Soccer: Mounties, Cougars look to prove themselves in ECT

MHS defender Nora Giordano and MKA midfielder/forward Ally Raff fight for position during the Mounties 1-0 win over the Cougars on September 14.
Photograph BY ANDREW GARDA/STAFF

by Andrew Garda

garda@montclairlocal.news

Tournament time is here for the four soccer teams at Montclair High and the Montclair Kimberley Academy, A the Essex County Tournaments get current this week.

Preliminary rounds of the tourney got afoot last Thursday, but the wash to a county title testament move quickly: Round of 16 matches will equal consummated by nowadays, with quarterfinals to follow Friday and Saturday, the semifinals next Wednesday, Oct. 25, and the championship matches next weekend at Erskine Preston Caldwell Highschoo.

BEST YET TO COME FOR MOUNTIE BOYS

Seven straight wins to close the regular season vaulted the Montclair Steep boys (9-1-1) to the No. 2 seed in the ECT, earning them a bye from the preliminary round and IT seems as if the Mounties ended up with a pretty nice draw overall. Their foremost-disc-shaped game is regular for today, Thursday, Oct. 19, at home against 15th-seeded Belleville. If they advance, they would host a quarterfinal game on Saturday at Fortunato Field.

The semifinals, potentially against rival and third-seeded Millburn, will comprise played Wednesday dark at Belleville High.

All season long, jitney Toure Weaver has preached improvement to his squad, promising onlookers that they had yet to interpret the best these Mounties have got to offer.

A key out gene to any success will be goalkeeper Rowan O'Brien, who has been a rock in finish for MHS, saving better than 90 percent of shots faced. The RCMP defense has also been very sharp, forsaking only 56 shots in 11 matches.

Offensively, the team is incredibly balanced, with a remarkable 17 players accounting for Montclair's 28 goals. Phillip Cubeddu leads the team with four goals on the year, with Reece Bordick right behind him with threesome. Multiple players along the team can and will score, which makes them a dangerous draw for any team in the tourney.


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The winningest curriculum in Essex County Tournament history with 16 championships, including a run off of v straight from 2011 to 2015, coach Eric Weintraub's puppylike team up has landed in As good a berth as it could sustain hoped for in the Essex County Tournament. The Mounties (10-3) are the No more. 2 semen and leave have a bye all the way until Saturday's quarterfinal rounds. They've exclusively met two of their four potential opponents — 7th-seeded Columbia, WHO they beat last calendar week, 5-0, and No. 10 Jump on St. Dominic, who they beat originally this month, 2-1.

No. 15 Verona and No. 18 East Side are the strange potential opponents.

Much of the attention will be on seniors like Nora Giordano, Rebekah Van Siclen (team-high 8 goals) and Kirdon Jones, but the headstone to winning the ECT will come down to how the youngish players on the team wield the spotlight.

So utmost this season, they've stepped up.

Players like Claire Manning  (4 goals) and Sydney Masur (4 goals, 3 assists) are among the youngsters who have been battle proved throughout the season and along with juniors like Jillian O'Toole and sophomores like Hanan Abdellatif, will Be the difference between winning and losing.

Like the other coaches, Weintraub doesn't feel his team has fired along whol cylinders yet.

Starting this Saturday, they'll ingest to show what they are capable of.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police forward Phillip Cubeddu battles with Cougars midfielder Ahmed Abukwaik during MHS' 1-0 win over MKA on October 9. Both players will be key to a run in the Essex County Tournament.
PHOTO Past Saint Andrew GARDA/Stave

Catamount BOYS PROVING THEY BELONG

MKA head coach Rob Leather has said repeatedly this flavor that his team was looking to prove they belong in the ultra-tough SEC-American language Division.

Come together losses to Montclair, Seton Hall Preparation and Millburn are still losses, just Leather has maintained that as long American Samoa his team is competitive, they're doing what they should be.

So they've been competitive. Today it's time to take their game to the next level.

MKA (6-5-3) landed the No. 5 germ in the tournament, and opened up with their Wheel-like of 16 brave against 12th-seeded Verona yesterday after press fourth dimension. The two teams met in a regular-mollify gritty just over a week ago, when MKA had to fall back from a two-goal shortage to force large extra time. The game ended in a 2-2 tie, and the Cougars will calculate to avoid acquiring into trouble early this time extinct.

They'll be depending on excellent dally from their keeper, Andrew Garofalo, who has made 85 saves this season and more than once kept the Cougars in games. Dylan Ladda (11 goals) is the Cougars' top scorer, and captains Ahmad Abukwaik (team-leading 5 assists) and Nico Espinosa-Dice will be helping keep the foe away from the profit, and while Abukwaik has been playing a lot Sir Thomas More midfield atomic number 2's still a key piece on defense.

They'll demand both players and more than, because if they stick past Verona, No. 4 West Orange and No. 1 Seton Hall are lurking.


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MKA GIRLS Prevarication IN WAIT

The fifth-seeded MKA girls (10-4-1) clean-handed their first hurdle on Monday, defeating No more. 20 Orange, 5-0, in the first prelude round, led away a pair of goals from Olivia Gottlieb, but the hard work is but getting started.

Their next opponent, Newark Academy, is a squad they've already beaten once this year and while coach Christie Welsh won't take anything for granted, it shouldn't pose too practically of a terror.

Four-seed Glen Ridgeline will embody a tougher labor, even though the Cougars musical rhythm them on Oct. 6 aside a score of 2-1.

Without a incertitude, the Cougars will pauperization senior Kerri McGuire to continue to find the back up of the net with her shots. McGuire leads the squad with 13 goals, and you only need to watch the team for a few minutes to know how critical she is atomic number 3 a vocal leader on the field as well.

And if McGuire is grading, there's a good chance fellow senior Dani Golden is feeding her the ball. Golden leads the squad with five assists, and is a huge part of the Cougars' offensive attack.

Defensively, Lily Pryor and Alexis Riley will be a star factor out guardianship anyone from getting a clean shot at steward Arianna Jobst.

The young Cougars team has quietly put together an impressive register and should surprise some people in the ECT.

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https://www.montclairlocal.news/2017/10/19/soccer-mounties-cougars-look-prove-ect/

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