Authors Posts by Steven Zaitz

Steven Zaitz

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By Steven Zaitz

In a game of punch-counterpunch, it was the Sachem North football team that got last licks against Ward Melville on Nov. 10 in Lake Ronkonkoma, knocking the Patriots out of the playoffs and ending their season.

Sachem North running back Lucas Singleton’s six-yard touchdown run with two minutes left in the fourth quarter propelled the Flaming Arrows to a 27-21 victory in the Suffolk Conference I semifinal game. They will face top-seeded William Floyd, who destroyed Longwood 49-13 on Saturday, at Stony Brook University to decide the Suffolk County championship for Conference I. This will be Sachem’s first trip to the finals since winning the Long Island Championship in 2013. Ward Melville was the 2022 county champion.

In a game filled with wild haymakers and explosive plays by both teams, Ward Melville managed to answer Sachem North touchdown for touchdown, erasing seven-point deficits on three separate occasions. But the Patriots were unable to stop the Flaming Arrows on 3rd down in the game-deciding drive that led to their postseason ouster.

Arrow QB Anthony Vino, who missed the final six games of the regular season due to injury, launched the first salvo in this one, hitting WR Brayden Tappin for a 40-yard score to start the game. Patriot QB Ethan Burgos hopped through a small crease and sprung himself 49 yards for a game-tying touchdown later in the first quarter.

WR Shane Reilly got behind the Ward Melville defense and Vino hit him for a 36-yard score midway through the second quarter. Burgos answered again, finishing off a 65-yard drive with a one-yard keeper. The drive was aided by two 4th and short conversions, one of which was a completion to WR Brody Morgan that deflected off the helmet of teammate Griffin Kramer, went straight up in the air and fell into the arms of a surprised and thankful Morgan, who was brought down at the Sachem 43-yard line.

Six plays later, Burgos took it in to tie the score at 14 with a minute to go in the half. It would become untied in short order at the start of the third quarter.

On the first play from scrimmage, Singleton took a handoff from Vino and immediately sensed that his path around left tackle was blocked off. He bounced it to the right, toward the Patriot sideline, and had only green astroturf in front of him. Eighty yards later, he was celebrating in the end zone with his teammates because he had given Sachem North yet another touchdown-sized lead.

After a Patriot three and out, Sachem was on the precipice of expanding their lead to two touchdowns as they drove the ball deep into Ward Melville territory. But do-it-all linebacker/running back/emergency kicker Daniel Brausch Jr. made a leaping interception in the end zone for the green and gold with five minutes left in the third quarter to keep it a one-score game.

“I saw the quarterback [Vino] step back, and when he threw the ball, I knew I had a chance to make a play for my team,” said Brausch, a senior.

He would make more plays for his team. After his interception, the Patriots would march 80 yards — all on the ground — in seven minutes, and it would be Brausch who would cap the drive with a one-yard plunge, tying the score at 21.

“Being a two-way player is an honor because it means the coaches believe in me enough to put me in those positions,” Brausch said. “I look at it as having twice the number of chances to make plays to help us win games.”

Brausch would help in even more ways than just those two. 

When Morgan, who is the Patriot kicker in addition to playing wide receiver, was injured in the first half of the game, Brausch took over on kickoffs and extra points. He made both of his kicks, and one of his kickoffs was nearly recovered by Ward Melville. He also returned kickoffs on special teams.

With 10 minutes remaining in the game, Ward Melville had forced the Flaming Arrows backward and Vino and company faced 3rd and 12 deep in their own end. A stop by the Patriots would likely result in getting the ball with good field position to get the go-ahead and potential winning score.

But in one of the most important and explosive plays of the game, Vino rolled right and hit WR Andrew Eaton for 24 yards and a 1st down. This was a Patriot backbreaker. Sachem would convert three more 3rd downs, consume eight minutes, and score on a six-yard run by Singleton with a smidgin over two minutes left in the game.

Brausch would block the extra point, which created the possibility of Ward Melville, with two minutes left and three timeouts, winning the game with a last-minute TD and an extra point conversion.

