SCARBOROUGH — Hard work is its own reward. Unless the effort happens to pay off in a victory.
For Kennebunk, the satisfaction of a game played full tilt will have to suffice, after it sustained an 8-3 setback at the hands of defending state champions Scarborough, in an SMAA boys lacrosse clash, Wednesday.
The Rams (5-5) fell victim to a five-goal second-quarter run by Scarborough, and despite all the urgency they could muster, were unable to recover on an unseasonably raw night.
“It was a rough game,” said Kennebunk junior attack Nick Gross. “We played hard, but we couldn’t bring it through this time.”
Scarborough captured last year’s Class-A title — it’s second in three years — after ousting an upstart Rams club in a hard-fought Western Conference final.
Wednesday’s rematch started out in tooth-and-nail fashion too, thanks in large part to the work of Cullen Finn in the Kennebunk net.
He held the Red Storm (8-2) to one goal in the opening period.
Finn’s biggest save of the stanza came while the game was still scoreless, when he dipped low to block a point-blank drive from Jake Barrett.
Several other Scarborough scoring chances missed the mark, either sailing wide of the cage, or over it.
Then, with 8:29 gone, Scarborough’s Matt Mayo curled aroun d the right side of the net and deposited the opening goal of the game.
Kennebunk answered that with just :42 gone in the second period, when sophomore attack Kevin Airoldi took a feed from Henry Gould, head faked a Scarborough defender, then flipped his shot into the upper left corner.
However, the Rams’ respite was a brief one.
Scarborough sniper Brendan Ham fired in three straight goals in a span of 2:21, as the Rams ripped open a 4-1 lead.
“The second quarter was probably the downfall,” said Kennebunk coach Charlie Burch.
Ball possession was a particular problem for the Rams. They lost all eight faceoffs taken in that quarter.
However, they managed to stop the bleeding late in the half when Sam Wentworth bounced a shot into the left side of the net, cutting the margin to 6-2.
“I thought we turned the momentum around toward the end of the quarter,” said Burch. “And then came out strong (in the third) and played as best as we could.”
Kennebunk allowed just two goals in the second half, then finished up with a goal by Gross that was set up by an electrifying down field run by Finn.
Finn came within striking range of the goal, but at the last moment, threw a behind the back pass for Sam Joseph that continued on to Gross on the left wing.
“This is going to carry over,” said Burch, whose team needs to win at least one of its two remaining matches to secure a playoff spot. “If we play like we did tonight, I can see us winning at least one, and maybe two.”
— Contact Dan Hickling at 282-1535 ext. 318 or dhickling@journaltribune.com.
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