Search Results for: Penobscot Valley conference

Foxcroft wins PVC Wrestling championship

February 6, 2017
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The Foxcroft Academy wrestling team knows that wrestling is a very demanding sport and it demands a lot of discipline and commitment to succeed. They also know that championships are not won at the beginning of the season, but at the end.

In 2016, Foxcroft won the Class B Wrestling State Championships, but that was last year. From that team they lost four state ch to graduation and some great leaders. Early on the season it looked like this year was going to be a rebuilding year.

“Early in the year we took some lumps. We lost to teams that we had not lost in years,” Coach Ayala said. “We had a lot of kids with no varsity experience and kids that were new to our programs and needed to learn the way we do things here at FA.”

As the season progressed things changed. One major factor was the return of Billy Brock, a 2016 State Champion. He came back earlier than expected from a football injury.

Ayala said, “The return of Billy to the team has given us the energy and enthusiasm that has pushed the team to do more and to give more.”

Going into the Penobscot Valley Conference Championships the Ponies new that it was going to be tough and it was going to be a close race. But the more things change, the more they stay the same. This young group of wrestlers have grown up and matured and it showed at the PVC’s. The Ponies brought 13 wrestlers to the tournament and had 12 of them place top four in their weight classes.

“This was a complete team effort,” Ayala said. “We expected our top seed to get to the finals, but what pushed us to the top with a commanding lead was our other wrestler stepping up.” Some of those wrestlers were 120 lbs. Josh Talock and 220 lbs. Reggie Johnston, as both of them upset the #2 seed in their weight class to place. Jacob Diamond at 138 lbs., winning a close match versus a tough Bucksport wrestler, and 160 lbs. Cody Labbe, battling injuries and still finishing in 4th. place. Foxcroft clinched the tournament by the time they reached the Conci Finals and Championship Finals. The Ponies won Back-to-Back titles and their Fourth title in five years.

Placing for Foxcroft Academy were-
4th Place-
138- Jacob Diamond and
160- Cody Labbe

In 3rd Place-
113- Brandon Weston
120- Josh Tatlock and
220- Reggie Jonhnston

In 2nd Place-
106- Rico Ayala
152- Dustin Simmons
195- Billy Brock and
285- Matt Storer

and PVC Champions-
126- Marcus Caudill
132- RJ nelson and
170- Elijah Ames

PVC CHAMPIONSHIPS
TEAM STANDINGS
1.Foxcroft Academy- 174.50
2.Bucksport High School- 114.00
3.Dexter Regional High School-103.00
4.Mattanawcook Academy-83.00
5.Ellsworth High School- 81.50
6.Washington Academy- 51.00
7.Penobscot Valley High School- 32.00
8.Piscataquis Community High School-29.00
9.John Bapst High School-27.00
10.Bangor Christian-24.00
11.Lee Academy-23.00
12.Calais High School-14.00
13.-Caribou High School-12.00
14.Schenck High School-0.00
14.(tie)Brewer High School-0.00

106 lbs. Rico Ayala winning his semi finals match.

Foxcrof Team Picture winning PVCs

132 lbs. RJ Nelson winning the finals

170 lbs. Elijah Ames winning the finals

Baseball and softball standouts attribute success to extra work at Sluggers

June 20, 2016
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Five athletes were recognized at Sluggers in Brewer on Monday for their success during the spring season. (Left to right: Thomas Spencer, Cassidy McLeod, Katelin Saunders, Karli Theberge and Nick Guerrette)

Five athletes were recognized at Sluggers in Brewer on Monday for their success during the spring season. (Left to right: Thomas Spencer, Cassidy McLeod, Katelin Saunders, Karli Theberge and Nick Guerrette)

BREWER, Maine – The phrase, “practice makes perfect,” is common in the world of sports, and especially so in baseball and softball, where repetition is a major key in a player’s success.

While they may not be perfect, Karli Theberge and Nick Guerrette of Hermon High School, Katelin Saunders of Bucksport High School, Cassidy McLeod of Stearns High School and Thomas Spencer of Penobscot Valley High School have all put in extra work at Sluggers, an indoor baseball and softball training facility located on the Acme Road in Brewer, during the offseason in order to compete at a level above their competition.

The staff at Sluggers recognized the five standout athletes for their accomplishments during the spring season with a ceremony in front of family and friends at the Brewer facility on Monday.

The ceremony began with a brief welcome from owner, Karl Ward, and general manager, Brandon Portwine. Each player was then introduced individually and given a plaque by Tim Bush, the director of baseball at Sluggers.

“The fact that these players are drawn to coming here definitely validates us and makes us feel very good about what we do,” said Portwine.

