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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Joye Jackson (on left) shares a moment with friendly rival Jamie Rodden of South Whidbey during last year’s track season.

Joye Jackson was born to play soccer.

Now, the Coupeville High School junior has plenty of other talents (she runs track, takes part in drama productions, plays in the school’s pep band, has musical interests that range from Lady Gaga and Foster the People to “Phantom of the Opera” and carves out as much time as possible to work with a menagerie of pets that include a horse, donkey and mule), but the soccer pitch has called to her since she was young.

From her first days booting the ball in an Under-6 league, to now, when she’s a key, unsung part of an improving Wolf squad, Jackson has had a love affair with the sport.

“I have been playing soccer since I was very little,” Jackson said. “I think I really enjoy the chance to just get that one time in a game when you do something totally awesome, like a new move, and pull it off, or a great save or something that will stand out to me personally, such as improvement.”

She sees herself as a work in progress (“I feel that my strengths are equal this year, that nothing has really made me feel like, that’s my trademark strength as a soccer player.”), but it’s evident to anyone who watches a Wolf game that she plays her heart out every time she steps on the field.

A still-developing CHS squad has begun to mesh more as the season has gone on, and while the Wolves are still seeking their first win, they have gotten closer to their opponents each time out. For Jackson, who has seen time both at forward and a bit in goal, she has a few personal moments she’d like to accomplish before the season plays out.

“My personal goals are to either assist a goal or have a shut out in goal,” Jackson said. “As a team, I think our goals are to improve on what we already have done well. Our defense is working so hard and so is the offense; I feel like our season (now that we have started the second half of the season) will be better then the first half of the season.

Jackson credits her coaches from when she was younger — Kali Barrio, Scott Rosenkranz and Sean LeVine — for helping her to develop as a player, while also showing some nice appreciation for the impact her family has had on her growth as a young woman.

I feel like my parents are the ones who encourage me to do better and to make a difference,” Jackson said. “Also my cousin, Katherine, who always, no matter how far away she lives, cheers me and encourages me to become the best in myself.

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With a limited scoring attack, the Wolf defense has had to keep the team in games. They have done it with grit and hustle, as shown here by goalie McKayla Bailey and defenders (l to r in white uniforms) Kelsey Miranda, Marisa Etzell and Anna Bailey. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

McKayla Bailey has been one of the pleasant surprises of the soccer season.

The Coupeville High School sophomore was thrown into the goaltender’s net for the first time in her life this season and has had to sink or swim. With lots of side practice with Wolf assistant coach Gary Manker, father of a talented former CHS goalie — Ashley MankerBailey has stepped up nicely.

As she continues to get more comfortable in net, and the Coupeville offense begins to take some pressure off of her by keeping a chunk of the play on the other side of the field, the Wolves have shown steady progress.

That was evident again Tuesday night, as the Wolves battled until the end in a 2-0 loss to visiting Cedarcrest. While it was Coupeville’s tenth loss in as many games, the Wolves trailed just 1-0 at the half and radically improved on their first meeting with the Red Wolves, when they were blasted 7-0.

Bailey, for one, remains confident, both in her own play and that of her teammates.

“It was good. Our defense is getting stronger and our offense is getting more and more shots on goal as we go along,” Bailey said. “It’s the second half of the season and we plan to bring it.”

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Wolf goalie McKayla Bailey snared 14 balls Saturday, including one brilliant   diving save that sent an electric jolt through her cheering section. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It was an honorable loss.

Facing off Saturday afternoon with a King’s squad made up of highly-dangerous offensive weapons who spent most of the game deep in Wolf territory, an injury-riddled Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team made gritty defensive stand after stand before finally falling.

The 3-0 loss, which dropped the Wolves to 0-9 on the season, was much closer than the score might sound. With Coupeville goalie McKayla Bailey patrolling the net with a laser-like focus, and her defenders sacrificing their bodies for the cause, the game was up for grabs until the visiting Knights popped in two goals in the final 18 minutes of the match.

A perfectly placed throw-in from the side set up a header that just evaded Bailey’s grasp, making it 2-0. Then, in the final two minutes, a King’s player put on a one-woman shock ‘n awe show, evading three Wolf defenders on a wild run, before delicately placing the ball into the corner of the net with a flick of her foot (while smacking a Coupeville player with a well-placed elbow that the ref missed).

Missing speedster Madison Tisa McPhee (out with an injury), Coupeville struggled to get any consistent offensive flow going. Wolf play-maker supreme Amanda d’Almedia was aggressively shadowed by Knights defenders, and the few times d’Almedia could get a ball over the head of the defense, King’s blunted runs by Makana Stone, not allowing the freshman to get loose and convert a shot on goal.

Under almost constant pressure, Bailey, a sophomore in her first year in net, continued to show flashes of brilliance. Recording 14 saves, she brought the crowd to their feet with one diving snag late in the game.

Around her, multiple teammates sacrificed their well-being in her defense. Victoria Wellman and Marisa Etzell blocked shots with their bodies, with Etzell taking a nasty shot to the chest.

The nastiest shot, however, came when freshman phenom Jennifer Spark was run over by a freight train from behind during a scramble for the ball. Planted face-first into the turf, she left the game to be checked on, but returned and gave the Wolves a burst with her energy.

Coupeville stalwarts Kelsey Miranda, Haley Marx and Anna Bailey (fighting through a nagging injury of her own) scrapped up and down the field, while Micky Levine, Joye Jackson, Christine Fields, Rachel Wenzel, Ana Luvera and Erin Rosenkranz each chipped in with hustle and an unflagging spirit.

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Micky LeVine tracks a ball through the air in a recent game. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Marisa Etzell, on right, battles for a ball in a game earlier this week. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

CHS assistant coach Gary Manker (in sweater vest) and head coach Dan d’Almeida direct action. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It was closer, but not close enough.

Playing with an aggressive defense (Ivy Luvera sacrificed her noggin to deflect one shot on goal), strong goal-tending from McKayla Bailey and a couple of nice runs at the goal from Makana Stone, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad stayed within shouting distance of host Granite Falls Thursday, but wasn’t able to nab its first win of the season.

Marissa Hutchinson, Kaila Green and Courtney Leofshe all slipped in goals as the Tigers nipped the Wolves 3-0. Two of the scores came in the game’s waning moments.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 0-8 overall, 0-6 in Cascade Conference play, with powerhouse King’s coming to the Island Saturday for a 2 PM game.

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   Katelin McCormick prepares to unleash a wicked throw-in. (Wendy McCormick photo)

  Seventh grade spiker Kyla Briscoe (left) gets some face time with Wolf cheer/basketball/track superstar Jai’Lysa Hoskins. (Amy Briscoe photo)

An orange a day fuels the stars of the future. (Wendy McCormick photo)

The greats start young.

A new generation of future Wolf sports stars is out there on the horizon and can already be seen on middle school courts and Central Whidbey rec soccer fields, as these photos depict.

Spiker Kyla Briscoe and booter Katelin McCormick are just the tip of the wave that is coming, as Wolf Nation prepares for a new golden age of athletic success.

And hey, even if they never win a state title in the years to come, these are still neat photos right now, if nothing else. So, from me, to you, the future!

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