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Archive for the ‘Boys Soccer’ Category

Ethan Spark gets his head into the game. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf goalie Dewitt Cole fires the ball downfield.

   With teammate Aram Leyva running beside him, Hunter Downes pulls the trigger on the CHS offense.

Well, the weather was nice.

While the score of Friday night’s boys soccer game between Coupeville and Port Angeles wan’t to the liking of the locals (a 6-0 Wolf loss), rain and wind mostly stayed away.

That made John Fisken’s job easier, and the wanderin’ paparazzi was able to snap away without too much time devoted to wiping off his camera lenses.

If you want to see everything he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Boys-Soccer/20140414-vs-Port-Angeles/

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   William Nelson, seen here in an earlier game, had a dazzling would-be assist Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The score didn’t tell all.

A look at the scoreboard, which was faithfully updated by always hard-working team manager Peytin Vondrak, showed the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad fell 6-0 to visiting Port Angeles Friday night.

The non-conference loss, coming against a much-larger school, drops the Wolves to 3-6-1, while the victorious Roughriders rise to 7-3.

The fourth, and final, game against a 2A opponent this season (CHS was 1-2-1 playing above its weight class), it sets Coupeville up for the stretch run.

That starts Monday, when the Wolves hit the road to face Klahowya, the first of five straight league games to close the regular season.

Coupeville (2-2 in league play) sits in third-place in the four-team 1A Olympic League, a half game off of Port Townsend (2-1).

Two-time defending champs Klahowya (3-0) and Chimacum (0-4) round out things.

While they didn’t knock off Port Angeles, the Wolves were much more competitive than the score might indicate.

CHS pushed the attack, especially in the first half, with several players getting decent cracks at the net.

Ethan Spark came within an inch or two of knocking in the game’s first goal barely a minute into the game, only to have the Port Angeles keeper come up with a strong save.

The shot was set up by an absolutely gorgeous little backwards chip from William Nelson, who split two defenders, juked them out of their shoes, then nonchalantly popped the ball over his shoulder to his waiting teammate.

Whether it resulted in a goal or not, it was one of the prettiest-looking assists you’re likely to see on a high school soccer field.

Fab frosh Aram Leyva had a nice crack at the net six minutes later, while Spark launched a long cannon shot that looked like it might skip in shortly afterwards.

Unfortunately, neither shot got a lucky bounce, and the Roughriders demonstrated why they are a very hard team to score on, repeatedly shutting down Coupeville opportunities at the last moment.

Port Angeles has only surrendered 10 goals in 10 games.

Take away the four they gave up in a season-opening loss to powerful Franklin Pierce, and the Roughrider defenders have been in lock-down mode.

“I’m not disappointed with our play,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “We had a tough opponent, a quality team, and they just don’t give up many goals.

“We had some quality shots, though,” he added. “We were dangerous at times and put up a good effort.”

Port Angeles knocked in its first goal in the game’s fifth minute, then Coupeville held the Roughriders scoreless for a 20-minute stretch.

Wolf goalie Dewitt Cole pulled off back-to-back saves on the same play, knocking down a shot, then rolling back up off the turf to track down and snare the ball as a rival player tried to knock the rebound home.

Port Angeles, which passed with a great deal of precision, sending people flying out ahead of the defense, then dropping the ball out on the attack, eventually broke through, however.

Three goals in the final 16 minutes of the first half, with the final one coming during stoppage time, gave the Roughriders a 4-0 lead at the break.

The second half played out more like a chess match, with a lot of artful passing and backpedaling.

Port Angeles tacked on goals in the 54th minute and again mere seconds before the ref whistled the match dead.

Brian Roberts, who stalked the goal in the second half for Coupeville, had several nice saves, while Wolf defenders Axel Partida, Uriel Liquidano and Teo Keilwitz scrapped tooth and nail until the final whistle.

Play got a bit rough down the stretch, with booters on both sides of the ball taking hard hits.

On the attack, Brandon Jansen rocked a Roughrider who probably had 25 pounds on him, knocking his burlier foe airborne and sending him into an unintentional cartwheel which left him dizzy ‘n dazed.

Leyva went down, and stayed down for a bit, but remained in the game, while Spark and Nelson imparted a series of carefully-placed elbows to the mid-sections of various Port Angeles players.

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   Hunter Downes, seen here during football season, knocked in his first two goals as a Wolf soccer player Tuesday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

They found their scoring touch.

After struggling to find the back of the net just once in their last three games, the Coupeville High School booters unloaded on host Chimacum Tuesday afternoon.

The Wolves pounded away for a season-best scoring performance, rocking the Cowboys 7-0 and moving back within shouting distance of second place in the Olympic League.

With the win, CHS sits at 2-2 in league play, 3-5-1 overall, a half-game off of Port Townsend (2-1, 4-3) and a game and a half back of two-time defending champs Klahowya (3-0, 5-2-1).

