Girls Soccer Photos: King Philip vs. Northampton

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King Philip Shuts Out Northampton, Surges Into the Final Four

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Foxboro’s Bordieri Inducted Into New Agenda Northeast Hall of Fame

Melissa Bordieri
Foxboro field hockey coach Melissa Bordieri on the sidelines of a game against Canton in 2024. (Ryan Lanigan/HockomockSports.com)

By HockomockSports.com Staff

Longtime Foxboro field hockey coach Melissa Bordieri was recently inducted into the New Agenda Northeast Hall of Fame. Bordieri has been at the helm of the Warriors since 2002 and is one of the longest tenured coaches in the Hockomock League across all sports. The Warriors have won five Hock titles under her guidance, and Bordieri has over 275 career wins.

The New Agenda – Northeast was founded in the spring of 1986 by Mary Lydon, President of the Massachusetts Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance. Mary Pratt, Past Vice-President of the Division for Girls’ and Women’s Sport for the Massachusetts Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Mark Colon, Education Director for the New England Sports Museum. It was based on the National New Agenda, established in 1983 through the efforts and leadership of the National Association for Girls and Women in Sport, an Association of the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance, and The Women’s Sport Foundation.

Below is a release from the New Agenda Northeast:

Melissa Bordieri has devoted 24 years to advancing girls’ and women’s sports, establishing herself as one of the most respected coaches and leaders in the field hockey community. Now entering her 24th season as the head varsity field hockey coach at Foxboro High School, she has built a program defined by consistency, competitiveness, and excellence. Under her leadership, Foxboro has qualified for the state tournament an astounding 23 times, captured the Division 2 South Sectional Championship, and earned six trips to the Elite 8. Her teams have also secured five Hockomock League Championships, and Bordieri has reached an impressive milestone of 279 career wins.

Beyond her high school coaching success, Bordieri has left an indelible mark on the broader field hockey community. She served as both a coach and Director of the Baystate Field Hockey Club for six years, where she emphasized developing players’ skills, strength, and confidence on and off the field. Her commitment to youth development was even more evident in her role as the founder and Director of Foxboro Youth Field Hockey, a program she led for 17 years and one that has created opportunities for countless young athletes to discover the sport.

Bordieri’s leadership extends into governance and advocacy within the sport. She has been an active member of the Massachusetts State Field Hockey Coaches Association for several years, lending her voice to initiatives that promote and strengthen the game statewide. In addition, she has served on the board of the Commonwealth Field Hockey League for the past five years, helping to shape the future of the sport at a regional level.

Her own athletic journey began as a collegiate field hockey player at Northeastern University, but it was her mother’s advocacy during her youth that fueled her lifelong passion for mentorship and equity in athletics. Bordieri credits her mother with instilling in her the drive to ensure that girls were afforded the same opportunities as their peers. Inspired by that example, she has dedicated her career to helping young women recognize their worth, develop confidence, and fall in love with the game of field hockey.

Thursday’s Schedule & Scoreboard – 11/13/25

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Volleyball Photos: Franklin vs. Newton South

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Franklin Sweeps Aside Newton South to Reach First State Final

Franklin Volleyball
Franklin players celebrate after the final point against Newton South clinched a spot in the program’s first state title match. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

By Josh Perry || HockomockSports.com Managing Editor

WESTWOOD, Mass – Newton South, the No. 16 seed, put together an improbable run to the Final Four, including a win over the tournament’s top seed Chelmsford in the Sweet Sixteen. The Lions went into Wednesday night’s state semifinal at Westwood High looking to complete their magical postseason with a trip to the program’s first final.

Instead, the clock struck midnight on this season’s Cinderella.

Click here for a photo gallery from this match.

Franklin continued to roll, earning a dominant, 3-0 (25-16, 25-13, 25-16) victory. It was Franklin’s 17th straight win, with 15 of them being sweeps (including all four postseason matches). The Panthers fulfilled their preseason goal of reaching the program’s first state title game in style and will face perennial power Newton North in the final.

