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.”

Trip To Ireland Spurring Olympic Dreams For Wharton Junior

yasmine_gillespieWatching the 2016 Summer Olympics was a real treat for 15-year-old Paul R. Wharton High junior Yasmine Gillespie. It provided a nice respite from the young athlete’s busy schedule, as she got to see martial artists from all over the world compete for gold in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

What the second-degree black belt did not know was that during the Olympics, several new sports were given a chance to be included in the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, and making the cut was karate, both kata (one-person forms) and kumite (two-person grappling/sparring).

The former infused instant dreams into the mind of Yasmine, who over the summer found out she would be representing Team USA at the World Karate & Kickboxing Commission (WKC) World Championships in Dublin, Ireland.

In June, she attended the WKC national tournament in Dearborn, Michigan on the University of Michigan’s Dearborn campus.

“The way it works is they call you up, you do your form, they score you, then you go again and it repeats until you eventually get a compiled score,” Yasmine says. “When they called the top four qualifiers up, I didn’t realize that was what it was for, I thought they just called me up to perform again.”

Instead, one of the other girls leaned over to her and said, “You’re coming with us to Dublin. Welcome to the team.”

“I was so shocked,” Yasmine said. “I got the medals and took pictures and I was thinking, ‘Oh, my God. I’m on Team USA. That’s real.’”

From October 30 through November 4, Gillespie will be representing Team USA at the WKC World Championships, where more than two dozen countries will be participating.

yasmine_gillespie_2Yasmine says she has always wanted to be an Olympic athlete, and she is headed in that direction.

But before 2020 rolls around, she has other goals. She was advanced a grade level when she started public school, and plans to finish in the top 10 of her graduating class academically. She plays Libero on Wharton’s varsity volleyball team, and also is a varsity tennis player.

How does she manage all of this?

“I’m really good with time management,” Yasmine says. “I find time to work on homework after lunch and in that hour between volleyball practice and karate class. It’s hard to fit it in but I make sure and find time; I plan ahead.”

That careful planning and management has helped Yasmine succeed not only academically, but also in her athletic pursuits.

She trains under fourth-degree karate black belt, Master John Augello at Core Martial Arts in New Tampa. While Yasmine cracks the pads and rolls around on the mat with the other students in the adult class, her specialty is one-person forms, called “katas” in Japanese or Okinawan martial arts disciplines.

A form or kata is a series of movement combinations fused together to simulate combat against an imaginary opponent or opponents. Oftentimes, an intense energy/vocal expression called a “kia” is used to punctuate some of the techniques.

“She just has this natural flow,” Augello says, “and you can’t teach that.”

Yasmine competes in both regular kata and classical kata. She started training in martial arts when she was three years old, and advanced quickly, especially in her teenage years. She now competes in the adult class.

“She was just too big and strong for the little guys,” Augello says. “We had to set the bar higher for her.”

Yasmine keeps jumping over that bar.

In July, she earned her second black belt, and also competed in the U.S. Open Karate World Championships in Orlando and won the International Championship in regular kata in the 15-16 age group.

Her brother Sammy, who is 11, also competes and will join her in Dublin.

“My wife and I wanted to get our kids into karate at an early age,” Yasmine’s father Brian said. “And, not just for self defense but also for confidence and having experience getting out and performing at a young age.”

Wharton’s Viloria Steps Up For Varsity Ahead Of Harvest Volleyball Tourney

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Wharton High freshman Gracie Viloria (left) has stepped up to varsity to serve as the Wildcats’ setter in place of the injured Tyler Sroufe. Photo: Cotey

By John Cotey

The Wharton volleyball team opened the season with a lofty goal — to compete for a State Championship. After winning their first nine matches, the Class 7A, District 8 Wildcats looked like a team determined to meet those expectations.
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Freedom, Wharton Make List Of ‘Most Challenging High Schools’

By Matt Wiley

New Tampa’s two high schools — Freedom High in Tampa Palms and Paul R. Wharton High on Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. — are no strangers to accolades, each receiving top marks (“As” and “Bs”) from the State Dept. of Education for the past several years. So, it’s really no surprise that the two schools, along with all of the high schools in the Hillsborough County School District (HCSD), again appear on The Washington Post’s list of “America’s Most Challenging High Schools.”Continue reading