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Archive for the ‘Boys Soccer’ Category

Zane Bundy (John Fisken photos)

   Four-year Wolf starter Zane Bundy gets dangerous in the open field. (John Fisken photos)

William Nelson

William Nelson fires a pass ahead to a teammate.

Connor McCormick

CHS goalie Connor McCormick was in lock-down mode most of the night.

Laurence Boado

Laurence Boado gets an up-close-and-personal look at the ball.

COdy Menges

Cody Menges goes into launch mode.

Abraham Leyva

  Abraham Leyva and a Bellevue Christian rival practice synchronized soccer ballet.

Uriel Liquidano

   Uriel Liquidano sweeps up Bundy in a bear hug after the senior scored on a rebound in the first half.

Tanner Kircher

  Tanner Kircher evades a rival, while letting the breeze catch his magnificent mane of hair.

Their final moments played out in beautiful weather.

While the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer players were knocked out of the playoffs in a tight one-goal game Thursday, they at least didn’t endure the non-stop rain the Wolf girls did back in their fall finale.

Both CHS teams hosted their postseason tilts at Oak Harbor High School’s stadium, which makes life easy for travelin’ photo man John Fisken.

He swung by and snapped these pics for us (when he wasn’t taking photos of my moss-encrusted car).

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Zane Bundy

   Zane Bundy knocked home a rebound late in the first half Thursday for Coupeville’s lone score in a 2-1 playoff loss. (John Fisken photo)

In a perfect world, the players on the field decide the game.

But, no one ever said soccer was perfect.

Stabbed in the heart by two second-half penalty kicks, scores on which goalie Connor McCormick had to battle the sun in his eyes, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad fell 2-1 Thursday in their district playoff opener (and closer).

The loss, which came on Oak Harbor High School’s turf field, came at the hands of the Nisqually League’s #4 seed, Bellevue Christian, and ended the Wolves season at 5-9-1.

The Vikings (6-7-1) advance to play Vashon Island (8-2-4) in another loser-out game Saturday.

Thursday’s battle was a rematch of a non-conference game from March, when Coupeville fell 7-4 in a wild, high-scoring affair on its home field.

In that game, the Wolves were without McCormick, who was serving a one-game suspension after being given a red card for an inadvertent hand ball a day before.

This time Coupeville had their senior net-minder in place, and the lanky one played superbly, batting balls away and controlling the flow of the game.

While McCormick and his defense were untouchable in the first half, the Viking goalie couldn’t say the same.

During a wild scramble in front of the Bellevue net in the game’s 33rd minute, Coupeville smacked a shot from close range that was partially deflected.

Putting his head in the right place at the right time, senior Zane Bundy, a four-year starter, banged home the rebound into the left corner of the net to stake the Wolves to a 1-0 lead.

It was his sixth goal of the season.

The lead held up until two minutes into the second half, when Bellevue was awarded a penalty kick after what seemed like a fairly innocuous “collision” between two players scrambling for the ball.

Taking advantage of the sweet opportunity, the Vikings knotted things up, with the shooter faking right, then flicking the ball left and just past McCormick’s fingertips.

With the game even, the two teams battled back-and-forth the rest of the way, with Bellevue noticeably pushing hard on offense.

It paid off when the Vikings were awarded a second penalty kick with under seven minutes left in regulation.

Why they got it is something you’d have to ask someone with a deeper understanding of soccer, cause, to the layman, nothing untoward happened on the play.

Bellevue launched the ball into the net on the PK, however, suddenly putting a huge amount of pressure on the Wolves, who had to play from behind for the first time in the game.

Coupeville got the ball into Bellevue’s half of the field several times in the final moments, and had one or two good looks near the end, but nothing clean, and nothing that would go in.

The loss marked the fourth straight year Coupeville went one-and-done in the playoffs, though the one-goal margin was their closest postseason defeat since 2013.

The last Wolf boys’ soccer playoff win came back on May 2, 2012, when CHS knocked off Meridian 1-0.

Thursday’s game marked the end of the run for seniors Bundy, McCormick, Abraham Leyva, Tanner Kircher, Taylor Chiles, Loren Nelson, Jose Marcos, Andrea Avila, Garrett Compton, Cody Menges and manager Sebastian Wurzrainer.

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Coupeville gets a rematch with Bellevue Christian Thursday, but this time with starting goalie Connor McCormick. (John Fisken photo)

   Coupeville gets a rematch with Bellevue Christian Thursday, but this time with starting goalie Connor McCormick. (John Fisken photo)

Time for the big payback.

After wrapping their regular season Tuesday with a hard-fought 4-0 loss to two-time 1A Olympic League champ Klahowya, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad is postseason bound.

Their first opponent and possibly their second? Both familiar foes.

The Wolves (5-8-1) host Bellevue Christian (5-7-1) Thursday at Oak Harbor’s stadium (6 PM) in a loser-out district playoff game that offers a chance at redemption.

