Wharton Boys Turn In Best Finish Ever At State Cross Country Meet

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The Wharton High boys cross country team hoists Tre Rivers into the air after his first-place finish at the District championship meet. (Photo courtesy Kyle LoJacono)

The best finish in Wharton boys cross country history went anything but smoothly.

There were critical injuries, tough courses and some flat performances to overcome. But in the end, the Wildcats managed to do something no other boys cross country team at the school had — crack the Top 10 at the State Championship race with a ninth-place finish on Nov. 5.

“It was really a testament to the kind of kids we had on the team this year,’’ said third-year head coach Kyle LoJacono.

Behind sophomore Tre Rivers’ ninth-place finish in a personal best of 16 minutes and 16 seconds, the Wildcats finished with 286 points at the Class 4A State race at Apalachee Regional Park in Tallahassee.

Juniors Noah Damjanovic (71st), Sahil Deshenes (89) and Frankie Godbold (99) all cracked the top 100, while freshman Casey Pleune was 113th.

The Wharton finish was the second-best of all the Hillsborough County public school teams competing at the event, behind only Newsome, which was third with 185 points.

It was a deserved ending to a season that resembled a run through tough, wandering terrain.

It began with high hopes. Wharton lost seven seniors, but returned a strong group of underclassmen, led by Rivers. Pleune joined the team in the fall, and set a number a freshman school records.

“We 100-percent expected to do what we did,’’ LoJacono said. “We knew the group coming back not only had the talent, but the right kind of mindset to do it.”

In the summer, though, the Wildcats lost senior Veyd Tandel to a broken leg, a disheartening injury considering Tandel was something of an inspirational leader after running with the team for three years before finally making varsity for the first time.

Meanwhile, Damjanovic broke his foot in the summer, and saw his times early in the season hang around 18 minutes, a tough start for a runner who was used to finish in the mid-17-minute range.

And at the Region 4A-2 race, Dennarius Murphy injured his calf and couldn’t run at States, so Zach Kane had to step up.

But, perhaps the biggest obstacle for the Wildcats to overcome was a race at the University of Florida Mountain Dew meet at the UF Golf Course in Gainesville in which they finished 15th overall (after being seeded to finish 10th), only placing three runners in the top 150.

“They were really demoralized after that race,’’ LoJacono said.

Two weeks later, however, the Wildcats took on another big hurdle, traveling to Tallahassee for the pre-State FSU Invitational race, which was disrupted by Hurricane Matthew, causing some teams to drop out. That opened the door for Wharton to be moved into the elite race — where the Wildcats finished eighth and placed all five scorers in the top-100 runners.

The Wildcats also closed the gap with District 4A-6 rival Steinbrenner, their average time just 15 seconds behind the Warriors, who finished fifth at the FSU race.

“That is where things turned around,’’ LoJacono said.

So began a series of races where the Wildcats chased down, and eventually passed, their rivals. At the Hillsborough County Championships, Wharton finished third, just eight points behind champion Steinbrenner.

At the District race the following week, Rivers broke through to win the individual title in 16:41, and the Wildcats were just two points behind first-place Steinbrenner.

Finally, at the Region 4A-2 race, the Wildcats caught the Warriors. Behind another strong finish by Rivers, Pleune and Deshenes, Wharton finished fourth overall, a whopping 43 points ahead of Steinbrenner.

“That was the first time we were ever able to beat Steinbrenner,’’ LoJacono said, and the following week they did it again at state, as the Warriors finished one spot and 13 points behind Wharton.

Now that the Wildcats have caught the rabbit, the target could be on their backs next season. They return everyone, and plan on using a strong track and AAU season to bolster their chances at finishing even better at States in 2017.

“I told them, now you have to set your bar and your motivation higher,’’ says LoJacono. “They may be chasing us next year.” 

