Date post: | 24-Mar-2016 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | paul-mencher |
View: | 217 times |
Download: | 0 times |
O c t o b e r 2 5 , 2 0 1 1V o l u m e - I / I s s u e - 3
www.asmnorth.com
Boys Soccer:Chatham ChargesForwardPage 4
The NJAC ShufflePage 6-7
Gridiron Crunch
Time: NJAC Football
playoff OutlookPage 8-9
Delbarton’s White
KnightPage 10
Madison Reclaims
Morris County Field
Hockey Title
Page 10
Girls Soccer: Setting
New StandardsPage 12
County
Tournaments
RoundupPage 15
O c t o b e r 2 5 , 2 0 1 1V o l u m e - I / I s s u e - 3
Boys Soccer:Chatham ChargesForwardPage 4
The NJAC ShufflePage 6-7
Gridiron Crunch
Time: NJAC Football
playoff OutlookPage 8-9
Delbarton’s White
KnightPage 10
Madison Reclaims
Morris County Field
Hockey Title
Page 10
Girls Soccer: Setting
New StandardsPage 12
County
Tournaments
RoundupPage 15
O c t o b e r 2 5 , 2 0 1 1V o l u m e - I / I s s u e - 3
Boys Soccer:Chatham ChargesForwardPage 4
The NJAC ShufflePage 6-7
Gridiron Crunch
Time: NJAC Football
playoff OutlookPage 8-9
Delbarton’s White
KnightPage 10
Madison Reclaims
Morris County Field
Hockey Title
Page 10
Girls Soccer: Setting
New StandardsPage 12
County
Tournaments
RoundupPage 15
A multimedia company that provides
exciting and innovative coverage to high school
athletics in the Shore conference and now the Northwest Jersey
Athletic Conference in order to highlight the achievements of local athletes
in one of the premier conferences in New Jersey. Whether it’s the star of the team or
the last player off the bench, everyone has a story and it is our mission to recognize as many
athletes as possible and add to the memories for all of the families, coaches, friends and fans
who support both the Shore Conference and Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference
sports. Whether in print or on the Web, All Shore Media and now All Sports
Media Northern Review is your main source for all things exciting in the
Shore Conference and Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference.
All Sports Media Northern Review
Web Site Features
Log on to www.asmnorth.com and www.allshoremedia.com
regularly to get video highlights of all the important games that the Shore
Conference and the Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference fans will
be talking about. Catch up on the action you might have missed
and watch video clips of everything from the action early in the
event to the big finish as well as video interviews with various
athletes. If you can’t make it to the game, we’ll bring the game to
you, and if you were at the game and want to relive the excitement,
www.asmnorth.com and www.allshoremedia.com
is all you need to get inside the action.
Join The All Sports Media
Northern Review Team Today!
Interested in joining our team and think you have what it takes to
be covering sports in the Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference for
All Sports Media Northern Review? We are looking for
local writers interested in covering sports like Lacrosse, Basketball,
Wrestling, Track, Soccer, and more as part of our Bi-weekly
newspaper and our website www.asmnorth.com. Grab your
chance to appear regularly in The All Shore Media Northern Review
Bi-weekly issues and on www.asmnorth.com while helping us recognize more athletes and bring
more stories to Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference sports fans. This is your chance to become a
regular contributor to a growing business on the cutting edge of covering sports in Northwest
Jersey Athletic Conference.
Just contact
ASM Northern Review Managing Editor Paul Mencher at;
StevenMeyerASM Director/
CeO/Marketing
7 3 2 - 2 3 3 - 4 4 6 0
ScottStumpASM Director/
Managing editor
Ha r ry L i t s i sNorthern Review
Marketing/Sales
h a r r y p r i n t i n g @ a i m . c o m
2 0 1 - 2 9 4 - 5 9 0 3
P a u l M e n c h e rNorthern Review
Managing editor
p m e n c h e r @ a s m n o r t h . c o m
9 7 3 - 8 3 1 - 2 2 3 3
All Sports Media Northern Reviewis published by:
F i n i s h L i n e M e d i a , L L C
26 Oxford Dr ive Wayside N J, 07 712
C o p y r i g h t 2 0 1 1 A l l S p o r t s M e d i a N o r t h e r n R e v i e wA l l r i g h t s r e s e r v e d Reproduction in whole or in part without thepermission of A l l S p o r t s M e d i a N o r t h e r n R e v i e w is prohibited
O c to b e r 25 , 20 1 1 I V o lu me - I I I s s ue -3
FOR ADVeRTISING INFORMATIONContact : Harry L i ts is 201 -294-5903 harrypr int [email protected]
www.asmnorth.com Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1 ASMNorthern Review / 3
The newspaper you’re holding inyour hand is an exciting newway to follow NorthwestJersey Athletic Conferencesports. But it’s only one halfof the way we cover local highschool action.
For day-to-day coverage of sports in theNJAC, you can visit our multimediawebsite, www.allsportsmedianorth.com (orwww.asmnorth.com for short). The sitecontains a wide variety of features andcontent that’s hard—or impossible—to findanyplace else:
Game highlight videos:We are videotaping several NJAC sporting
events each week and posting video highlightsto our site, along with interviews with theplayers and coaches. So if you missed thegame, or even if you were there, you can seewhat happened right on your computer!
Web-only articles:When important news breaks involving NJAC
teams, we’ll have stories on our site. Alsocheck out weekly notebooks about the differentsports that All Sports Media covers.
Photo gallery links:We are working with a number of local
photographers who shoot high school sports, and will be postinglinks to their galleries on a regular basis. You can enjoy thephotos or make purchases if you desire.
Scoreboards:We are post ing the resul ts of a l l games involving NJAC
schools . You can also look back at the resul ts for any day orlook ahead to see the schedules for future dates .
Standings:Divisional standings for all NJAC divisions in a variety of sports,
updated instantaneously when a new score is reported—somethingyou simply won’t find on any other website or anyplace else.
Schedules:Access the season schedules for any NJAC team in a variety of
sports, including game results for contests already completed.
Brackets:We are maintaining actively updated brackets for
county tournaments in a number of sports. MorrisCounty and Hunterdon/Warren/Sussex tournamentsare included.
electronic version of ournewspaper:Yeah, we know some of you love to get ink onyour fingers. But if you can’t find a print copyof our paper, or you’d rather see it online, youcan download an electronic copy for free righton our site.
