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Northport High School

By Steven Zaitz

In the first inning against Bay Shore, the Northport Tigers baseball team looked more like Bears — The Bad News Bears, that is.

With their ace pitcher Liam Fodor on the hill, the Tigers kicked the ball around the infield to start the game, making three errors and giving up four unearned runs in the first inning to the undefeated Marauders.

Not a good start — at all.

Tack on a very earned run in the form of a 340-foot solo homer to left by left fielder and cleanup hitter Darnell Guerrero in the third inning and Bay Shore had itself an early five-run lead.

Making Northport’s situation extra bleak was the sight of Marauder pitcher Christopher Rouleau, who stands 6 feet 5 inches tall and was cruising through a Tiger lineup that mustered only two baserunners and a lonely run in the first four innings. Rouleau was dominant during that stretch, racking up six strikeouts and pitching to very soft contact.

“The first part of that game was rough and giving up four runs in the first inning was deflating,” said Northport Associate Head Coach Sean Lynch. “But our guys don’t quit.”

Entering the seventh inning down by three, Northport sprang to life. Rouleau walked the leadoff batter Fodor.  Left fielder Tom Tini also drew a walk and Bay Shore replaced the tiring Rouleau with lefty reliever Hayden Preston. He promptly hit right fielder Rocco Stola with a pitch, putting the potential tying runs on base.

Designated hitter Mike Catrone hit a comebacker that drove in a run and centerfielder Dan Thomson grounded out to third to drive in another. But now the Tigers were down to their last out.

Senior third baseman William Deriso stepped into the batter’s box with Northport down by a run with an eager Stola itching to score from third. With two strikes, Deriso, who had been 0-3 with two strikeouts against Rouleau, hit a towering fly ball to left field. Guererro turned his back to home plate and gave chase. He would run out of room.

The ball clanked off the billboard-sized, metallic scoreboard that is situated behind the left field fence for a two run home run. The blast put the Tigers ahead 6-5 and their bench exploded with joy.

“As soon as Will hit that ball, I knew it was gone,” Lynch said. “The wind was blowing out and he put a great swing on it.  He is a huge part of our offense and he showed why today.”

There was still a matter of the bottom of the seventh. Clinging to this newly found one run lead, Fodor, who had been brilliant in his two previous starts, retired the first two batters.  In a game that started on shaky ground for the senior right-hander, he was one out away from a complete game victory.

“Liam is a true leader,” Lynch said. “He threw a one hit shutout against Smithtown East, but I think he was even better in this game because of the way he dealt with the adversity. He kept us in the game”

But before Fodor could close the books on this one, he needed one more out. Right fielder Coltrane Calloway refused to cooperate, lining a single to center. Guerrero followed with a single of his own and suddenly the tying run was in scoring position for the Marauders. Guerrero was 3-4 with a homer and three runs batted in on the day.

After a long discussion between the umpiring crew and both coaches about the starter’s pitch count, it was determined that Fodor had to come out of the game. So, in came Jason Schwartz to try and finish it.

Schwartz induced a weak grounder to third. Deriso, a hero just moments before, threw the ball past first baseman Joe Gonzales and Calloway scored the tying run. Schwartz got the next batter, but this hard-fought game was now going to extra innings.

With two outs and nobody on for Northport, Schwartz walked and Tini dumped a single into left. Leadoff hitter Stola stepped in against the lefty.  After fouling off a hittable pitch on 3-1, Stola, the multi-sport superstar, knocked himself in the helmet with his bat in frustration.

“I should have put a better swing on the 3-1 pitch,” Stola said. “He threw it up and in and I was a little early on it and fouled it off. After that pitch, I reminded myself to wait on the ball against this guy.

Stola’s mental note paid off. He laced the 3-2 pitch into the right center field gap for a double. Schwartz scored rather easily and Tini raced around all the way from first, giving the Tigers an 8-6 lead. Once again there was pandemonium in the Northport dugout.

“That was awesome,” Stola said. “I knew I had to come through in that clutch moment. I appreciate that my coaches trust me by putting me high up in the order and I feel like I’ve got to deliver in that spot.”

After allowing a leadoff single in the bottom of the inning, Schwartz got the next three batter, all on strikes, to preserve the win.

