Hinsdale Central celebrates special night; Naperville Central wins ranked battle
Redhawks take 3-1 win; Red Devils celebrates long tradition
By Dave Owen
HINSDALE – Hinsdale Central celebrated its 50 years of soccer history Friday.
But it was visiting Naperville Central that capped off a week also worth celebrating.
Chase Adams’ brace midway through the second half turned a 1-1 tie into a 3-1 win for the no. 11 Redhawks (11-3-0), who added to the momentum of their 2-1 win Tuesday over cross-town rival Naperville North.
“We're playing great teams and winning in the style of gritting it out,” Adams said. “It really helps our confidence to do that. Hopefully it carries on to the postseason, and we can make a great run.”
There's been a lot of success at Hinsdale Central including the 12th-ranked 2022 version of the Red Devils (7-3-1).
The school debuted soccer in 1973 and quickly took a state title in 1976. Another championship came in 2014, and there has been plenty of success in between and since.
More than 40 former-Red Devils players from all eras gathered in a tent just beyond the south goal during the game to celebrate and commiserate.
Among them: Jim Walker, a player on the 2014 team who sang the National Anthem on Friday.
“Jimmy spent four years on varsity and we went 24-0-x in conference,” Red Devils coach Mike Wiggins said. “It’s unheard of in our conference to go undefeated four years in a row.”
The 1976 champions were represented by players like Craig Felde, a goalkeeper on the squad who was really brought down memory lane by one unexpected aspect of Friday’s game – the Red Devils wore replica uniforms of the 1973 and 1976 teams, candy cane-like red and white vertical striped jerseys with black numerals.
“The game didn't turn out like I wanted it to but still, it's a great night,” Felde said. “And I love the throwback jerseys. That was the first jersey the guys ever wore. But I was a goalkeeper so I never even got to wear those.
“What Mike Wiggins has done here is phenomenal. I got here early today and he said to me 'I can't wait ‘til you see the jerseys.'
The old school look was also a big hit with the current Red Devils.
“One of the highlights was the throwback jerseys, the original jerseys of 1973,” senior Dayton DeTomasso said. “We get to keep those, and we just revealed them tonight. We got those 10 minutes before the game in the locker room. That was a really cool moment.”
Between the jerseys and creating new links between Red Devils past and present, it was a special night.
“It was an absolutely wonderful time, but it's a little surreal,” Felde said. “I'm seeing younger guys I played softball with. I'm seeing them here and 'You played soccer at Hinsdale?' I didn’t know a lot of them played.”
Also on hand was longtime assistant coach Harry Bull (who started teaching at the school in the 1960s), and Skip Begley, who preceded Wiggins as varsity head coach and remains on the staff as a freshman coach.
“When I came here there were five state championship flags hanging in the gym,” Bull said. “Go in there now and there’s like 150.”
“This (night) is pretty special. You look at all these guys, and really, I’m more interested in the things they’re doing now.”
Begley remains the only Red Devils head coach to never have a losing season (82-38-13 over six years, including a 20-win season his final year as boys coach in 2001). He guided Hinsdale Central to a girls state title.
“This is the first time I've been around a program that made a dedicated effort to bring players in from the 1970s and through five decades,” said Begley. “I think it's a real credit to Mike. He sees such big picture things.”
As for the big picture on the field Friday, the first half began well for Naperville Central with the game’s first goal 28:50 before halftime.
Joe LoDuca fielded a Chase Adams cross in front, nicely turned inside his 1-v-1 defender and sent a low 10-yard liner inside the right post.
“Chase got me the ball wide open, and gave me the opportunity to go 1-on-1,” LoDuca said. “I had a defender behind my back, and I just did a little feint to my right and even the goalie moved the opposite way. So it gave me the chance to shoot.”
But after grabbing the 1-0 lead, Naperville Central had to endure a relentless Red Devils’ attack over the next 35 minutes of play.
A Josh Weigel block and nice header away by Patrick Bohan denied an extended Luca Davies threat in the 13th minute, and many more chances soon followed.
An Ardit Abdullai shot 18 minutes in was saved by Redhawks first half keeper Austin Waite, and good defense by Carter Adams near the left post denied an end line threat in the 24th minute.
After Hinsdale Central goalkeeper Martin Contreras saved an eight-yard Elliot Krause shot off a Weigel pass in the 27th minute, the Red Devils came close to scoring one minute later.
