Beyond the lines: A look at Friday's regional soccer championship
Mark Longo is the authority when it comes to the history of the Quincy High School-Quincy Notre Dame girls soccer series, having coached in every game played between the schools.
So when the first words out of his mouth Friday night were to call the Class AA regional championship game the “greatest” played in the series, it resonantes loudly.
And it would he hard to argue against that.
For 120 minutes, through regulation and four overtimes, the teams engaged in a battle of wills. And although scoreless for each and every one of those minutes, the tension and physical play made it as entertaining as any high-scoring affair.
Let’s be honest. It was the most entertaining game of the season.
“This game has definitely been one I will remember forever,” QND defender Alicia Bower said.
The night was fillied with potential plot lines.
For QHS coach Bill Sanders, it was his last meeting with QND, and as it turned out, his last game as the Blue Devils’ coach. He will become the school’s new athletic director next month.
For QND keeper Megan Rabe, there was a question of how she felt. So ill on Thursday that the QND coaching staff prepped backup Janell Vermeire to potentially start, Rabe regrouped to stay between the pipes.
For QHS midfielder Jenny Dreasler, it was a return to the starting lineup. Saddled with a knee injury since midway through the regular season, Dreasler missed the last meeting with QND and played sparingly in the regional semifinal victory over Jacksonville.
And for QND, it was the chance to maintain its dominance. No senior class in the last five years has suffered a loss to QHS. It was 1999 when QHS last beat QND, a string of 22 games since it last happened.
Yet, the most spellbinding plotline of all — Bower making amends for the penalty kick she missed against Chatham Glenwood in last year’s sectionals — didn’t develop until the two teams had exhausted themselves.
And no plotline could have brought more tears.
QND won on Bower’s made PK, the sixth attempt overall and the first in sudden death. Afterward, she clutched the regional plaque, pulled it tight against her chest and kissed it.
Then she started crying again, overwhelmed by the emotion of the moment.
If you looked close, there was even a glimmer in Longo’s eyes.
“For her to step up and put that side net... it was beautiful,” Longo said.
Across the way, the QHS players shed tears themsevles, finding the ending as heartbreaking as anything they’ve experienced.
“It’s the toughest thing as a goalkeeper that I think I’ve ever been through,” QHS keeper Brittany Senator said. “Not just because it was PKs, but I know I’m walking off Flinn Stadium for the last time.”
Sanders did, too, saying goodbye to a program on which he left an indelible mark.
“I told the girls thank you,” Sanders said. “Usually, I’m sending the seniors off and that’s hard enough. Now, it’s a little harder. I’m sending myself off, but it’s a great way to go out. I’d rather play like that and lose. It’s a good way to go out.”
He can say he took part in the series’ greatest game ever played.
“That’s a huge compliment,” Senator said. “We’re a part of something that is bigger than us, all of us out here who are either Blue Devils or Raiders. The rivalry has been there for years and it will continue to go on for years. We were happy to be a part of it tonight.”

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