“Jason came in and was outstanding,” Lynch said. “He got the grounder in the seventh inning that should have ended the game, but instead of letting it bother him, he got out of the inning and struck out the last three batters of the game. That was a tremendous job by Jason.”

With the win, Northport is 5-2 and stays within the top tier of teams in League II, along with Bay Shore (6-1), Connetquot (5-1) and Huntington (4-2).  Bay Shore travels to North Babylon on Thursday while Northport is at Half Hollow Hills East.

For more photos, visit tbrnewsmedia.com.

By Steven Zaitz

The Huntington Blue Devils were three outs away from a lost weekend of baseball.

Down by two runs going into the seventh and final inning on Saturday, May 8, and looking dead in the water, they exploded for four runs off of a leaky Northport Tiger bullpen to steal a 6-4 victory. They were able to salvage a split of their two games on the opening weekend of high school baseball season across Suffolk County.

Senior pitcher Kyle Colleluori threw a complete game and was able to settle in after the Tigers scored three unearned runs against him in the first inning. He finished with six strikeouts and the four runs he allowed were all unearned.

“We showed a lot of heart out there today,” Colleluori said. “I knew the guys would settle down defensively. I have a ton of confidence in my teammates, and I’m glad we got this win.”

Despite Colleluori’s righting of the ship and the defensive improvements they made throughout the game, it was a late and surprising offensive assault by the Blue Devils that stole the show and stunned the Tigers. After senior pitcher Liam Darrigo pitched six brilliant innings of his own for Northport, the Tigers, clinging to a 4-2 lead, brought in Joseph Gonzales to face the bottom of Huntington’s batting order to secure the save.

Gonzales was greeted rudely by a hard hit single by Devil second baseman Alex Bellissimo and then a towering double to right by the lanky first baseman Palmer O’Beirne.  That immediately put the tying runs in scoring position and stirred further activity in the Tiger bullpen.

With one out, Blue Devil senior shortstop Chris Segreti drove in a run with a clean single to left, his fourth hit of the game, cutting the Tiger lead to 4-3. Gonzales was replaced by Dan Thomson, setting up the seminal moment of the game.

Centerfielder Dylan Schnitzer, recently recovered from a broken thumb, stepped in against the hard-throwing lefty Thomson. He sat on a 3-1 fastball and laced it to left center field for a hit. O’Beirne scored easily from third, and Segreti dove headfirst underneath the tag of Northport catcher Richard Kershow to plate the go-ahead run. Schnitzer later scored to give Huntington a 6-4 lead.

“That was a huge hit there by Dylan,” said Blue Devil head baseball coach Billy Harris. “It seems like it’s been two years since we’ve gotten a timely hit like that, so that was a really big moment for us.”

“It was really cool to be in that position and give my team the lead,” said the versatile Schnitzer, whose primary position is catcher, but was playing centerfield on this day. “We wanted to attack their bullpen as soon as possible, because the other guy [Darrigo] was cruising the whole game.”

Northport head coach Sean Lynch believes his decision was the correct one despite the result.

“One of our biggest strengths is our pitching depth and our bullpen,” Lynch said. “Liam was up around 90 pitches and we need him for the entire year to give us length.  If we can’t count on the guys in the pen, then we’re not the team we thought we were.”

“But I feel confident that the guys we brought in will bounce back. In baseball, you blow saves sometimes, and I don’t think any of us coaches feel like we should have done anything differently in that situation.”

The day before

Northport didn’t need the bullpen on Friday Night against Smithtown East as Liam Fodor was brilliant, striking out 11 Bulls batters in a 4-0 complete game masterpiece.  The game was scoreless until the sixth inning when junior shortstop Ray Moreno manufactured a run with a single, advanced on a wild pitch, then a fielder’s choice and scored on a passed ball. The Tigers tacked on three more in the seventh inning, as catcher Mike Catrone and third baseman William Deriso both hit triples and scored.

Huntington ran into a buzzsaw that same night as they fell to reigning Suffolk County champions Connetquot, 7-1. Thunderbird shortstop James Goff had three RBIs, and pitcher Sean Mileti held the Blue Devils offense at bay, giving up only one run on five hits in seven strong. Legendary Connetquot baseball coach Bob Ambrosini, who died this past December from COVID-19 complications, was honored before the game, which was held at Moriches Baseball Complex. Carmine Argenziano, of Deer Park, and Bill Batewell, of Sachem and Bellport, both of whom have also recently passed, were also honored.

