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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

   Freshman Mollie Bailey delivered a scoreless second half in goal Saturday as Coupeville romped to an 8-0 win at Port Townsend. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Kalia Littlejohn, seen here earlier in her career, tallied five goals Saturday, pulling within eight of sister Mia’s CHS career scoring record.

The little sister is coming for all the records.

Torching the net in unprecedented fashion Saturday, Coupeville High School junior Kalia Littlejohn recorded five goals to spark the Wolf booters to an 8-0 thrashing of host Port Townsend.

The win lifts CHS to 2-0 in Olympic League play, leaving it in a first-place tie with Klahowya.

The Wolves, who return home Monday for a non-conference tilt with Mount Vernon Christian, are 3-2 overall, having won three of their last four games.

Facing off with the RedHawks, Coupeville scored from every angle, with fab frosh Genna Wright added a pair of scores to back up Littlejohn.

Junior Lindsey Roberts, owner of the most powerful kicking leg in the soccer biz, rattled home the game’s other score.

The outburst left Wright and Roberts with four goals apiece on the season, while Littlejohn sits with nine.

Add that to the 10 scores she recorded as a freshman and the eight she tacked on last year, and Kalia has 27 for her career.

That pulls her within eight goals of the best sharpshooter in CHS girls soccer history — older sister Mia Littlejohn, who scored 35 times between 2014-2016.

Abraham Leyva, with 45 goals, holds the school record.

While Kalia and Co. were busy peppering the Port Townsend goaltender, the Wolf net-minders were in lock-down mode all the way.

Junior Sarah Wright recorded a flawless first half, then gave way to freshman Mollie Bailey after the break.

The duo, who are highly-accomplished softball catchers in another life, scooped up anything and everything which came their way, though, truth be told, Coupeville’s fearsome defenders allowed very little to get by in the first place.

“Great day for Coupeville girls soccer,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “Nice league victory.”

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   Ema Smith notched her first goal of the season Thursday in Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Don’t sleep on Ema Smith.

The Coupeville High School junior is normally a role player for the girls soccer squad, but she has a dangerous goal-scoring toe or two at her disposal, as she showed Thursday night.

Smith notched her first score of the season, beating the Sequim goaltender (with a little assist from a rival player’s head), the only Wolf to do so in a 4-1 loss.

The non-conference defeat, coming on the road against a large 2A school, snaps a two-game win streak for CHS and drops it to 2-2 on the season.

While the final score didn’t come out in favor of his squad, Wolf coach Kyle Nelson saw genuine positives in his team’s performance.

“It was a closer game than the score shows,” he said. “It is also a good game for us against a good opponent to show us the things we need to work on.

“We will use this to get better.”

Coupeville, which is tied with Klahowya for the early lead atop the 1A Olympic League, has a key game coming up on Saturday.

The Wolves (1-0 in league play) travel to Port Townsend for a 1:15 game.

That match-up with the RedHawks closes out a three-game road trip for Coupeville.

After that game, CHS won’t have to play more than one road game in a row the remainder of the regular season.

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   Fab frosh Genna Wright scored twice Tuesday in a 7-2 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Season ends now, they’re league champs.

Just sayin’…

Yes, yes, there are still plenty of games to go, and three-time Olympic League champ Klahowya has yet to play a conference tilt, but, for one night at least, Coupeville is on top of the girls soccer world.

Shredding Chimacum’s defense with ease Tuesday, the Wolf booters rolled to a 7-2 road win in their league opener.

Now 2-1 overall, Coupeville split the scoring duties four ways against the Cowboys.

Lindsey Roberts, Kalia Littlejohn and Genna Wright banged home two goals apiece, while Avalon Renninger put the cherry on top with a score of her own.

Littlejohn, who leads the Wolf squad with four goals, has scored in every game this season.

The junior sharpshooter now has 22 tallies in her career, pulling her closer to big sister Mia, who set the program’s scoring record with 35 goals from 2014-2016.

With her own two-goal night, Roberts sits with three scores on the season.

It was the first time Renninger and Wright had found the back of the net, with the latter notching her first official high school goals.

The freshman whiz kid also scored during the season-opening jamboree, but that goal doesn’t count towards her season total.

Coupeville also doled out its assists, with Wright and Sage Renninger each picking up a pair.

Roberts and Littlejohn set up other goals, while one score — off a free kick by Roberts — was unassisted.

With his team kicking off a three-game road trip with the Chimacum game (the Wolves travel to Sequim Thursday and Port Townsend Saturday), CHS coach Kyle Nelson was pleased with much of what he saw.

“We will call it a “taking care of business” type of game,” he said. “Overall we continue to be making progress; our passing game took a nice jump forward as we continue to work on various aspects of our game.

“We also left Chimacum healthy as we start a succession of away games this week,” Nelson added. “Sequim tomorrow should be a good test for us as we continue to look to improve.”

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   It’s a Renninger family reunion, as Sage (left) and Avalon celebrate their sisterly soccer success. (John Fisken photos)

   CHS girls soccer manager Chris Cernick shoots game action, while Dawn Hesselgrave protects him from the elements.

Sage Renninger gets ready to torch Bellevue Christian’s goalie.

Dr. Z lives dangerously, operating an electronic scoreboard in the rain.

