DeAndrade and O’Driscoll Net 1,000th Collegiate Points

Karlie O'Driscoll Rocky DeAndrade
Former Hockomock League MVPs and HockomockSports.com Players of the Year Rocky DeAndrade and Karlie O’Driscoll each reached 1,000 points in their collegiate careers over the span of two days this week. (Caldwell University Athletics/Bridgewater State University Athletics)

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In 2014, Sharon’s Karlie O’Driscoll and Mansfield’s Rocky DeAndrade compiled impressive lists of achievements during their senior years of high school. Both reached the South sectional final (O’Driscoll in Div. 2 and DeAndrade for the second straight year in Div. 1), both were named Hockomock league MVPs by the coaches, and both were selected as Player of the Year by this website.

This week, now as seniors in college, they were both making headlines again.

O’Driscoll, a forward at Caldwell University (N.J.), scored her 1,000th point on Jan. 24 in a 72-49 victory over Felician College. The next night, DeAndrade notched his 1,000th career point in a 68-58 victory over Fitchburg State.

“Going into college, there’s definitely a possibility [of scoring 1,000 points] if I do my job and do what I have to do, but it wasn’t a goal for me because I wanted to do more about the team aspect,” O’Driscoll said in a phone call on Friday. “Each game I wasn’t thinking, oh I need to score to get closer to my 1,000, I was just thinking I need to score to make my team win and it just kind of happened.”

DeAndrade had similar thoughts about getting to 1,000 points for the Bears. He said, “It’s not something you think about really. I expect to get there, so you just work hard and do your thing. I knew if I stayed there for four years that the chances of getting it were pretty inevitable.”

Chasing 1,000 points and dealing with the excitement that builds up as you get closer to the milestone was something that O’Driscoll dealt with in high school. She also reached that total at Sharon and knew what to expect. She had also seen two of her fellow seniors, Kristen Drogsler and Sharell Sanders, reach that mark in the past two years.

“At Sharon, it was an amazing experience to be able to do that and in college I’ve had so many teammates in the past four year who have reached that milestone, so it was special for me to be able to join so many amazing players,” she explained.

Coming into the game, O’Driscoll needed 15 points to get to 1,000. She got off to a great start, scoring 14 points in the first half. “I wasn’t trying to force it too much,” she said. “I know a lot of my teammates were trying to get me the ball and I told them midway through the first half to stop forcing the ball to me, it will happen when it happens.”

Just a point away in the third quarter, her team ran a play for her to start the half, but it did not go as planned and the ball was knocked away. The inbound was also intended for O’Driscoll, but again it was tipped out of play. Finally, on the third try, the ball got into guard Tina Lebron and she drove and dished to O’Driscoll for a layup and the foul.

“It was a lot more emotional this time,” said O’Driscoll, who finished that night with 20 points and 10 rebounds. “In high school, I knew I was playing in college, so I knew I had four more years to play basketball. I think it’s really setting in now that this is my last year, my last few games, so to do something like this to represent my school and myself was such a different experience.”

DeAndrade came close to reaching 1,000 points in high school, scoring more than 900 for his career, but never had the countdown or the hype that surrounded the milestone until this season. He went into the Fitchburg game knowing that he had a shot to get there, but tried to keep it out of his mind.

“Before the game, I wasn’t nervous at all,” he said. “I was excited. I thought I was going to have a really big game.” He was right. DeAndrade scored 13 points to get within a basket with most of the second half remaining and the Bears holding onto a lead, but that last two points took a while to happen.

“I needed two points with 11 minutes to go in the second half and I was like, okay I’m going to get this, just play your game,” he recalled. “Sure enough, the clock just kept going and we’re under two minutes and I still need two points, so I was like oh jeez I need to get going now.”

DeAndrade reached his milestone at the line, knocking down a pair of free throws with 1:48 left to play. When the Bears got the ball back, they stopped the game to celebrate his accomplishment. He said, “I think the whole hype of the night, you know, and the expectation to get 1,000 that night it was a relief to get it over with. It was awesome though.”

When asked what it felt like to say he was a 1,000-point scorer, DeAndrade said, “I haven’t thought of that, but it’s always good and my name will be in the rafters, so that’s cool.”

Not surprisingly, both players have their teams in good positions heading down the stretch of the season.

DeAndrade is leading the Bears with more than 16 points and nearly four assist per game and has Bridgewater at 5-1 through the first half of MASCAC play. O’Driscoll is second on the team with 11.3 points per game and has helped Caldwell to a 17-3 overall record, including 10-1 in the CACC.

For both seniors, the personal milestone was fun and important, but they each want to close out there collegiate careers like they did their high school ones – with league titles.

“I think we’ve made the changes we need to since last year and getting the whole team involved in doing their jobs and doing what we need to win,” said O’Driscoll, whose team reached the conference final but lost to University of Sciences and was knocked out in the first round of the Div. II NCAA tournament.

