Fulton returned to the Laker Shootout as the defending champion but were unable to defend their title going 1-2 for the weekend. While somewhat disappointing, the Hornets faced a somewhat uphill battle, with a banged up back line and playing against two class 3 teams in Ozark and Francis Howell. On the plus side, several players got significant playing time with the varsity, which should pay dividends later this season and next year.
Fulton - Ozark (2-3)
The Hornets opened against Ozark on Friday afternoon on the turf of Camdenton's football practice field. (By the way, if anyone needed proof of the inequities of Missouri's system of school financing, they need look no further than Camdenton High School. The only element missing from this "Taj Mahal" was a reflecting pool.) Fulton started well and raced out to a 2-0 lead in the first 25 minutes. Zach Thomas scored on a ball that the Ozark defense inexplicably allowed to roll in the box, poking it past the surprised keeper. Jake Pierce added another off a solid attack from the right that brought the ball across the box and Pierce hit a well-placed shot from just outside the penalty area.
Ozark stepped up its intensity and, frankly, the Hornets did not respond well to the physical play. Ozark got a goal back shortly before half-time when Ozark sent an aerial ball into the box. Keeper Nick Heimericks seemed to have it in hand, but a hard challenge knocked him off-balance and the ball went into the net.
In the second half, the Hornets had two early chances to score as Pierce narrowly missed tucking the ball inside each post. However, the Hornet attack somewhat fizzled in the second half and the newly configured Fulton back line (Morgan Milligan moved to keeper in place of the banged-up Heimericks) was heavily pressured by Ozark. The pressure paid off as Ozark scored two goals in the second half to complete their comeback.
Fulton - Francis Howell (0-3)
On Saturday morning, Fulton faced off against Francis Howell from St. Charles. The Vikings were a very strong side (they moved very well off the ball and had a number of Academy players) and struck for two first half goals against Zach Hegemann, who started in goal for the first time this season. In the second half, the Hornets put together some very nice passing sequences in the midfield, but were unable to translate this into chances in the final third. On the defensive front, the Hornets gave up a third goal under the relentless pressure. While the Hornets were disappointed to lose, it was a "good loss" in that the team learned a lot from the experience, namely that we need to be dynamic in our movements on offense. We also learned that Caleb Lee and Cody Pae are very tenacious man-to-man defenders.
Fulton - Osage (2-0)
In the final game of the tournament on Saturday afternoon, Fulton took on fellow district member Osage. Both teams were feeling the effects of two games in less than 24 hours and the tired legs showed. While the Hornets would ultimately win comfortably with a 2-0 victory, the Osage Indians can feel hard done by the result as they actually created the better chances to score in the first half. Thankfully, keeper Sam Mayne was up to the task and kept the match scoreless.
The offense finally got on the board in the waning seconds of the half in a somewhat controversial play. The play began when the clock was stopped after an Osage player went down hurt. As he had committed a foul, the restart was a free kick to Fulton. So far, so good. Unfortunately for Osage, the clock operator accidentally reset the clock. Unable to set it to 10 seconds, the referee decided to keep time on his watch. On the restart from the midfield side line, the ball came through the box and apparently out of danger, But, giving proof to the adage "play to the final whistle," Jakob Hull picked up the loose ball and crossed where Darren Jones pounced on it to score with a left-footed volley. Did it take more than 10 seconds? According to the referee it didn't.
In the second half, Zach Thomas added a second off a header. The play began off a good switch when Jake Pierce sent a ball out wide to freshman forward Kevin Wallace. Wallace drove to the corner and then crossed. Both Pierce, Thomas, and the Osage keeper all converged on the ball, but Thomas won the battle and headed it into the empty net to round out the scoring.