Belmont Girls Hockey Takes Hingham To Last Minute Before Falling 2-1 In MIAA Quarterfinal

Photo: Belmont High goalie Jil Costa making one of her 37 saves against Hingham High in the quarterfinal in the MIAA Division 1 quarterfinals.

Speaking in the narrow hallway leading to his team’s locker room in Stoneham Arena, Belmont High Girls Hockey Head Coach Brendan Kelleher was trying to find the right words to describe the game his team played on Wednesday night. In the state quarterfinals for the second consecutive season, the Marauders fell just short, 2-1, against Hingham High on a final-minute goal.

Despite the disappointment of the result, Kelleher looked back at the effort and toughness of his team against the top Division 1 team in the state.

“We knew it was going be a one-nothing game, a two-to-one game,” said Kelleher.

“Well, the customers got their money’s worth today,” said Kelleher with a shurge and a smile. 
In a tightly fought contest that spotlighted both team’s top players, Hingham finally broke through Belmont’s stout defensive game plan on a reflexive pass toward the Marauder’s goal, “And you had a couple of sticks in there that ended with the puck in the net, and that’s the difference maker.”

For 44 minutes and 7 seconds, Belmont’s junior goalie Jil Costa stood as Belmont’s resolute redoubt, the last line of defense as the Marauders took on the onslaught from number 1-ranked Hingham.

“She stood on her head like she does every day for us,” said Kelleher. 

With her typical calm demeanor, Costa was rock solid between the posts. Only once in 38 attempts did Hingham get past Costa on a second-period goal via its all-star center Caroline Doherty. 

“They were just trying everything. I mean, they had girls coming and going all the time. We just tried keeping the outside, which we did for three periods,” said Kelleher.

The match was finally resolved on the Harborwomen’s 39 attempt: the game’s final shot. Hingham’s Callie Crean, who was parked just outside the crease, stabbed at a Doherty-induced rebound that slipped between Costa’s pads into the net. 2-1 with 53 seconds left in the game and the season. 

“They were bringing it,” said Kelleher. “We would bend a little, but we didn’t break. And then it was just a puck that popped in.” 

It was nothing less than a dream start for the Marauders when first-year winger Alexcia Fici, cycling behind the net, found co-captain Sadie Taylor alone in the slot. The team’s only senior whistled a slap shot by Hingham’s Izzi Puleo, and Belmont grabbed a 1-0 lead on the Marauder’s first shot on net just 2:37 in the first period.

“Sadie drove the ship all year for us. Her work ethic is stays alone. She drove the first line – Mackenzie and Alexi – which was the reason our season was such a success,” said Kelleher. 

The top D line of sophomore Elise Lakin-Schultz and eighth grader Amelia Long and Kelleher’s second line, Middle School Kate Townsend with junior co-captain Thea Menovich, were in top form. On several occasions, the defenders tracked down Hingham’s talented forwards, pushing them to the outside where their shots were a leisurely game of catch for Costa. Lakin-Schultz was often took on the laborious task of rooting out Harborwomen and screening her goalie.

The offense in the first half of the game was buzzing the Harborwomen’s defense. “We had our chances,” said Kelleher. Belmont’s leading scorer, junior Mackenzie Clarke, had three chances as the clock wound down in the first period, which ended with 10 shots for Hingham and 7 for Belmont. 

The start of the second period turned out to be a bright point for Belmont as momentun sided with them, with Menovich coming close when her shot confused Puleo. But the 10-minute mark would be the zenith of the Marauder’s attack as Hingham would reestablish their dominance as it kept possession for long stretches, forcing Belmont deeper into its own end. 

Hingham’s breakthrough came after Long blocked a shot that Doughty collected to the right of Costa. The Holy Cross-commit picked up her own rebound and buried the puck at 8:35 of the second to knot the game at one. The one-way play was evident as Hingham held a more than 2-1 advantage in shots, 12-5, in the period. 

The ultimate period saw Hingham pressure the Belmont defense, adding a fourth forward on the ice as they sought to finish the job before the vagaries of sudden death would decide the game. Costa would be peppered with 17 shots as Belmont mustered four in the period. 

The winning play began with a positive play as Belmont’s Long tracked down attacking winger Hannah Lasch and sent her to the boards. Lasch turned and quickly passed the puck toward the crease, where Lakin-Schultz covered a pair of Hingham players. Doherty redirected the puck that Costa saved. The rebound was directed to Hingham’s Crean, who came from the blind side, and she squeezed the puck between Costa’s pads.

“What can you say? Hingham is a great team, solid up and down the lineup with great coaches. They deserve their placement, and we proved tonight that we can play with them for an entire game. I’ll take that,” said Kelleher. 

In the postgame wrap-up in the Stoneham hallway, Kelleher said his team’s despondency from the loss – consecutive MIAA quarterfinals that ended up short – should not overwhelm its achievements: one-loss season, a top 10 power ranking, a place at the end of the regular season in the Boston Globe’s Top 20, and notably, consecutive Middlesex Liberty titles.

“This [game] takes nothing away from what the season was and what they accomplished,” said Kelleher. “Someone said to me before the season that this was a rebuilding year. So I think what they did was something else.”

Historic Run Ends As Belmont Field Hockey Fell To Andover In State Quarters Match

Photo: Belmont coming off the pitch at halftime at the quarterfinals of the MIAA state championship

A brilliant sun was just setting on a crisp fall day as the final horn sounded over Lovely Stadium in Andover as the players of Belmont High School Field Hockey slowly made their way to the sideline. Many just wanted to hold on to their teammates while others stared down at the field. They wanted more time together, to continue the season, win just once more.

But the cold reality was the season had just ended, as Andover came away with a solid 3-0 victory over the Marauders in the quarterfinals of the MIAA Division 1 state championship.