Austen Szurgot powered a 30-yard free kick to the crease that deflected near the goal line, where Weigel cleared the ball out on the side.
Then 10:30 before halftime, Waite came up with a big diving save when Davies (who had a point in every Hinsdale Central game this year before Friday) had a nice eight-yard redirect in front of a Enzo Cinque cross.
“The first half, the first 15 minutes were fine,” Redhawks coach Troy Adams said. “But when we scored I felt our energy and work-rate went down.
“And you know when you play Hinsdale Central they're going to work and be disciplined, and if you don't match that they're going to take it to you. I felt the last 25 minutes of the first half, they took it to us.”
The Red Devils’ strong play rose another notch as the half ended. A flurry in the last 40 seconds began with a Greg Theotikos 25-yard throw-in. Cinque collected a clearing attempt and his pass and one from Dray Glashin set up Davies for a 12-yard liner in front that Waite saved.
That sequence marked the sixth Hinsdale Central chance in the box in the final 8:20 of the first half. Yet the Redhawks 1-0 lead remained.
After both teams inserted new keepers after the halftime break (Dylan Scott of the Redhawks and Henrique Ribeiro for the Red Devils), the late first half theme continued.
On a play initiated by Owen Peterson, DiTomasso’s right-side attack drew Scott out but his shot was cleared by a defender. Scott raced back to the net to grab Braden Henry’s 25-yard one-time rebound try.
But DiTomasso was back in the box with 37:28, this time with results.
“We were knocking at the door and had been for a really long time,” DiTomasso said. “We won the ball in the air, we came down, Ardit connected a pass and found me through, and I was able to get there before the keeper, and he ended up fouling me.”
DiTomasso drew a penalty kick but was shaken up and had to leave the game briefly. Abdullai put away the PK lower left to tie the game 1-1.
“Luckily Ardit was there, a fantastic player, to put away the PK for us,” DiTomasso said. “It was really important to get that goal. One of the trends we're seeing with our team is were able to really respond at the start of the second half.”
But after that Red Devil response to tie, the Redhawks had their own.
A LoDuca 22-yard free kick with 31:55 left produced a header away. Later Eli Jarrell had a rebound shot that Ribeiro nicely saved at the left post.
Hinsdale Central responded to nearly grab the lead with 27 minutes to go, but Davies’ header off a Abdullai cross hit the right post.
But the back-and-forth play turned the Redhawks’ way with 23:03 to go.
A LoDuca send found Chase Adams in on the right side on a 1-v-2 attack. Adams deftly steered away from one defender, then created enough space from the second to drive a low 20-yard shot inside the left post.
“That Naperville Central team is very good,” DiTomasso said, “a lot of talented players. Their forward was very talented. But it was unfortunate, because we were all over them. We were serving balls in, we were there, but they just caught us a couple of times.”
Freshman striker Adams noted both his team’s lapse and the need to turn the tide.
“In the first half after we scored the first goal our work-rate dropped and theirs went up,” he said. “And then 5-10 minutes into the second half we saw the result of it, a penalty and the goal.
“So we realized we had to get back on and keep forcing it. I was just lucky that I was on the end of them, but it was the work-rate for all of our team that got us those goals.”
His attacking strategy on the goal paid off.
“I just trust my ability with the ball on my feet,” Adams said, “going 1-on-1 with people and being able to challenge them and use my physical ability no matter the age to get by them, body them and execute what we need.”
The goal began a dominant stretch of play for Adams. He followed by drawing a 20-yard free kick with 20:40 left, and his ensuing send just missed Weigel at the back post.
Weigel (15-yard shot) and Adams (20-yarder) were denied on saves by Ribeiro in the next three minutes. Then with 10:59 to go, Patrick Berryman intercepted a defensive end Red Devils throw-in and found Adams streaking up right wing into the box.
Ribeiro raced off his line for the ball but tripped Adams, producing a penalty kick and Adams PK conversion that upped the lead to 3-1.
“We always have a couple talented forwards,” Troy Adams said, “and this year is no exception. We've had three guys that have all scored hat-tricks so it can come from anybody. Today with the way they were playing with what we had, he was in the right spots at the right times. And we have enough guys that can score that teams can't focus on one kid.”
While his son took over the game offensively, coach Adams had special praise for a Redhawk defender.
“Patrick Bohan doesn't get enough credit back there being I believe if not the best junior defender, then right up there with any other kid,” Troy Adams said.