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By Steven Zaitz

Often times, a football game is just a football game.

But there are instances when it is a lot like chess, with the guys in the headsets matching wits and probing for weakness. Other times, the game is just an all-out street brawl, with both sides trading haymakers until one is left standing.

On rare and glorious occasions, it is all three.

Saturday’s Suffolk Conference II semifinal game between the Northport Tigers and the West Islip Lions was just such an occasion, as West Islip survived a late Northport rally and emerged with a 21-14 victory. The game featured wild swings of momentum and emotion, bloodied uniforms, in-game adjustments, and impossible escapes.

The outcome having enormous consequences for both sides — a trip to the Conference Championship and a chance to own a piece of the Suffolk County Crown — only added to the drama. The pressure was palpable on the field, on the sidelines and in the bleachers.

West Islip senior Joe Constantino, who is listed as a quarterback, but does most of his damage on the ground and with his brain, rushed for 125 yards and two touchdowns to lead West Islip.

“Joe is a special athlete,” said Northport Head Football Coach Pat Campbell. “He’s probably the best running back in Suffolk County and he’s playing quarterback. He’s got a really nice lean and as good a tackling team as we are, we could never get a full shot on him. That’s what they always said about [NFL greats] Walter Payton and Barry Sanders.  You could never hit them square. That’s how Joe runs.”

But Constantino would have to wait to take center stage, as West Islip Head Coach Steve Mileti elected to kick to Northport to open the game — a big early gamble by Mileti because Northport had scored on 75% of its first possessions in the regular season. Mileti’s risk was rewarded.

After a three and out and a poor punt gave West Islip the ball at the Tiger 30-yard line, in came Constantino.

“Joe is probably the best kid I have ever coached,” Mileti said.  He’s just a magician with the way he handles everything and he’s amazing to watch.”

That is quite a statement, as Mileti has been around the Lions program for 30 years, first as a star linebacker and then an assistant coach starting in 1997. He took the reigns as head coach in 2009 and he has built a program that is a perennial winner, developing many fine players over the years.

On third down and six, Constantino faked a jet-sweep handoff to running back Ryan Behrens. He then burst through the middle just past the fingertips of Northport linebacker Owen Johansen and scampered to the Tiger two-yard line.  Three plays later, he outflanked the Tiger defense and walked into the end zone to give West Islip a 7-0 lead.  It was the first time the Tigers had ever trailed in a game this year.

“A lot of bad things happened in the first five minutes of that game,” Campbell said.  “We had a missed assignment, a bad snap and a bad punt on our first drive and that set them up. When you’re playing a good team like that, you can’t do those types of things.”

Against Constantino who now drew first blood, this is especially true.

“A lot of people call our team small and it’s true that we are smaller in size than most teams, so any little thing we can take advantage of, we have to go try and get,” said the humble superstar senior Constantino. “Watching film, seeing what the other team does is very important because so often that stuff shows up in games.”

After another Northport three and out, the Lions took over at midfield.  On a fourth and two play from the Tiger 35, Constantino used a hard count to get right end Cole Ronan to jump offsides and give the Lions a free first down — a costly mistake.

Eight plays later, Konrad Maciejny scored from the one-yard line.  The Tigers were in a two-touchdown hole, the game was well into the second quarter and they had yet to gain a first down.  Constantino had landed another punch and the Tigers were reeling.

Northport and West Islip would go into halftime separated by 14 points. The Tigers were wounded for the first time since 2019, but would they lay down and die?

“During halftime, we definitely talked about being more disciplined,” Campbell said. “It was about a matter of re-focusing and cleaning up the little mistakes that were costing us. Sometimes I can tell by the look in their eyes that the kids become a little shell-shocked in a situation like that.  It’s my job to remind them what they’re capable of.”

Campbell is referring to the Tigers greatest strengths — stopping the opposing offense and running the ball.  They stopped the Lions on three plays to start the third quarter. Anthony Canales had one of his 22 (yes, 22) tackles on this drive and almost caught Constantino in the West Islip end zone.  This was a game of so many ‘almosts’ for the Tigers and their hardy supporters.

