Some of the saddest news to begin the season was word spreading that Wheaton North junior Jane Rogers would likely miss the season with a knee injury.
Rogers, the 2024 Suburban Life Girls Soccer Player of the Year, had 30 goals and 21 assists a year ago. Last year the Falcons were held scoreless once. Theyβve already been blanked twice this season.
Wheaton North coach Tim McEvilly is hopeful that a mix of proven talent along with some newcomers will be able to collaborate for a scoring-by-committee approach without the irreplaceable Rogers.
Forward Talia Kaempf (23 goals, 14 assists last), midfielder Grace Kuczaj (five goals, four assists) and defender Calah Strong (nine assists, three goals) are back while senior Olivia Smith and freshman Ellie Whittington are a pair of newcomers that will look to contribute to the offense.
βI think those additions, in addition to Talia (Kaempf) and Calah (Strong) and Grace (Kuczaj), still gives us a punch,β McEvilly said. βWe just kind of changed the way weβre playing with the formation and what weβre expecting out of the kids so they are still trying to figure it all out.β
Wheaton North (1-3-1) beat Glenbard South 3-0 to open the season, dropped games against Glenbard West, Benet and Metea Valley before tying Rockford Boylan, 1-1, on March 29.
Kuczaj and Strong were among the Falcons named to the Wheaton North Kickoff All-Tournament Team.
Other area notables recognized on the team included Benetβs Ashley Polanco, Chloe Sentman and Ivana Lukas and Glenbard Westβs Hana Allen and Julia Benjamin.
After playing five times in 11 days, the Falcons wonβt take the field again until they travel to St. Charles North on April 10 to begin play in the DuKane Conference.
St. Francis rolls through first tourney test
After a humbling 7-0 loss against one of the top teams in the state in Naperville Central to open the season, St. Francis has rattled off four straight victories while outscoring opponents, 21-2, to improve to 4-1.
The Spartans have some time off before beginning conference play, hosting Fenwick on April 8.
βI was pretty happy (with the start),β Spartans coach Jim Winslow said. βI think we can be ever better. Weβve tried some different things. It was a different kind of preseason. We did slightly different conditioning. A lot of these schools are going four or five days a week training which Iβve never been a big believer in. Your better kids are already training three or four days a week now so you donβt want to kill them fitness-wise. And we added a bunch more games before spring break than usual.β
Last year the Spartans didnβt play their fifth game until April 6.
Shorter and more intense training has proven to be beneficial, certainly showing in the early results as the Spartans won the Glenbard South tournament.
βI think the kids have enjoyed it more; Iβve enjoyed it more,β Winslow said. βI just think itβs paid off in how weβre playing overall. I kind of feel weβve gotten on the same page a little quicker. Still a work in progress. The tough part for us is going into the thick of conference, and conference is pretty darn good. Itβs also probably the smallest roster Iβve had since being here so thatβs a big difference, too.β
Junior midfielder Maicie Schweimer had three goals and an assist to lead the Spartans to an 8-1 victory over Lake Park last Thursday to secure the tournament title.
βItβs not surprising that Maicie has gotten off to a good start,β Winslow said. βShe didnβt play freshman year coming off an ACL. So in her head and my head, sheβs only a sophomore because she only played one season for us. She had a solid season last year and will probably tell you she shouldβve been even better in the sense of being more consistent. Part of that is human maturation and then coming back from an ACL you never know. Every kid is different in how they treat it and come back. She is on a tear right now.β
Caroline Kiesler, Ashley Klein and Molly Marks also are making an impact in the midfield.
βKiesler started as a freshman and has gotten even better and then Molly Marks who had varsity (time) last year, but improved a ton,β Winslow said. βThose three have been our stalwarts. Ashley Klein missed all of last year. She played some during the fall but missed six months and started playing again in November.β
Benet battles against the best
Benet (2-2-1) hasnβt got the same result in consecutive games yet this season.
The Redwings opened the season with an 8-1 rout of Wheaton Academy in West Chicago, dropped a 3-0 game at Metea Valley two days later, beat Wheaton North 2-0 a couple days after that before settling for a scoreless tie against Glenbard West last Tuesday. Most recently they dropped a 2-0 game to Naperville Central.
βI think the biggest questions of the season were in the back and in goal because of primarily who we lost last year,β Redwings coach Gerard Oconer said. βBut I think especially with the Naperville Central game we answered a lot of questions, really solidifying what weβre doing back there. We lost 2-0 that game but it was 0-0 at halftime and 1-0 until that last eight minutes against an offensive juggernaut in Naperville Central.β
The Redwings returned 14 players from a program that won the East Suburban Catholic Conference and was the runner-up in the Naperville Invitational a season ago, but lost some key contributors who graduated, including Kate Grubish and Bailey Abbott who were named Goalkeeper of the Year and Defender of the Year respectively.
Keira Petrucelli, who will play collegiately at John Hopkins University, is injured and wonβt play this spring while fellow senior Johnna Caliendo also has been fighting through a mix of injuries that have kept her sidelined.
Thankfully the Redwings welcomed freshmen Ashley Polanco, Keira Stone and Sahana Raja and sophomore Sophia Duncan.
Polanco scored four goals in her debut against Wheaton Academy to spark the offense while Duncan is seizing the opportunity to be a lockdown defender.
Duncan impressed Oconer with how she defended Naperville Central senior Callie Tumility, an Ohio State recruit.
βCallie got loose one time and fouled in the box on another by other defenders,β he said. βConsidering the circumstances, she did great. Sheβs one of those players who goes about her business. Sheβs really effective, calm and composed and not just defending but also with the ball.β
Junior Ivana Vukas and Polanco have carried the offense thus far, scoring 70% of the teamβs 10 goals.
βAnd (senior) Chloe Sentman has been so crucial for us,β Oconer said. βSheβs converted from outside back to defensive midfielder since (sophomore) Megan Bergman decided not to play.β
The Redwings begin conference play on April 5 at home against Nazareth.
The Roadrunners earned victories over Hinsdale South (1-0) and Rosary (9-0) before losing to Providence Catholic (3-1). Theyβre scheduled to face St. Viator and Aurora Central this week before traveling to Lisle on Saturday.