Nimiry’s Hat Trick Leads TC Boys’ Soccer to Victory
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Nimiry’s Hat Trick Leads TC Boys’ Soccer to Victory

Titans score five goals in Patriot District opener against West Potomac.

The T.C. Williams crew team wrapped up a week of two-a-day practices over spring break by holding a time trial and an intra-squad scrimmage on April 7 at the Dee Campbell Boathouse in Old Town.

The T.C. Williams crew team wrapped up a week of two-a-day practices over spring break by holding a time trial and an intra-squad scrimmage on April 7 at the Dee Campbell Boathouse in Old Town. Photo by Louise Krafft.

— T.C. Williams defender Manuel Benites let fly with a lengthy sideline throw-in that found teammate Alexander Wolz, who headed the ball in the net during the first half of the Titans’ April 10 matchup with West Potomac.

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Manuel Benites is a facilitator on set pieces for the T.C. Williams boys’ soccer team.

More than eight minutes later, TC’s Mauricio Salvatierra initially came up empty on a penalty kick, but managed to score after the ball ricocheted off the West Potomac goalkeeper.

In the opening minute of the second half, Benites booted a corner kick that Abdel Al Nimiry put away for his second goal of the evening.

The T.C. Williams boys’ soccer team had struggled to capitalize on scoring opportunities early in the season, managing just six goals in five games en route to a 0-4-1 record. Against the Wolverines on Tuesday, the Titans found several ways to get the job done. Nimiry scored a career-high three goals and the Titans cruised to a 5-0 victory in their Patriot District opener at Parker-Gray Stadium. The victory came 12 days after TC earned its first win of the season against Chantilly, 3-0. With back-to-back victories and more goals in their last two games than in their first five, the Titans are hoping to ride momentum into their district schedule.

"We’ve been getting a lot of chances, but we haven’t been able to put them away," head coach Martin Nickley said. "The positive in the matches was we weren’t able to score, but at least we were making the opportunities. Then it’s just been a matter of us continuing to work on that confidence in front of the goal."

"He’s one of the players in practice who just never stops. He’s always giving 100 percent all the time, everywhere."

— T.C. Williams’ Manuel Benites about Abdel Al Nimiry

If the Titans were lacking confidence around the net, Tuesday’s win should help. Nimiry scored the team’s final three goals, securing a hat trick in the 57th minute.

"That was a great performance," Nickley said. "He was playing [multiple] positions on the field. He’s such a hard worker. [Some of his] goals he creates because he’s an opportunist — he puts himself in a position to score."

Nimiry took a modest route when describing the key to his three-goal effort.

"I couldn’t do it by myself," he said. "I did it with my teammates. My teammates helped me out. If it wasn’t for my teammates, I wouldn’t have any goals."

One of his teammates acknowledged Nimiry’s hustle.

"He’s one of the players in practice who just never stops," Benites said. "He’s always giving 100 percent all the time, everywhere."

While Benites didn’t score, he showed his offensive value as a facilitator in set pieces. His ability to generate considerable distance on his throw-ins led to TC’s first goal, when he found Wolz in the 26th minute for a header to the far post.

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T.C. Williams’ John Longabaugh slides in against a West Potomac player during the Titans’ 5-0 victory on April 10.

"He always makes his run right to the front post," Benites said. "He looks at me right before I throw it. He said ‘Hey, I’m going front post, front post.’ I found him and [the throw was] just like a beam, just right to him. It skipped right off the head right to the far post. It was great."

Benites also takes many of the team’s corner kicks.

"Both with the throw-in and with his corner kicks, he has such good control of the ball," Nickley said. "The trajectory with which the throw-in comes in is just the perfect height for little flick-ons and nod-ons. He strikes the ball so well both from shooting and the delivery — and he works really hard at it. …

"He was a driver of the ball because he was a field goal kicker [for the school’s football team], but he’s now putting a curve to it in there, as well, which is very effective."

T.C. Williams will look to continue its strong play against defending Northern Region champion Lake Braddock at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 18 in Burke. The Bruins are 2-3-1, including a district loss to Lee on April 10.

"We’re very pleased with our last couple matches and our start in the Patriot District," Nickley said, "and hopefully we can build off that."