We intend to make our website an invaluable
resource for high school sports fans in the northwest
New Jersey area and we hope you will visit on a
regular basis. If you have any ideas about how we
can better cover NJAC sports, please send an e-mail
to [email protected] and we’ll
be happy to consider them.
Web exclusives fromAll Sports Media For The NJACBy Paul Mencher – ASM Northern Review Managing Editor
The moment of t ruth for a soccer team can occur
any t ime during the season. The members of the
Chatham boys’ team may have experienced theirs
af ter just the second game of the year.
The Cougars s tumbled in a 1-0
loss to upstar t Hanover Park
and immediately had some
soul searching to do. They
responded by winning their
next 16 games and
vanquishing those same
Hornets 3-0 on October 10 to
even the ledger.
Some teams might
have t reated the
ear ly loss as an
aberrat ion and
ignored their
problems or lost
confidence by
panicking. The
Chatham
players took
the loss as a
lesson to be
learned.
“I wouldn’t
real ly cal l i t a
f luke,’’ senior
defender
Thomas
Stephan said.
“They came
real ly hard.
They came to
play. We
defini te ly took
them l ight ly. I
would say we had their
number for a good decade or
so. They def ini te ly were the
bet ter team that day.’’
That humil i ty is not a lways easy
to except , especial ly in a place l ike
Chatham, where i t seems the
players are issued soccer c leats a t
bir th . The Chathams have
establ ished reputat ion for great
soccer dat ing back to the days
where Chatham Borough and
Chatham Township had separate
high schools and the Eskies and
the Gladiators held fever-pi tched
bat t les .
Chatham had a good preseason
and had success against wel l - regarded
teams l ike Mil lburn, Westf ie ld and
Princeton. The loss to Hanover Park, a
school that hasn’t had ser ious soccer success in
two decades, was a jaw-dropping
defeat . Afterwards the Chatham
players could ei ther unravel because of i t or learn
from i t .
“I t was just a wake-up cal l , ’’ senior defender Matt
Proto said. “In the game of soccer anything can
happen. Every game we have to go in 100 percent
physical ly and mental ly. We didn’t make i t a big
deal , but that game happened and you have to move
on and take every game l ike i t ’s our las t game.’’
Last year the Cougars played into overt ime before
fal l ing to Montvi l le in Morr is County Tournament
f inals . They gained their share of redemption in the
state Group III semif inals by upending the Mustangs.
Chatham lost s ix s tar ters to graduat ion but found
players to s tep into those roles .
“At the beginning of the season Trip (Burke)
was doing a lot of scoring, but that
was the f i rs t few games,’’ Proto
said. “Other people have been
scoring: (David) Gil l , Josh
Bris tol , Brian Schaefer has
been dishing and scoring so
i t ’s balancing out real ly
nicely.’’
The team has chemistry that has
come from years of playing together.
“We have good balance,’’
senior midfielder
Trip Burke said.
“I t just happens.
We’ve been
pract ic ing al l
summer. I t jus t
develops.’’
Defense has cont inued to
be a mainstay with Proto,
Stephan, outs ide
defenders Sean McHugh
and Chad Gilders leeve
and goalkeeper Brian
Petrunik helping to
generate nine
shutouts in i ts 16-
game run.
The Cougars are
comfortable with
their coach Gene Foca, a Chatham
native who pays close at tent ion to
detai l and keeps his players on an
even keel .
“He real ly just te l ls us what the
other team is about before the
game,’’ senior midfielder Brian
Schaefer said. “If there’s somebody
we have to watch, what we have to do.
He te l ls us to play s imple. In the
game, i f we’re not doing what we
have to he reminds us again. I t ’s
real ly up to us the way we
play.’’
Foca balances
the t radi t ion of
Chatham’s
soccer past with
the real i ty of the
present day
Cougars . His
calm demeanor
hides the fact
that he is a
motivator, who
often pushes the
r ight but tons to
get his squad to
perform.
“Gene l ikes to
think back to a l l
the good things
about Chatham
soccer, ’’ Stephan
said. “He te l ls us about the t radi t ion and we have to
l ive up to i t . The his tory over Chatham soccer is
real ly r ich but a t the same t ime he gets us focused
game-by-game to move forward.’’
And the Cougars have responded. Their win against
the Hornets was expert ly done. Chatham control led
the tempo on offense and l imited Hanover Park’s
scoring
opportuni t ies .
There was l i t t le
celebrat ing
afterwards, just
the sat isf ied
feel ing of a job
well done.
“We were more
relaxed,’’ Burke
said. “We kept the
bal l . We passed i t
around. The turf
real ly helped that .
We got much
bet ter possession
and bet ter chances.
We didn’t panic . ’’
Like many teams
that carry
tradi t ions, the Cougars wil l be ranked against the
success of past teams. Their resul ts in the county
and s ta te tournament wil l be the overal l measuring
st ick.
“The biggest thing is how we come into every
game mental ly, ’’ Proto said. “After Hanover Park i t
was, we can’t take any team l ight ly any more. We
have to t reat every game l ike i t ’s the most important
game of the season.’’
Defender Chad Gildersleeve
4 / ASMNorthern Review Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1
David Gill
CHATHAM CHARGeS FORWARD:Cougars on a rol l after early stumbleB y M a r k K i t c h i n – S t a f f W r i t e r
Goalie Brian Petrunik
P h o t o s b y :
R ob er t H ar r i sw w w . r o b e r t h a r r i s . s m u g m u g . c o m
www.asmnorth.com ASMNorthern Review / 5
Chatham is moving up, Jefferson is re joining some
old fr iends and a number of other teams wil l be
changing divis ions as a resul t of the Northwest
Jersey Athlet ic Conference’s bi-annual real ignment .
The new al ignment approved by the conference
athlet ic directors went “s t r ic t ly by the bylaws”,
according to NJAC president John DiColo. Those
rules use the s ize of each school and their
geographic locat ion
to determine the
makeup of the f ive
divis ions. The new
alignment takes
effect in September
2012 and is s la ted to
remain in place for
two years .
The most
prominent change
sees Chatham move
to the Nat ional
Divis ion af ter
spending the las t
three years as a
member of the
Independence
Divis ion for most
sports and the
Freedom Divis ion in
footbal l . That
change was
automatic under the
conference bylaws
because Chatham’s
increasing s tudent
populat ion made i t
one of the largest
schools in the NJAC
(in fact , Chatham is now the 11th largest publ ic
school in the conference) .
