BY
MATT SCHOOLEY
Visiting Hopkinton High
School jumped out early on host
John Stark and minimized a second-
half charge, continuing its
recent dominance of the Generals
with a 7-2 victory in Division-
III boys lacrosse on Friday, April
18.
Hopkinton’s David Wood
opened the scoring roughly three
minutes into the first quarter of
the contest, firing a deep shot
that found the back of the net.
Less than a minute later,
Doug Meyer gave the Hawks a
two-goal lead, weaving through
the General defense and scoring
past John Stark goalie Andrew
Seccareccio. It was the first of
Meyer’s three goals during the
game.
Joe Dammann then added
two goals within a minute of each
other, and the Hawks, behind
goalie Bryan Libby, who turned
several difficult shots away, held
on for the win.
“We got a normal game out
of (Libby), with normal meaning
outstanding,” said Hopkinton’s
head coach, Doug Maynard.
“He’s doing a great job in net. He
can play outside the crease and
make outlet passes. He’s been
the total package.”
Early in the second half,
John Stark scored when Nathan
Goldsberry fired from close
range after receiving a pass from
Parker Gage. That cut the lead to
4-1.
Following Meyer’s second
goal late in the third quarter,
John Stark answered when
Goldsberry notched his second
goal of the game to make it 5-2.
Hopkinton iced the contest
with two fourth-quarter goals.
Generals head coach Mark
Schaub said his team has had
lopsided contests with Hopkinton
in recent match-ups, and he
was happy his team was able to
keep the score closer this time.
“In the past it would have
been hard for us (falling behind
early), but this team has a good
mindset,” said Schaub. “We
didn’t think we were out of it. I
was proud they could focus on
what they knew they could do.”
Maynard said the key to the
victory was his group’s determined
effort to control play.
“I love seeing more men getting
on the ground balls,” said
the coach, whose team improved
to 2-1. “We had great hustle, and
we worked very hard.”
Schaub said John Stark,
now 1-3, had a difficult time
controlling the speed of Hopkinton.
“They’re a fast team, and
they really kept us running.
That was impressive,” he said.
“They moved the ball well, and
when our defense got out of position,
they found the hole.”