Month: October 2017

Northern Durham Ruins Orange Soccer’s Senior Night 3-1; Southern Edges CRHS 2-1

It appears the first state playoff game at Orange Socer Stadium will have to wait.

The Orange Panthers could have tied East Chapel Hill for 2nd place on Wednesday night by simply defeating Northern Durham, a task the Panthers easily accomplished last month with a 4-2 decision at Armstrong Soccer Stadium in Durham.

Instead, Northern scored twice in the opening 20 minutes, and held off a late charge to defeat the Panthers 3-1 on Wednesday night, ruining senior night for Orange’s 12 players competing in Hillsborough for the final time.

Orange ends the regular season 13-6-2 in the regular season, 10-4 in the Big 8. The Panthers will almost certainly qualify for the 64-team 3A state playoff field, which will be announced Monday. However, they will most likely be on the road to open play.

Senior Bryan Torres knocked in his own rebound for the Panthers’ only goal with 5:32 remaining in regulation. Northern pulled that goal back scoring on a quick counter for the final tally.

Orange put themselves in position to win its first-ever conference championship by winning a school-record nine consecutive games, but ended the regular season losing three of its last four.

Cedar Ridge’s regular season ended in disappointing fashion on Tuesday night, falling to Southern Durham 2-1 at Red Wolves Stadium. Than Aung, in his final game, scored the Red Wolves’ only goal on a penalty kick.

It was the final game for Cedar Ridge seniors Aung, Jake Brown, A.J. Perez, Henry Mellor and goalkeeper Jesus Yanez.

The Red Wolves end the season 5-15-1, 4-9-1 in the Big 8.

Cedar Ridge Freshman Ivy Garner Qualifies for 3A State Tennis Tournament

Not even Cedar Ridge’s first girls tennis conference championship team had a player that qualified for the state tournament.

However, Red Wolves freshman Ivy Garner has accomplished something that no other Cedar Ridge girls tennis player has: she will play for an individual state championship this weekend.

On Saturday, Garner finished as the runner up in the 3-A Mideast Regional Championships. Garner advanced to the Regional Championship match, where she fell to Carter Juergens of Northern Guilford 6-3, 6-0.

Garner won her opening singles match over April Harrington of Grays Creek 6-1, 6-0. In the quarterfinals, Garner knocked off Emma Hilburn of Northern Guilford 6-1, 6-0. In the semfinals, Garner won a the only three-set match of the championship round, beating Northern Guilford’s Emily Callahan 7-5, 2-6, 6-4.

Garner will be the #2 seed from the Mideast for the state championships on Saturday at the Burlington Tennis Center. The 16-player tournament features Garner taking on Madison Cullpher of D.H. Conley in the opening round.

Cedar Ridge’s Olivia Ward also qualified for regionals, falling to River Britt of Union Pines 6-2, 6-4. The Cedar Ridge doubles team of Kate Milner and Brianna Celine lost in the opening round to Hailee Haymore and Charlotte Craven of Union Pines 6-0, 6-2.

The East Chapel Hill doubles team of Savannah Bright and Stela Joksimovic captured the Mideast Regional Championship by beating Haymore and Craven in the championship 7-5, 6-1.

Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: Julia Mills

Cedar Ridge senior Julia Mills had a solid finish at the 3A Central Regional Golf Meet last week. She posted an 18 hole score of 105, placing her just eight strokes from moving on to the state match. Mills medaled in every match for the Cedar Ridge girls golf team this season, and finished the conference season with a 51.8 nine hole average, which put her in 14th place out of 32 golfers in the Big 8 Conference. Mills is a Red Wolf through and through, as she is also an assistant trainer for the Cedar Ridge athletic department and plans to make a living in that field once she graduates in June.

Musty Leads Red Wolves XC to 3rd Place Finish at Big 8 Championships

Despite competing without its top five runners, the Cedar Ridge girls cross country team finished third at the Big 8 Cross Country Championships at Chapel Hill High School on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the Orange boys cross country squad finished third in its competition, led by junior Kyle Van Tubbergh, who finished 11th overall.

