Sports

Legislators Sanin (front-right), Bontempi (back-right), and Donnelly (front-left) with the students and coaches of the Walt Whitman High School Boys Varsity Soccer team

At the Nov. 26 General Meeting of the Suffolk County Legislature, Legislator Rebecca Sanin, joined by her colleagues Legislators Stephanie Bontempi and Thomas Donnelly, proudly honored the Walt Whitman High School Varsity Boys Soccer Team in the Rose Caracappa Auditorium of the William H. Rogers Legislative Building.

The team was recognized for their outstanding accomplishments during the 2024 season, including winning the Suffolk County AAA Championship and the Long Island Class AAA Championship and advancing to the semifinals of the New York State AAA Class Tournament. Their remarkable performance has solidified their place as one of the best teams in both Long Island and New York State.

“The Walt Whitman Varsity Boys Soccer Team exemplifies the very best of Suffolk County’s student-athletes,” said Legislator Sanin. “This season was a testament to their skill, teamwork, and dedication, and they’ve inspired our community with their incredible achievements on and off the field. We are so proud of each of you.”

Legislator Sanin also commended the team’s coaching staff, including Head Coach John DiGiacomo and assistant coaches Brian Karcz, Robert Tedesco, Nicholas Costa, and Brayan Portillo, for their commitment to nurturing talent and fostering a culture of excellence.

The celebration highlighted the team’s ability to demonstrate resilience, leadership, and collaboration throughout the season, making them a source of pride for the entire Suffolk County community.

“This recognition is about more than championships,” Legislator Sanin added. “It’s about celebrating a group of young leaders who embody what it means to work hard, support one another, and strive for greatness. Congratulations on an unforgettable season!”

Legislators Sanin, Donnelly, and Bontempi presented a proclamation to the Walt Whitman Varsity Boys Soccer Team to commemorate their achievements and acknowledge their contributions to the community.

By Steven Zaitz

A cold and blustery night at LaValle Stadium on Saturday night, turned colder for the Ward Melville Patriots, as they were thumped by William Floyd 34-6 in the Suffolk County Conference I championship football game.

Floyd’s star running back Ja’Quan Thomas ran for 261 yards and five touchdowns and he delivered the keynote of the game, running for 45 yards on his first touch and then punching it in two plays later that gave the Colonials a 7-0 just three and a half minutes of the game. This  early display by the Colonial junior was a microcosm of what he has done to opponents all year – use both his  breakaway speed and bowling ball power to lead all of Long Island in rushing yardage with 2,322.

 Ward Melville sophomore QB Hudson Philbrick, who emerged as one of Suffolk County’s premier passers in 2024, was adversely affected by the stiff headwind at the start. The Patriots gained only one first down on their first two drives, and with good field position, Thomas took advantage on both occasions. He gave Floyd a 14-0 lead to close out the quarter and the Colonials had effectively landed the first two haymakers of the game. When Philbrick threw an interception on his third possession, Floyd looked to land another.

But something happened on the way to Thomas’s third trip to the end zone. Ward Melville’s sophomore Swiss Army Knife Joe Karpowicz, who plays defensive back, punter, kick returner, receiver, and running back, recovered a fumble in his own end zone that prevented Floyd from taking what might have been an insurmountable three-touchdown lead to start the second quarter.

With renewed vigor, aided and abetted by a 54-yard run by WM running back Joey Benedetto, Karpowicz ran in a direct snap from one yard out with eight minutes left in the second quarter. Benedetto finished the game with 176 yards on 28 carries – and in half where they thoroughly dominated territorially, Ward Melville went into the locker room with only a palatable 14-6 deficit.

The second half would prove much less palatable, especially the first 180 seconds of play

After recovering a fumble deep in Floyd territory on the opening kickoff, Philbrick threw his second interception of the night, and any momentum that Ward Melville mustered from their takeaway was snuffed out.

But things would get worse for the Pats very quickly.

On the next play from scrimmage, Thomas galloped 72 yards into the endzone for his third TD of the night and a 20-6 Colonial lead.

“Ja’Quan is a great player,” said Ward Melville DL Nate Wain. “He is different from the other backs that we have faced because he runs with both tremendous speed and strength.”

