After Slow Start, Belmont High Girls Soccer Shuts Out Framingham, 2-0, In MIAA Div. 1 First Round

Photo: Belmont High senior mid Nora Goulding (number 5) readies to celebrate with goal scorer first year Clara Selandraski (21) after the midfielder scored the game-winning goal in Belmont’s first round tournament shut out of Framingham.

Early in the second half of a scoreless match in Belmont’s first round playoff game against Framingham, first year midfielder Clara Selandraski was unceremoniously dumped to the Harris Field pitch from a hard tackle. As she was preparing to launch the free kick 20 meters from goal along the left sideline, Belmont Head Coach Jemmy Cange came up to her with set play that orginated on the training ground.

Rather than pitching the ball “into the mixer” – the penalty area that was crowded with players – Jemme saw the Framingham goalie was favoring the left side of the box where the ball was expected to be placed. Following the classic advice of Baseball Hall of Famer Wee Willie Keeler: “Put’em where they ain’t,” Selandraski took a quick shot to the open right post. The play worked like a charm, surpising the goalie who could only follow the ball into the back of the net.

“The goal just put away the game,” said senior co-captain Danica Zicha “Then we calmed down, because [the game] won’t go to PKs. We’re winning now.”

“It was good that we finally get one of those goal that we really walk on practice all,” said Cange. “It was a great goal that came from the practice field.”

Asked if he should be awarded an “assist” on the goal, Cange said, “Oh, that goal was mine!”

Selandraski’s goal was the first of a pair of tallies in the second half that secured the Marauders a trip to the MIAA Division 1 Sweet 16 as Belmont shut out Framingham, 2-0. Belmont’s second came from Marauder ace scoring leader Zicha who slotted in her 31st goal of the season from 10 meters out with 18 minutes remaining in the match.

Senior Danica Zicha, Belmont High’s ‘Der Bomber’, scores her 31st goal of the season against Framingham in the first round of the MIAA Div. 1 tournament 

“I saw the ball, and I just went for it. I was like, ‘No, that’s my ball’,” said Zicha who took the shot off the ground and despite the goalie getting her gloves on it, the ball broke through into the net.

Eight-ranked Belmont (15-2-2) will host ninth-seed Central Catholic High School (16-1-2) – the alma mater of White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt – in the rain on Monday, Nov. 10 at 6 p.m. The Raiders defeated Attleboro, 6-0, to advance.

The first 40 minutes saw both teams unable to put together a cohesive attack. While the offense was sputtering, Belmont defensive line put the kabash on the Falcon’s attemps to put pressure on Belmont junior goalie Martha Dimas.

Belmont High junior goalkeeper Martha Dimas registered her 10th clean sheet of the season against Framingham.

“We’ve been working with the backs for a lot. They’ve been stepping up since the whole season,” he said of seniors Farah Harris and Ashley Waters, junior Elizabeth Schreiner and sophomore Vianne Capitani. “They all went in there and did a wonderful job.”

The second half had the familiar feel of past Belmont matches with a dominance of the midfield – thanks to rangy junior Madhavi Ramadas and physical presence of sophomore Catherine Greiner – that freed up space for passes to first year winger Mackenzie Tierney and senior Nora Goulding, whose speed caused problems for the Falcon’s D-line.

What the team has to improve to take the win against a Central Catholic squad that lost a single game in the regular season (to Bishop Feehan, 2-1) and is one an 18 game unbeaten streak, will be about consistancy throughout the game.

“We definitely need to come out the way we came in the second half (against Framingham),” said Zicha. “We just need to play like that throughout the whole game. Obviously, there are gonna be a lot of nerves going into the second game, probably even more than against Framingham, but I think we can definitely do it. I think we come out strong just how we played in the second half. Everyone was connecting, everyone was talking, everyone was hyping each other up. I think if we do that, we’re gonna be like, unstoppable,” said Zicha.

“We have a slow start, but they keep fighting,” said Cange. “That’s the spirit of that team that we have all year. They never put themselves down. They keep fighting. And at the end, we were the better team, and we got the result that we wanted.”

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