After an 11-yard punt return by Rafe Carner, Northport was set up deep in Lion territory.

On the Tigers second play from scrimmage in the second half, running back Rocco Stola ran a sweep left. He saw enemy shirts in the hole he was supposed to hit, bounced it outside and in a flash, was gone. A lightning strike 27-yard touchdown, and the Tigers were suddenly back in business, down by seven with a whole half of football remaining.

“That play was supposed to go inside the tackle, but the blocking developed where I thought I could get to the outside and I did,” Stola said. “It got us back in the game and swung the momentum to us.”

It was now Constantino’s turn to make a counter move.

On the next drive, he ran the ball four times for 40 yards and completed a pass for 20 more, moving to the Northport 10-yard line.  On one of those runs, he was swung down hard by the Tigers’ massive sophomore Johansen for a loss of five but bounced up off the artificial turf and called the next play. Constantino was pounded hard by all 11 Tiger defenders all afternoon, who are all big, fast, and mean.

“He’s what? 165, 170 pounds?” Campbell asked rhetorically.  “But he is tough, and he gets right up every single time.”

After Carner made a splendid, touchdown-saving, open field tackle on Behrens at the Tiger 10-yard line, Constantino again showed his moxie, instincts and escapability.

On a play designed to go left, Ronan sealed it off so the slippery quarterback cut right. Ronan chased but Constantino ran away from him and fellow lineman Dan Lugo.  He angled to the goal line and pierced through nose tackle Ryan Farrington and Stola like they were twin turnstiles, and then bounced off linebacker Andrew Miller and Carner. He kissed the end zone pylon with the nose of football after a headlong dive.  It was a feat of ballet dancer and bulldozer all wrapped up in a 10-yard touchdown jaunt.

And just as Northport had thought they wrested momentum to start the half, Constantino had wrested it back, restoring West Islip’s two touchdown lead with a huge chunk of clock now gone.

“I immediately saw that defensive end [Ronan] coming at me, so I knew I had to cut back to the right,” Constantino said. “I saw a little opening and as soon as I did, I caught a glimpse of the pylon out of the corner of my eye and went for it.  It worked out well.”

For West Islip, yes.  Not so much for Northport.

“We should have stopped him on that play,” said Canales, who is a candidate for both the Collatta and Burnett awards presented to most outstanding linebacker and defensive player in Suffolk County. “We had four or five chances to get him, but he’s a shifty runner. Hats off to him.”

“We came out in the second half and flipped the script, but then they flipped it right back and we were running out of time,” Campbell said. “They stacked the box against us, and at some point, we had to adjust our game plan.”

The Tigers, whose vaunted running attack averaged 300 yards rushing per game in the regular season, had a grand total of 81 against West Islip. Gaining the first move advantage by scoring two early touchdowns freed the Lions to deploy more defenders closer to the line of scrimmage, taking away the strong suit of Northport’s offense.

But with a little over a quarter to go, would the Northport Tigers fight back or simply throw in the towel or start mixing in some throws? Anyone familiar with Northport athletics knows the answer, and no greater example of this fighting spirit came in the form of a fourth down desperation run by Rocco Stola.

With the Tigers facing a fourth down and two from their own 41 and the clock whittling away any realistic chance for a Tiger comeback, it was do or die for Northport. Lined up as a slot receiver, Stola came in motion to the right on a play called Wing Left 46 Truck.  Immediately pursued by four Lions at the snap of the ball, Rocco simply outran them but was ceding ground way behind the line of scrimmage in doing so.  He cut upfield sharply, rolled out of the tackle of a fifth defender before diving headlong out of bounds for a tremendously hard-fought gain of four.  The Tigers still had a pulse.

“There was no way they were stopping me,” Stola said.  “I knew the situation and they chewed up a ton of clock and it got late early for us, but I was getting that first down no matter what.”

“What a great run by Rocco,” Campbell said. “We didn’t block the edge as well as we should have, but he got outside and gave himself enough room to belly back and beat three or four of their guys and then spun past another. Incredible.”

