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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Freshman Megan Thorn was named Most Improved at Friday's CHS girls' soccer banquet. (John Fisken photos)

   Megan Thorn was named Most Improved at Friday’s CHS girls’ soccer banquet. (John Fisken photos)

Fellow frosh Mallory Kortuem was tabbed Rookie of the Year.

Fellow frosh Mallory Kortuem was tabbed Rookie of the Year.

They’ll go down as the most successful team in program history.

This year’s Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad became the first to post a winning record, finishing 8-7-1 overall, 6-3 in 1A Olympic League play.

After collecting their third straight second-place finish in conference play, the Wolves brought a close to their season Friday night with an awards shindig which saw several players honored for their contributions.

Junior Mia Littlejohn, who torched the school’s single-season scoring record (girls or boys) with 27 goals, was, not surprisingly, named the team’s MVP.

Joining her on the stage were freshmen Mallory Kortuem (Rookie of the Year) and Megan Thorn (Most Improved) and seniors Lauren Grove (Defensive Player of the Year) and Bree Daigneault (Leadership Award).

All-Conference honors will be announced next week.

Letter winners:

Lauren Bayne
Bree Daigneault
Megan DePorter
Lauren Grove
Mallory Kortuem
Kalia Littlejohn
Mia Littlejohn
Avalon Renninger
Sage Renninger
Lindsey Roberts
May Rose
Tia Wurzrainer

Participation certificates:

Fanny Deprelle
Anna Dion
Cassidy Moody
Megan Thorn
Ema Smith

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Mia Littlejohn (John Fisken photos)

Mia Littlejohn gets medieval. (John Fisken photo)

She shoots, she scores.

Coupeville High School junior soccer sensation Mia Littlejohn has picked up another honor, being selected for the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association Student Spotlight.

An honoree for November, she shares the stage with Sam Nehren, a football player from Lindbergh.

Littlejohn crushed her school’s single-season soccer scoring record, torching the nets for 27 goals as she led the Wolves to their first winning season in program history.

Come Nov. 14, she’ll be back on the hard-court, where CHS girls’ basketball wants to go back to state for the second straight year.

To see Mia’s write-up, pop over to:

http://www.wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=1081

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Lauren Grove (John Fisken photos)

Wolf goalie Lauren Grove snares a runaway soccer ball. (John Fisken photos)

Lindsey

Lindsey Roberts (and her bionic leg) crush a goal kick.

Tia Wurzrainer

   Freshman booter Tia Wurzrainer looks into her soccer future and sees it’s a bright one.

Mia Littlejohn

Mia Littlejohn scraps with a Charles Wright rival.

Megan DePorter

Senior defender Megan DePorter levitates, just cause she can.

Mallory Kortuem

Dropping some sprinter speed, Mallory Kortuem wins the race to the ball.

They went down fighting.

Despite being knocked out of the playoffs Saturday, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad put on a good show, for fans and photographers alike.

Wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken coasted in to Wildcat Memorial Stadium on a busy shooting day to nab us these photos.

To see the rest of what he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/GS-20161029-Coupeville-vs-Char/

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Bree Daigneault, a captain and four-year player, is one of six seniors CHS soccer will lose. (John Fisken photo)

   Bree Daigneault, a captain and four-year player, is one of six seniors CHS soccer will lose. (John Fisken photo)

The search for a postseason goal continues.

Despite several strong chances, including a booming shot from Lindsey Roberts that curled up and over the bar at the last second, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad suffered a shutout loss in the district playoffs for the third straight season.

The Wolves fell 3-0 to Charles Wright Academy Saturday in a game played on the damp turf at Oak Harbor’s Wildcat Memorial Stadium.

The loss ended the most successful season in CHS girls’ soccer history, while CWA advances to the double-elimination round of districts, where it will face Cascade Christian Tuesday night.

With a final record of 8-7-1, it’s the first time a Wolf girls’ soccer squad has finished a season with a winning record since the program was started in 2004.

Coupeville finished second in the 1A Olympic League for the third straight season, set a program record for wins and saw junior Mia Littlejohn shatter the school record for goals in a season.

She finished with 27, bettering the 20 Abraham Leyva scored during his senior season on the pitch way back in … the spring of 2016.

The previous record for a Wolf girl was 10, set by Kalia Littlejohn in 2015.

Lil’ sis added eight more as a sophomore, while Roberts, also a tenth grader, smacked home six and freshman Tia Wurzrainer notched three.

Of Coupeville’s 48 goals this season, only two were scored by seniors, with May Rose and Bree Daigneault being joined by freshmen Avalon Renninger and Anna Dion in rounding out the scorers.

Saturday, though, the well ran dry, though not for lack of chances.

Coupeville pushed the pace early, but saw Charles Wright seemingly get away with a major off-sides on the game’s opening goal.

The Wolves had set a trap to lure the Tarriers into committing just such an act, yet, even with a CWA player a clear five feet in front of the ball on what turned into a scoring run, the refs declined to say anything on the matter.

“It’s tough when girls play so well and earn their spot here and honestly outplayed the other team and it doesn’t show up on the scoreboard,” said Coupeville coach Troy Cowan.

“In the first half we certainly outplayed them; the second half was a little more even, but we did well with our set pieces,” he added. “Regardless of what was on the scoreboard, we can be proud of our season. They had a great season.”

Trailing just 1-0 coming out of the halftime break, the Wolves got nipped on two big plays in the second half.

On the first, CWA punched in a header off of a corner kick, with Coupeville goalie Lauren Grove unable to see the ball coming as a Tarrier expertly blocked her field of vision.

The final goal of the afternoon came when a Charles Wright player got behind the defense, picked up a pass and flicked it into the open side of the net.

The Wolves made several charges at the end, with Roberts unleashing a laser from about the 40-yard line, but it wasn’t to be.

While he wanted a win, Cowan can step back and see the progress the program has made in his four years at the helm.

“If you look at where we started at four years ago, we’ve really changed the culture of Coupeville soccer,” he said. “We’ve gone from being a cellar dweller to battling (Olympic League champ) Klahowya and chipping away at them.”

While he’ll lose six seniors — Grove, Rose, Daigneault, Megan DePorter, Mattea Miller and Fanny DuprelleCowan will retain virtually all of his offensive firepower and the heart of his defense.

“Our core is coming back and we’ll continue to build around them,” he said. “We’ve been lucky to be adding quality people, high character young women who really bring a lot to the program.”

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Megan DePorter (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf defender Megan DePorter is ready to help carry her teammates to their first-ever playoff win. (John Fisken photo)

Into the great unknown.

When the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad opens the playoffs Saturday, the Wolves will be facing a foe they haven’t played before — at least on the pitch.

While CHS memorably clashed with Charles Wright Academy in a sometimes-brutal basketball playoff game last winter, the two schools don’t appear to have met on the soccer field before.

So, as you prepare for Soccerageddon 2016, here’s a cheat sheet.

What: District 3 girls’ soccer playoff game.

Where: Wildcat Memorial Stadium in Oak Harbor (1 Wildcat Way), which is covered and seats 3,000.

When: 1:30 PM kickoff, Saturday, Oct. 29

Admission prices:

$8 Adults/Non-ASB
$5 Students with ASB
$5 Sr. Citizens (62+)
$4 Elementary

At stake: Winner advances to face Nisqually League champ Cascade Christian Nov. 1 in the double-elimination round of districts, from which three of four teams qualify for state.

Lose Saturday and your season is done.

The bracket:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2068&sport=11

Records: Coupeville is 8-6-1, CWA is 6-8-1

Rankings: Coupeville is #23 in 1A on ScoreCzar, #180 in the state on MaxPreps. CWA is #25 and #126.

Goal differential: Coupeville outscored foes 47-29, while CWA nipped theirs 36-31.

Coaches: Troy Cowan (CHS) vs. Saraid Faville (CWA)

Common foes: None. They would have had one, but Bellevue Christian, which split games with CWA this season, cancelled its late season non-conference match-up with Coupeville because of “a shortage of players.”

BC is also in the playoffs, on the other side of the bracket, so the Wolves still might get that game, just with a lot more riding on the outcome.

So, you have the basics down cold. But what about the trivia, in case you need common ground to talk to a Charles Wright fan?

Boom.

CWA is a private K-12 school located in Tacoma. It’s associated with the Episcopal Church, but doesn’t push one religious doctrine to its 700+ student body.

It was founded in 1957 as an all-boys school. Opening with 40 students, it graduated its first senior class (14 of them) in 1964.

The school went co-ed in 1970 and is named after a guy who never stepped foot in our state.

Charles Barstow Wright was a Pennsylvania businessman who chose Tacoma as the Pacific terminus for the transcontinental railroad.

While the school is named in his honor, there’s never been a direct connection between the academy and the Wright family.

And lastly, but maybe most importantly, the school mascot is NOT a scruffy little dog, as CWA hails the Tarrier, not the Terrier.

And what’s a Tarrier?

It’s a name given to Irish workers who worked on building the railroad so important to the original Charles Wright, though it almost lost the mascot battle on day one.

Apparently there was a pretty heated fight back in the day (1962 or so), with the runner-up being Hodag.

And if you wouldn’t have been super excited to have your school mascot be named for a legendary 200-pound, seven-foot-long lizard with razor sharp spikes for teeth which (allegedly) stalked lumberjacks, there’s just something wrong with you.

The Hodag monster was “the living embodiment of deceased lumber oxen, filled with rage and hatred towards mankind for forcing upon them an enslaved existence during their previous life” and you can read much more here:

https://exemplore.com/cryptids/Hodag-Monster-Urban-Legend-Or-Real-Life-Cryptid

Sadly, Hodag lost out to Tarrier and the world was a less exciting place.

Though, there is this YouTube video:

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