The facility features 8,500 square feet of space for baseball and softball use. There are seven cages, five of which are retractable to reveal a Little League or softball regulation-size field. In the two cages that are not retractable, there are baseball and softball hitting simulators that use video screens showing pitchers going through their motions. There are also pitching mounds, special pitching nets, bats, helmets and other equipment that can be used.

Since opening in 2013, Sluggers has been a place for local athletes to improve their skills without being forced to travel long distances. Before opening, many athletes, like Theberge, were forced to travel to Portland to work out during the offseason.

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Sluggers indoor baseball and softball training facility.

“Traveling to Portland isn’t always the easiest thing to do, and I used to do that a lot,” said Theberge. “It’s really been great.”

“If I would have had this in high school, I would have been in here every day,” said Bush. “It’s so cool to have this in our town, to be able to use it and to be affordable to everyone.”

Theberge was named the Penobscot Valley Conference Pitcher of the Year and Player of the Year for softball in Class B. She led the conference with 12 wins, 113 strikeouts and a 0.73 ERA in the regular season. She helped herself with her bat as well, leading the conference with 33 hits and a .623 batting average. She finished second in RBIs with 33, only four behind teammate Hailey Perry.

Theberge was also named one of the nine finalists for the Miss Maine Softball award by the Maine Softball Coaches Association. The award is given to the top senior softball player and will be announced at the Senior North-South All-Star games on Thursday, June 23, at Cony High School in Augusta.

Theberge and fellow Hawk, Guerrette, spent so much time at Sluggers that Bush began calling a portion of the training facility the “Hermon cages.”

Guerrette, who has been working out at Sluggers for about two years, wouldn’t be outdone by the accomplishments of his classmate. He was named the PVC Player of the Year and Pitcher of the year for baseball in Class B. Guerrette led the conference with 49 innings pitched, 49 strikeouts and seven wins in the regular season. Guerrette was second to Old Town’s Drew Coloumbe with a 0.57 ERA. He was among league leaders with 17 RBIs, 17 runs scored and a .419 batting average.

“It’s not often that both the softball and baseball team have someone who is both Pitcher and Player of the Year,” said Guerrette. “It’s a great honor.”

Guerrette was one of nine finalists for the Dr. John Winkin “Mr. Baseball” Award given to the top senior baseball player in the state. The winner will be announced before the start of the Class A-B North-South Senior All-Star Game on Friday, June 24. The game is scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. and will take place at Colby College in Waterville.

Spencer was also named a finalist for the award. He was selected as the Class D North player of the year after leading Penobscot Valley to a 14-1 regular season. Spencer also helped the Howlers win the first regional baseball title in school history by defeating Fort Fairfield, 3-2.

“It’s a big deal to the town and to me because it’s something that we’ve wanted for a really, really long time,” said Spencer. “Winning the regional title was our goal, and we did that.”

He began training at Sluggers after meeting Bush at a UMaine summer camp. Bush suggested that Spencer should play for one of the Amateur Athletic Union teams that Sluggers offers.

“As soon as I started coming here and working with all the guys, I knew that this was the place to be if you wanted to be a good baseball player,” said Spencer.

Each senior on the 18U AAU team offered at Sluggers is slated to play college baseball next year. Spencer will continue his baseball career at Thomas College, where he will major in sports management with a specialty in sports marketing. Guerrette will be attending Husson University, where he will major in business administration and play baseball.

Theberge will be attending Castleton University in the fall, where she will major in health sciences and continue to pitch.

The talent produced by Sluggers isn’t just at the senior level. Saunders, a sophomore this year at Bucksport who has been coming to Sluggers since it opened, was named the PVC Pitcher of the Year for softball in Class C. She pitched the Bucks to the Class C North regional title, racking up 35 strikeouts in their three playoff wins.

Junior Cassidy McLeod makes the hour-long trip to Sluggers once a week, and the work she puts in has paid off for her. McLeod was named the PVC Player of the Year for softball in Class D in a season where she has hit 10 home runs and lead Stearns to its second straight state final. She finished the season by going 3-for-3 with a grand slam in the regional final victory over Madawaska and 4-for-4 with a triple in the state final loss to Richmond.

The five athletes recognized on Monday attributed their success during the spring season to the coaches and programs at Sluggers, but the coaches attribute the success to the extra work that the athletes put in to play at the level that they do.

“It wasn’t anything that we did for them, it was everything that they did,” said Bush. “I like to tell the players that we give them the tools, but they turn the wrench.”

Young Lady Howlers win Class D Northern Maine Championship

November 2, 2022
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The PVHS girls soccer team is going back to the Class D state championship for the second time in the past three years that there have been MPA tournaments held, and played in their fourth straight title game on Tuesday night (including the 2020 Penquis Valley Conference Covid Cup).

