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Brockport netted four goals in the final 12:49 of the second half en route to an 8-4 victory over Oswego State Thursday afternoon at Laker Field. Senior midfielder Amanda Pickard (pictured) found the back of the net on three occasions for the Golden Eagles (7-6, 3-2). The 2007 SUNYAC MVP and three-time first-teamer pushed her conference-leading totals in points to 20 (29 overall) and goals to nine (13 overall) with one game yet to play.

Sophomore Kelly Henry scored the game-winner in the 45th minute, she finished with a game-high four goals which more than doubled her season total (7).

The Lakers finished conference play with a conference record of 2-4 (3-9), winning multiple conference games in one season for the first time since 2002. They are on pace to have their best finish since 2005 despite the fact that second-leading scorer Brittany Roetzer (3 goals, 3 assists) has been out of action since Sept. 13 with an injury. Junior co-captain Kim Hiffa has also missed the past two games with injury; Emily Greene and Nichole Carlozzi each missed today's contest and were listed as injured.

The banged-up Lakers managed to make due with what they had for the better part of the game, leading 2-1 towards the end of the first half and within a goal midway through the second. Freshman Kelly Collins scored twice for Oswego State to finish her first SUNYAC season with 17 points (22 overall) and seven goals (8 overall). Sophomore Sara Budde helped keep the Lakers in the game with some stellar defensive work to help goalkeeper Jamie Scharfe protect the net.

Oswego State returns to action Oct. 14 when they visit Houghton at 4 p.m. They will be looking to avenge a Sept. 3 season-opening 6-2 loss at Laker Field.

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Battle-field hockeys future

  • Oct. 2nd, 2008 at 2:09 AM
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Every day brings 24 new hours to be explored. They can be useful, or not.
Last weekend, at a Fort Hill vs. Dunbar, D.C., football game in Cumberland, the Dunbar coach pulled his team in the third quarter, alleging racial taunts including the use of the "N" word. While leading 14-8, but in the middle of a Fort Hill drive that was being helped along by unsportsmanlike conduct penalties on Dunbar’s players and coach, Dunbar coach Craig Jefferies made the decision to discontinue play.
"They were trying to upset us, calling my guys the N-word," Jefferies told The Washington Post. "I had one guy in tears. I had to take him off the field."
The incident is being investigated by the Maryland attorney general’s Office of Civil Rights and by Fort Hill officials.
One of those officials, Fort Hill principal Steve Lewis, took the opportunity to tell The Cumberland Times-News, this:
"I’ve harped on this before, but we need to play local football," Lewis said. "When you play teams from out of the area that you don’t really know, it’s good in some situations and bad in others. ... When we stay local, we all know each other, our programs and our personalities. We know what we’re getting. We get along with each other and like each other, and we play great football. We need to play local football."
An unfortunate action by a coach and an incredible statement from an educator.
Football is supposed to help teach young players how to deal with adversity. An educator is supposed to teach young people about the world and those in it beyond their immediate, comfortable environment. Both coach and teacher are charged with building character and enlightening the students they serve.
Last Friday, whether the Fort Hill players actually used racial slurs or not, opportunity knocked for Jefferies, as one reader of the WUSA9 Web site pointed out: "This incident (if found to be true) would have been a great learning lesson for the young men of Dunbar by not walking away but standing strong and defeating FH and the bigotry attached to it. That thrill of victory is what legends are made of, i.e. Jackie Robinson, Roberto Clemente, Author Ashe [sic], Wilma Rudolph, Jim Brown etc., who ultimately gave each of those men the RIGHT to be on the field with FH."
Even if the incident was simply one of pure frustration for Jefferies and his players at the way the game was going, standing strong while facing adversity was still a lesson there for the learning.
Instead, the Dunbar coach had his players quit.
And, on Monday, Lewis’ answer was that the door to the rest of the high school football world – who may not look, act or think like the folks at Fort Hill – should be closed.
Here in Baltimore, City College coach George Petrides admitted being shock by all of it.
His team had played at Fort Hill in the opening game of the season because Petrides wanted to give his players a new experience.
"I wanted our team to feel a football atmosphere," said Petrides. "The whole city closes down there and comes out to the football games. It was a little road trip to a place with a different atmosphere. Except for the loss everyone enjoyed the trip."
It had been a tight football game, 6-6 at the half, and 14-6 Fort Hill with less than four minutes to play.
"We scored a touchdown with two and a half minutes to play that was called back," Petrides said.
Through it all, there were no racial incidents he was aware of.
After Friday’s incident, Petrides said he got a call from Fort Hill’s athletic director asking him to ask his players if there had been any racial slurs used during their game. Petrides asked.
"I don’t know what happened in the Dunbar game and I have no comment on that," he said. "But our fans and their fans got along great in the stands and there was nothing controversial in our game. It was a real good football environment."
Petrides said he would use the Fort Hill-Dunbar situation as a teaching tool.
"We’ll talk about it," he said. "On the field, there is always trash talk. That’s in every game. I tell my kids all the time to ignore it. To let their blocking and tackling do their talking."
Each day brings opportunity. It’s up to each to us to decide how to use it.

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Join the William Paterson Pioneers in the fight against breast cancer Oct. 2-8, 2008.

The annual campus-wide Breast Cancer Walk to raise awareness and charitable donations will be held Thursday, Oct. 2, starting at Zanfino Plaza at 12:30 p.m.

William Paterson will also conduct 50-50 raffles at three of its upcoming athletic home events to raise funds for cancer research -- Thursday, Oct. 2 (volleyball match, 7:00 p.m., Rec Center); Saturday, Oct. 4 (women's soccer match, 5:00 p.m., Pioneer Soccer Park); and Wednesday, Oct. 8 (field hockey, 7:00 p.m., Wightman Stadium).

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When the Golden Bears soccer team envisioned passing the Canada West season’s halfway point, they were hoping to come down the homestretch remaining undefeated, as well as gain some ground on the two British Columbia-based teams at the top of the standings. Instead, Alberta dropped both games this past weekend to the very same teams that they’re trying to catch, losing 3–1 to the Victoria Vikes on Saturday and 2–0 to the UBC Thunderbirds on Sunday at Foote Field.

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By Tim Dahlberg
AP Sports Columnist
OK, I'll give the Red Sox the whole nation thing.
Hard not to after following Boston through the playoffs last year and watching the throngs of faithful who always seem to show up no matter where they're playing. The one enduring moment of a short World Series in Denver last year was the sight of maybe 5,000 of them gathered above the dugout chanting, cheering and calling player's names long after the Red Sox finished their sweep of the Rockies.
For sure, no one else has a nation. Judging from the reaction of their fans this season, the Rays can barely claim a city.
The Red Sox Nation will be hard to miss Wednesday as the West Coast chapter gathers in Anaheim for what now seems like an annual rite of autumn. They'll be loud, boisterous and about as smug as you would expect them to be now that their team has won two of the last four World Series.
They weren't always this way. The same fans were once resigned to live out their lives under the curse of the Bambino, content only because they had a quirky little ballpark where they could go to share their misery with others just like them.
Then Dave Roberts steals a base, the Red Sox beat the Yankees four straight, and the culture of a nation changed.
So, too, has a team that in just a few short years has gone from the scrappy underdog that never could to the team that almost everybody outside the Red Sox Nation will be rooting against in the playoffs. Once mildly amusing because of their 86-year record of futility, the Red Sox aren't so cute anymore now that they spend money and win much like their rivals in pinstripes did so successfully for so many years.
Besides, there's only room for one cuddly team in the playoffs this year and the equally big-spending Cubs get that nod, largely, it seems, because they grow ivy on their outfield walls and haven't won a World Series now in exactly a century. Like the Red Sox, the Cubs also have a curse of their own, something about a goat that you'd have to get a real Cubs fan to explain.
They still hope against hope that this will finally be their year, but you could make the case that Steve Bartman did the Cubs a favor by getting in the way of a ball in a playoff game they had no business losing five years ago. Everyone loves a winner, but the Cubs wouldn't be nearly as lovable if they, like the Red Sox, had won a couple World Series titles by now.
There's not a lot to love about the Red Sox anymore, either, not when compared to the team that did the impossible in 2004 and beat the Yankees before sweeping St. Louis in the World Series.
That team had Johnny Damon leading off with hair flying everywhere and Big Papi and Manny Ramirez combining for 84 home runs. It had Curt Schilling's famous bloody sock and a rotation that also included Pedro Martinez and Derek Lowe.
More important, though, it had an underdog carrying the desperate hopes of a city - no, make that a nation - against the most evil of empires. Down 3-0 and trailing in game 4 against the Yankees, the Red Sox somehow managed to overcome all odds and win not only that game but the next seven, too.
It was inspiring, and it was thrilling. The nation gained a wave of new immigrants.
But now, as the Red Sox try to stake a claim to a Yankee-like dynasty of their own with their third title in five years, it's just old.
There's nothing warm and fuzzy about this team, not even anything terribly interesting. Manny is gone, David Ortiz' home run totals are plummeting, and their hopes of repeating as champions rest a lot on an imported pitcher they got only because they went all Yankee and spent more than $100 million to acquire and sign him.