“We’re so excited,” said Franklin senior hitter Makayla Kuykendall. “Our goal wasn’t just to win the league but it was to win it all. [Coach Ridolfi] asked us what we wanted to get from this season and we said, a state championship. We’re so lucky and grateful to have this privilege to play.”

“We were cleaning the closet,” first-year Franklin coach Chris Ridolfi explained, “way before preseason and Mak and Liv said they wanted to be in the state final. So, we’ve coached them that way the whole year and they’ve taken me on the ride.”

Each of the three sets started close until Franklin put together a run to open up a cushion. Once the Panthers got onto the front foot, it was hard for Newton South to keep up.

Leading 8-6 in the first, senior Olivia Alberti (nine kills, three digs, and six blocks) found the court with a deft tip and freshman setter Phoebe O’Connor (31 assists, two aces, and 10 digs) had a huge block to open up a four-point edge. The Lions halved the deficit but Franklin won eight of the next 11 points to pull away.

Alberti’s control of the net in the middle was key to Franklin’s success early on. She came up with a huge block and followed it with a kill and a tip that dropped just inside the line. Alberti added an ace to push the lead to six (15-9).

“The whole year, she’s been that way,” Ridolfi said of Alberti. “She’s fast off her feet, she’s strong at the net, she can just change a game that way. We count on her to do that for us.”

Kuykendall (15 kills, 12 digs, two aces, and two blocks) rolled a shot down the line for a point, the Panthers had multiple blocks during a long rally that ended in a Newton South hitting error, and junior Gianna Laurello (five kills, two aces, and five digs) smacked one off the block to give Franklin a commanding 18-11 lead.

Senior libero Emma Cunningham (three aces and 22 digs) fired in an ace and Alberti followed with another block. Cunningham again picked out the perfect spot with serve to the back corner for a second ace to keep the Panthers in charge. Newton South cut the lead down to seven, but sophomore Emerson Delleo (nine kills, three aces, and 15 digs) drilled the ball down the middle and Laurello’s serve clipped the top of the net for a set-clinching ace.

The second set didn’t start all that well for either team, as a series of service errors kept it close through the early stages. With the set level at 9-9, Franklin went on one of its standard runs to break things open. This time, the Panthers won nine of 11 points and 16 of the final 20 points in the second.

“We talk to them a lot about game plan and approach,” Ridolfi said. “We game plan and they have to execute, but our approach is we find a spot in the game where we can separate ourselves and play with the lead. Through the tournament, that’s what we’ve been able to do.”

Kuykendall got things started with a pair of kills and sophomore middle Charlotte Yeulenski stuffed a shot for a point. O’Connor hit a laser serve that couldn’t be handled cleanly, Laurello scored off the block, and Kuykendall added an ace to make it 15-10. After Annabel Kohler got one back for the Lions, Delleo closed out a rally with a shot inside the back line and Kuykendall scored with a swing from the back row.

Newton South was reeling and, after a shot into the net, Delleo’s powerful swing scored a point and Laurello added an ace. Alberti came back with an accurate tip and she and O’Connor combined to smother a shot at the net. O’Connor would add a second block two points later and Delleo’s ace delivered the Panthers a 2-0 lead.

“I’ve been in those shoes as a freshman,” Kuykendall, a four-year starter, responded when asked about helping the team’s talented younger players thrive in the tournament atmosphere. “I know how they feel, I know where they’re coming from. Obviously in these games, there’s a lot of stress, a lot of pressure, so I think it’s good to remind them that we’re all in this together.”

Ridolfi praised his seniors, particularly Kuykendall, Alberti, and Cunningham, for being the foundation for the team’s run. He said, “The team as a whole is a mature team. Those three are exceptional leaders. So, you have a mature team willing to follow and you have three great leaders willing to lead, it makes for a good combination.”

The Lions started the final set well, leading 5-2 early to give their fans a little hope, but Franklin chipped away and grabbed the lead at 10-9. Alberti’s block and a roll shot from Kuykendall but the Panthers up 15-11 and starting to feel like the final was in their grasp.