PVHS went through quite a big change in the offseason, with losing 5 players from last years Northern Maine runner-up team, as well as another starter (captain Mia Neal) due to a season-ending injury suffered in the summer. This Howler team starts two seniors (Kaya and Holly Loring), two juniors (Emma Potter and Ashlyn St. Cyr), and the remaining seven are underclassmen with four of them being freshmen. Their poise, confidence, skill, and belief in themselves however has made up for their limited experience.

The Howlers defeated the Ashland Hornets under the lights in Presque Isle on Tuesday evening 1-0 in the regional final. PVHS earned the top seed in Northern Class D as they compiled a 13-0-1 regular season record, before knocking off Fort Fairfield and Central Aroostook in the quarter and semifinals respectively. Ashland came in as the #3 seed, and had an impressive road win at undefeated Wisdom last Friday to get there.

The game was physical and intense right from the start, with both teams having some solid attacks but the match went to halftime scoreless. Finally, with about 26 minutes left to play freshman Lila Cummings attacked and controlled an Ashland goal kick at the corner of the 18 yard line. She darted toward the middle, sidestepped a few defenders, and blasted a 25 yard shot that deflected off the goalkeepers hands and went into the net. That would prove to be the game winner. Penobscot Valley had a few other opportunities for goals that just missed, including a shot by Rylee Moulton from a Holly Loring cross that went off the left post, and a header by Ellie Austin from an Emma Potter corner kick that went off the crossbar. In the end, the Howler defense and goalkeeper Lauryn Smart kept the high-scoring Hornets off the board for the shutout. Smart saved six of seven shots she saw, and had some key saves throughout the game. Michaela Carney stopped eight of 15 shots on the other end, as Ashland ended their season at 13-4.

PVHS improves to 16-0-1, and will play North Yarmouth Academy (NYA) down at Deering Memorial Stadium in Portland on Saturday at 12:30 pm. When the Lady Howlers last made it to the state championship in 2019, they lost to that same team 1-0 in the final minutes.

 

Photos are courtesy of Feldmus Photography 

PVC Senior all star roster: games to be played March 8th

March 2, 2022
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Below are the players that will be playing in the PVC Class C/D senior all star games at Mattanawcook on Tuesday, March 8th. The girls game will start at 5 PM, boys at 7 PM. PVC All-Conference awards will be passed out between games.

Boys

East All Stars (Home Uniforms) West All Stars (Away Uniforms)
Will Libby – Central #5  Bryce Burns – Central #30 
Avery Gagnon – Dexter #11  Seth Robbins – Dexter #12 
David Gadsby – GSA #1 Teague Smallidge – GSA #21 
Bryce Schneider – GSA #25 Vince Skovronsky – Lee #30 
Ethen Allard – Lee #32 Kashman Feeney – Machias #40
Jayden Rhodes – Machias #4  Kyle Anderson – Machias #24 
Evan Strout – Narraguagus # 2 Josh Farrington – Mattanawcook #20
Ryan Thompson – Penobscot Valley #32  Alvin Robshaw – Penquis #40
Buddy Hutchins – PCHS # 13 Andy Williams – Penobscot Valley #10
Josh Wright – Searsport #3  Kaden Hannan – Schenck #32
Gavin Darling – Stearns #21 Elliot Shearer – Stearns #11 
Wyatt MacArthur – Woodland #13 Justin Overlock – Woodland #2
Coach:  James Getchell – Machias Coach:  Peter Murray – Dexter  
Girls


East All Stars
(Home Uniforms)

 

 

West All Stars (Away Uniforms)

Trinity Jones – Calais #1  Sage Phillips – Calais  #33 
Abigail Young – Central #4  Elizabeth Kinney – Dexter #15 
Luna Perry-St. Peter – Deer Isle # 21 Lila Kronholm – Greenville #12 
Lauren Beal – Jonesport-Beals #14 Bryn Weatherbee – Mattanawcook #2 
Bella Farrington – Mattanawcook  #10 Rebecca Carson – Penobscot Valley #4 
Emilee Ireland – Penobscot Valley #13  Angela Bryden – Penquis #23 
Elizabeth Kendall – Piscataquis #32  Hannah Sewall – Schenck #21 
Abbigaile Perrault – Schenck #20  Ashlee Morang – Shead #24 
Kristin Russell – Schenck #10  Alisyn Alley – Stearns #23 
Makayla Anderson – Stearns #13  Kasey Kenyon – Stearns #41 
Rachel Colby – Sumner #45 Sierra Bryant – Woodland #5 
Coach:  Jody Grant – Dexter Coach:  Kirsten Hutchins – Schenck