Samhouri Finishes Strong

Wharton senior Rania Samhouri, who was featured in our last Neighborhood News issue, was the only girl ‘Cat to advance to States, where she finished ninth overall.

Samhouri, who improved on her 30th-place finish last season, ran the race in 18:49.

Wharton Soccer: Girls Look To Climb Higher, Boys Seek A Rebound

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Wharton girls soccer coach Denis Vukorep looks on during a recent practice. His Wildcats are looking to repeat last year’s success, when they reached the Regional semifinals.

When coach Denis Vukorep looks out at this year’s girls soccer team at Paul R. Wharton High, he sees plenty of familiar faces, and that’s always a good thing.

He doesn’t return his leading scorer from last season, midfielder Tyler Hubbard, although he does return Tyler’s little sister Sydney. His second leading scorer, Alisha Deschenes, is back. So is keeper Caroline DeLisle, midfielder Delaney Rowen and defenders Emily Johnson and Natalie Noble.

In all, seven starters from last year’s team that went 13-6-4 last year return.

It’s enough to keep expectations high, as the Wildcats hoped to follow up one of their most successful seasons as the 2016-17 campaign kicked last this week with the 10th annual Wharton Invitational. The Wildcats are already 4-1, and have outscored opponents in the games they have won by a 19-4 margin. The lone loss came 2-0 to Land O’Lakes, the Class 3A state runners-up from last season.

“Every team loses players, but when you return so much talent, you expect the team to be in the same spot it was last year,’’ Vukorep says.

For the Wildcats, that “same spot” would be the Region semifinals, where they fell to Palm Harbor University High 2-0 last year. The Hurricanes are five-time state champions and one of the top girls soccer programs in the state, and have become, for the moment, Wharton’s primary nemesis after handing them three of their six losses in 2015-16.

This year, Wharton has its sights set on toppling PHU, although Class 5A, District 7, is fraught with other challenges, like former state champion Steinbrenner and perennial playoff contenders Wiregrass Ranch and Plant.

The combined 2015-16 record of every team in 5A-7 was 73-35.

gsocc2“It’s one of the toughest districts around,’’ Vukorep said. “Look at Steinbrenner last year, they were 10-5 and finished fifth. There’s not a lot of margin for error.”

The Wildcats will lean on DeLisle, who had eight shutouts last season in 17 games, with an impressive 1.10 goals-against-average. This season, she has allowed only six goals in five matches.

A University of Central Florida in Orlando commitment, DeLisle is a natural athlete who skipped volleyball this fall to focus on soccer, and has elite reflexes and athleticism.

“She levels the playing field (against teams that have big-time scorers),” Vukorep said. “She lets us be more aggressive out there on offense, and when we get a lead and play a little more conservatively, it’s just that much harder to score on her.”

Deschenes, who made the All-Conference team along with DeLisle last season, is the top returning scorer after netting 10 goals in 2015-16. Deschenes, who passed on cross country this fall to hone her soccer game, has already almost matched last year’s total, scoring eight goals in the four victories.

Sidonne Vickers had four scores last year, but Vukorep is hoping that Vickers can return to her freshman year form, when she led the team with 17 goals. She leads the team so far with five assists.

Midfielder Sydney Hubbard is filling in for departed sister Tyler, now at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, and has three goals, and Noble will be asked to shore up the defense, which lost two starters to graduation.

Vukorep is also excited about some newcomers — midfielder Payton Jones and forward Avery Damjanovic, a pair of freshmen that Vukorep says will add some punch to his offense. Damjanovic scored two goals against both Robinson and East Bay, and netted the fifth goal of her young prep career in a win over Plant City.

“We’ve been to the Region semifinals a few times now,” Vukorep says, “and it would be nice to break off and make it to the final, and maybe even the (State) final four. That’s what we’re shooting for.”

Boys Hoping To Bounce Back

The cyclical nature of high school sports at most schools can drive coaches batty. You’re up a few years, then you are down, at the mercy of the quality of each class of players that enters the school.

Wharton boys soccer coach Scott Ware knows all about that feeling. After winning an average of 15 games a season from 2006-11 — including the school’s first State championship to cap the 2007-08 season -— the Wildcats have managed just 16 wins in the past four seasons.

Ware, though, holds his hand out, palm down, and then turns it upwards a little and raises his arm.

Clifford Adeji led the Wildcat boys with 10 goals last season, and hopes for more during  the 2016-17 season that kicks off Monday.
Clifford Adeji led the Wildcat boys with 10 goals last season, and hopes for more during the 2016-17 season that kicks off Monday.

“It’s been tough, but I think we’re back on the upswing,’’ he says.

Wharton is coming off a 4-9-2 season, but is carrying Ware’s largest team in years  — with 25 players, “And it’s a good 25,’’ he says.

His seniors, who have been on teams that have gone a combined 11-41-4 in their career, are determined to turn things around. SO far, the team is 1-1.

“I think they are taking ownership of this thing,’’ Ware says. “They are good players. It’s just that their confidence hasn’t been there. Losing takes a toll.”

The Wildcats’ two top scorers, seniors Alex Ramirez and Clifford Adjei, are back. Adjei, a strong, physical forward, had 10 goals last season and scored two in the season-opening 6-0 win over Armwood; Ramirez, a midfielder who relies on speed and finesse, chipped in with five.

Junior forward Jamal Farhoud scored twice last year and hopes for more, and the midfield will be bolstered by Donovan Quigley (three goals, four assists last season), who Ware says might be the fastest player he has ever coached. Ware is high on a trio of freshmen: Nicolas Vasquez, Sebastian Echeverry and Zachary Godbold, who are  all expected to contribute.

alex_ramirezDefensively, Matthew Hartnell has started every game he’s played since his freshman year, and for the first time Ware is carrying three goalkeepers because the competition has been so fierce. Two newcomers, junior Enrico Dagostino and promising freshman Ethan Hernandez, are challenging Andy Ilken, who played in six games last year, for the starting job.

Wharton will once again face a challenge with a touched schedule and tough Class 5A, District 7, which includes Steinbrenner, Alonso and Wiregrass Ranch (combined record of 46-7-6 last year) as well as Palm Harbor University, the region runner-up in 2015-16.

“It won’t be easy, but our goal is to get back into the playoffs,’’ Ware says. “If they play with the confidence they have shown, that’s a possibility. The schedule is tough, though. We’ll need to get some ‘W’s early, and hopefully we build off that.”

Continuity A Big Key For The Freedom High Girls Soccer Team

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Midfielder Rachel Diioia works the ball around at a recent Freedom girls soccer practice. Diioia is expected to have a big impact on the Patriots fortunes this season.

There are always question marks when a new coach takes over. What system will he or she implement? How quickly will they find the best positions for their players? That’s not the case at Freedom, as coach Jennifer DeMik takes over the girls team that finished 5-7 last year.

DeMik knows the players and the system very well. She’s a math teacher at Liberty Middle School and she’s had nearly the entirety of the current varsity team on her Liberty school soccer team.

“Our chemistry is really good and we have strong, veteran leadership to go with a promising future,” DeMik said. “It’s a good balance and I like (what I) know is coming (up from middle school).”

DeMik coached girls soccer at Liberty for eight years and her teams made the District meet six of the eight years, including a trip to the District finals in 2012. The eighth graders from that season have now become DeMik’s senior leaders as she takes over Freedom’s varsity program from Jenna Lamour, who is now in administration.

“She (Lamour) built this program to what it is today,” DeMik said.

Starting up top in DeMik’s 4-4-2 scheme are senior captains Emily Dabrowski and Emma Eldridge. Dabrowski is typically the team’s top goal scorer. She’s played club soccer, lacrosse, has run on the cross country team and DeMik says she is a phenomenal student. The coach also credits Dabrowski with helping get the team started.