Chimacum (0-4, 1-6) remains deeply mired in the basement.

The Wolves control their playoff destiny, with five of their final six games against league foes, including two more meetings apiece with both of the schools they trail.

Before it gets to that, Coupeville plays a final non-league game 5:15 PM Friday, when it hosts 2A Port Angeles.

The 1A Wolves are 1-1-1 against bigger schools this season, having beaten North Mason and tied with Olympic.

Tuesday, CHS spread its goal-scoring among five different shooters, with two booters recording their first goals of the season.

Wolf quarterback Hunter Downes, having just recently made the jump to the pitch, had an immediate impact, rattling home his first two scores in a soccer uniform.

Joining him in a repeat assault on the net was freshman Aram Leyva, who tallied his fourth and fifth goals of the season.

That pulls him within one of the team’s leading scorer, Ethan Spark.

Rounding out the Wolf assault on the net Tuesday were Laurence Boado, Zack Nall and James Wood.

It was Boado’s first goal, while Nall, who laid in a firecracker from 20 yards out, and Wood each tallied their second scores this year.

Spark and William Nelson set up two goals apiece, while Leyva, Wood and Uriel Liquidano also collected assists.

Dewitt Cole and Brian Roberts combined to pull off the shutout, with each Wolf net-minder working a scoreless half.

“It was a great league win,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “It also shows some good growth for our team, being a much better result than our first game with them a month ago.”

Coupeville won 4-3 the first time around, after rallying from a two-goal deficit.

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  Wolf captain Uriel Liquidano sacrifices his head for the team. (John Fisken photo)

There was one truly electrifying play in Friday afternoon’s Coupeville vs. Port Townsend soccer showdown.

Unfortunately, it was pulled off by the visiting RedHawks, and not the Wolves.

Just about six minutes into the Olympic League clash, the guys in red took control of the ball right in front of their own net.

Then, bing-bang-boom, they pulled off a rare coast-to-coast run, using a string of slick passes to pierce the Wolf defense on a run straight up the gut, finishing their jaunt with the ball landing with a plop in the right corner of the net.

In a sport where the ball usually shoots off in a new direction every 0.2 seconds, as it skips off of knees, elbows or groins, pulling off the equivalent of a straight-ahead basketball fast break is fairly rare.

But, like I said, wrong team, wrong result, and it set up a 3-0 win for Port Townsend, which left the home fans a little crestfallen.

It was the second straight game Coupeville has failed to score, and the loss drops the Wolves to 1-2 in league play, 2-4-1 overall.

They sit in third place, trailing Klahowya (3-0) and Port Townsend (2-1), but still a game up on Chimacum (0-3).

CHS plays six of its final eight regular season games against league foes, but first gets a non-conference game Monday at Vashon Island.

After its Sports Center goal, Port Townsend added two far more ordinary scores to pad its lead.

The RedHawks hit a shot from the right side with 15 minutes left before the break, then got lucky early in the second half.

Coupeville was called for an inadvertent handball in the box, giving Port Townsend a gift-wrapped penalty kick which it converted.

The Wolves struggled to get their offense going, though did have a couple of near-misses from Zack Nall and William Nelson.

After watching his team play lethargically at times (having a half day at school leading into Spring Break seemed to sap a lot of energy early on), CHS coach Kyle Nelson was able to find a bright spot.

It came from the continued emergence of his defenders, many of whom are young, fairly inexperienced or both.

“We’re continuing to build a solid back four and they’re coming together,” Kyle Nelson said. “We saw some really good plays from them, especially in the second half.

“They’re gaining experience and confidence, and we’re happy to see that.”

 

To see more photos from this game (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Boys-Soccer/20170331-vs-Pt-Townsend/

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   Axel Partida and teammates are in a second-place tie with Port Townsend, who they host Friday. (John Fisken photo)

The gap is real.

The Klahowya boys soccer squad has yet to lose a game in 1A Olympic League play, and none of the other three conference teams are getting any closer to making that a reality.

Thrashing visiting Coupeville 7-0 Tuesday, the Eagles ran their season league mark to 3-0 and their all-time win-streak in conference play to 15-0.

That’s the third-longest active league winning streak, behind Coupeville girls basketball (27-0) and Klahowya girls soccer (20-0).

With six more league games ahead of them, the Eagle booters have a chance to slide past their female counterparts this season, if they stay perfect.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-1 in league play, 2-3-1 overall.

The Wolves are in a second-place tie with Port Townsend (1-1, 3-2), who they host Friday (3:30 JV/5:30 varsity), while Chimacum (0-3, 0-5) is mired in the cellar.

Facing off with Klahowya, Coupeville battled fairly evenly for the opening 35 minutes, then was stung by two goals right before the half.

The Eagles used their familiarity with turf to speed the game up in the second half, stretching the final score out.

“Klahowya is a very good team, especially on their turf field,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “It was a good game to work on our defense and will give us some things to look at to improve.”

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