Bears' magic runs out
Things go Collins Hill's way in final 20 minutes of AAAAA soccer quarterfinal
By Robyn Disney - rdisney@macon.com
WARNER ROBINS --Seven Houston County soccer jerseys were left hanging on the crossbar of one of the goals as the boys team left the field Friday night.It couldn't be denied that those jerseys, representing the seven seniors on the team, weren't all the Bears left on the field.
Houston County played a gritty and aggressive game but came up short in a 3-1 loss to Collins Hill in the GHSA Class AAAAA quarterfinals. It was the fourth consecutive year that the Bears' season ended in that round.
"I don't have any words to take away the hurt," Houston County head coach Chris McCook said. "I hope the underclassmen will take that hurt and turn it into a positive for next year. I was really pleased with this senior class. They got us here again. And the work ethic in the past two weeks really picked up. It was tremendous that they got us there, and we just fell a little short."
Down 1-0, a free kick in the 60th minute put Houston County back in the game. Dallas Hall belted a shot from about 25 yards out and senior Alex Baughman headed it in to tie the game at 1.
Less than a minute later, the Bears had an opportunity to go ahead when senior Kyle Turcotte crossed the ball from the left side. Senior forward Josh Salmon was right in front of the net, but the ball was shot over the net.
Collins Hill quickly turned momentum the other way, with Juan Giraldo giving the Eagles the go-ahead goal. A free kick by Jonathan Hazard with nine minutes remaining gave Collins Hill a two-goal cushion.
"We come out in the second half and get the tying goal," McCook said, "and within a minute-and-a-half later, we just missed a wide-open net that could have spurred us on to the finish. I think that was an emotional letdown that carried over. We just lost our focus for about seven minutes there. They got one in and then they got another."
The Eagles (17-4) were coming off the biggest win in program history, upsetting Chattahoochee, which was ranked by StudentSportsSoccer.com as the No. 1 team in the nation, on Tuesday.
The No. 3 seed out of Region 7 rode that momentum into Friday's match, attacking the net early. They got a lucky break in the 24th minute when goalkeeper Kyle Clodfelter made a beautiful save off his fingertips. But the ball bounced back to Ricardo Ortega, who got it in the net for a 1-0 lead.
Houston County (16-5) went on the counterattack with numerous shots, positioning itself for a physical second half in which five yellow cards were issued, including two for Collins Hill's Greg Hoover, who was sent off with two minutes remaining.
"We just play hard," Collins Hill head coach Stan Carpenter said. "The players have bought into a team atmosphere. They support each other and when they do that, they are great."
Collins Hill will either host Centennial or travel to East Coweta on Tuesday. Not only is this the furthest the Eagles' boys team has gone in the postseason, but it is also the most wins in a season.
While Collins Hill is moving on to the semifinals, Houston County has nine juniors that are hoping to hang up their jerseys next year in a later round.
"It is a fire that burns in them to get here and to go further each year," McCook said. "It is a tradition that has been handed down from each class to class. The work ethic in the offseason just intensifies each year."
Teamwork Builds Champions! GO BEARS!
Bears' depth overwhelms Bulldogs
By John Kosater - sports@macon.com
Senior Kyle Turcotte scored two goals in a one-minute span 25 minutes into the first half to give the Bears a lead they never relinquished.
The win puts Houston County in the state quarterfinals.
Houston County head coach Chris McCook was pleased the way his team reacted to Tri-Cities' early goal.
"I think it got us even more fired up," McCook said. "Our plan was to come out and get an early lead and really get after it. We wanted to set the tone, and I think we were able to accomplish that."
The first half was full of action, with both teams pushing the tempo. Turcotte gave his team the lift it needed, and by the end of the half, Tri-Cities was wearing down from the constant barrage from the Bears' players off the bench.
Nursing a 2-1 halftime lead, the Bears controlled the second half. They took a two-goal lead on a penalty kick from Richie Wimsatt, and from that point on, frustration set in for a Tri-Cities.
In the final 20 minutes, Tri-Cities was assessed four yellow cards and three red cards.
Houston County's Dallas Hall scored on a header off of a corner kick with 1:30 left in the game.
Tri-Cities head coach Hemal Patel had then seen enough and pulled his team off the field.
Turcotte, a senior who comes off the bench, was pleased that he was able to help his team.
