sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Oak Bay, SMUS squeeze through to Ryan Cup final

The Oak Bay Breakers are holding true to their No 1 ranking in sa国际传媒 senior girls鈥 soccer play, but it took an extra effort on Thursday afternoon.
D1-0506-ryan-CLR.jpg
Oak Bay HighÕs Holly Goodacre, left, tries to fend off Chloe Beech of StellyÕs during their Ryan Cup semifinal game at UVic on Thursday.

The Oak Bay Breakers are holding true to their No 1 ranking in sa国际传媒 senior girls鈥 soccer play, but it took an extra effort on Thursday afternoon.

Maddie Trimmer headed home Anelise Karakostas鈥檚 cross off a free kick in the 66th minute as the Breakers edged the Stelly鈥檚 Stingers 1-0 in the Ryan Cup semifinal on a sizzling, sunny day on the turf fields at the University of Victoria.

The Breakers will face St. Michaels University School in Tuesday鈥檚 final of the city championship after the Blue Jags out-lasted the Reynolds Roadrunners 7-6 in penalty kicks that went 13 players deep.

That result was tied 1-1 after regulation and extra time before Taylor Noel finally put it away for SMUS with her second goal in PKs as the teams went through their full 11 players on the pitch. Keeper Anna Mollenhauer made one more save than Reynolds鈥 Natalie Koehn.

Koehn is a star striker at the high school level, but played the second half, extra time and faced the kicks in goal as injuries have forced all three Roadrunners鈥 usual keepers out. Koehn dove far to her left and got a piece of Noel鈥檚 offering, but the ball rolled off her fingertips and in.

Abby Fraser had scored SMUS鈥檚 regulation-time goal on the team鈥檚 first shot, but Sophia Anderson had tied it for Reynolds in the first half.

The Breakers, meanwhile, had several good chances to score as they dictated play against the Stingers, who played it close to their vest with five regulars out due to injury, including defensive stalwart Mara McCleary.

Oak Bay finally broke through on Trimmer鈥檚 tally.

鈥淲e just didn鈥檛 do what we needed to do in the last 30 yards, but it鈥檚 hard against Jackie鈥檚 teams. Even without Mara, their best player, she gets the girls to battle,鈥 Breakers coach Brent Garraway said of Jackie Cunningham鈥檚 game Stingers .

Patience won out on the day, though.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the maturity of learning how to finish those attacks earlier on in the game,鈥 said Garraway. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a good lesson for us. We鈥檙e really happy to get through. Anytime you鈥檙e competing for a local championship, it鈥檚 a nice feeling. The girls have been working their butts off to get to this.鈥

Karakostas, a Grade 10, was spectacular on the day with plenty of threatening runs, including one in which she advanced the ball forward off her head, ran it down, but slid a left-footer just wide left 58 minutes in. She also hit the goalpost in the 69th minute.

鈥淚t was intense. We weren鈥檛 really calm for a part of it, but once we settled down and played, we fixed it,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey definitely wanted it. They went into every tackle as hard as they could. I think it just came down to who wanted it more and I think that we did.鈥

The SMUS victory was a nail-biter for all involved.

鈥淚ncredible, wasn鈥檛 it,鈥 said Reynolds coach J.J. Atterbury.

鈥淚t was a great match, all around,鈥 said Blue Jags鈥 coach Nikki Kaufmann. 鈥淲hat a finish. I can鈥檛 say I have ever seen PKs, ever in my life, go to that many. It was a mental battle to the end.鈥

[email protected]

Twitter.com/tc_vicsports