Sudden Impact
Tri-Valley/Fallsburg Boys Soccer Game Terminated After Frightening Second Period Collision Of Players; Girls Game Postponed As Well Due To Safety Concerns; Fallsburg’s Arturo Perez Okay After Night’s Stay At CRMC; Hunter Kennedy Treated And Released From Hospital
Fallsburg 2, Tri-Valley 0
By RICHARD A. ROSS
rross@sportsinsightsny.com

A night of great soccer would change into a night of gloomy concern after a scary midfield collision between Fallsburg sophomore Arturo Perez featured in earlier action in the top left photo and Tri-Valley's Hunter Kennedy pictured next to Perez, again earlier in the game in the top photo at right as they observe a scramble in front of the T-V goal. Perez was seriously hurt and had to be transported by ambulance to CRMC where he remained overnight. He' and Kennedy are both okay. Bottom left: Sam Didinsky beats T-V keeper Mike Devault for the game's first goal. Another close encounter of the cerebral kind: Didinsky and Tom Monforte nearly bang heads as Patrick McHugh looks on.
GRAHAMSVILLE, NY—It only takes a second for life to suddenly shift from the routine to the starkly dramatic.
Ask drivers or passengers who have ever been in accidents. One minute they were just going along and then out of nowhere comes that unforgettable moment of a collision, that terrifying sound of metal on metal and then the aftermath….
Lives can be changed or even lost in the space of a nanosecond and we rarely see it coming.
As I write this piece that can’t help but focus on the terrifying on the field collision between Fallsburg sophomore Arturo Perez and Tri-Valley senior Hunter Kennedy, I am reminded just how precious life is, how fragile we are.
In the blink of an eye the focus on this chilly night shifted without warning from a compelling soccer game between rivals teams to the grave concerns about what could have been a potentially life-threatening injury.
Before recounting what occurred, it is of paramount importance to report that both boys are okay.
Perez was assiduously attended to by the Grahamsville EMS team and covered with a cascade of donated jackets, sweatshirts and sweaters from concerned fans to prevent him from going into shock.

Fallsburg senior keeper Dustin Foertsch making one of his powerful punts. Foertsch and teammate Daniel Justiniano went to the hospital to look in on Arturo Perez.. The team is literally a band of brothers.
This transpired just moments following the head-to-head collision with the much larger Kennedy as the two boys raced with all the verve of their youth and determination for a ball that veered towards the near sideline, literally a few feet from my fixed attention, not to mention far too close to be photographed by my nearly 300mm zoom lens. .
Kennedy was clearly shaken up, but soon able to get up on his own power apply an ice pack to his aching head and looked over by EMS staff, before heading off to the hospital with his mom to be further checked out.
By stark contrast, Perez had fallen instantly to the field and immediately went into convulsions which then morphed into an even more frightening state of motionless as coaches and other personnel rushed to his aid.
As is the case with volunteer ambulance services in rural areas, it took awhile for the ambulance to arrive. Meanwhile Coach Herb Foertsch knelt over Perez, holding his hand and reassuring him that help was on the way.
The EMS team methodically assessed Perez’s vital signs, checking his pupils for dilation and rendering his neck and head motionless for the ensuing transfer to a backboard beforeh is trip to Catskill Regional Medical Center.
The collision had occurred in an area of the field partially darkened by a stubborn set of lights that had kept going out during the game. There was still sufficient light for the game to be played in but officials had already decided during the halftime that if any others had gone out they were going to call the game and the subsequent girls game slated to follow.
The incident occurred with 18:55 remaining in the second period. Fallsburg led 2-0 at that juncture but the game was clearly no longer the focus at this point; only the safety and well-being of the injured players and by extension, the two teams who awaited news about their condition and what was to happen next.
Foertsch never thought twice about what he needed to do. He accompanied Perez to the hospital in the ambulance. Devoted to his players whom he regards as his own children just like he does his son Dustin who is the team’s keeper, he sped off in the ambulance, leaving things in the hands of his able assistant coach Mike St. Lawrence.
The latter expressed his reservations to the officials about putting his team back out there on the partially darkened field and told them that Fallsburg Athletic Director Tim Bult was on his way and that the decision would rest with him and the Tri-Valley Athletic Director as to whether the game should be resumed.