The makeup of the two large-school divis ions is
determined geographical ly, so Chatham joins schools
l ike Delbar ton, Morr is town and Randolph in the
National Divis ion. The Cougars would appear to be
ready to compete in many sports , but some squads
may f ind the going rough in the new divis ion.
“The teams wil l do the best they can,” says
Chatham athlet ic director Harvey Cohen. “The
games wil l be bat t les , they wil l be great competi t ive
games.”
Chatham wil l face a couple of old r ivals f rom the
Iron Hil ls Conference, Mendham and Parsippany
Hil ls , in i ts new league, but wil l no longer be in a
divis ion with neighbors Hanover Park and Madison.
The Cougars won’t be able to play those schools in
footbal l , but as Cohen notes , “All the other sports
have non-divis ional games, so there’s the potent ia l
to play ( them).”
Chatham’s move to the Nat ional Divis ion forces
one school to switch to the American Divis ion, and
Morris Knolls wil l be that school . The shif t means
Morris Knolls wil l no longer face schools l ike
Randolph, Roxbury and Morris town on a regular
basis .
“That move is probably going to have the biggest
r ipple effect in Morr is County,” says DiColo.
“They’re losing some of their longt ime r ivalr ies .”
“These are r ivalr ies we’ve had for many, many
years ,” notes Morr is Knolls a thlet ic director Ken
Mullen. “I t ’s
not ideal to be
sure.”
“The good
part is that the
tradi t ions
won’t cease
al together,”
Mullen adds.
“We can s t i l l
pick up games
with these
teams in many
sports .”
Mullen says
he’s a l ready
looking to set
up independent
games with the
old Iron Hil ls
Conference
schools where
possible .
The change
does put
Morris Knolls
in the
same
divis ion with local r ival Morr is Hil ls , but
that is a mixed blessing, according to
Mullen. “We’re exci ted about playing
Morris Hil ls , but in some ways the games
lose a l i t t le luster,” he says. For example,
the schools may no longer be able to play
each other in basketbal l a t County College
of Morr is , as they have in recent years ,
s ince they now wil l square off on a home-
and-home basis .
Overal l , though, Mullen says “the feel ing
(at Morr is Knolls) is le t ’s play the schedule
that we’re given.” He says other schools in
the conference have deal t with s imilar
issues involving t ravel and loss of r ivalry
games.
The school dropping out of the large-
school divis ions, based on enrol lment
f igures , is Jefferson. The Falcons wil l move
to the Freedom Divis ion, joining former
Sussex County Interscholast ic League r ivals
l ike Hopatcong, Lenape Val ley and Newton.
Also joining the Freedom Divis ion is the
NJAC’s newest school , North Warren, meaning that
divis ion wil l
jump from
six to e ight
schools next
year.
“For the
most par t ,
our coaches
are happy,”
says DiColo,
who is a lso
the Jefferson
athlet ic
director.
“We went
from the
smallest
school in our
divis ion to
the biggest
school in our
divis ion.”
However, DiColo notes that in cer ta in sports , l ike
wrest l ing and f ie ld hockey, the competi t ion may wel l
be tougher in the Freedom Divis ion.
“From a r ivalry s tandpoint , i t ’s kind of a wash,”
DiColo says, not ing that Jefferson wil l no longer
have divis ion games against teams l ike Sparta and
Pope John. “I t ’s going to increase our t ravel a l i t t le
bi t . But going into the season we have a more
posi t ive out look.”
The athlet ic directors a lso decided to fol low the
league bylaws in terms of the other two divis ions,
which means the Independence and Liber ty Divis ions
wil l see some shif ts as wel l . Under geographic
cr i ter ia , Pequannock
and Whippany Park
are changing places ,
as are the
conference’s smaller
non-publ ic schools .
Pequannock joins
Kinnelon, But ler,
Mountain Lakes and
Boonton in the
“northeast” divis ion
of the league, which
wil l now be cal led the
Independence
Divis ion. Morr is
Cathol ic wil l a lso be
placed in that
divis ion, a long with
St . El izabeth, which
is fur ther north than
the other a l l -gir ls
school , Vil la Walsh,
by a few yards .
The new
“southeast” Liber ty
THe NJAC SHUFFLe: Conference Re-alignsDivisions For Next FallBy Paul Mencher – ASM Northern Review Managing Editor
Jefferson drops out of the AmericanDivision and will play in the Freedom
Division starting next September.
6 / ASMNorthern Review Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1
Morris Knolls won't be in the same division as longtime rivals like
Randolph beginning next fall under the NJAC's new alignment.
Pequannock technically will remain inthe Independence Division, but will losefive current division rivals and gain four
new ones.
C o n t i n u e d o n n e x t p a g e
Divis ion consis ts of the grouping of
Madison, Hanover Park, Pars ippany
and Dover, who wil l be joined by
Whippany Park, Morr is town-Beard and
Vil la Walsh.
“There was a l i t t le concern about
having Hanover Park and Whippany
Park in the same divis ion, as they are
sis ter schools , but that’s the way i t
fa l ls ,” notes DiColo.
The general c lass if icat ion appl ies for
most sports , with a handful of
except ions. The most prominent
except ion is footbal l , which wil l s t ick
with a four-divis ion format for the
next two years .
The Nat ional and American Divis ions
wil l be the same as in the overal l
c lass if icat ion. The other three
divis ions wil l cont inue to be
condensed into two, with just a couple
of changes from this year ’s a l ignment .
Jefferson wil l take Chatham’s place in
the Freedom Divis ion, which wil l s t i l l
have nine teams. Meant ime, new
conference member North Warren wil l
be placed in the Independence
Divis ion for footbal l , br inging that
divis ion back up to 10 teams.
The changes mean Independence
Divis ion teams wil l no longer need to
play a non-league game during the
regular season, but Freedom Divis ion
teams s t i l l wi l l have to f i l l an open
date—and that may become a bigger
chal lenge as crossovers wil l no longer
be possible .
Chatham's growing enrollment meansthe Cougars move up to the tough
National Division.
P h o t o s b y :
P au l Sw en s o nwww.photosbyswens.zenfol io.com
P h o t o s b y :
E d L eo na rdwww.edleonardphoto.smugmug.com
www.asmnorth.com ASMNorthern Review / 7
Visit
All Sports Media North
on Facebook
Find out what's new on our
website, keep track of our
publication schedule, and
send us feedback on our
site and newspaper!
