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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

All for one and one for all. (Aimee Bishop photo)

It was a good day to be a Wolf. (Robert Pelant photo)

Senior Haley Marx shares the joy of her team’s first win with her parents after the match. (Robert Pelant photo)

“I love to see their smiles!”

That was a sentiment heard from numerous parents Thursday, as three separate Coupeville High School teams pulled off electrifying wins, guaranteeing a somber ride back to Sultan for the visiting Turks.

The Wolf girls’ soccer squad won their first game of the season, breaking out of a season-long scoring funk and erupting for a 3-1 win at Mickey Clark Field. Just down the road, the CHS gym was rockin’ all night long, as the JV spikers shredded Sultan 25-18, 25-23, 25-23 behind the play of Kenzie Kooch and Kacie Kiel, a mere prelude to the epic five-set win (25-21, 19-25, 25-22, 15-25, 15-10) the varsity would then pull out, sending their fans into a fit of pandemonium.

With pink (and an excess of glitter) everywhere, as the athletes honored breast cancer awareness, the young women of Coupeville reached down and found a new resolve. That was never more evident than on the volleyball court, where Wolf captain Bessie Walstad paid tribute to those who have fought the disease, including Wolf Athletic Director Lori Stolee.

What many in the crowd might not have known was the spikers were also paying tribute to the mother of two of their players (Katie and Kacie Kiel), who was recently diagnosed with the disease. After bringing her presents and raining hugs down on her, they left her with a smile as they played their best volleyball of the season.

The JV, sparked by Kooch, their captain, blitzed the Turks. A run of nice serves by Camilla Rische, Miranda Engle and Sidney Autio packaged around well-placed tips by McKenzie Bailey and Rhiannon Ellsworth made things easy and then Kacie Kiel unloaded a couple of whiplash-inducing spikes just to seal the deal.

The varsity match was more of a full-on war, one that intensified the longer the match went on. When the Sultan cheering section, buoyed by an influx of soccer players, tried to get loud, Coupeville’s fans (in particular Steve Kiel, who set a one-man record for good-natured lung-busting love of his Wolves) showed why NO ONE makes them bow down.

Inspired and a bit amused by the action in the stands, the Wolves threw themselves around the court with wild abandon. If Amanda Fabrizi wasn’t going face-first in pursuit of a dig, then Breeanna Messner and Sydney Aparicio were pulling off a tandem dive.

Coupeville opened the match with a display of power from enforcers Walstad and Hailey Hammer, then cinched the first set with a perfectly-placed tip from Messner that slid artfully through a razor-thin opening between two flailing Sultan players.

After falling behind in the second set, the Wolves staged a furious rally, punctuated by Haley Sherman unleashing a cold, precise fury on the hapless Turks, burying several shots off of the kneecaps of her opponents. It wasn’t quite enough, however as the Turks held on to even the match.

The match went on like that, point and counterpoint, through two more split sets and then a nail-biting finale. Up 9-3 in the final set, Coupeville surrendered six straight points, before Walstad broke out her best steely glare and laced a game-busting spike. Riding the wave of cheers, the Wolves closed out the match with picture-perfect tips from Messner and Megan Oakes and then, finally, Steve Kiel was free to head home and drink a nice warm cup of tea to sooth his throat.

The Wolf booters were making their own magic across town, assaulting the goal in a manner not seen this season.

Makana Stone opened things with a breakaway goal off of a through ball from Amanda d’Almeida, Madison Tisa McPhee flat out schooled the Sultan goalie by taking away a loose ball and chipping it into the net and then Haley Marx put the cherry on top by smashing a pass from d’Almeida past the defense.

With a rare lead, sophomore goalie McKayla Bailey and her stalwart defenders (Anna Bailey, Jenn Spark, Kelsey Miranda and Marisa Etzell, among others) went into lock-down mode and ran the clock out, setting off a group celebration that could probably be heard across town.

Well, unless you were sitting next to Steve Kiel. But hey, if I’m semi-deaf for a day or two, I’m OK with it.

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 Freshman Makana Stone popped in Coupeville’s lone goal Tuesday night and came close on a couple of other plays. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Agony upon agony.

Suffering its second straight loss in extra time Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team keeps getting closer and closer to that elusive first win, only to see it ripped away at the very last second.

A game ago, it was a ball that dribbled in late in the second overtime against Lakewood. Tuesday it was a mix of questionable calls by the ref, a bit of bad luck, a string of shots that almost went in (but didn’t) and, finally, plain old exhaustion that did in the Wolves.

After battling through 80 minutes of regulation and two five-minute overtimes, they fell in a shoot-out, suffering a 2-1 loss to host South Whidbey. And while it was a moral win, those aren’t always enough.

Now 0-12 with four games remaining — including match-ups with powerhouses Archbishop Thomas Murphy and King’s — Coupeville is still scrambling. Still pushing. Still leaving everything on the field.

And they have hope for the future.

“I’m not a betting man, but if we get South Whidbey again in the district playoffs, I like our chances,” said Coupeville coach Dan d’Almeida.

The Wolves, who have had trouble mounting a sustained offensive charge in some games, did just the opposite in Langley.

Madison Tisa McPhee narrowly missed a goal in the first 15 seconds, Amanda d’Almeida and Haley Marx whipped jet-propelled shots that were just a bit outside and freshman Makana Stone, who scored Coupeville’s goal, had several goosebumps-inducing breakaways.

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Princess Leia (Lauren Escalle) is also a two-sport threat. Joining her are fellow CHS athletes (left to right, faces showing) Drew Chan, Josh Wilsey, Maria Rockwell and Rachel Wenzel. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

You might want to hold on to your seats, because this has never before been attempted in the annuals of Coupeville sports blogging.