“We've used him in a variety of ways, as a traditional center back, a man marker at times, and every challenge we've presented he's been successful at it. He really deserves a lot of credit for what happens in the back and for our success as a team.”
Bohan has seen nice progress since a rare off day for his team, a 5-2 loss to Plainfield North, to close August.
“We were still getting to know how each other played,” Bohan said, “and how we wanted to play. We figured out new man-marking tactics so we could do better against these teams. And now we're able to stop just about any top players.
“We have a really consistent defense all the way throughout the back. Everybody can hold their own, even against some of the top players. No matter who is on the ball, who's defending who, I have faith we can stop them.”
That was true late Friday, as a Szurgot cross to the box was cleared by Berryman with 8:35 left. Then off a Kevin Gottschalk 55-yard free kick with 5:10 to go, Peterson sent a 20-yard shot over the crossbar.
“The second half, the whole team mentally kind of rose up together,” LoDuca said.
“But even though we won I don't think today was our best day. Usually when we play well we work really hard. In the end we did have a lot of effort, and it showed getting two more goals.”
After a shaky first half, the second half approach did please coach Adams.
“To the team’s credit we talked about always matching or exceeding the other team’s energy,” he said, “and I thought the second half was much better.
“Some of it was understanding what they were giving us and taking advantage of that, but a lot of it boils down to our guys working a little more, winning some 50-50s and starting to get after it.”
Said Chase Adams: “It's the mentality to keep pushing and pushing. Not doing that will make games like Plainfield North happen, when we lose 5-2 and could tie or beat them if we play our best.”
That game seems more distant a memory every day, especially this week.
“This gives us a lot of confidence,” Bohan said, “especially with our win against North too. I'm excited because I know we're going to keep winning.”
On his program’s special night, Wiggins summed up an up-and-down game.
“We came out strong. and I thought we brought a strong presence in the attack,” Wiggins said. “Once again. we responded to start the second half as we have done all season.
“We had chances so that was encouraging, and so we continue to build game by game in a season that has as strong of a schedule as we have had over the years.”
Players like DiTomasso are also stressing that growth, even in defeat.
“They (Naperville Central) are a very talented team in the air, and they were able to capitalize,” he said, “but I’m really excited for where the team’s at right now. I think we’re in good shape. We’re competing with every team we play with, even if sometimes the score doesn't show it.
“We learned a lot this week and what we need to work on. And sometimes it’s good to get humbled a little bit, because we were on a stretch of winning a lot of games and doing really good.
“Definitely there's balls in the box we need to work on. We had like 100 throw-ins to the box, and we couldn't capitalize on them. I think we have a lot of things to work on, and we're kind of going back to the basics a little bit. But I think we're going to be able to come out really strong against York, who's our next opponent.”
And more than anything, the 50th anniversary events will be the team’s lasting memory of Friday.
“It was a really special night,” DiTomasso said. “We've been looking forward to this: a lot of work was put in. Credit to coach Wiggins and the booster club for putting this all together.
“I talked to some of the alumni, and I know they really enjoyed it. A couple of them came into the locker room and talked to us. It was a really good time all around.”
It was quite a night for the coach as well.
“We had former players in from California, Arizona and Washington state, just to name a few who were in for the game,” Wiggins said.
“The turnout was terrific, and as I said to the group, I couldn't be more proud of our current team in the way they play, show up everyday and put in the work. This year's team continues to represent the 50 years of soccer at Hinsdale Central better than you could ever hope for. Our soccer alumni can be proud of these boys."
Starting lineups
Naperville Central
GK: Austin Waite
D: Patrick Bohan
D: Patrick Berryman
D: Michael Cavalleri
D: Carter Bilik
M: Carter Adams
M: Eli Jarrell
M: Sean O’Reilly
M: Josh Weigel
F: Joe LoDuca
F: Chase Adams
Hinsdale Central
GK: Martin Contreras
D: Greg Theotikos
D: Kevin Gottschalk
D: Dayton DiTomasso
D: Cody Jurgenson
M: Ardit Abdullai
M: Enzo Cinque
M: Austen Szurgot
M: Braden Henry
F: Luca Davies
F: Owen Peterson
Chicagoland Soccer Man of the Match:
Chase Adams, fr., F, Naperville Central
Scoring summary
First half
NC- Joe LoDuca (Chase Adams assist), 12’
Second half
HC- Ardit Abdullai (PK), 43’
NC- Chase Adams, 57’
NC- Adams (PK), 69’
Redhawks take 3-1 win; Red Devils celebrates long tradition
By Dave Owen
HINSDALE – Hinsdale Central celebrated its 50 years of soccer history Friday.
