Suburban News West Edition - March 5, 2017

Page 1

March 5, 2017

Issue No. 10

www.westsidenewsny.com

West Edition

Distributed to Bergen, Clarendon, Holley-Murray and Brockport-Sweden

Brockport Blue Devils win hockey sectional by Warren Kozireski Brockport scored twice in the first period and added two more late in the third to defeat Webster-Thomas 4-1 to win the Section V Class B championship. After the Blue Devils couldn’t score on an extended first period power play that included 14 seconds on fiveon-three, they took a 1-0 lead on a perfect give-and-go with captain Alec Rockow converting a return pass from Patrick Viscardi at 7:31. The Titans threatened later in the period as Brockport goaltender Liam Schreiner lost his stick for 45 seconds, but a good stick check by Walden Grady knocked the puck away. Minutes later the Blue Devils made it 2-0 as Peyton Young forced an offensive zone turnover by the Thomas defense and scored an unassisted goal at 13:44. The Titans scored on a redirection about five minutes into the second period to close to within 2-1 before both teams played the rest of the second and much of the third period with more tight-checking, less risky approaches. Thomas started to pressure the Brockport net, but Schreiner made three wonderful saves in a quick sequence with less than three minutes remaining in regulation. After a Brockport dump-in, the Titans goaltender tried to pass the puck, but Young intercepted and found Maison Fadale who redirected it into the net for a 3-1 Blue Devil advantage at 13:02. Forty-nine seconds later with Brockport shorthanded, it was Fadale creating yet another turnover at the blueline. He backhanded it under the crossbar to ice the Blue Devils 4-1 victory. “So excited; such a sigh of relief that we finally got it done and I couldn’t be more proud of everyone on the team,” Most Valuable Player Fadale said. “It was a little nerve-wracking at 2-1 with five minutes left, but luckily I got the third goal and capped it off with the fourth goal; it’s a nice feeling.”

“I thought we didn’t finish early…to make it 3-1, so I was getting a little nervous that maybe we didn’t capitalize,” Brockport head coach Greg Stahl said. “We’ve been beating a lot of teams early - getting way ahead of them - so that was probably the tightest third period we’ve been in. “We saw on video that they were throwing the puck up the middle. We tried to keep a guy up top and we also kept a guy down low for when we got the turnover and it worked a lot.”

“This is honestly the best feeling I’ve probably had in my entire life,” Schreiner, who finished with 26 saves, said. “It’s truly special especially to share it with such amazing teammates.” Rockow was named the Offensive Player of the Game. The Blue Devils, ranked fourth in Division II in the latest New York State Sportswriters rankings, advance to the regional round of the state tournament against West Seneca East of Section VI.

Local county fairs deciding how to spend state improvement funds by Kristina Gabalski Earlier this year, Governor Cuomo announced the awarding of $5 million to county and youth fairs across the state through the Agricultural Fairgrounds Infrastructure Improvement Program. Fifty-six local fairs can receive more than $89,000 each through the program to help with the cost of improvement and renovation projects including new construction. This is the first time in nearly a decade that the state’s more than four dozen local fairs will receive critical infrastructure improvement funds, the Governor’s office said. The Monroe County Fair & Recreation Association has not yet decided how they will use the funds, says Eileen Voak. Voak works in the Fair & Recreation Association office and explains that the search is underway to find a new location for the fair, which has been held most recently at Northampton Park. “The new location for the fair has not been decided yet,” Voak says. She explains that the Fair Association is currently considering a couple of potential sites. The dates of the 2017 fair have been tentatively set for July 28 through 30, about one week earlier than usual. Because the new location has not been chosen, Voak says no decision has been made about how to utilize the

funds from the Infrastructure Improvement Program. Once a site has been chosen, the decision will likely be made, she adds. Similarly in Genesee County, members of the Genesee County Agricultural Society, Inc. have made no decision on how to spend the funds. “We are coming up with ideas and seeing what (the program) will allow us to do,” Agricultural Society President Scott Adams says. “We are looking forward to deciding on the best usage of the money.” The Agricultural Society had their next meeting planned for March 1, Adams says. The Genesee County Fair will be held July 17 through 22, at the fairgrounds on Route 5 (5056 East Main Road) in Batavia. In Orleans County, 4-H educator Robert Batt says the Orleans County 4-H Fair expects to receive $96,000 in funds through the program, most of which will be used to upgrade a performance stage at the Curtis Pavilion. Currently, a temporary stage is set up each year with a large tent for performances, competitions and concerts, but constructing a new performance stage at the Curtis Pavilion would save the $2,000 Orleans County Cornell Cooperative Extension spends each year on the temporary set up, Batt says. During the 4-H Fair in July, the new stage would be used for dance competitions, bands and additional activities

and could serve as an outdoor classroom for the Master Gardener program and agricultural specialists at other times, Batt says. The new stage proposed for the pavilion would be 40-feet wide by 30-feet deep, he says. “The completion of the new stage project would turn the Curtis Pavilion into a better resource for the county,” Batt explains. “Our hope is that it can serve as a venue for performances throughout the spring, summer and fall as well as allowing our own program to utilize the area as an outdoor classroom.” Additionally, private dressing rooms attached to the stage will, “Help solve a longstanding problem of not having a private place for participants in the talent show or the local talent showcase to change into costumes or prepare equipment,” Batt says. The Orleans County 4-H Fair will take place July 24 through 29, at the Orleans County 4-H Fairgrounds, Route 31 Knowlesville, just west of Albion. State Agriculture Commissioner Richard Ball says many of the state’s local fairs have been struggling for years to make necessary improvements to stay up-to-date and attractive to visitors. “This funding will help mitigate those challenges and provide better opportunities to spotlight the state’s diverse and exceptional agricultural community,” Ball says.


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