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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Kalia Littlejohn has scored in both of her first two high school games. (John Fisken photos)

   Kalia Littlejohn has scored in both of her first two high school games. (John Fisken photos)

Landon

   Lindsey Roberts fan club was out in full force to see her score her first goal. Pictured are (l to r) lil’ bro Landon Roberts, mom Sherry Roberts and grandpa Rick Bonacci.

Kalia (21)

Littlejohn and Jenn Spark celebrate a goal.

Kalia Littlejohn doesn’t know what it’s like to play in a high school soccer game and not score.

Making it 2-for-2 to start her career, the Coupeville High School freshman rattled home another goal Thursday night.

Her score, one of two to come off the foot of a Wolf ninth grader (Lindsey Roberts punched home her first), wasn’t enough, though, as Coupeville fell 4-2 at South Whidbey.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 0-1-1 on the young season.

CHS gets its first home game of the season Saturday, when it hosts Forks at noon.

Facing a tough Falcon squad, Coupeville was hurt by bad luck and poor calls.

South Whidbey jumped on the board early, knocking home a goal in the third minute, and then things got fluky.

The Wolves inadvertently scored an own goal to make it 2-0, then had their goalie, Mckenzie Meyer, whistled for a dubious foul while fighting for a loose ball in the box.

Given a gift penalty kick, the Falcons slammed it home, carrying a 3-0 lead into the halftime locker room.

What could have been a blow-out took a turn for the positive, however, after CHS coach Troy Cowan went all Vince Lombardi on his team.

“I saw the girls coming off the pitch with their heads down and their spirits wilted; I knew I needed to light a fire under them and bring them back to life,” he said. “I reminded them that they had only really given up one goal and that in soccer there are two halves and we still had a half of soccer to play.

“I talked about what we were doing right, which was a lot, to be honest,” Cowan added. “We were better then this team across the board, we just weren’t getting the calls and the ball wasn’t bouncing our way every time.

“I reminded the girls to control what we were in charge of, and that was our effort!!”

Cowan made a few strategic changes which paid immediate dividends.

Senior captain Jenn Spark slid into the sweeper role, Sage Renninger moved into the middle “to help control the flow of the ball and to send quality through balls” and Littlejohn jumped up to forward.

The new flow hit pay dirt ten minutes into the half, when Spark pounded a rocket to Littlejohn, who promptly shattered her defender’s ankles en route to her second goal of the season.

Kalia has no mercy!,” said a jubilant Cowan.

Midway through the second half, Coupeville got another goal back off of a corner kick from the master, Spark.

“Not sure if you have ever had the privilege of watch Jennifer Spark serve up a corner kick, but it is a thing of beauty for us and probably a living nightmare for our opponents,” Cowan said.

Spark’s missile rattled around, zipping between May Rose to Bree Daigneault to Renninger and on to Roberts, who launched a laser shot into the back of the net.

With the loud South Whidbey crowd quieted, Coupeville came hard for the tying goal, only to lose Littlejohn to an injury with six minutes to play.

Luckily for the Wolves, Littlejohn’s mom, Dawn Hesselgrave, later confirmed the injury wasn’t a bad one and her daughter expects to be in the thick of action Saturday.

Without its top scorer, and desperate to force a tie, Coupeville moved one of its midfielders to forward to increase its offensive chances.

The move backfired, however, when South Whidbey took advantage of the mismatch and launched a successful counter-attack, scoring the game’s final goal in the waning seconds.

While it went into the record books as a loss, Cowan came away pleased with his squad’s resilience under fire and was already looking for some payback.

“I can’t wait to play them again next year!!!”

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Lauren Grove, seen here last spring when she was smashing track records, had a strong soccer debut Tuesday.

   Lauren Grove, seen here last spring when she was smashing track records, had a strong soccer debut Tuesday.

One game.

That was all it took for Lauren Grove to have her one shining moment on the soccer pitch.

Having made the jump over from volleyball, the Coupeville High School junior played like a beast in goal for the Wolves on opening night Tuesday, earning kudos from her coach for the way she helped carry her squad to a 3-3 tie against host Mount Vernon Christian.

