STAMFORD -- The
Westhill High School boys soccer team has been locked in a battle for one of
the four Fairfield County Interscholastic Athletic Conference playoff spots.
Still, both the players and coach felt their resume was lacking the type of
quality win that would validate their hopes.
Against the other contending teams they had faced, the Vikings were 1-3-1.
Thus, yesterday's home game with
Norwalk, which is in a struggle of its own for the top seed in the tournament,
was given priority importance.
"It was either a must-win or a must-tie," Westhill coach Mark Lukas said. "We
couldn't have another loss against another big team."
Playing with a sense of urgency, the Vikings were quicker to the ball, and
used a nifty three-pass sequence to score the game's only goal and hand the
Bears their first loss, 1-0.
"This was a pretty big game and a pretty big win," said Andres Ruiz, the
Vikings' goalkeeper, who made a pivotal save two minutes before David
Tumulik's deciding score. "We knew we were one of the best teams but we hadn't
beaten the best. This was our biggest win of the year."
Westhill improved to 7-3-1 and is currently tied, at 22 points with Trumbull,
for the fourth-best record, one point behind New Canaan. In terms of potential
tie-breakers, the Vikings played the Rams to a draw and lost to the Eagles.
"We needed to stop saying we were one of the top teams. We needed to do it,"
Lukas said. "Today we did that."
Norwalk (9-1-2), the defending FCIAC and CIAC Class LL runner-up, lost six
starters from a year ago and four more since the beginning of this season, due
to injury or disciplinary action.
The Bears are not as deep, but have flourished behind an underrated defense,
led by Matt Mitchell, the midfield play of Mike Fraioli, and the finishing
prowess of Anthony Fraioli, who has 17 goals.
But Norwalk was slow to the ball yesterday and the Vikings did a masterful job
marking Anthony Fraioli, whose frustration led to his picking up a yellow card
with 15 minutes remaining.
"They outworked us today, there was no question about it," Norwalk coach Kurt
Simonsen said. "As thin as we are and we don't bring intensity to the field .
. . credit Westhill."
Most of the scoring chances in the first half were created by the Vikings'
Jorge Zubillaga, who was a dual threat distributing the ball and freeing
himself for shots off the dribble.
"We were really pumped for this game," Ruiz said. "In the first half we were
touching the ball much better."
Neither Ruiz nor Bears goalkeeper Michael Surace were tested in the opening
half. The best opportunity came right before the intermission, when the
Vikings' Jonathan Martinez played a nice long ball into the box, but there was
no one at the far post to finish.
"We're pretty good with the ball," Lukas said. "We're very fast. We're not big
but we know how to play."
Westhill continued to dominate possession time in the second half, and after
good midfield support Zubillaga shot just high of the crossbar from 20 yards.
The Bears' best chance came when Connor Prescott put a ball from the right
side in front of the goal. It deflected off of the Vikings' Bryan Ramirez, who
was fending off a Norwalk player, but Ruiz anticipated the play and made a
diving save.
"When you are the goalie you always have to expect something like that," Ruiz
said.
In the 54th minute, the Vikings used quick ball movement to score. Cesar Rios
set up Darlin Lazo, whose centering pass was one-touched by Tumulik into the
net.
"It was a beautiful counterattack goal," Lukas said.
Anthony Fraioli became increasingly irked by the constant attention he
received and finally drew a yellow card. He was eligible, after the mandatory
10-minute penalty, to return for the final five minutes, but Simonsen kept him
on the bench.
Norwalk dropped a game behind Greenwich for the top seed in the playoffs.
Simonsen did not rule out the possibility that yesterday's loss could prove
beneficial over the long term.
"I think it definitely has the potential to be positive depending on what we
make of it," he said. "If it reinvigorates our work ethic and energy on the
field that would be great."
The Westhill players by late yesterday afternoon could give a lesson in
rejuvenation.
"We needed this," Ruiz said. "It feels good to beat a good team and have a
chance for the FCIAC playoffs because that is where we want to be."