e-Newspaper for Nov. 17, 2021

Page 9

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

The Observer | www.theobserver.com

Sports & Recreation

9

WITH

Jim Hague ogsmar@aol.com

Lyndhurst’s Gress signs with Penn State women’s soccer Although she never played a minute of girls’ soccer at Lyndhurst High School, Mackenzie Gress was treated like Golden Bear royalty last week, when she signed her national letter of intent to attend Penn State University and play soccer there next fall. Gress has been a nationally acclaimed goalkeeper since she was a youngster and played for several Team USA squads over her career, including a stint with the 16-and-under national team that traveled to Europe last fall for the World Cup. She has played for STA, one of the premier soccer academies in the nation, earning her place to get recognized by a major college program such as Penn State. In fact, Gress has been committed to Penn State since she was a freshman at Lyndhurst High, getting that decision out of the way at an early date. “It was always my dream school growing up,” said Gress, considered to be one of the top young goalkeepers in the country. “I went to a couple of camps there and just fell in love with the place. They then started to recruit me and one thing led to another.” So even though Gress never played for Lyndhurst, the school’s athletic director Jeff Radigan set it up for Gress

to sign her scholarship letter on the field with her name featured prominently on the scoreboard. “I’ve been waiting for this for a long time,” Gress said. “Now I’m officially a Nittany Lion. I was pretty surprised when Mr. Radigan told me of the plans for me to sign my letter here, considering I never played for Lyndhurst. But I’m always going to be a Lyndhurst girl. Mr. Radigan pulled out all the stops. I was very impressed.” Gress shared the day with her family and friends, one of whom is Enrique Mutsoli, last week’s Observer Athlete of the Week who leads the state in scoring with 39 goals. “We’ve been good friends for a long time,” Gress said. “I was happy that he showed up for me. He’s a great soccer player.” Gress said that it was somewhat of a relief that she finally signed her national letter of intent. “Some pressure has been lifted off of me,” Gress said. “I mean, I made my decision three years ago and nothing was going to change that. I didn’t have to impress college coaches that might have recruited me.” Gress was also impressed to see her name on the Penn State website. See VIEW, Page 10

Photo by Jim Hague

Seniors Alan Castillo (left) and Juan Rojas (right) have been two of the catalysts to lead Kearny to its first state sectional championship since 2017.

KARDS

Continued from Page 1 Section 1, Group IV is considered to be the toughest public school sectional in New Jersey. “We told them that they were going to have to face tough competition and that we could never take any game lightly,” Galka said. Facing West Orange was a challenge, considering that the Mountaineers (19-5) were a bigger and stronger team. “They like to play a physical game,” Galka said. “We saw them play against Clifton and we saw that they were going to be difficult to play.” And the Mountaineers drew first blood by scoring a goal just two minutes into the game. Francisco Soca scored for the Mountaineers, giving West Orange the early 1-0 lead. “We just had to stop the bleeding,” Galka said. “We couldn’t let them score again. Sometimes, it’s hard to do that, but we didn’t panic. We knew that the game hadn’t been decided yet.” West Orange held the advantage into halftime.

“We might have been losing, but we weren’t really worried,” said senior striker Juan Rojas. “We were playing really well. I knew it was just a matter of time before we scored.” Rojas was right, because he was pulled down in the penalty area midway through the second half and was awarded a penalty kick. “My plan was to hit it low,” Rojas said of the free kick. “I never get nervous when I take a penalty kick. I just try to shoot it hard.” Rojas’ shot eluded West Orange goalkeeper Justin Scavalla for the equalizer. The game remained that way through a tense second half, only thanks to Kearny goalie Joshua Rodriguez making two big consecutive saves in the closing minutes of regulation. Rodriguez stopped the initial shot and when the rebound escaped the Kearny defense, Rodriguez had to come up huge once again to punch aside another close scoring attempt. “If they got another one there, it would have been very tough for us,” Galka said. “Josh got hurt earlier, but came back in and made those

saves to keep us alive.” As the match went to the golden goal overtime, the confidence was there for the Kardinals. They also had help from a higher power. “All week in practice I prayed,” said standout defender Alan Castillo, who has enjoyed an All-State caliber season. “Every night before I went to bed, I prayed. During the game, I prayed.” So did Rojas. He prayed for another reason. “All week long, I was sick,” Rojas said. “I was worried that I might not be able to play. I prayed to God to get me healthy to help my team.” Rojas did exactly that. He obviously recovered enough to play and in the overtime, the team’s leading scorer performed magic once again. “I saw the defender watch the ball bounce,” Rojas said. “I just got it front of it, stopped it with my heel and headed it forward. I touched it forward and saw Aidan coming forward and he just tapped it in.” Mansilla’s goal set off a frenzy at a packed Kearny High Stadium, with about See KARDS, Page 10


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