"Coach McCook tells us all the time that someone new has to step up and play big, and I was able to take advantage of my opportunities (Tuesday)," Turcotte said. "I wanted to come in and try to give us a spark, and I just was in the right place at the right time."
Jenkins girls knocks out Lady Bears
Houston Co. boys hosting second round 04/25/08
Matthew Brown
For most of the match, Jenkins High Lady Warrior soccer players didn’t display much in terms of strong kicking skills. That is, until it mattered. From seemingly out of nowhere, Jenkins’ Tori Futrell crushed the ball from about 30 yards away from the goal. At 4:23 remaining, that hot shot stopped at the back of the net, and the Lady Warriors from Savannah eliminated the Houston County High Lady Bears 2-1 Wednesday in the opening round of the 2008 GHSA AAAAA playoffs. For Jenkins, it was the second straight visit to the Warner Robins area for state tournament play. Last year Warner Robins High beat the Lady Warriors 3-0 in the second round. This year, Wednesday’s win against Houston County marked only the third win for Jenkins (14-4) against a team with a winning record.
But visiting coach Joe Hul can really thank stellar play from his sophomore goalkeeper Kalee Cross for this upset. Hul said his keeper had gone through some injury problems earlier in the season, but she racked up some amazing saves on Wednesday despite prior problems with long kicks (something Houston County uses often from Elizabeth Weber, Amanda Coggins and Jessica Scarlett) and playing the second half with the sun in her eyes. For Houston County, the match became an immediate uphill climb as Jenkins scored barely two minutes into the opening half. It was a matter of speed for the Lady Warriors as they took the ball down the left side of the field and took a quick and successful first shot on goal. Hul’s team did all it could from there to use tight marking and clogging of the passing lanes on Houston’s offensive end to protect the 1-0 lead. Cross had six saves in the first half, but also saw the Lady Bears miss some open opportunities.
Weber, Coggins and April Holloway helped the home team dominate possession time by winning the 50-50 balls. Samantha Wheeler, a freshman, and Rebecca Primm played well off Sid Baxley’s bench in keeping the ball at midfield. When Jenkins did make some token pushes, Clarie Jacques had a great half in shutting down the right side of the field. Kailey Garrison had three shots in the first half. Two of those were saved, and another was the result of Cross’ mishandle of a Scarlett long shot. But Garrison’s rebound rolled to the wrong end of the side bar. Cross made three more saves of the spectacular variety in the first six minutes of the second half. She reached up to catch a little loop by Kierston Wharton and stopped a liner from Garrison. Houston didn’t attack the net much again for about 12 minutes. But a charge by Wheeler created an open net. Garrison didn’t miss this time on the rebound for a 1-1 tie at 13:56. Jenkins turned much more offensive minded with the tied score, and the Lady Warriors even missed an open net after a fine play from Lady Bear keeper Teresa Davis. Jenkins also took a shot from the same spot as the winning goal that went over the goal.
HC BOYS CRUISE
Karl Chester had three goals and Ryan Barrick and Josh Salmon each had two as the Houston County High boys soccer team smashed Johnson High of Savannah 7-0 Tuesday in the opening round of the GHSA Class AAAAA tournament. Six different players had assists for the Bears, including Barrick. Cameron Bradley, Richie Wimsatt, Alex Baughman, Dallas Hall (2) and Brandon Davey all helped out in the scoring efforts. Kyle Clodfelter had the shutout at goalkeeper.
Coach Chris McCook said his team was trying some new formations in hoping to earn more success in this year’s state tournament. He said this first round match wasn’t the best test for that, but that the Bears executed well and played hard. McCook said it was important to get an early lead, and it was 3-0 in the first half. But he said to the team at halftime that at some point they will have to battle from behind and wanted to see a stronger second half. He got that with four more points.
The Bears next play Tri-Cities at home on Tuesday. Though Houston is the No. 2 seed from Region 1-AAAAA, the next match is at home because Tri- Cities, at No. 4 from Region 4-AAAAA, upset 2-AAAAA champion Luella. This will be a rematch of last year’s first-round match.
Bears not tested by Atom Smashers
By Jonathan Heeter - jheeter@macon.com
WARNER ROBINS --
Chris McCook knew his strategy was risky.
But the Houston County head soccer coach figured a switch in his defense would be needed if the Bears were to challenge for a state championship.