The attitude among the nation, meanwhile is one more of entitlement than anything. Boston fans who once prayed the Red Sox would win a championship before they died now greet the postseason with the kind of bloated expectations that come from winning eight straight World Series games.
That won't stop them from turning out in big numbers in Anaheim, where the tickets are easier to get than at home and the Angels have proven easy pickings. They partied in the stands there last year when the Red Sox won, and they won't be shy about doing it again.
They're a nation, all right. Clad in red and ready to travel.
Put some pinstripes on them, though, and they'd look suspiciously like an empire.

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re of brutal honesty of what they are nowthe team has a website with the full 2009 schedule, a roster and videos of the beautiful facilities being builtand enthusiasm.
Wilder is a native New Englander, with a direct approach and unflappable demeanor dictated by his Maine upbringing. His leadership style is built upon his experiences up North, where he quarterbacked the Maine Black Bears to the championship of the now-defunct Yankee Conference, amassing over 4,000 passing yards by the time he graduated in 1987. He spent two years as a graduate assistant at Boston College before returning to his alma mater as quarterbacks coach. Wilder spent the next seventeen years at Maine (now a part of the CAA's North Division), rising to the position of associate head coach before the Monarchs came calling.
"We looked at some more experienced coaches with bigger names," admits ODU athletic director Dr. Jim Jarrett, "but my theory is that every successful head coach started as a player, then an assistant, and moved up. Somebody has to give them that chance."
Wilder's unrelenting positivity and outgoing nature may have served him as well as anything on his resume. Hired in February, 2007, he spent his first year coaching as both politician and salesman, convincing residents of this seaside city of 2 million that he was the right man for the job, and then trying to convince their sons to come play for him.
Norfolk, home of the Navy's U.S. Fleet Headquarters, is part of the vaunted Hampton Roads recruiting grounds, which annually turns out gifted Division One players in all sports. Allen Iverson and Michael Vick are the big names, but the local talent pool also produced Plaxico Burress, Alonzo Mourning, and MLB's David Wright, amongst many others.
"This area, for recruiting, is really tremendous; a nationally known area," says Wilder. "At first, I wasn't really interested in applying for a job at a start-up program, but that really piqued my interest." The school's all-in commitment to building a competitive program helped seal the deal.
Old Dominion has been without a football program since 1940, when the school was still a two-year branch campus of nearby William Mary College. Debt and lack of interest killed the original program in its infancy, leaving venerable Foreman Field to host mostly high school games for the next several decades.
As interest grew, money was still hard to come by, and an attempt to revive football in 1987 failed. According to Dr. Jarrett, it was former president Roseanne Runte who finally solved the puzzle. "Dr. Runte pushed hard for this," he says. "She got student leaders involved, and they put through a student fee package."
With the student body behind the proposal, the university's Board of Visitors had no problem convincing other donors to contribute to what eventually became an $8 million football endowment fund. In addition, Foreman Field is undergoing a $24.8 million facilities upgrade, and the $17 million Powhatan Sports Center was built from scratch. The center houses the football offices and two fifty-yard practice fields, as well as facilities and offices for field hockey and lacrosse.
The commitment to all sports ensures that Wilder and his lion cubs won't get a free pass at Old Dominion. Monarch teams have won multiple national championships in women's basketball, sailing, tennis and field hockey. ODU's Anne Donovan earned a gold medal coaching the U.S. women's basketball team in Beijing, and alum Anna Tunnicliffe won her sailing race to earn more gold. Men's basketball is routinely atop the CAA standings. Dr. Jarrett says "We expect our teams to compete for championships and national rankings. We won't take money from established, successful sports to support football."
ODU's roots in the area are an immediate boon to recruting if a football history isn't.
Defensive End Andrew Turner grew up just down the road. "I'm from Virginia Beach, and all of the coaching staff at my high school went to ODU," he says. "Everyone really stressed that we could make history and do something special, and I was really excited about that."

That pioneering spirit will have to hold the team for some time. If this were a movie, the next year would play out in an inspirational thirty-second montage of weightlifting, sprints, studying and scrimmaging. But the coaching staff, which already includes eight position coaches plus a strength coach, and their 82 new charges will have to live every minute of it in real time. In an attempt to stave off monotony, coach Wilder has planned his schedule meticulously, as though the current season was the real deal. In addition to regular practices and academic study groups, there will be team-building functions and community events in which the Monarchs will get to know each other and their fans. There will also be simulated game weeks. "We project them into next year," says Wilder. "We choose an opponent, do scouting reports, practice for that team, and then kick off an intra-squad scrimmage at 6pm on Saturday night. It's the whole routine."
As the team takes to the practice field on an overcast day a week into the football season they all see unfolding on TV, all of that is still ahead of them. The team only has thirteen offensive plays right now, a small part of what will be a full spread offense by this time next year. They have just one defensive set down.

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Alex Oneid is finishing his dream high school volleyball season with a big bang.

The graduating Grade 12 Glebe Collegiate Institute student was one of eight individuals and two teams to receive a $1,000 bursary from the inaugural Rogers Sports Zone Development Fund, which was created by Rogers TV in co-operation with the National Capital Secondary School Athletic Association.

The bursaries can be applied to post-secondary education or individual/team sport development through coaching, clinics, competition or equipment. More 180 submissions were made for the bursaries.

Oneid carried his love of volleyball from Rick Desclouds’ program at Glashan Public School to Glebe in 2004 and capped his career as a Gryphon in memorable fashion.

Providing precise power hitting and senior leadership, Oneid was the team captain and backbone of Glebe producing an undefeated season and winning the first Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations’ boys’ volleyball championship in the school’s 85-year history. Glebe won seven straight matches and 15 of 16 sets to capture the AAAA title.

The Gryphons ended their undefeated season with a match record of 51-0, won all five tournaments, and captured 116 of 121 sets.

Head coach Matt Harris considered Oneid his best ball controller because he was calm and cool under pressure.

Oneid was thrilled to receive the bursary cheque at a ceremony yesterday in the Ottawa Carleton District School Board chambers.

“It’s a relief because university is so expensive,” said Oneid, who will attend Queen’s University in 2008-09 and should be a starter on the highly-ranked Golden Gaels men’s volleyball team.

“There was interest from the States, across Canada and a few in Ontario. But it was an easy decision because of how good Queen’s is in volleyball and school.”

Queen’s lost the 2008 Ontario University Athletics men’s volleyball title to McMaster University Marauders and finished ranked second in the province as well as 10th nationally.

Oneid, who broke a finger two weeks ago while playing a pickup basketball game at school, has been invited to the Ontario 18-and-under team tryouts.

