10 minute read

Sports

Sports & Recreation

WITH Jim Hague

ogsmar@aol.com

Harrison, NA kids fi nish grid season in style at MetLife Stadium

Bobby Crudele is a Harrison police officer who has been a volunteer coach with the North Arlington Recreation department for ages. Over the years, Crudele has developed a good relationship with the New York Jets, who graciously allowed North Arlington’s junior football team to play at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, when the Giants and Jets were not occupying the facility.

In years past, Crudele set up a game between North Arlington and the Kearny Generals to play there, but the Generals suspended operations last year in wake of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.

Wanting to keep with tradition, Crudele wanted to see if another local team would be interested in playing there.

“Why not Harrison?” Crudele asked. “I’ve been a cop there for 22 years. I always try to help them out.”

As it turned out, the powers-that-be in Harrison were all for the idea.

“I thought it would be a great opportunity for the kids,” said Mike Camara, a former Observer Athlete of the Week during his playing days at Harrison. “We’re not really a football oriented town.”

No, soccer rules in Harrison. It’s just the way of the world. But Camara has been coaching youth football in Harrison for five years.

“Something like this will encourage signups for the fall,” Camara said. “The kids were all shocked that they were getting a chance to play there. It might be their only chance of going to MetLife.”

The Jets accommodated both teams with tickets for their recent game with the Cincinnati Bengals, a game the Jets won, and then North Arlington and Harrison squared off afterwards.

Although MetLife Stadium can be seen from the outskirts of both municipalities, it might be a light year away for some of these eager youngsters.

“Most 11-and-12 year old kids don’t get a chance to go to MetLife for any reason,” Camara said. “So when we told them, they were really looking forward to this game.”

North Arlington veteran head coach Jay Leiner felt the same way.

“I was excited for the kids,” Leiner said. “We had a tough season. We had a very young team of seventh graders playing eighth graders. Once the kids found out they were going

Kearny soccer and athletic legend Briscoe passes at 79

Photos courtesy of NJCU athletic communications The late Tommy Briscoe with former NJCU soccer standout goalkeeper Manny Lojo a few years ago. Briscoe died last week of an aggressive brain cancer. INSET: The late Tommy Briscoe was a Kearny native who was a star soccer player at the school and later coached both the boys and girls’ soccer teams at Kearny High, eventually becoming the school’s athletic director.

By Jim Hague ogsmar@aol.com

Santiago Formoso is one of the most storied soccer players to come out of “Soccertown USA” namely Kearny. Before he became a member of the famed New York Cosmos teams of the late 1970s, a team that featured Pele and constantly filled Giants Stadium to the rafters, Formoso played at Kearny High School, where he played for a man with strong Irish roots like a good portion of the town named Tommy Briscoe.

“He tried to teach the game correctly,” Formoso recalled about Briscoe, who died last week after a battle with brain cancer. “He was more into fitness first. We would come in for training and then run like crazy. After a while, we got used to it. He was a total gentleman who cared about people. He was just a wonderful man.”

Briscoe was a great soccer player in his heyday, eventually going to Jersey City State College (now New Jersey City University), where he was regarded as the school’s alltime greatest player. A charter member of the school’s Hall of Fame in 1979, Briscoe was the all-time leading goal scorer at the school when he graduated in 1966 and still stands seventh on the all-time list more than five decades after he last played for the Gothic Knights.

Briscoe played both right back and forward for the Gothic Knights and was a four-time First Team honoree in the old New Jersey State College Athletic Conference at both positions. In 1965, Briscoe scored an astounding 13 goals in nine games. He was selected as a participant for the East Coast Olympic Tryouts in 1966 and later that year, was the placekicker for the first-ever Jersey City State football team.

His kicking prowess eventually earned him a tryout with the Dallas Cowboys.

After graduating from JCSC, Briscoe took a teaching and coaching job in his native Kearny, where he remained for 40 years. Briscoe became the head boys’ soccer coach, where he mentored players like Formoso, and was also the head girls’ soccer coach for several years. Eventually, Briscoe was elevated to the role of athletic director at the school, handling both roles as a history teacher and athletic director.

Mike Granelli coached soccer at nearby St. Peter’s College for more than 25 years and resided in Kearny when Briscoe was the soccer king of the town.

“He was an educated man,” Granelli said. “He was very friendly, a nice guy. I can’t say that he was in the “in” crowd, but I’d see him from time to

BRISCOE

Continued from Page 9

time. He was strong, built like an athlete should be.”

Bruce Reed is another Kearny soccer legend who was a teammate at Kearny High with Formoso.

“He was a great influence on my life,” Reed said. “He took over a .500 team and turned it into a state champion. He was based in tactical strategy. He would work us like we were in an Army boot camp. But I liked it. He worked us hard, but he got about 95 percent of his tragedy rubbed off on kids.”

Reed sang glowingly about his former coach.

“He was a heck of a guy,” Reed said. “He was a complete Irish gentleman who best represented a Celtic warrior. He pulled no punches.”

And Reed cherished the last few years with Briscoe.

“He was a true friend,” Reed said. “I admire him for that.”

Reed became a coach himself at Middlesex County Community College for three seasons and he used to call Briscoe regularly for advice.

“He was a major influence on me there,” Reed said. “We spoke a lot on the telephone a lot. He was the best guy to do anything for you.”