The switch, which was designed to add a proficient counter attack, got mixed review in its first trial Tuesday night. But the Bears didn't really need it in a 7-0 win over Johnson-Savannah in the first round of the GHSA Class AAAAA playoffs.
"B-minus," McCook said of the defense. "I saw some good things and some things we need to work on. For the first time out, I thought it went well. There's still room for improvement."
The 10th-ranked Bears (15-4) altered their defense from using a true sweeper to one who could put pressure on the opposing team. It allowed the Bears to use an extra attacker to create some more offense on a counter attack. McCook said he wasn't sure if the strategy will be used going forward in the playoffs.
"We might go back to the other defense or use this one or play both," he said. "We'll see. We definitely feel comfortable mixing them up."
The Atom Smashers (10-8) never tested the new Houston County defense. Their only good look on goal came in the second half on a free kick that Bears sophomore goalkeeper Kyle Clodfelter punched over the crossbar.
"I knew he would try to put a soft shot over our wall, so I was about 70 percent sure of where it was going," Clodfelter said.
The Bears had no problem generating offense.
They had three goals during the first 25 minutes of the game, highlighted by a pair of goals by Karl Chester. Josh Salmon added the other first-half goal.
"It really makes it a lot easier when we are out there scoring first," Clodfelter said. "The confidence goes up. We felt like with a lead and a good second half that we would win."
The Bears tacked on four more goals during the second half to pick up their fourth largest margin of victory this season. Chester picked up a hat trick with a goal in the second half.
HoCo v Valdosta
thanks, Darnell, for the photography!
NEW!!!
CHECK the PHOTOS page for HoCo/WR pictures!!
Friday's Late Boys Soccer Box
HOUSTON COUNTY 6, VALDOSTA 1
Goals: HC - Kyle Turcotte, Ethan Krirat, Josh Salmon, Richie Wimsatt 2, Ryan Barrick; V - Patrick Moore.
Assists: HCy - Shawn Wharton, Dallas Hall, Christian Aguliar, Karl Chester 2.
Saves: HC- Kyle Clodfelter 3, Zac Bradley 2; V - Bryce France 9.
Shots: Houston County 22, Valdosta 8.
Records: Houston County 14-3, 10-2 GHSA Region 1-AAAAA.
Next: Brookwood at Houston County, 7 p.m., Tuesday.
Houston County earns big win over Warner Robins
-By Robyn Disney www.macon.com
WARNER ROBINS --When Houston County senior April Holloway walked off the soccer field Tuesday, she was in tears and her teammates immediately asked her what was wrong. She had broken her right foot last week and thought maybe she was in pain.But those tears were not of pain. They were of joy. For the first time since her freshman year, the Lady Bears beat Warner Robins, posting a 4-3 victory that gave the Demonettes their first region loss since 2006. The Demonettes entered GHSA Region 1-AAAAA last year.
"It was so emotional," said Holloway, who had the Lady Bears' second goal. "We try our hardest. We put our heart (in) the game, and we always lose. So it finally felt good to win." more pictures
Houston County (10-4, 9-2) caught a lucky bounce against Warner Robins (12-2, 8-1) late in the match. With the score tied at 3 and with less than three minutes to go in regulation, the Lady Bears were putting pressure on the Demonettes' defense. Elizabeth Weber crossed the ball from the left side of the field, hoping to find a teammate. But the ball bounced off the foot of a Warner Robins player and into the net.
"We had a little bit of luck (Tuesday)," Houston County head coach Sid Baxley said. "In the previous game (a 5-2 Demonettes win), they had a little bit of luck and we had opportunities to score and didn't. We had opportunities (Tuesday) that went in, and they had opportunities that didn't."
Weber also had an assist to tie the game when her corner kick landed in front of Jessica Scarlett, who kicked the ball in to tie the game at 3 in the 72nd minute.
Junior Courtney Walker had two goals for the Demonettes, who still sit on top of the region standings with two matches left. If both teams win out, Warner Robins will claim the top seed. Both teams will host first-round state tournament games.
• WARNER ROBINS BOYS 2 - HOUSTON COUNTY 1
Warner Robins senior stopper Jonathan Applegate beat Houston County goalkeeper Mark Hoskins in a penalty-kick shootout to give the Demons the victory over their region and city rivals.
Warner Robins won the shootout 4-2.
"That's the third time in the past two seasons that I've kicked last (in penalty kicks)," Applegate said. "You get nervous, but it is not that bad."
