The drama of a championship match was delivered on Thursday night, as Monacan held off Hanover 1-0 to win the Region 4B girls soccer championship.
The Chiefs will host Region 4A runner-up Great Bridge in a Class 4 state quarterfinal Tuesday, and the Hawks will travel to Region 4A champion Smithfield. Times are to be determined.
“I am so happy with the effort and the togetherness and the fight that this team has shown all season, and the fact that it results in a championship is icing on the cake,” Monacan coach Sean Hollingshead said.
The Chiefs started the region tournament as the eighth seed and slowly worked their way to the final by bringing down No. 9 Powhatan, then ousted No. 1 Atlee in the regional quarterfinals before edging No. 4 Eastern View in the semifinals.
The game against the second-seeded Hawks was intense and had the potential of a match that could’ve gone all the way to a penalty shootout.
However, with 13 minutes left in the first half, the referee called a penalty inside the box that would eventually decide the winner.
Senior forward Olivia Woodson, who will attend Auburn, was designated with taking the kick for Monacan, and the first thing she thought was, “I hope I don’t miss this.”
Cool and calm, she put the ball past Hawks goalkeeper Kendall Wright, who is also her club teammate.
Maggie Walker GS girls track runs away with another region title
“That was our main opportunity, and I wasn’t getting a lot of deep range shots, so I was thinking, ‘This is my one main opportunity, I have to make it this,'” the senior said. “I’m definitely glad we practiced it a lot, so I was a little prepared and felt pretty confident.”
Going into halftime, Hawks coach Riley Wichmann had to adapt to the game in order to give his team a chance of scoring a goal.
“It was purely adjustments based on the game, there are certain variables that we can’t control and that doesn’t bleed into our conversations, we try to solve the problem on the field,” he said.
The Cosby High School boys soccer team looks to keep their winning ways going heading into the playoffs
The Hawks were not going to give up easily and dominated in possession, but were unable to get a lot of shots on goal as the Chiefs’ defense was working hard to prevent a goal from going in.
Despite the loss, the Hawks are looking to shake off the loss and focus on the ultimate goal — a state title.
“We are looking to win states,” senior midfielder Estella Gajarsky-Prado said. “I think we played a really good game today, and I think we’re going to go far in these next few games.”
PHOTOS: Celebrating the 50-year anniversary of Secretariat’s Triple Crown
With his sights set for victory in the June 9 Belmont Stakes to capture the Triple Crown, Secretariat works out with an exercise rider in the shed row at Belmont Park, New York, May 23, 1973. The horse loosened up indoors to avoid rainy weather. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)
Ron Frehm
Secretariat and jockey Ron Turcotte leave other racers in the dust at the 1973 Belmont Stakes.
Secretariat.com
FILE — Jockey Ron Turcotte poses aboard Secretariat in the winners circle at Churchill Downs after winning the Kentucky Derby in 1973. (AP Photo/HO)
AP
“The track is very much of a man’s world,” says Penny Chenery, at her Laurel Hollow, New York, May 23, 1973. But Ms. Chenery, owner of Secretariat, adds: “I feel very comfortable there.” She stresses however: “I don’t want to be one of the boys, I want to be treated like a lady.” The trophy is Secretariat’s 1972 Horse of the Year award. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)
Ron Frehm
Jockey Ron Turcotte pilots Secretariat (leading, #4) over the finish line at Aqueduct in New York, March 17, 1973 to win the $27,750 Bay Shore stakes in his debut as a three-year-old. The 1972 Horse of the Year, got under the wire 4½ lengths ahead of Champagne Charlie, with Michael Venezia up, second from left, with a time of 1:23 1/5. Venezia’s mount was two and a half lengths ahead of Impecunious, right, ridden by James Moseley. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)
Ron Frehm
Race horses Secretariat and Riva Ridge in their barn at Belmont racetrack, New York, Sept. 17, 1973, after a workout. Guard, maintained on a 24-hour basis to protect the fabulous pair, is seen in foreground feeding Secretariat. (AP Photo/Dave Pickoff)
Dave Pickoff
Groom Clay Arnold stands with the 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat, May 7, 1975 after giving him hiss daily bath. Old super horse has sired 27 foals since retiring to Claiborne farm in eastern Kentucky and his first offspring will be ready for the track in 1977. (AP Photo)
The Associated Press
Secretariat, who won the Triple Crown of racing in 1973, relaxes at the Claiborne Farm near Paris, Kentucky, May 2, 1974 with his groom, Edward Fields. Secretariat won the Kentucky Derby, the Belmont Stakes and the Preakness in 1973. (AP Photo/Bob Daugherty)
Bob Daugherty
FILE – This June 9, 1973, file photo shows Penny Chenery, owner of Secretariat, reacting after her horse won the Belmont Stakes, and the Triple Crown, at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. Chenery, who bred and raced 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat as well as realizing her disabled father’s dream to win the Kentucky Derby in 1972 with Riva Ridge.
FILE – In this April 29, 2010, file photo, Secretariat owner Penny Chenery appears at a news conference about the movie based on the story of the legendary horse, in Louisville, Ky. Chenery, who bred and raced 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat as well as realizing her disabled father’s dream to win the Kentucky Derby in 1972 with Riva Ridge, died Saturday, Sept. 16, 2017, at her Boulder, Colo. home following complications from a stroke.
