Without Maggie Currie, Leigh falls to St. Ignatius in CCS quarters as Amanda Hughes’ strike is difference​on February 22, 2025 at 11:46 pm

Mitty girls erupt in second half to oust Woodside. Dominic Magana’s goal lifts Bellarmine over Los Altos.   

The St. Ignatius girls soccer team celebrates after beating Leigh 1-0 in a CCS Division I quarterfinal game on Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025, at Leigh High School in San Jose. (Christian Babcock/Bay Area News Group)
The St. Ignatius girls soccer team celebrates after beating Leigh 1-0 in a CCS Division I quarterfinal game on Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025, at Leigh High School in San Jose. (Christian Babcock/Bay Area News Group)

SAN JOSE — St. Ignatius has been building toward this moment for a year’s time.

The Wildcats faced Leigh in the 2024 Central Coast Section Division I quarterfinals and lost 4-1 to the Longhorns in San Jose. On Saturday, they got another shot in the same scenario.

Playing without star striker Maggie Currie, who was off with the U.S. U17 youth national team, Leigh was vulnerable, and the Cats pounced. Dominating possession for almost the entire game, SI finally broke through in the 47th minute on a cross-box strike from Amanda Hughes.

That was all the Wildcats needed, and they celebrated sweet revenge with a 1-0 win. The victory not only advanced SI to the Division I semifinals, it also punched SI’s ticket to the CIF NorCal tournament.

“That’s two W’s against Leigh in three years after losing three years in a row,” third-year SI coach Daire O’Connor told his team after the game. “So now things have shifted a little bit.”

St. Ignatius (10-6-5) emerged from the gauntlet of the West Catholic Athletic League with the No. 6 seed in Division I, earning a chance to face off against No. 3 Leigh in the first round.

Early on, it was the Longhorns (13-2-2) who generated the best scoring chance. In the eighth minute, freshman Shani Outlaw beat SI goalkeeper Maddie Lund and put a shot on goal, but defender Keira Bromwell blocked the shot at the goal line.

After that, it was almost all SI. The Wildcats dominated the ball, and it was only a matter of time before they got on the scoresheet.

“(Currie) is such a fantastic player,” O’Connor said. “Especially in the midfield there, she really makes them tick. We knew coming in today that they were without her, and that forced us to press them early and put a stranglehold on the game, because we knew they were down their best player.”

Leigh made it exciting late. With three minutes left before stoppage time in the second half, sophomore Kaya Schaefer blasted a shot from the edge of the box that nearly missed the goal, ricocheting off the crossbar and down. 

With that, the Longhorns’ best chance was stopped, and the Cats sealed the win. 

Leigh coach Nick Hatzke had been without Currie since Feb. 17, so he knew the challenge ahead. Win against SI, and Currie would be back in time for the semifinal round.

Instead, Leigh’s excellent season has now found an abrupt end, and the Longhorns will not qualify for the NorCal tournament.

“I actually coached Maggie when she played at Los Gatos when she was 9v9 and said, ‘One day, you’re gonna play for the national team,’” Hatzke said. “So it was pretty cool for her to finally get that call-up. Obviously, it was bittersweet, because the team’s gonna miss her. If we got past this game, she was gonna be back Tuesday. But we came up a little bit short.”

Currie, who is committed to North Carolina, will be back next season as a senior. But six Leigh seniors – Katherine Amanatullah, Tori Anderson, Kennadi Borg, Peyton Currie, Riley Jackson and Huali Liao – played their last high school game on Saturday.

“We have six seniors that we’ll miss, and we didn’t have the best send-off for them,” Hatzke said. “But we have a good, strong group that comes back next season.”

Meanwhile, the show goes on for SI. The Wildcats advance to face No. 2 Archbishop Mitty in the Division I semifinals on Tuesday.

Even in the postseason, the Cats can’t escape the WCAL. But they feel well-prepared for what’s ahead.

“Now there’s a culture, there’s a style of play coming in,” O’Connor said. “There’s an expectation with each other, accountability, effort. If we’re 1-0 down or 2-1 up, there’s an incredible attitude to leave it on the field. That’s where the program has gone. There’s a real buy-in by the players as a group.”

MITTY GIRLS ERUPT AFTER HALFTIME, ROUT WOODSIDE

All Mitty needed was one goal to get going on Saturday at home in the first round of the CCS Division I playoffs.

That came when senior midfielder Murphy Walsh scored in the 48th minute to break a scoreless tie. Three more goals followed as second-seeded Mitty cruised into the semifinals with a 4-0 victory over seventh-seeded Woodside.

Walsh scored again off an assist from Penny DeLa Cruz to make it 2-0. Brooklynn Collier added a goal in the 70th minute, and Jasmyne Wheeler capped the scoring with a goal in the 73rd minute.

Since losing to St. Francis 4-0 on Feb. 8, Mitty has outscored Sacred Heart Cathedral, Presentation and Woodside by a combined 11-1.

– Darren Sabedra 

BELLARMINE ADVANCES IN CCS BOYS PLAYOFFS

Senior Dominic Magana broke a 1-1 tie in the second-half with his first goal of the season to lead the top-seeded Bells into the CCS Division I boys semifinals.

After a scoreless first half, Leo Holt put Bellarmine on top 1-0 with an assist from Thomas Dumont. Eighth-seeded Los Altos tied it two minutes later on a goal by Dylan Po. Sophomore midfielder Walter Guzman got the assist.