If the Demons (8-3-1, 8-1) win the rest of their region matches (Coffee, Tift County and Lowndes), they will win the region title. The Bears (13-3, 9-2) were sitting in the top spot prior to Tuesday's game. They were also ranked 11th in the classification.
Houston County almost got the win in the 69th minute when senior striker Kyle Turcotte came up and to the left of Demons goalkeeper Kyle Wisniewski. The keeper came to get the ball, and Turcotte kicked it right past him. But the Bears were called offsides, and the goal did not count.
Houston County had another opportunity, this time in the penalty-kick phase.
Coach Andy Bailey said. "This game, Houston County, is always a battle."
Prep Game Day
REWIND
Some tight soccer games: A game decided in penalty kicks after two overtimes? Two games decided by 1-0 scores? It has been a great past couple of days for soccer fans. The Westside boys team won 3-2 over Central on Tuesday, and the Houston County boys team beat Colquitt County 1-0 on Friday while Tattnall Square's girls team defeated Central Fellowship Christian 1-0 on Friday. With the GHSA postseason around the corner, soccer fans can expect more close games.
FAST FORWARD
Houston County at Warner Robins, soccer, 5:30 p.m., Tuesday: Soccer fans will want to bring a lawn chair because it will be worth staying for both games. The girls kick off at 5:30 p.m. with Warner Robins trying to keep its region winning streak alive at 19. But the Lady Bears are No. 2 in the region with a loss to Warner Robins and Tift County. The boys will kick off at 7:30 p.m. with Houston County, ranked 11th in AAAAA, trying to avenge its only region loss of the season. Warner Robins, which won the earlier game 1-0, also has one region loss. This could decide the region title.
HOUSTON COUNTY 1, COLQUITT COUNTY 0
Goals: HC - Alex Baughman;
Saves: HC - Kyle Clodfelter 4; CC - Robert Brooks 9.
Shots: Houston County 23, Colquitt County 6.
Records: Houston County 13-2, 8-1 in Region 1-AAAAA; Colquitt County 7-6, 5-3 in Region 1-AAAAA.
Next: Houston County at Warner Robins, Tuesday 5:30 and 7:30 p.m., April 8.
Houston County continues its soccer mastery over Colquitt
Houston County continues its soccer mastery over Colquitt
JV Girls beat Tift to take region title, cap
perfect season
this links to a 7 minute photo essay.....it will take a while to load......it's worth your time......from South Georgia Sports Network
Colquitt County JV soccer team falls to HoCo in tournament finals
Published March 27, 2008 11:02 pm — The Colquitt County boys soccer team was defeated 5-1 by Houston County on Thursday in the finals of the Region 1-AAAAA tournament, held in Tifton.
The match was originally scheduled to be played in Moultrie, but Houston County was unable to travel that far because of the 100-mile limit rule.
Colquitt defeated Coffee 3-0 and Valdosta 2-1 in penalty kicks to reach the finals and finishes the season with a 6-8 record.
Houston led 2-0 at the half and was up 5-0 before the Packers scored a goal. Coach Ashley Hill said it was unclear which player scored the goal. "Even when we were down, nobody gave up,” Hill said. “They’ve got nothing to hang their heads about. I’m proud of them.”
JV put Demons to rest
JV Boys advance to Championship Game
defeating Warner Robins 4-0
JV Girls
advance to
Championship Game
Houston’s Bears edge Tift
March 25,2008 – Houston County’s Karl Chester scored a goal with nine minutes left to play Tuesday night, giving the Bears a 1-0 win over Tift County in soccer action.
"Our defense played well and we maintained possession all night,” said Houston coach Chris McCook. “We rotated a lot of people in and we had some sick tonight. Tift County played us tough like they always do and it was a really good match.”
The Bears will visit Colquitt County Friday night in a rematch of last week’s game when Houston won 2-1 in overtime. Tift County will be at Valdosta Friday night at 8 p.m.
Houston defeats Colquitt in OT
March 21, 2008 – It came down to an overtime period Friday night but the Houston County Bears finished with a 2-1 win over Colquitt County Friday night in a game decided by penalty kicks.
The teams were tied at 1-1 before the game went into the overtime phase. For the Bears, Josh Salmon, Ryan Barrick, Alex Baughman and Dallas Hall all nailed their kicks. The fifth one was never attempted after reserve goalkeeper Mark Hoskins made a save to seal the win.