Belmont Head Coach Jess Smith only regret was that for the first time in 21 games, the Marauders didn’t bring their A game to a contest which they needed to be their opponents equal.

“It was not our day,” said Smith “Things didn’t fall the way they needed to. It’s like a basketball; we were hitting the rim and the ball just keeps coming out.”

“Some of those players that could elevate their intensity a little bit, it just didn’t happen,” she said.

Not that 5th-seed Belmont didn’t have its chances. In the first quarter, the Marauders were banging on the 4th-ranked Golden Warriors door. Five times they drove the ball within seven meters of goal. The first opportunity came just a minute-and-a-half into the game when a ball squeezed through Andover’s goalie Lucy Baker’s pads only to be stopped on the goal line.

While Belmont had a 10-6 shot advantage and 10 penalty corners in the 60 minutes, each chance would go wanting. And Andover would prove ruthless, scoring on its first two shots all within 90 seconds in the first quarter. The initial goal at 8:28 by Ella Sewall was one of the rare times this season the defense were out-of-position and missed a critical opportunity to clear the ball from in front of first-year goalie Zoe Bruce. The Warriors second tally from Avery Pitts at 6:51 came from some top-notch passing on a penalty corner.

Senior co-captain Ana Hopkins – who centered “The Wall”, Belmont’s outstanding back line along with junior Neamh Lesnik and sophomore Elise Lakin-Schultz – felt that going behind so early on the road put the team on the back foot.

“We were confident coming into it but no one was expecting [Andover] to so quickly bang those two goals. Once our team gets down, we were kind of like … ,” said Hopkins shrugging. “I don’t think we had it in us today to come back.”

While Belmont saw solid performances from center back Hopkins. first year mid Mia Smith and junior captain Mackenzie Clarke, who attracted double and triple teams, the Marauders couldn’t capture the same momentum which they could find during its 16 game winning streak which included wins against top 10 opponents Reading and Winchester.

While Belmont did push forward in the third quarter, coming close on a shot that barely skipped by the far right post, Andover packed the middle of the field with players stifling the Marauders centering passes from the wings. A late goal in the fourth quarter – a well-placed shot from Caroline Samaras that snuck inside the left nearside post – was the coup de grâce for any Belmont comeback.

Smith said the disheartening ending to the season doesn’t take away from a historic year for the program: a Middlesex Liberty Division title – capturing the crown for first in nine years – and records for wins (18) and shutouts (13) – lead by Bruce who didn’t pick up the game until this year – along with scoring 93 goals while surrendering just 18.

“We did a really good job this year,” said Hopkin, who is one of five seniors on the team. “I’ll miss it forever.”

“In all honestly, it’s a great year. We made it further than we ever thought back in August when we worried we were a .500 team,” said Smith. “The nice thing is it’s a young team and now they’re going to expect this from themselves coming into next season. I think they’ll be really motivated for it.”

Belmont Field Hockey Reach State Quarterfinals Shutting Out Natick, 2-0; Next Up Andover On Saturday

Photo: Sophomore defender Elise Lakin-Schultz after scoring Belmont’s second goal against Natick to secure a 2-0 Sweet 16 win in the MIAA Division 1 Field Hockey tournament in Belmont on Nov. 6, 2024.

Relying on its record-setting defense and a pair of goals from the teams most reliable scorers in junior midfielder Mackenzie Clarke and sophomore defender Elise Lakin-Schultz, 5th-seed Belmont High School Field Hockey reached the Elite Eight of the state’s Division 1 field hockey tournament with a dominating 2-0 victory over Natick High School in a second-round matchup held at Harris Field on Wednesday, Nov. 6.

Belmont (18-2-0) continues its tournament run into the quarterfinals on Saturday, Nov. 9, as they face Andover High at the Warriors home field. The game gets underway at 2:30 p.m. Fourth-ranked Andover (17-2-1) reached the quarterfinal defeating Beverly, 1-0. The upcoming game comes 10 years to the week when Belmont lost to Andover, 1-0, in overtime in the Division 1 North quarterfinals in 2014.

Belmont High junior midfielder and co-captain Mackenzie Clarke vs. Natick. Clarke scored the first goal and assisted on the second in Belmont’s 2-0 Sweet 16 match in the MIAA Division 1 tournament.

The win comes on the heels of Belmont’s playoff opening round game in which the Marauders rode roughshod over Barnstable High, 5-0, last Thursday.

“Natick played us tough … but we dominated the play despite all of what they did,” said Jessica Smith, Belmont’s long-tenured head coach after the game. She also praised the defense from the entire team and especially the three backs – senior Ana Hopkins, junior Niamh Lesnik, and Lakin-Schultz – “who played phenomenal, they worked extra, extra hard.”

Belmont High first year goalie Zoe Bruce makes a first quarter pad save against Natick in Belmont’s 2-0 Sweet 16 victory in the MIAA Division 1 Field Hockey tourament.

“I think that being super aggressive and going to every ball is something that worked well,” said co-captain Hopkins. In the third quarter, the Red Hawks crossed the midfield line just once and had its only penalty corner with three minutes remaining in the game. Final shot totals were seven for Belmont and one for Natick.

Since losing to Reading 2-1 on Sept. 13, Belmont (18-2) has compiled a 16 game undefeated/untied streak with 13 clean sheets. Over the regular and post season, Belmont has scored 93 goals while giving up 15, with first-year goaltender Zoe Bruce in the net who picked up the game in the spring.

In the Elite Eight match against Andover, “scoring on [penalty] corners with teams like in the top five is going to be key because it going to be tough to score on,” said Hopkins.

“The kids don’t remember what its like to loss, so they go out expecting to win every single game. I think with more energy, I’m expecting to win,” said Smith.