But with less than five minutes to go and down by two scores, the Tigers would now need to put the ball in the air on almost every play.  Quarterback Conner Gallagher, who did not complete a pass in the first half, now held the fate of the game in his hands. He accepted the challenge.

Gallagher hit wide receiver Tristan Triolo with a 10-yard pass and then led Stola perfectly on an eight-yard slant pattern that the speedy running back turned into a 40-yard gain. With a pep now in his step, he scrambled for a first down and then hit Carner in the back of the end zone for a 15-yard score.  That cut the lead to 21-14 with a minute and a half to go.

With only one timeout remaining, the Tigers were forced to try an onside kick. West Islip recovered, took a knee, and the game was suddenly just over. Constantino and Mileti executed their magic act of a game plan perfectly and made the game, and Northport’s dream of a county title, disappear.

“They had a great game plan, ran time off the clock and took advantage of our mistakes,” Campbell said. “The total yardage was almost exactly even [188 to 174 for the Lions] and it was just a great, defensive, hard-fought football game.”

Coach Mileti echoed that last sentiment.

“Football is just a special game and we saw it out there today,” Mileti said. “It was two great programs giving everything they had, and we were lucky enough to come out on top.”

For the first time this year, it was the Tigers whose luck had run out.

Tigers are still playing!

Despite the lost to West Islip, the Northport Tigers football team will host Half Hollow Hills East this Saturday at 1 p.m.

This game will determine a Section XI, League III champion and will be the final game of the Tigers’ season. The original match that was scheduled between the two team back in March was canceled due to COVID-19.  The Thunderbirds lost to Bellport in their semifinal game, setting up the opportunity for this game.  Bellport will play West Islip for the second time in three weeks in West Islip, the winner capturing the Conference II championship.

By Steven Zaitz

Demolish, rinse, repeat.

The Northport Tigers football team made Smithtown East its latest victim this past Saturday, as they cruised to a 50-13 road victory in St. James and ran their record to 3-0. The Bulls drop to 2-2.

Senior running back Andrew Argyris rumbled for 139 yards and three touchdowns, leading a rushing attack that gained 376 yards.  Junior Jack Sandrib had 89 yards, and senior Rafe Carner had 71 and two scores.  This trio averaged over nine and a half yards every time they touched the ball against Smithtown East. The Tigers have averaged 301 rushing yards in their three victories this season.

“Our philosophy is to run it down their throats until they prove they can stop us,” Argyris said. “Our offensive line is nasty, and they open up big holes for us.”

Smithtown East found itself in a nasty situation right from the opening whistle.  They won the coin toss but elected to kickoff to the Tigers. Ten plays later, it was 7-0 Northport on Carner’s 3-yard touchdown run. The Bulls fumbled the ensuing kick and Argyris scored on the very next play to make it 14-0 — and Smithtown East’s offense had yet to touch the ball. “It was like an avalanche,” said Northport Head Coach Pat Campbell. “We didn’t give them a chance to breathe because we did a good job of turning their mistakes into early points.”

Northport converted three East turnovers in the first half into 17 points and had a 44-0 lead at halftime. One of those turnovers was an interception by senior cornerback Tom Tini.

“They had a stack on my side of the field, and I read what he [Bulls Quarterback Nick Karika] was trying to do and he threw it right to me,” Tini said. “I’ll take that any day!”

Despite his perfect diagnosis of the play, Tini was kicking himself for not turning the interception into a pick six. “My coaches were busting my [butt] because if I made one cutback, I would have been gone, “Tini said. “It cost me a steak dinner.”

Regardless of Tini having to pay for his meal, the Tiger defense was its usual mauling self.  They were responsible for only one of the Bulls’ touchdowns — the other was a 86-yard fumble recovery by East’s  Santino Pollina — and have given up only two scores in three games this year, both of which came in garbage time.  The Bulls eked out 162 total yards, which is the high-water mark this year for a Northport opponent. The Tigers have allowed only 129 per game on average – a remarkably low number.

“Our TNT [defensive line and fittingly also an abbreviation for dynamite] is just dominant,” said Campbell.  “They do a lot more than take blockers. It’s three against five up there and most times, our three are winning that battle against the opponents’ five.”

