Pella's Mason Holland smothers three Bloodhound shots in PK session
BY JOHN BOHNENKAMP
PCC SPORTS
PELLA — Fort Madison was an equal match for its opponent for 100 minutes, even when the Bloodhounds were one man short for the final 21 minutes.
But the final three shots of the season were smothered by a goalkeeper who made the right move every time.
The 1-0 (3-0) loss to fourth-ranked Pella in Wednesday’s Class 2A substate final was proof that the ninth-ranked Bloodhounds belonged among the state’s best.
It was something Fort Madison coach Kevin Wellman said was pointed out to him by Pella coach Mark Solomon during the post-game handshake.
“He kind of raised an eyebrow and said, ‘Wow. You guys are the real deal,’” Wellman said.
Fort Madison (16-2) lost its first match of the season and its last match — both in overtime — and in between those bookends the Bloodhounds built a culture that sustained them on this night.
They played one man short after Xander Wellman was sent off after receiving his second yellow card with 1:05 left in the second half. And yet they scrambled to fight off the Dutch (15-4) in the two overtime periods.
“And we had some chances (to score), too,” Kevin Wellman said. “They’re a good group of kids who know how to dig down deep and put it out there.”
What it did was give the Bloodhounds the chance to win in the shootout period, but they couldn’t get the ball past Pella senior goalkeeper Mason Holland.
Holland stopped shots from Mitchell Pothitakis, Jacob Pothitakis and Leif Boeding.
Pella’s Austin Bone scored past Fort Madison goalkeeper Reiburn Turnbull for the first goal. Logan Solomon scored the second goal, then Will Rasmussen’s goal sent the Dutch to next week’s state tournament as the dejected Bloodhounds looked on.
Kevin Wellman thought back to the first loss of the season, when the Bloodhounds fell 3-2 to a Notre Dame team that is now ranked No. 1 in the state in Class 1A and has qualified for the state tournament. Fort Madison was behind 2-0 in the match, rallied to tie, and then lost on a golden goal in overtime.
“The way we responded...” Wellman said.
He then thought back to a 2-1 win over Fairfield on April 15, when the Bloodhounds were short-handed and held on for the victory.
“The way we responded…” Wellman said.
“These guys were really good at … being in the now,” he continued. “What just happened a minute ago, or even three seconds ago, doesn’t matter anymore. It’s what’s ahead.”
It’s why Wellman didn’t want to think much about what happened in those 100 minutes. He was already thinking about next season — Fort Madison loses five seniors, but has the bulk of its offense returning.
“If we would have had another game after this — say, this is a tournament where we lose in PKs and have to play again — we would be laser-focused and ready to play the next game,” Wellman said. “Unfortunately, we don’t have that next game.”
It’s now about next season, with a statement left behind.
“Hopefully,” Wellman said, “next year we’ll be the real deal.”
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