The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Friday, May 10, 1996                   TAG: 9605080122
SECTION: CHESAPEAKE CLIPPER       PAGE: 23   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY VICKI L. FRIEDMAN, STAFF WRITER 
                                             LENGTH: Medium:   96 lines

G. BRIDGE GIRLS CLINCH DISTRICT TITLE

Great Bridge clinched the Southeastern District girls soccer championship last Friday with a 1-0 win over Churchland, but the Wildcats are hurting without leading scorer Jennifer Hilborn, who has eight goals and nine assists this spring. Hilborn is out for the season after a muscle tear she suffered May 1 against Oscar Smith.

``Not only was she a scoring threat, she could play midfield, defense,'' said coach Harvey Regan. ``We've lost a little versatility without her, plus she's a good finisher.''

Without Hilborn, freshman Casey Miller will carry the offensive load. Miller has seven goals and six assists.

Regular-season champ Great Bridge already knows its regional fate. The Wildcats will play the Peninsula's second seed, expected to be Lafayette, in the quarterfinals May 20 at Salem.

Elsewhere:

Biff Andrews is back coaching the Churchland girls after missing three games because of an exchange trip to Russia. In his absence, the Truckers went 3-0 under assistant Peggy Powers.

Andrews is tickled at how well his young team, with 16 freshmen and sophomores, has withstood the competition. The Truckers played what Andrews calls ``rock 'em, sock 'em soccer'' against Great Bridge, and came out with a 1-0 loss.

``Our kids just hang in there and play with guts,'' Andrews said.

Churchland's strength is defense, led by Kat Crandall, Dorothy Laskin and Kate Foley. ``We can stay with anybody,'' Andrews says. ``We can stop people from scoring; we just have trouble scoring ourselves.''

And with the Truckers carrying 24 on their roster, you wouldn't think Andrews would worry about depth. But should Churchland make the district final on May 16, he will be without five of his players who are going to Florida as part of the school's chorus.

Ironically, one of them is keeper Courtney Hundley, who missed her final basketball game during regionals because of a goodwill trip to Guyana.

Wilson continues to struggle, with its losses in the double digits, but keeper Pam Willie is among the team's bright spots. Coach Dan Lewandowski recruited Willie, a freshman, from his earth science class.

``She has good physical size and really good hands,''he said. ``When she lays into the ball, she can hammer it.''

Willie is a good punter, averaging 55 to 60 yards, and her reflexes are excellent.

That's a help with the ball in her end of the field for most of the games. Western Branch outshot Wilson 41-0 en route to the Bruins' 5-0 win.

Norfolk Academy continues to dominate the Tidewater Conference of Independent Schools, and it looks like Bulldogs coach Kevin Sims will depart the school without a loss in the league. Sims is moving to Chattanooga, Tenn., this summer to be closer to family and his hometown, Atlanta. He will coach soccer there at the McCallie School, an all-boys high school.

Norfolk Academy is 144-0-1 in the TCIS since Sims took over the program 15 years ago. The lone tie was back in 1983 against Catholic, and ironically, Sims served as an official during the game. Sims recalls it being Sports Festival Day at Academy, with every team having a home game scheduled. Soccer was moved to earlier in the afternoon to accommodate some of the other games, and no official was available. By gentlemen's agreement, Sims took the field.

``I wasn't allowed to have any contact with the girls on my team,'' he said. ``And back then I had no assistants.''

The score on penalty kicks: 2-2.

Last Friday's Princess Anne/Kempsville game was a case of Rafal/Rafal versus Rafal. Jessica and Lauren Rafal play for Kempsville; their dad, Jerry, coaches Princess Anne.

``They wouldn't talk to me before the game,'' said Jerry Rafal. ``Luckily I knew their style.''

Lauren is Kempsville's leading scorer, and Jessica is one of three freshmen on the varsity squad.

``He marked me really tight; I couldn't do much,'' Lauren said. ``He knows how me and my sister play, and we know how he coaches.''

Neither Rafal managed to score against Dad's team, but Kempsville still won the game 3-1, and Jerry Rafal said he never secretly rooted for either of his daughters. ``I figured we needed the game more than Kempsville,'' he said.

Afterward, both girls gave their dad hugs. ``Nice game,'' Lauren told him.

Cox pounded Maury last week 8-1, but Commodores coach Bob Mayer will assure you that Cox is not seven goals better than his third-ranked team. Maury gave up a couple of goals early on flukey plays, Mayer said, including a defender heading in her own ball for a goal, and was never able to rebound.

``We fell apart mentally and physically, more mentally,'' Mayer said.

Maury quickly regrouped to hand Great Bridge its second loss of the season on Saturday, 2-1.

Mayer has moved Katie Roman back to stopper from the midfield. Roman prefers stopper but previously had changed positions to give Maury another scoring threat. Amy Mayer and Shwante Snead lead the Commodores in scoring, but Snead also runs track and has missed a few games.

``Katie at midfield worked fine for a couple of games,'' Mayer said. ``But now we need more strength in the backfield. Katie's very vocal. She talks a lot back there, and she also helps our sweeper out.'' by CNB