FILE- This June 9, 1973, file photo, shows Penny Chenery, right, as she receives the August Belmont Memorial Cup from New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller in the Belmont Park Winner’s Circle, after her horse, Secretariat, won the Belmont Stakes by an astounding 31 lengths. Watching are jockey Ron Turcotte, second from left and Virginia Gov. Linwood Holton.
Harry Harris
Two of Secretariat’s great granddaughters, Twinkie and Clever (right) walk in a pen in front of Secretariat’s yearling stall where the 1973 triple crown winner stayed in his time at Meadow Farm, now home to the State Fair of Virginia in Doswell on Saturday, Sept. 27, 2014.
DEAN HOFFMEYER
Groundshaker, a great-great granddaughter of Secretariat, at Meadow Event Park in Doswell VA Wed. March 23, 2016.
Mark Gormus
Ron Turcotte rides Secretariat at the Belmont Stakes on June 9, 1973. Secretariat won the race by 31 lengths and captured the Triple Crown. (AP Photo)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Owner Penny Chenery shown with Secretariat in a family photo.
JOE MAHONEY
Nabil Elhilali from Malage, Spain, stopped by to see a Secretariat display at Main Street Station, which features the second largest horseshoe in the world along with other items from Meadow Farm, the land now occupied by Meadow Event Park in Caroline County.
JOE MAHONEY
Kate Tweedy, daughter of Penny Chenery who operated The Meadow horse farm in Caroline County when Secretariat was born.
BILL LOHMANN
Curry Roberts, president of State Fair of Va. stands outside the stables that once housed the great Secretariat.
JAM
In this publicity image released by Disney, from second left, Diane Lane, Nelsan Ellis, Otto Thorwarth, and John Malkovich are shown in a scene from, “Secretariat.” (AP Photo/Disney, John Bramley)
John Bramley
FILE – In this May 9, 1973 file photo, Secretariat, Ron Turcotte up, wins the 98th Preakness Stakes horse race at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. Secretariat’s owner has asked the Maryland Racing Commission to conduct a hearing about changing the time of the horse’s winning run in the 1973 Preakness Stakes. Penny Chenery, along with Maryland Jockey Club president Tom Chuckas, say advances in modern video technology will prove Secretariat ran the 1 3/16 mile race in 1 minute, 53 and 2/5 seconds. That would have been a record at the time and would match the standing record for the Preakness.
The Associated Press
Penny Chenery, L, signed autographs for admirers during the 40th Anniversary of Secretariat’s Triple Crown win in 1973. The event was held at Meadow Farm.
JOE MAHONEY
Ann Carter of Sandston shakes hands with racing hall of fame jockey Ron Turcotte during Secretariat celebrations at Meadow Farm.
JOE MAHONEY
Richmond Police Department’s Mounted Division officers Amanda Bass, L, and Dawn Lehmann escorted the Percheron team driven by Goochland’s Dr. Tom Newton and pulling a carriage bringing Penny Chenery and her daughter Kate Chenery Tweedy to celebrations for Secretariat’s 40th anniversary of Triple Crown victories in 1973.
JOE MAHONEY
FILE — Jockey Ron Turcotte poses aboard Secretariat in the winners circle at Churchill Downs after winning the Kentucky Derby in 1973. (AP Photo/HO)
AP
Secretariat, the record-breaking winner of the Kentucky Derby, is greeted in his stall at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland, by exercise attendant George Davis and Penny Chenery in May 1973.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Secretariat shown winning the final leg of racing’s 1973 Triple Crown at Belmont Park in New York.
AP
Meadow Farm, where Secretariat was born, photographed Tuesday, June 2, 1998.
ALEXA WELCH EDLUND
Horses on Meadow Farm, where Secretariat was born, photographed Tuesday, June 2, 1998.
ALEXA WELCH EDLUND
Ross Sternheimer, owner of Meadow Farm, stands at the door to Secretariat’s stall. Photo taken Tuesday, June 2, 1998.
ALEXA WELCH EDLUND
Triple Crown winner Secretariat gallops during a workout with exercise jockey George Davis in saddle at Arlington Park race track in Arlington Heights, Ill., Friday morning, June 29, 1973. (AP Photo)
STF
Ron Turcotte rides Secretariat to win the Belmont Stakes and capture the Triple Crown in this June 9, 1973 photo. Secretariat set a world record for a one and a half mile course in 2:24, and a record for largest margin of victory in the Belmont, 31 lengths.(AP Photo)
AP
Jockey Ron Turcotte, aboard Secretariat, turns for a look at the field many lengths behind in this June 9, 1973 photo as they make the final turn on his way to winning the Belmont Stakes and the Triple Crown.
DAVE PICKOFF
FILE – In this June 9, 2012 file photo, retired jockey Ron Turcotte, left, who rode Secretariat to the Triple Crown in 1973, poses for photos with Kenny Foudy, 5, next to a statue of the race horse prior to the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.
Mark Lennihan
Secretariat, the 1972 Horse of the Year, cools off in New York on March 17, 1973, after winning the seven furlong Bay Shore Stakes at Aqueduct by four and a half lengths in his debut as a 3-year-old. “He’s just like he was, good,” said jockey Ron Turcotte (checked shirt) after Secretariat’s explosive stretch run that took him to victory over Champagne Charlie. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)
Ron Frehm