Orange and Cedar Ridge had strong finishes from underclassmen in the girls meet. Sophomore Allison Musty was the top finisher for the Red Wolves, completing the 5,000 meter course at a time of 20:09.40. She finished 13th overall. Musty’s classmate, Ella Nissler, came in 13th with a time of 20:45.90.

Orange’s top finisher was freshman Sascha Godfrey, who crossed the finish line 18th overall at a time of 20:51.50. Cedar Ridge freshman Anne Morrell came in 19th at 20:56.40, ahead of Orange sophomore Ava Heffernan, who came in 20th at 21:08.50. Red Wolves freshman Ariadne Solis finished 21st.

Orange freshman Abby Dease, the daughter of baseball coach Dean Dease, came in 27th. Panther sophomore Katie Cook registered a 29th place finish.

Chapel Hill captured the girls’ individual and team championship. The Tigers had 15 points. East Chapel Hill finished 2nd with 63 points. Cedar Ridge was 3rd at 91 points. Orange was fifth at 112 points.

Chapel Hill’s Katherine Dokholyan won the individual conference championship with a time of 17:55. It was a day dominated by the Tigers, who had the top six finishers in the girls’ race.

In the boys meet, Orange finished 3rd with 98 points. Cedar Ridge finished 5th with 106 points, only five points behind Northwood.

Van Tubbergh completed the course with a personal best time of 16:57. Cedar Ridge’s top finisher was junior Rory Legg-Bell, who came in 14th at 17:17.30. Brian Finch, in his final conference meet, came in 16h for the Red Wolves. Orange junior Sam Rasinske finished 17th at 17:26.20, another personal best.

Orange senior Andrew Sollars crossed the finish line 24th. Cedar Ridge’s Alistar Stewart came in 27th. Orange sophomore Wesley Morris finished 28th, while Panther wrestler Mitchell Askew came in 29th. Cedar Ridge’s Eli Tilley finished 30th.

Chapel Hill had the top eight finishers in the boys race. The individual champion was senior Ryan Combs, who finished the course at 15:37.20.

Jones Scores in OT as Northwood Upsets Orange 21-20

Photo by Jackson Fuqua 

The grind of playing in the deepest conference in the Triangle, 145 yards in penalties, a banged up starting quarterback balancing the load of his team on his back and no Marvante Beasley finally caught up to Orange.

Northwood’s A.J. Jones scored on a four-yard run in overtime and Lupe Amezquita kicked the game-winning extra point as the Chargers stunned Orange 21-20 in overtime to ruin Homecoming night at Auman Stadium.

Orange (6-2, 3-1) quarterback Payton Wilson, clearly feeling the effects of making 56 carries over the last three games, scored on a eight-yard touchdown run. Kicker Francisco McKinley pushed the extra point wide right, triggering a raucous celebration on the Northwood sideline as the Chargers defeated the Panthers for the first time since the two teams became conference rivals in 2013.

Northwood (7-2, 4-0) has the inside track on winning the Big 8 Championship for the first time. They will enter the penultimate week of the regular season next Friday in sole possession of first place with senior night against Hillside in Pittsboro, following by a road date at Northern Durham.

”They have a big old offensive line and a big old power running game,” said Orange Coach Van Smith. “They get a lot of blockers at the point of attack and they know how to follow those blockers. I thought defensively, we played pretty well. We gave up a fumble for a touchdown.

Yet with :46 remaining in the first half, all seemed comfortable for the Panthers. They led 14-0 after an interception by Corbin Kenion at the Orange 8-yard line.

Things started to unravel on the next play from scrimmage, when Morgan Paschall fumbled right into the arms of Northwood’s Brendan Harrington, who scooped up the ball and scored from eight yards to saw the Orange lead in half just before intermission.

The Chargers didn’t score an offensive touchdown in the first half despite Orange committing four personal foul penalties, including three for facemask violations.

“Our halftime discussion was ‘Guys, we can’t continue to get 15-yard penalties,” said Smith.

Orange responded by getting hit with a late hit penalty—on the opening kickoff of the second half….which was immediately followed by a 15-yard unsportsmanlike penalty when a player mouthed off to a referee. 30 yards in penalties without a second going off the third quarter clock.

