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Genna Wright, who scored 10 goals as a freshman, is Coupeville soccer’s top returning scorer this fall. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Welcome to a whole new world.

As Kyle Nelson returns for his second year at the helm of the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad, he’ll guide a team in transition into a new conference.

Gone are Klahowya, the Olympic League, and leading Wolf scorer Kalia Littlejohn, who chose to skip her senior season, while the jump to the new North Sound Conference tosses defending state champs King’s into the mix.

But, with 13 returning players on his roster, including Genna Wright, who bashed home 10 goals as a freshman, Nelson enters the new day head high and chin set.

“My goal is to form a well-organized, disciplined, exciting to watch squad,” he said. “And with anyone who watches us play this year, seeing improvement through the course of the season.”

The new league pits CHS against South Whidbey, Cedar Park Christian, Granite Falls and Sultan.

And, of course, the private school Knights, who toppled Elma, Klahowya, Seattle Academy and Cascade en route to earning King’s its first state title in girls soccer.

While Nelson acknowledges his Wolves will be swinging at a big target, he expects them to do just that – come out swinging.

“Looking forward to the new conference,” he said. “It should be a little tougher competition overall, but I believe we will be right in there competing well with them.

“I would like to finish with a berth to the postseason,” Nelson added. “So, the season will be a success if we make postseason play.”

While the unexpected loss of Littlejohn, who scored 33 goals in three seasons, hurts, plenty of talent remains on the Wolf roster.

“We are returning quite a few starting varsity players in most positions on the field,” Nelson said. “We also have a number of players who played with a select team in the off-season.

“So, we have experience on our side this year.”

One area where the Wolves may need to shore things up is on the defensive side of the ball, an area Nelson is focusing on in the early days of practice.

“On the defensive side, while they are bringing some experience, this is where we have the least amount,” he said. “We will also be looking to incorporate some new players who look to be important to our team, but it can take a while for both the defense and the new players to fully integrate.”

Coupeville returns 13 players from a season ago, when it won eight games, the best single-season result in program history.

Senior midfielder Lindsey Roberts and senior goalie Sarah Wright, who share captain honors, top the roster, while defender Maddy Hilkey and midfielder Ema Smith also rep the Class of 2019.

Returning juniors include Tia Wurzrainer (defender), Natalie Hollrigel (defender), Avalon Renninger (midfielder), Mallory Korteum (midfielder), and Anna Dion (forward).

Sophomores Mollie Bailey (goalkeeper), Genna Wright (forward), Knight Arndt (midfielder), and Aurora Cernick (defender) round out the returning players.

Coupeville is also adding to its roster, with five freshmen and two newcomers jumping onto the pitch. That raises hopes the Wolves may be able to play some JV matches this year.

New to the CHS squad are sophomore defender Megan Behan, junior midfielder Casey Rogers and frosh Kiara Contreras (defender), Lily Leedy (midfielder), Katelin McCormick (defender), Mary Milnes (defender) and Sam Streitler (defender).

The Wolf booters open their season Thursday with an appearance at the Oak Harbor Jamboree (5:30 PM at Memorial Stadium), before traveling to Meridian Sept. 4 for the regular-season kickoff.

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Lindsey Roberts, doin’ work. (Photos by JohnPhotos.net)

No pressure, Lindsey Roberts, but this is your year.

In much the same way last year was about Hunter Smith making a run at claiming all the records, the 2018-2019 school year is set up to be the Year of Lou.

Even after dealing with an injury which cost him half his senior season, Smith graduated owning seven CHS football records.

He followed that up by burning up the nets, finishing his basketball career as the 11th highest scorer in Wolf boys basketball history.

While baseball stats are a trickier thing to track in the world of Cow Town sports, Smith put a cap on things by being named Olympic League MVP and helping lead the Wolves to their second conference crown in three years.

He was one of the best we’ve ever seen in a Coupeville uniform, and Roberts, a senior this year, is much the same.

Her parents, Jon and Sherry, are both former CHS Athlete of the Year winners.

Uncle Jay? Still on the school’s track record board 30+ years after graduation, a board where his niece appears three times already.

Lindsey’s cousins Madeline and Ally were stars, her grandfather Sandy a living legend, but Lou is primed to pass them all.

More than any other active athlete at CHS, she is within striking distance of breaking, tying or making a run at records – and in every one of her three sports.

So, here’s what to keep an eye on as the new school year unfolds:

 

Soccer:

Admittedly, this is the one which would be most difficult for her to accomplish.

Mia Littlejohn holds the CHS girls soccer career scoring record with 35 goals, and Kalia Littlejohn was hot on her heels with 33 through her first three seasons.

With Kalia opting not to play as a senior, Mia’s record gets a reprieve, and Roberts inherits the mantle as the leading active scorer for the Wolves.

She has 13 goals, notching six apiece the past two seasons after tallying a lone goal as a freshman.