The two schools met in a non-conference game Mar. 30, and while the Vikings won 7-4 in Coupeville that day, the Wolves were playing without starting goaltender Connor McCormick.

The senior was serving a one-game suspension after receiving a red card in a game the day before for an inadvertent handball.

If Coupeville wins Thursday, they’ll advance on for another crack at revenge, with a road game Saturday at Kentridge High School against Vashon Island (8-2-4).

That’s the team the Wolves were playing when McCormick was ejected for preventing “an obvious chance to score,” when his hand connected with the ball as he was scrambling to get back in the goalie box with six minutes to play.

Backup goalies Jose Marcos and Tanner Kircher stepped in and held Vashon scoreless through the end of regulation and overtime as the two teams eventually accepted a 1-1 draw.

If Coupeville knocks off both Nisqually League teams, it advances to the double-elimination round of districts May 10-14. Two wins there would qualify them for state.

While CHS doesn’t charge admission for regular season soccer, the postseason is a different beast.

Prices for Thursday’s game at OHHS:

Adults and students without an ASB — $8

Middle school/high school students (with ASB) — $5

Elementary school students (under 12) — $4

Senior citizens (62 and over) — $5

Preschool (with parent) — free

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Cody Menges (14) is one of seven WOlves to have scored this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Cody Menges (14) is one of eight Wolves to have scored this season. (John Fisken photos)

Ethan Spark (15)

   Ethan Spark (15) jumps into Tanner Kircher’s arms as Garrett Compton (right) joins them in a post-goal celebration.

The offense is clickin’.

The season is not over for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad, but they have already amassed their most successful goal-scoring campaign in recent memory.

And it’s not even close.

With at least two more games on the schedule — the regular season finale at Klahowya Tuesday and a playoff game Thursday in Oak Harbor — the Wolves have tallied 46 goals this season.

They have also scored in every one of their 13 games this season, unheard of consistency for a program which had been shutout at least five times a season for five years running.

At the center of the attack has been senior Abraham Leyva, who broke his own school single-season scoring record.

After tallying 25 goals combined over his first two seasons at CHS (11 as a sophomore and 14 as a junior) Leyva has 20 this year, having scored in all but one game.

Here’s a look at how this year’s Wolves compare to the last five teams to suit up:

2016 — 46 goals in 13 games, zero shutouts (5-7-1 record)
2015 — 35 goals in 14 games, six shutouts (3-11-0)
2014 — 22 goals in 17 games, five shutouts (5-10-2)
2013 — 15 goals in 17 games, nine shutouts (3-14-0)
2012 — 27 goals in 18 games, six shutouts (10-8-0)
2011 — 30 goals in 17 games, seven shutouts (6-11-0)

Both the 2011 and 2012 teams won playoff games, the last times the CHS boys’ soccer squad triumphed in the postseason.

The ’11 team beat Meridian 3-0, then was nipped 2-1 by Seattle Christian, while the ’12 booters bopped Meridian 1-0 and were eliminated 1-0 by Cedar Park Christian (Bothell).

And a look at this year’s scoring chart:

Abraham Leyva — 20
Ethan Spark — 8
Zane Bundy — 5
William Nelson — 5
Zack Nall — 3
Andre Avila — 2
Sebastian Davis — 2
Cody Menges — 1

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Cody Menges

   Cody Menges and mom Jennifer share a fun moment together. (Wendy McCormick photos)

Leyva

   The leading scorer in CHS soccer history (he netted two more Saturday to run his career total to 45 goals) Abraham Leyva had a lot of fan support.

Zane

   Zane Bundy, a true four-year varsity star, and a kid who developed his soccer skills running wild through the aisles at Videoville back in his younger days.

Sebastian

   Team manager Sebastian Wurzrainer, reacting to something I just said in the press box. What, I’m not going to tell you…

little girl

Leyva’s fan club came in all sizes and ages.

Taylor Chiles

Taylor Chiles bows out gracefully.

Tanner

  Defender Tanner Kircher (11) pledges his undying love to Wolf goalie Connor McCormick.

guys

“And we’re outta here!”

The season’s not done, but you can’t stay here anymore.

The remainder of the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer season, whether it’s two games or whether it winds all the way to the state championship game, will be played entirely on the road.

Putting a final punctuation on their time running the CHS pitch, a pack of Wolf seniors sparked a huge win over Chimacum Saturday morning.

Before they did so, however, they stopped for a final bow, some words of wisdom, and a mix of hugs, tears and smiles from family and friends.

A whopping 13 seniors, including four-year manager Sebastian Wurzrainer, will depart after this season, one of the biggest groups ever to leave at one time.

As they go, we pause to say thank you and offer up this collection of snappy pics from the camera of Wendy McCormick, mom of goalie Connor.

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