“Me and my fellow seniors have been together since the beginning,” she added, “and we’re really excited and really confident about winning the league this year. That’s a very strong goal we’ve had since the beginning and to do it our senior year and go out with a win would be incredible.”

DeAndrade had plenty of success in his four years and Mansfield and is hoping to translate that knowledge of how to win to the second half of the MASCAC campaign. He explained, “That would mean a lot. That would cap off the college experience.

“We put in a lot of work in from Oct. 15, so if you get to the end of the season and you can come away with the championship that’s obviously the big goal.”

The Campus Report: Catching Up With Basketball Alums

Below is an update on former Hockomock League athletes currently competing in collegiate sports. If you would like to submit an update, please e-mail info@HockomockSports.com.
Joe Farroba’s Bridgewater State team is full of former Hockomock players and for the first time this season, all five of them made up his starting lineup on Thursday night. Oliver Ames’ Ryan Carney, Taunton’s Fawaz Mass, Milford’s Michael Soares and Mansfield’s Greg Romanko and Rocky DeAndrade. The five combined for 72 of the team’s 83 points in a double overtime win over UMass Boston. It was Carney’s first collegiate start and he didn’t disappoint, scoring a career-high 23 points while Romanko also netted a career-high 18 points. For the season, Mass leads the Bears in scoring with 15.2 points (5.6 rebounds), DeAndrade is third with 8.9 points (3.2 rebounds, 2.8 assists), Romanko has 8.8 points (3.3 rebounds), Carney 8.3 points and Soares 3.1 points (2.1 rebounds).
Canton’s Olivia Murphy has been a monster for UMass Boston so far during his senior season, leading the team with 20.1 points and 15.6 rebounds a game. She’s been a nuisance for opponents by averaging an impressive 8.4 offensive rebounds per game and is leading the team with 2.6 blocks a game.
Former HockomockSports.com Player of the Year Sam Bohmiller has played a big role for Babson in the first part of the season. Bohmiller has started in all 11 games, averaging 5.6 points, 2.9 rebounds and has connected on a team-high 17 three pointers. Babson is 7-4 so far this season.
Franklin’s Lexi Martin has missed the past two games but has been a vital piece for Merrimack so far in her freshman year. Through her 12 appearances, Martin has averaged 6.4 points per game, shooting nearly 50% from the floor. She’s added 2.3 rebounds a game as well. Back at the beginning of December, Martin poured in a career high 19 points in a 72-68 win up at St. Michael’s.
Taunton’s Angie Martinez continues to be the go-to scorer for Mount Ida in her junior season. Martinez is averaging a team-high 15.3 points per game while also pulling in over 13 rebounds a game (another team-high). Over the Mustangs’ past three games, Martinez has averaged 19 points, including dropping 23 points in a 59-57 win over Becker.
Out in Worcester, a trio of former Milford Scarlet Hawks are playing a big role for Clark. Juniors David Mercier and Joe Atkinson are both regulars in the lineup while former Milford coach Steve Manguso is in his third year as Associate Head Coach. Former North Attleboro standout Justin Perron is in his first year as an assistant coach. Mercier is averaging 9.3 points per game and 4.4 rebounds while Atkinson is scoring 7.4 points per game, 6.0 rebounds and 1.8 steals.
At Framingham State, Joe McCabe is having a solid start to his senior season. A former Canton standout, McCabe is a captain and has appeared in all of the Rams games except for one. McCabe is coming off his best scoring performance since November, scoring 10 points against Salem State.
A trio of Hockomock alums – all from different schools – are the captains at Colby Sawyer this year. Mansfield’s Katie McCarthy, Oliver Ames’ Kristin Ellis and Sharon’s Jessica Shenkel are the captains are all in the top six in scoring on the team. Shenkel leads the 7-4 Chargers at 11.4 points per game, Ellis has averaged 5.5 points and a team-high 8.9 rebounds and McCarthy has 3.7 points a team-best 3.7 assists a game.
King Philip alum John Mullane is just one of two players to start all 10 games for Elmira College in New York. Mullane, a senior, is averaging 6.4 points per game, 3.7 rebounds and 1.5 assists. He also leads the Eagles in free throw attempts (25) and offensive rebounds (16). Mullane had a season-best 13 rebounds in the team’s 62-59 win over Endicott at the end of December.
King Philip graduate Ellen Wagner has impressed early on in her sophomore year for Roanoke College. Wagner is fourth on the team in scoring with 7.7 points and four rebounds a game. She scored a career-high 17 points back in December, shooting over 72% of the floor to help the Maroons to a big win over Mary Baldwin College.
Former Stoughton 1,000 pointer scorer Aaron Calixte has appeared in all 14 games for Maine, a D1 team, this season. Calixte is averaging 8.1 points per game, shooting at nearly 50% from the floor. He is averaging 2.4 assists per game and 2.6 rebounds as the Bears are 4-10 so far this season.
Speaking of D1 programs, former KP star Jake Layman and Maryland is ranked third in the country. Layman has started in all 15 games and is averaging 11.1 points per game and 5.3 rebounds a game. He has 18 steals and 14 blocks on the season. Layman had one of his best games of the season when he dropped 18 points in the Terps 88-63 win over Rutgers.
Over at UMass Dartmouth, former HockomockSports.com Girls Basketball Player of the Year Meg Ronaghan scored her 1,000 career point in the fourth quarter in a win over Salem State. The North Attleboro grad scored 21 points in the game to reach the milestone. Check back on Sunday for our feature story on Ronaghan.
Also at Umass Dartmouth, Franklin graduate Alicia Kutil has started all 10 games and is averaging 9.5 points per game, which is fourth on the team. Kutil is also averaging 4.9 rebounds while Milford grad Jess Pye has appeared in five games so far for the 8-2 Corsairs.
On Wednesday, former Mansfield standout and 2015 Hockomock League Boys Basketball MVP Ryan Boulter dropped career-high 17 points in his 11th game played for Merrimack. The Warriors needed a late bucket to secure the win but Boulter was a big reason that Merrimack was in it. Coming off the bench, Boulter played 26 minutes and shots 55% from the floor and hit five three pointers. So far in his rookie year, Boulter is averaging 5.8 points per game.
Another former Mansfield player, Kevin Conner, has started in all 11 of Mount Ida’s game so far, averaging 6 points per game and 3.6 rebounds a game. The Mustangs are 4-5 so far while Conner’s best game came back in December in a one point loss to Johnson & Wales. The sophomore had a season-best 15 points, four rebounds, two assists and two steals in the game.
Former HockomockSports.com Player of the Year Karlie O’Driscoll has been a big part of Caldwell’s nine wins i 15 games so far this season. The Sharon alum is third on the team in scoring at 11.9 points per game while she leads the teams in rebounds at 5.8 per game. In the two games in 2016, O’Driscoll has reached double figures both times, scoring 24 points over the two games.
Taunton’s Chris Green and Sharon’s Jimmy Fritzson are the two leading scorers for Rhode Island College through 12 games this season. Green is scoring a team-best 18.3 points a game, also averaging 3.4 rebounds a game and has shot nearly 90% at the free throw line. Fritzson, a former 1,000 point scorer for the Eagles, is second on the team with 11.3 points per game and is averaging 2.1 rebounds a game.
Former Franklin big man Marcus Giese is enjoying a successful start to his collegiate career at RPI. Standing at 6’8, Giese has played and scored in every single game this season. He’s averaging 6.4 points per game (a career high 10 came against Hibert in November), is pulling in 5.3 boards a game and 2.1 assists per game. RPI is 7-4 so far this season and 1-1 in conference play.
Sharon’s Emilee Daley scored a season-high 17 points in Boston College’s win over Bryant just before the new year. Daley was 7/11 from the floor and had a pair of rebounds and assists in just 23 minutes of play. Daley, who played two years at Sharon, is averaging 8.3 points per game and 3.1 rebounds off the bench for the 11-1 Eagles.
Attleboro’s Kerri Beland is currently third in scoring at 6.0 points per game for Salve Regina. Beland has started in 10 games so far this season and is pulling down 3.3 rebounds a game and has 1.5 assists a game. Back in December, the former Bombardier scored 12 points in a win over Curry.
Former Oliver Ames 1,000 point scorer Caitlyn Abela is second in scoring for Saint Anselm, who is 7-5 to start the season. Abela is averaging 10.4 points per game, 4.1 rebounds and 1.3 assists. In the month of December, Abela scored 61 points over five games for the Hawks. Her strongest scoring performance of the year came when she scored 19 points in a loss at Assumption.
Another former player for OA’s Laney Clement-Holbrook is enjoying success at the D1 level. Asia Mitchell-Owens is currently third in scoring with 10.5 points per game for UMass Lowell. Mitchell-Owens has started in all 13 games for the River Hawks (3-10). The former Tigers is also averaging 3.0 rebounds and 2.5 assists a game.
Former Attleboro coach Missy Traversi’s Wildcats are 6-2 so far this season. Wheelock has four straight games and Attleboro grad Bri Hochwarter is a big season. The junior is second in scoring at 12.9 points per game and has scored in double figures in each of the last four games.

Sharon Star Soars Above The Rest In Her Senior Season

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Karlie O'Driscoll

Sharon senior forward Karlie O’Driscoll was named Hockomock MVP and HockomockSports.com Player of the Year. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

By Josh Perry, Managing Editor

As the chants of “Airball…Airball…Airball” rained down from the visiting Oliver Ames fans and with her team trailing in the fourth quarter of its second round tournament game, Karlie O’Driscoll set aside what to that point had been a frustrating night and the possibility that it could be her final high school game.

