Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Mallory Kortuem

   Mallory Kortuem (right) sacrifices her noggin for the good of her team. (John Fisken photos)

John McClarin

John McClarin plays doubles, with his own shadow making a superb partner.

Lindsey Roberts

   Lindsey Roberts is not so sure about this soccer ball’s ability to levitate in mid-air.

Nick Etzell

Nick Etzell shows off a laser-like focus at the net.

Nile Lockwood (John Fisken photos)

On the attack, it’s Nile Lockwood, destroyer of worlds.

Kalia

   “The goal’s that way! THAT WAY!!” Sage Renninger (back) directs Kalia Littlejohn as she heads off on the attack.

William Nelson

William Nelson dances with his racket.

Mia Littlejohn

   “All your goals are mine, fool!!” Mia Littlejohn, caught in the midst of a four-goal explosion Tuesday vs. Chimacum.

Tis the season to snap pics.

Bouncing from court to field and back again, wanderin’ photographer John Fisken went crazy snapping pix of Coupeville’s fall sports teams in action over the past two days.

The photos above, a medley of eye-catching moments, are courtesy him and showcase girls’ soccer and boys’ tennis.

To see more of his work (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes!) pop over to:

Soccer — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/GS-20160913-Coupeville-vs-Chim/

Tennis — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/BT-20160912-Coupeville-vs-Sequ/

Read Full Post »

Mia Littlejohn cracked home four goals Tuesday, propelling Coupeville to an 8-0 win and sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn cranked home four goals Tuesday, propelling Coupeville to an 8-0 win and sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

“When you have a combination of red hot Wolves and a bunch of young Cowboys you are gonna get some thunder and lightning!!!”

By the time the goals were done raining down Tuesday, all Coupeville High School girls’ soccer coach Troy Cowan could do was smile.

And sing his team’s praises.

Powered by Mia Littlejohn, who netted a hat trick then went one better, the Wolves obliterated visiting Chimacum 8-0 to claim sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League.

While there’s still a long ways to go for Coupeville to upend two-time defending league champ Klahowya, for this day, at least, the Wolves (1-0-1 overall, 1-0 in league play) are top dogs.

Three of Mia Littlejohn’s four goals came in the first half, all unassisted.

She added a final score off a “stunning header” in the second half, set up by a “ferocious crossing pass” from senior captain Bree Daigneault.

With five goals in the first two games of the season, Mia Littlejohn is already halfway to little sister Kalia’s school single-season scoring record.

Mia was a one-woman wrecking crew, she was totally unstoppable and in the zone,” Cowan said. “She had to be butter tonight because she was on a roll.”

Kalia Littlejohn doesn’t intend to let the scoring title slip away easily, popping her first two scores of the year into the back of the net.

Kalia struggled mightily with her shot early in the match, but I kept telling her shooters shoot, so keep on ripping them in,” Cowan said. “Her perseverance finally paid off late in the match.”

Daigneault and freshman Avalon Renninger rounded out the scoring attack, each tallying their first goal of the season.

Bree played a career match; she was fantastic tonight, really her most complete match,” Cowan said. “Her biggest contributions came from her tenacity and on the field leadership!

“She just refused to be rattled and kept her team on point and focused; very proud of this amazing young woman.”

Avalon Renninger’s first high school goal, fittingly, was set up by older sister Sage.

Avalon is just such an unselfish player and wants to share too much sometimes,” Cowan said. “I told her tonight before the match started she would score her first career goal if she listened and followed my directions.

“She has so much potential because she has been prepared for this moment and having a left foot like a sledge hammer helps too,” he added. “Avalon and Sage work so well together and you can actually see the chemistry on the pitch.

“It’s really a thing of beauty when they are working in tandem, almost like synchronized swimmers!!!”

Coupeville dominated the game so completely senior goalie Lauren Grove failed to touch the ball in play once.

That led Cowan to gush over his defenders, who were clicking on all cylinders.

From Lindsey Roberts (“Her drive, commitment and just overall sense of responsibility to her team, school and community are off the charts”) to Lauren Bayne (“She is such an unbelievable athlete that can do so many different things on the field it’s scary”) to his freshman starters, praise was offered all.

Tia (Wurzrainer) and Mallory (Kortuem) are really the Wonder Twins from the super heroes,” Cowan said. “These two are peanut butter and jelly, ham and cheese or whatever combination you like.

“They just complement each other so well, the fact they are freshman is what is really exciting,” he added. “The ceiling with these two is epic, I mean cathedral level.”

Read Full Post »

Lindsey Roberts scored a goal and assisted on another in Thursday night's soccer opener. (John Fisken photo)

   Lindsey Roberts scored a goal and assisted on another in Thursday night’s soccer opener. (John Fisken photo)

It was a tale of two halves, at least scoring wise.

Sparked by the booming leg of sophomore defender Lindsey Roberts, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team jumped to a commanding lead Thursday against arch-rival South Whidbey.

But the pesky Falcons hung tough, scored two late goals (one aided by a questionable ref call) and somehow managed to force a 2-2 tie in the regular season opener.

With the game being a non-conference affair, the teams didn’t take their battle to overtime, instead accepting a draw.

Up until South Whidbey slipped in the tying goal with a little under five minutes left on the clock, the game seemed fairly lopsided in favor of the host Wolves.

Coupeville out-shot their visitors by a ton, but the scoring touch it showed in the first half slipped away a bit after the halftime break.

The Wolves continued to rain down shots, and had a golden opportunity to reclaim the lead, and probably a win, in the final seconds of injury time.

With the clock frozen and the game in the hands of the ref and his own personal watch, Lauren Bayne picked up a ball deep in Falcon territory and ripped a screaming shot.

