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The SC basketball team hit the court last Wednesday night for their league home opener against La Poudriere, delivering a confident and commanding performance. Fresh off a successful weekend tournament, the team displayed the fruits of their hard work, particularly in transition play and defensive discipline.
After a whirlwind start to season – 3 days of tryouts, 4 practices, then 5 days off for November Break – your Senior Boys Basketball Spartans kicked off their 2024-25 campaign barely five days ago, and a lot has already happened.
While we were definitely the underdog going into this all-important semifinal clash vs Alexander Galt, I felt we had a legitimate shot to pull off the upset. We just had to avoid bad luck, and have a few bounces go our way. Hey, if we could do it in 2022 (the legendary Friday Nite Lights victory over these same Pipers), we could do it again in 2024. Lightning CAN strike twice. Happens all the time with lightning rods, doesn’t it?
Varsity Boys Offensive Player: #11 Zackarie Michaud
The varsity boys captain had a massive month in October, as he and his linemates, Ryan Dwyer and September Offensive Player of the Month Kamyl Chemrouk, continued to put the puck in the net. At the October CPSHA weekend hosted by the Rothesay Netherwood School, Zackarie had 6 points in 4 games, highlighted by a hat trick in a 5-2 win over the Ridley College Tigers. The second-year Spartan looks to continue his torrid start to his senior season as the Spartans look ahead to a busy month of November that features the TCF Bank International Invitational tournament in Minnesota and the Stanstead Showcase.
The Stanstead College Senior Boys Soccer Spartans capped off a very successful 2024 Eastern Townships Interscholastic Athletic Conference (ETIAC) season by defeating the Bishop’s College School Bears, 5-1, in the playoff championship game played last Friday at Stanstead College.
The stage was set…the reigning ETIAC champion Richmond Knights versus the 2023 runner-up Stanstead College Spartans in the 2024 ETIAC semi-final played at Stanstead College on Tuesday, October 23 at 4:00pm. This match would be the third and final one of the season, and despite having won the previous two league encounters by an aggregate 11-3 margin, the Spartans would not take the Knights for granted. Potentially slipping up the Spartans on this day – and if there was ever a banana skin in the works – was exhaustion resulting from six games in three days at the CAIS tournament in Aurora, Ontario, just the previous weekend.
The Stanstead College Senior Boys Soccer Spartans attended the annual CAIS tournament held on the campus of St. Andrew’s College in Aurora, Ontario, October 17-19, and finished in 6th place in the silver division. CAIS organized a new format for 2024, which was aimed at having divisions of like with like talent. There are large and small CAIS schools, some with very strong and some with less experienced quality teams, so this new format provided all schools with the opportunity of playing against teams of similar caliber. For Stanstead College, this format worked perfectly, as games against Trinity College School, Ridley College and Country Day School were all excellent matchups.
I love how CAIS 2024 started – 7:45 am Thursday morning, freezing cold, -1o C, field a slick, white carpet of frost, and your Spartans are the first team out there warming up, the whole campus to ourselves. A neat boarding school scene I won’t soon forget.
Stanstead College is hosting the Canadian Accredited Independent Schools (CAIS) Senior Girls Soccer Tournament this week, with 18 schools from across the country represented.
Massey-Vanier is tough. Big and strong and skilled at every position, with some speed thrown in there as well. No weak spots, no letup, just a well-coached group of intelligent athletes pressuring you wherever you turn. No wonder they’re heavy favourites to win the 2024 ETIAC league banner.
Game 1 – Tuesday, September 17th - Stanstead 1 @ MVR 0
The Spartans opened the ETIAC season by travelling west to Cowansville and the home of the Massey-Vanier Vikings. Always a difficult team to play, the Vikings are a tough opponent and hard to beat at home. From the opening kick-off the Spartans displayed their trademark style of play, keeping the ball by passing and moving it quickly on the ground, beginning offensive attacks by playing the ball from the defenders through the midfield to the forwards and breaking opponents down with aggressive pressure.
Last week something happened that is a first in my 32-year coaching career, something that is probably illegal in some countries: three full ETIAC games in a row. All at home. Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday. 80 minutes each. Back-to-back-to-back. Talk about your homestand.