The Patriots moved the ball to midfield in short order. Burgos scrambled to the Sachem 35 with just over a minute remaining. But on 3rd and long, after a long delay caused by timeouts taken by both teams, the shotgun snap of center Bobby Ehlers flew over Burgos’ head. The quarterback did well to track it down and throw it away. But it was a waste of a valuable down, and it brought up 4th and 10 and the Patriots’ last chance.

Would they get off the mat and survive for yet a fourth time in this game?

Burgos dropped back but didn’t find anyone open. He tap-danced down the right sideline, cut back into the middle of the field and lunged forward. Would it be enough?

Despite his effort, the ball was spotted about three quarters of a yard short of the sticks. Sachem ball. The game was over.

“That last drive was tense,” said Burgos. “We had a limited amount of time and were trying to do everything as quickly as we could. It was a tough way for the season to end.”

By Steven Zaitz

Three wasn’t enough, so they went out and got number four.

The Northport Lady Tiger field hockey team — whose team motto is “never enough” — won its fourth consecutive Class A Long Island championship on Sunday, Nov, 5, beating Nassau champ Massapequa, 5-0. The game was played at Northport High School.

Senior forward Kenzie Bliven scored 20 seconds into the game off a long drive up the field and a pass by junior middie Caeley Monez. Northport would never look back, scoring two more in the first half – one by Monez and another Bliven.

The three-goal lead for the Lady Tigers might as well have been 30 as Massapequa’s offense was bottled up by Northport midfielders and defenders. Senior captain defenders Emily Maloney and Caitlin O’Malley, along with sophomore Nina Corbett and senior Sam Ferrara, tended to the backline and made sure goalkeeper Mariselle Camillone’s crease was clean for most of the game. Middies Sophia Cox, Lily Beamer, Ruby Hasbrouck and captain Madison Maxwell also played well on both sides of the ball. Camillone made two saves while Massapequa earned only four penalty corner opportunities.

Conversely, Northport had 16 penalty corners and fired 25 shots at Massapequa’s overworked goalkeeper Colleen Emanuele, as Julianna Tietjen and Mary Breckling scored in the second half — and the party in the stands and on the sidelines was on.

Tiger head coach Gina Walling inserted several of her bench players so that they could experience playing in a Long Island championship game.

With the Long Island championship in its hip pocket, there is still work to be done. Northport will return to Centereach High School, Walling’s alma mater and the site of the last two state tournaments, next weekend to compete for the Class A New York State title. If they win, it will be their third straight.

They will face Buffalo-area Orchard Park on Saturday, Nov. 11, at noon. If they are fortunate enough to win that game, they will play the next day against the winner of Mamaroneck High School of Westchester County and Windsor, which is a suburb of Binghamton.

Ward Melville running back Griffin Kramer rumbles through the Lindenhurst line on Nov. 3. Photo by Steven Zaitz

By Steven Zaitz

Fortune really does favor the bold.

Clinging to a 14-10 lead with less than five minutes to go in its first-round playoff game against perennial powerhouse Lindenhurst on Nov. 3, the Ward Melville football Patriots were desperately trying to run out the clock.

But after two unsuccessful running plays and facing 3rd and 12 from their own 15-yard line, the very real possibility of punting the ball back to the Bulldogs with plenty of clock and likely a short field stared Patriot head coach Chris Boltrek directly in the face. He took a timeout to discuss his options with his staff and senior quarterback Ethan Burgos.

Conventional and conservative football wisdom would be to run the ball, melt the clock as much as possible, and let your defense — which had shut the Bulldogs out in the second half — seal the victory. 

So much for conventional wisdom. 

With a stacked box, Burgos took the snap on this fateful third down play, wheeled around and handed it to senior wideout Jackson Weber on a jet sweep option pass. Weber sprinted to the far sideline, stopped, and threw the ball to a crossing WR Brody Morgan, who caught the ball and was knocked out of bounds at the Patriot 38-yard line. It was plenty good enough for a first down, with the clock now whittled down to three minutes.