Next to Dabrowski up top is Eldridge. DeMik likes her co-captain’s versatility.

“She’s a great athlete and can play all over the field,” DeMik said. “We’re stronger at other positions this year, so it frees her to play up top.”

The tandem, having played together going back to middle school, could develop into a potent scoring threat.

“Emily and I have a friendly competition going between us,” Eldridge said. “It’s so great that we started playing soccer together (at Liberty) and we’ll finish playing together (at Freedom).”

A pair of senior midfielders also are the other two team captains at Freedom. Rachel Diioia and Carly McCoy form a dexterous and rangy midfield tandem. DeMik is particularly excited about the “beautiful triangle” formed by Dabrowski and Eldridge along with Diioia.

Diioia played for the West Florida Flames club team before deciding to commit more to the school’s team. DeMik likes her vision of the field, as well as her footwork and ball control.

“She just slides in front of you and the ball’s gone,” DeMik said.

Even beyond the seniors, DeMik has a core of young players developing, including a few that will step in and contribute right away. Sophomores Kelsey Skendzel and Bethany Green help form a defensive back line for the Patriots. Both defenders came up with DeMik through Liberty.

DeMik jokes that the pair communicates telepathically.

The continuity is just what the Patriots need this season as they are in a very tough Class 4A, District 8, and their regular season started off with a 1-0 loss to Alonso, with games scheduled against State semifinalist Newsome, Regional semifinalist Wharton and Regional finalist Mitchell.

“The front end of our schedule is tough,” DeMik said. “We’re going to see what we’ve got early.”

Boys Looking For Goals

The Patriot boys struggled offensively last year on the way to a 3-12 record, scoring just 34 goals, although their top two scorers — Jon Hornecyck and Kwami Amankwah — were both underclassmen.

Hornecyck, a junior forward/midfielder, led the Patriots last season with eight goals and one assist. Amankwah, a junior forward, scored six goals with two assists. 

The Patriots, who have had only one winning season since losing the 2009 Class 5A State championship game to Palm Harbor University, are off to solid start, beating Tampa Prep 2-0 and Carrollwood Day 3-2. The Patriots will try for their first three-match winning streak since 2013 when it hosts rival Wharton on Thursday, November 10.

Freedom Golf Finishes 11th At States

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The Freedom boys golf team is the closest thing to a high school sports dynasty New Tampa has, with four straight District titles and two trips to the State championships since 2013.

After four consecutive District championships, the Freedom golf team took the next step and finally made it back to state, finishing 11th out of 16 teams at the Class 3A State Championships Oct. 25-26.

Playing on the El Campeon Golf Course at the Mission Inn Resort & Club in Howey-in-the-Hills, FL, the Patriots got strong outings from Cy Storlien, Cooper Smith and Tyler Bray to finish with a two-day team total of 646 strokes.

Nick Mitchell and Sam Smith both had big rebounds from Day One, shaving a combined 17 strokes from their scores.

Only six strokes separated the sixth-place team and the 11th-place team.

Tampa’s Plant High won the title with a score of 606.

The Patriots, who won their fourth straight District title under coach Mike Passarelli on Oct. 10 at Hunter’s Green Country Club, then took second at Regionals at Innisbrook in Palm Harbor a week later. Storlien was team medalist at both tournaments, shooting 73s while winning his second straight individual District title.

At State, the team started out strong.

On the opening day, Storlien, one of three seniors (along with Mitchell and Bray), birdied Nos. 2, 3 and 10 to go minus-1 after 10 holes on the 6,764-yard, par-72 course.

Storlien bogeyed the final two holes to finish the day with a 3-over par 75.

Cooper Smith was just as hot early, with five birdies in his first round, but struggled with consistency, mixing in three double-bogeys to finish with a 7-over 79.

Bray shot an 80 in the first round, which he duplicated in the second round.

