Boys Hockey: Marty Napleton stymies St Viator, lifts St Rita to title

Story Image St. Viator # 50 Jeremy Linzig and St. Viator # 22 Jackson Owens, St. Viator # 28 Jeremy O'Donnell battle St. Rita # 20 Richard Faron for the puck in the first period of play of the 2012 Boys State Hockey Championship game at the United Center, 1901 W. Madison, Chicago, IL on Friday night 3/23/12.|Judy Fidkowski~For Sun-Times Media
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Updated: March 23, 2012 9:45PM



St. Rita goalie Marty Napleton has been marvelous all season — a 31-8-2 mark, including 13 shutouts, and 1.45 goals-against average is testament to that.

Napleton, however, saved arguably his finest performance of the campaign for Friday night.

The junior netminder turned aside 28 shots, many in spectacular fashion, to carry St. Rita to a dominant 5-0 victory over St. Viator in the Amateur Hockey Association of Illinois’ state championship at the United Center. Napleton earned Most Valuable Player honors for his performance.

Stan Sojka (assist) and Ricky Faron paced the offense, scoring two goals each. Jack Warren added a solo tally for the Mustangs.

“Marty has been unbelievable all year,” Faron said. “He stood on his head tonight.”

The state title was St. Rita’s second in three seasons and the third overall for the storied program. The Mustangs (40-13-4), who won their fifth straight Kennedy Cup championship earlier this season, knocked off defending champion New Trier, the No. 1 seed, Saturday in the semifinals and then No. 2 St. Viator (50-17-5) in a matter of six days.

“All the kids played well,” said St. Rita coach Craig Ferguson, who just completed his eighth season. “We outplayed them. We were the better team tonight.”

Trailing 2-0 entering the third period, St. Viator had a chance to mount a comeback with a power play just 47 seconds in. The Lions had two wonderful chances to dent the net, but Napleton denied Jackson Owens on a breakaway and Michael Decker, after being stopped on his first attempt, fired wide on a rebound chance.

The failure to convert appeared to sap life from St. Viator.

“That was big to kill that penalty,” Faron said. “It took away all their momentum.”

The Mustangs then put the game away. Jack Warren hammered home a one-timer off a pretty pass from Sojka at 13:33 to make it 3-0. It was Warren’s 23rd goal of the season. Just 1:22 later, Sojka went to his backhand to beat goalie Robert Schmidt for a 4-0 advantage. It was the St. Rita captain’s second goal of the game and 10th of the season.

Then Faron, camped out just right of the crease, made it 5-0 at 9:46. It was Faron’s second goal of the game and 63rd of the season. Chris Foley and Luke Botica picked up assists.

“I think it was our composure,” said Foley, who was injured most of the season and was limited to 29 games. “We’ve played in enough big games where we weren’t really nervous. Its a bigger stage, but just another game.”

It was non-stop action for the first seven minutes of the opening period, void of a single whistle that would have caused play to halt.

Play was finally stopped at 10:07 and would be halted again just four seconds later, when Sojka batted home his own rebound at 10:03 for a 1-0 lead.

The early deficit seemed to wake-up St. Viator, which picked up the pace considerably the rest of the period. The Lions were awarded two power plays — one at 9:35 and another at 3:38, but failed to capitalize. A lack of effort wasn’t the problem; The Lions had scoring chances, but Napleton was a brick wall.

The junior absolutely stoned St. Viator’s David Kellner, whose rebound from just outside the crease was miraculously stopped by a sprawling Napleton. Moments later, Owens’ one-timer from the slot was kicked aside by Napleton.

Just 22 seconds after the Lions second power play elapsed and with 1:16 remaining in the opening period, Faron scored to extend the lead to 2-0. Faron made a nifty move around the Lions’ Ryan Santorsola just inside the blue line, before completing a give-and-go with Foley.

The score may as well been 10-0 with the way Napleton was playing. Slap shots, snap shots, wrist shots, breakaways, rebounds, you name it, St. Viator tried it. Nothing, however, could make its way past Napleton. The Lions’ Sean Thornton will have nightmares thinking about Napleton’s sliding blocker save that preserved the shutout late in the third.

“After the New Trier game, I had a lot of confidence,” Napleton said. “It carried over to this game. I was just seeing the puck well. This is an unbelievable feeling. To win the Kennedy Cup and state, fortunately we had the guys and coaches to do it.”

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