Unfortunately, it was a little too hot, caught an updraft and flew through the football uprights for what would have been a beautiful field goal, letting South Whidbey off the hook.

The Falcons tied the game off of a free kick with 4:42 left in the game.

Or, actually, two free kicks.

The first one sailed wide left of the goal, but the ref called the ball back and allowed South Whidbey to set back up and try again.

No one was quite sure why, but the ultimate consensus was it had something to do with whether a whistle was blown, or not blown, or maybe the ref was just in a really forgiving mood.

Whatever the rationale, the Falcons took advantage and banged home the free kick, sending it into the upper left corner of the net, just a fraction too high for Wolf goalie Lauren Grove to snag.

Grove was solid all game, making several key saves, including one in which she speared the ball while leaping to touch the top of the net.

And, early on, the Wolves repaid her, hitting the back of the net twice in the first half.

Roberts, who has replaced the graduated Jenn Spark as having the most fearsome leg on the CHS roster, notched the year’s first goal 10 minutes in when she lashed a free kick from the far left side of the field.

Her shot curved nicely and hit pay dirt with the sound of a gun going off.

Then, at the 28 minute mark of the first half, Roberts once again earned screams of “Louuuuuuu” from her faithful fans when she whipped a shot into the middle, setting up Mia Littlejohn for a score.

The pass was a perfect set-up and the finish even better, as the junior caught the ball on her toe and perfectly angled the ball past the flailing goalie.

While the Wolves ultimately didn’t hold on to the lead, CHS coach Troy Cowan came away pleased with a lot of what he saw develop on the pitch.

“Overall, I was really happy,” he said. “For a first match, with several freshmen playing in key spots, I thought we played well.

“We’ll go back and make some adjustments and work on spacing in practice, but we out-shot them, by a lot, and we came away healthy, which you always like to see after the first match.”

Cowan hailed Roberts for her two-way play (she continually cleared the ball with passion in the backfield and hustled back to save Grove late in the game with a key deflection when the goalie got trapped outside the box).

He also lauded his freshmen.

All five ninth graders on the roster — Mallory Kortuem, Tia Wurzrainer, Avalon Renninger, Megan Thorn and Anna Dion — saw crucial field time.

Mallory and Tia are new defenders and they started in their first match in a new system and really handled themselves well,” Cowan said. “That was very nice to see.”

Read Full Post »

Raven Vick (John Fisken photos)

   Freshman spiker Raven Vick leads off our series of fall sports portraits. (John Fisken photos)

Aiden Crimmins

Aiden Crimmins, senior, tennis.

Megan Thorn

Megan Thorn, freshman, soccer.

Gavin Knoblich

Gavin Knoblich, freshman, football.

Jaschon Baumann

Jaschon Baumann, sophomore, tennis.

Kalia Littlejohn

Kalia Littlejohn, sophomore, soccer.

Chris Battaglia

Chris Battaglia, sophomore, football.

Mikayla Elfrank

Mikayla Elfrank, junior, volleyball.

Everyone approaches their portrait differently.

Some smile. Others go as far to the opposite extreme as possible.

Whichever route they pursue, John Fisken (and his trusty camera) are there to document their choice.

The pics above are just a small taste of those he captured at recent CHS fall sports practices.

To be fair, I randomly selected two athletes from each of the sports (volleyball, tennis, soccer and football), varsity and JV, to showcase some of his work.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for Wolf student/athletes), pop over to:

Volleyball — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Portraits/Coupeville-VB-2016/

Football — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Portraits/Coupeville-FB-2016/

Soccer — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/GS-20160901-Coupeville-vs-Sout/

There isn’t currently a link for the tennis portraits, but if you contact Fisken at http://www.johnsphotos.net/, he can let you know what he has to choose from.

Read Full Post »

Samantha Shulock (John Fisken photo)

   OHHS grad Samantha Shulock has been hired as an assistant girls soccer coach at Coupeville High School. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville High School’s newest soccer coach vividly remembers what it was like to be a player.

“I still have the players perspective fresh in my mind and can make that connection between coach and player,” said Samantha Shulock.

The 2008 Oak Harbor grad, who went on to play college ball after high school, has joined Troy Cowan’s staff as an assistant this year.

She replaces Nicholas Dziminowicz, who departed after a year in the position to focus full-time on his work with premier teams through Northwest United.

Shulock, who made her Wolf debut Thursday during a four-team jamboree on her old field at Oak Harbor’s Wildcat Memorial Stadium, played for 15 years.

After hanging up the purple and gold at OHHS, she went on to play two years at Skagit Valley College, then wrapped her career with a stint on the women’s club soccer team at Washington State University.

Back on Whidbey, she couldn’t resist the siren call of the pitch.

“I recently moved to Coupeville and saw this as the best opportunity to stay involved in soccer,” Shulock said. “Overall I’m here for the girls.

“My goal is they feel like they played the best season they could have and continue to learn about the game.”

She’ll work with the players on both sides of the ball, though says “defense has always been my comfort zone.”

One lesson she’ll try and pass on is how important it is for each Wolf to rely on the player next to them.

“This is a team sport; support is key,” Shulock said. “Any game is meant to be fun and if you want to take it to the next level you need to make sure it makes you happy every time you step onto the field with your teammates.”

As the Wolves prep for their regular-season opener (Sept. 8 at home vs. South Whidbey), their newest coach is counting down the days.

“I’m excited to be a part of it,” Shulock said. “I see myself in a lot of the girls and hope I’m a positive influence on each one.

“I’m coming in completely from the outside with no ties to this community,” she added. “My best wishes are always with the girls and their families and that every soccer experience is a positive one.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »