Whittier reaps in giving
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Bryce Alderton
Something needed to give when two undefeated teams, who had each
raced past their first two Daily Pilot Cup opponents, met to decide
the pool A winner in the boys third- and fourth-grade Silver division
Friday at the Farm Sports Complex.
St. Joachim and Whittier had tallied eight and nine goals,
respectively, in their prior two tournament games. St. Joachim hadn’t
been scored upon.
Until Friday.
Whittier reaped the benefits of sharing. Four Whittier players
scored goals, the result of patience and sharp passing, to power the
team into the quarterfinals with a 7-1 victory.
Whittier will face a wild-card team at 11:30 a.m. today at Farm
field No. 3.
Marco Ibarra brought his Pilot Cup scoring total this season to
eight with a hat trick while front-line mate Henri Ramirez tallied
two goals, also bringing his tournament total to eight. Jonathan
Arroyo and Christian Cruz each scored once to cap the scoring for
Whittier, which includes three second-graders among its 13 total
players.
Forward Ryan Harris scored St. Joachim’s one goal, cutting the
deficit to 3-1 in the 24th minute.
But Whittier’s speed was too much for St. Joachim to handle.
Whittier fired 20 shots.
“You can’t run and kick the ball, you have to pass,” St. Joachim
co-coach Adrian Buonanoce said. “The two other teams we beat, we were
faster than them. Against [Whittier], you have got to pass to beat
them and we didn’t do that.”
Whittier Coach Temoc Zamarripa credited his team’s unselfishness
and passing as the keys to victory.
Whittier players were patient. They often dribbled the ball at a
few steps before finding a teammate.
Ramirez was the spark in the middle. His nifty dribbling skills
created several scoring chances.
He stole the ball near the top of the 18-yard box, dribbled a few
steps and rolled his shot into the goal’s left side to give Whittier
a 1-0 lead nine minutes into the first 25-minute half.
Later in the half, Ramirez plowed through two defenders and fired,
but the shot sailed left.
St. Joachim defenders Will Crook, Daniel Schimoller and Albert
Lopez, along with goalkeeper Adam Josephson, were kept busy with
Whittier’s attacks, but blocked several advances. St. Joachim
midfielder Evan Monestine knocked the ball to the sideline, halting
an attacker in the first half, when Josephson tallied four of his
five saves.
Harris did it all to tally his goal. Off a throw-in, he stole the
ball near the sideline, crossed midfield and zoomed along the
sideline. He cut in slightly and rifled in a shot into the center of
the net.
Whittier took a 3-1 lead into halftime and opened the second half
with three goals in a 10-minute span.
Ibarra scored the fourth goal in the 33rd minute and completed his
hat trick six minutes later, glancing a shot off the crossbar before
finding the inside of the net on a penalty shot. Ramirez drew his
second foul within the 18-yard box to set up Ibarra’s penalty kick.
Ramirez made it 6-1 in the 43rd minute when he stole a ball in the
St. Joachim zone, juked a defender, side-stepped to his left and
knocked the shot into the left side of the net.
Cruz lobbed an arching shot into the goal, from nearly 25 yards
out, to cap the scoring.
Chaz Beek, Peter Kwock and Harris sparked several St. Joachim
attacks while Michael Reo replaced Josephson in goal in the 39th
minute after Josephson went out with what appeared to be a jammed
finger.
Josephson’s fifth and final save was hard-earned. Whittier was on
a two-on-one break. Ramirez crossed to Arroyo, who fired a shot left,
but Josephson sprawled to make the save.
Reo finished with two saves.
Luis and Roberto Perdomo anchored Whittier’s defense and kept
several clearing attempts on St. Joachim’s side.
St. Joachim kept the same lineup, but moved its defenders and
midfielders forward in attempt to create scoring chances in the
second half.
“We had no midfield in the first half, but in the second half we
got better,” Buonanoce said.
Whittier runs only through third grade. Most of Whittier’s players
will likely attend Rea beginning in fourth grade. The Sharks have won
four straight boys fifth- and sixth-grade titles.
“It’s an exciting future for Rea,” Zamarripa said.
The same could be said for Whittier, which faces its future today.
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