“The MVP of the game had to be Lauren Grove. She was a lion in that box!,” said CHS coach Troy Cowan. “For her first time in the box in like forever and getting limited training, she did great!

“Coming off her line and attacking strikers with reckless abandonment, diving and crawling on the ground for every ball was really inspiring!,” he added. “Two weeks ago she couldn’t drop kick the ball out of 10 yards, tonight she was clearing the ball to the 50!!!

“She was very impressive and I was very proud of her. She kept us in the match and ensured we didn’t lose!”

Kicking off a new season against a non-conference foe, the Wolves jumped out to a 3-1 lead at the half, riding goals from sophomores Mia Littlejohn and Sage Renninger and fab frosh Kalia Littlejohn.

“Girls played well for their first full match together,” Cowan said. “First half was a dominant one and where I thought we were going to coast to an easy victory.”

MVC scratched back into the game in the second half, taking advantage of a very young Coupeville defense.

“We are relying on some inexperienced, young defensive players to learn on the job,” Cowan said. “The playing experience is awesome for the new players, but it can be painful to watch.

“I just have to keep reminding myself and the few veterans remaining that it’s part of the growing pains that a young team has to go through and that the game is always the best teacher!,” he added. “We will learn from our experiences and get better.”

Along with Grove’s play in net and the rapid-fire goals, Cowan was pleased with the return of senior Jenn Spark, who missed most of last season after a devastating knee injury.

“My personal highlight of the night was to see Jennifer back on the pitch playing soccer,” Cowan said. “She had her moments and scared me a few others, but overall she played well.”

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Their photo game is strong. (Photos courtesy Kalia Littlejohn)

   They’ve taken a photo or two before. It’s not like they’re amateurs. (Photos courtesy Kalia Littlejohn and Lisa Edlin)

Senior captain Jenn Spark

   Senior captain Jenn Spark (front, right) bonds with her younger teammates. (KL)

Kalia

   Kalia Littlejohn, such a good friend she’s always there to offer her head to Ema Smith to use as a coaster. Ashley Smith is suitably impressed. (KL)

Lauren (Photo courtesy Lisa Edlin)

   Lauren Grove (left) and Lindsey Roberts, always being stalked by their fan clubs. (LE)

Madeline

   College softball slugger Madeline Roberts (left) reunites with her lil’ cousin. (LE)

Ema

Ema Smith goes to the weird side… (KL)

ema

   And then comes roaring back for one final excellent (two-person) selfie. (KL)

It’s official. Fall sports have begun.

The Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad got things kicked off Thursday, taking part in a jamboree at Oak Harbor.

While the scores didn’t count, it did give the Wolves some real-world prep for their season opener (Tuesday, Sept. 8 at Mount Vernon Christian) and, maybe most importantly, gave the booters a chance to get comfortable in front of the camera again.

Seeing as how their photo game is already at mid-season peak, the season looks like a bright one.

Oh, and those scores?

The Wolves battled to a strong 1-1 tie with South Whidbey, a team they will play for real in a week, then were narrowly nipped 1-0 by host 3A Oak Harbor.

Sophomore Sage Renninger tallied Coupeville’s goal, hitting on a shot described by Wolf coach Troy Cowan as “a bullet from point blank range that left thread marks on the ball, it was hit so hard.”

Lauren Grove and Mckenzie Meyer shared time in goal, and the duo, who are replacing the graduated Julia Myers, both sparkled.

Cowan tabbed Meyer as the night’s MVP, but he was pleased with the play from his entire roster.

“The girls showed some real spunk and fire!!!,” he said. “Both our opponents were tough and played hard and that brought the best out of the Lady Wolves which I was pleasantly happy about.

“I saw some scrappy Wolves tonight that didn’t back down and gave it as good as they got it!!! It’s going to be a good season!”

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Jenn Spark is back, healthy and ready to lead the Wolf booters. (John Fisken photos)

   Jenn Spark is back, healthy and ready to lead the Wolf booters. (John Fisken photos)

Bree Daigneault (left) will be a captain this season.

