The 10 best pure attacks in Long Island girls lacrosse
The position says it all. To be an attack, you have to possess uncanny aggression and motivation to create on the offensive end. You put all your energy into generating goals for your team and some of the best attacks in America play on Long Island. Here is a list of Newsday’s Top 10 pure attacks on Long Island.
Delaney Radin, Long Beach
The senior led Long Island in points (123) with 61 goals and 62 assists. Despite playing against some of the toughest competition on Long Island in nearly every game, the Florida commit had three games of at least 10 points — posting seven assists in each of those games. She had at least three points in all 19 games last season and the lefty is a matchup nightmare with her ability to score paired with elite passing.
Madison Alaimo, Wantagh
The Virginia commit was fifth in Nassau in points (105) with 62 points and 43 assists. She was part of a tremendous trio at Wantagh last year, which graduated All-Long Island selection Madison Taylor. Alaimo, a senior, had seven games of at least seven points against some of the best competition on Long Island.
Eva Ingrilli, Wantagh
Ingrilli and Alaimo create possibly the best-scoring duo on Long Island. Ingrilli, a senior, had 37 goals and 35 assists last season but is primed to take on an even larger offensive role this spring. The North Carolina commit had two goals and five assists last season against St. Anthony’s, the top school on Long Island.
Jaimey Hill, West Islip
The senior had 42 goals and 28 assists despite constantly being guarded by the opposing team’s top defender. The Colorado commit had nine games of at least five points as the quarterback of the West Islip offense.
Clockwise, from top left: Lea Flobeck of Mt. Sinai, Haydin Eisfeld of Bayport-Blue Point, Sara Curley of Lynbrook, Alexa Spallina of Mt. Sinai, Taylor Hoss of Sayville, Shea Panzik of Manhasset.
Alexa Spallina, Mount Sinai
Spallina is the next in line in a tremendous lacrosse family. Spallina, only a sophomore, had 24 goals and 19 assists in 10 games as a freshman before missing the final nine games with injury. Her brother, Joey, is a freshman at Syracuse after setting the Long Island boys lacrosse scoring record last season. Her father, Joe, is the women’s lacrosse coach at Stony Brook. Spallina is a dynamic attack who is equally as capable of creating for herself as setting up teammates as she’ll display for years to come.
Lea Flobeck, Mount Sinai
The Florida commit elevated her game last year with 33 goals and 13 assists and will take on an even larger role this spring. The senior is a strong dodger and feeder and is dangerous in open space.
Haydin Eisfeld, Bayport-Blue Point
The Stony Brook commit certainly doesn’t shy away from the big moment. She scored the winning goal to break a tie at 5 with 1:56 left in a 6-5 victory over Manhasset in the Long Island Class C championship game in 2021 as a sophomore. She followed that with 23 goals last season on a balanced Bayport-Blue Point team that won the Suffolk Class C title.
Sara Curley, Lynbrook
The senior had 48 goals and 26 assists with a tireless work ethic that separates her from other top players on Long Island. The Monmouth commit uses her dodging abilities to get past the faceguard and finish at the net. She also has a name, image and likeness (NIL) agreement with Kylie Ohmiller’s “KO17 Lacrosse.”
Taylor Hoss, Sayville, Sr.
The crafty lefty is great at creating space with a knack for finding the back of the net. The Johns Hopkins commit had 26 goals and 15 assists in a 14-win season.
Shea Panzik, Manhasset, Jr.
She was a key piece for the state Class C champions last season, including three goals and three assists in the state semifinals. The Vanderbilt commit had 41 goals and 11 assists and will amass a larger role this year with the graduation of Alexis Morton, Newsday’s Player of the Year last season.
Dawson’s Gavyn Pure repeats as BoCoPreps.com Player of the Year – BoCoPreps
LAFAYETTE — From a statistical standpoint, Gavyn Pure didn’t leave much of anything on the table during his four years playing for the Dawson School boys lacrosse team.