Magana’s game-winner came with 20 minutes left to play, improving Bellarmine’s record to 16-2-3. The Bells, who won the WCAL title, have bounced back strong after going 5-9-6 last season, their only sub-.500 record in Conor Salcido’s nine years as head coach.

Drew McClelland was outstanding in goal for the Bells, recording seven saves, three that were “really solid,” Salcido said.

Los Altos finished 14-4-3.

— Mike Lefkow

Originally Published: February 22, 2025 at 3:46 PM PST

 

SAN JOSE — St. Ignatius has been building toward this moment for a year’s time.

The Wildcats faced Leigh in the 2024 Central Coast Section Division I quarterfinals and lost 4-1 to the Longhorns in San Jose. On Saturday, they got another shot in the same scenario.

Playing without star striker Maggie Currie, who was off with the U.S. U17 youth national team, Leigh was vulnerable, and the Cats pounced. Dominating possession for almost the entire game, SI finally broke through in the 47th minute on a cross-box strike from Amanda Hughes.

That was all the Wildcats needed, and they celebrated sweet revenge with a 1-0 win. The victory not only advanced SI to the Division I semifinals, it also punched SI’s ticket to the CIF NorCal tournament.

“That’s two W’s against Leigh in three years after losing three years in a row,” third-year SI coach Daire O’Connor told his team after the game. “So now things have shifted a little bit.”

St. Ignatius (10-6-5) emerged from the gauntlet of the West Catholic Athletic League with the No. 6 seed in Division I, earning a chance to face off against No. 3 Leigh in the first round.

Early on, it was the Longhorns (13-2-2) who generated the best scoring chance. In the eighth minute, freshman Shani Outlaw beat SI goalkeeper Maddie Lund and put a shot on goal, but defender Keira Bromwell blocked the shot at the goal line.

After that, it was almost all SI. The Wildcats dominated the ball, and it was only a matter of time before they got on the scoresheet.

“(Currie) is such a fantastic player,” O’Connor said. “Especially in the midfield there, she really makes them tick. We knew coming in today that they were without her, and that forced us to press them early and put a stranglehold on the game, because we knew they were down their best player.”

Leigh made it exciting late. With three minutes left before stoppage time in the second half, sophomore Kaya Schaefer blasted a shot from the edge of the box that nearly missed the goal, ricocheting off the crossbar and down. 

With that, the Longhorns’ best chance was stopped, and the Cats sealed the win. 

Leigh coach Nick Hatzke had been without Currie since Feb. 17, so he knew the challenge ahead. Win against SI, and Currie would be back in time for the semifinal round.

Instead, Leigh’s excellent season has now found an abrupt end, and the Longhorns will not qualify for the NorCal tournament.

“I actually coached Maggie when she played at Los Gatos when she was 9v9 and said, ‘One day, you’re gonna play for the national team,’” Hatzke said. “So it was pretty cool for her to finally get that call-up. Obviously, it was bittersweet, because the team’s gonna miss her. If we got past this game, she was gonna be back Tuesday. But we came up a little bit short.”

Currie, who is committed to North Carolina, will be back next season as a senior. But six Leigh seniors – Katherine Amanatullah, Tori Anderson, Kennadi Borg, Peyton Currie, Riley Jackson and Huali Liao – played their last high school game on Saturday.

“We have six seniors that we’ll miss, and we didn’t have the best send-off for them,” Hatzke said. “But we have a good, strong group that comes back next season.”

Meanwhile, the show goes on for SI. The Wildcats advance to face No. 2 Archbishop Mitty in the Division I semifinals on Tuesday.

Even in the postseason, the Cats can’t escape the WCAL. But they feel well-prepared for what’s ahead.

“Now there’s a culture, there’s a style of play coming in,” O’Connor said. “There’s an expectation with each other, accountability, effort. If we’re 1-0 down or 2-1 up, there’s an incredible attitude to leave it on the field. That’s where the program has gone. There’s a real buy-in by the players as a group.”

MITTY GIRLS ERUPT AFTER HALFTIME, ROUT WOODSIDE

All Mitty needed was one goal to get going on Saturday at home in the first round of the CCS Division I playoffs.

That came when senior midfielder Murphy Walsh scored in the 48th minute to break a scoreless tie. Three more goals followed as second-seeded Mitty cruised into the semifinals with a 4-0 victory over seventh-seeded Woodside.

Walsh scored again off an assist from Penny DeLa Cruz to make it 2-0. Brooklynn Collier added a goal in the 70th minute, and Jasmyne Wheeler capped the scoring with a goal in the 73rd minute.

Since losing to St. Francis 4-0 on Feb. 8, Mitty has outscored Sacred Heart Cathedral, Presentation and Woodside by a combined 11-1.

– Darren Sabedra 

BELLARMINE ADVANCES IN CCS BOYS PLAYOFFS

Senior Dominic Magana broke a 1-1 tie in the second-half with his first goal of the season to lead the top-seeded Bells into the CCS Division I boys semifinals.

After a scoreless first half, Leo Holt put Bellarmine on top 1-0 with an assist from Thomas Dumont. Eighth-seeded Los Altos tied it two minutes later on a goal by Dylan Po. Sophomore midfielder Walter Guzman got the assist.

Magana’s game-winner came with 20 minutes left to play, improving Bellarmine’s record to 16-2-3. The Bells, who won the WCAL title, have bounced back strong after going 5-9-6 last season, their only sub-.500 record in Conor Salcido’s nine years as head coach.

Drew McClelland was outstanding in goal for the Bells, recording seven saves, three that were “really solid,” Salcido said.

Los Altos finished 14-4-3.

— Mike Lefkow

 


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