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Archive for November, 2013

Speedy receiver Tyree Booker prepares to take flight.

Speedy receiver Tyree Booker prepares to take flight. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Let the butt-whuppin’ begin!

The Coupeville High School football squad will have an earlier-than-normal kickoff time this Friday, when the Wolves host Chimacum in the final game of the season.

The non-conference tilt, which officially wraps up winter sports — with girls’ soccer, volleyball and boys’ tennis already done — will put the ball into play at 5:30 PM.

The early start is due to Chimacum having to catch a ferry back to Port Townsend.

Coupeville (3-5) and Chimacum (1-7) faced off last year on the other side of the water, with the Cowboys pulling out a wild 56-39 victory.

The game will be the final high school gridiron clash for 12 Wolf seniors, led by lineman Nick Streubel and wing Jake Tumblin, who is cleared to play after sitting out the last game with a concussion.

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Joey Lippo (center) swings a big bat. (Joe Lippo photo)

Joey Lippo (center) swings a big bat. (Joe Lippo photo)

Contributed by Joe Lippo

The six-game two-team fall ball season wrapped up and the future of Coupeville baseball looks bright indeed.

All made contributions to an undefeated season for the North/Central team, and the Coupeville players did well and learned what playing in the Juniors is all about.

Cameron Dahl, the youngest player on the team, will play Majors next year and will shine due to what he learned playing up in the Junior leagues.

During the season, he got on base about a third of the time he showed up at the plate, and then promptly stole everything that wasn’t nailed down. Playing on the shorter base paths in the Majors, he will be the bane of any catcher’s existence.

Ethan Marx and Johnny Thurston put up respectable numbers, with Ethan hitting just above .300 and Johnny hitting just below.

Ethan soaked up any ball that came near him no matter what position he played, while the speedy Johnny was a real threat on the base paths.

Clay Reilly and Joey Lippo, however, just blew the roof off the place.

Both players’ batting average was a staggering .750, and that’s not a typo. Seven hundred and fifty.

Both had 18 plate appearances, and both were walked six times.

Beyond that, they could be counted on to hit the ball every game, and neither of them ever went hitless in any game.

Joey led off with a hit almost every game, and Clay could be counted on to drive the deep ball, contributing many extra base hits and a home run. Both were successful at any position they were placed at.

The next time they will be together on the same diamond will be next year, when Joey will be in 9th grade and Clay, Ethan and Johnny will be sophomores.

Add Julian Welling, Nick Etzell and Kyle Rockwell to that mix and next year’s JV team looks very good indeed.

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Want to play like Anthony Bergeron? Start working today. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Want to play like Anthony Bergeron? Start working today. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Time to lace the basketball shoes back up.

The Coupeville Boys and Girls Club has set Saturday, Dec. 14 for its season-opening Skills Day and Registration. The event will kick off at 9 AM in the Coupeville High School gym, across the street from Prairie Center.

The program is open to players in kindergarten through eighth grade and the season starts in early January. It will include weekly practices, Thursday clinics, and Saturday games.

For more information head over to https://sites.google.com/a/coupevilleboysandgirlsclub.org/basketball-program/

To sponsor a team contact Jamie Scharich at 678-5640.

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When she's not catching fish, Mia Littlejohn is fairly good at snagging soccer balls shot at her, as well. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

     When she’s not out catching fish, Mia Littlejohn is also fairly good at snagging soccer balls shot at her. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Contributed by Joe Lippo

Saturday came, and made its presence known like a mugger in a dark alley.

It was 45 degrees in the shade, and the wind easily matched the temperature. It was colder and wetter than Penn Cove, where the Great and Powerful OB (Owner of this Blog) usually marinates himself.

It was a really, really crappy day. Perfect for soccer.

Four Coupeville middle school girls took the field with the Whidbey Islanders, the U-14 select soccer team, in Bothell to square up against NSC Spectre, the #1 team in this league.

The first half was a stalemate with a few scoring opportunities, and the whistle blew on the half with the two teams deadlocked at 0-0.

The second half would be different.

NSC Spectre dialed up the pressure and the Islanders were up to the challenge. The tone switched from soccer to hockey as bodies started flying and shots on goal increased.

Now, we all know that to be a goaltender, you need to be a special kind of crazy.

You must be able to ignore pain (even welcome it), understand angles, keep an eye on that wing trying to sneak into the open grass, and not flinch when a sprinting forward is about to run you down.

This author (been there, done that, got the bloody goalie equipment) realizes that it “takes one to know one” and so knows that the position is perfect for Mia Littlejohn.

The bulk of the second half was played in front of the Islanders net, and Mia is who kept her team in the game.

She made several challenging saves, including a bunch in a row during a scramble in front of her net that resembled a mosh pit at a Rammstein concert.

Coupeville’s own Lindsey Roberts and the Islanders defense stood tall and cut off any angle that Mia didn’t already have covered, doing their part by turning aside several shots.

Kalia Littlejohn ran back from her right forward position to throw body checks into opposing players twice her size in a bid to clear the area in front of her sister.

There were 18 players in the box and the ball rattled around like a pinball.

Shot after point blank shot was somehow turned aside by Mia with her hands, feet and even one where she was on the ground until she finally covered the ball, putting an end to the chaos.

Later in the half, NSC Spectre scored on a bullet from the left of the goal that Mia had no chance to stop. Then a penalty shot found the back of the net to make it 2-0 in favor of NSC Spectre.

However, the Islanders weren’t done.

A foul committed against the Islanders deep in NSC Spectre territory gave Coupeville player Sage Renninger a free kick.

She took full advantage, bending the ball to a spot eight yards from the goal and right in the middle. Center Devin Whitlock made no mistake with the pass and buried the ball in the net to cut NFCs lead in half.

Unfortunately, despite several opportunities and some inspired play, that’s the way the hard fought game would end — NSC Spectre 2, Islanders 1.

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Spray-tanned and buff, Cavan Simonson prepares to lay down a beat-down on show day.

Spray-tanned and buff, Cavan Simonson prepares to lay down a beat-down on show day.

The hard work that got her there...

The hard work that got her there…

and the baby-hugging that earned her good karma.

and the baby-hugging that earned her good karma.

She’s a superstar.

Former Miriam’s Espresso barista goddess, and Coupeville High School Class of 2005 grad Cavan Simonson continues to wow the world with each new day.

Her latest venture — a 5th place finish at the Las Vegas Classic Saturday, during her first-ever venture into the world of bodybuilding and fitness figure competition.

Weeks of chicken and salads topped off with intense workouts with her teammates from the Las Vegas Figure and Bikini Team paid off with a big trophy, and hearty in-house congrats from big sis Thayer Jester, who was on the scene to lend moral support.

“Not bad for first time!!,” said a very-excited Simonson. “There will be more to come. Thanks for the support!!”

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