By now it was getting later and later and the girls game slated to start at 8:00 would have been delayed by more than a half-hour at the least. Bult conferred with Tri-Valley Athletic Director Derek Adams, the coaches and the officials and after a lengthy confab, the game was called.
“Safety is our principal concern, “ stated Bult who noted that the game was official having passed its halfway mark and that the girls game would be rescheduled as quickly as they could agree on a viable date/time.
Foertsch’s wife Winnie, who diligently photographs Fallsburg sports of every ilk and variety was visibly shaken by the scene. Like her husband, she is immeasurably close to her son’s teammates. She messaged me early the next morning to let me know the boys were okay and that Dustin Foertsch and Danny Justiniano had gone to the hospital to be on hand for their teammate.
Such brotherhood is part and parcel of teams like Fallsburg where the bond of playing together forges abiding friendship and love. Perez is the younger brother of the now –graduated Victor Perez. The family ties speak for themselves and by family I am referring to the entire team connection.
While Tri-Valley (1-13, 0-9 OCIAA) is no longer in contention for a playoff berth, Fallsburg now 4-7 (2-5 OCIAA) needed to win every remaining game including this one, two against Eldred and one versus Chester to return to the sectionals where it has had its share of success as well as drama over the past two years.
The Bears kicked off to start the game but Fallsburg went right on the attack. Tri-Valley had trouble clearing the ball in the early going as Sam Didinsky turned it back as did Austin Halchak as the Comets pressed their cause.
Fallsburg drew first blood with 4:37 gone by on a goal by Didinsky for the 1-0 lead.
Tri-Valley looked to counter as the ball was sent ahead to a charging Tyler Greffrath. Fallsburg knocked it out and on a throw in by Dan Lederman the Bears tried to take advantage of the short field in front of Foertsch to make something happen.
Fallsburg’s Alan Sierra prevented that with a rapid rush up the far side. T-V kicked it back in but Justiniano was there to reverse it again as the back-and-forth parry continued. Mike Devault made a save on a Fallsburg shot attempt. Devault stopped a Didinsky shot as the fiery Comet held the sides of his head in disappointment.
Much of the play continued in the midfield with great intensity, a foreshadowing of the second half catharsis but there would be no more scoring in the period as the teams came off the field with the Comets holding the narrow 1-0 lead.
The Comets would add to that with a goal by José Rubio on an assist from Didinsky at 24:17. The Bears had a couple of chances to get it by Foertsch including shots by Greffrath and Anthony Beale but the dominant keeper wasn’t going to be beaten on this night.
With the second period now more than half gone, the pace intensified as the Bears tried to break through. It was then that the aforementioned collision occurred and everything came to a halt.
Clearly the game stats were the last thing on my mind so I am unable to report on the minutiae including shots on goal, saves etc. Once the decision to call the game was rendered, Fallsburg’s 2-0 victory went into the books. The fans and the girls teams exited the field. The Tri-Valley girls who were hoping to clinch a playoff berth with a win over Fallsburg will now have to wait for that potential chance.
Good Golly Ms. Volley

Fallsburg senior volleyball players are honored on Senior Recognition Night: Left to right (players and coaches names only not including their representatives (sorry!) Coach Carlye Hyde, Shanice Mack, Isabel Mejia, Alexis McCarthy, Nicolle Freeman and Marie Countryman.
Fallsburg senior volleyball players had were honored on Senior Recognition Night prior to their 3-1 victory over Liberty. T-V seniors include Marie Countryman, Nicolle Freeman, Alexis McCarthy, Isabel Mejiaa and Shanice Mack. The girls posed for photos with their loved ones prior to the game in the ceremony overseen by Athletic Director Tim Bult and Coach Carlye Hyde.
The Lady Indians won the opening set 25-19 but the Lady Comets came back to win the subsequent three sets by the scores of 25-23, 25-18 and 25-20 to garner their third win and a season sweep of the Lady Indians. Fallsburg’s other win came against S.S. Seward.
Top Performers:
Fallsburg: Melissa Melko 7 aces, 19 service points, 4 digs; Shanice Mack 5 aces, 10 service points, 5 kills, 3 blocks, 3 digs; Isabel Mejia 3 aces, 5 service points, 3 kills, 4 digs.
