STRONG β As it turns out, 600 pounds worth of potatoes wasnβt nearly enough.
Darren Allen, head coach of the Mt. Abram boys soccer team, thought that amount would be plenty earlier in the week as he prepared for the school to host its annual 7-on-7 tournament. Instead, he knew by the end of the first day that heβd have to make another run.
βWe went through half of it the first day, and I couldnβt believe it,β Allen said. βI was like, βNo way; this is the girls section.β We usually never go through this many potatoes, but we had to run out and buy more. I think we ended up with around 1,000 (pounds).β
Thatβs how big Mt. Abramβs Western Mountain Classic, which continued Saturday after Fridayβs opening day, has gotten in its 14 years of existence. Itβs an event thatβs become a canβt-miss date on Maineβs soccer calendar as it brings teams from around the state together more than ever before.
Itβs no secret that players and coaches love the Western Mountain Classic. Although itβs a tournament rather than a camp, thereβs plenty of the latter going on as teams stay on Mt. Abram campus grounds overnight Friday and Saturday. Thereβs campers, tents, cornhole boards, tailgates and more going on between the games.
βItβs hard to travel two and a half hours away, but this is worth the trip,β said Mark Ensworth, head coach of the Ellsworth boys team. βItβs beautiful out here. We came up here last year and had a blast. It gives the kids a chance to bond and puts a nice little cap on the summer program.β
This year, 56 teams have descended on Strong, a small town just south of the mountain that gives Mt. Abram High School its name. Thatβs a 33 percent increase from last yearβs 42-team tournament field and is about the maximum, Allen said, that the event can take.
βWe decided to expand it this year, and it still filled up in about a month,β Allen said. βThereβs some logistics with the extra people creating traffic jams, but seeing all the people here is a real cool thing for a small area where, as you can see, thereβs not much here except the school and the playing fields.β
Some of Mt. Abramβs Mountain Valley Conference foes, such as Hall-Dale, Mountain Valley and Oak Hill, are fixtures at the tournament. So, too, are some of its fellow Franklin County schools (Mt. Blue, Buckfield and Rangeley) as well as a few others that arenβt terribly far away (Carrabec and Skowhegan).
Yet the tournament field goes well beyond that. Shead brought its girls teams four hours, traveling from the shores of Americaβs easternmost city to the western Maine mountains. Sanford and Penobscot Valley also made long trips to Salem. Itβs made for some interesting matchups between teams that might otherwise never meet.
βWeβve played some of the teams before, but itβs a good experience to play the ones we donβt normally get to play,β said Hall-Daleβs Marie Benoit, whose teamβs path to the championship included games against Winslow, Mt. Blue and Penobscot Valley. βYou meet new people from new places and get the chance to make a lot of new friends.β
Boys and girls fields are divided into βPremierβ and βChampionshipβ brackets with separate champions being crowned in each. Hall-Dale (Premier) and Central (Championship) won the girls crowns Saturday morning with the boys winners set to be crowned early Sunday afternoon.
Camping is one of the best parts of the experience. Sure, itβs common for athletes to go on trips together as part of high school or club sports, but they usually end up in hotels or AirBnBs. In this instance, theyβre sleeping in the very fields where theyβll wake up to play the following day.
βI learned my lesson this year and brought a camper,β Ensworth said. βI am not sleeping on the ground like I did last year. β¦ The parents are at AirBnBs β theyβre living the life of luxury β but the kids tent up together and pile in. Itβs definitely not something they get to do every day.β
Itβs an event that transforms Strong and some of the surrounding small communities for three late-July days every year. While there are perhaps more populated, centrally located areas for big soccer gatherings, none can offer the specialized experience the Western Mountain Classic does.
βOur soccer community is a small little world, so even if you donβt play everybody every season, you have friends here and there throughout the state,β said Nate Benoit, filling in for Hall-Dale head coach Mark Tinkham. βItβs something Hall-Dale has made a long tradition out of it, and we look forward to it every year.β
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