He openly admits that his only regret is not winning a state championship despite a 62-13 record while in high school, but Pure still leaves high school lacrosse as the most decorated individual to ever play in Colorado. He is the state’s all-time leader in points, goals and assists, as well as a smattering of other single-season marks he has picked up along the way.
Also for the second year in a row, and for one last time, Pure is the BoCoPreps.com Boys Lacrosse Player of the Year. The graduating senior will likely add that award to the mound of accolades he has collected, none of which he’ll remember as well as the time he spent with his teammates.
“I’d say it was four years of the greatest time playing with the boys,” Pure said. “We experienced the highs and the lows together and it’s all memorable. I’m pretty sure that for the rest of my life, I’m going to be able to look back on these four years of lacrosse at Dawson with coach Peter Devlin and my best friends as some of the best years of my life.
“The achievements were awesome but just grinding every day to try to win with my boys is what I’ll always remember most.”
Pure’s resume is truly one befitting Colorado’s greatest of all time to date.
With 252 career goals, he passed Rock Canyon’s Wilson Dismuke (2010-13) for most all time by 26. Pure’s 205 career assists are 17 more than Monarch’s Michael Christma (2005-07) and are now the all-time mark. Those combined totals give him 457 career points and the all-time records, which he already held to begin the 2018 spring season. Monarch’s Chad Kreuzer (2013-16) has second most all-time points with 333.
Pure also has the single-season record for points, which he set when he put up 128 points as a sophomore in 2016. His senior season, Pure led all Colorado players in goals (70), assists (50) and points (120) overall.
With Pure leading the way, the Mustangs finished runners-up in Class 4A for the third straight season. They fell 6-8 to Cheyenne Mountain in this year’s title game after finally getting past rival Valor Christian, the team that had beaten them for the two previous championships.
“The season obviously didn’t finish how any of us wanted it to,” Pure said. “Honestly, we’re still a little stung from it because we were rolling and we just didn’t have our best game in the finals. But you have to take the positives from it and I still think this was maybe the best and also the most fun team I’ve ever been a part of.”
Surprisingly, Pure doesn’t currently plan to continue his lacrosse career at the next level. He instead is headed to the University of Indiana, where he hopes to get into the business school.
Though he isn’t focused on it, Colorado’s all-time statistical leader hasn’t ruled out playing lacrosse in the future. Pure has options including an open transfer offer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. But that is a decision for down the road, and one that will all depend on how strongly Pure finds himself pulled back to the sport.
“If I miss it really badly, I may look for a chance to play,” Pure said.
Brad Cochi: cochib@dailycamera. com or twitter.com/BradCochi
Ambientair Lacrosse Pure Oxygen Home Fragrance – “A scent that women and men love”
I usually don’t think about fragrance in my apartment because it’s usually OK, meaning it’s not there, except for periods of time after cooking.
But sometimes (it happened to me a couple of times in rented accommodation) there were unpleasant odors, the sources of which could not be accurately identified and completely eliminated. Therefore, I had to use a permanent fragrance at home.
The same thing happened with Lacrosse Pure Oxygen, which I bought to hide the unpleasant smell in the rented apartment where I spent the weekend with my husband.
The glass bottle was packed in a light blue cardboard box. Inside is a decorative, wooden lining and 6 rattan sticks.
The manufacturer reports (on the website) that one bottle lasts from 3 to 6 months.
Surprisingly, it’s true. The fragrance lasted me three months – for sure.
Easy to use: turn sticks every week.
The fragrance really looks like something fresh and sonorous. Ozon and Isberg perfumes come to mind associatively. Of course, Pure Oxygen is a different fragrance, it’s modern, trendy, and apparently a perfumer actually worked on it. It does not smell like soap or any detergents, it does not look like car or any other similar fragrances. It is rather a little cool, but not cold, with warmth … Not only me, but also my husband liked the aroma, but I could not decompose it into notes, and the manufacturer does not give the aroma pyramid, there is not even a composition of essential oils. Therefore, I am tormented by doubts about its naturalness. However, this is not so important, because synthetic fragrances are also more often used in perfumes today. They are more time stable and predictable in operation.