But before he heads in that direction, he allowed himself one more chance to reflect on the success of the Glebe senior boys’ volleyball team this season.

“You couldn’t ask for a better season. I didn’t think of it, but people would tell us: ‘You never lost a game.’ When you go into the gym, you play with that confidence and that’s the best feeling,” said Oneid, who also was undefeated in NCSSAA regular season and playoff action in 2006-07 and only lost at the OFSAA championship.

Rogers TV and the NCSSAA selected two athletes in each of four individual categories _ senior boys, senior girls, junior boys and junior girls. The development fund also recognized two teams.

Here is the list of the other winners:

Senior boys: Harrison Niznick, Ashbury
Niznick had a lot of variety in his final year, whether it was playing quarterback or linebacker on the football team, training two months for the Viennese Winter Ball with a couple of gridiron teammates or co-organizing the Marathon of Hope walkathon to support an Ashbury student diagnosed with leukemia, which raised $4,000 for the CHEO oncology ward.

Senior girls: Angelia Hughes, Colonel By
During her four years at By, Hughes played eight sports for 13 school teams as well as representing four teams outside of school. Leadership also is important to her as she volunteered for various outreach programs with senior citizens, at hospitals, missions and shelters as well as children’s groups and camps.

Senior girls: Christina Donnelly, Immaculata
Donnelly was exceptional on the alpine ski hills winning the NCSSAA level 2 giant slalom and finishing second in the slalom. But at the OFSAA championships, she was a double gold medallist, the first ever high school provincial gold won by a Saints’ athlete. In her high school sports career, she participated on 16 teams and has been athlete of the year for the past six years _ two senior, two junior, Grade 8 and Grade 7. Active in leadership programs, Donnelly also has been a volunteer coach and referee. She will focus on alpine ski racing at the FIS level in 2008-09 with hopes of securing the dream athletic scholarship to an American university for soccer and alpine skiing.

Junior boys: Roland El-Khoury, Deslauriers
A five-sport athlete _ soccer, basketball, volleyball, cross-country running and track and field _ El-Khoury has been team captain and won MVP and athlete-of-the-year awards. He also uses his time to volunteer as a coach and referee as well as organizing workshops for younger athletes.

Junior boys: Sean Ryan, Canterbury
Despite his age, Ryan was co-captain of the senior boys’ soccer team, won the NCSSAA boys’ 72-kilogram wrestling title, and ran a season-best 2:12.56 to finish 14th in the junior 800 metres during the 2008 East Regionals track and field meet. Canterbury’s junior athlete of the year, Ryan also volunteers as a community rink supervisor, is involved in fund raising events and is a counselor-in-training participant at Carleton University.

Junior girls: Kate Saunders, Nepean
Saunders had an impressive debut in sports, being the only Grade 9 nominated for junior girls’ athlete of the year. She played for the basketball, volleyball and soccer teams, experienced being a team captain and earned an MVP award. A participant in Nepean’s Student Athletes Inspiring Leadership program, Saunders also volunteers with the neighbouring Broadview Elementary School ski club.

Junior girls: Gabrielle Dupuis, St. Paul
Dupuis has been captain of the St. Paul girls’ basketball and soccer teams and received a number of MVP awards. She attended the OFSAA girls’ AA soccer championship this week with the senior team. She also enjoys volunteering as a boys’ basketball coach, officiating, and organizing track meets, Special Olympics and basketball tournaments

Team, senior: Gloucester Gators nordic skiing
The Gators cross-country ski program under coach Thomas Holcz has been successful on the trails, winning many individual and team medals over the years, as well as on dryland. The student/athletes have taught nordic skiing to church groups, worked with people with disabilities and organized many fund raising ventures.

Team, junior: John McCrae junior girls’ volleyball
The Bulldogs won 13 of 14 matches in NCSSAA play, which earned them the city and west conference titles. The multi-talented athletes also played basketball, soccer, ringette and field hockey.

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Berrys Heroics Hurl No

  • Sep. 17th, 2008 at 11:25 PM
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NEW HAVEN, Conn. The Southern Connecticut State University athletic department and Coca-Cola kicked off a promotional partnership over the weekend that will feature a presence of the latters product at numerous home athletic competitions this fall. All fans that attended Fridays football game and Saturdays field hockey game were treated to complimentary Coke Zero. In addition, one lucky fan left Fridays football game with a special promotional gift package courtesy of Coke Zero.

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JV girls volleyball strengthening skills, muscles One. Two. Three. Half way there. Four. Almost finished. Five. The JV volleyball team just finished five basketball suicides and are now gasping for breath.
When their coach isn’t satisfied with the team’s focus or performance, he has them run. They also condition during the last 15 minutes of practice. It’s definitely not some of the girl’s favorite thing to do.

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The SCSU mens soccer team won both games this past week, improving their record to 2-2. The Owls will look for their third win of the season this week, when they head to Albany, N.Y. to face the College of Saint Rose. Game time for the contest is set for 4 p.m. On Saturday Sept. 13, the team will host the University of Massachusetts Lowell at Jess Dow Field. Kickoff for this game is scheduled for 7 p.m.

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Battle-field hockey results

  • Sep. 9th, 2008 at 7:26 AM
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With the Pawsox season officially complete, the Red Sox added two more players to their major league roster.
Catcher George Kottaras and outfielder/DH Chris Carter were promoted.
The presence of Kottaras gives the Sox four catchers -- to go along with JAson Varitek, Kevin Cash and David Ross -- and there's no guarantee that Kottaras will see much game action -- if any.
Still, he gives the Sox the luxury of another lefty bat off the bench.
``And,'' added manager Terry Francona, ``it gives him three weeks to spend with (bullpen coach and catching instructor) Gary Tuck.''
Carter, who had a strong season at Pawtucket, gives the Sox one more outfield option and a righthanded bat for pinch-hitting.
J.D. Drew (back spasms) has yet to be activated, but that could come soon. In fact, Francona wouldn't rule out the possibility of him being taken off the DL in time for tonight's series opener.
``He'll go out there today (and get some work in),'' said Francona. ``He's getting closer.''
David Ortiz acknowledged Sunday night that he can still detect some clicking in his wrist, some three months after going on the DL with a torn sheath in the wrist, but Francona wasn't alarmed.
``I told David that if he needs a day off to tell me,'' Francona said. ``He's had, I think, one day off since coming off the DL. He's handled this -- and we've handled -- pretty well.''
The Sox have shut down Michael Bowden for the season. Bowden, who made his major league debut with a win on the last homestand, won't pitch again this season. The Sox are still trying to work out an off-season program for him.
The same goes for Clay Buchholz, who was sent to Double A Portland last month.
The Sox were pleased with the start turned in by Bartolo Colon Sunday night. He remains on target to start one of the two games of the day-night doubleheader against Toronto Saturday.

Francona chose Mark Kotsay over Jacoby Ellsbury for the start in right field, citing the fact that Ellsbury had a tender quad in Texas. He also didn't want Kotsay sitting for three straight games.
``I changed my mind a few times,'' said Francona of the decision-making process.

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field of battle Hockey in First

  • Sep. 8th, 2008 at 1:00 PM
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Houghton's Ashley Hoffman (pictured) scored four goals and assisted on another as the Highlanders (1-2) beat Oswego State 6-2 Wednesday afternoon at Laker Field. The win gave first-year coach Rachael Allsion career victory number one while rookie Laker coach Brandi Ostrander suffered a loss in her debut.

Oswego State got their first scare of the season early int he first half. Play was halted after sophomore Amy Carey was struck in the head and fell to the turf in the game's sixth minute. She walked off of the field under her own power but did not return.

Minutes later, the Lakers had the first scoring chance of the afternoon. Sophomore Brittany Roetzer broke loose from the defense, but was denied on a pair of shot attempts by Houghton goalkeeper Ashley Farr. Roetzer would find herself open for several breakaway chances throughout the afternoon, but was denied every time and held scoreless.