I am going to — wait for it — publish the name of EVERY varsity and JV fall sports athlete at Coupeville High School (and yes, I consider cheer a sport, regardless of what school officials say).

But it gets better. I am going to try and spell at least 83.6% of the names correctly! Oh yeah, it’s on!!!!

BOYS TENNIS:

Kyle Bodamer
Konrad Borden
Cameron Boyd-Eck
Zane Bundy
Aaron Curtin
Dawson d’Almeida
Beauman Davis
Sebastian Davis
Stephen Edwards
Ben Etzell
Jared Helmstadter
Brandon Kelley
Jason Knoll
Nathan Lamb
Geoff McClarin
Connor McCormick
Jake McCormick
Loren Nelson
Brian Norris
Lilan Sekigawa
Shane Squire
Ben Wehrman
Sam Wynn

CHEER:

Courtney Allard
Sydney Aparicio
Nicole Becker
Destiny Bitting
Kylie Burdge
Mekare Bowen
Emily Clay
Caitlyn Connolly
Emilee Crichton
Holly Craggs
Darian Emerick
Lauren Escalle
Amanda Fabrizi
Julia Felici
Jovanah Foote
Jai’Lysa Hoskins
Sylvia Hurlburt
Katie Kiel
Kenzie Kooch
Teri Lee
Breeanna Messner
Jessica Painter
Kirsten Pelroy
Madeline Roberts
Iris Ryckaert
Ciera St. Onge
Brittani Wilkinson

FOOTBALL:

Brett Arnold
Josh Bayne
Raymond Beiriger
Riley Boyd
Ian Buie
Jared Dickson
Dominic Ellis
Joey Edwards
Bryce Fleming
Ryan Griggs
Serigio Guerro
Ben Haight
Caleb Hampton
Matt Hampton
Wiley Hesselgrave
Lathom Kelley
Kole Kellison
Kyle Kendall
Auston Kirk
Korbin Korzan
Gunnar Langvold
Oscar Liquidano
Jacob Lord
Joshua Lord
Mitchell Losey
Anthony Maggio
Dalton Martin
Cole Payne
Carson Risner
Danny Savalza
Wade Schaef
Alex Schmakeit
Paul Schmakeit
Nick Streubel
Daniel Thornley
Jake Tumblin
Caleb Valko
Aaron Wright

GIRLS SOCCER:

Anna Bailey
McKayla Bailey
Vanessa Bernales
Amanda d’Almeida
Marisa Etzell
Christine Fields
Joye Jackson
Micky LeVine
Ana Luvera
Ivy Luvera
Haley Marx
Kelsey Miranda
Kelsey Pape
Erin Rosenkranz
Jennifer Spark
Makana Stone
Madison Tisa McPhee
Victoria Wellman
Rachel Wenzel

VOLLEYBALL:

Sydney Aparicio
Sydney Autio
McKenzie Bailey
Emilee Crichton
Rhiannon Ellsworth
Miranda Engle
Lauren Escalle
Amanda Fabrizi
Hailey Hammer
Allie Hanigan
Julia Jones
Kacie Kiel
Katie Kiel
Kenzie Kooch
Samantha Martin
Breeanna Messner
Ashlynn Miller
Megan Oakes
Camilla Rische
Iris Ryckaert
Haley Sherman
Madeline Strasburg
Monica Vidoni
Bessie Walstad

Khanei Williams

 

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We send you live to the streets of Coupeville, where intrepid photographer Shelli Trumbull is on the scene, clicking away and capturing the sights and sounds of Coupeville High School’s 2nd Annual Homecoming Parade.

For members of Wolf Nation who couldn’t be on Main Street today, you’re welcome.

And the last photo? That’s not a Shelli shot, but features CHS boys’ tennis coach Ken Stange, celebrating his win as the Duke of Homecoming — a title he won with a dance routine that recalled the best of Patrick Swayze.

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Madison Tisa McPhee’s speed? It’s the shoes. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

This really doesn’t seem quite fair.

After battling through almost 90 minutes of scoreless, counter-punch upon counter-punch soccer Thursday night, to lose the way Coupeville High School did — on a semi-questionable, confusing ball that dribbled slowly into the back of the net, sort of, on a play where Wolf goalie McKayla Bailey was blocked from seeing where the ball was — is sort of depressing.

At least it was for the CHS fans and parents in the stands, who looked around with questioning looks on their faces, uncertain that the game had actually ended. But, with a pair of refs seemingly anxious to get to a warm car, that was it, and Lakewood escaped with a 1-0 double overtime win.

The loss, which dropped Coupeville to 0-11 on the season, was one of its best efforts of the season, however. Clad in new uniforms (“I told them, new uniforms, new attitude,” said Wolf coach Dan d’Almeida), the Wolves spent more time than normal on the other side of the field, pushing the attack at times.

With Madison Tisa McPhee streaking down field in snappy, brightly-colored shoes that popped in a sea of black foot-gear, Coupeville play-makers Amanda d’Almeida and Haley Marx tried to force the action, but were largely blunted by a scrappy Lakewood defense.

The Wolf back line made their own stand, with Anna Bailey clobbering anyone who dared enter her territory, and the trio of Kelsey Miranda, Jennifer Spark and Marisa Etzell providing a nice layer of protection for Wolf goalie McKayla Bailey.

With her protectors running interference for her, McKayla Bailey didn’t have to turn away many shots, but made one nice save off a penalty shot near the end of the first half that stood out.

After playing through an uneventful first overtime, the two teams were agonizingly close to wrapping up the second five-minute extra period and advancing to a shoot-out. Dan d’Almeida was already mentally checking to make sure he had the five players on the field he would want to use when the awkward final play snapped him back to reality.

“Shouldn’t have done it. Probably jinxed us!,” he said with a good-natured laugh.

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