“Are you kidding me?” Jones said to himself on the sideline.

With the drive starting from the Orange 35-yard line, Harrington scored on a 21-yard scamper with 11:02 remaining in the third quarter. Orange’s 14-point lead was erased in 1:47 of game time, and they didn’t get it back.

Orange played without leading rusher Marvante Beasley, who wasn’t cleared to suit up after being taken off the field on a stretcher last week against Hillside.

His absence was never more apparent when Orange mustered one first down in the entire second half. Wilson’s hit flanker Kendall Whitted for a 42-yard strike early in the fourth quarter, the Panthers’ longest play from scrimmage. The drive stalled at the Northwood 13-yard line when McKinley pushed a 31-yard field goal wide left.

The Panthers were held to 69 yards in the second half. Pachal alone rushed for 91 yards in the first half.

Orange coped well without Beasley pretty well in the first half, storming out to a 14-0 lead. It started with a 84-yard drive that ended when Hunter Pettiford roared 15-yards for his second touchdown of the year with 9:58 remaining in the first half.

Subsequently, the Chargers mounted its longest drive of the game, driving to the Panther 4-yard line. But Amezquita banged a 23-yard field goal off the left upright.

Orange came back with a 80-yard drive, several strong runs by Paschall. Pettiford rushed for a 34-yard touchdown as Orange bolted ahead 14-0 with 2:14 remaining. No one could have known that would be the final Orange points in regulation.

Now, Orange will need help from Hillside or Northern Durham to earn a share of its third straight Big 8 Championship.

”I told our team afterwards to look down the field at Northwood celebrating,” said Smith. “They deserve to celebrate, but that celebration is the upmost respect for the program. They are happy to have beaten Orange, which says something about where we are as a program.”

NORTHWOOD 21, ORANGE 20 OT

N    0     7     7    0      7-21

O    0    14    0    0      6-20

O-Hunter Pettiford 15 run (Francisco McKinley kick)

O-Pettiford 34 run (McKinley kick)

N-Brendan Harrington 8 fumble recovery (Lupe Amezquita kick)

N-Harrington 21 run (Amezquita kick)

N-A.J. Jones4 run (Amezquita kick)

O-Payton Wilson 8 run (kick failed)

RUSHING: NORTHWOOD (Josh Scott 12-80, Tyrell Baldwin 15-53, Harrington 8-40 TD, A.J. Jones 4-10 TD, Tanner Althoff 1-(-2), Alex Parker 1-(-9)

ORANGE: (Morgan Paschall 11-91, Pettiford 12-76 2TD, Wilson 14-47 TD)

PASSING: NORTHWOOD (Parker 6-12 45 yds INT) ORANGE: Wilson 4-13 59 yards, Brenden Huss 1-2 (-2))

RECEIVING: NORTHWOOD (Baldwin 2-22, Corey Smith 2-9, Jack Holeck 1-15, Scott 1-4, Dedric Powell 1-(-5)) ORANGE: (Milton Purcell 3-10, Kendall Whitted 2-49)

With Thys on their Minds, Orange JV Football Wins Over Northwood

Regardless of what the scoreboard read at the end of the junior varsity football game in Pittsboro Thursday night, the Northwood Chargers were going to come out winners regardless.

One week after Orange running back Thys Oldenburg suffered a serious head injury against Hillside, leaving him in a medically-induced coma, the Northwood staff made sure they could make an impact financially.

On Thursday night, Northwood created towels to raise money for Oldeburg’s medical expenses. 65 of them sold out in less than a half hour.

In addition, Orange handbands readying “Pray 4 Tyce” are being sold at Orange High and will be made available at Friday night’s varsity Homecoming game against Northwood.

After the game, the two teams gathered to pray together for Oldenburg at the 50-yard line.

The latest update on Oldenburg came from Caroline Oldenburg, who said there were some very promising signs on Thursday. Earlier in the day, she wrote that Wednesday night was a roller coaster evening. Thys was stricken with a fever that increases his blood pressure. He was given antibiotics to get rid of the infection in his lungs. He remains unconscious at Duke University Hospital as of Thursday night.