“It’s a play we practice every week,” said Boltrek. “If it’s not set up perfectly, then Jackson simply runs the ball and we punt it back to them. If the defense attacks the run, it opens things up for our receivers behind them.”

Coach Boltrek makes it sound logical and easy, but there is still a matter of risk and execution, especially at such a critical juncture of the game.

“When the play was first called after the timeout, I was nervous because I knew no matter what, I couldn’t throw an interception in that spot,” said Weber. “But I knew I had to come up big to make the play for my team. Brody did a great job of getting open, and I’m happy my coach had confidence in me to make a big play.”

Burgos, who threw for a touchdown in the first quarter and ran for the game-winner to start the fourth, managed the game like an old pro, mixing up runs, passes and the occasional trickeration to confuse and surprise the Lindenhurst defense.

“They were a tough and physical opponent, and guys on both sides were willing to give it their all,” said Burgos. “But many people still don’t give the Ward Melville football program the respect that it deserves. I hope this win changes that somewhat, and our goal for the rest of the playoffs is to earn even more respect.”

One player who earned the respect of everyone who watched this particular game was RB/LB Griffin Kramer, who seemingly never came off the field for Ward Melville. He had 60 yards rushing as a punishing fullback and made 12 tackles on defense    three of which were behind the line of scrimmage. He also had a sack of Bulldog QB Christian Capogna.

“After that first drive, our defense got after it,” Kramer, a senior, said. “We didn’t want to let the team down and as a unit, we started playing with the mindset that there was no way our season was going to end on this night.”

The evening started in easy breezy fashion for the defending Suffolk County Division I champions, as Burgos led a seven-play, 70-yard march that ended with a leaping catch in the end zone by Senior WR Sebastian Jolly for a 7-0 Ward Melville lead.

But Lindy held serve on its opening possession by virtue of a 27-yard TD pass from Capogna to Christian Aquino, who led the Bulldogs with 105 yards receiving on eight receptions. Bulldog kicker Ben Choden would connect on a 22-yard field goal in the second quarter to give his team a 10-7 lead that they would carry into halftime. That would be the only scoring in the game until Burgos scrambled up the left sideline for a 17-yard score with ten minutes left in the game.

“Ethan is a special athlete and a very smart football player,” said Kramer. “He stayed calm tonight and did whatever we needed from him to win this game.  He’s an elusive runner and threw the ball really well when he was called upon to do that.”

Burgos was 10 for 17 for 86 yards in the air, and he ran for another 92 yards. That is good for a 91.8 passer rating. He had mutual admiration for his teammate Kramer.

“Kramer is the toughest kid I know, and the entire defense runs through him,” said Burgos. “His ability to read what the opposing offense id trying to do is unmatched and he is the energy of the team – on both sides of the ball.”

They will need a large energy reserve for their next task — a semifinal match on the road against arch enemy and Suffolk Division I’s second seed Sachem North, who easily dispatched Walt Whitman over the weekend, 42-10.

Both teams are 7-2 entering the game, but the Patriots beat the Flaming Arrows 29-7 in the regular season, rolling up 250 yards on the ground. Burgos had 107 of those yards and is assuming Sachem hasn’t forgotten that late September beatdown.

“We’ll be ready for them,” he said. “I expect us to play our brand of football, assert ourselves over them and walk into another county championship.”

A bold statement from the Ward Melville signal caller – a trait that seems to run deep with this Ward Melville football team.

By Steven Zaitz

In an offensive extravaganza not seen in years, the Northport Football Tigers dropped their regular season finale to Half Hollow Hills East 63-41 on Saturday Oct. 28.

Hills East quarterback Jordan Heyman tied a Long Island record by throwing eight touchdown passes and Northport running back Michael Campoli had five total touchdowns in the highest scoring game of 2023.

The Thunderbirds got on the board early when Heyman scrambled to his right and connected with halfback Lucas Martin for a 33-yard score with only three minutes gone by in the first quarter.  It was just the beginning of what was to come.

Heyman would loft one to receiver Tyler Sanders on Hills East’s next possession that would be good for 60 yards and another score, and the T-birds were up 15-0 with 4:49 remaining in the opening period.

Northport would be in scratch-and-claw mode for most of the game and Campoli would pull the Tigers to within a single point, 29-28, with a short TD run and two-point conversion with 1:19 remaining in the second half.

But in one of the most glaring defensive lapses in a game full of them, Heyman threw up a Hail Mary Pass as the horn sounded to end the first half that would settle in the stomach of receiver Max Futter in the end zone. It was 35-28 for the Thunderbirds at the break, and Northport would never recover.

Tiger Sophomore QB Simon Blissett had the most prolific game of his career throwing for 242 yards and two touchdowns. Campoli had 181 yards on the ground and three rushing TDS.  He had two catches for 44 yards and both of those went for touchdowns. His brother Christian had 72 yards receiving and Giancarlo Valenti had 111 yards rushing on only 14 carries – which is 8 yards per carry. Heyman, who threw for 475 yards, took advantage of a Northport fumble to start the second half and opened up a two TD lead just 27 seconds into it.  They would increase it 49-28 four minutes later, on another Heyman TD strike of 52 yards again to Martin, as most of the second half was now rendered a formality.

Heyman’s octet of touchdown passes has only been done once in the modern high school football history of Long Island. Charlie McKee of Oceanside threw eight touchdowns in 2018 in the Sailors’ 62-33 win over Farmingdale.

The loss ended Northport’s three game winning streak and they finish the year an even 4-4 and earned the 5th seed in Suffolk Division II playoff bracket.  They will play on the road at West Babylon on Friday Night. The Tigers lost to this team 36-0 on Sept 30th and hope to improve upon that performance.

Hills East (7-1) is seeded third and will host Bellport on Saturday afternoon. The Thunderbirds easily handled the Clippers, beating them 38-6 in the regular season.

By Steven Zaitz

Commack girls volleyball team is headed to the Suffolk County finals after beating Northport Lady Tigers in three straight games this past Monday, Oct. 30, in the semifinal round at Commack.

Outside hitter Kaitlin Curran led the top-seeded Lady Cougars with 13 kills and nine digs, as the relatively quick match ended at 25-16, 25-22, 25-9.

When these two teams played earlier in October, Northport won the first game but the Cougars have beaten the Tigers in six straight games since, outscoring Northport 151-95 in that span.

Commack’s Rylie Curran had 14 digs in this affair and teammate Molly Singer had a symmetrical 14 assists. 

The Lady Cougars are looking to win the county crown when they take on Patchogue-Medford Nov. 2 at Walt Whitman High School. 

— Photos by Steven Zaitz

By Steven Zaitz

Northport High School celebrated Homecoming this weekend with a rousing 47-7 victory over still-winless Copiague on Saturday.

The Tigers improve to 4-3 with the win as they have won three consecutive games and have clinched a playoff berth for the fourth consecutive season. Copiague is 0-7.

Northport senior halfback Michael Campoli was in the end zone with a 6-yard run just 32 seconds into the game. He would add another touchdown on a 54-yard bomb from Tiger senior QB Calvin Blissett to start the second half, giving the Tigers a 40-7 lead. His brother Christian rushed for 108 yards and a score, and bruising fullback Giancarlo Valenti would run for three more touchdowns. The Northport defense forced five turnovers, including two picks by sophomore DB Greyson Cabrera. 

The Tigers are currently ranked fifth in Suffolk County League II with one game remaining, which is on the road against the 6-1 Half Hollow Hills East Thunderbirds. If the Tigers win and get some help in other games, they could move up to the fourth seed and earn a home playoff game in the first round.

By Steven Zaitz

One of America’s great Founding Fathers, Benjamin Franklin, once said that the only two things that are certain in this life are death and taxes.

If Franklin had been around for the past three field hockey seasons, he might have added the Northport field hockey team to his list, as the Lady Tigers, entering Monday’s clash against the Ward Melville Lady Patriots, had won 68 consecutive games dating back to March 2021.

That winning streak, just like good Ole Ben, now lives only in the history books.

Fueled by two goals from senior Julia Rotoli, one by junior Jadyn Stoecker and a suffocating defense that did not allow a shot on goal in the entire second half, Ward Melville finally broke Northport’s stranglehold on the New York state field hockey scene with a 3-0 win in East Setauket on the final day of the regular season.

Ward Melville was a victim of the Lady Tigers’ dominance six times during the winning streak, including three elimination playoff games — the most excruciating of which occurred in the 2021 Suffolk County finals when Northport scored two goals in the fourth quarter to win 2-1. In addition to that county championship, the Tigers have won the past two state titles while Ward Melville has bitterly watched them win on the livestream.

“Every season is a new season,” said Patriot head coach and Ward Melville alum Shannon Sioss. “We were sick of losing to them, especially in the counties. And every day we come out and are focused and ready to go and on a mission — a mission not just to beat Northport but to finish the season strong in our last home game, and we’re so happy that we were able to do that tonight.”

Under dusky, autumnal skies splattered with orange cumulus clouds drifting in from the west, Roteli opened the scoring 11 minutes into the game when she tipped in a shot from linemate Olivia Comerford. The 1-0 Lady Pat lead would hold until halftime as Northport could not generate any offense over the first two periods — a spell they often cast upon their opposition and not the other way around. They mustered only one shot and one penalty corner.

However, at the start of the second half with dusk now fully surrendering to night, the Tigers would get a boost from not their offense but their goalkeeper, Mariselle Camillone. When a Ward Melville midfielder was brought down hard by Northport defender Caeley Monez inside Camillone’s cage, the Patriots were awarded a free penalty stroke. This occurs when the defense either commits a deliberate foul inside the attack zone or intentionally fouls inside the shooting circle, which prevents a goal from being scored.

From seven yards away, which is essentially point-blank range, Lady Patriot ace winger Peyton Phillips blasted a high shot at Camillone, who calmly turned it away with both of her oversized goalie gloves. The entire Northport team celebrated with their goalkeeper as if she had scored a goal. There was a sense that the Lady Tigers would use this stop to propel them to victory as they had done so many times before.

“I didn’t feel that much pressure,” Camillone said. “I have practiced penalty strokes many times before, but it was definitely a little nerve-wracking knowing that everybody’s eyes were on me.”

The stroke is converted into a goal 80% of the time in high school field hockey, but Northport head coach Gina Walling had every bit of faith that Camillone would be up to the task.

“That was a phenomenal job by Mariselle,” said Walling, who played against Sioss while attending Centereach High School in the late 1990s. “She has never faced a penalty stroke outside of practice, and although we didn’t win today, that save only helps us and Maiselle moving forward, giving her confidence as we start the postseason.”

Ah, yes, the playoffs. They start on Oct. 20. With the win, Ward Melville and Northport have identical 13-1 records and will almost certainly be seeded as the top two teams in the Suffolk County Division I postseason bracket. Sachem East is also 13-1, but they have a softer strength of schedule and will likely be seeded third.

For the regular season finale, Sioss awarded Stoecker, a junior, the postgame rubber chicken as the game’s most valuable player. When she scored in the final minute of the third quarter, it not only gave Ward Melville a two-goal lead but spiked any juice Northport may have squeezed out of Camillone’s heroics from earlier in the period.

“It really felt great scoring that goal,” said Stoecker, who enjoyed green-iced cupcakes as a postgame celebration with her teammates. “It really deflated them and boosted us. We needed this win heading into the playoffs, and it proves to ourselves that we can play with them and actually beat them.”

Northport team captain and senior defender Caitlin O’Malley was philosophical about the team’s first loss in 940 days.

“Obviously, it is a new feeling for us, and we’ve never had to bounce back from a loss, but it’s not going to affect how we go into the playoffs,” she said. “We are going to come back stronger, and this by no means ruins what Northport field hockey stands for. As captain of the team, my main goal will be to keep everyone’s head up, let them know that everything is going to be OK and that this one loss will not define us.”

O’Malley said she welcomes a chance to see the Lady Patriots again in the coming days.

“I really hope we get to see them in the playoffs to show them how we actually play,” she said. “I don’t think this game was a great representation of what we are capable of, and when the playoffs come, we will be more prepared and, hopefully, we will come out on top.”

And start a new chapter in the Northport field hockey history book? Time will tell.

For Ward Melville, however, it was one of the most satisfying page flips in the history of their program.

By Steven Zaitz

In a battle of two powerhouse teams, the Commack girls volleyball team beat crosstown rival Northport last Friday night.

The Lady Cougars dropped the first game 24-26 but came storming back to take the match in four games, winning the final three by scores of 25-8, 26-24, 25-16, at home Oct. 6.

Commack’s Kaitlin Curran had a monster day with 15 kills, 20 digs and four service aces. Both teams entered the match at the top of the standings in League II, but Commack now takes control of the conference, opening up a two-game lead over Northport with a 9-1 record. The Lady Tigers drop to 7-3.

“We knew Northport was going to be a tough team going into this match,” said Curran, who is tied for fourth in Suffolk County with Sarah Idler of Eastport-South Manor in kills with 147. “We never lost faith after losing that first set, and we knew if we kept a positive attitude and minimized our errors, we would come out on top.”

Lady Tiger outside hitter Emma Watts, who has 170 kills this season, good for second place in Suffolk, felt her team committed too many errors to win against such a quality opponent.

“We just had too many mistakes, and Commack did a great job in finding the weak parts in our defense,” Watts said. “It was definitely a tough loss, and we are focusing on these last few games and hopefully we will come out on top in all of them.”

Lady Cougar Maya Khan had 10 kills and 19 digs, and Molly Singer had 21 assists and four service aces. Curran’s sister Rylie had 35 digs.

For Northport, who wore all-pink uniforms to recognize Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Chloe Mayer had 30 assists and 15 digs, and eighth grader Riley Zdrojeski had four service aces and five kills.

“We have such a talented team with some of the best hitters in Suffolk County,” Mayer said. “But we just couldn’t get the job done after winning that first game. We will regroup and be ready for our next match.”

Northport played Sachem North at home on Tuesday, Oct. 10, and Commack, who lost at Connetquot in their very first game and haven’t lost since, played at Lindenhurst on Wednesday, Oct. 11. Both results occurred too late for press time.

Michael Campoli celebrates his touchdown with Connor Henigman, No. 50, and Giancarlo Valenti. Photo by Steven Zaitz

By Steven Zaitz

It is difficult to determine which was more a bummer for Huntington High School and its football team this past Saturday — the unrelenting rain that drenched players, fans and guests of its Homecoming festivities, or the beatdown the Blue Devils suffered at the hands of the Northport Tigers.

Tiger running back Michael Campoli rushed for 180 yards and two touchdowns as Northport defeated Huntington 30-13, Oct. 7. The Tigers improve to a record of 2-3 as the Blue Devils are still looking for their first win of the season as they drop to 0-5.

Northport’s game plan from the very beginning of the game was obvious — run the ball down the Blue Devils’ throats. The Tigers ran 11 straight plays after receiving the opening kickoff and all of them were on the ground. Campoli ran six times for 76 yards, and he finished the drive with a 9-yard score.

Northport would score again in the second quarter but this time it was the defense that registered the points. Linebacker Ben Pipolo would stop Blue Devil halfback David Djebi in the Huntington end zone for a safety and give the Tigers a 9-0 lead with just over nine minutes remaining in the half.

As the rain became more ferocious, Northport got sloppier with the handling of the ball. The Tigers fumbled twice on their next two possessions and the Devils took advantage of the second turnover. Djebi slipped a tackle and sloshed 38 yards down to the Tiger 1-yard line and quarterback Joey Zink snuck it in to make the score 9-6.

But another 11-play drive by Northport to close the half put them up 16-6. Quarterback Simon Blissett completed his only pass of the afternoon on the march, and it was a big one. He threw a rainbow down the right sideline to his brother Calvin for 28 yards to the 4. Campoli slid into the end zone on the next play.

Two explosive plays, one by each side, highlighted the second half. On the first play of the 4th quarter, Djebi broke four tackles on his way to a 91-yard touchdown run that made the score 23-13 but this was quickly negated by kick returner Luke Loiacono who broke a few tackles of his own while bringing back the ensuing kickoff 89 yards to the house. It was the final scoring of the afternoon.

Northport will attempt to win two games in a row for the first time this year when the team travels to Bellport this weekend. Huntington tries again to get into the win column when it hits the road to Deer Park.

By Steven Zaitz

The Hauppauge-Smithtown girls swimming and diving team, who are the defending New York State champions, defeated the combined forces of Huntington, Harborfields, Walt Whitman and John Glenn high schools last Thursday. The final score was 105-73, and it was Hauppauge-Smithtown’s 19th consecutive victory in Suffolk County swim meets, a streak that dates back to March 25, 2021.

The HASM team set the tone in the very first event, the 200-yard medley relay, as the senior twin sisters and team captains Makayla and Morgan Lee, senior captain Madison Dominger and eighth grader Julia Lucca finished the race in 1:57.92. They were the only quartet to swim this event in less than two minutes. It was the first of an 11-event sweep of non-diving events for the girls who are from Smithtown East and West as well as Hauppauge.

Makayla Lee would go on to win the 200-yard individual medley, and Morgan Lee won the 100-yard butterfly. Sarah Lucca, only 13 years old, was victorious in the 50-yard freestyle, and senior teammate Sofia Burns won the 100-yard freestyle. Makayla would notch another win with Sarah Lucca, Olivia Chiofolo and Grace Bruder in the 200-yard freestyle relay, besting her sister Morgan, who was on the second-place foursome with Burns, junior Mary Schroeder and freshman Avery Wilcox. The margin of victory was barely more than one second.

“As a twin, it is always a competition with Morgan,” Makayla Lee said. “I beat her in that relay, but she is faster than me in other events. We are always pushing each other to be the best we can be.”

The Huntington-based team, which competed as HHWJ and is also known as HESHH (Huntington, Elwood, South Huntington and Harborfields), is now 2-2 in county meets and gave the state champs a push as well. They took the diving event, with Walt Whitman senior Venusmarlu Stewart taking home first place with 196.28 points; Ava Vandor, a sophomore from Harborfields, was second and HASM sophomore Caitlin Fleece finished third.

Between the two teams, there were 26 Suffolk County qualifying times — 21 of which were earned by HASM. The Lee twins, who attend Smithtown High School East, earned five of those. However, Makayla is not satisfied with just Suffolk County qualifiers.

“For me, I did not perform as well as I could, but I’m hoping to improve and qualify for states in our upcoming meets,” she said.

HHWJ got a strong performance in the 200-yard medley relay, finishing second with the foursome of Maria Petkovits, Catherine Muller, Julia Somers and Anna Knutson. Their time of 2:08.20 beat the county-qualifying time by three seconds. 

Sophomore Samantha Williamson snuck in just under the one-minute mark in the 100-yard freestyle to qualify for counties with a time of 59.88. After she was done on the diving board, Vandor along with Williamson, Knutson and Angelina Cuthbertson swam a 1:52.57 in the 200-yard freestyle relay which was good for fourth, earning them the right to go compete at Stony Brook University, where the Suffolk County championships will take place later this fall.

Vandor loves every aspect of competitive swim meets.

“The whole environment of these swim meets is like no other,” Vandor said. “It is truly the best feeling to cheer on your teammates, push each other and race our hardest in the pool. Great teams like Hauppauge-Smithtown drive our competitiveness, and many of us had personal bests at this meet. We did great, and I’m so proud of my teammates.”

HHWJ had another chance to compete, against William Floyd, Oct. 3 (results too late for press time) and HASM will battle the combined forces of Half Hollow Hills and Kings Park Oct. 5.