Liberty: Tea Williams 4 aces, 10 service points, 3 assists, 5 kills, 4 blocks; Cortney Sawyer 2 aces, 9 service points, 3 assists, 6 kills, 2 digs; Kristen Siegel 4 service points, 5 assists.
Records: Fallsburg 3-15; Liberty 1-16.
For albums of photos from the volleyball and soccer games visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com
Night And Day
Lady Monties Complete Season Sweep of Sullivan West Under The Lights As Purcell Returns To Action With A Hat Trick; Fallsburg Boys Garner First League Win Of The Season With Crisp Performance Vs. Tri-Valley
Boys: Fallsburg 4, Tri-Valley 1
Girls: Monticello 5, Sullivan West 2
By RICHARD A. ROSS
rross@sportsinsightsny.com

Two games for the price of one (Clockwise) Monticello's Mara Resnick and Sullivan West's Amanda Rosenberger vie for a ball in the heated encounter between the Cats and Dawgs in their rematch. Fallsburg keeper Dustin Foertsch goes airborne in one of his graceful patented saves. Tri-Valley's Christian Reynolds and Fallsburg's Felix Martinez angle for control. Monticello's Annie Purcell, center leads the advance with teammate Kerissa Bennett as Sullivan West's Jasmine Davis follows close by.
SULLIVAN COUNTY, NY—One sporting event a day is more than enough for a photojournalist who takes hundreds of photos, stays up into the night processing and uploading them and then devotes his mornings to telling compelling stories which range far beyond a laundry list of game details.
So imagine trying to reckon with two soccer games in one day; something I am down for at least one more time before this season is out when I travel to Tri-Valley to watch the boys and girls sequentially take on Fallsburg under the lights on October 20.
Just such a double dip was on tap on October 11 as I scurried around trying to catch up with four teams I haven’t seen nearly enough of this fall.
Two games supplied two compelling stories which I will combine in this post. Oddly enough for all of the talent on display among the teams who took their verve to the pitch, not one currently sports a winning record and were the season to end today, which thankfully it won’t, neither the Fallsburg or Tri-Valley boys nor the Sullivan West or Monticello girls would be in sectionals.
By season’s end that is apt to change but time will tell.
Fiery Comets Look To Make Headway As Second Half Of The Season Begins With A Win
I began my sojourn in Fallsburg to watch the Comets try to regain some swagger on their home pitch. The schedule for the first half of the season has been brutal , availing Coach Herb Foertsch’s squad nary a league win against four league defeats prior to this tilt with the Bears. With Tuxedo and Seward currently sitting atop of Division V, the Comets are glad to have most of those trials in the rearview mirror as they now turn their attention to T-V, Eldred and a rematch with Chester to try and parlay a series of league wins into a return to sectionals where they feel they can make some serious noise.
Fallsburg had posted a couple of non-league wins affording them a better record than Tri-Valley whose only victory came against Chapel Field. The Bears had already come up on the wrong side of six league games coming into this one and hoped to turn it around with a win over their traditional rival.
But from the opening kickoff it soon became apparent that the Comets would get the better part of the play as keeper Dustin Foertsch had time to daydream with his long range view of the ball which resided principally in the Tri-Valley end of the field.
Fallsburg’s sophomore midfielder Arturo Perez fired the Comets’ first shot on goal only 53 seconds in as Tri-Valley keeper Mike Devault went north into the upper left hand corner to snare it. The Comets held the ball in the T-V end as they set up for the first of seven first half corner kicks. A direct kick by Perez was snared by Devault as Coach Foertsch yelled encouragement to his team to keep the pressure on.
Offensively Tri-Valley was trying to use its speed up front coupled with the deft ball skills of Josue Ramos to get something going. Fallsburg was successful in repulsing rare runs as Kyle Miller, Austin Halchak and Daniel Justiniano were key in sending it quickly back.
At 6:30 the Comets nearly scored as Perez sent a nice cross to forward José Rubio which went just a bit wide. Tri-Valley was whistled for holding in the box but Perez missed on the PK try at 9:11. Halchak blasted one over the top as the Comets kept on coming.. At 11:40 in Felix Martinez turned the ball upfield and drove in an unassisted goal for the 1-0 lead.