You can visit
our Facebook page at
http://www.facebook.com/asmnorth.
8 / ASMNorthern Review Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1
n the NFL, they strivefor parity as a way tokeep most of the
league in playoff contentionright up to the final gamesof the season. The NJAC maynot exactly have parity, but itcertainly has a lot of teamswith a chance to reach thepost-season.
With just one game left before the eight-
game cutoff for the bulk of the league, 14
NJAC teams are in playoff position and no
fewer than nine more could qualify with a win
in Week Eight (and some help in a
few cases).
Here’s a group-by-group
breakdown of the various sections
in terms of qualifying, plus an
early look at the how the
playoffs may shape up:
North 1 , Group IV
Three NJAC teams sit at 3-4
with one game left, so all three
must win in order to get in. Morris
Knolls is in the best position by far,
as the Golden Eagles are actually
sixth in power points despite the
sub-.500 record, and they face
winless Mendham in their 8th game. A
win is likely enough to get Knolls into
the dance, barring some big upsets
elsewhere.
Both Roxbury and Randolph are
teams hoping to spring one of those
upsets that could shake up the playoff
picture. The Gaels stayed alive by
beating Morristown and now must
upend 5-2 Parsippany Hills to have a
chance. Randolph has an even tougher
task with a game against unbeaten (and
motivated) Delbarton.
In terms of the playoffs, Montclair is a
prohibitive favorite to win this section after
falling to Randolph in last year’s final.
None of the other teams strike fear in
anyone’s hearts, so if
one of the NJAC teams
can get in and avoid
the 8th seed, it
could have a real
chance to
advance.
North 1 ,
Group I I I
Sparta continues to stand
near the top of what is
usually a crushingly
competitive section. The
Spartans are second, just
one point adrift of Pascack
Valley. Sparta plays surging
Morris Hills this week, and
with a win could very well
finish first—and should place
no worse than second.
Vernon moved up into 7th place
with its victory this week over High
Point, but is far from secure in
playoff position. The Vikings
will almost certainly need
to beat Jefferson this
week to qualify, in what
amounts to a playoff game, as the
winner should be in and the losing
squad is almost surely out.
The top three teams in this section
(Sparta, Pascack Valley and Wayne
Hills) appear to be a level above the
rest, so the team that places first in
the power points gets a major
advantage in avoiding the other two
until the sectional final. It looks like
things could break well for Sparta,
which is looking to reach the finals
for the first time since 2005, when
it played in Group II.
North 1 , Group I I
Lenape Valley is solidly in
the playoffs, and could well
hang on to the 4th seed in
order to have a first-round
home game. The Patriots
will need to beat winless
Parsippany and get a little help elsewhere to lock up
home field. Hopatcong also looks to be in good
shape. The Chiefs are in 6th, and with a victory
over Boonton would be in.
Three other NJAC squads are part of a seven-way
scramble for the final two spots in this section.
Morris Hills stands 7th, with Jefferson 8th—but
tied with Dover on power points for that final
position. For both the Scarlet Knights and
Falcons, the scenario is pretty simple: win
this week and qualify, lose and almost surely
miss the states. Both face tough games,
Jefferson meeting a Vernon team that also
must win, and Morris Hills playing
undefeated Sparta.
For Dover, the Tigers must beat
winless Morris Catholic, then need at
least four other teams to lose, but it’s not
nearly as hopeless as it sounds, as all of those teams
are underdogs this week.
Ramsey, River Dell and West Essex are the top three
teams in the standings and look like the toughest teams
in the section, but Lenape
Valley showed in its recent
game against Madison
that it is ready to
compete at a high
level as well.
North 1 ,Group I
While the
bottom half of
many other
brackets will
feature mediocre
teams, that won’t be the
case in this section,
loaded with high-quality
small school squads.
Mountain Lakes moved
up to 3rd after beating
Butler in their Week
Seven showdown. Now
for the NJAC teams in
this section come two
huge games with major
playoff implications.
Mountain Lakes hosts
Pequannock, currently holding
onto the 8th spot. If the Herd wins,
they lock up a first-round home game
IBy Paul Mencher – ASM Northern Review Managing Editor
Mountain Lakes RB Dylan Muti
Lenape Valley QB Bobby Pregno
Vernon RB Chris Gonzalez
and could move up into one of the top two spots, while a loss would likely drop
them into the lower half of the bracket. The Panthers simply must win to qualify;
there are several teams waiting to pounce if they falter.
The other game to watch this week is Kinnelon at Butler. The Colts are in 12th
place but with an upset over Butler would gain plenty of power points and would
have a chance to make the playoffs. Butler fell to 9th after its tough loss to
Mountain Lakes, but that is somewhat deceiving, as the Bulldogs are one of two
NJAC teams (along with Madison) that have only played six games to date. That
means Butler has two more games to gain points; a win over Kinnelon is probably
enough to sneak in but a Week Nine win over Hopatcong would push them up the
ladder.
This looks like a tremendous section in terms of the playoffs as well, with
quality teams like Glen Rock, Cresskill, Saddle Brook and Pompton Lakes along
with Mountain Lakes and Butler. Whichever team ends up as champion in this
group will have earned it.
North 2 , Group I I
Madison stands atop this group, and the defending
section champion should secure the top seed barring a
major upset. Three other NJAC teams are in the
running here, with two big games on tap this
weekend.
Chatham visits Hanover Park in
a key matchup. A win for the
Cougars locks them in to the
states, but
it
would be hard for them to move up
from 5th position. With a loss,
Chatham might still be able to sneak
in. Hanover Park has no such luxury;
the Hornets must win to get into the
playoffs.
Meantime, Hackettstown slipped
into 8th place with its win over
Wallkill Valley. The Tigers go for
their fifth straight win when they
meet Kittatinny, and will secure a
playoff berth with a win as well.
But a loss will almost certainly
knock the Tigers out.
Madison looks like the team
to beat in this section, but the
Dodgers know repeating
won’t be easy, with tough
teams like Summit and
Orange standing in their
way.
North 2 , Group I I I
This section hasn’t been very strong in
recent years, and this year appears no
different. 11 of the 19 teams are already
eliminated from playoff contention,
and two others appear almost
certain to fall short of the
necessary .500 record as well.