“This keeps us at the top of the region with Warner Robins,” said Houston coach Chris McCook. “We need to keep going and get ready for another big week next week.”
Salmon scored the first goal for the Bears in the first half before the Packers tied the game in the second half on a header by Hudson Wrenn.
Colquitt County will host Warner Robins on Tuesday while Houston County visits Tift County the same night.
Soccer teams drop two to Houston County
— The Colquitt County boys soccer team has been involved in eight games this season in which the final score was 2-1.
The Packers have won four of those. Their opponents, including Houston County on Friday night, have won the other four. And it was a frustrating loss for the Packers, who have yet to defeat the Bears.
Colquitt County tied the match 1-1 on a header by Hudson Wrenn on a ball played in by Spencer Clayton with 11 minutes remaining in regulation. It was Wrenn’s first goal of the season. And the score remained tied through the next 21 minutes, sending the game into penalty kicks, where the Bears outscored the Packers 4-2.
The Houston victory broke a tie with Colquitt County atop the Region 1-AAAAA standings.
The Bears are now 6-1 and in first place in the region. The Packers fall to 5-2 in the region — and 7-5 overall — with home games against Warner Robins on Tuesday and Houston County next Friday.
The Packers have not defeated Houston County since the Bears joined the region in 2005.
“We played a great game,” said Packers coach Rob Craft. “I’m not ashamed or disappointed in the way they played.”
Craft said he was especially pleased with the play of Morgan Castellow.
“And Trey (Brooks) made some great saves to get us into overtime,” Craft said. “It’s disappointing and it hurts, but we know we can play with them.
“Next Friday they are coming to our house and we want to repay the favor.”
Houston County also won the evening’s first game, taking a 7-0 victory over the Lady Packers.
The win raises the Lady Bears region record to 6-1 and their overall record to 7-3.
The loss was the third in a row for the Lady Packers, who fall to 5-7 overall and 2-5 in the region.The Lady Packers, who have been bedeviled by injuries all season, started without Anna Hall and then lost Suzi Hernandez during the game.
“We’ve just got to win to come back and win some games in the next go round,” Coach Jimbo Jarvis said. including Houston County on Friday night, have won the other four.The Packers have won four of those. Their opponents, including Houston County on Friday night, have won the other four. And it was a frustrating loss for the Packers, who have yet to defeat the Bears.
Colquitt County tied the match 1-1 on a header by Hudson Wrenn on a ball played in by Spencer Clayton with 11 minutes remaining in regulation. It was Wrenn’s first goal of the season. And the score remained tied through the next 21 minutes, sending the game into penalty kicks, where the Bears outscored the Packers 4-2.
The Houston victory broke a tie with Colquitt County atop the Region 1-AAAAA standings.
The Bears are now 6-1 and in first place in the region. The Packers fall to 5-2 in the region — and 7-5 overall — with home games against Warner Robins on Tuesday and Houston County next Friday.
The Packers have not defeated Houston County since the Bears joined the region in 2005.
“We played a great game,” said Packers coach Rob Craft. “I’m not ashamed or disappointed in the way they played.”
Craft said he was especially pleased with the play of Morgan Castellow.
“And Trey (Brooks) made some great saves to get us into overtime,” Craft said. “It’s disappointing and it hurts, but we know we can play with them.
“Next Friday they are coming to our house and we want to repay the favor.”
Houston County also won the evening’s first game, taking a 7-0 victory over the Lady Packers.
The win raises the Lady Bears region record to 6-1 and their overall record to 7-3.
The loss was the third in a row for the Lady Packers, who fall to 5-7 overall and 2-5 in the region.The Lady Packers, who have been bedeviled by injuries all season, started without Anna Hall and then lost Suzi Hernandez during the game.
“We’ve just got to win to come back and win some games in the next go round,” Coach Jimbo Jarvis said.
Successful soccer weekend for Bears
It was senior weekend, and a successful, satisfying one for Houston County High soccer players. Both the boys and girls teams are fighting to stay in the hunt for first place in Region 1-AAAAA, and with two wins apiece at home the Bears and Lady Bears continue to put pressure on the remainder of the league. READ MORE
Click HERE for pictures from the Colquitt matches.
Photos by Gary Harmon and the Houston Home Journal. Thanks for supporting the BEARS!