One of those three is Cole Ronan, who registered a sack and two tackles behind the line of scrimmage versus Smithtown East. His nickname is Big Nasty.

“Our main goal is to eat up the blocks and let our linebackers come down hill and make the tackles,” said the 6’3” senior. “We work really hard all week in practice to get ready and it shows up in the games.”

His linemate, senior Dan Lugo, loves to have ‘meetings’ with fellow linemen Ronan and senior Ryan Farrington.

“We are always talking about meeting in the backfield, meeting at the quarterback, meeting at the line to stop the running back”, laughed Lugo, who is known around the locker room as Big Daddy. “We have great chemistry.”

So far that chemistry has resulted in the Tigers outscoring their opponents 99-19, with Copiague next on the schedule. The Eagles have laid quite the egg this year, having dropped all three of their games, outscored 155-8 in the process.

Pictured clockwise from above, Smithtown’s Matt Kaires stiff-arms Northport’s Ryan Bell; the Tigers Andrew Argyris on his way to a 28 yard touchdown run; and Jack Sandrib takes on two tacklers in Northport’s win against Smithtown East.

By Steven Zaitz

Sixty regulation minutes was not enough.

The extra 10 in overtime could not decide it either.

When the Northport Tigers field hockey team invaded Smithtown East March 22, the matchup pitted two of the elite teams on Long Island. They needed a shootout to decide it, and it was Smithtown East goaltender Gianna Festa who stood tall.

She did not allow a goal in the shootout, stopping all four Northport attempts. Dani Brady, one of Long Island’s top players scored on her mano y mano with Northport goalie Natalie McKenna, who was also excellent, that decided it for the Bulls.  The final score was officially 2-1.

Festa, who had 12 saves in addition to her four stops in the shootout, sparked a wild, equipment-flinging celebration seconds after making her final stop.  Brady, teammate Sydney Anderson and Northport’s Sophia Bica are all listed on Newsday’s Top 25 players of Long Island, but it was Festa that earned the Most Valuable Player of this star-studded affair, making several acrobatic saves throughout regulation, overtime and the shootout.

This game was a hard-fought war and the survivor — Smithtown East — has now equaled Northport’s record of 5-1. Ward-Melville, who beat Sachem East Monday, is atop the Suffolk County leaderboard with a record of 6-0.

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By Steven Zaitz

They waited almost 500 days to play a football game. They are now going to wait longer than expected to play the next one.

The Northport Tigers opened their spring season this past Saturday by blanking the Connetquot
Thunderbirds, 26-0. However, two Tiger players tested positive for the coronavirus following the
game and the entire team will be quarantined until at least March 24, postponing this week’s
matchup against rivals Half Hollow Hills East.

The Tigers are trying to stay positive, enjoy the win and hope for the best during the 10 day in-
person shutdown of the program.

“It was a great win,” said an emotionally mixed Head Coach Pat Campbell. “I told the guys that
we have to celebrate this win and appreciate it because nobody knows what the future holds.”

Yes, the immediate future of the team has a large font-sized question mark above its collective
head, but the present says they have a record of 1-0 after their thumping of the Thunderbirds.
The Tigers are looking at this early season pause philosophically.

“I talked to the kids and the message is not to lose your faith, look out for each other and we’ll
get back out there in short order,” Campbell said. “We’re going to meet virtually, and I have a lot
of trust in this team. We’re going to stay ‘together’ apart.”

On this autumnal day in March, they did more than stay together. They obliterated Connetquot
starting right from the opening whistle. The Tigers played a stifling brand of defense, allowing
the T-Birds 84 total yards and zero trips into the red zone. Northport linebacker Anthony
Canales was a human game plan wrecker as he had 13 tackles and a quarterback sack.

“That was the first real sack of my career,” Canales said. “It felt great.”

The senior and future Alfred University Saxon, who also had a forced fumble and three tackles for
loss, admits he might have had an extra bit of motivation on this day. Newsday’s list of Top 100
High School Football Players on Long Island was published the day before the game and
Connetquot’s Will Immel and Vncent Canatia were both on the list. There were no Tigers on it.

“I guess they forgot us this year,” said the jovial Canales. “I feel like we have a few players on
this team who could have made that list, but it’s only a list. At the end of the day, who really
cares. It’s cool to prove people wrong.”

