CHSAA, Metro postseason awards
-
- June
- 6
Three juniors were named New York City metro private school all-Americans to lead the list of local players selected to all-Metro and all-CHSAA teams.
Iona Prep attackman Nick Trizano and midfielder Michael O’Hagan and Fordham Prep goaltender Chris Moffa make up the trio.

Fordham Prep’s Chris Moffa was named a New York City metro private school all-American. (Frank Becerra Jr./Journal News file photo)
Myles Gillespie, another Iona Prep junior, was named CHSAA outstanding offensive player. Michael Wrotniak, a senior from Fordham Prep, was named its most outstanding defensive player and Moffa was named goalie of the year.
All Metro (first team): Chris Moffa, Michael Wrotniak, Connor Brown (Fordham Prep); Michael O’Hagan, George D’Ambrosio, Nick Trizano, Myles Gillespie (Iona Prep); J.P. Garry, Cody Levine (Rye Country Day); Dan Viggiano, Justin Caba (Stepinac).
All Metro (second team): Anthony McGuiness (Fordham Prep); Chris Sconzo, Anthony Raymond, Gus Guido (Iona Prep); Chris Setter (Rye Country Day); Tony Scamati, Connor O’Donnell (Stepinac).
All CHSAA (first team): Moffa, Wrotniak, Brown, McGuiness, Sean Hans (Fordham Prep); Trizano, O’Hagan, Gillespie, Guido, Sconzo, Raymond, D’Ambrosio, Paul Anderson, Tom Jardine (Iona Prep); Caba, Vigliano, A.J. Datino (Stepinac); Mike Visintin, Marcus Little (Mount St. Michael).
All-CHSAA (second team): Phil Cedor, Chris Jackson, Pete DeSalvo, Brendan Grogan, Brian Fahy, Steven Trizano (Iona Prep); Tony Scamati, Mackenzie Gleason, Connor O’Donnell, Brendan Power (Stepinac); John Brookgouse, Thomas Ochoa (Mount St. Michael); Erick Pramschufer, Kevin Moore, Dennis Unrein, Patrick St. Onge, Christian Quinttus (Fordham Prep).










Joe,
Who do u think the 9 midfielders will be for the empire team?
I know of one player who received post season honors that is adversely affected by the new age requirement. With their new rules it is possible for an athlete to have four tryouts for the Empire team, after his freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior years. Yet for the athlete I know, he could have only tried out after his freshman and sophomore years, and he would still only be 17 years old at the time the games are played. Four years versus two years hardly seems equitable, regardless of what the ESG Committee was trying to accomplish.