By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
RH boys soccer advances to Elite 8
RH soccer
Richmond Hill goalie Drew Crawford (in orange) grabs the ball off of an Apalachee corner kick during the Wildcats' 4-3 at home Wednesday night. - photo by Ted O'Neil

The Richmond Hill boys’ soccer team jumped out to a 3-0 lead and held on for a 4-3 win at home Wednesday night over Apalachee in the second round of the state tournament.

The Wildcats, now 16-2-2, play Chattahoochee in Alpharetta Saturday. The game time has not been determined yet.

Richmond Hill got its first goal at the 23:50 mark of the first half from Agboade Sobowale on an assist by Michael Hoffman. Joseph Petrino made it 2-0 four minutes later when he scored on a breakaway.

Apalachee had several near misses early in the game, something Wildcats Coach Robbie Flanders said concerned him.

“They jumped on us early and we just weren’t matching their intensity,” he said. “Then we woke up and started playing harder and got two very good goals close together.”

Sobowale scored again less than a minute into the second half to give Richmond Hill a 3-0 lead when his shot from the left side hit the Apalachee keeper’s hands and rolled toward the net, just barely crossing the goal line.

Apalachee answered a minute later with its first goal and scored again with 23 minutes left in the game.

Logan Merry scored for a 4-2 Richmond Hill lead with 12 minutes to go on an assist from Bryant Jackson, although the Apalachee players and coaches contested it for several minutes, arguing that the ball entered the goal from the side and rolled under the netting.

“From my vantage point it looked like it went in and the ref called it a goal,” Flanders said.

Apalachee fans were so upset after the game that Richmond Hill coaches and administrators had to escort the referees out of Wildcat Stadium.

Apalachee got its final goal with about 10 minutes left, but a save by Richmond Hill keeper Drew Crawford with about 15 seconds left sealed the outcome.

“They kept fighting, but our guys stayed calm and controlled the ball,” Flanders said. “That’s something we can learn from and build on.”

Sign up for our E-Newsletters