   That area behind Wolf sharpshooter Ema Smith? That’s where new, possibly covered stands will go … one day.

   The BC goalie ponders the futility of her life as Avalon Renninger (16) scoops up goal scorer Lauren Bayne.

   CHS football players came out to support their classmates Saturday, though they did find some time to amuse themselves as well.

   One BC defender can’t bear to look, as Kalia Littlejohn (black headband) and Avalon get their celebration on.

A little rain is not going to stop John Fisken.

The intrepid photographer ambled back to his car at halftime Saturday and reemerged with a giant U-Dub umbrella, then, shielded from the steady Whidbey drizzle, went promptly back to work.

As the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad pulled out a stunning come-from-behind 3-2 win over big city rival Bellevue Christian, Fisken’s camera fired away, catching the shots featured above.

Your featured performer?

Avalon Renninger, super sophomore, rampaging booter and giddy force of life, who pops up multiple times in this essay.

To see everything Fisken shot (purchases support college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Soccer/2017-09-09-vs-Bellevue-Christian/

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   Wolf goalie Sarah Wright made several sensational saves Saturday, including one in the final moments of a 3-2 win. (John Fisken photo)

Move over, Vince Lombardi, cause Kyle Nelson has a few things to say.

The low-key, nattily-dressed Coupeville High School girls soccer coach had a message for his team at halftime Saturday afternoon.

“We can play with this team. We can beat this team. If we believe in ourselves.”

Apparently the Wolves were listening.

Trailing by two scores with just under 30 minutes to play, Coupeville rallied for three unanswered goals — the final one coming on a freak play — and stunned visiting Bellevue Christian 3-2.

The non-conference victory, which sent the gathered CHS football players into a mad celebration, evened the Wolves record at 1-1.

More importantly, it was a statement win, and a huge one.

Bellevue Christian hails from the Nisqually League, the conference which crosses over with the Olympic League come playoff time.

For a Wolf girls soccer program which has struggled in the postseason, having this kind of win, especially the way it came, is huge.

“I’m proud of the whole team,” Nelson said. “They came together and made it happen.”

And it truly was a team effort, as countless players made contributions.

The goal scorers will get the bright spotlight, but Coupeville doesn’t win if defensive whiz kid Mallory Kortuem doesn’t spend the afternoon relentlessly chasing down one breakaway after another.

It doesn’t win if freshmen Lily Zustiak and Genna Wright don’t play like hardened vets, scrapping for every ball.

It doesn’t win if Lindsey Roberts doesn’t mash the heck out of the ball (and any foe unlucky enough to linger next to Roberts sharp elbows).

It doesn’t win if Sage Renninger isn’t a calm, cool and collected captain, Maddy Hilkey, Natalie Hollrigel and Knight Arndt don’t play like scrappers and Avalon Renninger and Tia Wurzrainer don’t lock down their sides of the field.

And it certainly doesn’t win without second-half heroics from the trio of Sarah Wright, Kalia Littlejohn and Lauren Bayne.

It was Bayne who broke the spell, Littlejohn who lit the fuse and Wright who slammed the door shut.

Trailing 2-0 after BC snuck in a goal early in the second half (their first score came in the 25th minute of the first half), the Wolves were stuck in neutral.

They were getting decent looks at the net — Littlejohn had narrowly missed three or four times at that point — but couldn’t ruffle the Viking goaltender.

Until Bayne went medieval on her rear.

One of only two seniors on the CHS squad, the ever-dependable midfielder picked up a loose ball, turned and fired a point-blank shot that left her foot like it was coming out of a cannon.

The Bellevue net-minder reached for it, then watched in horror as it ripped right through her grasp, possibly leaving a gaping hole in her body as the ball slammed into the back of the net.

Given new life, the Wolves surged, staying on the attack.

It paid off less than two minutes later, when Roberts uncorked a long, looping drive that went airborne like a field goal attempt, then dropped on a dime at the feet of the hard-charging Littlejohn.

The BC goalie screamed (more a sob, really) as Kalia devoured her soul whole, abusing her ten different ways with a quick set of jukes, before knotting the game at 2-2 with a wicked slap shot.

If the Vikings thought Coupeville would settle for the stunning come-from-behind tie, they were wrong.

With just five minutes left in the suddenly action-packed tilt, Sage Renninger crushed a corner kick that headed for Littlejohn, who was lurking in front of the net.

Caught up in the melee (and perhaps frightened by the sight of Littlejohn coming at her, eyes flared and teeth bared), a BC defender made a fatal error and turned her foot the wrong way.

Renninger’s lob smacked the defender’s shoe right as Littlejohn lunged, and it angled off perfectly, skidding backwards into the net for an “own goal” that drove a stake through Bellevue’s collective heart.

The Vikings tried to push for the tying goal, but Wright was resolute in net for the Wolves, turning away multiple shots at the end, including one snag that knocked the wind out of every fan’s lungs.

The junior goalie is in her first year as a soccer player, having jumped over from volleyball, and her long experience as a softball catcher has been invaluable in giving her the skills necessary to surprise even her veteran coach.

Wright was a rock for CHS all afternoon, making several sliding saves in the first half, and handled the non-stop drizzle, which made the field and ball extra-slick, like a seasoned pro.

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