Newton South tried to push back and closed the gap to three, but Franklin went on a 3-0 run that gave it a more comfortable advantage. Kuykendall ended Newton South’s mini-comeback with a blast and then she finished off a rally with a shot that dropped inside the back line. A block from Yeulenski made it 19-13.

Sofia Hellstrom tried to keep the Lions alive with a nice tip and a big swing on the outside, but the Panthers continued to close down the angles with their block and keep everything alive along the back row.

Two shots into the net gave them match point and a final swing that went long sealed Franklin’s place in the final. Franklin (22-2) will now face three-time defending state champ Newton North at Billerica High on Saturday. As Ridolfi noted, “Might as well play the best.”

“It’s a big task ahead of us,” he added. “We have two days to get ready. I know they’re up for the challenge, so we’ll do what we can do.”

Click here for a photo gallery from this match.

Volleyball Photos: Oliver Ames vs. King Philip

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Oliver Ames Sweeps King Philip To Return To Division 2 Final

Oliver Ames volleyball
Oliver Ames junior Claire Kenny (3) celebrates after an ace in the Tigers’ Division 2 state semifinal match against King Philip. (Ryan Lanigan/HockomockSports.com)

By Ryan Lanigan || HockomockSports.com Editor

STOUGHTON, Mass. — Since the moment last year’s state final ended, Oliver Ames has been building toward another shot.

On their road back, they haven’t lost since.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

The Tigers have done it with the same formula every match: rock solid defense, a variety of offensive weapons, and relentless effort.

On Wednesday, that combination delivered again as top-seeded Oliver Ames swept Hockomock League rival #5 King Philip, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-12) to book a return trip to the Division 2 state championship game.

“This is their revenge tour,” OA head coach Chelsea Cunningham said. “They’ve been planning this since we were in that classroom [at Billerica High School] one year ago [after the state final], and they never wanted to feel like that again. And they meant it. A lot of teams will come in and say it. They’ve kept their focus on this. This has been on our whiteboard in the team room — like, we’re going back. We went one game at a time, took everything, positives and negatives from every match, to be able to craft how we were going to get here. And they’ve done nothing but stick to their work.”

The Tigers were met by a game Warriors squad at the start of the match. Unsurprisingly, the two squads went back-and-forth for the first half of the set. OA had a couple of small two or three point runs, and then King Philip took its turn. The result, a slim 11-10 lead for the Tigers.

But like OA has done to teams all season, they just kept coming. A tip from junior Taylor Donohue (16 kills) preceded a kill off the block from classmate Chelsea Wagner (15 kills), and then one from junior middle Claire Kenny. Earlier in the set, Kenny had a big block and senior Evan Casey floated a short serve just over the net and down for an ace.

After a service error, OA came back with three straight points including an ace from Kenny and a big block from freshman Lyla Yurrita shortly after junior setter Lyla McDonough made a terrific save on a ball flying out of play and OA’s lead was suddenly 17-11.

Another block from Yurrita kept the momentum with the Tigers and then senior Lindsey Solomon toed the service line, dropping in a pair of aces around a kill from Donohue as the lead ballooned to 22-14. KP battled: a kill from senior Cece Kilroy, who earned her 500th kill earlier in the set, a perfectly placed tip from junior Amie O’Neil, who then teamed up with senior Alli Cleasby for a block to get within six at 23-17. But Donohue, who usually swings from the outside or the right side, popped up with a kill from the middle and OA sealed the set win after a KP hitting error.

OA’s balance and depth was on full display in that first set. McDonough (26 assists) was responsible for setting up the majority of the Tigers’ kills and junior libero Molly Milliken (21 digs) was super steady defensively, helping OA get into its offense seamlessly.

“Everybody contributes and that’s what makes us such a great team,” Kenny said. “It’s not one person winning the games. It’s all of us contributing together. Lyla knows that we have such a strong offense and that she can rely on setting anybody. She knows whoever she sets, they can work with it no matter what.”

