Thursday, May 21, 2009

Academy Blue U12 Girls


VA RUSH ACADEMY BLUE ANYTHING BUT

The Virginia Rush Academy Blue U-12 Girls team, coached by Kevin Carmichael, has reached the semifinals of the Virginia State Cup. To accomplish that feat the girls have won four straight games. In the first round, they faced their sister team – Virginia Rush Academy Black. The game began fiercely, like two girls fighting over the same boy. But Blue scored quickly on a beautiful one-touch volley by Emily Baragar and were never headed. Alexandra Connell (2), Sh’nia Gordon (2), and Brooke Mister also scored in the 6-2 victory. In the second round, the Blue faced the Great Falls Real Force. Blue dominated the action, controlling the ball and the midfield for long spells, and cruised to a 5-0 victory. Goals were scored by Connell (2), Mister, Gordon, and Marie Shoen. The Blue’s third game was against an aggressive Loudoun Black team. The play was largely even, though the referee called a very tight match, whistling the Blue for five fouls in the first half alone. With ten minutes left in the game, Gordon found Connell towards the right sideline. Connell sped upfield, juked the goalie, and played the ball in with a left leg that Rush Girls Director of Coaching Vyburt Silcott had described as “sick” or “broke.” Apparently, it healed at the right time.

In the quarterfinals, Blue played the Fauquier County Soccer Club Blackwatch Red. The Blue fell behind 1-0 early in the second half. With its tournament life about to expire, the Blue were rescued by Natalie Simon, who scored with only two minutes remaining. The teams played two scoreless overtime periods, and then went to penalty kicks. Maeryn Long, Shoen, and Baragar banged home three consecutive penalties to propel the Blue through to the semifinals.

Anchoring the Blue has been Jessie Cavolt in goal. In the words of Shakespeare, “though she be but little, she is fierce.” Cavolt has been in goal for three and half games, two ten-minute overtime periods, and three rounds of penalty kicks. To date, only one ball has crossed the endline into the goal. Amazingly, Cavolt has not trained as a goalie and usually plays midfield and defense. Her play against Loudoun Black could be described in one word: flawless.

Also tough has been the Blue’s defense. Catie Espinoza, Mister, and Maeryn Long have turned back all comers. Espinoza has demonstrated a knack for head balls, while Mister has personified coolness under pressure, effortlessly juking any defender in her path. Baragar, Mister, and Shoen have also dominated while alternating turns in central midfield. Gordon has worked tirelessly in the midfield, while Sarah Moore and Jordan Simon have filled in ably when needed. Through four games, the Blue’s coach, Kevin Carmichael, has remained unphased, inspiring the girls’ with his confidence and making the right tactical adjustments when needed.

Up next for the Blue is Loudoun Red, the top-ranked girls team in Virginia, Champions of the 2009 Jefferson Cup and the 2008 WAGS tournament, ranked No. 2 in the country by soccerincollege.com, and No. 19 in nationalsoccerranking.com. The Blue are looking forward to the challenge.

Trey Saunders selected to play against U.S. U17 Youth National Team

Trey Saunders, of the VA Rush, has been chosen to be a member the US Developmental Academy Select Team. Trey, one of thirty-six players selected, from the U15/16 division of the seventy-four USSDA member clubs will play against the US U17 Youth National Team. Selected by the USSDA technical staff he will be in action this Saturday May 23, 2009 at the Spring Showcase in Sarasota, Florida.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Ethan Zohn, former Professional Soccer Player, comes to Hampton Roads.

Register online at www.chkd.org/classes or call 668-7500 or 1-800-395-2453.
Ethan Zohn will discuss the importance
of character, where it comes from, why
it matters and how it can influence
important decisions in your life. He will
relate character building moments in his
own life, from his father’s death when he
was 14 to his experiences on the soccer
field and in college, to illustrate how
character is built and why it is important
to develop one’s character. Parents and
young people are invited to join Ethan
as he explains how to be a valuable and
contributing member of a community
and make a difference. Free
Character:
The Ultimate Survival Tool
Featuring Ethan Zohn, former professional
soccer player and winner of the
“Survivor: Africa” reality TV show
Speaker:
Ethan Zohn was a soccer goalkeeper at Vassar College and played
professionally in the United Soccer League and in Zimbabwe for
Highlanders Football Club. Using some of his $1-million first-prize
winnings from “Survivor,” he started Grassroots Soccer
to mobilize the global soccer community to combat
the AIDS epidemic in Africa. Zohn has served as
a sideline reporter for ESPN and later co-hosted
the Metro Soccer Report on the MSG Network,
a weekly show dedicated to major league soccer.
For his humanitarian efforts to provide HIV education
throughout Africa for youth and young adults,
Zohn received the Courage of Conscience Award
from The Peace Abbey in Massachusetts.
ONE MILLION DOLLARS, A SOCCER BALL
AND THE WORLDʼS GREATEST EPIDEMIC
What ETHAN ZOHN, winner of Survivor: Africa, did with
his reality-TV prize money will amaze your students.
A free lecture series on children’s
health and wellness
presented by
June 4, 7-8:30 p.m.
Salem High School
Auditorium
1993 SunDevil Drive,
Virginia Beach