But it was visiting Naperville Central that capped off a week also worth celebrating.
Chase Adams’ brace midway through the second half turned a 1-1 tie into a 3-1 win for the no. 11 Redhawks (11-3-0), who added to the momentum of their 2-1 win Tuesday over cross-town rival Naperville North.
“We're playing great teams and winning in the style of gritting it out,” Adams said. “It really helps our confidence to do that. Hopefully it carries on to the postseason, and we can make a great run.”
There's been a lot of success at Hinsdale Central including the 12th-ranked 2022 version of the Red Devils (7-3-1).
The school debuted soccer in 1973 and quickly took a state title in 1976. Another championship came in 2014, and there has been plenty of success in between and since.
More than 40 former-Red Devils players from all eras gathered in a tent just beyond the south goal during the game to celebrate and commiserate.
Among them: Jim Walker, a player on the 2014 team who sang the National Anthem on Friday.
“Jimmy spent four years on varsity and we went 24-0-x in conference,” Red Devils coach Mike Wiggins said. “It’s unheard of in our conference to go undefeated four years in a row.”
The 1976 champions were represented by players like Craig Felde, a goalkeeper on the squad who was really brought down memory lane by one unexpected aspect of Friday’s game – the Red Devils wore replica uniforms of the 1973 and 1976 teams, candy cane-like red and white vertical striped jerseys with black numerals.
“The game didn't turn out like I wanted it to but still, it's a great night,” Felde said. “And I love the throwback jerseys. That was the first jersey the guys ever wore. But I was a goalkeeper so I never even got to wear those.
“What Mike Wiggins has done here is phenomenal. I got here early today and he said to me 'I can't wait ‘til you see the jerseys.'
The old school look was also a big hit with the current Red Devils.
“One of the highlights was the throwback jerseys, the original jerseys of 1973,” senior Dayton DeTomasso said. “We get to keep those, and we just revealed them tonight. We got those 10 minutes before the game in the locker room. That was a really cool moment.”
Between the jerseys and creating new links between Red Devils past and present, it was a special night.
“It was an absolutely wonderful time, but it's a little surreal,” Felde said. “I'm seeing younger guys I played softball with. I'm seeing them here and 'You played soccer at Hinsdale?' I didn’t know a lot of them played.”
Also on hand was longtime assistant coach Harry Bull (who started teaching at the school in the 1960s), and Skip Begley, who preceded Wiggins as varsity head coach and remains on the staff as a freshman coach.
“When I came here there were five state championship flags hanging in the gym,” Bull said. “Go in there now and there’s like 150.”
“This (night) is pretty special. You look at all these guys, and really, I’m more interested in the things they’re doing now.”
Begley remains the only Red Devils head coach to never have a losing season (82-38-13 over six years, including a 20-win season his final year as boys coach in 2001). He guided Hinsdale Central to a girls state title.
“This is the first time I've been around a program that made a dedicated effort to bring players in from the 1970s and through five decades,” said Begley. “I think it's a real credit to Mike. He sees such big picture things.”
As for the big picture on the field Friday, the first half began well for Naperville Central with the game’s first goal 28:50 before halftime.
Joe LoDuca fielded a Chase Adams cross in front, nicely turned inside his 1-v-1 defender and sent a low 10-yard liner inside the right post.
“Chase got me the ball wide open, and gave me the opportunity to go 1-on-1,” LoDuca said. “I had a defender behind my back, and I just did a little feint to my right and even the goalie moved the opposite way. So it gave me the chance to shoot.”
But after grabbing the 1-0 lead, Naperville Central had to endure a relentless Red Devils’ attack over the next 35 minutes of play.
A Josh Weigel block and nice header away by Patrick Bohan denied an extended Luca Davies threat in the 13th minute, and many more chances soon followed.
An Ardit Abdullai shot 18 minutes in was saved by Redhawks first half keeper Austin Waite, and good defense by Carter Adams near the left post denied an end line threat in the 24th minute.
After Hinsdale Central goalkeeper Martin Contreras saved an eight-yard Elliot Krause shot off a Weigel pass in the 27th minute, the Red Devils came close to scoring one minute later.
Austen Szurgot powered a 30-yard free kick to the crease that deflected near the goal line, where Weigel cleared the ball out on the side.
