Let’s face it.
A full sports season was just what the doctor ordered.
And the 2021 spring campaign delivered in every way.
After being deprived of a season in 2020 due to COVID, spring athletes and coaches were primed to make up for lost time and they certainly did so from start to finish.
For the first time since the winter campaign of 2019-20, we had a full regular season and postseason and plenty of memories were made.
On the diamond, city squads were on a collision course, as Portland eliminated Deering in a play-in game, then the Bulldogs took Cheverus to an extra inning and another and yet another before the Stags prevailed in the quarterfinals.. Cheverus then bowed out in the semifinals, losing to eventual state champion South Portland. The Waynflete/North Yarmouth Academy co-op squad enjoyed its best season to date, posting double-digit victories before losing to Lisbon in the quarterfinals.
Cheverus’ softball team eliminated Deering in a play-in game, then lost to top-ranked Marshwood. Portland sprung a Round of 16 upset at Sanford, then lost to Thornton Academy in the quarterfinals.
Boys’ lacrosse produced a champion in a dominant Waynflete squad, which lost only one game en route to a Class C title. In Class A North, Deering was ousted in the preliminary round, while Cheverus and Portland were eliminated in the quarterfinal.
On the girls’ side, Waynflete brought home a Class C championship as well, in fairy tale fashion. In Class A North, Cheverus and Portland both fell in the quarterfinals.
The outdoor track state meet produced plenty of highlights, including a transcendent performance from a Cheverus standout.
Tennis saw the Waynflete boys win their 13th championship in succession, while the Waynflete girls featured a jaw-dropping individual effort.
We’re already enjoying summer, but let’s take another look back and pay tribute to some of the best moments of the spring.
Team state champions
Waynflete Flyers boys’ lacrosse, Class C
Waynflete Flyers girls’ lacrosse, Class C
Waynflete Flyers boys’ tennis, Class C
Individual state champions
Track
Victoria Bossong, Cheverus, Class A girls’ 100
Victoria Bossong, Cheverus, Class A girls’ 400
Victoria Bossong, Cheverus, Class A girls’ 800
Frank Morang, Cheverus, Class A boys’ triple jump
Frank Morang, Cheverus, Class A boys’ long jump
Michael’s top five stories/moments
5) A walk-off, two-strike squeeze bunt
The baseball playoffs had no shortage of memorable moments, but perhaps no finish was as dramatic as the one that occurred June 10 when Portland, the No. 15 seed, which had eliminated No. 18 Deering in the play-in game, then upset reigning champion Scarborough, the second-ranked squad, in the Round of 16, gave No. 7 Cheverus fits in a classic pitcher’s duel. Bulldogs ace Danny Tocci didn’t give an inch, nor did Stags starter Sam Clark or reliever Brian Connolly. Both teams had golden opportunities to win it before Cheverus finally did so in the bottom of the 10th, when Nick Giancotti tripled and came home on Chris Murphy’s two-strike squeeze bunt. An instant classic it was.
“It was a wonderful game,” said Cheverus coach Tony DiBiase. “A very exciting game. You can’t ask for a better day. We’ve played three really good games against (Portland) this year and we’ve been fortunate to be on the winning side each game. This one was special because it’s a tournament game.”
“I’ve coached against Tony DiBiase for a long time and we’ve had some good ones,” said Portland coach Mike Rutherford. “That might be one of the better ones. A classic game.”
4) The Bossong remains the same
Everyone knew Cheverus senior standout Victoria Bossong was going to steal the show at the Class A outdoor track and field state meet June 5, the only question was could Bossong win four individual events? She almost did. Bossong won three, setting meet records in the 100 (11.73 seconds in the semifinals, before posting a time of 11.81 in the final), 400 (55.08 seconds) and 800 (2 minutes, 10.66 seconds). Bossong hoped to add a first-place finish in the 200 as well, but her time of 25.41 seconds was second to Bangor’s Anna Connors, whose time of 24.51 eclipsed Bossong’s existing-record time of 24.8.
“Even if I had run fresh in the 200, it still would have been a really close race,” Bossong said. “(Anna) ran really amazingly. I mean, I’m a little disappointed, but I’m also really proud that I went out and did it, so I wouldn’t change a thing about the events I ran.”
Waynflete’s boys’ lacrosse team entered the 2021 campaign highly touted and focused on unfinished business. The Flyers, who had won the inaugural Class C championship in 2018, then were upset by eventual champion North Yarmouth Academy in the semifinals in 2019, didn’t get a chance to return to the pinnacle during a doomed spring a year ago, but finally, this season, they returned to action in impressive fashion. Waynflete won 11 of 12 regular season games, then steamrolled the Class C playoff field, earning a measure of revenge with an 11-4 win over NYA in the state semifinals before capping its second title run in four years with an emphatic 17-5 victory over Oak Hill on State Championship Saturday.
“This means everything,” Flyers coach Andrew Leach said. “These guys play in big moments in big games. We put everything into this game. We pride ourselves on our defense. (The Raiders) averaged about 18 goals a game. For us to put this together and hold them to what we held them to and play together as a team, that was motivation enough to come out here and do right by the seniors.”
2) Morgan refuses to lose
Waynflete senior Morgan Warner didn’t bring home the state singles title, but she did produce one of the most inspirational individual efforts you’ll ever see along the way. Warner, ranked third, rolled into the semifinals, where she and second-seeded Blair Hollyday of Cape Elizabeth produced a match for the ages. It took nearly three hours before Warner advanced, 5-7, 6-3, 7-5. Warner broke Hollyday’s serve on multiple occasions in the third set to survive. Warner finally met her match in the final, losing to No. 1 Sofia Mavor of Yarmouth, 4-6, 0-6, but she’ll be most remembered for how she got to that final match.
Michael Hoffer can be reached at mhoffer@theforecaster.net. Follow him on Twitter: @foresports.
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