Martinez was abetted by an assist from Rubio for his second goal at 17:00 in for the 2-0 edge. The Comets nearly got another one soon thereafter as Devault came out of the goal but Patrick McHugh’s heads up play averted that contingency.
As the first half wound down T-V’s Tom Monforte sent a blast over the top of the crossbar. Another Monforte shot was saved by Foertsch who punted it mightily back into the T-V end where Martinez took a feed from Rubio and sent it over the top of the cage. T-V’s Anthony Beale had a great run up the side and a shot by Zach Nilsen was saved by Foertsch as the half ended.
T-V Coach Jason Closs provided me with the second half scoring as I had to leave to get back for the Suliivan West-Monticello girls game under the lights.
Tri-Valley scored on a cross from Zach Nilsen to Tyler Greffrath who headed the ball into the goal 15:00 minutes into the second half. Fallsburg scored their final goal with under 8 minutes to play in the second half on a penalty kick by A. Halchak following a penalty on a TV player for holding inside the 18. Hope this helps. The other Comets’ score came via Rubio with an assist from Sam Didinsky.
Foertsch had five saves for the Comets; Devault had ten for the Bears. Fallsburg improved to 3-5-0 (1-4-0 OCIAA)l, while Tri-Valley fell to 1-10-0 (0-7-0 OCIAA).
Questionable Call Opens The Floodgates As Monticello Breaks A 2-2 Deadlock With A Trio Of Unasnwered Goals
The night rippled with excitement as the Sullivan West players gathered with their parents prior to the rematch with Monticello. Adorned in their painted shirts that read “No Goals Fo’ You,” the Lady Bulldogs looked to defend their home pitch under the lights and to come out with fire, something they severely lacked in their 3-0 loss to the Lady Panthers two weeks prior.
During the latter moments of that game, Monticello junior Annie Purcell had sustained a concussion and had missed the intervening games. On this night she was back at it and it was clear from the get go that there was no rust from her enforced hiatus.
Reckoning with Purcell had been very much on the mind of Sullivan West Coach Mike Ellmauer as he implored his players to mark her like, “white on rice.” But Purcell’s ball skills, rendered razor sharp by her year-round play on Quickstrike FC would net her a hat trick in the Lady Monties 5-2 win.
That said, it would be amiss to infer from that score that this one a one-sided affair. In fact, it was anything but. It would be more apt to describe this non-league clash as toe-to-toe encounter which had seen each team grab the momentum leading to a 2-2 tie as the Lady Westies tied it up on a PK by Emma Seidl at 26:15 of the second half..
The game took a dramatic turn when an official whistled Sullivan West’s Amanda Rosenberger for a dangerous kick even though there was no one within ten yards of her in any direction.

Iconic match up: Sullivan West's Amanda Rosenberger looks to stymie Monticello's Annie Purcell as the latter turns the ball. Purcell returned from a concussion-induced hiatus to score a trio of goals in the win.
The event would signal a change in momentum in the second half as the Lady Panthers would add three goals for the 5-2 victory. After the game, Ellmauer cited the call as key in the outcome. “That was an awful call. How do you call a dangerous play when the nearest person is more than ten yards away? This has been our modus operandi all year with calls like this from local officials,”Ellmauer went on to say, while not taking anything away from Monticello, a team he noted is far better than their record would indicate.
More on the post-game commentary erelong but first here is the game chronology.
After honoring all of its players including seniors Stephanie Hauschild, Amanda Rosenberger, Emaa Seidl, Alika Simon, Kristina Sumfleth, Kassie Thelman and Giselle Vega, the Lady Bulldogs got set to go to work.
The Lady Westies kicked off but the Lady Monties got control of the initial parry. Seidl sent it deep ahead to Rosenberger but as she would all night long, Monticello defender Laurie Schoonmaker quickly reversed it. Soon Purcell was weaving in and out. Heather Miller’s advance resulted in an offsides call.