Thomas would show that power burst after Ward Melville fumbled the ensuing kickoff, barreling over would-be tacklers on a ten-yard run to get the ball to the one and then taking it in two plays later. In a flash, the score was 27-6 with less than three minutes gone by in the third quarter – and the rest of the game was rendered a freezing formality.

“All good things come to an end”, said the senior Wain. “We left it all on the field today and while we may have lost the game, we won in heart, unity, and brotherhood. Every step we took together and every challenge we faced, they made us stronger as a team and I think I can speak for all the seniors, when I say that we will remember these experiences forever.”

One of those positive experiences was the 22-21 victory over Floyd in the regular season and the two playoff wins this year that sent them to Stony Brook for the Suffolk County finals. But for this night, especially the 15 or so seniors who played in their final high school football game, it was much colder and sadder than the Patriots would have hoped.

Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

The Stony Brook women’s basketball team kept Marist to just 12.1 percent from 3-point range (4-for-33) and 30.3 percent overall (20-for-66) on their way to a 69-49 win over the Red Foxes on Nov. 18. The victory marked the Seawolves third straight victory this season

The Seawolves (3-1) had three players score in double figures, led by Breauna Ware, who had a career-high 21 points and seven rebounds. Zaida Gonzalez added 20 points and eight rebounds as Chloe Oliver chipped in a career-high 15 points and three steals off the bench.

Stony Brook out-rebounded Marist 44-36, led by Gonzalez’s eight boards, while scoring 17 points off of 15 Red Fox turnovers.

HOW IT HAPPENED

After falling behind 2-0, Stony Brook went on a 15-0 run with 8:55 left in the first quarter. Stony Brook did most of its first quarter damage in the paint, scoring 14 of its 27 points close to the basket. Ware led through the opening frame with 12 points as Janay Brantley tallied three rebounds and three steals on the defensive end.

The Seawolves kept its first quarter lead intact before going on a 6-0 run starting at the 6:41 mark in the second period, highlighted by a driving bucket from Oliver. Gonzalez led with six points as Oliver added five to showcase offensive dominance on their home court. Stony Brook forced five Marist turnovers in the period and turned them into five points.

Stony Brook continued to preserve its halftime lead before going on a 5-0 run, punctuated by a thrilling three from Oliver with one second to go in the quarter. Ware tallied six points to lead the Seawolves, going 2-for-2 from behind the arc. Those three-pointers from Oliver and Ware accounted for nine of the squad’s 13 points.

Stony Brook kept its lead going on a 6-0 run halfway through the fourth quarter, as Gonzalez scored eight points to power the Seawolves past Marist. The Red Foxes narrowed the margin somewhat before the game was over, but Stony Brook cruised the rest of the way for the 69-49 win.

#84 Dez Williams scored two touchdowns during Saturday's game. Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

In their last game of the season, Tyler Knoop threw for a career-high 408 yards while Dez Williams put up 134 receiving yards and two touchdowns as Stony Brook scored their most points since 2018 but the Monmouth Hawks exploded for 55 points, giving themselves the victory at LaValle Stadium on Nov. 23.  

The Hawks improved to 6-6 on the year and 4-4 in Coastal Athletic Association play, while the Seawolves fell to 8-4 overall and 5-3 in conference match-ups.

Knoop went 37-for-53 on the way to the 408-yard, three-touchdown outing with one interception. Roland Dempster led all Seawolves rushers with 95 yards in the contest, picking up 4.8 yards per carry. Dempster also added one receiving touchdown. Knoop also added 22 yards on the ground. Williams’ 134-yard, two-touchdown performance led the Stony Brook receiving corps. Jayce Freeman also hauled in five passes for 93 yards and Jasiah Williams chipped in with eight grabs for 81 yards as well.

Jordan Jackson showed out for the Stony Brook defense, collecting five tackles and one forced and recovered fumble. AJ Roberts had a team-high nine tackles, while Chayce Chalmers and Shamoun Duncan-Niusulu each tallied seven, respectively. 

Stony Brook also had an outstanding day offensively, racking up 559 total yards, 128 on the ground and 431 through the air, while averaging 6.2 yards per play. The Seawolves were keeping drives alive, converting on 43.8 percent of third-down attempts.