Bree Daigneault (#17) will be a captain this season.

The brightest bit of news from the first week of practice for the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad was the return of senior spark-plug Jenn Spark.

The defensive whiz kid with the booming clearing kick suffered a devastating MCL/ACL injury and missed most of her junior campaign, but is back to lead a young Wolf squad into a new season.

Jennifer has been working hard and I expect great things from her and she expects great things from herself,” Wolf coach Troy Cowan said. “She will take the helm of our defense as our “sweeper.” Welcome back Cap!”

Coupeville, which went 6-7-1 and finished second in the 1A Olympic League last season, will face an uphill battle in 2015.

League rival Klahowya is the defending 1A state champ, and while it lost its top two players, McKenzie Cook and Izzy Severns, to graduation, the Eagles are still stacked.

“Tough team to deal with, lots of talented players on the pitch and a coach that is always well prepared and has a bench full of starters!,” Cowan said. “We will do our best and give them everything we have, no excuses and no backing down.”

While the Wolves lost eight players to graduation, Spark will have some familiar running mates and a strong group of promising freshmen will be fighting for immediate playing time.

Sophomore Mia Littlejohn is the top returning scorer, having netted three goals while winning Rookie of the Year honors last season.

Mia’s versatility allowed her to play goalie to forward for CHS last year, but after an extremely successful European soccer tour, Mia’s offensive prowess will be on display full time this season!,” Cowan said. “No net will be safe this season, ciao…”

Junior Bree Daigneault and sophomore Sage Renninger (“she hasn’t missed a beat and her shot is better than ever”) join Spark and Littlejohn at the forefront, with Daigneault being named a team captain.

“I think Bree has surprised me the most. She really worked hard since last year and has transformed herself into something special,” Cowan said. “Not only is she a much more physically dominating player, but her leadership is profoundly distinctive and magnanimous.

Bree has added quickness and ball control to her game,” he added. “She really came out of the gate on fire and hasn’t looked back.”

Two youngsters expected to make an immediate impact are freshmen Kalia Littlejohn and Lindsey Roberts.

Kalia will be fun to watch this season, so everyone better come early because you may not want to miss the show this young striker is going to put on!,” Cowan said. “Not to be outdone, Lindsey has turned her golden track shoes in for spiked soccer cleats and we have been picking up the bodies ever since.

“This young, defensive-minded speedster with power in both legs has been anything but freshman like! Just dangerous.”

While the Wolves will miss the veterans lost to graduation, Cowan looks to the future, and sees a bright one.

“Our goals are simple; Stay positive, improve each and every half, give 100% effort, and never, ever quit!,” he said. “We are going to focus on what we can control and manage what we can’t!

“Our team strengths are our youthfulness and our high energy,” Cowan added. “We are very young and have some players with a lot of energy. We will be looking to capitalize on that energy and use it to gain momentum and turn it into our advantage.”

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(JOhn Fisken photos)

   CHS soccer players head out for a run, led by Ashley Smith (pink shorts) and Kirsten Pelroy (Coupeville Wolves shirt). (John Fisken photos)

Bree

   Bree Daigneault (right), Lindsey Roberts (red shirt) and coach Troy Cowan share a moment, while Pelroy tries to launch a photo bomb in the background.

Bree

  Daigneault, Jovanah Foote (Seahawks shirt), Pelroy and Roberts are old pros at this.

run

   The biggest news seen here? The return of Jenn Spark (far right) who missed most of last year after a terrible injury.

girls

Like I said, not their first photo shoot…

Eventually, they played some soccer. And were pretty dang good at it.

But first things first for the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad on Day #1 of practice for a new season.

Running? Well, yeah, eventually…

But take one team blessed with athletes who enjoy posing for the camera, and one rovin’ photo man in John Fisken, and the first day of practice was all about the photo ops.

Then CHS coach Troy Cowan got control of his team again and they went back to work, content in the knowledge that they had, once again, won the internet.

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