As of early Friday morning, the GoFundMe Page  for Thys had reached $20,500 of a $100,000 goal. That included an anonymous donation of $5,000 that came in early Friday morning.

Orange Volleyball Earns 3A State Playoff Birth, Prepares for Chapel Hill

Photo by Dave Lindaman

The new system where MaxPreps decides the bracketing for the state playoffs didn’t do the Orange volleyball team any favors.

The same can be said of many other Big 8 teams.

The good news for Orange is the Panthers made the 3A state playoffs for the 3rd straight year under head coach Christina Carinci. The bad news is they’ll have to face the defending Eastern Regional Champions in the first round…and a cross-county rival.

The Panthers travel to Chapel Hill on Saturday afternoon at 1PM. The Tigers romped through the Big 8 this season, finishing a flawless 14-0 to take the regular season championship. The Tigers added to its trophy case on Wednesday when they won the Big 8 Tournament Championship  by defeating Northwood 3-1.

Chapel Hill is 20-6 overall and claimed the 5th seed in the 3A East Region. The winner of Orange-Chapel Hill faces the winner of #21 Northern Guilford vs. #12 Clayton next week.

After falling in the first round of the Big 8 Tournament to Northern Durham, the Panthers are 13-10. They earned the 28th seed after coming in fifth in a deep Big 8 Conference with a 6-8 record.

In the two regular season matchups on September 7th and October 3rd, Chapel Hill swept all six sets from the Panthers. The closest Orange came to winning a frame was the 2nd set in Hillsborough earlier this month, with the Tigers pulled out 25-23. The Tigers also won the 3rd set at CHHS 25-23 in September.

Orange was the fifth of five Big 8 teams to make the 3A state playoffs. Runner-up Northwood earned a 14-seed and will host Gray’s Creek (16-7) in the opening round. East Chapel Hill (15-11) will start on the road after earning a 24-seed and will open at Union Pines (19-6), the champions of the Tri-County Conference. Northern Durham (17-6) is seeded 23rd and goes to Cape Fear (24-3), the champions of the Patriot Conference who finished 16-0 in league play.

The 64-team field also includes Person, a former conference rival of Orange, Chapel Hill, Northern and East Chapel Hill. The Rockets are 20-0 in its first season in the Mid-State Conference, where they face teams such as Western Alamance and Northern Guilford. Person is the #2 overall seed and opens with Western Harnett on Saturday in Roxboro.

Fundraisers Announced for Thys Oldenburg as Recovery Continues

There was positive news regarding Orange junior varsity football player Thys Oldenburg on Wednesday after a minor setback earlier in the week.

Oldenburg’s family posted on its Go Fund Me page Wednesday morning that Oldenburg remains in a coma and critical condition. Jan Whitted Oldenburg said on Facebook that doctors reduced his medication and were pleased with with Thys’ responses. The swelling in his brain reduced slightly, which is a positive sign.

After the incredibly classy display by Hillside players after the injury to Marvante Beasley last Friday, Northwood High School announced on Wednesday that during the junior varsity football game on Thursday night in Pittsboro, M2 Graphics has donated towels to show support for Oldenburg. All proceeds will be donated to Oldenburg’s family to pay for medical costs.

In addition, on Saturday, Carillon Assisted Living on 1911 Orange Grove Road will host a Spaghetti Lunch from 12-2. Again, all proceeds will go to Oldenburg’s recovery efforts. Plates will run $7.00 and are available to dine in or eat out. You can phone in your order in advance by calling 919-732-9040.

 

Orange Panther of the Week: Omar Landeros

The Orange Soccer Team has set a school record this season for most consecutive wins. A big reason why is the leadership of seniors like wingback Omar Landeros, who lives a soccer life. When he’s not on the pitch as a co-captain of the Panthers, he’s playing with local soccer clubs across the Triangle. When he’s not playing, he’s enjoying his favorite teams from Liga MX in Mexico and Major League Soccer. Landeros is a huge reason why the Panthers appeared poised to earn a state playoff birth.