Rams boot
Bears from FCIACs
By DAVID LIBERATORE
Hour Correspondent
FAIRFIELD — Matthias Hunkeler scored a pair of goals as New Canaan jumped
out to a 3-0 lead before holding off Norwalk, 3-2, in Wednesday's FCIAC boys
soccer semifinals in the first game of a double-header at Fairfield Ludlowe.
Second-seeded New Canaan, which also defeated Norwalk 2-0 last Thursday,
will face No. 1 Greenwich at 8 p.m. Friday in the FCIAC championship game at
Ludlowe. Greenwich beat fourth-seeded Trumbull 1-0 in Wednesday's second
semifinal.
Peter Campbell gave New Canaan a 1-0 lead midway through the first half,
scoring on a header off of Patrick Randall's free kick from 40 yards out.
The Rams then controlled the game for the remainder of the first half,
seemingly beating Norwalk to every 50-50 ball.
"(New Canaan) made hard runs to balls that we watched fly by us," Norwalk
coach Kurt Simonsen said. "We looked a little shell-shocked right after that
first goal."
New Canaan (13-2-2) went up 2-0 with 6:09 left in the opening half, as
Hunkeler easily directed a header past Norwalk goaltender Mike Surace.
Hunkeler was unmarked for the goal after receiving a chip-in from along the
far side by teammate Fergus Campbell.
The Rams then appeared to put the game away just 1:32 after halftime, as
Humkeler got his foot on a loose ball 20 yards out and flared a shot inside
the right post for a 3-0 lead.
"To give that goal up after halftime was difficult," Simonsen said.
"Especially since I thought we had the right mindset coming out of halftime."
But Norwalk stopped the bleeding 10 minutes later when Ronald Machado
chested in a ball sent to him by Mike Fraioli. Fraioli accelerated down the
near sideline and drilled his centering pass to Machado, who put the ball past
New Canaan goaltender Chris McKennan.
"Norwalk is one of the hardest teams to beat," said Pete Campbell, a senior
midfielder. "Mike Fraioli has a lot of heart and I respect him a lot. He
picked up the tempo and got them back in it."
Norwalk (12-3-2) pulled within 3-2 on a goal by Anthony Fraioli with 2:36
left in regulation. Anthony Fraioli had the ball pop out to him after it
bounced off a few players, scoring from 15 yards out.
"I knew Norwalk would come back," Swallow said. "They are too tough
mentally and they're too well-coached not to."
The Bears, however, couldn't manage to get a shot on goal in the closing
moments, as New Canaan, the only school to qualify for the league playoffs in
each of the last three seasons, avenged a 3-2 overtime loss to Norwalk in last
year's FCIAC semifinals.
"I think our kids grew from last year's loss," New Canaan coach Eric
Swallow said. "We have a lot of senior leadership on this year's team."
The Rams usually win tight, low-scoring games. However, they won in a
different manner Wednesday, scoring three goals in the game's first 42
minutes.
"We defend before we attack," Swallow said. "We spend the first week of
practice each year just on defensive organization. We take a lot of pride in
our defense."
McKennan finished with nine saves for New Canaan while Surace ended up with
seven saves for Norwalk. The Bears took six corner kicks, compared to just two
for the Rams.
Norwalk outshot New Canaan 10-8 in the contest.
"It's very difficult to beat Norwalk twice, especially in a span of six
days," Swallow said. "The four teams playing here tonight in the FCIAC's could
also be some of the final four teams playing in the states."
Norwalk lost in the FCIAC championship game a year ago before finishing as
state runners-up in the Class LL tournament.
"Our guys have been resilient all year and they were resilient again
tonight," said Simonsen, whose team will look to make another run in the state
playoffs beginning next week.
"If we had another four or five minutes, who knows what would have
happened? But whether New Canaan won 3-0 or 3-2, they're still the ones
playing Friday.