Two NJAC teams
are already in: West
Morris, which can lock up
the top seed with a win over
Morristown, and Parsippany
Hills. Meantime, Morristown is facing a
desperation scenario in its game against West
Morris; now 3-4, the Colonials must win to
qualify. If Morristown falls, this section will
almost surely have only five playoff qualifiers.
West Morris looks like the favorite in this
section, and the Wolfpack’s toughest competition
could come from Parsippany Hills. When the two
teams met early this season, West Morris won by a
touchdown on its home field.
Non-PublicGroup I I I
Delbarton continues to
stand atop the power-
point rankings in this
group, and with a win at
Randolph the Green Wave
can assure itself no worse than
the second seed (St. Joe’s of
Montvale has a game in hand and
would pass Delbarton with two wins). That’s a
significant advantage in this difficult group.
Pope John locked up a playoff berth with its
win over Jefferson; the Lions appear almost
certain to be the sixth seed and face a road trip
to play DePaul, Red Bank Catholic or
Immaculata.
St. Joe’s is very strong this season and plays a
remarkably difficult schedule. The Green Knights are seen as the
group favorite, but will their schedule help them improve or simply
wear them out by the end of the season? That could be the key
question, and if anyone is to knock off St. Joe’s, Delbarton appears
to be the most likely candidate.
www.asmnorth.com ASMNorthern Review / 9
West Morris RB Jon Ciccone
Morris Hills RB Eric Turner Delbarton’s RB Jamie White
P h o t o s b y :
R o ber t H ar r i swww.robertharris.smugmug.com
P h o t o s b y :
P au l S we ns onwww.photosbyswens.zenfol io.com
P h o t o s b y :
Ra nd y M i l l swww.allproshots.com
Delbarton football practice was over and Jamie White was
asking the driver of the equipment cart for a lift back to the
fieldhouse. “It’s full,’’ said the driver. “Besides if you run, you
can make it before the cart can.’’
Such is a rare disadvantage for one of the quickest running
backs in Morris County, if not the state. The speed and ability of
the Green Wave’s junior tailback is one of the major reasons
Delbarton is off to an outstanding season.
The 5-foot-9, 175-pound athlete has rushed for 1,085 yards
and had scored 16 touchdowns this season after his team’s
35-0 blitzing of Mendham in last Saturday’s homecoming
contest. White can be dazzling at times with his open field
jaunts but his toughness is also unquestioned.
Jammed with a shoulder injury early in
another recent game against cross-town
rival Morristown, he came back in the
second half and scored on an
electrifying 74-yard run to put a final
touch on the 42-20 victory against a
talented opponent.
“A lot of the defenses come
in and focus on Jamie,’’
Delbarton quarterback
John Shaffer said. “He’s
a great player and he
deserves it but that also
opens up the passing game
for us. I think that’s kind of
what happened for us against
Morristown. His running ability in
the past few games really helped the
offense. It let us throw the ball deep and
it opened things up.’’
At 7-0, Delbarton has been playing
well on both sides of the ball and Green
Wave linebackers Dennis Bencsko and
Chris Soulas have put on impressive
tackling displays on defense at times.
However, having an athlete like White
who can turn a short gain into a long
run at any time he touches the ball
provides a distinct advantage for any
football team.
“Jamie is a spectacular player,’’
Delbarton coach Brian Bowers said. “We
feel like if we give him enough of a crease,
he is going to get through it. He’s a game
breaker. And he showed some toughness getting
back after he banged his shoulder a little bit.’’
White is from Summit. If you don’t know him, you
might remember his brothers. Terry and Alex both
played football and lacrosse for Delbarton in the past
decade. Now both are students and lacrosse players
at Harvard. They are in close contact and always
checking up on what little brother Jamie is up to.
White often uses his brothers as a sounding
board for ideas.
“I’ve learned a lot from both,’’ Jamie White said. “They try and
teach me the ways of things and I take advantage of it as much as
I can. A lot of it is just the way to approach situations and lessons.
They try to teach me drills.’’
Having older brothers is the type of thing that usually keeps an
athlete grounded. White doesn’t consider his size much of a
detriment on the football field. He’s not easily intimidated but he
also doesn’t walk around feeling that he has
something to prove because of his frame.
“I was bigger (then most of my
teammates and rivals) when I was a
little younger and then I stopped
growing,’’ White said. “I haven’t had
too much trouble with my size. I
think I make up for it in other
ways. I definitely think I’m
a target.
“It’s become an
advantage in our pass
game. We run a fake to me
and then the pass goes to
somebody that’s wide
open. It also opens things
up in the run game. They
can use me as a decoy
and I actually like that.’’
White gained
confidence during his
sophomore year which
he used his quick and
elusive abilities to
ground out yards for a
team which finished at
5-5 last year.
The underclassmen -
- including White and
many of the members of
the offensive line -- that gained
experience on that team are reaping the
benefits of last year’s trials by fire.
“I definitely couldn’t do it without the
line,’’ White said. “They do a great job.
They are mentally focused every game and
they know what they are doing.”
Will Reynolds, who also plays lacrosse with
White, is the center. Niyi Odewade plays left
guard. Donny Alvine, the lone senior, is an anchor
at left tackle. Casey Moran, Peter Bergh and Chris
Shafer all do a great job on the right side.
It’s a line that has only two returning starters but bonded
pretty quickly this fall.
“Donny gets us going,’’ Reynolds said. “We all do our thing.
We’re not the biggest line but we’re a bunch of athletes and we
use that to our advantage.’’
It helps the line to know that it doesn’t take much to get
White into open space.
“We know that Jamie is going to do what Jamie does,’’
Reynolds said. “We just try to open up the holes and he finishes.
… We expect him to break the first tackle. If he can make that on
the second level (of defenders), he usually comes through and
ends up in the end zone.’’
When asked to describe what it’s like for a player his size to hit
the line, White says it’s kind of like running through tunnels as
fast as you can. There’s very little thinking involved and White
admits there’s little time for it. He looks for a hole and heads for
it.
“It’s a lot of fun,’’ White said. “I don’t think that much when
I’m running so I don’t remember much of it. I just see it and I just
go. We do a great job of repetition and making cuts in practice so
I’m used to it.’’
There’s little time wasted during a typical Delbarton football
practice. Coach Bowers employs a large digital clock mounted in
the stands that ticks off practice time in five-minute blocks. There
are 32 blocks in an average practice. The practices are upbeat,
well-organized and regimented although there are numerous
variations from day-to-day.