Houghton seized their first lead of the season in the game's tenth minute when they converted their first goal of the 2008 campaign. The marker came from Ashley Hoffman with an assist from Amanda Brenon. Hoffman scored once more after for what stood up to be the game-winner after Brenon had converted on a penalty stroke to give the Highlanders a 3-0 halftime lead.

The Lakers entered the second half looking to stay competitive and scored just 96 seconds into the period. Freshman Jenny Quinn netted her first collegiate goal during a scrum in front of the cage. Classmate Jordan McGuire was credited with her first collegiate assist on the play that cut the Highlander lead to 3-1.

Houghton wasted little time responding as Hoffman redirected a shot from Jenny Huyett past Laker goalkeeper Jaime Scharfe in the 39th minute. That gave the Highlanders another three goal lead at 4-1, Oswego would never get any closer than that and Hoffman capped off the scoring in the 65th minute to account for the final score of 6-2.

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ITHACA, N.Y. The Big Red field hockey team opens its 37th season on Saturday afternoon when it travels to Albany to take on the No. 19 Great Danes at Alumni Turf Field at 1:00 p.m. Cornell will remain in Albany overnight to play Siena on Sunday, Sept. 7, on the UAlbany campus at 5 p.m. The Big Red is coming off a 2007 campaign in which it completed the season with a 10-7 record overall and 5-2 mark in the conference to finish tied for second in the league rankings for the second straight year.

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field hockey

  • Aug. 9th, 2008 at 5:42 PM
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field hockey

  • Jul. 28th, 2008 at 12:10 AM
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A ardor for battle-field hockey

  • Jul. 25th, 2008 at 2:40 PM
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If youve been a frequent reader of this blog, you will have noticed that I have taken an extremely strong stand against eyewear in the game of field hockey. I wont bore you with the details of why: I suggest you use the search box in the right margin. You can also go to the calendar and read every entry from Jan. 6-20, 2007 for my detailed, multifaceted argument against eyewear.
You can also go to June 4-18 for a 15-part series on how the Journal of Athletic Trainings issue on NCAA sports injuries treats each of the 14 sports studied, even going to the point of offering a proven hazardous piece of equipment the modern hard-shelled mens lacrosse helmet to field hockey.
Today, I am exposing the Journal of Athletic Training and any defender of eyewear of field hockey to perhaps the most stringent criticism that I can offer.
Thats because the JAT, in a December 2007 study, showed that the basis for eyewear in the game of field hockey does not exist.
The study data is in a paper called Subsequent Injury Patterns in Girls High School Sports, and while the thrust of the paper is in tracking secondary injuries, the paper also published statistics regarding initial and total injuries as well. The data was compiled between 1995 and 1997, around the time when Massachusetts became the first state to mandate eyewear for public schools.
Of the five sports from the 235 schools chosen from the National Athletic Trainers Association database (basketball, soccer, softball, and volleyball are the others), you find that field hockey injury rates are the lowest by far.
Field hockey had 510 injuries which at least required the cessation of participation in a practice or game, and prevented that players return. Field hockey players also reported having the fewest multiple injuries (17 percent) of the five sports in the study. Of course, the truism, She learned her lesson and knows the hazards of the stick and/or ball applies here.
Soccer and basketball, during the same time frame and in the same schools, had more than 1,700 each. And yet you dont see the patriarchical behavior on the part of ambulance-chasing lawyers and doctors who stand to make money off of eyewear (for an example, read this).
Its time to make a stand, and to do it now.

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Benson left after four full innings with the IronPigs trailing, 4-2.
In the first inning, Benson allowed only a slow-rolling infield single to leadoff batter Wayne Lydon, who stole second and was trying to steal third when Danny Sandoval grounded out to first base. Lydon just kept going toward the plate and made it.
The Chiefs did not get a ball out of the infield in the first against Benson, the major league veteran who was signed to a minor league contract by the Phillies in the offseason after missing all of 2007 with a rotator cuff injury.

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