of high-level high school soccer as it ought to be.

The Marauders now turn their attention to longtime rival Oyster River, and the resumption of a clash between the two best programs in the history of NH high school soccer. Each has won three straight Class I titles in this decade alone. The last time they met in postseason was two years ago at Stellos, when the Marauders beat the Bobcats 2-1 in a scintillating semifinal on Casey Maue’s golden goal. Since then, the two teams have encountered each other twice, and both games have ended in goalless draws. This Wednesday the unfinished business will be concluded, and one team will walk away a winner.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Week of Nov 3

With a 1-0 win over Merrimack Valley on Saturday, Hanover advances in the Class I Tournament. A well-played match on both sides, Kevin Dade headed in the game winner on a cross provided by Lou Gemunden in the 49th minute. A brief write up in the Concord Monitor here.

Varsity practice will be from 6:15 - 7:45 p.m. on Monday and 3:15 - 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday at Merriman-Branch Field.

Hanover will play their semi-final match against Oyster River at 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday November 5, at Stellos Stadium in Nashua. The team will leave immediately after school, no early dismissal is necessary.

Senior Night

During halftime of the Monadnock game, coach Rob Grabill served as MC for 2008 Senior Night, in recognition of the team’s seniors and the support provided by their parents. Photos courtesy of Tiger Shaw.

Henry Caldwell


Kevin Dade


Lou Gemunden


Jake Harris


Andrew Holzberger


Chris Jayne


Yosef Osheyack


Miles Peterson


Mike Tecca


Trevor Barlowe


Ben Rimmer


Rhys Cyrus


Andrew Holzberger (Kim back from concession stand!)


Oscar Eriksson