Maxim has picked up right where she let off last season to lead a deep Spartan offensive attack, scoring 7 goals and 10 assists in 10 games. Primarily playing on a line with Rosalie Tremblay and Isabelle Michaud, the trio has been able to dominate the offensive zone through high-level skill and creativity and strong team system play to create high-quality scoring chances and score timely goals. Individually, Maxim has found offensive success across even strength, power play and penalty kill by creating space with her size and beating goalies with her powerful shot.
The weather has not quite turned to real hockey weather here in Stanstead. The leaves are beginning to change colours and there is a distinct chill in the air at night, but days have been filled with some late September sun and warmth. Despite Mother Nature’s desire to hold onto summer, this past weekend was time for the Pat Burns Arena to open its doors to Varsity Boys Hockey action. With a 4-game week, the boys began by dropping their first CPSHA game to rival Bishops College by a score of 7-5 in a high energy, offensive game.
Soccer can be the most frustrating sport on the planet. You can do everything right, make all the right passes, all the right plays, but still not score. Finishing is hard, kids. That’s why Messi makes a trillion dollars a year. Because finishing… is… hard.
This past Tuesday, your Spartans travelled to Richmond for their third ETIAC game of the season. So far in league play, we had yet to score on our way to a desultory 0-2 start.
Early season can be tough. You’re not in great shape after the summer (best case sore legs, worst case injured), you don’t know your teammates very well (what’s her last name again?), and the coach keeps moving you around, trying you at different positions (can’t he make up his mind?).
Game 1 – Spartans (2) vs College de Levis - Blue (0)
Stanstead started the game on the front foot and took the lead in the 5th minute when left-winger Jeremiah finished from inside the 6-yard box following a great pass from Jordan. The Spartans doubled the lead in the 12th minute when Gabriel won a 50/50 contested ball, made a quick move and fired a rocket into the back of the CDL goal. Spartan goalkeeper, Emanuel, faced and denied the four shots directed his way and earned the shutout.
After a full week of tryouts and practices and figuring out positions and getting to know each other, your Senior Girls Soccer Spartans faced real competition for the first time with the 2024 edition of the Stanstead Invitational Tournament (aka the Dyke ‘N’ Friends) this past Saturday.
This student-athlete from Jay, Vermont has been a consistent and steady presence throughout the entire senior girls rugby season, whether bringing up the defensive line with full speed tackles or leading off the offence with a decisive run. Any player, coach or fan who has watched our games notices Camryn. What is more impressive is what people don’t always see, namely the attention to improving footwork and skills in practice and boosting teammates when they need it. Camryn performed just as well this past weekend in Dover, New Hampshire, reacting to unexpected situations and focusing on moving the ball to set her teammates up for exciting tries. Congratulations, Camryn.
Following a difficult start to the season, this golfer from Ayer’s Cliff, Quebec had one of his best rounds ever on Sunday. William’s first tournament victory as a Spartan came in dramatic fashion. Two Stanstead golfers were tied with low score following the tournament, so in order to determine the low gross, they went to extra holes. This means that they walked back and played the 18th hole again. Still tied, they played the 10th hole and still tied, off to the 17th hole they went! When it looked like they were headed to a 4th playoff hole, William pulled up his socks and made a fabulous 12-foot putt to take the victory over his teammate, Jack Carter. For his overall progress this year and his performance on Sunday, your Athlete of the Week, from the golf team, William Towner.
Who knew that these student-athletes hailing from Singapore and Saitama, Japan would become a match made in tennis heaven. From the beginning of the season, their coaches could tell that they would become a force to be reckoned with. Cruising by their opponents at almost every opportunity, they have impressed players on the other side of the net and earned the respect of their peers. Always looking to improve, they have also used their time to help their teammates get better. Their coaches would even argue that nobody is more dedicated to their craft than these two. For their incredible and consistent play in the last three meets with BCS, Athletes of the Week, from tennis, Seia Oikawa and Louis Sullivan.
A standout second-year junior rugby player, Julia Lee is fierce on the pitch! She is an offensive force and relentless on defence. Her strong and technically sound tackles had fans gasping in awe at yesterday’s ETIAC games as she helped her team solidify wins against both Galt and BCS. Julia is wracking up points on the scoreboard and back to finish what she started last season. A quiet leader with tremendous skill and determination, congratulations Athlete of the Week, from junior girls rugby, Julia Lee.