“When you wear the jersey, you have to work hard,’’ White
said. “It’s not given it to you. We all know that out here. It’s a
great tradition.’’
And White has the type of qualities that his coaches covet no
matter his size.
“He’s very smart, very coachable,’’ Bowers said. “You wouldn’t
want to coach a better kid than Jamie White. He has no ego. He
comes to work every day. He’s just a humble, outstanding young
man and it is a pleasure to coach a kid like that.’’
That type of attitude will to make it difficult for teams to catch
White or the Green Wave for the remainder of the season.
“We knew coming into the season that we had some players,’’
White said. “We had a lot of returning starters from last year and
all of our key places were really in check. We have a lot of
confidence.’’
DeLBARTON'S WHITe KNIGHT:Speedy Jamie White LeadsUndefeated Green WaveB y M a r k K i t c h i n – S t a f f W r i t e r
FOR ADVeRTISING INFORMATIONContact : Harry L itsis 201-294-5903 harrypr int [email protected]
10 / ASMNorthern Review Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1
P h o t o s b y :
P au l Sw e ns o nw w w . p h o t o s b y s w e n s . z e n f o l i o . c o m
www.asmnorth.com ASMNorthern Review / 11
It was a familiar scene on Saturday night as the
Madison High School field hockey team celebrated yet
another Morris County Tournament title.
Denied last year
by Chatham, the
Dodgers seemed to
yell a little louder
and embrace one
another a bit tighter
after wrapping up
their 17th MCT
championship with a
3-1 victory over
second-seeded West
Morris.
"We really earned
this one," Madison
coach Ann Marie
Davies said. "We
didn't run all over
anyone. There was
never an easy
game."
There certainly
wasn't. The road to No. 17 was challenging. After
shutting out Mendham 4-0 in the first round, the top-
seeded Dodgers went to overtime before emerging with a
3-2 win over Mountain Lakes in the quarterfinals. In the
semifinals, they trimmed Pequannock, 2-1. West Morris
provided a
challenge of
paramount
proportions, too.
By clawing and
fighting its way
through the MCT,
Madison left
behind bad
memories of 2010,
a subpar season by
its lofty standards.
In 2010, the
Dodgers were MCT
runners-up and
didn't win any
titles.
The letdown
came one year after
Madison had a
stellar 2009
campaign, garnering conference, MCT, sectional and
Group II crowns. The Dodgers' run landed them a berth in
the Tournament of Champions.
"We brought the title back to Madison," an elated Tori
Ellis, a junior back, said. "We've worked so, so hard for
this."
A lack of chemistry, said Davies, was what hindered
Madison last season.
"This year's group is playing as a team," Davies said.
"They play for each other, not as individuals."
According to goalie Caroline McCabe, named the
defensive MVP of the MCT for her 13-save effort, 2010
was trying for several reasons.
"We were rebuilding. We lost some great players from
the team that won four titles," McCabe said. "That was
hard to live up to. We had players at different positions
and some that hadn't played varsity before. It took time
for us to get used to each other."
Madison went into this season without two more
standouts, Ally Helwig and Mackenzie Ellis, both now
playing Division 1 field
hockey. Still, the Dodgers
got back on track and were
more determined than ever
to honor the program's
tradition.
"It's
amazing
what we've
done with
the group
we have,"
Davies
said. "The
improvement from the beginning of the
season has been unbelievable. The girls
have figured out that hard work pays off.
They do drill after drill after drill.
They're very well-conditioned. They
know what needs to be done."
No longer can Davies
count on the majority of
her players being
involved in club field
hockey. That has had an
impact yet there are
enough devoted to the
sport year-round to keep
the Dodgers among New
Jersey's elite.
"Things have changed
over the years," Davies
said. "The commitment to
club is huge and some
kids shy away from that.
I understand that. Many
of the girls love the game
when it's here but they're
not interested in playing
Division 1. Some clubs
are very intense. Some are not."
Those factors aren't going to stop
Madison from pushing hard for more
championships. Looming is the state
tournament, which will be tough because
West Essex, Chatham and Ramsey are
among the squads vying for top honors in
North Jersey Section 1, Group II. The
Dodgers are also aiming to emerge atop
the NJAC Independence Division.
"If we play the way we've been playing,
we can go far," said McCabe, a captain
along with Sam Spelker and Liz
Lehmann. "We work with each other's
strengths rather than focusing on
weaknesses. We communicate well and
connect."
Besides McCabe, Ellis, Spelker and
Lehmann, Brynn Taylor, Ali Jago, Lexi
Dellavia, Rachel Massaro, Maggie Dalena, Michelle
Montagna and Rachel Alvey are starters for the Dodgers.
Dellavia, the right wing who scored two goals,
including the decisive one, in the county final, declared
winning "the best feeling in the world" and, no doubt,
wants to experience it again.
BACK WHeRe THeY BeLONG: Madisonreclaims Morris County Field Hockey TitleB y S a n d y S e e g e r s – s o a r - n j . c o m
Mortgage RatesHave Fallen Again
Is your rateas low as ours?
Please contact me for a
FREE Mortgage Check Up
If you or someone you know isinterested in refinancing orpurchasing please call me!
P h o t o s b y :
K a r e n F u c i t ow w w . k f u c i t o p h o t o g r a p h y . s m u g m u g . c o m
Madison's Liz Lehmann (left) tries to send the ball into the circle
Dodgers swarm Lexi Dellavia (#9) after her
second goal of the county final.
Mount Olive soccer players Nicole Amada and Victoria Portesyare good at playing together on the soccer field -- maybe, a littletoo good.
“I know where Victoria is going to go,’’ Amada said. “Shescored on about 70 percent of my assists. Sometimes I get yelledat for only giving Victoria the ball.’’
Those complaints are usually few and far between this season.The pairing of the two Marauders standouts are a good enoughplace to start when it comes to talking about this year’s success.Mount Olive earned its 10th victory ofthe season with a 4-2 triumph overMontville on Oct. 12. Ten wins wasbelieved to be the prior school recordfor girls’ soccer. The team, which was11-5 going into the last week of theregular season, is now venturing intonew territory and the players seem to beenjoying their role as trailblazers.
“The reason that we are doing so wellthis season is the girls that start on thefield, we’ve been playing together sincewe were kids,’’ Amada said. “We’vebeen on the same travel teams, sameclub teams. We’re all more dedicated.We all want to win.’’