John Millar, the legendary Kearny soccer coach, was just starting his coaching career when Briscoe was stepping aside.

“He just loved the game of soccer,” Millar said. “He loved just going to the field, getting down on the field and mixing and playing with the players. Tommy could strike a ball better than anyone. He had a cannon of a shot. He was the man who hired me and gave me my shot. He was absolutely a great guy. After I became the head coach, Tommy and would talk. He was a kind hearted guy who was willing to help anyone. I’ll always remember Tommy singing Irish and Scottish songs.”

Jim Cifelli, the legendary track and field coach at Kearny High, also recalled Briscoe fondly.

“Tommy was the AD (athletic director) when I started,” Cifelli said. “He was the kind of guy who let you do your own thing. He cared so much about the kids. He made sure the kids were treated properly. He was an honest guy, a straight forward guy who didn’t put up with the political crap. He was easy to talk to. He was kind spirited.”

Cifelli recalled a time where he played golf with Briscoe.

“We were playing golf in Belmar and a branch from a tree came down and knocked his contact lens out,” Cifelli said. “He had to go home because he couldn’t see. That’s my last memory of Tommy. He was just a nice guy.”

Rutgers University women’s head soccer coach Mike O’Neill, a Kearny native who will lead his team to the NCAA College Cup Final Four this weekend in Santa Clara, California, also recalled Briscoe with fondness.

“He was so good to so many people,” said O’Neill, speaking on the phone en route to Briscoe’s services. “He was so loved. He was so involved in my career and Robert (McCourt, the Monmouth University head men’s soccer coach). He was always supportive of who we were and where we are today. He was loved by so many people. He was like a second Dad to me. He’s what Kearny is all about.”

Briscoe left Kearny in 1988 and moved to Marco Island, Florida, where he lived his final years. He taught history at Lely High School in Naples, Florida for 21 years and coached the boys’ soccer team at Lely, as well as both the boys’ and girls’ soccer teams at St. John Neumann High School.

Briscoe’s funeral services were held in Spring Lake earlier this week. He is survived by his wife, Patricia, four daughters and a son. Tommy and Pat Briscoe were married for 36 years.

Incredibly, Briscoe was diagnosed with brain cancer in late October and passed away just three weeks later.

He will be sorely missed by all who loved him.

“I’d look forward to his phone calls to talk about soccer,” Formoso said. “It was good to hear someone else’s thoughts about a game. We would watch the Champions League games and then comment on them. We talked about once a week. We were both soccer addicts. Once you have a friend like Tommy, it doesn’t matter how much time passes. You reconnected with him and you had him for life.”

“I just spoke with him about three weeks ago,” Reed said. “He said that he took his wife to the store. He didn’t want to talk about his illness. That’s who he was. He was my Coach until the end. Something like this shows you that life is a gift until the end. I’ll always remember his integrity and his fighting spirit.”

Walter Perez, M.D.

Doctor of Obstetrics & Gynecology • Prenatal Care • Family Planning • Basic Infertility • Sterilization • Irregular Menses • Fibroids, Cysts, etc. Major Insurances Accepted

Now also taking United Community Health Plan Fluent in Spanish & Portuguese 213 Harrison Ave., Harrison, NJ • 973-350-0800

Most Insurances Insurances Accepted Accepted

“Make your vision picture perfect... picture perfect... See what you’ve been See what you’ve been missing. Visit our offi ce!” missing. Visit our offi ce!”

Family Eye Care

Eye Exams • Contact Lenses • Pediatric Care

Your Eye Care Professionals Dr. Maria Domingues

Lic # 27OA00630100 Dr. Jayswinder Kaur

Lic# 27OA00689700 Dr. Marina N. Megalla

Lic# 27OA00690300 Dr. Carla Domingues

Lic # 27OA00646200

348 Ridge Road • Lyndhurst

Dr. Prakash J. Doshi

Premier Care

TALKS

Dr. Hector Aguilar

WHEN YOU’RE MORE THAN JUST “TIRED”

Everyone goes through periods in life where they have less energy and feel more run down than usual. However, when these periods begin to pile up, it’s time to start asking questions. Chronic fatigue may sound like a condition unto itself, but it is actually a symptom of a wide variety of other health problems including anemia, cancer, chronic heart and kidney disease, obesity, sleep apnea, diabetes, and hypothyroidism. It can also be a symptom of mental health issues such as depression and anxiety. Bi-polar disorder is defined by periods of intense energy followed by extreme fatigue. Determining the cause or causes of your chronic fatigue may take time and patience, but it is essential to obtaining proper treatment. Many people with chronic fatigue syndrome benefit from exercise, addressing sleep problems, and counseling. Counseling can help build coping skills to deal with chronic illness, address limitations at work or school, and improve family dynamics. It can also be helpful for managing depression. If it’s been a while since you’ve had a wellness exam, please call PREMIER CARE ASSOCIATES OF WEST HUDSON at 201-998-7474. Our office is located at 512 Kearny Ave., Suite B. P.S. Chronic or extreme fatigue should never be ignored. However, it may be difficult for those affected to notice, which is why it is important to listen when others mention a potential problem.

Email any questions or comments to: premiercare@gmail.com

Premier Care Associates of West Hudson

This article is from: