High School Sports

Ward Melville High School student-athletes who committed to continuing their sports on the college and university levels are pictured with athletic department faculty during the College Athletic Commitments Ceremony. Photo courtesy of the Three Village CSD

During the annual College Athletic Commitments Ceremony, held in the Ward Melville High School gymnasium on May 22, 44 student-athletes announced their commitment to continue their sports at the college and university levels. Kevin Finnerty, executive director of health, physical education, recreation, and athletics congratulated the athletes on their dedication to their sports and the parents for their behind-the-scenes support.

Congratulations to all of the athletes!

Anna Albert, swimming, SUNY Cortland

Nicholas Armato, lacrosse, SUNY Oneonta

Grace Balocca, lacrosse, Villanova University

Norman Bergamaschi, football, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Daniel Brausch, football, Utica College

Zachary Brittman, lacrosse, SUNY Stony Brook

Ava Carrillo, lacrosse, Virginia Commonwealth University

Wilman Castellon, soccer, SUNY Oneonta

Olivia Comerford, lacrosse, University of Pennsylvania

Sophia Corpac, cheer, University of Rhode Island

Peyton Costello, soccer, College of William and Mary

Annabel Dimaculangan, swimming, Georgetown University

Robert Ehlers, football, SUNY Maritime

Robert Hauss, soccer, SUNY Cortland

Owen Haviland, soccer, Stevenson University

Abaigeal Higgins, swimming, University of Mary Washington

Sebastian Jolley, football, Hartwick College

Gabrielle Justiniano, soccer, Southeastern University

Aidan Kilduff, lacrosse, Mount St. Mary’s University

Griffin Kramer, football, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Ava LaMedica, lacrosse, Stetson University

Shawn Legge, volleyball, Juniata College

Brian Liebowitz, track & field/cross-country, SUNY Stony Brook

Hanna Matheson, swimming, Stevens Institute of Technology

Aidan McMinn, lacrosse, SUNY Binghamton

Riley Metz, diving, Tufts University

Brody Morgan, lacrosse, Towson University

Grace Mulham, lacrosse, Princeton University

Thomas Murphy, lacrosse, SUNY Stony Brook

Madden Murphy, lacrosse, Boston University

Harshith Pennabadi, tennis, Temple University

Amelia Pirozzi, lacrosse, Marist College

Amanda Probst, track & field/cross-country,
     Coastal Carolina University

Emilia Retzlaff, lacrosse, United States Naval Academy

Brady Reyling, baseball, SUNY Plattsburgh

Stephen Rosano, lacrosse, Sacred Heart University

Dalton Rutt, baseball, SUNY New Paltz

Kate Spinks, lacrosse, Brown University

Jake Sudaley, lacrosse, Saint Leo University

Maryjane Timpanaro, lacrosse, University of Rhode Island

Marissa Tonic, soccer, Marymount University

Vincent Vinciguerra, swimming, University of Pennsylvania

Kimberly Vosswinkel, cheer, Quinnipiac University

Jack Wheeler, lacrosse, Hartwick College

By Steven Zaitz

Think of your favorite baseball movie. Everybody has one. If it’s Bull Durham, Field of Dreams, or even Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars, it won’t have as dramatic an ending as the deciding game of the Suffolk County Class AAA title between Commack and Sachem North this past Sunday.

The tying and championship-winning runs were on base in the bottom of the seventh for Sachem North against Commack ace right-hander and reigning Suffolk County Pitcher of the Year, Evan Kay.

Entering the final frame, Commack built what seemed like an impregnable 2-0 lead with Kay having thrown six scoreless innings and looking as dominant as ever. He had scattered four hits, struck out seven, and walked no one entering the seventh.

But after two infield hits and a clean RBI single by Sachem third baseman John Ferrante, not only was the shutout gone, but the game – and the championship – was in serious jeopardy for the Cats. The tying run was 90 feet away, and the potential winning run at first with only one out.

Kay, known for his fiery demeanor and over-the-top competitiveness, was in quite a sticky situation – somewhat uncharted waters for him. Kay pitched in four games last year in the postseason and allowed exactly zero runs in 28 innings on the way to the Cougars’ third straight county title and the 2023 Long Island championship. Sachem North was looking to put an end to Commack’s burgeoning dynasty.

But first a meeting at the mound.

Kay had thrown close to 90 pitches in the 80-degree heat. Could the unthinkable be happening, and Cougar head coach Matt Salmon be coming out to take Kay out of the game?

“No,” Kay said. “This was my game to win or lose.”

After about 45 seconds, Salmon patted Kay on the backside and told him to get the next two guys out.

 “Evan wasn’t coming out,” Salmon said. “He is the best competitor I’ve ever coached and was gonna finish the inning if they tied it up, or we were gonna lose the game right there. I just told him that getting this done was what he was born to do – to get these next two outs.”

After the meeting broke up, Kay walked to the back of the mound, his back to home plate, and played patty-cake with his resin bag before slamming it down to the turf. He was ready to face this challenge.

A safety squeeze attempt to get the runner in from third by Flaming Arrow catcher Matt Podesta went foul, and Kay fanned Podesta on the next pitch. It was Kay’s ninth strikeout of the day, and the Cougars were one out away from a Suffolk County four-peat.

Sachem second baseman and leadoff hitter Jack Pitman, who had a single off of Kay to start the game, was now in the batter’s box.

Pitman, a lefty, hit a bouncer to Cougar first baseman Brady Cascone, who bobbled it momentarily. Cascone managed to shovel the ball over to Kay, who scrambled to cover the bag, in time to nip Pitman at first. Kay and Commack had done it again. They were Suffolk County champions for the fourth straight year; and for Kay, this 2-1 nail-biter might have bested them all.

“When I stepped on first base and saw the umpire give the out signal, it might have been the best feeling after a win that I’ve ever had,” said Kay, who holds the record in Suffolk County for consecutive scoreless innings with a remarkable 60. “The past few years, we were just better than everybody else. But we lost a lot of guys this year, and we had to fight for almost everything we got, and I think we’re the better team for that.”

One of the new guys in the lineup in 2024 is catcher Robbie Mascia, who is in only eighth grade. Mascia was struck by a bat in Saturday’s loss to Sachem North, and after a postgame visit to Urgent Care, there was some doubt as to his availability for the deciding game. But come Sunday, Mascia was behind the plate.

“It’s not broken, so I wanted to be out there,” said Mascia, who, until the swelling subsided, had a golf ball-sized lump on his wrist the night before. “I love catching Evan, and today his stuff was as good as it’s ever been. His change-up was dialed in, and it was falling off and moving late. That’s his out pitch.”

Both starters were getting outs, as the game was scoreless through five. Anthony Vino, the Sachem North starter, showed signs of fatigue in the sixth and lost command of the strike zone. He gave up a hit and two walks, the second of which to pinch hitter Matt Shovelson with the bases loaded, As he came in to score on Shovelson’s walk, Commack right fielder Dean Vincent demonstratively jumped on home plate with his arms flapping in the air like a giant crane, much to the delight of the always-boisterous Commack bleacher cats. Commack had finally broken through.

Cougar fans would get even louder when Kay doubled down the line in the seventh to drive in center fielder Ryan Krzemienski for a 2-0 Commack lead. Krzemienski reached on a walk, one of seven that Vino allowed, in addition to five hits over seven innings. Commack had itself a vital insurance run that would end up being the difference in the game.

“I wish we would have been up 15-0 nothing because I would have sweated a lot less,” said Salmon, who has been the head coach of the Cougars for three years and has won the county championship in every one of them. “It was a great game, and this win means so much to the Commack community that supports us and each other and rallies around in times like this. It’s a great thing to be a part of.”

Next week, Salmon and his team will try to give the people of Commack something even greater when they take on Nassau champ Farmingdale. Kay will be on the mound as the Cougars seek their second Long Island championship in three years and despite this game’s exciting climax, the drama of the 2024 Commack varsity baseball team still has not played its final act.

2024 Suffolk County Class A Champions. Photo by Bill Landon

By Bill Landon

It was the bat of Emily Lopez bat that sparked the Miller Place (No. 3) offense with a two-run homer in the opening inning coupled with some lights-out pitching from Ava Zicchinelli that kept Islip (No. 2) at bay in the Suffolk County Class A championship final Saturday, May 25. Islip answered in the top of the third, but the Panthers plated two more insurance runs to protect a 4-1 lead after six innings of play. 

With Islip’s backs against the wall and down to the last three outs, Zicchinelli kept the Buccaneers on their heels and fanned the final batter for the win at the Martha Avenue sports complex in North Bellport. 

The Panthers will return to Martha Avenue Thursday, May 30, to contest the Long Island championship round where they’ll face the winner of the Wantagh/Seaford game. First pitch is scheduled for 5 p.m. and tickets can be purchased at: gofan.co/app/school/NYSPHSAAXI. 

By Steven Zaitz

Northport, Ward Melville, and lacrosse always make for a high-stakes combination. It was no different last Friday, May 24, when the two girls varsity teams faced off in the Suffolk County Class A championship game at neutral-site West Islip.

This time, the Lady Patriots came out on top, doubling up their most bitter rival with a score of 8-4.

Northport, who beat Ward Melville in the county final two years ago when Isabella Germani scored with three minutes left to lift Northport to an 8-7 win, could not ride the wave of their emotional semifinal victory against Commack, which gave head coach Carol Rainson-Rose her 500th career win.

Ward Melville’s stifling defense led to numerous Northport turnovers, and the Patriots capitalized on them. Attacker Grace Mulham and midfielder M.J. Timpanaro scored second-quarter goals that gave Ward Melville a 4-2 lead. Senior attacker Kate Spinks scored to open the second half, and senior goalkeeper Ava Carrillo did the rest.

Carrillo made six saves, many with a great degree of difficulty, and played a positionally sound game, rarely giving Northport anything to shoot at.

Tiger freshman Riley Cash had two goals, and senior captains Kennedy Radziul and Christina Lauro each scored once. However, big guns Julia Huxtable and Kate Atkinson were held scoreless.

Freshman middie Aliya Leonard had a pair of goals, and junior Ava Simonton and senior Mia Pirozzi also scored.

The Lady Patriots, who last won the Suffolk County championship in 2007, will take on the winner of Farmingdale and Massapequa for the Long Island championship next weekend.

Wildcats WIN! Bill Landon photo

By Bill Landon

Shoreham-Wading River Wildcats (No. 2) struck first and never trailed in the Suffolk Class C boys lacrosse semifinals against Kings Park (No. 3) at Thomas Cutinella Memorial Field, Friday, May 17. 

The Gregorek brothers set the tone with senior Liam Gregorek notching his hat trick midway through the 3rd quarter as did his younger brother Noah, an eighth grader, to put the Wildcats ahead by six goals at 9-3. The senior quartet of Brendan Meskill along with twin brothers Liam and Alex Kershis answered the call with two goals apiece, and Andrew Cimino found the back of the net in the Wildcat 13-5 victory.

Senior goalie Jaden Galfano stopped 13 between the pipes.

Jack Salva had two goals for Kings Park and teammates Luke Griffin, John Flynn and Billy Berhalter each scored.

Kings Park concludes the 2024 campaign with a 10-6 record.

The Wildcats advance to the championship round where they’ll face top-seeded Bayport-Blue Point at Longwood High School Thursday, May 23. Game time is slated for 8 p.m. and tickets can be purchased at: gofan.co/app/school/NYSPHSAAXI.

Jack Deliberti rips one over the top of Ward Melville goalkeeper Davon DiFede. Photo by Steven Zaitz

By Steven Zaitz

It was a rivalry that has become a domination.

And the latest chapter was delivered with quite the punctuation.

The Northport boys lacrosse program thrashed Ward Melville on Saturday, May 18, by a score of 14-3 in the Suffolk County Class A semifinal match at Northport. It is the eighth straight time the Tigers have beaten the Patriots, three of the eight knocking Ward Melville out of the playoffs.

Northport goalkeeper Quinn Napolitano made an astounding 20 saves in the contest that sent the second-seeded Tiger team, led by Northport alum Billy Cordts, to face top-seed Half Hollow Hills. Northport beat Hills 7-3 on May 8 but the Section XI power ranking computer put Hills, who beat Huntington in their semifinal, atop the playoff bracket.

Northport attacker Jack Deliberti netted a nickel-full of goals, all five coming in the second half to lead the onslaught for hosting Northport. Fellow attacker Luke Loiacono scored three in the first half to ignite the Tiger attack, the second of which gave the Tigers the lead for good and it came with exactly one second remaining in the first quarter. 

Midfielders Quinn Reynolds and Logan Cash had a pair each and crafty veteran Tim McLam scored from the seat of his pants at the end of the first half to give the Tigers a 6-2 lead. It would balloon to 11-2 when Deliberti and Reynolds alternated goals in an eight-minute span to bridge the third and fourth quarters. The rout was on.

Deliberti added a triple dollop of dessert with three more to finish off the luckless Patriots. 

Meanwhile, Napolitano was busy fending off shots until the very end, as Ward Melville played hard until the final whistle – some might say a little too hard.

As frustration set in, slashing and cross-checking penalties were assessed late in the game to Thomas Murphy and Zach Brittman of Ward Melville as yellow flags flew frequently in the fourth quarter. Giancarlo Valenti and Derek Vassallo were also given unsportsmanlike penalties for the Tigers.

Northport (15-2) will be playing in its fourth straight Suffolk County final when they play Hills at neutral site Longwood on Thursday afternoon at 3 p.m. They have won the previous three with two Long Island championships since 2021, but fell to Farmingdale last year.

Ward Melville, who got two goals from Aidan Kilduff and one from Callan McLaughlin, finishes at 13-4. Davon DiFede made nine saves for the Patriots.

By Steven Zaitz

It was the latest in a long history of 500 wins — and probably the sweetest.

The situation surrounding the Northport girls lacrosse team’s semifinal victory over Commack last Friday was like an old-fashioned Hollywood thriller with lots of subplots and a twisty, edge-of-your-seat happy ending — but when the credits rolled there wasn’t a dry eye in the house.

In an exhilarating, 8-7 win that came down to the very last Commack possession, the Lady Tigers booked a trip to the Suffolk County finals for the seventh year in a row and in doing so, earned the 500th career win for legendary coach Carol Rainson-Rose, who with her husband Al Rose at her side, has coached every game in Northport girls lacrosse history.

Five-hundred wins is quite the number and is unofficially the most by any high school lacrosse coach in the United States. Embedded in that legacy, are two New York State titles, seven Long Island crowns, 15 Suffolk County championships and hundreds of girls who have benefitted from both the lacrosse and life lessons the Roses have bestowed upon them.

After the game, emotional Tiger players gave their coach a bouquet of yellow and purple roses and golden mylar balloons in the shape of the number 500. As an entourage of camera phones and well-wishers followed her around, Carol was moved to tears.  

The balloons, flowers and fanfare were all a nice touch on her big win, but the greatest gift on this day was being able to share the occasion with her coaching and life partner, Al Rose.

“This win was one of the greatest moments of my career,” Carol said.  “I wanted Al to be able to celebrate this milestone. He has coached all 500 games with me, and we started this program together in 1990. He loves these girls and enjoys spending every day with them. Whether he is pacing the sideline or hanging in the corner and watching, his presence is always felt.”

Last summer, Al had surgery to remove a brain tumor. At the time, the news of this was not widespread around campus but the surgery was considered a “success”. When Al rolled onto the Northport campus at practice time in a wheelchair at the start of the 2023-24 school year after word had finally gotten out, students, coaches, and parents from every Northport team stopped what they were doing. En masse, they formed a receiving line that started at the big blue rock near the football field and snaked around the running track.

Al didn’t say much that day and just flashed his signature smile, which was perceived by those who greeted him, as perhaps a sign that he was on his way back to them. Shortly thereafter, he was diagnosed with the dreaded glioblastoma; an aggressive, spindle-like brain tumor that is ultra-resistant to traditional forms of cancer treatment and rarely allows for good outcomes.

Despite this horrible situation, there was Al a few months later, at his wife’s side at the start of 2024 lacrosse season, patrolling the Lady Tiger sidelines in their opening game against Huntington – the school that this coaching duo beat to win their first county championship in 1996. 

“Every day and every game I thank God that he is still able to be here,” Carol said.

The players feel the same.

“Man Rose (Al) is like a ray of sunshine, and I speak for everyone on the team that we are grateful every day that he is here,” said senior captain and midfielder Christina Lauro. “He is so supportive, has such a kind heart and he inspires us so much because he shows us how strong a person can be. He has taught us all to live our lives to the fullest, and every girl on this team plays her heart out for him.”

As they did in this battle to reach the county final against Commack.

With the score tied at 4-4 late in the second quarter, sophomore attacking winger Kaleigh Howard, who has seen more playing time as the season has progressed, bolted around from behind the net and snapped off a sharp-angle shot as she was being knocked to turf by a pair of Commack defenders. The shot beat Lady Cougar goal-keeper Olivia Bezmalinovic on the short side to give Northport a 5-4 lead.

“I saw an opening to go in and drive to the net,” said Howard, who is also the starting varsity soccer goalkeeper. “When I shot the ball and I saw it touch the net, it was like a dream.”

Carol was thrilled by Howard’s efforts not only in scoring that important goal, but how her demeanor inspires the team.

“Kaleigh’s goal was epic,” she said. “She fired up the entire team with that one as she got up off the ground and was so pumped. Her emotional celebration was motivational.”

Attacker Kate Atkinson, who is also a sophomore, but has already amassed 124 goals playing for the Roses, scored to open the second half and give Northport a 6-5 lead and freshman Riley Cash, who had three goals in the game, made a nifty high-low fake to beat Bezmalinovic for a two-goal lead. Ashley Arizonas, who came off the bench for the Lady Cougars, trimmed the Northport lead to one with less than a minute left before the fourth quarter. 

With the score 7-6, Lauro made a play that will not show up on the scoresheet. 

Three minutes into the fourth, Lauro, like a ball-hawking football safety, sprinted 20 yards across the field to make a clean interception of a Commack outlet pass. It was a play rarely seen in a lacrosse game, as ball control is so precious a commodity and long passes like the one Lauro intercepted, are usually made with extreme caution – especially at such a critical time in the game

“I was angry that we had just lost possession and I was determined to get it back,” said the Binghamton-bound Lauro. “It was really important because we kept the ball for a good amount of time after that play.” The repossession by Northport ate up three minutes of clock and it climaxed with Atkinson’s second goal of the game. 

But Commack wasn’t just going to be a willing participant in Northport’s fairytale ending, especially on their home turf. Amelia Brite scored to make it 8-7 with four minutes to play and Commack was looking for more.

With a minute left in regulation, Commack scooped up a loose ball and was circling Northport goal-keeper Charlotte Cuneo’s net. Seconds ticked down as Commack winger Aubrey Maurer came out from behind the net, checked by Northport defender Mary Breckling – Maurer found midfielder Michaela Burke, who was about 12 yards away from the goalmouth to Cuneo’s right. Breckling switched to cover Burke, but not soon enough to prevent Burke from firing an unmolested shot. Cuneo came out to cut off the angle and Burke’s shot glanced off the goal post and rolled into the awaiting stick of Northport defender Emma Greenberg. 

The Roses earned their 500th win. Send in the balloons.

“It was crazy. I didn’t really know what happened or where the ball ended up,” said Cuneo, who made 12 saves for Northport. “I’m so excited for my team and my coaches. Coach Rose deserves everything that comes to her. She works so hard to get us to this point and we couldn’t have done it without her.”

And she couldn’t have done it without her partner for the last 35 years. 

“Our whole team has embraced the ‘Fight Like Al’ mentality,” Carol said. “The girls wear red bows in their hair for him. The community has been amazing in supporting us in this journey and I was just overwhelmed with joy that he could be a part of this celebration. Al is a warrior and a fighter and so are these young ladies.”

Lauro and her mates knew this day was bigger than just the outcome of the game.

“Being associated with Coach Rose is an experience many wish they could have,” Lauro said. “Being on this team for four years has taught me so much about confidence and team play. We all knew that the game was about more than just us as players, and with all that has gone on, we knew we could not let this season end without us getting both of them their 500th win.”

On Friday, against top-ranked Ward Melville, the Roses and the Tigers together, go for the first of their next 500 – against their fiercest rival and number one ranked team in Suffolk, the Ward Melville Lady Patriots.

Al Rose is already looking forward to it.

“I am just so happy that the girls played their hearts out, defeated Commack and brought us back to the county championship game,” he said. “I knew they could do this because the girls on this team are warriors.”

They learned from the best. They fight like Al.

 

By Bill Landon

Both Connetquot (No. 5) and Ward Melville (No. 8) softball teams had their backs against the wall where both suffered an opening round playoff loss and wound up in the loser bracket Saturday morning, May 18. 

Connetquot at (12-6) hosted Ward Melville (10-8) in an elimination round of the Suffolk AAA Class championship and led Patriots 6-0 through four innings of play. Izzy Parente’s bat spoke next when she plated Kaitlyn Morales in the top of the 6th inning to take the goose egg off the board. Makenna Steinberg stepped into the batters box and drove in two more, then teammate Cate Scolaro drove in Steinberg for Ward Melville to trail 6-4 to go into the bottom of the 6th inning.

Down to their final three outs, the Patriots trailed 7-4 in the top of 7th but loaded the bases with two outs when Parente crossed home plate on a passed ball to trail 7-5. It was too little too late as Connetquot concluded the Patriots 2024 season.

By Bill Landon

Having survived a must-win game the day before, Shoreham-Wading River (No. 3) lived to face Sayville (No. 6) at home Sunday, May 19, in a Suffolk Class A playoff match.

Sayville banked two runs in the opening inning, but the Wildcats answered when Kyle Stella drove in Christian Cox to get on the scoreboard. Shoreham-Wading River sophomore Daniel Laieta homered in the bottom of the second driving in to put his team ahead 3-2, a lead that would be short-lived. 

Sayville leveled the game in the top of the 3rd but the Wildcats fell behind in the top of the 5th when Sayville drove in two more runs to make it 5-3. Sayville extended the lead to five in the top of the 6th at 8-3.

Shoreham-Wading River with three outs left, with their season on the brink, rallied in the bottom of the seventh inning plating three runners but Sayville ended the Wildcats season winning the game 8-6.

The Wildcats concluded their 2024 campaign with an impressive 17-5 record.

By Steven Zaitz

It ain’t over ‘til it’s over – but even then, it was still over.

Yes, it sounds crazy, even for a Yogi-ism, but so was the season finale – and the year as a whole – for the 2023 Suffolk County champion Smithtown High School East softball team. 

On May 9, in their last contest of 2024, they ambushed Bay Shore with seven runs in the final two innings of the ball game. They trailed 8-4 entering the seventh and won dramatically when freshman shortstop Sam Brescia smacked a single to right center field with two outs. Brescia’s hit drove in the game-tying and winning runs from second and third. It was Brescia’s third hit of the day, and it capped a wild and improbable 9-8 win for the Lady Red Bulls, who ended the season with a record of 9-10; just one win shy of making the playoffs. 

“There was a lot of pressure, but I didn’t really think about it too much,” Brescia said. “I just concentrated on making contact and hitting it hard somewhere in the gap.”

Until that point, most of the hard hitting in this game was by Bay Shore. The Lady Marauders took a 5-0 lead in the third inning on three hits, two walks, and some sloppy defense by the home team.

After Smithtown East took a small bite of the Bay Shore lead and made a 6-0 game into a 6-2 game after five, Bay Shore center fielder Isabella Petraglia blasted a homer to left center to start the sixth. The long ball gave her team a five-run lead and before the inning was done, they tacked on another and Smithtown East again seemed dead in the water. 

The Red Bulls had been in that position before in 2024. 

After winning five of their first seven in early April, they hit the skids by dropping eight of their next ten, the last of which was an 8-6 heartbreaking, come-from-ahead loss to Sachem East on May 6, that all but eliminated them from a chance to defend their title. They won their penultimate game against Lindenhurst and were looking to end their campaign on the high note with consecutive wins. It’s not a county championship or even a league title, but it was something to take into 2025, when they will have many returning players from this team’s roster.

Now, they faced a six-run deficit with only six outs left to play and even that small consolation seemed way out of reach.

RBI singles by Brescia, who was 3 for 5 on the day, and her double-play partner Casey Connelly in the sixth inning slashed the deficit to a more palatable 8-4 entering the seventh.

The Red Bulls were the beneficiary of two errors by Bay Shore first baseman Sydney Schaaf, who inexplicably lost the ability to catch the ball and make putouts in that final frame. 

Throughout the game, Schaaf had performed admirably with her first baseman’s mitt, making all the plays around the bag and even had one nifty unassisted put-out on a Connelly smash in the fifth.  But at crunch time, her glove transformed into oatmeal, as she dropped two seemingly unremarkable throws from her infielders that provided extra outs for the home team and ultimately an ending that would be very remarkable. 

After one out, center fielder Amelianna Santinello and catcher Riley Connelly singled. Lefty swinging right fielder Brooke Hanson hit one back to the mound, but Schaaf could not handle the throw from pitcher Erin Wolfe. Left fielder Lana Cain, who made a spectacular, run-saving catch to help stifle Bay Shore in the fifth, singled with two outs and then Casey Connelly reached on another drop at first by Schaaf that would have ended the game. 

With the Bulls now down 8-7, they had two outs and runners on second and third. Brecia laced a 3-1 fastball to right-center field. 

Cain scored easily, and as she was moving with two outs, Connelly scored without a throw to win the game.  After briefly piling on Cain and Connelly at home plate, the entire Red Bull team turned its joyful attention to Brescia.  They hugged and screamed and celebrated between first base and home plate for a few moments, until they united with parents and friends in the stands to celebrate a win for the final time in 2024.

“It was an amazing feeling knowing we had won the game and finished the season with a win,” said Brescia, who was on the 2023 championship team as an eighth grader. “Everyone played their hearts out and we deserved to celebrate. Hopefully next year, we’ll celebrate in the playoffs.”