Cunningham added, “Any point of those six rotations, we’re comfortable. We have learned to adapt to whatever we have to do, with whoever is out there, knowing who connects well, knowing we can switch it up. The trust, you can see it on the court. If they make an error, they acknowledge each other right away to move on, and they do it. Volleyball is a game of mistakes. We try our best to make less of them, and we came out on top of this game, which is great.”

OA played from ahead for the entire second set, though it was hard to fully pull away from KP. Early kills for Donohue and Wagner sparked the Tigers, though Kilroy landed three early kills, including a great shot down the line to keep pace.

But once again, OA just kept going with its relentless play. Yurrita found a hole in the defense, Donohue landed a kill after a long back-and-forth rally, and Solomon had an ace. A kill from KP sophomore Molly Sweeney off a set from classmate Charlotte Bailey brought the Warriors within five at 13-8, but in a blink, OA’s lead reached double digits. Kenny dropped in a tip, McDonough had an ace, Donohue and Wagner each had a kill, and senior Angelina Romeiro went up and put down a block on a loose pass as the advantage peaked at 19-9.

The Warriors refused to go quietly though. Senior Cece Mullen set Kilroy for a kill out of a timeout, OA had a hitting error, and then Mullen got a deep free ball pass to hit the line after a nice dig from Mya McCormick. Kilroy had two more kills and O’Neil, after a nice dig from Caleigh Shore, put one down from the middle as KP crawled back into it at 21-17.

“We never really had control at any point of the match,” King Philip head coach Kristen Geuss said. “There’s a reason why they’re undefeated. They’re a phenomenal team, kudos to them. They’re a really great team. I thought we played well in the first set, just couldn’t keep up with them in the next two sets.

“I’m really proud of my team. I admire how hard they’ve worked. They’re practicing six days a week and they haven’t had a day off — they’re tired. We had to work super hard for all our points. It’s almost like we have to play perfect to beat a team like that. We wanted to see what we could do, and we got this far, it was really fun.”

Yurrita had another block, Solomon had another ace, and Donohue another kill, as OA closed out the second, 25-18.

OA put any thought of a comeback away pretty early: the Tigers won 11 of the first 13 points for a commanding lead. Romeiro rolled in a kill, Donohue had two aces, and Wagner found a gap to land a roll shot. Sweeney had a block and Bailey dropped in an ace to cut it to 13-7, but the Warriors didn’t win consecutive points the rest of the set.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

“If you watch the first match we played [KP] two months ago, we’re both completely different, and I had a completely different lineup and so did [KP],” Cunningham said. “You don’t know what to expect and you prep as best as you can. You still have to show up prepared. We scrimmaged Needham and Franklin, and now playing Canton and KP, that’s the level of play we want to be at.

“This group is so smart. They’re able to reflect immediately and adjust if they have to. They adapt, they talk, they communicate. And like I said, the trust is unmatchable right now. It’s fantastic. This is the best group I’ve had to date.”

Oliver Ames will look to finish off its revenge tour in the Division 2 state championship right back at Billerica against #7 Wayland on Saturday.

“It’s very nerve-wracking, obviously, but also so exciting,” Kenny said. “We’ve been here before so we know what to expect, and we’re all very eager to claim that title this year.”

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Wednesday’s Schedule & Scoreboard – 11/12/25

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Oliver Ames Boys Cross Country Claims Division 1C Title

Oliver Ames boys cross country
Photo courtesy of Oliver Ames cross country

By HockomockSports.com Staff

Oliver Ames senior Landon Sarney continued his torrid run this fall with a second place finish while junior Devon McStowe followed up his impressive performance at Hocks with a sixth place finish to lead the Tigers to the Division 1C title over the weekend at the Wrentham Development Center.

The Tigers had 60 points to edge out Reading, who came in second with 64. Mansfield and Sharon, who came in seventh and eighth respectively, also placed inside the top 10. North Attleboro junior Anthony Malakidis crossed fourth overall and Sharon junior Alex Pinnix was seventh.