Coach Campbell joked that he’s going to start calling his players 101, 102, 103 and 104.

On offense, the Tigers used an inside-outside running game and racked up an eye-popping 377
yards rushing. Rafe Carner led the way with 102 on the ground, and Andrew Argyris had three
blunt force touchdowns from in close. Jack Sandrib steamrolled his way to 95 yards on only six
carries, and Rocco Stola had 94 yards on seven carries. Stola, who plays defense and special teams as
well (i.e., he never comes off the field) was able to use his speed to out-flank the T-Bird defense
on sweeps.

“I’ve got to give credit to the blocking upfront,” said the modest Stola. “We have been working
really hard, in drills and in meetings, even from last year when a lot of things didn’t go our way.
But today, our offensive line was great. Our defense was amazing. I think all phases today
showed that Northport is ready to make a difference after all this time away from football.”

In 2019, the Tigers were ravaged by injuries, had a 2-6 season and missed the playoffs for the
first time in a decade.

“Last year [2019] we had a different kind of epidemic and it was injuries,” lamented Campbell.
“We had 22 separate injuries, many of which were season ending. We went through five
quarterbacks and by the time we got to the last game of the year, we were on our sixth.”

This year’s signal caller, senior Conner Gallagher, had a quiet game, completing half of his eight
pass attempts for 40 yards, but Campbell felt he did a fine job leading the offense.

“Conner looked good on the tape I saw,” Campbell said. “He’s going to be called upon to make
some big throws for us this year. But today, we were able to run it effectively.”

Looking at tape and holding virtual meetings are what the team is relegated to for the next week
and a half, but the coach is already planning on how to make best use of that time as they still
plan to play Huntington on March 27.

“It’s going to be hard, but I think it’s important to keep the routine and schedule and devote the
time to football that we planned on,” Campbell said. “As far as staying in shape physically, that’s
up to each kid being accountable for himself. The kids are in charge of the culture on this team,
and we have many great leaders. I have confidence in our leaders to be able to rally them up and
we’ll step up to this challenge as a team.”

Just another 10-day challenge; for Northport football, they can add that to the five hundred that
came before.

Hauppauge boys varsity swimming & diving team improved to 5-1 with a 101-79 win over Northport in a League II season finale Feb 5.

Fueling Hauppauge’s victory on Senior Day were seniors Vincent Reino, Michael Schroeder, Sean Napolitano, Michael Seda, Jake DiVilio, Owen St. Pierre, Seamus Buckley, Jalin Belli-McCue and Anthony Sicurelli 

With the win the Eagles are solidly positioned for a top seed in the League finals which begin Feb 13 at a venue yet to be announced. The Section XI Diving championships follow on Feb. 18 also at a site to be determined. 

This month, Northport High School senior Dillon Heinzman, above, was honored with the Technology and Engineering Student of the Month award and fellow senior Maxwell DeBrino was honored as Science Student of the Month. Both students showed incredible passion for their respective courses and will be recognized during the Jan. 21 board of education meeting. 

Maxwell DeBrino

Dillon’s commitment to his technology and engineering courses was apparent throughout high school, having taken both Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate classes as well as Project Lead the Way engineering courses. District Chairperson for Science, Technology and Engineering David Storch said, “Dillon’s diligence and tenacity in all his STEM courses exemplify his determination to comprehend complex and highly specialized concepts along with outstanding computer science and technological skills.”

Similarly, Maxwell DeBrino has had an impressive educational career, starting the school’s Trout Team and a co-captain of the school’s Science Olympiad team. When describing Maxwell, Mr. Storch said, “he is a creative and inquisitive scientist who possesses a passion, commitment and sense of wonder when he is conducting experimental research.” 

Northport High School. File photo

By Leah Chiappino

In light of graduation season, Northport High School has named Peter DeTolla and Alea Brummel valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively.

Peter DeTolla

Like all members of the Class of 2020, both students have attempted to rise to the challenge of celebrating senior year in the face of a pandemic, while mourning the loss of classic senior moments, such as prom and traditional graduation.