By Bill Landon

No. 3 seed Ward Melville came calling on No. 2 seed, Longwood Lions, in Friday night’s Suffolk Division I football semifinals. It was a ground-and-pound battle where the Patriots nipped the Lions 14-7, punching their ticket to Saturday night’s championship final at Stony Brook University.

Longwood opened the scoring in the second quarter with a 29-yard breakaway run by Kalen Percer, but the Patriots answered in the closing seconds of the half when Joey Karpowicz plowed into the end zone on short yardage to knot the game at 7-7. Six minutes into the fourth quarter, Ward Melville running back Joey Benedetto, who piled up 186 rushing yards, punched one in on a four-yard run, and Ethan Jargo’s kick split the uprights for the 14-7 final.

Ward Melville (9-1) will square off against William Floyd (9-1) in the Suffolk Division I championship game at Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 23 at 7 p.m.

Tickets can be purchased here: gofan.co/app/school/NYSPHSAAXI

By Steven Zaitz

Undefeated seasons, long winning streaks and milestones? Check, check, and check.

Suffolk County crowns, Long Island championships, New York State supremacy and dominating dynasties? Yes, we’ve got those too.

It has been an unprecedented, exhilarating and ultra-successful fall season for the entire Ward Melville Patriot athletic program in 2024 — and the green and gold are not even close to being done.

In what stands as one of the most impressive athletic dynasties in New York State history, the Ward Melville Lady Patriot girls soccer program won its third straight New York State Championship on Nov. 17. The team traveled to SUNY Cortland and defeated upstate Arlington 1-0 in the tournament’s final match. Senior goalkeeper Kate Ronzoni made a lunging save on a penalty kick in the dying moments of regulation to preserve the win while Adriana Victoriano scored the game’s only goal in the 62nd minute. The Lady Patriots now boast a 63-game unbeaten streak and finished 2024 with a sparkling 20-0-1 record.

Both the boys and girls volleyball teams will compete in their respective State Championship tournaments after winning Long Island titles.

The boys secured their second consecutive Long Island Championship by defeating Massapequa in a five-set marathon in East Meadow on Nov. 15. They were led by senior Kyle Fagan, who earlier this fall recorded the 1,000th kill of his high school career. Now, the team heads to Albany to face upstate powers such as Penfield and Shenendehowa. After falling in the round-robin stage last year, the boys hope for a different result in 2024 bolstered by the valuable experience gained in 2023.

Fagan, who will attend Penn State next year, appreciates being part of Ward Melville’s winning tradition.

“It’s really cool being a part of a program that is so successful across the board. By being part of this program, it sets the expectation of excellence which I believe pushes its athletes and teams to work harder and do better. And so far, most teams have lived up to or exceeded these expectations,” he said.

The girls volleyball team will compete for a state title in Glens Falls this weekend against yet-to-be-determined opponents. Senior Emma Bradshaw, a Gettysburg College commit, led the team to victory over Plainview-Old Bethpage last week in Wantagh with 22 kills. The Lady Patriots dropped the first set, 22-25, but rallied to sweep the next three, 25-18, 25-23 and 25-20, earning a trip upstate. They remain flawless at 20-0 this season.

The football team advanced to the county final after two playoff wins. The Patriots will take a short trip to LaValle Stadium at Stony Brook University to face the William Floyd Colonials. The Colonials, talented and determined, are still smarting from a 21-20 loss to Ward Melville earlier this season. In that game, Floyd coach Paul Longo opted to go for a two-point conversion with no time left, but Ward Melville’s defense forced an incompletion, handing Floyd its only loss of the year and setting off joyous bedlam at Ward Melville stadium.

The Patriots reached the county final by defeating Longwood 14-7 last Friday, despite being dominated by the Lions in the regular season matchup 35-7. Sophomore quarterback Hudson Philbrick has been a key contributor this season, throwing 14 touchdown passes against seven interceptions. Excluding the loss to Longwood, the Patriots’ defense has held opponents to 14 points or fewer in seven of nine games this season.