Monticello held it in as the two teams continued to strongly contest for the ball. The Lady Panthers pressed the attack with Kerissa Bennett, Jordan Fredell, Purcell and Mara Resnick but the Lady Bulldogs were making their own runs as Rosenberger just missed a nice cross looking to draw first blood.
After a handball call gave the Lady Bulldogs the ball, the Lady Monties held in and Purcell missed a wide-open net at 30:49. Purcell rocked one off the crossbar and Resnick missed on the rebound. Purcell had a shot just under 26 minutes as Jordan Parsons made a sliding save.
Quickly the action reverted to the Monticello end as the Lady Bulldogs looked to break through with a couple of nice chances. Defense was sharp for both squads who appeared to be very evenly matched.
At 16:48 Bennett nearly got one in. Resnick’s shot was blocked by Parsons. The Lady Monties were getting a steady advance up the far sideline but having trouble getting the needed cross in front at times.
It was Sullivan West that got the first goal at 8:33 as Carly Grishaber poked it through on the left hand side of the net by keeper Morgan Halloran on an assist from Cassidy Sauer for the 1-0 lead. Just one minut e later Resnick answered to tie it up on an assist from Purcell at 7:29. Monticello amped its energy behind the goal and pressed their cause. A great play by Kristina Sumfleth broke up on great run but Purcell had the last word of the first half as she buried an unassisted goal with 19.6 seconds to give the Lady Panthers the 2-1 upper hand at the break.
Sullivan West came out on all cylinders to start the second period. Sullivan West was afforded a penalty kick with 26:25 after a trip in the box. Seidl sent it by Halloran but the official waved it off saying the keeper wasn’t ready. Seidl dialed it up and did it again and the game was now knotted at two-all.
Purcell had a direct kick saved by Parsons as the ball continued to go back and forth. Neither team scored but both had chances. Parsons fell on a shot by Fredell for the save. It was then that Rosenberger was whistled for the dangerous play that set up a goal Bennett assisted by Purcell for the 3-2 lead at 12:54.
It had occurred at a time when the Westies appeared to have the momentum but suddenly things went south in a hurry as Purcell fired in an unassisted goal in to make it 4-2 just 31 seconds later at 12:23.

Monticello gets the bragging rights in this year's chapter of the Cats and Dawgs spat but this feud is far from over.
Purcell’s final goal came on a perfectly lofted direct kick at 9:35, giving the talented junior the hat trick and assuring the Lady Monties of the this year’s last word in the Cats and Dawgs Spat. While the last story was entitled Cats and Dawgs Redux, I’m sure Ellmauer might have been okay with this one being called “Cats and Dawgs Reflux,” as in acid reflux given the bitter taste of the game which slipped away behind the questionable call.
Purcell was upbeat about her return to action. “I think we really kept our intensity up which was an important factor. We’re coming off a lapse over our last few games. We didn’t’ take it for granted that we beat them the last time. We really kept it up and had some nice combinations,” she said.
Asked to comment about her team’s answer to the penalty kick that tied it up, she noted “We never got down and kept the energy positive.” Purcell attributed her direct kick placement to her year-round play with Quickstrike FC, her travel team. We play all year round.
Monticello Coach Bill Stento referred to his team as “Up and down. We’ll have games where we play like this as opposed to losing to Liberty 5-0. It’s been an inconstant year but when these girls come to play, they really show it,” he averred.
Stento felt his backline defense abetted by Lauren Katz who was able to push up as the Lady Westies deployed just to up front, helped to keep the flow heading towards the Lady Bulldogs end a significant part of the time. “That allowed us to control the midfield a little better.”
With a daunting schedule ahead, Monticello will have an uphill battle to make sectionals but they are not technically out of it at this juncture, nor is Sullivan West who must now face Burke for its next challenge while the Monties try to wrangle with Cornwall.
Morgan Halloran had seven saves for the Lady Panthers; Jordan Parsons had 15 for the Lady Bulldogs.