Amada and Portesy have beenkicking the ball to each other since theywere in the second grade. Amada issmaller, but quick and very active as adistributor while Portesy is long andlean and makes powerful runs often finishing what Amada starts.Portesy, who was hindered by ACL and ankle injuries herfreshman and sophomore seasons, is leading Morris County ingoal scoring. She has 21 goals, many of them coming of plays setup by Amada.
“This year the difference is that they have more of an offensivesupport system,’’ Mount Olive coach Lauren Caruso said.“Victoria is very unselfish. She wants to score goals but she alsowants to win as a team.’’
The development of sophomore midfielder NicoletteThorkildsen has also made a difference in stoking the Maraudersoffense. The two-year starter excels at getting and redirectingopponent’s clears once the first wave ofthe attack comes through.
“Nicolette is a hard worker,’’ Portesysaid. “It shows. She’s very physical andthat’s what it takes.’’
She’s often seen distributing the ballback on the forwards or taking a crack atthe goal herself. She has five goals thisseason
“She’s going to be a phenomenalplayer,’ Amada added. “She’s a bulldozer.That’s why I love her.’’
Anna Poggi, Melanie Kopacki, AlisonSchroeder, Michelle Kozak, StephanieLopez and four-year varsity goalkeeperKat Clint have known each other goingback to the travel soccer days.
Kozak is the key to an improving defensive unit with RebeckaDeValve, Kelly Hartt and sophomore Sara Fasino. Those tightrelationships that have gone on for years translate tounderstanding on the field.
“We haven’t had any fights and if we do yell at each other onthe field, we know that it’s just to push each other,’’ Portesy said.“Right when we step off the field, we forget about it.’’
Even though criticism is often difficult to take, it often serves tomake the players understand that it’s not done to be hurtful but tohelp.
“That’s the advantage of being so close,’’ Amada said. “If (ateammate) says something, I respect what she says and I take it toheart. When my keeper tells me to do something I do it not
because she’s my teammate, she’s also myfriend.’’
The Marauders have developed confidenceand are getting better and better at exhibitingpoise under pressure, something that hasn’talways been a trademark for Mount Olivesoccer teams but something that must bemastered in order to be successful. TheMarauders credit their coach Lauren Carusofor instilling some of those qualities into theprogram.
Caruso, in her third season as the Marauderscoach, learned her soccer at Parsippany Highand counted current Parsippany Hills coachGia Rosamilia as one of her teammates. Shewas anassistant coachat Montvillefor two yearsbefore takingover at Mount
Olive.
“She’s taught us composure andsportsmanship and discipline,’’Portesy said.
“Everyone knows their job. Youknow where you stand. That’sreally important. Players that areseen as leaders, she’s taught usthat you have to act like a leader.If the players on the bench seeyou are not working hard, it islike a slap in the face because you
are on the benchso you want towork hard for yourplayers.’’
Mount Olive isin the running forNJAC Americanhonors and if theMarauderscontinue on theircurrent paceshould earn a statetournament seedthat could landthem at least onehome game if notmore. As the ninthseed in the MorrisCountyTournament, their
loss against eighth-seeded WestMorris in the opening round maynot be looked upon so harshlyconsidering the Wolfpack has
played well lately. In fact,the players have used thatdefeat as a measuringstick for how far they’veprogressed.
“That game showedhow much we’veimproved and our recordshows how much weimproved,’’ Amada said.“Last year we lost toWest Morris 5-0. Thisyear we stayed in thegame the entire time.’’
“It just proved toeveryone that we coulddo it,’’ Portesy added.“We worked really hardand it just shows howskilled we are.’’
12 / ASMNorthern Review Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1
SeTTING A NeW STANDARD: Mount OliveGirls' Soccer Enjoys Landmark SeasonB y M a r k K i t c h i n – S t a f f W r i t e r
FOR ADVeRTISING INFORMATIONContact : Harry L itsis 201-294-5903 harrypr int [email protected]
Midfielder Nicolette Thorkildsen
Midfielder Nicole Amada
Forward Victoria Portesy
P h o t o s b y :
M ar k K i t ch in
www.asmnorth.com ASMNorthern Review / 13
14 / ASMNorthern Review Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1
Boys' Soccer
Chatham and Delbar ton are this year ’s Morr is
County Tournament f inal is ts . Chatham cont inued i ts
winning ways in
the semif inals
of the MCT by
el iminat ing
Roxbury on
penal ty kicks
af ter a 0-0
draw.
Technical ly the
Cougars’
semif inal win is
considered a t ie
because the
contest went
into the
shootout round
but the 16-1-1
team emerged
victor ious.
Chatham
goalkeeper
Brian Petrunik
saved the day
with a couple of s tops in the shootout
round, which went into sudden death mode
since the teams were t ied af ter the f i rs t
round of f ive kicks. The Cougars won the
shootout 5-4.
Chatham, which is seeded fourth, wil l play
third-seeded Delbar ton in the
championship game scheduled for
Saturday, October 29 at Roxbury High
School . The highly regarded Green Wave
returned to the t i t le game af ter a two-year
hiatus but i t wasn’t easy. Delbar ton (15-2)
received a s t i ff chal lenge from seventh-
seeded Whippany Park (10-5-4) . The Green
Wave won 2-0, but victory wasn’t assured
unt i l Jack Clarke notched an insurance
goal with 8:33 remaining in the contest
played at neutral s i te Morr is Cathol ic .
The game was t ight with the upstar ts f rom Whippany
Park muster ing just as many scoring opportuni t ies as
i ts pr ivate school foes . Delbar ton took the advantage
when junior midfielder Connor Kel ly knocked in a
rebound off his own miss , which clanged off a
goalpost and bounced r ight back to him.
Two upsets helped to shape this year tournament .
Whippany Park pul led off one of the s tunners by
toppl ing defending champion Montvi l le in the
quarterf inals . The second-seeded Mustangs came in
undefeated but the Mustangs were s tunned in the
opening minutes by a goal by the Wildcats’ Ricky
Tango off a Tyler Raff pass . The spectacular play of
Whippany Park goal ie Anil Vegesna and the effor ts
of Raff , who la ter set up Paul Coi ley for one of the
most picturesque goals of the tournament ,
cemented the 2-0 win.