While on the subject of football and game days, the cheer squad traveled to Hudson Valley Community College in Troy earlier this month and won a New York State Class A title in the Game Day Cheer competition, improving on its second-place finish in 2023. They earned the Suffolk County Championship in Game Day the previous week, outperforming local competition at Sachem North High School. Chalk up another county and state title for Patriot Nation.

The boys cross-country team also made history, capturing the Suffolk County Championship at Sunken Meadow for the first time in 51 years. Seven runners advanced to the state finals in Queensbury, just south of Lake George. Senior Jon Seyfert led the way, finishing 12th in the 5K race with a time of 15:41.70 while teammate Anthony Anatol placed 22nd with a time of 15:51.20. Andrew Senf, Matteo Ritieni, Tim Brown and Matt Fumai also represented the green and gold. Elizabeth Wright qualified on the girls’ side, finishing 45th overall in 19:13.80.

The Patriot field hockey team, a perennial powerhouse, made headlines by defeating the dynastic Northport Lady Tigers in the Suffolk semi-finals 1-0. Peyton Phillips scored the game-winning penalty stroke in the final minute, marking the first time in five years Ward Melville eliminated Northport in the playoffs. The Lady Patriots ultimately fell to Sachem East 1-0 in the county final. But they have made it to the Suffolk County finals for five consecutive years.

If you’re keeping score, that’s two state championships with two more pending, five Suffolk County championships and the football team aiming for a sixth. Add a program-wide winning percentage exceeding 90% and Ward Melville High School has firmly established itself as Long Island’s premier athletic powerhouse this fall.

“There has definitely been a buzz around the school and the community,“ said Ward Melville Athletic Director Kevin Finnerty. “We’ve been very successful over the years and many of our teams succeed year after year, but this year has been exceptional. We have great support from the community and the school district but most importantly our coaching staff. We have a very passionate and experienced coaching staff and they take a lot of pride in what they do.”

So far in 2024, Patriot Nation has countless reasons to be proud.

Photo from Stony Brook Athletics

The Stony Brook women’s basketball team held Yale to just 6.2 percent from deep in a 1-for-16 shooting performance on the way to a 62-48 victory over the Bulldogs at the historic John J. Lee Amphitheater in New Haven, C.T. on Nov. 15. 

The Seawolves (2-1) had three players score in double figures, led by Janay Brantley, who scored a career-high 17 points, while adding seven rebounds. Zaida Gonzalez tacked on 15 points and six rebounds as Breauna Ware chipped in a career-high 14 points and two steals. Chloe Oliver also tallied a career-high nine points through 36 minutes of play. Brantley pulled down three offensive rebounds to lead an offense that racked up 12 second chance opportunities for Stony Brook, turning them into seven second chance points. Defensively, the Seawolves forced 17 Yale turnovers, and used those takeaways to score 13 points on the other end of the floor

“Proud of our fight and grit on the road against a very good Yale team. Road wins are never easy, and I’m happy we were able to keep our composure down the stretch and finish out the game. We were focused on getting stops on the defensive end, and I’m most proud of the multiple effort plays that disrupted their offense. This was a great step in continuing to build on our identity which centers around toughness,” noted head coach Joy McCorvey postgame.

 

The team celebrates their victory after Saturday's game. Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

The Stony Brook volleyball team earned a three-set sweep (25-22, 26-24, 25-19) against the Campbell Fighting Camels on Nov. 16 on the road at Gilbert Craig Gore Arena in Buies Creek N.C.

The victory moved the Seawolves’ record to 16-12 overall and 9-9 in CAA play to close out the regular season. Stony Brook would clinch their third-straight CAA postseason berth after securing the win.

Kali Moore finished with 14 kills on the day to lead the Seawolves as Abby Campbell, Leoni Kunz, Quinn Anderson, and Ayanna Pierre Louis each contributed to the Stony Brook attack. Defensively, Madison Cigna and Julia Patsos each tallied double figure digs with 16 and 11, respectively.

The team will head to Towson University for the CAA Championships beginning on Nov. 21. Stony Brook earned the No. 6 seed and will face the No. 3 seed with the race for the top spots still being determined in either Charleston, Delaware, Hofstra, or Towson. The match is set for 6 p.m. with coverage available on FloVolleyball.