Mitchell struggled with a 91 on day one, and Sam Smith shot a 95, but both Patriots came back strong on day two. Smith knocked 12 shots off his first round with an 83, and Mitchell shot an 86.

Storlien continued his consistent golf. He picked up birdies on the 420-yard No. 5 hole and the 347-yard No. 16, both par 4s.

Smith birdied the par-3 holes at No. 8 and No. 15 to finish with an 80 on the second day.

The trip to states was the second for Freedom. The Patriots also advanced to States in 2013, finishing last.

Samhouri Heads To State Cross Country Meet

The Wharton Wildcats put together the best cross country team in the Tampa Bay area in 2015. The Wildcats took third place at the Class 3A State championships behind then-sophomore Alisha Deschenes, who finished 21st overall.

The team’s next best finisher was junior Rania Samhouri, who was 30th.

With such key runners expected to return, the future of Wharton cross country looked good for 2016.

But, head coach Anthony Triana did not know at the time that only one of his top state finishers would ever run again for the Wildcats. The one that has, however, has seamlessly stepped into her role as the team’s No. 1 runner.

Samhouri, who was the team’s No. 5 just two seasons ago, is headed to the State meet as an individual after finishing fifth at the Class 4A, Region 2 meet on Oct. 28, finishing the difficult 5K (3.1-mile) course at Holloway Park in Lakeland in 19 minutes, 13.82 seconds, 34 seconds slower than her personal best.

The 2016 Florida High School Athletic Association’s State championships will be run tomorrow at Apalachee Regional Park in Tallahassee, and Florida State University is the host. Samhouri will begin her quest to top last year’s finish at 9:40 a.m.

The Wharton girls team did not qualify for a return to state, finishing eighth in the Region. Only the top six teams and top 15 individual finishers qualify for state.

Deschenes, a soccer player first who stars for both the Wharton side and one of the top club teams in the state, decided that her junior year, the most important from a recruiting standpoint, was too important for her not to focus on soccer.

After trying to balance it all over the summer, the grueling club schedule just presented too much of a conflict and Deschenes stepped away from the cross country team.

The good news, however, is that Samhouri was ready for the challenge. “When you lose your number one, you have to have a backup plan,” Triana said. “But, even before Alisha left, Rania was already starting to step up to that number one spot.”

As a sophomore, Samhouri made dramatic improvement all season long.

She was the team’s number five runner, with a top time of 20:58 early in the season, but by the Pre-State meet at FSU towards the end of the season, she was well under 20 minutes, posting a 19:44.

This season, she already has run 18:40 at the North Port Invitational. That ranks her in the top-10 in her classification heading into States.

Samhouri had a great rabbit to chase this season in defending State champ and State meet record holder Bailey Hertenstein of Riverview.

It was chasing Hertenstein, Tampa Bay’s best cross country runner, that helped push Samhouri to the 18:40 she ran at North Port, and chasing Hertenstein again at the Hillsborough County Championships helped Samhouri run her second-best time of the season, covering the 3.1-mile course in 18:48.

“When there’s someone in front of you, you can’t help but try and close the gap,” Samhouri said.

Gaps have been just what Samhouri has been closing all season.

She broke through for the Class 4A, District 6 title on her way to qualifying for state. At Al Lopez Park in Tampa, she broke from the start line and raced to the front, and despite some competition midway through by a pair of Steinbrenner runners, she managed to pull away and finish first by nine seconds.

If you ask Samhouri about her individual accomplishments, she’ll deftly defer you to what her team has accomplished, which included a third-place finish at Districts.

“At the end of the day, it’s about what can I do to make the team better?,” Samhouri said.

Proof, perhaps, that Samhouri has grown as both a runner, and a leader.

“She wants that leadership role, we have trust and a confidence level with each other,” Triana said. “She knows and speaks to every girl on the team, she supports (not only) the varsity girls, but the kids on JV, too.”