Then 10:30 before halftime, Waite came up with a big diving save when Davies (who had a point in every Hinsdale Central game this year before Friday) had a nice eight-yard redirect in front of a Enzo Cinque cross.
“The first half, the first 15 minutes were fine,” Redhawks coach Troy Adams said. “But when we scored I felt our energy and work-rate went down.
“And you know when you play Hinsdale Central they're going to work and be disciplined, and if you don't match that they're going to take it to you. I felt the last 25 minutes of the first half, they took it to us.”
The Red Devils’ strong play rose another notch as the half ended. A flurry in the last 40 seconds began with a Greg Theotikos 25-yard throw-in. Cinque collected a clearing attempt and his pass and one from Dray Glashin set up Davies for a 12-yard liner in front that Waite saved.
That sequence marked the sixth Hinsdale Central chance in the box in the final 8:20 of the first half. Yet the Redhawks 1-0 lead remained.
After both teams inserted new keepers after the halftime break (Dylan Scott of the Redhawks and Henrique Ribeiro for the Red Devils), the late first half theme continued.
On a play initiated by Owen Peterson, DiTomasso’s right-side attack drew Scott out but his shot was cleared by a defender. Scott raced back to the net to grab Braden Henry’s 25-yard one-time rebound try.
But DiTomasso was back in the box with 37:28, this time with results.
“We were knocking at the door and had been for a really long time,” DiTomasso said. “We won the ball in the air, we came down, Ardit connected a pass and found me through, and I was able to get there before the keeper, and he ended up fouling me.”
DiTomasso drew a penalty kick but was shaken up and had to leave the game briefly. Abdullai put away the PK lower left to tie the game 1-1.
“Luckily Ardit was there, a fantastic player, to put away the PK for us,” DiTomasso said. “It was really important to get that goal. One of the trends we're seeing with our team is were able to really respond at the start of the second half.”
But after that Red Devil response to tie, the Redhawks had their own.
A LoDuca 22-yard free kick with 31:55 left produced a header away. Later Eli Jarrell had a rebound shot that Ribeiro nicely saved at the left post.
Hinsdale Central responded to nearly grab the lead with 27 minutes to go, but Davies’ header off a Abdullai cross hit the right post.
But the back-and-forth play turned the Redhawks’ way with 23:03 to go.
A LoDuca send found Chase Adams in on the right side on a 1-v-2 attack. Adams deftly steered away from one defender, then created enough space from the second to drive a low 20-yard shot inside the left post.
“That Naperville Central team is very good,” DiTomasso said, “a lot of talented players. Their forward was very talented. But it was unfortunate, because we were all over them. We were serving balls in, we were there, but they just caught us a couple of times.”
Freshman striker Adams noted both his team’s lapse and the need to turn the tide.
“In the first half after we scored the first goal our work-rate dropped and theirs went up,” he said. “And then 5-10 minutes into the second half we saw the result of it, a penalty and the goal.
“So we realized we had to get back on and keep forcing it. I was just lucky that I was on the end of them, but it was the work-rate for all of our team that got us those goals.”
His attacking strategy on the goal paid off.
“I just trust my ability with the ball on my feet,” Adams said, “going 1-on-1 with people and being able to challenge them and use my physical ability no matter the age to get by them, body them and execute what we need.”
The goal began a dominant stretch of play for Adams. He followed by drawing a 20-yard free kick with 20:40 left, and his ensuing send just missed Weigel at the back post.
Weigel (15-yard shot) and Adams (20-yarder) were denied on saves by Ribeiro in the next three minutes. Then with 10:59 to go, Patrick Berryman intercepted a defensive end Red Devils throw-in and found Adams streaking up right wing into the box.
Ribeiro raced off his line for the ball but tripped Adams, producing a penalty kick and Adams PK conversion that upped the lead to 3-1.
“We always have a couple talented forwards,” Troy Adams said, “and this year is no exception. We've had three guys that have all scored hat-tricks so it can come from anybody. Today with the way they were playing with what we had, he was in the right spots at the right times. And we have enough guys that can score that teams can't focus on one kid.”
While his son took over the game offensively, coach Adams had special praise for a Redhawk defender.
“Patrick Bohan doesn't get enough credit back there being I believe if not the best junior defender, then right up there with any other kid,” Troy Adams said.