ON FIRE: #3 CJ Luster scored 30 points during Saturday's game at Island Federal Credit Union Arena. Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

CJ Luster scored 30 points to help lead the Stony Brook men’s basketball team over St. Joseph’s (L.I.), 93-45, at home on Nov. 16. 

Luster added nine rebounds and two steals to his 30-point game to lead the Seawolves. Nick Woodard helped out with 11 points, eight rebounds and two blocks, while Joe Octave chipped in with 15 points.

Stony Brook’s defense held Saint Joseph’s (L.I.) to only 16 percent shooting from beyond the arc and 25.4 percent from the field.

After jumping out to a 13-9 advantage, Stony Brook went on a 9-0 run to increase its lead to 22-9. The Seawolves added eight points to that lead by the end of the period and entered halftime with a 40-19 advantage. Stony Brook did most of its first half damage in the paint, scoring 24 of its 40 points close to the basket.

Following the intermission, Stony Brook kept widening that lead, expanding it to 68-34 before going on a 7-0 run, finished off by Jeremiah Nyarko’s layup, to grow the lead to 75-34 with 9:18 to go in the contest. 

The Seawolves kept expanding the margin and coasted the rest of the way for the 93-45 win. Stony Brook shot well from three-point range in the second half, connecting on eight shots from deep to account for 24 of its 53 second-half points.

“Good win for us. I thought that we played hard defensively… What we were looking for tonight was elite communication, elite huddles on free throws — we had that. We are still learning each other, we are trying to make each other better. We have a lot of good players. We’ll get there,” said head coach Geno Ford postgame.

Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

As part of its continued partnership with SNY, the Stony Brook University Athletics Department announced a linear television agreement with SNY to air 19 basketball games during the 2024-25 season. SNY will air nine Stony Brook men’s basketball games and 10 women’s basketball games this season. Last season, SNY aired 20 Stony Brook basketball games, the largest linear television deal in program history.

The men’s team, who surged all the way to the CAA Championship last season behind upsets of Drexel and Hofstra, return the likes of Andre Snoddy and Jared Frey and welcome eight new faces to the roster in 2024-25. The women’s team, under the direction of first-year head coach Joy McCorvey, welcomes back key contributors like Zaida Gonzalez and Shamarla King. The reigning CAA Regular Season Champions brought in three newcomers and look to return to the CAA Championship for a second straight season.

To purchase tickets, click here, call: 631-632-WOLF or email: [email protected].

Stony Brook Basketball on SNY:
Men’s Basketball:
Saturday, November 16 vs. St. Joseph’s Long Island – 6:31 p.m. (Live)
Sunday, December 1 vs. Norfolk State – 1 p.m. (Live)
Tuesday, December 17 vs. Marist – 7 p.m. (Live)
Saturday, January 4 vs. William & Mary – 12 p.m. (Live)
Thursday, January 9 vs. Drexel – 7 p.m. (Live)
Saturday, January 11 vs. Northeastern – 7 p.m. (Live)
Thursday, January 23 vs. Campbell – 7 p.m. (Live)
Saturday, January 25 vs. N.C. A&T – 12 p.m. (Live)
Thursday, February 27 vs. Hofstra – 7 p.m. (Live)

Women’s Basketball:
Monday, November 18 vs. Marist – 7 p.m. (Live)
Wednesday, November 27 vs. Harvard – 12 p.m. (Live)
Sunday, December 22 vs. Cornell – 1 p.m. (Live)
Friday, January 10 vs. William & Mary – 7 p.m. (Live)
Sunday, January 12 vs. Charleston – 12 p.m. (Live)
Friday, February 7 vs. Hofstra – 7 p.m. (Live)
Friday, February 14 vs. Hampton – 12 p.m. (Live)
Friday, February 28 vs. Delaware – 7 p.m. (Live)
Sunday, March 2 vs. Monmouth – 1 p.m. (Live)
Sunday, March 8 vs. Drexel – 12 p.m. (Live)

All games on SNY will be accessible live via SNY.tv and the SNY app to authenticated subscribers. Authenticated SNY subscribers can access live game broadcasts provided they are within SNY’s broadcast territory.