Making that more impressive, she’s done so while playing almost exclusively as a defender, albeit one blessed with a cannon for a leg.

It’s more likely Genna Wright, who torched the nets for 10 goals as a freshman last year, will be the one ultimately coming for the record.

Still, you can’t discount the offensive fireworks Roberts can launch, even if she’s doing it from half a field away.

 

Basketball:

With a season to play, Roberts sits 36th all-time on the Wolf girls scoring chart with 298 points, and has increased her point totals each year.

She tossed in 54 as a frosh (good for #6 on the squad), raised that to 83 as a sophomore (#4), then soared to 161 as a junior, which topped the team.

While it’s unlikely she’ll catch Brianne King (1549), Zenovia Barron (1270) or Makana Stone (1158) atop the charts, Roberts still stands a very good chance of making a run at the top 20.

She stands 102 points away from becoming the 23rd Wolf girl to crack 400 career points, and a repeat of her 161-point junior year performance would carry her to #18 on the all-time list.

 

Track:

Roberts final prep season could be her greatest moment.

She enters her senior season having already claimed five state meet medals – a 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th – and is one of only 10 Wolves, and one of only four girls, across 118 years, to pile up that kind of hardware.

Within her reach? Exiting as the most-decorated CHS female track athlete in school history.

If Roberts wins at least one medal next spring, and she has done so in each of her three previous seasons, she breaks a tie with Yashmeen Knox and rises to tie Natasha Bamberger.

Two medals, she joins Makana Stone with seven, or match her freshman total of three, and she finishes with eight, trailing only Tyler King (11) and Kyle King (10).

Roberts came dangerously close to winning a state title in the hurdles as a junior, nipped at the end by Lillian Kirry, a sophomore from Chewelah.

If she can return the favor next spring, Roberts would be the first Wolf to win a state title in any sport since Tyler King wore the 1A boys cross country crown in 2010.

So, buckle in, keep an eye on the stats and prepare for eight months of excitement — the Year of Lou begins.

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Wolf goalie Sarah Wright gets a kick out of life. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jacob Burke mashes a pesky tennis ball.

Gridiron speed demon Sean Toomey-Stout, momentarily at rest.

Chelsea Prescott sends the ball skyward.

It’s early, but tennis guru Ken Stange already has his goatee in mid-season form.

Lindsey Roberts keeps her life in perfect balance.

Football bruiser Chris Battaglia checks to make sure his feet are still there.

Freshman Eryn Wood makes a strong first impression.

Photos, photos and more photos.

Wanderin’ camera clicker John Fisken has hit practices for four of five CHS fall sports teams in the early days, so here’s a few more snappy pics.

The glossy photos cover soccer, tennis, volleyball and football, and they come with this reminder – just nine days until the first official game of the new school year.

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Avalon Renninger whispers to her soccer ball. “Hello, my old friend. I’ve missed you.” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mason Grove is back and ready to unleash some lethal forehands.

Tucked away in the gym, spiker Maya Toomey-Stout heartily approves of the clean air.

Meanwhile in downtown Los Angeles…

Zach Ginnings is in mid-season form.

Fab frosh (l to r) Anya Leavell, Abby Meyers and Izzy Wells ignite their jets.

Maddy Hilkey works on her foot skills, while trying to avoid breathing any smog.

Jaschon Baumann glides into action.

Wolf senior Emma Smith shows the youngsters how it’s done.

Smoke, what smoke?

The skies above Whidbey Island were thick with Los Angeles-style smog Monday thanks to raging fires elsewhere, but the first day of practice for fall sports went off without a hitch.

Battling through the haze, mad photo clicker John Fisken snapped pics of three Wolf teams hard at work, capturing boys tennis, girls soccer and volleyball (which got to stay inside where the air was crisp and clean).

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Coupeville soccer ace Lyla Stuurmans celebrates a tourney title with lil’ sis Scarlett. (Photo courtesy Scott Stuurmans)

In a family of sports legends whose triumphs could fill up a book, Lyla Stuurmans is busy writing her own successful chapter.

The fast-rising soccer star, who is headed into the sixth grade at Coupeville Middle School this fall, is tearing up the soccer pitch.

Her latest adventure came this weekend, when Stuurmans and her squad swept to a title in the U12 gold division at the Phillips Rimland 66 Challenge in Bellingham.

Northwest United FC, which is based out of Burlington, was on lock-down duty all weekend, surrendering just one goal across four games.

Stuurmans, who normally operates as a center back, more than answered by herself, rattling home three goals during the tourney.

The 11-year-old soccer whiz kid is the daughter of Scott and Sarah Stuurmans.

Dad was a standout basketball player at CHS back in the day, while mom is a Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame inductee.

Among Lyla’s many other sports-minded relatives is cousin Payton Aparicio, who was the CHS Female Athlete of the Year for 2017-2018.

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