She did what is expected from star players – she took over.

Sharon’s senior forward, who had been recently named the Hockomock League MVP by the coaches, got the ball on the block and scored five points in the final minute to push the Eagles ahead. She capped it on the other end with a huge block that prevented an OA layup and allowed Sharon to get past its Davenport rival and continue on a path that would continue all the way to the sectional finals at UMass Boston.

“It was an MVP performance,” said Sharon coach Kate Horsmann after the game. “There are some other really fine players in the league but when you come through all the difficulty that we came through I wouldn’t trade her for any other girl in the league.”

It was one more MVP performance in a season filled with them for the league’s leading scorer and the Eagles clear star. O’Driscoll, who also reached the 1,000-point plateau this year, finished the season averaging team highs of 17 points, eight rebounds, three assists, five steals, and three blocks per game, while almost always being the focal point of the opposition’s game plan.

“She is naturally strong and deceptively fast,” said Horsmann, who saw her grow from freshman year into a strong physical presence in the post. “Once she grew and added some post moves, she became one of the most versatile players in the Hock. She is very tough to guard.”

She added, “Personal stats have never been a concern to her, which makes her easy to coach. If she scores 20 and we lose, she’s bummed. If she scores two and we win, she’s excited because we won. Every coach should have a chance to coach someone like Karlie.”

Karlie O'DriscollO’Driscoll shoots a jumper against O’Bryant.

O’Driscoll sat down to talk after receiving her trophy as the 2014 HockomockSports.com Player of the Year and was able to reflect back on what the accomplishments of the season meant to her.

“It’s unbelievable what we’ve done,” she said. “Especially with me being a senior, it’s my last year, and I was honored to be named a captain, a leader, and a part of the program this year.”

The Eagles came into the year as favorites in the Davenport division but were forced to battle through injuries and illnesses that at various times in the season cost four of the team’s regular starting five. Despite even more of a load being put on her shoulders, O’Driscoll said that she never felt weighed down by expectations.

“I knew there was going to be pressure this year, but game by game I don’t really think like that. Before a game, I don’t really get nervous. I think about just playing my game and not worrying about anything else,” she said.

O’Driscoll continued, “I definitely thought that with our team as a whole, including the players that were injured, that we were absolutely the best team in the league. I didn’t really lose hope in us or think that we’re going to lose all our games; I thought that it was a little hiccup and that we were still a good team.”

The Eagles proved just how good of a team they were by making a charge all the way to the sectional final, but it was earning the program’s first league title in 37 years that meant the most to O’Driscoll and her teammates.

“In the beginning of the season, we had a team meeting and set a goal to be Hock champs. Once we hit that goal, we weren’t thinking okay this is over but we felt that we had done what we needed to do and whatever [else] happens we’re going to be happy because we reached our goal.”

She added, “Not having Andrea [Bender] and Alyssa [Piazza] out there really hurt us because they’re starters, but it didn’t really hit me until after how amazing the rest of the team was to step up and help each other out.”

After the loss in the final against Duxbury, there was disappointment in not being able to match the 1977 team and win a sectional title, but that wasn’t the part that bothered O’Driscoll the most.

“I was really upset after the game, not because we had lost but because it was over. I was really proud of the team and how far we had come and I was just upset because it was my last game…It was more upsetting to know that I won’t be playing with the same group of girls again then losing the game.”

Karlie O'DriscollO’Driscoll posts up against Attleboro.

Looking back on her four years with the Eagles, O’Driscoll, who will be playing for Caldwell College (N.J.) next fall, credited a former star for being a big influence on her progress as a player. As a freshman, she watched then senior Liz Wluka, who was the first Sharon girls’ basketball player in nearly 30 years to be named league MVP, and said that experience helped her grow into the star that she became.

“After Liz Wluka got [MVP] my freshman year, I was kind of working towards that myself to get up to her level. I still talk to her a lot to this day, we’re still very close, but as a freshman she took me under her wing and showed me what to do.”

Now, as a senior, O’Driscoll is providing that leadership to the younger players and hoping that it will help the program build on this year’s success.

“Being named captain is a lot of pressure because there’s a lot of people looking up to you,” she said. “My biggest strength is doing the bes
t that I can to set a good example for people and not just telling them what to do or being bossy – kind of being the fun captain and letting everyone do their own thing. Just being a good teammate.”

As her Sharon career came to an end, it was not the individual awards that she wanted to highlight, but the overall time that she spent on the court with the Eagles.

“Every year was just such a different experience and I enjoyed each year. I’m just very proud to be a part of the program.”

Josh Perry can be contacted at JoshPerry@hockomocksports.com and followed on Twitter at @Josh_Perry10.