In order to suppress unwanted room odors, dip all 6 sticks into the bottle and turn to evaporate, then the fragrance will be very bright and persistent. If you dip a few, it is already much calmer and not so assertive and ubiquitous.
I like the second option, so I prefer it. I use the first in cases of urgent need, described at the beginning of the review.
The interior of the bottle looks modern and concise.
In the fragrances of most other manufacturers, a decorative wood overlay is not often found, so I consider it an advantage of the product. In addition, in combination with it, the bottle takes on a finished look.
Decorative bottle cap made of wood
This fragrant accessory will suit most modern interiors.
Home fragrance Lacrosse Pure Oxygen
The composition of the fragrance is toxic to water bodies, which was noted on the package (unfortunately, I did not save it).
However, I recommend it for its intended use.
Other interior fragrances
Botavikos Thyme and galbanum
Botavikos Orange and cinnamon
Frosch Vanilla
Vovchenko’s lacrosse goal did not save Severstal from defeat in Yekaterinburg: News
Daily review
Avtomobilist beat Severstal on home ice – Shane Prince and Stanislav Bocharov scored twice, Brooks Macek scored four points.
5 – 2
Prince’s double helped Avtomobilist win the first match of the year
Prince’s double helped Avtomobilist win the first match of the year
Motorist
Severstal
Avtomobilist and Severstal have already met each other this season in Cherepovets. Then the hosts won – 3:2. And in general, the statistics of the confrontation between the teams spoke in favor of Severstal. Of the 25 meetings between the teams in the KHL, the Cherepovites won 15.
The match was the first for Avtomobilist in 2022. To some extent, the postponed matches of early January should have been a useful respite for the Urals – nevertheless, they ended 2021 with an unpleasant series of defeats. Severstal, on the contrary, embarked on a victorious track in the coming year – team Andrey Razin arrived in Yekaterinburg with three victories in a row.
The pause seems to have benefited Avtomobilist – in the first period, the hosts dominated the court, provoked the opponent to two removals in the opening of the meeting and, as a result, capitalized their advantage in two abandoned goals. The first goal of Avtomobilist in 2022 was scored by Stanislav Bocharov . And before the end of the period, the hosts increased their advantage thanks to Shane Prince’s goal .
Severstal returned to the game spectacularly. At the 27th minute of the game Daniil Vovchenko scored a lacrosse goal, and three minutes later Ivan Yemets sent the puck into the gates of the dumbfounded hosts. However, thanks to the active actions of Avtomobilist’s legionnaires, the hosts finished the second period with the same “+2”.
First, Prince made a double, and soon he also brought Brooks Macek’s excellent pass to a rendezvous with Dmitry Shugaev . Severstal took the challenge, hoping to find an offside position in the actions of the hosts, but the decision of the judges was not in favor of the guests – a clean goal. Shugaev was changed to Vladislav Podyapolsky , but he did not come out unscathed either – in the middle of the third period, Bocharov made a double, having converted the majority, and set the final score of the match – 5:2.
Andrey Razin, head coach of Severstal:
– I would like to thank the guys for the fact that with such a schedule, despite the fact that almost the entire team is coughing, they were able to return to the game in the second period. Unfortunately, one mistake did not allow us to develop the game. The segment was difficult, it’s good that it’s over, let’s start treatment.
Nikolai Zavarukhin, Avtomobilist head coach:
— A good first period. They understood that they had not played for a long time, everyone was in a different physical condition – someone started training earlier, someone later. We scored good goals in the first one. In the second, Severstal added that we were not ready for this, but counterattacks helped us. There were leaders, and those who carried the piano, there was a “live” shop. Viktor Neuchev made his debut – a talented guy, good skating, good technique. I hope he will add, grow stronger and grow into a good hockey player.