Monticello improved to 3-8, while Sullivan West fell to 4-6-1
For albums of photos from both games, visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com
A Matter Of Pride
Liberty Punctuates Pride Weekend With A Captivating Non-League Win Over Talented Fallsburg; Sergio Diaz Records The Hat Trick To Account For Indians’ Goals
Liberty 3, Fallsburg 1

Pride Week at Liberty is enhanced by a dramatic 3-1 Indians' non-league win over neighboring Fallsburg. (Clockwise) Liberty senior captain Andy Hazelnis poses for a picture with his parents prior to the game as part of the honoring of the team's elder statesmen. Liberty players surround Sergio Diaz and congratulate him on his goal. He scored all three of Liberty's goals on the night. Liberty fans and band members amp it up as part of the night fever. Fallsburg's inimitable keeper Dustin Foertsch holds on for a save. Battle of the 17's. Liberty's Alex Barragan and Fallsburg's Alan Sierra go at it. Fallsburg brings the ball forward on a dramatic rush and early in the game Fallsburg's Amado Gallo and Liberty's Chris Symanski vie for possession.
LIBERTY, NY—“Liberty Pride,” was the school’s renaissance mantra rekindled by former Athletic Director Jason Semo. Though Semo is now no doubt churning up school spirit in South Colonie High School in the Capital District, the legacy he left behind in Liberty is alive and well.
A day after the girls soccer team pulled off a dramatic come-from-behind 2-1 win over rival Sullivan West, it was the boys team who entered the limelight both literally and figuratively. The occasion was a non-league game against ever-competitive neighboring Fallsburg . The tilt was about to take place under the lights as part of the Pride Weekend cavalcade.
It should also be mentioned that the girls tennis team garnered a victory the day before as it beat Fallsburg 4-1.
With a playoff bid’s life on the line, the football game slated against Ellenville as the Friday Night Lights centerpiece of the weekend, Liberty is hoping for another outpouring of whoops, hollers and chest bumps.
But on this night it was all about soccer.
It should be emphatically noted that pride is not the exclusive property of Liberty. Fallsburg has plenty of it too and rightfully so, especially when it comes to a pair of boys sports, namely soccer and basketball. On this first day of fall it was the soccer pitch, not yet the hardwood that would offer the Comets a chance to show their stuff and at times they did just that.
Both teams saw a bevy of talent go out the door at graduation, Liberty more so in terms of sheer numbers, but Fallsburg too. For Liberty Coach Debora Simpson and Fallsburg Coach Herb Foertsch, the agenda is to get their newly configured squads to gel as rapidly as possible so that their vital league quests will result in sectional bids and the chance for a run at a title.
Fallsburg’s Class C quest entails encounters with S.S.Seward, Tuxedo, Chester and Tri-Valley, while Liberty’s Class B campaign calls for clashes with O’Neill, Burke and Sullivan West.
Night Fever
From the opening whistle it was apparent that both teams would hustle with all they had, vying for every loose ball and looking to create scoring opportunities in a game that figured to be immensely competitive.
In goal for Fallsburg was senior Dustin Foertsch. Anyone who knows anything about soccer in this region knows all about the athletic keeper who guards his cage with unflagging vigilance and whose acrobatic diving saves are the stuff of local legend.
At the opposite end of the field was Liberty freshman Julian Spina who replaces another legend, namely the recently-graduated Will McGuire. Spina is clearly up to the task as his five saves on the night would attest. With a stringent defense in front of him, he wasn’t tested that often in this game and the lone Fallsburg goal, a perfectly-lofted direct kick by Fallsburg sophomore Arturo Perez was impossible to stop.
A Liberty handball led to that score which tied the game at that juncture. Simpson and her sideline assistant Mike Salvia were impressed by the shot. Spina would have needed some Flubber, that miraculous substance of movie fame that lets a player defy gravity to have stopped that one.
But let’s start at the beginning…..
Fallsburg kicked off but within seconds, Liberty’s Sergio Diaz had his first shot on goal, a booming kick that sailed over the crossbar. It was a preview of coming attractions for Diaz who was about to uncork a hat trick to propel his team to an uplifting 3-1 win.
Simpson has been noting from the start of the season how cohesive and unselfish this group is. Last year’s team was very, very talented, but was also plagued at times by overly-strong individual play.
As Fallsburg made its runs over the course of the night, Liberty showed great instincts in not only repulsing the attack, but turning it around to create push ups of its own. Great communication and deft passing, as well as a quickness to the ball would provide the opportunities for scoring.
Great speed is an attribute both teams can take pride in and there was plenty of that on display.