Click here for a photo gallery from the Hockomock League boys cross country championship meet.

Click here for a photo gallery from the Hockomock League girls cross country championship meet.

After storming to a first place finish at Hocks two weeks ago, OA’s top five runners placed in the top 21. Sarney (15:34.00) was just over four seconds behind first place while McStowe clocked in at 16:03.20 on the 5K course. Senior Lawrence Dear was third for the Tigers and 13th overall at 16:28.50, junior Colin Donahue took 18th overall in 16:42.20, and senior Douglas Smith clinched the win with a time of 16:47.60, good for 21st overall. Junior Jake Hauvuy also had a strong race, crossing the finish line in 17:18.

Pinnix set a new PR with a time of 16:14.30 to lead the way for the Eagles, who finished with 76 points as a team. Mansfield was led by senior Joey Federline‘s time of 17:17.20 (32nd overall) and the Hornets finished seventh overall to qualify for the MIAA Meet of Champions for the first time since 2018. Stoughton junior Matthew Pritchard crossed in 17:22.70 to set a new personal best for 39th, and Milford junior Benjamin Tetreault was right behind him at 17:25.20 for 40th overall.

In the Division 1A race, Franklin had the top finish for a Hockomock team at 12th overall. Junior Kyle Twomey paced the Panthers with a 47th place finish, qualifying for the Meet of Champions with a time of 16:59.50. Attleboro senior Camden Martin and junior Owen Lacaillade crossed the finish together shortly before, both clocking in at 16:52.70 to move on to the Meet of Champions. Junior Jordan Trucchi had the top race for the Tigers at 17:56.00.

King Philip was the lone Hock team that competed in the Division 1B race. Junior Michael Joseph led the way for the Warriors with a 33rd place finish in 16:54.30. In Division 2, Foxboro senior Timothy Chase took 15th overall in the 2B race at the Northfield Mountain Rec Center. Chase clocked in at 17:18.96 for 15th overall while classmate Eamonn Kelly took 36th in 18:23.97. In the 2A race, Canton sophomore Tristan Grant clocked in at 18:09.20 for 32nd place.

Canton, OA Girls Each Take 6th

After running away with the team title at Hocks two weeks ago, Canton took sixth overall at the Division 2A meet in Northfield. Junior Lauren Raffetto was well ahead of the pack but came up just short of first place, taking second (19:38.93) by less than a second to Boston Latin Academy’s Sara Blanco (19:38.16). Sophomore Adileh Azar clocked in at 20:55.82 for 13th overall, junior Isabella Holland was 24th in 21:44.82, and senior Madeleine Driscoll secured 40th overall with a time of 22:28.92.

Back in Wrentham, the Tigers took sixth overall with 189 points in the Division 1C race. Billerica dominated the race with all of its top five runners inside the top 10. Kathleen Beaulieu had the top race of any Hock harrier with a time of 19:57.10, good for 16th overall. Classmate Devin Thomas (20:26.70), seniors Ashley Powers (20:34.80) and Erin Reilly (21:50.10), and freshman Norah Dupill (22:16.30) rounded out the scoring for the Tigers.

Sophomore Cameron Ward clocked in at 21:56.10 to lead the way for North Attleboro, sophomore Iris Nolan was the top Sharon runner in 22:48.60, and senior Alex Leman (23:03.90) paced Mansfield.

In the Division 1A race, Franklin senior Victoria Courtright-Lim qualified for the MIAA Meet of Champions by taking 35th overall in a time of 20:21.80. Junior Annabelle Santiago also had a strong race for the Panthers, clocking in at 20:54.40. Taunton eighth-grader Rylee Levesque had the top time for the Tigers, finishing in 22:05.90, while Attleboro senior Alexa Frackelton clocked in at 22:20.10 to lead the Bombardiers. Over in the D1B race, junior Ashley Cleverdon was 31st overall with a time of 20:41.10. Freshman Lillian Almeida also finished in the top 50, clocking in at 20:57.00 for 42nd overall.

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