Roxbury, a ninth seed, advanced to the
semif inals for the f i rs t t ime in tournament
his tory af ter defeat ing Pequannock 4-1 in
the quarterf inals with the help of goals f rom
Scott Sclar and Dylan Hammer. Dave
Columbo scored for Pequannock, a 16th-
seed which reached that game af ter toppl ing
top-seeded Randolph in the opening round.
Although the Golden Panthers’ 2-0 victory
over the Rams is s t i l l considered a s tunner,
i t was actual ly the third t ime in the las t
four years that the top-seeded team was
el iminated in the opening round of the
Morris County boys’ tournament .
In the Hunterdon/Warren/Sussex
tournament , only one NJAC team made i t to
the semif inal round, which is scheduled to
be played Wednesday. Newton, the top-
seeded team from Sussex County, had to
survive a
penal ty-kick
shootout with
Wallki l l Val ley
to advance
after the
Rangers held
the Braves to a
scoreless t ie .
Newton wil l
play host to
Hunterdon
Central in the
semif inals in
what wil l
l ikely be a
very
chal lenging
game. The winner is scheduled to meet e i ther North
Hunterdon or Delaware Val ley in the tournament
f inal on Saturday.
Girls' Soccer
This year ’s Morr is County Tournament f inal renews
acquaintances between Randolph and Kinnelon, two
teams which met in the 2008 t i t le game.
The Rams and the Colts wil l bat t le once again when
they meet in the championship contest a t Roxbury
High School on October 29. Both teams had to go
into extra per iods to reach the f inal . Second seeded
Randolph edged Mendham 1-0 in double overt ime. I t
took a s ingle overt ime for fourth-seeded Kinnelon to
dethrone defending champion Vil la Walsh by a 2-1
score. Both semif inal games were contested at
Morris Cathol ic .
I t was just three years ago when Kinnelon was a
considered a small-school Cinderel la team. The Colts
proved themselves worthy by upset t ing Randolph 2-1
that year for the f i rs t gir ls’ soccer MCT t i t le in
school his tory. The Colts are now perennial favori tes
under coach Steve Racine, who previously led Morris
Cathol ic when i t was a county powerhouse.
He acknowledges that there is no comparison
between this year ’s squads and those from three
seasons ago. “They are two total ly different teams,’’
Racine said. “I t ’s s t i l l hard for me to say that but
we’re not the Cinderel las anymore.’’
Kinnelon made a s t rong run to the f inal a l though
they have not had to compete against any of the
physical Nat ional Divis ion teams. In the opening
round the Colts topped 14th-seeded Liber ty Divis ion
rival Mountain Lakes (2-0) . The fol lowing week they
handled upstar t Pars ippany (2-1) . When i t reached
the semis , Kinnelon had a September loss to Vil la
Walsh (1-0 on a la te goal) c lear ly in mind. The Colts
also knew that the Vikings had advanced twice in the
tournament by shootout .
The duo of f reshman Emily Thiem and senior
County Tournaments RoundupBy Paul Mencher – ASM Northern Review Managing Editor
FOR ADVeRTISING INFORMATIONContact : Harry L itsis 201-294-5903 harrypr int [email protected]
C o n t i n u e d o n n e x t p a g e
Delbarton's Connor Schaible (#6)
Kinnelon's Jess Daniels (#4)
Delbarton's Greg Seifert (#9)
www.asmnorth.com ASMNorthern Review / 15
10% OFFYo u r F i r s t O r d e r !
midfielder Karyn Anselmo played a huge role for the
Colts . Anselmo, a
senior midfielder,
connected twice
including the game-
winning goal which
occurred in a wild
scramble in f ront of
the net for the 2-1
tr iumph.
The Colts can score
in a lot of different
ways. Midfielders
Ingrid DiClemente
and Daniel le
deTorres of ten put
shots on net . Chalen
Noble has been a
ser ious offensive
target s ince her
freshman year and
Anselmo is an
emotional leader as
well as aggressive
around the net .
Defender Aine Schanche cont inues to impress a t
t imes when defense is needed. However, the Colts
are sometimes uneven and show lapses too, l ike they
did when surrendering a second-half goal to Vil la
Walsh’s Rei l ly Esposi to which sent the game into
overt ime.
Randolph was also very decis ive in i ts victor ies
leading up to the MCT semif inal . The Rams had sol id
wins against Montvi l le and Chatham. The seeds of
Randolph’s semif inal victory
came from their
react ion to a 2-0
loss to Mendham in
an NJAC-National
regular season game
a couple of days
before the
tournament contest .
The unl ikely hero of
the MCT contest was
Alexa Roemer.
Playing in her f i rs t
vars i ty contest , the
Randolph sophomore
ended up scoring the
double-overt ime
game winner. The
Rams have always
been s t ingy on defense. This year is no
except ion, however in the regular-season
game they t r ied to a l ter their formation in
the back to t ry and discourage Mendham
from scoring on deep diagonals . I t d idn’t
work, so Randolph returned to i ts f la t
back with much bet ter resul ts . Sam Brener, Megan
Olsakowski , Carol ine Matos and the s teady play of
sophomore keeper Mel Durbin are making the
defense cl ick. On offense Anna Conklin and Steph
Gonnel la have been s tepping up as of la te , but
Randolph can always use more.
In the Hunterdon/Warren/Sussex tournament , two
NJAC teams remain al ive heading into the midweek
semif inals . Hacket ts town edged Pope John in
overt ime, 3-2, and
wil l next host
Belvidere , which
upset Sparta in
another quarterf inal .
The Tigers would
have to be
considered the
favori te here , as they
defeated the County
Seaters ear l ier this
season on the road,
and wil l now get to
play at home.
Meant ime, High
Point scored an
impressive 3-0 win
over North
Hunterdon, and wil l
t ravel to face Hunterdon Central . While the
Wildcats must make the long t r ip to Flemington, they
are one of the hot tes t teams anywhere r ight now, as
their win over North Hunterdon was their 11th
straight . An al l -NJAC f inal on Saturday would
hardly be a surpr ise .
Randolph's Taylor Lusardi (#23)
Randolph's Shannon Kiss (#6)
P h o t o s b y :
Ma r k K i tch i n
P h o t o s b y :
R ob er t Ha r r i sw w w . r o b e r t h a r r i s . s m u g m u g . c o m
www.asmnorth.com Volume- I Issue-3 10 /25 / 1 1 ASMNorthern Review / 16