“We've used him in a variety of ways, as a traditional center back, a man marker at times, and every challenge we've presented he's been successful at it. He really deserves a lot of credit for what happens in the back and for our success as a team.”
Bohan has seen nice progress since a rare off day for his team, a 5-2 loss to Plainfield North, to close August.
“We were still getting to know how each other played,” Bohan said, “and how we wanted to play. We figured out new man-marking tactics so we could do better against these teams. And now we're able to stop just about any top players.
“We have a really consistent defense all the way throughout the back. Everybody can hold their own, even against some of the top players. No matter who is on the ball, who's defending who, I have faith we can stop them.”
That was true late Friday, as a Szurgot cross to the box was cleared by Berryman with 8:35 left. Then off a Kevin Gottschalk 55-yard free kick with 5:10 to go, Peterson sent a 20-yard shot over the crossbar.
“The second half, the whole team mentally kind of rose up together,” LoDuca said.
“But even though we won I don't think today was our best day. Usually when we play well we work really hard. In the end we did have a lot of effort, and it showed getting two more goals.”
After a shaky first half, the second half approach did please coach Adams.
“To the team’s credit we talked about always matching or exceeding the other team’s energy,” he said, “and I thought the second half was much better.
“Some of it was understanding what they were giving us and taking advantage of that, but a lot of it boils down to our guys working a little more, winning some 50-50s and starting to get after it.”
Said Chase Adams: “It's the mentality to keep pushing and pushing. Not doing that will make games like Plainfield North happen, when we lose 5-2 and could tie or beat them if we play our best.”
That game seems more distant a memory every day, especially this week.
“This gives us a lot of confidence,” Bohan said, “especially with our win against North too. I'm excited because I know we're going to keep winning.”
On his program’s special night, Wiggins summed up an up-and-down game.
“We came out strong. and I thought we brought a strong presence in the attack,” Wiggins said. “Once again. we responded to start the second half as we have done all season.
“We had chances so that was encouraging, and so we continue to build game by game in a season that has as strong of a schedule as we have had over the years.”
Players like DiTomasso are also stressing that growth, even in defeat.
“They (Naperville Central) are a very talented team in the air, and they were able to capitalize,” he said, “but I’m really excited for where the team’s at right now. I think we’re in good shape. We’re competing with every team we play with, even if sometimes the score doesn't show it.
“We learned a lot this week and what we need to work on. And sometimes it’s good to get humbled a little bit, because we were on a stretch of winning a lot of games and doing really good.
“Definitely there's balls in the box we need to work on. We had like 100 throw-ins to the box, and we couldn't capitalize on them. I think we have a lot of things to work on, and we're kind of going back to the basics a little bit. But I think we're going to be able to come out really strong against York, who's our next opponent.”
And more than anything, the 50th anniversary events will be the team’s lasting memory of Friday.
“It was a really special night,” DiTomasso said. “We've been looking forward to this: a lot of work was put in. Credit to coach Wiggins and the booster club for putting this all together.
“I talked to some of the alumni, and I know they really enjoyed it. A couple of them came into the locker room and talked to us. It was a really good time all around.”
It was quite a night for the coach as well.
“We had former players in from California, Arizona and Washington state, just to name a few who were in for the game,” Wiggins said.
“The turnout was terrific, and as I said to the group, I couldn't be more proud of our current team in the way they play, show up everyday and put in the work. This year's team continues to represent the 50 years of soccer at Hinsdale Central better than you could ever hope for. Our soccer alumni can be proud of these boys."
Starting lineups
Naperville Central
GK: Austin Waite
D: Patrick Bohan
D: Patrick Berryman
D: Michael Cavalleri
D: Carter Bilik
M: Carter Adams
M: Eli Jarrell
M: Sean O’Reilly
M: Josh Weigel
F: Joe LoDuca
F: Chase Adams
Hinsdale Central
GK: Martin Contreras
D: Greg Theotikos
D: Kevin Gottschalk
D: Dayton DiTomasso
D: Cody Jurgenson
M: Ardit Abdullai
M: Enzo Cinque
M: Austen Szurgot
M: Braden Henry
F: Luca Davies
F: Owen Peterson
Chicagoland Soccer Man of the Match:
Chase Adams, fr., F, Naperville Central
Scoring summary
First half
NC- Joe LoDuca (Chase Adams assist), 12’
Second half
HC- Ardit Abdullai (PK), 43’
NC- Chase Adams, 57’
NC- Adams (PK), 69’