Malcolm Nicholson, Grade 11, from Darien, Connecticut, had an epic performance in the boys lacrosse team’s first game in the United States this year. He finished with three goals and played with toughness and selflessness. Malcolm is relentless with the ball in his stick and also when trying to get it back. The attackmen duo with Jaxon Pierce is a threat to score anytime they touch the ball. Malcolm’s follow-up game vs BCS did not disappoint. He led the team with another three-goal performance for an 11-5 win. For his elite scoring touch and overall selfless play, congratulations Athlete of the Week Malcolm Nicholson.
Chaz Grenier from Stanstead, Quebec showed true grit this past weekend at Rugbyfest in New Brunswick. In the finals, he was double-teamed and still managed to create offence. His strong play on defence resulted in numerous turnovers and momentum changes in the most critical moments of the championship game. Off the field, Chaz leads by rallying everyone to be invested and push towards the end goal of team victory.
The second student-athlete recognized this week, Shun Hatano, is known as the “Tokyo 10." He is an electric player with a large toolbox of skills. He can kick, see gaps in the defence and pass on a rope to his left and right. When it matters most, he elevates his game to another level. These two Grade 12 leaders were instrumental in securing the championship banner in the Bonnycastle "B" Division.
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Last week's Co-Athletes of the Week were goalie Louis Sullivan and team captain Charles Généreux from U15 hockey who led the team to win the RSEQ Metro Division semi-final at home, including the game-winner by Charles in overtime.
In what may well turn out to be the final basketball action of the 2023-24 season, your Spartans travelled to Centennial Regional High School to take part in the annual MacLeod Provincial Tournament. The MacLeod is as storied a tournament as there is, with the inaugural event taking place way back in 1953. 71 years ago! In all that time, Stanstead College has emerged as champions four times (2017-2019, and again last year in 2023). It was a hard tournament to win. But as we’ve said before, worthwhile things are never easy.
A Grade 11 student from Sherbrooke, Quebec, Noémie Cloutier was the heart, soul and rock of the prep girls hockey team all through last weekend's JWHL playoffs. With the team down two defenders all weekend due to injuries, the team’s captain played every second shift on defence. Not only did she perform her regular duties of shutting down the opposition’s offensive threats, but she also contributed offensively by scoring her first goal of the season in the opening game. She played through the pain of badly bruised ribs and never complained about it. Wanting a championship so badly, she showed up three hours early at 6:00 am to prepare for the big game. The girls could not have pulled it off this weekend without her leadership and unconditional dedication to a team-first attitude. Congratulations, Athlete of the week Noémie Cloutier.
Congratulations to our varsity boys and prep girls hockey teams, both of whom came from behind to earn their respective league championships this past Sunday.
Words are hard to find right now. It is hard to try to write something as if it is in the past, when I want to keep this amazing feeling present, I want to stay in this moment. My sense of joy for our boys, pride for our program and school and personal relief for feeling that our job was done well are all working together to make waking up the last couple days to be extra special.
The last RSEQ game of the year, against Le Salesien on their home floor, was one of those games I just don’t like that much, i.e. non-stop full court pressure with loose reffing. Which means our ballhandlers are constantly being ridden downcourt and there is body contact on every single play. Which means every time you have the ball you have two to four hands reaching in to grab it from you with no fear of a foul (in fact, Clara’s father spent most of the game yelling “Hands! Hands!” from the sideline). Which means the game is a haphazard track meet where everything is rushed and improvised and messy, the way basketball is probably played in prison. And the main problem with prison basketball is that you don’t learn very much in terms of technique or strategy. It’s a battle of athleticism. It’s roller derby.
This past weekend, your Stanstead College Spartans travelled to St-Jean-sur-Richelieu to participate in the first of our two most important events of the year, the 2024 Bailly Small Schools Provincial Tournament. As defending champions, and ranked #1 going into the tourney, we were looking to take care of business and bring the championship plaque back home.
I can’t say for sure how all of their games have gone this season, but I’m pretty sure that La Ruche, undefeated and undisputed league leaders in RSEQ D3 this season, haven’t had many games as tough as their game against your Stanstead Spartans last Wednesday.
Athlete of the Week is co-awarded to two linemates from prep girls hockey. Laurie Aubin has been at the top of her game all season and did not disappoint this weekend at the JWHL Challenge Cup. She scored the overtime winner to advance the prep girls to its first championship game in program history. She finished the tournament with 5 goals and 5 assists in 6 games which was good for fourth overall in the tournament. Laurie’s overtime goal was assisted by Zoé Charland, who has been an equal force the entire season. Zoe scored 9 goals and added 3 assists for 12 points in 6 games this weekend and good for second overall in the tournament. Like Gretzky and Messier or Lemieux and Jagr, these two linemates lead on the scoresheet but also with their work ethic and never-quit attitudes. Congratulations, Laurie Aubin and Zoe Charland.
The halftime buzzer goes. The players trudge to the bench, heads down, shoulders slumped. Demoralized. I can’t exactly remember the score, but it was ugly. 36-11 or something like that. It felt like more. Laruche’s full-court press was debilitating, no let-up at all, never letting us get comfortable on offence, and their fast break was killing us. Even if we got a couple bodies back in transition, they would stay in fifth gear, attack downhill and finish anyway, contested or not. Even when we forced them to play in the half court, they dropped threes like it was nothing. They were fast, athletic, deep, they were shooting well, and they were on their home floor. Laruche was rolling. Stanstead was not going to win this game.
“That was the best team basketball I’ve ever seen you guys play.” – Mr. Andrew Blair, head minor official, giving his thoughts to me after the game.
And he was not wrong. Because not only were we going up against a fast, well-coached Triolet team hellbent on revenge (we’d beaten them 10 days earlier), but Trio full-court presses every second of every game, and we were going to be without our point guard (as Melissa was out with a concussion). Nothing is harder in girls’ basketball than bringing up the ball vs pressure without a true dribbler. Not only is it difficult, it can be demoralizing. I’m not gonna lie, I was concerned coming into this game.
This Grade 12 student-athlete from Ayer's Cliff, Quebec earned 3 points in two games against a tough Le Boisé opponent on Saturday. The U18 hockey captain followed up these performances by helping lead his team to a 7-3 victory over Frontalière on Monday by scoring 4 goals and adding 3 assists. William always plays the game the right way, is a natural leader on and off the ice and is a pleasure to coach. Congratulations, William Towner!
Twelve days ago, in our first game back from the Christmas break, we travelled all the way to Victoriaville to play our worst game of the year versus Le Boise, a listless 33-24 loss. This past Tuesday was our chance at redemption. At home this time.
This past weekend, varsity boys hockey won both of their games, the first against the #3-ranked Kimball Union Academy and the second against New Hampton School. Leading the offensive charge in both games was team captain Jaxon Pierce (Grade 12, Fredericton, NB). Jaxon scored on the first shift of the game against Kimball Union and scored both the first and second goals against New Hampton school on Sunday. Besides finding himself on the scoresheet for 3 goals in 2 games, Jaxon’s work ethic was on full display all weekend. Congratulations, Jaxon!
This past weekend your Spartans travelled to the big city for the annual Montreal Independent Schools Tournament, always a highlight of the year. We were hoping to build upon the progress we made in our last league game vs Salesien, and build we did. We haven’t quite returned to our best form of the season (which was at CAIS last November), but we made real strides.
Well, that was better. Much better. Starting right away with the warmup, we looked faster. More athletic. Ready to go. Passes were crisp, hands were sure and cuts were sharp, the kind where you hear the sneakers squeak on the floor. All of which carried over to the first quarter, and honestly, to the whole game. Last Thursday, we looked like we were moving in quicksand, but this past Tuesday vs Le Salesien we were purposeful for the full 32 minutes.
Charles Genereux of U15 hockey had a tremendous day this past Wednesday at Cardigan Mountain School in New Hampshire. A Grade 9 student from Lorraine, Quebec, Charles scored the tying goal in the last three minutes of play in the third period, and then, with 54 seconds remaining in the game, he scored the game winner on an outstanding end-to-end rush. The Spartans staged the late-game comeback against a big, strong and fast Cardigan Mountain team to pull off the 3-2 victory. For putting the team on his back, your athlete of the week is the U15 hockey team captain, Charles Généreux.
Saturday, December 2, 2023, the CAIS Tournament in Winnipeg. Not only was that the last basketball game your Spartans played before this past Thursday’s RSEQ trip to Le Boise in Victoriaville; that was also the last day the whole team even practiced together. Immediately upon their return from CAIS, our Grade 12s started preparing for exams, i.e. no athletics, just studying.