“I definitely would have preferred to have finished my senior year in school with all of my classmates, but I am trying to make the best of the situation,” Brummel said. “While I am sad that I didn’t get many of the opportunities I would have had if we had been in school, I am extremely grateful for the efforts our principal Mr. Danbusky and all of the other staff and teachers at Northport High School who have made efforts to ensure we get a special ending to our senior year such as lawn signs or the drive-by parade we had.”

“The pandemic was really a slap in the face, as everyone in the Class of 2020 missed out on the best part of high school,” DeTolla added. “However, my school made a great effort to make us feel appreciated and I thank them for that.”

DeTolla finished high school with a 102.78 grade point average and plans to attend Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the fall, with hopes of becoming a mechanical engineer.

The valedictorian was involved in Students for 60,000, a Northport High School-based service organization dedicated to helping the needy. Through the club, DeTolla went on a service trip to Nicaragua, which he says was a highlight of his high school experience. “My experience in Nicaragua as a part of Students for 60,000 is something I’ll never forget,” he said. “I’ve become so appreciative of the life I have, and those trips are a big reason for that. The memories and friends I made there are truly remarkable.”

DeTolla added that another highlight from high school was beating Ward Melville High School “on their home turf,” at a record-breaking lacrosse game.

“It was a euphoric feeling that I share with every member of the team,” he said.

One of four children, DeTolla said he grew up in a close, well-rounded family, something he attributes to his success.

“My mother and father, Aimee and Peter, raised me to be a balanced individual with a strong work ethic and kind spirit,” he said. “Our family is very close, and I can’t imagine not being a part of it … I would like to thank every teacher, coach, older cousin and any other role model in my life for giving me the tools to succeed.”

Alea Brummel

Brummel, who earned a 101.62 GPA, is headed to Baylor University in the fall to study chemistry and mathematics on a pre-med track, with the hopes of working in sports medicine. For the salutatorian, it was her combined love of sports and science that led her on this path. At Northport, she was the head student athletic trainer and was able to assist the district’s athletic trainer in treating and rehabilitating injured student-athletes. The times when she was working directly on the football field, she said, were some of her favorite memories from high school.

“I am a huge football fan, and it was awesome to not only go to games but to also get to work as a student trainer for the games,” she said. “It was an amazing experience to be on the field with the players, and I am hoping to potentially pursue a career in sports medicine so it was incredible to get to see what the atmosphere is like.”

Despite her school and training commitments, Brummel also was involved in community service through her church. For the past two years, she has gone on a service trip to the Dominican Republic over February break.

Brummel said she has loved growing up in Northport and “had an amazing experience at Northport High School.” She praised all of her “amazing teachers,” but gave special thanks to her AP Chemistry teacher, Don Strasser, as his class was a major factor in Brummel choosing chemistry as a major. She said her math teachers likewise fueled her passion for mathematics, and that she is deeply grateful to her mentors in the sports medicine program, Tracey Braun and Shawn Scattergood. Brummel thanked her family for “always being incredibly supportive of me and always being there for me.”

She advised next year’s senior class to take the time to cherish senior year.

“Make sure you take advantage of all of your opportunities and make sure to have fun and enjoy your senior year,” she said. “This year especially has shown us, not everything is guaranteed to happen as expected, so make the most of what you experience — go to the game, go to the dance, go out with your friends.”

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Northport showed why they’re the No. 1 seed in the girls Class AA semifinal against the No. 4 seed Patriots of Ward Melville, surging ahead by 13 at the half Feb. 22, then stretching that lead to 20 points after three quarters to win it, 69-53, at Centereach High School.

Northport sophomore Sophia Yearwood topped the scoring chart for the Tigers with two triples, four from the floor and a free throw for 15 points. Sophomore Sophia Bica netted 14, and seniors Danielle Pavinelli and Kelly McLaughlin banked 13 and 12, respectively, for the Tigers.

Ward Melville senior Jamie Agostino scored 14 points, as did freshman Julia Greek, and senior Sarah Bucher netted 11 for the Patriots.

Ward Melville finished their season with an impressive 12-3 league record, 17-5 overall.

The win lifts the Tigers to the Suffolk Class AA title game against No. 2 Longwood at St. Joseph’s College Feb. 29.

Tickets are $10.00 cash at the door. Game time is 7:30 p.m.