Fallsburg newcomer Alan Sierra made his presence felt early with a nice shot attempt. Speaking of speed, and deft ball skills, one cannot help but heap praise on Liberty junior captain Pedro Garcia who was racing up the field after dancing and juking to get the ball away from Fallsburg defenders who got to see much of the back of his jersey.
Speaking of captains courageous, how about Liberty’s Andy Hazelnis, a player this writer has now dubbed as “omnipresent.” For those of you who don’t know this word, it means appearing everywhere at the same time and that’s what Hazelnis does.
Lunging, leaping, sliding, running, he has great field vision and understands how to make the pass that will advance the ball towards that hoped-for seam in the defense.
Diaz got a rise of the crowd as he raced up the sideline, veered towards the middle of field and blasted a shot, ably resisted by Foertsch. A Liberty corner kick was also nullified by Foertsch but soon the direction shifted and it was Perez knocking at the Liberty door. Spina answered.
Diaz had more opportunities with direct kicks but couldn’t close the deal. The teams retired to the half in a scoreless tie.
That deadlock ended as Diaz scored an unassisted goal about a minute in for the 1-0 lead.
Not long after, Perez deposited that classic direct kick into the upper part of the net and the Comets exulted in the 1-1 tie.
As Liberty pressed the attack, Foertsch came out and Diaz got the ball by him for the 2-1 lead on a ball that took an incredible angle from the right side. At first glance it looked like Diaz had penetrated too far to make the angle but the ball was perfectly placed for the go-ahead score. Garcia had provided the assist.
Fallsburg battled on but Liberty players seemed to find a newfound burst of energy, egged on by the loud crowd and pep band who were making their presence felt under the blackening skies.
Fallsburg’s Felix Martinez looked to tie it up with a superb shot but Spina snared it to preserve the lead.

Great sportsmanship. Fallsburg's Dustin Foertsch hugs Liberty's Andy Hazelnis as John Kolarik , left and Daniel Justiniano wait their turn to shake hands.
At 30:50 in, Diaz hit his third on an assist from Hazelnis. The hard-fought game would soon send him to the sideline with a bruised thigh. Fallsburg senior Sam Didinsky was another casualty with a hard-knock to the head.
As the final whistle blew, the two teams amiably exchanged handshakes and a few hugs. It’s a good rivalry. Foertsch for one, can’t wait to renew it on the hardwood. Fallsburg stunned Liberty last year with last-second heroics by Michael Robinson..
Diaz who speaks volumes with his game, is a man of few words. “I don’t know what I can say. I’m just happy,” he grinned. Asked to respond to whether he felt proud given that it is Pride Week, Diaz said, “I am.”
Simpson had this to say. “It was a great game. We fought really hard for every touch on the ball. We always play them very tough. This was one of the best-contested games. It was relatively clean and both teams hustled really hard.
We made it happen and we wanted it,” she added.
“I really thought at the beginning of the season that it might take awhile but that our kids would work together very well as a group and that even though you didn’t see everybody out there tonight, everyone is kind of on the same page right now in terms of where they’re supposed to be. We’re still working on our second touches.
“I told the guys including those who didn’t play tonight that it was a team effort .”
Hazelnis deflected praise for himself and credited his entire team’s effort including defenders like John Kolarik. “He’s unbelievable,” he noted. It’s great to have him back. Kolarik broke his leg in a heroic play against O’Neill last season and hurt his other leg in the first game of the season this year. But he’s in there relentlessly pursuing the ball and using that patented head shot to repulse the opposition’s will to attack.
Foertsh agreed that it was a great hard-fought match. “We always want to win because they’re our neighbors and are a bigger school. We thought we had a chance and they came out strong in the second half.
Diaz is fast and a great ball handler. I tip my hat to them,” he added. “We worked hard and communicated well tonight. We were playing the ball the way we’re supposed to. We’re improving from game to game. We’ll see what happens.
Fallsburg expended a lot of energy and has to turn right around and play a home league game against Eldred . A day game after a night game…another real challenge.
Liberty remains unbeaten at 3-0-1, while Fallsburg slipped to 2-3.
For a full album of photos, visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com











